Jeff Gordon edges Kevin Harvick for Charlotte pole
Oct. 10, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD, N.C.—Jeff Gordon saved the best for last.
The
final driver to make a qualifying run Thursday night at Charlotte Motor
Speedway, Gordon edged Kevin Harvick for the top starting spot in
Saturday night’s Bank of America
500, covering the 1.5-mile distance in 27.791 seconds (194.308 mph).
Harvick,
next-to-last in the qualifying order, had just posted a lap at 194.283
mph, but with a scintillating trip through Turns 3 and 4, Gordon claimed
his ninth Coors Light
pole award at Charlotte and his second of the season by .015 seconds.
Gordon’s
run to his 74th career pole—third most all-time—denied Harvick his
second straight top starting spot. After a seven-year hiatus, Harvick
won the pole for last week’s
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup event at Kansas and went on to win the
race.
Greg
Biffle (193.959 mph) qualified third, followed by Jimmie Johnson
(193.791 mph), Kasey Kahne (193.694 mph), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (193.535
mph) and Ryan Newman (193.458 mph),
as Chase drivers captured the top seven starting spots.
Kahne
went out second and held the provisional pole until Biffle, the 38th
qualifier, topped him. Kahne quickly became an afterthought, however, as
four of the final six drivers
on the track outran him.
To
Gordon, who is fourth in the Chase standings, 32 points behind leader
Matt Kenseth, the pole was just another indication of his team’s growing
confidence as the Chase progresses.
“I can
tell you, I’m feeling better every race,” Gordon said. “I thought that
we really started making ground up the week prior to Richmond… Every
week that we perform well
and lead laps and run up front builds the confidence that we can win
races and put together some great runs and get the points that we need.
“At
this point, we’re just going all-out, giving it everything we have.
We’re not really thinking about points. We’re just trying to win races
and get the best finishes that
we can. Right now we’re just having fun.”
Harvick
was behind the wheel of the same car he drove to victory from the pole
at Kansas. With the Bank of America 500 scheduled for Saturday night,
that meant a quick turnaround
for a chassis that spent Tuesday undergoing post-race inspection at
NASCAR’s R&D Center in Concord.
“Turning
the car around couldn’t have come in a worse week,” Harvick said. “We
tested in Martinsville for two days and had to split the guys up to go
down to inspection Tuesday.
Wednesday night, they basically rebuilt the whole car and put it back
together.
“But
everybody wants to win. We racing in the thick of a championship, and
qualifying well was a huge benefit for us last week, with the first pit
stall. Obviously, we wanted
to be greedy and get that again tonight.”
Eighth-place
qualifier Juan Pablo Montoya was the only non-Chase driver to crack the
top 10, with brothers Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch in ninth and 10th,
respectively. Kenseth,
who holds a three-point lead over Johnson, will start 20th.
Other Chase drivers qualified as follows: Joey Logano 12th, Clint Bowyer 14th and Carl Edwards 15th.
Brian
Scott, Kyle Larson and Blake Koch—all making their Cup debuts—earned the
19th, 21st and 43rd starting positions, respectively.
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