Pole-sitter Kyle Busch chose the first stall off pit road

Kyle Busch, an 11-time winner in the NASCAR Nationwide Series this season, won the Coors Light Pole Award in qualifying for Saturday’s ServiceMaster 200 (4 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway.

Busch reached a speed of 133.422 mph. as he turned a lap and ultimately earned his 10th pole of the season. 

Busch chose to have the first stall off pit road, heading into Turn 1. 

Austin Dillon, the Nationwide Series points leader qualified second and chose the fourth pit stall. 

Sam Hornish Jr., who is currently trailing Dillon by six points qualified sixth and chose the 10th pit stall which has an opening in front of it. 

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Coors Light Pole Award winner and Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup leader Jimmie Johnson in first stall

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Jimmie Johnson takes a slim, seven-point lead into the penultimate race of the season, and he raised his game, winning the Coors Light Pole Award by picking the first stall at the exit of pit road.

Johnson’s championship foe, Matt Kenseth, will pit in the 35th stall, two off of the start/finish line on the Turn 4 side. Kenseth’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate will pit in the 33rd stall, right before start/finish, with an opening. The third JGR car, the No. 18 driven by Kyle Busch, is in the 16th stall with the first opening in front of a stall on the Turn 1 side.

Former JGR driver, Joey Logano, picked the 25th stall, also with an opening in front of him. Logano’s track record was broken by Johnson as the Gen-6 earned another fast lap.

Watch the AdvoCare 500 Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway (3 p.m. ET on ESPN).

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Live: Nationwide qualifying 12:35 p.m. ET

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Get event times, TV information and more as NASCAR action heats up in Phoenix

This weekend, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the NASCAR Nationwide Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series are all at Phoenix International Raceway.

All times ET

RELATED: Full coverage of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7:

ON TRACK
— 5:30-6:25 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice (Get results)
— 7:35-9:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES:
WATCH LIVE
Ryan Blaney and Darrell Wallace Jr., 5 p.m. ET

BUY TICKETS FOR PHOENIX

Click here to purchase Sprint Cup tickets.

Click here to purchase Nationwide tickets.

Click here to purchase Camping World Truck Series tickets.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8:

ON TRACK
— Noon-1:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1:35-3:30 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 3:35-4:20 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 4:30 p.m ET, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
— 5:40 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
— 8 p.m. ET, Camping World Truck Lucas Oil 150 (150 laps, 150 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES:
WATCH LIVE
Matt Kenseth, 11:15 a.m. ET
Jeff Burton, 11:30 a.m. ET
Ryan Newman, 12:15 p.m. ET
Jimmie Johnson, 12:45 p.m. ET
— Approx. Post-NSCS qualifying, 7 p.m. ET
— Approx. Post- NCWTS race, 10 p.m. ET

GarageCam
WATCH LIVE
Sprint Cup: 1 p.m. ET
Nationwide: 11:30 a.m. ET

BUY TICKETS FOR PHOENIX

Click here to purchase Sprint Cup tickets.

Click here to purchase Nationwide tickets.

Click here to purchase Camping World Truck Series tickets

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9:

ON TRACK
— 11:30 a.m.-12:25 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 12:35 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 2:30-3:25 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 4 p.m. ET, NASCAR Nationwide Series ServiceMaster 200 (200 laps, 200 miles), ESPN2 (Get results)
— 7 p.m. ET, NASCAR K&N Pro Series West (50 laps, 50 miles)

PRESS CONFERENCES:
WATCH LIVE
Austin Dillon, 11:15 a.m. ET
— Approx. Post-NNS race, 6:15 p.m. ET
— Approx. Post-K&N West race, 8 p.m. ET

BUY TICKETS FOR PHOENIX

Click here to purchase Sprint Cup tickets.

Click here to purchase Nationwide tickets.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 10:

ON TRACK
— 3 p.m. ET, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AdvoCare 500 (312 laps, 312 miles), ESPN on air at 2 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES:
WATCH LIVE
— Approx. Post-NSCS race, 6 p.m. ET

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Note: Links will be added as information becomes available.

Sprint Cup: Season schedule | Standings | Entry list | Qualifying order | Lineup | Pit stall assignments | Results
Nationwide: Season schedule | Standings | Entry list | Qualifying order | Lineup | Pit stall assignments | Results
Camping World Truck: Season schedule | Standings | Entry list | Qualifying order | Lineup | Pit stall assignments | Results

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20-year-old finishes as runner-up for the second time this season

AVONDALE, Ariz. — As Ross Chastain climbed out of his truck on pit road, he was bathed in the smoke of the burnout that Erik Jones had unleashed along the frontstretch. While the 17-year-old Jones became the youngest winner in NASCAR Camping World Truck Series history, the 20-year-old Chastain was left to rue one that got away.

Jones muscled past Chastain with nine laps remaining Friday, winning what turned into a duel between a pair of young drivers at Phoenix International Raceway. For Chastain, the sting of coming up short was bad enough — but there was also the realization that he might be running out of chances like he had on the desert mile, given that next week’s finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway will be his last start in his Brad Keselowski Racing truck.

"I realize now that these are my last two races," said Chastain, from Alva, Fla. "Homestead is it now, we’ve go to go down there and win if I’m going to have a shot to stay in this sport. We’ve at least got to go run good. Tonight we did everything but win. It’s no added pressure knowing that it’s the last race. It’s still in the back of your mind, though."

Friday marked the second runner-up finish for Chastain, who is making 14 starts this year in the No. 19 truck for BKR. Afterward, his team owner walked over to shake his hand and tell him he did a good job. Chastain led 63 laps and elbowed his way past Jones to retake the front spot with 31 laps remaining, but a caution for an accident involving Darrell Wallace Jr. and Timothy Peters gave the Kyle Busch Motorsports driver one last chance that he made the best of.

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"I did everything I could. I took his line away, about wrecked on restarts. Pushed the limits on everything," said Chastain, who also finished second at Iowa in September.

"It’s disheartening for sure, to know there’s only one race left this year and that’s probably going to be my last shot in this truck. I don’t know what else I could have done besides wreck him, and that’s not what I’m out here to do."

Once he got out front, Jones clearly had the superior truck, and he raced to victory to give KBM its sixth win this season. Chastain’s vehicle was just too tight in the final laps, so he wasn’t able to give chase in what might have been his best chance to win this year.

"Only running 14 races each year, it’s tough to come to the race track each week and know exactly how to respond to the characteristics the truck has," he said. "I’m out of it for weeks, sometimes months at a time. I’m not racing anything else, I don’t have money to go run a late model. This is it. This is what I’m trying to do, and it’s tough."

Even so, it was a long way from this race a year ago, where Chastain was driving for a smaller team and pulled off the track early with a vehicle that was uncompetitive. Now he’s trying to use performances like Friday night’s to continue his climb up the ladder. "The good Lord put me here, and I’m trying to do everything I can to stay around," he said. But it’s not easy.

"This is a money-driven sport, and I don’t have any money," Chastain said. "I don’t know what I’m going to do. If I can find a ride to be competitive like we have been, great. If not, I’ll go back to the watermelon farm and watch the races on TV."

Chastain was born on his family’s watermelon farm in southwest Florida, and next week at Homestead will race a truck backed by the National Watermelon Association. Although his future appears uncertain after that, all he can do is head south and make one more run at winning his first national-series race.

"You’re so close to winning in NASCAR, and you can’t get it done," Chastain said. "… I don’t know. I’ve got Homestead, and we’re going to go win in the watermelon truck. That’s all I can say."

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At age 54, veteran says he’s ready for next phase of life

AVONDALE, Ariz. — True to his nature, Mark Martin won’t call it a retirement. But the veteran NASCAR driver won’t compete in the Daytona 500 next season, and he left every indication that next week’s season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway will also be the last start of his storied career.

"The garage is full of drivers who are on their game, and I’ve gotten all the good out of mine. I’ve squeezed every ounce of it out, and no one can say that I didn’t," Martin said Friday after his qualifying run at Phoenix International Raceway. "I worked really, really hard the last 10 years to continue to be a formidable opponent in the garage, and from time to time when stuff was right, I was able to do it. And I’m proud of that. But it’s time for me to open a new chapter and do some other things."

Martin, 54, is finishing this season in the No. 14 car of Tony Stewart, who’s been out since August recovering from broken bones in his right leg suffered in a sprint-car crash. Next year, Martin expects to move into an advisory role with the same Stewart-Haas Racing team, going to tests and offering advice whenever needed. He’ll also handle all of Stewart’s preseason testing before the three-time champion returns for Speedweeks.

But as far as competing in races? Martin entered this season in the second and final year of his contract with Michael Waltrip Racing, with whom he competed in a partial schedule in the organization’s No. 55 car until he was allowed to go to SHR to substitute for Stewart. He said he didn’t entertain any offers to drive next season, even though his phone rang. Martin said he and his wife Arlene have known for a while about his plans to step out of the car after this season, although they kept it to themselves.

"Father Time does take its toll on every single sense you have," Martin said. "Your hand-eye coordination, everything is affected as you get older. And at some point in time, that decline becomes a detriment to you. You can work as hard as you want, you can maybe run good, but you’re fighting Father Time. That’s different for anyone. I feel I can still drive a race car pretty fast, but I’m not the driver I was at my peak. And I know it. Maybe for a while I didn’t, but I know it. … I’m not saying I can’t run good, but I can feel it in everything I do. Every time I get up and walk across the room, I can tell that I’m not 35. And anybody that says they can’t, I don’t know. I’d like to be sipping off their juice."

Martin has won 40 premier series races in a career that started in 1981, and has seen him finish as the circuit’s runner-up five times. He was rejuvenated by a 2009 campaign in which he won five times and placed second in final standings with Hendrick Motorsports, and was competitive last season in his first partial season with MWR.

"I wasn’t ready after the 5 car," he said, referring to the vehicle he drove at Hendrick. "I went over to the 55 and just had a barn-burning year where we nearly won several races and we got six poles and it was very, very satisfying. I felt satisfied and at peace. I also recognize the fact that I’m probably working harder at it than most of the young guys to do that, because I am at a disadvantage. Because no matter how hard you work at it, eventually Father Time will extract its toll from your skills."

This season, though, has been more difficult, particularly since he shifted over to the No. 14 car. "I was trying to go out with some dignity," Martin said. "The last two months have not been pretty. But everybody in the garage suffers through times when they can’t get their cars to do what they need them to do. I’m not the only one."

All of which makes the Batesville, Ark., native look forward to the next phase of his career.

"It’s exciting, because I get to be involved in racing, and I love it so much," Martin said. "But I don’t think I’m going to miss being a race-car driver, because I got to do that, and I was really good at it. And it’s not fun for me if I’m not real good at it. It’s only fun for me when I’m able to have a shot to put my number at the top of the scoreboard. That’s what’s fun. That’s what drives me. We did that a whole bunch last year, and it was really fun. And when the year was over with, I said, ‘I’m fulfilled, this is good, we’ll finish out our commitment and move on to the next thing.’ "

The plans for that next thing won’t be finalized until after next weekend’s finale at Homestead. Martin said he’ll be in a race car some in 2014, but he’s not yet sure of exactly how much outside of Stewart’s preseason testing in the No. 14. He added he plans to be at all of SHR’s tests next season, but not necessarily to drive. He would be available, though, if any driver is unable to attend the test or requested a second opinion from someone else in the seat.

There’s one thing, though, he says he won’t be — a driving coach for Danica Patrick, who’ll be part of SHR’s 2014 lineup along with Stewart, Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch.

"I say Danica does not need a driving coach. She’s driving her tail off, doing an amazing job in my opinion," Martin said. "But if we can feed her faster race cars, she will reach her full potential. I don’t want (the media) to write that I’m going to be coaching Danica. I don’t think she needs one ounce of coaching. She’s driving fantastic. We’ve got to get her cars faster. … So if I were able to aid in any way, shape, or form the information that was given to her to utilize, or (crew chief) Tony Gibson to put the right stuff under her, that would be a success. But as far as coaching her driving, I don’t think she needs it."

For Martin, this all crystallized for him after this season’s Daytona 500, where he finished third in a race he had always pursued but never won. He left the track content that he had been a factor his last time out.

"I wish I would have won it," Martin said. "But it was pretty cool to run third, and on the way home I felt pretty comfortable in my skin that I ran third in the last Daytona 500 I ran. This stuff ain’t easy, you know? It’s not easy. So I was proud of that."

One thing, though, won’t change — Martin still bristles at the idea of retirement, just as he always has. "I’m not sure if you keep working, if you’re really retiring. So I’m just saying I don’t have anything lined up to race next year," he said. He’s been listening to a lot of country music lately, and one classic George Jones tune in particular has struck a chord with him. The song is called, "I Don’t Need Your Rocking Chair."

"I’m like, dang, that fits this week perfect," Martin said, smiling, "because I’m not going to be using a rocking chair."

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Off-track relationship has no bearing when green flag drops

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Over the final weeks of what would become his most recent title run, Jimmie Johnson didn’t even want to speak with Denny Hamlin, his closest rival for the crown. Whenever their paths crossed over the latter stages of that playoff, the soon-to-be five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion wanted to look in the other direction.

What a contrast that is to these days, when Johnson and Matt Kenseth not only casually chat backstage before driver introductions, they also visit each others’ motorhomes when their young daughters want to play together. It’s hard to remember two recent championship contenders who’ve gotten along quite as well as Johnson and Kenseth, a pair of middle-aged dads who also happen to be battling for the biggest prize in NASCAR.

"I think our relationship has always been good. It’s probably better right now than it’s ever been," Kenseth said Friday at Phoenix International Raceway, which Sunday will host the penultimate event in a Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup that Johnson leads by seven points over the Joe Gibbs Racing driver. This has so far been a title race without any of the friction that defined last season’s battle between the teams of Johnson and Brad Keselowski, whose rivalry endures to this day.

"It’s different in some of those levels," Johnson said. "But on track, it’s just real simple. They’re good. They’re strong. We’ve got to find a way to be better."

That, both title hopefuls say, is when the lines begin to blur and two friends just become two of 43 drivers on the track trying to accomplish the same thing. Johnson and Kenseth have been close since the latter claimed the title with Roush Fenway Racing in 2003, and Johnson and then-girlfriend Chandra drove over the Kenseth’s house to share celebratory beers with Matt and wife Katie. Now both drivers have a pair of young daughters, leading to natural interactions in a competitor motorhome lot that’s grown full of little kids during this recent baby boom in NASCAR.

Once the green flag flies, though, none of that matters.

"I don’t think it makes any difference," Kenseth said. "When you drop the green out here on Sunday, there’s 42 cars that you want to beat and there’s 42 teams and guys that you’re trying to get ahead of and you’re trying to beat to go win the race. The guy I get along with the best on the race track, I want to beat him just as bad as the guy I get along with the least on the race track. For me, it honestly doesn’t really matter. Once they throw the green, they’re all cars that you want to beat and finish in front of, and you realize that to win the race, you have to figure out how to beat them all."

Speaking at an event Thursday night when one of his cars from last year was enshrined in owner Roger Penske’s museum, Keselowski said the key to his title run last season was that he got aggressive with Johnson, forcing the No. 48 team into mistakes like the cut tire at Phoenix that all but scuttled its championship hopes. Hard racing was Johnson’s weakness, Keselowski said, an assertion the Hendrick Motorsports driver later roundly dismissed.

Keselowski added that Kenseth might benefit from a similar tactic, and indeed the cars of the two title contenders were around one another occasionally in opening Sprint Cup practice Friday on the one-mile Phoenix track. But Kenseth said that’s not gamesmanship — it’s just the way he competes, regardless of who he’s up against.

"I think I race everybody really the same," Kenseth said "It doesn’t always work out according to plan, but I think you always race people the way you’d like to be raced. You try to show them respect, and more times than not you get that back. … When they start a race, you’re going to race everybody the same and you’re hoping you have a good enough car and everything goes good enough where you can figure out how to win."

Jeff Gordon has been there, winning four titles of his own — three of those in the heyday of Dale Earnhardt — and going down to the wire against Johnson in 2007. He knows there’s a friendship between Johnson and Kenseth, but also believes there are deep competitive urges beneath it.

"Don’t let that fool you. Both of those guys are fierce competitors. They just haven’t had to battle one another one-on-one on the track," Gordon said. "Honestly, me and Earnhardt, we didn’t either in ’95. We never had one incident in ’95 on the race track that I can remember. We had a few others prior to that and after that, but not really. It seemed like when I was at my best, he was a fifth- or 10th-place car. When he was at his best, I was a fifth- or 10th-place car. We never had a one-on-one, hard battle in a tight points battle. You take Jimmie and Matt this weekend, they’re in a tight battle. If they’re lined up side-by-side on a restart, it’s going to get a little more interesting."

Indeed, circumstances haven’t yet played out to put Johnson and Kenseth in head-to-head situations at the end of Chase races as they did for Johnson and Keselowski a season ago. But at the same time, these are both savvy, veteran drivers who know how to minimize any distraction that can get in the way of a championship — potential personal beefs included.

"I think they want it to be settled on the track," Gordon said. "They don’t want it to be settled in the media, or anything to be created, because they just want to go have it settled on the track. And I’m not saying that’s the best thing for the entertainment value of the sport. I’m just saying, that’s where our mindset is as competitors. We just want to win. We just want to win races and championships. We hope in that process it’s very entertaining. But if it’s not, we don’t look at that as our issue."

Johnson and Kenseth did have a few bumpy episodes during their days in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, when Kenseth was a championship contender and Johnson was "the slow guy in the way," as he called himself. But they moved past it, got older, had kids, won titles and developed a friendship that’s thwarted any potential personal drama between them in this Chase — even now, when they’re the last two drivers standing trying to win it.

"I like having friends more than I like having enemies," Kenseth said, "so yes, I think it’s good."

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Reigning champ suggests racing hard is No. 48 team’s weak spot

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

PHOENIX — If Brad Keselowski has any advice for Matt Kenseth when it comes to taking on Jimmie Johnson in the heat of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, it would be simple — don’t hesitate to get aggressive with the five-time champion, something the Penske Racing driver thinks was key to his title run a year ago.

"That team’s success comes from almost a gosh-golly-gee approach — not racing hard — and just beating you on pure speed, which has been their traditional advantage," Keselowski said of the No. 48 team. "So for them, I wouldn’t want to race someone that’s going to race me hard, because that’s not their wheelhouse. And I think that was one of our strengths last year. If I was going to give Matt a piece of advice, I’d say use the s— out of him. Every time you get, run him hard, because that’s his weakness. But Matt’s got to race how he wants to race. That’s his right."

This championship race has boiled down to Johnson and Kenseth, who are separated by seven points as NASCAR’s top series arrives at Phoenix International Raceway for the penultimate event of the season. As far as the title is concerned, Keselowski isn’t a factor, given that the sport’s reigning champion failed to qualify for the Chase. But that doesn’t mean the rivalry between his group and the No. 48 team, so evident in the final weeks a year ago, has subsided. If anything, it remains at a low simmer.

That much seemed evident last Sunday at Texas, when No. 48 crew chief Chad Knaus said after Johnson’s victory that their opponent for the title this season "is a little more formidable than what we had last year." Although some interpreted that as praise for Kenseth, who already has a 2003 title to his name, others saw it as a slap at Keselowski.

Did that comment just roll off the reigning champions back? "No. No," Keselowski said. "It’s just one of those situations where it’s hard to really define what he’s trying to say, and I said I’d give him the benefit of the doubt. But that doesn’t mean I’m not listening," he added Thursday night during an event at team owner Roger Penske’s museum, where a No. 2 car from last year’s title run was being added to the collection.

"I think you have to look at the bigger picture. Matt Kenseth has won a championship. He’s been at the Cup level for 13 seasons, approximately. He’s got two Daytona 500 rings. I can’t even list all his accomplishments, they’re pretty big. I think that maybe the emphasis should be put on respecting what Matt has done, and not necessarily disrespecting where I’m at."

Keselowski can relate to Kenseth’s situation. Last year it was the Penske driver who came to Phoenix seven points down to Johnson, but took a commanding advantage into the season finale after the No. 48 car cut a tire and hit the wall. Keselowski doesn’t believe that was an accident — he thinks it was a result of the way he pushed Johnson throughout the weekend, which in turn led the No. 48 team to push things too far with their car.

"I thought I ran him really hard at Texas, at Phoenix in practice," Keselowski said. "Some practice sessions I got by him. At the race he drove the car too hard until it blew out a tire. You can look at it and say it’s a tire failure or whatever, but those in the garage that know how the cars work know it was reaching too hard and a failure that was caused from that. I feel quite confident in that. That’s that group’s weakness."

Friday morning at Phoenix International Raceway, Johnson said last year’s tire failure on the one-mile track was of his team’s own doing. "We overworked the tire. We created an issue ourselves," he said. "We were lacking some speed, the 2 had us covered the entire time here. In that particular run where the tire blew, I look back on, man, if I had preserved my tires a little more … we’d go to Homestead with a much smaller deficit and have a much better chance of racing. So that’s the lesson I take from last year’s race here."

Johnson added he had no recollection of any tactics Keselowski might have used in practice last season at Phoenix to try and put pressure on him. And he was defiant when the topic turned to whether his team was averse to racing hard.

"I guess we need to ask Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin, Denny Hamlin — who else have I raced for a championship? — Carl Edwards, a lot of those guys (about) how we race. We race hard. That’s not a weakness of ours by any stretch," Johnson said.

"Racing’s what I’m good at. I’m not the best at putting up the fastest lap, the best at qualifying, the best at topping the speed charts in practice. But look at who has the fastest cars on the race track. I’m good at racing. That’s my sweet spot."

To Keselowski, the No. 48 team remains a study in contradictions. "You look at last weekend alone, it’s very hard to believe that Jimmie Johnson is a driver who can run three-tenths faster than the entire field on skill, but that’s what the numbers all showed," he said, referring to Texas. Like many others, he often wonders how Johnson’s programs has been able to defy the natural peaks and troughs most other teams endure, and maintain such a consistently high standard from one season to the next.

"It’s hard to really understand the full situation," Keselowski said. "But I can tell you this — I feel like heads-up I can beat him, and that’s all I can ask for."

 

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