Harvick wins fifth pole of the season for Bristol night race
August 22, 2014
By Seth Livingstone
NASCAR Wire Service
BRISTOL, Tenn. – Kevin Harvick is making it look easy in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying these days.
Harvick
claimed his fifth Coors Light Pole Award of the season at Bristol Motor
Speedway Friday in track record time. Harvick has started and finished
in the top 10 in each
of the previous four races and has missed cracking the top 12 just once
in the last 18.
His qualifying turnaround began after he could start no better than 27th at Bristol in the March race.
“It
just took us a little bit to get our balance right on our cars,” Harvick
said. “It took us six or seven weeks. But once (my team) zeroed in on
the balance number and the
things we needed to make the car go fast, qualifying has been a lot
better.
“They
make me look like a better qualifier than I really am because they put a
lot of effort into it. We were able to put down two solid laps today.
Anytime you can beat the
24 right now, you know things are going OK.”
Harvick was referring to the 24 of Jeff Gordon, perhaps the only driver hotter on the Sprint Cup circuit.
Gordon,
coming off a victory at Michigan last week, just missed winning a third
consecutive pole, running 131.290 mph to Harvick’s 131.362.
“We’re
clicking so well together right now and the result is showing,” said
Gordon, who has been among the top 12 in qualifying for 11 of the last
12 Sprint Cup races.
“It
builds a lot of confidence when you go to Watkins Glen, sit on the pole
and run up front, then go to Michigan and sit on the pole and win, then
come here and sit on the
front row. Those are three unique tracks and it shows how good our cars
are and our team is right now.”
All 12
cars that advanced through the first round of knockout qualifying broke
the track record of 129.991 mph set by Denny Hamlin in March. Hamlin,
nine-thousandths of a second
slower than his lap in March, was the odd man out, bumped by Kasey
Kahne for the 12th qualifying spot.
“I
don’t know what it looks like, but it felt screaming fast,” said
Edwards, who started 12th but went on to win the Food City 500 on March
16. “It’s just a crazy race track.”
It was
the second consecutive strong qualifying effort for Edwards, who started
third last week at Michigan. Prior to that, he’d qualified better than
10th once in 11 races.
Edwards turned a lap of 131.209 mph and will be joined on the second
row by Kyle Busch.
Drivers were in unanimous agreement that they’ll have to stick to the top groove to maximize speed on Saturday night.
The
difference from the bottom to the top is three-tenths of a second, so
you’re going to have to be on top of the race track (to contend),”
Harvick said. “The problem with
the high groove is that running into the back of somebody puts you in
jeopardy when you have to go underneath them after they bounce off the
wall.
“This
is going to be a track position game, just because of the groove and the
way the tires don’t fall off. There’s going to be a lot of strategy and
restarts are going to
be important because everybody’s going to be fighting for the top of
the track.”
Among
those fighting for a win with only three races until the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup field is set will be Greg Biffle (eighth) Marcos
Ambrose (10th), Ryan Newman
(11th) and Kahne (12th), each of whom advanced through knockout
qualifying, into Friday’s second and final round of qualifying.
Rookie
Kyle Larson, also looking for a win to get in the Chase, had been
fastest in final practice, but struck the wall in Turn 4 and failed to
advance past the first round.
Aric Almirola and Cole Whitt also tangled with the wall in the first
round of qualifying.
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