Joey Logano Makes Record Run To Pocono Pole

Joey Logano climbs from his car after qualifying for Sunday's NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Pocono Raceway. Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Image

Joey Logano may have left some speed on the race track, but he had enough on Saturday afternoon to win the pole for Sunday’s Pocono 400 presented by #NASCAR at newly repaved Pocono Raceway.

In a qualifying session that saw 36 drivers break Kasey Kahne’s 2004 track record of 172.533 mph, Logano was fastest, collecting his first Coors Light pole award of the season and the fourth of his career. Unlike most drivers who followed him in the qualifying order, Logano backed up his Sprint-Cup-Series-best time from Friday’s final practice session at the 2.5-mile triangular track.

Logano covered the distance in 50.112 seconds (179.598 mph), beating Carl Edwards for the top starting spot by .205 seconds. Edwards (178.866 mph) will start second ahead of Paul Menard (178.582 mph), and Logano’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammates, Kyle Busch (178.575 mph) and Denny Hamlin (178.543 mph).

Hamlin, a four-time race winner at Pocono, was ahead of Logano’s pace until an oil line broke on his No. 11 Toyota as he entered Turn 3. Hamlin skated in his own oil and lost his advantage as he completed the lap.

Turn 1 was a problem area, with oil-dry from Friday afternoon’s ARCA practice covering the racing groove. Logano felt he lost a little momentum in the corner, but the lap stood up.

“The track was dirty,” Logano said. “When I went out there and got to that trouble spot, I got loose a little bit and didn’t get to the bottom as well as I wanted to. So I felt like I left a tenth and a half (of a second) or so right there, but I felt like I nailed (turns) 2 and 3 pretty well.

“I was hoping it would be in the top five, and it ended up being good enough.”

Conventional wisdom, even as the session progressed, was that the 50-second barrier (180 mph) would fall. But Logano went out 18th and waited as his time stood up to the 26 drivers who succeeded him in the qualifying order.

Edwards was at a loss to explain why times weren’t faster during a session that began in cool overcast and ended with the sun peeking through the layer of clouds.

“I think it’s really hard to determine what makes this track faster right now,” Edwards said. “I don’t know if being a little warmer makes it faster. I thought, as we went on and that speedy-dry and the groove got cleaned off, that people would go a lot faster, so it’s a surprise to me.”

Menard characterized the time trials as the most important of the year so far, given the importance of track position in Sunday’s race. After three days of testing and practice, drivers had to lay down one lap on Saturday, with no margin for error.

“I’m actually surprised we went that fast, with not being on the track all day,” Menard said.

Series leader Greg Biffle and second-place Matt Kenseth will start 13th and 14th, respectively. David Stremme brushed the wall off turn 1 on his first qualifying lap and failed to make the 43-car field.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Pocono Raceway – Long Pond, PA
Pocono 400 presented by #NASCAR Qualifying – June 9, 2012

1    20    Joey Logano    50.112    179.598
2    99    Carl Edwards    50.317    178.866
3    27    Paul Menard    50.397    178.582
4    18    Kyle Busch    50.399    178.575
5    11    Denny Hamlin    50.408    178.543
6    55    Mark Martin    50.497    178.228
7    78    Regan Smith    50.517    178.158
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9    9    Marcos Ambrose    50.601    177.862
10    5    Kasey Kahne    50.612    177.823
11    1    Jamie McMurray    50.659    177.658
12    24    Jeff Gordon    50.694    177.536
13    16    Greg Biffle    50.699    177.518
14    17    Matt Kenseth    50.704    177.501
15    83    Landon Cassill    50.789    177.204
16    15    Clint Bowyer    50.840    177.026
17    42    Juan Pablo Montoya    50.851    176.988
18    39    Ryan Newman    50.890    176.852
19    22    AJ Allmendinger    50.904    176.803
20    31    Jeff Burton    50.946    176.658
21    29    Kevin Harvick    50.979    176.543
22    14    Tony Stewart    51.015    176.419
23    56    Martin Truex Jr.    51.090    176.160
24    48    Jimmie Johnson    51.093    176.149
25    51    David Reutimann    51.115    176.074
26    13    Casey Mears    51.254    175.596
27    47    Bobby Labonte    51.260    175.575
28    19    Mike Bliss    51.315    175.387
29    43    Aric Almirola    51.382    175.159
30    98    Michael McDowell    51.407    175.073
31    2    Brad Keselowski    51.464    174.880
32    49    JJ Yeley    51.741    173.943
33    87    Joe Nemechek    51.763    173.869
34    34    David Ragan    51.768    173.853
35    26    Josh Wise     51.874    173.497
36    38    David Gilliland    51.951    173.240
37    93    Travis Kvapil    52.370    171.854
38    23    Scott Riggs    52.472    171.520
39    74    Stacy Compton    52.584    171.155
40    36    Tony Raines    53.760    167.411
41    32    Reed Sorenson    Owner Points
42    10    Dave Blaney    Owner Points
43    33    Stephen Leicht     52.834    170.345
Did Not Qualify: David Stremme

 

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