All The King’s Men Sweep Coca-Cola 600 Front Row

Richard Petty and Aric Almirola are all smiles after Almirola led a Richard Petty Motorsports assault on the front row for Sunday's Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte. Almirola scored the pole, with RPM teammate Marcos Ambrose on the outside of the front row. Photo by Rhonda McCole

On one of the most prestigious weekends in all of motorsports, it seems fitting that an icon of the sport will see the car he made famous lead the field to the start of NASCAR’s longest Sprint Cup race.

Aric Almirola took Richard Petty’s famed no. 43 Ford Fusion to the top of the field in Thursday’s qualifying for Sunday’s 53rd annual Coca Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway to score his first career pole, while teammate Marcos Ambrose took the outside pole to give Richard Petty Motorsports a sweep of the front row.

Jimmie Johnson qualified third, followed by Greg Biffle and Clint Bowyer.

Almirola’s pole-winning effort was the 156th pole all-time for a Petty-owned team and the third in the Coca Cola 600, the last one coming in 1966 with Richard Petty behind the wheel of the no. 43.

“That’s really awesome.  To get my first pole right here in Charlotte.  I get to drive home and go sleep in my own bed tonight.  That’s really cool,” said Almirola. “Mike Ford (crew chief) and all the guys on this Richard Petty Motorsports team did an awesome job.  Memorial Day Weekend with Air Force on the car, it’s really cool.”

Almirola outpaced the field by nearly a full second, running 192.940 mph in the no. 43 Air Force Ford Fusion to earn his first pole in his 47th-career series start. It is the first pole for Richard Petty Motorsports since Elliott Sadler took the top spot at Texas in November of 2010.

“It’s been a huge honor for me from day one to be able to come to this organization,” said Almirola, “not just to drive at Richard Petty Motorsports, I’m not just driving at Richard Petty Motorsports, I’m driving the 43 car – probably the most iconic car in the history of our sport – so for him to allow me to do that and for him to ask me to come and do that is just really special and it’s a huge honor to be able to put that 43 car back on top of the board.  To see it over there in victory lane and get our picture taken is really cool.”

It was a surprising and welcome success for one of NASCAR’s most storied teams, and one that nearly closed its doors after the 2008 season before merging with Gillett Evernham Motorsports in 2009 and bringing in an outside investment group to breathe new life into a team that once dominated the sport.

“It’s been awhile since we’ve been up here,” said Petty as he addressed the media after winning the pole. “It really makes me feel good that our guys have been working hard for a long time and they finally got a little bit of recognition.

“Everything came together tonight with both cars and it was just kind of a deal from my standpoint it shows that what these guys have been doing has been right, but we just haven’t had circumstances right.  Tonight, circumstances were right.  They had everything lined up and from that standpoint it’s a confidence-builder that they thought they were working hard and getting the job done, and all of a sudden they’re getting the job done.”

As the fastest driver is Thursday’s practice session, Ambrose was the last driver to take to the track and tried to run down his teammate looking for his own first career pole, but came up more than a mile-an-hour slower, turning in a lap of 191.598 mph to take second.

“My Ford was really hooked up, just not quite enough to get the pole, but we’ll take a front row,” said Ambrose, whose previous best start was a second at Martinsville in 2010. “If you’re gonna get beaten by anyone, I guess you want to be beaten by your teammate. What a great day for Richard Petty and Richard Petty Motorsports.  We’re a two-car team independent here trying to take it to the big super teams.  It’s just a great night for us.”

“Nothing would make me happier than to see the King smile in victory lane and that’s our goal.  I’m proud to represent him and even prouder to run well for him, so it’s an honor to be a driver for him and he should feel good about what we did today because a year-and-a-half ago he single-handedly saved this team and kept it alive and he’s still steering the ship for us and he’s here at the track.  He’s been here today and he’s just a great inspiration to have and someone to really feel good about running well for.”

Danica Patrick, trying to become only the second woman to run in the Coca Cola 600, qualified 40th for her third Sprint Cup start.

Kurt Busch brought out the only yellow flag of the session, losing the back end of his no. 51 Chevrolet coming through turn two and nosing it into the inside wall.

Mike Bliss, J.J. Yeley, Scott Riggs and former Coca Cola 600 winner David Reutimann failed to qualify for Sunday’s race.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
Charlotte Motor Speedway – Charlotte, NC
Coca-Cola 600 Qualifying – May 24, 2012

1    43    Aric Almirola    27.988    192.940
2    9    Marcos Ambrose    28.184    191.598
3    48    Jimmie Johnson    28.217    191.374
4    16    Greg Biffle    28.234    191.259
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6    55    Mark Martin    28.247    191.171
7    5    Kasey Kahne    28.253    191.130
8    11    Denny Hamlin    28.289    190.887
9    27    Paul Menard    28.332    190.597
10    78    Regan Smith    28.353    190.456
11    22    AJ Allmendinger        28.372    190.328
12    88    Dale Earnhardt  Jr.    28.376    190.302
13    21    Trevor Bayne    28.381    190.268
14    29    Kevin Harvick    28.391    190.201
15    56    Martin Truex  Jr.    28.392    190.194
16    39    Ryan Newman    28.413    190.054
17    18    Kyle Busch    28.416    190.034
18    83    Landon Cassill    28.423    189.987
19    20    Joey Logano    28.465    189.707
20    17    Matt Kenseth    Fastenal Ford    28.480    189.607
21    14    Tony Stewart    28.485    189.573
22    31    Jeff Burton    28.493    189.520
23    24    Jeff Gordon    28.560    189.076
24    2    Brad Keselowski        28.591    188.871
25    13    Casey Mears    28.668    188.363
26    47    Bobby Labonte    28.671    188.344
27    74    Cole Whitt    28.674    188.324
28    99    Carl Edwards    28.692    188.206
29    42    Juan Pablo Montoya    28.735    187.924
30    34    David Ragan    28.776    187.656
31    1    Jamie McMurray    28.796    187.526
32    98    Michael McDowell    28.802    187.487
33    26    Josh Wise     28.837    187.259
34    33    Stephen Leicht    28.851    187.169
35    30    David Stremme    29.010    186.143
36    36    Dave Blaney    29.015    186.111
37    93    Travis Kvapil    29.019    186.085
38    95    Scott Speed    29.036    185.976
39    38    David Gilliland        29.062    185.810
40    10    Danica Patrick        Owner Points
41    32    TJ Bell        Owner Points
42    51    Kurt Busch    Owner Points
43    87    Joe Nemechek    29.066    185.784
Did Not Qualify: 19 Mike Bliss, David Reutimann, JJ Yeley, Scott Riggs.

 

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