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Gordon wins pole for Virginia 500

Posted: Friday April 12, 2002 5:07 PM

 
Virginia 500 Qualifying
Pos.  Driver  Make 
1.  Jeff Gordon  Chevrolet 
2.  Bobby Hamilton  Chevrolet 
3.  Dale Earnhardt Jr.  Chevrolet 
4.  Terry Labonte  Chevrolet 
5.  Rusty Wallace  Ford 
  • Complete lineup, click here.
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    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) -- Jeff Gordon followed his best race of the season with his best qualifying effort, rebounding from slow practice speeds to win the pole Friday for the Virginia 500.

    The defending Winston Cup champion, just sixth in points after seven races, turned a lap at 94.161 mph under cloudy skies at Martinsville Speedway, the oldest and shortest track in NASCAR's premier series.

    It is his second pole of the season, the 41st of his career and the least probable after his Chevrolet was only 25th-fastest in practice.

    "It's this team," Gordon said. "They just never gave up, kept working on it throughout the whole practice, getting it better and better.

    "The car just turned really good in the middle and allowed me to get on the gas hard up off the corner and carry a lot of straightaway speed. I couldn't be more happy, more surprised or more proud of this team."

    Gordon is coming off a second-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway, his first top-five this season.

    "There's no doubt that did a whole lot for us," he said.

    Gordon's lap bumped Bobby Hamilton to the outside of the front row after a lap at 94.092 mph, and helped give Chevrolet the top four spots. Dale Earnhardt Jr. will start third, even after spinning out and only putting one lap on the board. Terry Labonte will start fourth.

    "I made a mistake," Earnhardt said. "I got up on the curb between three and four. I didn't think that car would turn that good."

    Still, the lap left Earnhardt confidence for the race Sunday.

    "I think we've got a great race car," he said. "If we can be up in the top five at the start, we'll be there all day. I promise."

    Hamilton won here in 1998 and also feels good about Sunday.

    "This type of race you have to be pretty aggressive, but you can actually space yourself out and stay in clean traffic a lot," he said.

    It's the first time in the last 10 outings that he'll start better than 24th at Martinsville, where he's competed 47 times.

    "This is the first time we've had a real short track car in a while," Labonte said. "I knew the first time out we were going to be good."

    Rusty Wallace, the active leader with six victories on Martinsville's 0.526-mile oval, will be the first Ford off the line Sunday, and Bill Elliott will start outside Wallace as the first Dodge across the line. Elliott scraped the wall during his second qualifying lap.

    "I had to give them a little excitement there on the second lap," he said. "I think it would have been faster but the car just didn't stick."

    Pontiac, the only manufacturer yet to win at least one pole this season, struggled again with Tony Stewart the top qualifier at No. 8.

    Many others also struggled, with defending race champion Dale Jarrett getting the 31st starting spot, series points leader Sterling Marlin qualifying 29th and Virginia native Elliott Sadler using a provisional.

    "It's the same old song and dance," said Sadler, who always struggles at his home track. "We're in left field -- either I am or the car or both."

    Only one driver, Randy Renfrow, failed to make the race.


     
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