Chase Elliott edges Dale Earnhardt Jr. for Daytona 500 pole
February 19, 2017
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. – Winning back-to-back Daytona 500 poles is something of a
family tradition, as Chase Elliott proved by the skin of his teeth on
Sunday at Daytona International
Speedway.
The
last driver to take a lap in the second and final round of Monster
Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying at the 2.5-mile superspeedway,
Elliott covered the distance in 46.663
seconds (192.872 mph) to edge Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale
Earnhardt Jr. by .002 seconds.
The
pole was the second straight for Elliott, who led the field to green
last year as a Sunoco rookie. It was the third straight for Elliott’s
crew chief, Alan Gustafson, who
won the pole with driver Jeff Gordon in 2015 in Gordon’s last year as a
full-time driver.
With
three straight poles as a crew, Gustafson shares a record previously
held solely by Ernie Elliott, Chase Elliott’s uncle, who fielded cars
driven by former Monster Energy
NASCAR Cup Series champion Bill Elliott, Chase’s father.
“Everybody
at Hendrick Motorsports has done a lot of work this off-season,” said
Elliott, who claimed the third Coors Light Pole Award of his career, all
at restrictor-plate
tracks. “This team definitely has a knack for these plate tracks, as
they showed with Jeff Gordon and then last year with here and Talladega
(where Elliott also won the pole).
“But
that stuff doesn’t just happen by staying the same, as everybody knows.
Everyone is always trying to get better and make their cars better and
faster; and the engine shop
is always finding new things. So I think that’s just proof that they’re
improving with everybody else and taking that next step, which is
really impressive.
“I’m happy to be a part of it, and hopefully we can run good next Sunday.”
Elliott
and Earnhardt are the only two drivers locked into their starting spots
for next Sunday’s 59th running of the Great American Race (2 p.m. ET on
FOX). They will lead the
field to the green flag in the first and second Can-Am Duel 150-mile
qualifying races on Thursday night, Elliott in the first Duel, Earnhardt
in the second.
Earnhardt
is racing for the first time since a concussion sidelined him for the
final 18 events of the 2016 season. The satisfaction of locking in a
front-row starting position
tempered his disappointment at missing the pole by the slimmest of
margins.
“I
certainly would have loved to have gotten a pole, but my boss man (Rick
Hendrick) is happy,” Earnhardt said. “I just talked to him on the
phone, and he’s got to be thrilled
with having his cars up front.”
Brad
Keselowski qualified third at 192.691 mph and will start on the outside
of the front row in Thursday night’s first Duel. Clint Bowyer, in his
first competitive effort in
a Stewart-Haas Racing Ford will start beside Earnhardt in the second
Duel after posting the fourth fastest speed (192.571 mph).
With
36 chartered teams knowing they will race next Sunday, six “Open”
entries are vying for the four remaining berths in the Daytona 500
field. Sunday’s time trials brought
good news for Brendan Gaughan and Elliott Sadler, who know they will
race next Sunday as the two fastest qualifiers among the
“go-or-go-homers.”
Conversely,
Jeffrey Earnhardt and Timmy Hill, who posted the two slowest times in
the field, can race in the 500 only if they are the fastest Open drivers
in their respective
Duels.
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