Carl Edwards edges Kevin Harvick for New Hampshire pole
Sept. 25, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LOUDON,
N.H. – Posting the fastest lap of Friday’s time trials late in the
final round of knockout qualifying at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Carl
Edwards knocked Kevin Harvick
off the pole for Sunday’s Sylvania 300, the second race in the Chase
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup (2 p.m. ET on NBCSN).
Edwards
covered the 1.058-mile distance in 27.604 seconds (137.980 mph) to earn
his third Coors Light Pole Award of the season, his second at New
Hampshire — completing a season
sweep of the top starting spot at the Magic Mile — and the 16th of his
career.
“To
be honest, that third round surprised me, how fast we were,” said
Edwards, who was 11th fastest in the second round. “I think it helped me
almost to struggle through the
second round, 'cause I thought, ‘Aw, heck with it,’ and I just kind of
went for it in the third round.
“The
car has a ton of speed. I hate to admit how poorly I drove it the first
and second rounds, but I think it really says a lot about how fast the
car is.”
Needing
a victory or an extremely high finish to restore his hopes of repeating
as NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, Harvick (137.845 mph) posted a
lap .027 seconds slower
than that the pole winner to earn the second-place starting spot.
“I
felt like I probably left those few hundredths of a second not being
aggressive enough off the exit of Turn 2, and as good as the car was off
of Turn 4,” Harvick said. “Small
crumbs. It’s hard to balance that here, because if you push the car too
much, you wind up giving up two or three tenths (of a second) instead
of two or three hundredths.”
Harvick,
however, declined to address his confrontation with Jimmie Johnson
after last Sunday’s Chase opener at Chicagoland Speedway. Side-to-side
contact with Johnson’s Chevrolet
ultimately flattened the left rear tire of Harvick’s No. 4 Chevy,
sending him spinning into the Turn 3 wall and relegating him to a
42nd-place finish.
That
result left Harvick last in the 16-driver Chase standings and incensed
at the six-time champion. When Johnson approached the reigning champ in
the motor coach lot after
the race, Harvick responded with a blow to Johnson’s chest, as one of
Harvick’s handlers tried to keep the drivers apart.
Asked
whether Johnson might have something to worry about in Sunday’s race,
Harvick replied, “I don’t look back. I just do what we have to do to
focus on what we need to do
looking forward. I’m not going to use you guys (the press) to make
threats. I can do that myself.”
Kurt
Busch, Harvick’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, qualified third at
137.800 mph, followed by Brad Keselowski (137.671 mph) and Johnson
(137.621 mph), as Chase drivers claimed
the top five positions on the grid.
Non-Chaser
Kyle Larson was sixth fastest, while Chase drivers Denny Hamlin, Joey
Logano, Ryan Newman, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. qualified
seventh through 11th, respectively.
Other
Chase competitors will start as follows: Matt Kenseth, 13th; Kyle
Busch, 17th; Paul Menard, 20th; Martin Truex Jr., 21st; Jamie McMurray,
23rd and Clint Bowyer, 26th.
Bowyer was the only Chase driver who failed to advance past the first
round.
Travis Kvapil failed to make the 43-car field.
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