Rainout in qualifying puts Stewart on NASCAR Cup Series Pocono Pole
Thanks to a qualifying rainout Friday at Pocono Raceway, Tony Stewart will start on the pole for a NASCAR Sprint Cup race for the first time since Oct, 23, 2005, at Martinsville.
By Reid Spencer
Sporting News NASCAR Wire Service
LONG POND, Pa. — Thanks to a qualifying rainout Friday at Pocono
Raceway, Tony Stewart will start on the pole for a NASCAR Sprint Cup
race for the first time since Oct, 23, 2005, at Martinsville.
“Obviously, everybody is disappointed we didn’t get on the
racetrack today, but it worked out good for myself and (second-place
starter) Jeff (Gordon),” Stewart said. “It’s nice to be able to get a
front-row starting spot because of rain, but that’s not what the fans
came to see.”
The rainout also was good news for Gordon’s aching back, which got an
extra day of rest. At Pocono, Gordon’s back won’t be under the same
stress he experienced last Sunday at one-mile, high-banked Dover, where
Gordon hit the wall hard during qualifying May 29.
“I think this track’s one of the easier tracks (on his back),”
said Gordon, who will start beside Stewart in Sunday’s Pocono 500 under
NASCAR’s rainout rules, which order the front of the field according to
the current owner points standings. “You get a lot of rest on those
long straightaways. About the only place that it might be an issue is
under braking getting into Turn 1.
“I had to do a test at Road Atlanta this week — that was one
of the real tests (of the condition of his back). I was surprised that
we got through it pretty good, especially after the wreck last Friday
during qualifying. I was pretty sore from that.”
Jimmie Johnson will start third, followed by Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth.
Sunday’s race will be the first under NASCAR’s new restart
format, with lead-lap cars taking the green flag double-file, with
lapped cars behind them.
Gordon, 37, welcomed the day off at Pocono, with rain washing
out qualifying and the Cup practice session that was to have preceded
it.
“When you go to qualify here — it doesn’t matter how good you were in
practice — you’re going to have to pick up a bout a second from
practice,” he said. “Laying it out there on the line through that
tunnel turn is hairy. I’m getting old, and I hit the wall last week in
qualifying. So I’m fine with not taking that qualifying lap here today
and saving it for another week, even though I like qualifying.”
Notes: This is the second qualifying rainout for the Cup
series this year• Under the rainout rules, Derrike Cope, Tony Raines
and Mike Wallace failed to make the 43-car field. Wallace would have
made the field had his team’s entry form not been received late.
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Keeping Pace." Read all stories from this blog