Jimmie Johnson Makes Chase Statement With Pole Run At Phoenix
Nov. 8, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE, Ariz. -- Call it an extra gear.
Call it the benefit of a late draw.
Whatever
you call it, Jimmie Johnson found that extra modicum of speed in
Friday's qualifying session at Phoenix International Raceway.
With
a record run at 139.222 mph (25.858 seconds), Johnson won the pole for
Sunday's AdvoCare 500, the next-to-last race in the 10-event Chase for
the NASCAR Sprint Cup, as the top four drivers in qualifying broke the
previous mark Kyle Busch set a year ago.
It was the 19th time this season a NASCAR Sprint Cup track record has fallen.
Johnson
was the 41st of 43 drivers to qualify, and he took full advantage of
the late draw on a cooler track. As a result, Johnson, the Chase leader,
will start 13 positions ahead of Matt Kenseth, second in the Chase
points, seven points behind Johnson.
The
Coors Light Pole Award was Johnson's third of the season, his second at
Phoenix and the 32nd of his career. Seven of Johnson's 24 victories
in Chase races have come from the pole, including his win at the fall
race at Phoenix in 2008.
Denny
Hamlin (139.023 mph), Kenseth's teammate at Joe Gibbs Racing, qualified
second and promised to make things as difficult as possible for
Johnson,
within the bounds of racing decorum. Joey Logano (138.942 mph) will
start third, followed by Kyle Busch (138.851 mph) and Jeff Gordon
(138.627 mph).
Johnson's
record-setting pole run was no surprise to Logano, who said the driver
of the No. 48 has been on "kill mode" in recent weeks, as evidenced
by his dominating win this past Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway.
"Just
to see the speed in his car … he unloads today and you watch in
practice how fast his car was," Logano said. "It seems like when they're
racing
for the championship, they find that extra notch that a lot of teams
can't find."
Hamlin said much the same thing.
"Those
guys (the 48 team) had their struggles right before the Chase started,
but I think everyone in the garage knew that they can kind of turn
it up at will," Hamlin said. "This is typically the time of year that
they start doing that, especially when they are in championship
contention."
Johnson, however, doesn't think he or his team is doing anything out of the ordinary.
"At
least the years we won championships (2006-2010), we've been able to do
more than we have in the regular season," Johnson said. "It's hard when
you're inside the car and inside the team to know what the difference
is, because we're doing the same stuff.
"But
when I look around, and I see what other champions do to win. They
always seem to find a way to find a little more. Somehow we're doing it
-- yes, I recognize that -- but it's not a concerted effort. It's not
something that we're doing any differently. It's just what you have to
do to win championships, and we're trying to rise up to the face of the
20 (Kenseth), and beat him."
The
18th driver to make a qualifying attempt, Busch was first to break his
own track record. Busch covered the one-mile distance in 25.927 seconds
on Friday to knock Kevin Harvick off the provisional pole.
Busch's
record run simply opened the floodgates. Logano, 24th out onto the
track, followed with his lap at 138.942 mph but didn't stay on top of
the qualifying chart for long. Hamlin, who followed Logano in the order
determined by lot, toured the irregularly shaped mile in 25.895 seconds
to supplant the driver of the No. 22 Ford.
Hamlin remained on the provisional pole until Johnson posted his record lap.
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