Joey
Logano wins pole at Michigan
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[June 11, 2016]
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Distributed by The Sports Xchange
BROOKLYN, Mich. -- After two
frustrating weeks of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying, Joey
Logano learned the drill.
Posting the fastest speeds in both the second and final rounds of
Friday's knockout time trials at Michigan International Speedway,
Logano won the pole for Sunday's FireKeepers 400 (1 p.m. ET on FS1)
at the two-mile track.
In the previous two weekends at Charlotte and Pocono, Logano led the
first two rounds of qualifying but failed to close the deal in the
decisive third round. On Friday, he was on top when it counted,
giving Logano his second pole of the season, his second at Michigan
and the 16th of his career.
"It's about time," said Logano, who toured the speedway at 199.557
mph in the final round to beat second-place qualifier Martin Truex
Jr. (199.016 mph). "The last couple ones have stung a lot. We won
the first two rounds and came in second in the last one.
"So we figured it out. We won the same amount of rounds, but the
right one, the one that counts."
Tony Stewart (198.950 mph) took the third starting spot, his best
effort of the season after returning from injury. Denny Hamlin
(198.774 mph), who edged Logano for the fastest lap in the first
round, qualified fourth, followed by Rookie of the Year candidate
Ryan Blaney (198.588 mph).
With a new lower-downforce aerodynamic package in use for the Sprint
Cup cars this weekend, NASCAR delayed the start of qualifying for 15
minutes because roughly two-thirds of the field had difficulty
getting through inspection.
Truex was the last to clear inspection, but the recent Coca-Cola 600
winner didn't let that snafu affect his performance.
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"We had to work hard on it today and had trouble getting through
tech," Truex said. "Our first run was pretty bad, our second run was
better and our third run was pretty good. ... We came out with a
good result, so it was good.
"We just keep digging and never give up -- front-row starting spot
is pretty decent."
Kevin Harvick was the victim of two untimely cautions in the
20-minute first round, the first for debris and the second for David
Ragan's wreck in Turn 3. Both yellows interrupted hot laps for the
2014 series champion, who failed to advance to the second round and
will start Sunday's race in 29th.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., last week's Pocono runner-up, likewise failed to
make the second round and will start 27th.
Stewart had the strongest Chevrolet in the field and the only one in
the top five.
"I'm glad that was the last time I had to do that today," Stewart
said. "It felt really good. We were really loose in practice, and
(crew chief) Mike (Bugarewicz) did a great job in the break there of
making some big changes to get us caught up.
"It got my confidence back there and made me feel like I finally had
the right rear (tire) in the track there. Now we can hustle a little
bit."
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