Matt Kenseth Makes Statement With NASCAR Sprint Cup Pole At Homestead
Nov. 15, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- Game on.
With
a pole-winning run Friday at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Matt Kenseth
sent a clear message to Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup leader Jimmie
Johnson.
Kenseth isn't about to go down in the championship battle without a fight.
Touring
the 1.5-mile speedway in 30.394 seconds (177.667 mph), Kenseth drove
the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to his third Coors Light pole award
of the year (tying a single-season career best), his first at Homestead
and the 11th of his career.
Trailing
Johnson by 28 points entering the Ford EcoBoost 400, the season finale
in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Kenseth will start six positions
ahead of Johnson, who qualified seventh at 176.598 mph.
Nevertheless,
Kenseth doesn't expect to have a shot at the championship unless
Johnson has trouble. Johnson will lock up his sixth title if he finishes
23rd or better, 24th with a lap led or 25th with most laps led.
"All
we can do is control the (number) 20," Kenseth said. "My team did a
wonderful job of that today. The car was way better than I was all day,
so I could give it a decent lap and get some of the speed out of the
car.
"I
think that's a start of it. Even though this is a really great track --
it's really, really wide with a lot of grooves, you can really pass --
it's [still] hard to pass these days, and track position's really
important. We can't really control what they do. They don't usually run
23rd or 24th without any problem.
"So,
really, I just think we concentrate 100 percent on the 20, try to do
everything we can to go out there and run up front, hopefully have a
shot
to win the race, finish as high as we can, so if they do have any kind
of problem, we're there to capitalize on that."
For his part, Johnson likes his chances but knows he must finish the race.
"It's a great position to be in," Johnson said. "There's no doubt
about it. I think back to the old points system (pre-2011), what that number would equal.
"That's
a big number, so it's nice, but it doesn't guarantee anything. I have
to run all 400 miles on Sunday and that's really the goal for this
Lowe's car."
Kevin
Harvick -- third in the standings, 34 points behind Johnson and the
only other driver with a mathematical chance at the title -- qualified
sixth at 176.655 mph.
In
the competition for the pole, Kenseth edged Kurt Busch (177.445 mph),
who will start from the front row for the ninth time this year (one pole
and eight second-place qualifying efforts). Joey Logano (177.282 mph)
claimed the third spot on the grid, followed by Brad Keselowski (177.061
mph) and Denny Hamlin (176.846 mph).
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