Gordon moves into top 10 in points standings; Keselowski loses last week’s gain

Related: Race results | Updated standings | Full coverage

Three up

↑1 ↑2 ↑3

Three down

↓4 ↓1 ↓3

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

IN THE GREEN

Kasey Kahne (Change: 10th to 9th)
Kasey Kahne is a recent addition to the top 10, making his way into a guaranteed Chase spot just last weekend. This week, after finishing third at Indianapolis, he was able to take one more spot. Kahne is now sitting just one point behind eighth-place Greg Biffle, who has looked vulnerable lately with four consecutive finishes outside the top 10.

Jeff Gordon (Change: 12th to 10th)
Gordon may not have gotten that fifth win at the Brickyard, but his top-10 finish was enough to bring the four-time Sprint Cup Series champion into a top-10 points position. Without any wins this season, Gordon needs to stay there, or win, to make the Chase. Only five points behind Kasey Kahne and six behind Biffle, Gordon could continue to move up with more strong showings.

Ryan Newman (Change: 19th to 16th)
While Newman didn’t do much to cut the points differential between himself and leader Jimmie Johnson — Sunday’s win brought his deficit from 209 to 206 — his Chase hopes just became a bit more realistic. He’s now battling team owner Tony Stewart and Martin Truex Jr. for a Wild Card bid, and only needs to make up 20 points to match 12th-place Truex.

IN THE RED

Martin Truex Jr. (Change: 11th to 12th)
With Ryan Newman putting a check in the win column and moving up in the standings, it’s time to play defense for Truex. Despite his 11th-place finish at Indianapolis, Truex still fell in the standings, showing finishes outside of the top 10 may not cut it as the end of the season nears. Passing Stewart, who only sits four points ahead of Truex, would offer even more of a buffer should Newman continue to perform well.

Brad Keselowski (Change: 9th to 13th)
In one week, with one 21st-place finish, reigning Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski undid the jump he made last week in the points standings. The good news for the driver of the blue deuce is that he’s still within striking distance of the top 10, only six points behind Jeff Gordon. With a fourth-place finish in his last showing at Pocono, Kes has a chance to ping-pong right back into the top 10 next week.

Jeff Burton (Change: 17th to 20th)
After an impressive third-place finish at last weekend’s Camping World RV Sales 301, Burton jumped four places in the standings. The momentum didn’t carry over to Indianapolis, though, as Burton’s car came to a halt en route to the garage. The No. 31 was able to make it back out onto the track, but finished in last, 50 laps down. He now has 21 points between himself and 19th-place Paul Menard.

READ MORE:

READ: Full coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Junior grieves
uncle’s death

READ: Gordon among
top 10 in standings

WATCH: Newman
in Victory Lane

Live feed to the Media Center at the Brickyard

Click here to watch the live post-race news conferences.

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

After tire test, Busch continues to be tempted by IndyCar

Related: Lineup | Full coverage from Indy | Pit stall assignments

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — As Kurt Busch stood on pit road Saturday waiting to make his qualifying attempt at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, he couldn’t help but wonder what it might be like to be in a similar situation at the same track — but in a different month of the year.

The 2004 champion of NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series, Busch tested an IndyCar at the Brickyard in May, and has a clear interest in potentially competing in the Indianapolis 500. That curiosity was further piqued Saturday, when he stood down in Indy’s canyon of a frontstretch before qualifying sixth for the 20th edition of the NASCAR event at the 104-year-old track.

“I can honestly say, standing out on the grid ready to qualify, that our qualifying is a lot less nerve-wracking than it would be to be ready for a full day, four laps at a time, and putting an open-wheel car on the grid,” Busch said. “I was trying to chew on some of those emotions. That way, if I do come back in the month of May, I can chew on them and not be so nervous.”

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

On May 9, Busch took part in an IndyCar rookie test on the 2.5-mile speedway and passed it by turning a speed of 218.210 mph. Although neither the driver nor Andretti Autosport, the open-wheel team that supplied a vehicle for the test, were prepared to make a run at this year’s Indy 500, Busch is clearly intrigued by the idea. The Furniture Row Racing driver would also have to factor in NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600, run on the same day as the Indy 500, although later in the evening. Three drivers have attempted the Memorial Day double — Tony Stewart, John Andretti and Robby Gordon — with Stewart being the only one to successfully complete all the laps.

“It’s something you want to do as a dream,” Busch said. “Sometimes you have to throw away common sense when you have a dream, and to go and do it. We’ll see if it turns out. A lot of guys would love to do it, but there’s that 600-mile race you’ve got to do that same night. So that’s the big focus for a stock-car guy.”

How serious is Busch? Consider that he recently had a 45-minute telephone conversation with former Penske Racing teammate Sam Hornish Jr., an IndyCar and Indianapolis 500 champion who made the jump full-time to NASCAR in 2008. Hornish came away from that discussion believing that Busch would attempt the Indy 500 eventually.

“He called me up one day and wanted to know about sitting in the car and differences between the IndyCar and stock car, and little things about the nuances. A lot of the things he asked me I knew he had put a lot of thought into. It was neat for me to be able to go through those things because there are so many things that don’t transfer over between the two cars,” said Hornish, now a full-time driver in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

“I had a lot of fun, actually, explaining to him things I had experienced running the IndyCar here and the differences between it. The fact that he has ran here in a stock car as much as he has was a neat thing for me, because he has been around here a ton of laps, so it isn’t like he doesn’t know how to do it. It just showed how serious it is. He only went and did some practice this year, but I wouldn’t be too surprised to see him make it happen where he runs the Indy 500 in the next couple of years.”

Busch’s take on the conversation: “It was neat to switch the roles with Sam,” said the 24-time race winner on NASCAR’s top circuit. “He was the student and I was the mentor when he came to stock cars, and I tried to help him out. It was just great to give him a call, and talk to an Indy 500 champion.”

As for who might field a car, Busch said he’s received “a couple of other offers from a couple of other teams after we did our practice session with Andretti,” a team owned by longtime Indy 500 participant Michael Andretti. “But I’d like to do it with Andretti,” Busch added, “since he’s the one who dipped me in the bath the first time and baptized me.”

Saturday, Busch sounded as if the effort hinged on sponsorship — a factor that transcends all disciplines in auto racing. “Sponsorship is the name of the game,” he said. “… So we’re out there looking, and we’re out there promoting, and we’ll see if things come together the right way.”

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

Five-Time seeks record-tying fifth victory without skew

Related: Lineup | Full coverage from Indy | Pit stall assignments

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Leave it to Jimmie Johnson to get a head start on the competition. The five-time Sprint Cup Series champion and aspiring triathlete was awake at 5:30 Saturday morning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, shaking off the cobwebs in preparation for a 10-mile run.

Of course, seeing Johnson ahead of the pack is nothing new at the Brickyard, where he simply destroyed the field last season en route to a fourth victory that tied him for most wins ever on Indy’s oval track. Runner-up Kyle Busch said after the race that Johnson wasn’t in his own ZIP code, he was in his own country. Now he’s back at the 104-year-old track in search of a fifth victory that would knot him with former Formula One driver Michael Schumacher, whose five wins on the track’s road course are a record for the facility.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

And yet, there’s a noticeable difference between Johnson’s winning effort last season and his preparations for Sunday’s event — the No. 48 car is without the skew in the rear end that helped give it such an advantage here and soon had every other contending team in the garage scrambling to follow suit. It was Indianapolis where other drivers first began to notice the yawed-out setup on Johnson’s vehicle, a rear suspension trick that helped the car better navigate the corner and somehow stayed within the rule book at the same time.

Within weeks, everybody was trying the same thing, and the skew emerged as a defining setup tactic of the 2012 season. But no more — the redesigned Generation-6 car unveiled for this year eliminates that approach, forcing Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus to search for another way to gain an edge on the field at Indianapolis and everywhere else.

“The tools we have to work with on the car that we had last year, we don’t have this year,” Johnson said Saturday. “We’re working in different areas. Honestly, NASCAR’s taken away so much, it’s really small adjustments that we’re working on and make a difference with the car. You start stacking those small adjustments to find the tenth or tenth and a half (of a second), where last year we got on the skew thing and were really able to make it work here. They’ve eliminated so many areas to work in now, it’s really hard to find a chunk of speed.”

Indianapolis is tricky enough as it is, given that the differences in the four corners are much greater than they appear, and tire wear makes it hard to figure out which adjustments are working — reasons why even Johnson took so long to find his footing here. The No. 48 team was working on the skew concept last year well before it arrived at the Brickyard, tweaking the rear sway bar and using the bushings in the truck arms to help the car move through the corner.

At some places, it didn’t work. But it all clicked at Indy, a relatively smooth track with even transitions through the corners. The result was a race where Johnson led 99 of 160 laps, and won by nearly 5 seconds.

“From the first lap on the track, it was like, ‘Whoa. This is going to be good,’” Johnson remembered. “From there we were able to continue to work with it and make it better.”

Although he had the best 10-lap average in opening practice at Indianapolis, Johnson said Saturday morning that he didn’t yet have a winning car. Of course, that hardly deters many others from pointing to Five-Time as the favorite for a fifth victory here, particularly given how Indianapolis favors drivers in championship form. All but four of the previous 19 NASCAR races at the Brickyard have been won by a driver with a title to their names, and Johnson currently holds a 56-point lead — the largest ever after 19 races under the current format — on the field.

“They bring their best because this is such a prestigious race. That’s why I think you see champions or championship contenders compete so well at this race, and win this race. Those are the teams that are able to step up when it matters most and not only win this race, but go on to be a champion. And who has done that better in the last 10 years than the 48 team?” asked Jeff Gordon, also a four-time winner of the race.

“They will be very tough this weekend. This race means a lot to them, like it does to so many others. They certainly are in championship form, and I’d have to put them at the top of the list of teams to beat. For the rest of us, we’re going to put all that aside and run our race to see if we can finish ahead of the 48. If you can do that, you’re probably going to win this race and be proud of that accomplishment. I hope there were teams that felt that way when we were winning here. But I think they might be taking it to another level.”

That was certainly the case Saturday afternoon, when Johnson secured the second-place starting position for Sunday’s event, holding the provisional pole until Ryan Newman knocked him off on the last run of the day. There may not be any more skew in the No. 48 car, but clearly Knaus and Johnson have some other speed tactics in the works. 


“That’s been the project all year,” Johnson said. “It’s hard to take away a sensation that a driver feels, and certainly the knowledge of what that does to the car, and the balance that the car has and the speed that coms from it. We’ve been working on that magic all year trying to fund it. At times we’ve had lots of speed and hit it right. Race-trim wise here, we’ve been kind of average, and we noticed we had a lot more speed in qualifying trim than in race trim. So we’ve been trying to blend those two setups together and see what we get there.”

The immediate result was a spot on the front row that extends the momentum Johnson built here last year, when he won at Indianapolis for the third time in five years. Even more so than the restrictor-plate Daytona 500, this is a place that demands a perfect combination of team ability and driver skill.

“In my heart,” Johnson said, “I feel like I need to come here and win.”

And as for that 10-mile run? Johnson scrapped it when he looked out the window of his motor home and saw it was raining, choosing instead to sip some coffee and watch “Dora the Explorer” episodes with daughter Genevieve. Evidently, there is hope for the competition after all.

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

‘Rocket Man’ Moves Into Ninth Place On All-Time Poles List

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

ALL-TIME NSCS POLES

Richard Petty…….123
David Pearson…..113
Jeff Gordon……….72
Cale Yarborough..69
Darrell Waltrip……59
Bobby Allison……58
Mark Martin……….56
Bill Elliott………….55
Ryan Newman…..50

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – In winning the Coors Light Pole Award at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Ryan Newman, a native of South Bend, Ind., became the ninth driver with at least 50 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series poles.

With a speed of 187.531 mph (47.992 seconds), Newman won his first Indianapolis pole, and joined an exclusive list that features some of the sport’s all-time greats.

“It’s awesome because it’s my 50th,” Newman said. “It’s awesome because it’s Indy, and it’s a track record on top of that, so it’s like a double‑triple bonus.”

Newman won 11 poles in 2003, the largest single-season number of a NASCAR Sprint Cup career that began in 2000 thus earning him the nickname “Rocket Man.” This is the 12th season in which Newman has won at least one pole. Newman has won five or more poles in five different seasons.

Of his previous 49 poles, Newman has won the corresponding race four times with 18 top-five and 26 top-10 finishes. His last win from the pole came at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in September 2011.

Newman’s first pole came in the third start of his NASCAR Sprint Cup career, at Charlotte Motor Speedway in May of 2001, at the age of 23. Pole number 50 comes in his 424th start, at the age of 35. He won 43 poles driving for Penske Racing and seven since joining Stewart-Haas Racing in 2009.

Newman has won at least one pole at 17 different tracks, the most coming at Charlotte (nine).

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

Pole-sitter stays out front for 92 of 100 laps

RELATED: Full race results | Updated standings

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Even with a car that was clearly the class of the field, Kyle Busch had some anxious moments in closing laps of Saturday’s Indiana 250 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
That Busch beat runner-up Brian Scott to the finish line by 2.141 seconds belies the difficulty Busch experienced on the final restart on Lap 95 of 100, when Joey Logano squeezed Busch into Turn 1 and allowed Scott to take the lead.
 
After harrying Scott for nearly three laps, Busch finally made the winning pass, putting an exclamation point on a dominant performance that saw him lead 92 laps.
 
The victory was Busch’s eighth of the NNS season in 15 starts and the 59th of his career, extending his own series record. Earlier in the day, Busch had won his 31st NNS pole, breaking a tie with Mark Martin for the all-time lead in that category.

"I had no friends around me on the restart," Busch said of the final run. "On the restart before, I had (Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Matt) Kenseth behind me, and he pushed me and got me clear of the 22 (Logano). There on that final restart, (Kevin) Harvick was hanging back a little bit trying to get a run…
 
"I got down into (Turn) 1 and just lost all grip. I just slid. I was turning left, turning right, trying not to get into Logano. I got into him and we chased up the race track. I was watching my mirror at the same time, trying to see if anybody was coming, and here comes the 2 (Scott) out of nowhere, and he got by us there. It made it tough to pass him back."
 
Eventually, Busch got Scott loose and seized the opening, leaving Scott to second-guess his approach to the last six laps.
 
"I feel like he was able to get by me because I was a little too cautious on corner entry," Scott said. "I was really focused on making sure I got as low as I could and not give him any clean air. I thought that was going to be more beneficial.
 
"I over-slowed just a little bit into (Turn) 1 and allowed him to get up to my bumper and hit me and get me loose and get me up the race track and get back by me, unfortunately. But it was a lot of fun leading here at Indianapolis there toward the end, and I would give anything to be able to rewind, go back and do it over again."
 
Scott’s second-place run was the best of his career in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. Logano came home third, followed by Brian Vickers and Harvick.
 
As the highest finishing Nationwide regular qualified for the fourth leg of Nationwide’s Dash4Cash, Vickers claimed the final $100,000 bonus and won an additional $100,000 for Pam Nabors of Santa Cruz, Calif., the fan who was paired with Vickers in the Dash4Cash finale.
 
Nabors is a second cousin to actor Jim Nabors, who is a fixture at the Indianapolis 500 with his rendition of "Back Home Again in Indiana."
 
Busch was on pit road on Lap 65 when NASCAR called the second caution of the race because of fluid from Sam Hornish Jr.’s overheating engine.
 
Busch, however, stayed on the lead lap and regained the top spot when all the lead-lap cars ahead of him came to pit road for service under the yellow. With many drivers who came to pit road under yellow opting for new right-side tires only — among them Trevor Bayne, Vickers, Harvick and Paul Menard — Busch, on four new tires, led the field to a restart on Lap 71 with a tire advantage over most of the competition.
 
Logano, who had come to pit road under green on Lap 64, kept pace with Busch for two laps after the restart, but by Lap 75, the driver of the No. 54 Toyota had opened an advantage of more than one second. Busch’s lead had grown to more than two seconds by Lap 84, when Nelson Piquet Jr. brushed the wall and dropped debris on the track to cause the third caution.
 
A multicar incident on Lap 89 caused the final caution and set up the six-lap run to the finish.
 
Hornish’s engine woes led to a 34th-place finish and cost the former Indy 500 winner the series lead. Austin Dillon, who ran 12th, took over the top spot in the standings by six points over Regan Smith, who came home 19th.

The race weekend at Indianapolis concludes Sunday with the Crown Royal Presents the Samuel Deeds 400 at the Brickyard (1 p.m. ET, ESPN).

 

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

Final qualifying run a new track record, knocks Jimmie Johnson to second

Related: Lineup | Full coverage from Indy | Pit stall assignments

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Indiana native Ryan Newman saved the best for last Saturday afternoon at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
The last of 45 drivers to make a qualifying run for Sunday’s Crown Royal presents the Samuel Deeds 400, Newman stole the pole from Jimmie Johnson with a record-setting lap, touring the iconic 2.5-mile in 47.992 seconds (187.531 mph).
 
Johnson, who went out early in the session, was .024 seconds slower at 187.438 mph. The five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion, who is seeking a record fifth Brickyard win on Sunday, watched as his time stood up to every other driver’s save Newman’s.
 
The Coors Light Pole Award was the 50th of Newman’s career — breaking a tie with Bobby Isaac for ninth on the all-time list — his first at Indy and his first since Sept. 23, 2011 at New Hampshire. The pole comes at an opportune time for the driver nicknamed "Rocket Man," who acknowledged less than three weeks ago that he would lose his ride at Stewart-Haas Racing next year.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

Newman and Johnson both broke the previous qualifying record of 186.293 mph set by Casey Mears in 2004, as did the third- through ninth-place starters on the grid: Carl Edwards, Denny Hamlin, Tony Stewart, Kurt Busch, Kasey Kahne, Juan Pablo Montoya and Jeff Gordon.
 
"I’ll admit I was emotional, for me, especially, because it was the Brickyard, and I hadn’t won a pole here before, and I’ve won so many poles," Newman said. "It’s been so long since I’ve won a pole — people ask me if I’ve run out of fuel for the rockets.
 
"It’s special for me for a lot of reasons, being at home, being in Indiana, being at the Brickyard and being so long not winning a pole. Hopefully, we can turn it into a good day (on Sunday)."
 
As the pole winner, Newman gets first pick of pit stalls, and that means pit stall No. 1 closest to the exit from pit road — a huge bonus for the top qualifier at Indy.
 
"It’s really big," Newman said. "This pit road here can lose you a race pretty quick. The boxes are long, but (pit road is) narrow, so having (that stall) is truly an advantage."
 
Newman bettered Johnson’s lap through the first and second corners and held on through Turns 3 and 4 to snag the pole.
 
"I did miss Turn 2 a little bit on my turning point, and felt like I made that mistake, and then the lap tracker showed that," acknowledged Johnson, the series points leader. "But Ryan hit all four corners great and got it done. Happy for him. It’s got to be a big day for him, being a hometown boy and all. Very happy for Ryan and very happy for our team."
 
Mike Bliss and Scott Speed failed to make the 43-car field.

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

Patrick tries to temper high expectations at her most successful track

Related: Lineup | Full coverage from Indy | Pit stall assignments

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Danica Patrick knew she’d get the questions as soon as she drove into the iconic Indianapolis Motor Speedway — home to some of her greatest career triumphs, the place that launched “Danica-mania.”

Can she duplicate her great successes in the Indianapolis 500 (six career top-10s in seven starts and a third-place in 2009) when she competes in NASCAR’s Brickyard 400 on Sunday?

Apples. Oranges. Open-wheel versus fenders. It’s not a straight-forward nor a fair gauge.

If there’s one thing Patrick has learned during this most challenging of rookie seasons, it’s to temper expectations. Frankly, it’s having expectations, period.

With at a lot more experience in open-wheel and a lot less hype initially, Patrick reminded reporters Saturday that her rookie year in IndyCars was a completely different situation.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

“To start with, there are so many more cars here (in NASCAR), if I finished top-20 that meant that I was just in the field in IndyCar,’’ Patrick explained Saturday before qualifying. “As far as the overall results, there are significantly different goals (between the two series).

“Probably more so because you get this feeling like you are established and you know what you are doing on some level. You should jump in and be able to do OK, but in IndyCar, I really had no idea at all. So I feel like I have had to establish goals far more in NASCAR than in IndyCar.’’

“Baby steps” she likes to say.

“You are competing against a lot of experience and good relationships team-wise, driver/crew chief-wise, familiarity,’’ Patrick said. “I think that hoping for top-10s and wins all the time is fairly unrealistic. It’s about making realistic goals that you can achieve.’’

Her team owner Tony Stewart reiterated to reporters Saturday that he is satisfied with her progress and that’s all the approval she needs.

“I asked Tony after Loudon how I was doing and what does he really expect out of me,’’ Patrick said. “He said, ‘If I saw there being an issue or something that stood out as a problem or an area you needed to work on, I would have come to you already. … And every time I am behind you, you are doing the right thing.’

“He thinks I am doing a good job. He’s the boss.”

Patrick will start her No. 10 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet from the 33rd position on Sunday’s grid — her worst starting position in eight races (one Nationwide Series and seven IndyCar) at the venerable track.

Patrick is still looking for her first top-10 finish since the season-opening Daytona 500 (eighth). She is always more optimistic at the Brickyard, though joking she hardly remembers the 38 laps she ran in last year’s Nationwide Series race at Indy.

“I just remember getting frustrated and it ending my day,’’ Patrick said. “But as I’ve said before many times, it’s a special place and it makes me happy to be here.’’

And unlike other stops on the Sprint Cup Series circuit, at least at the 2.5-mile speedway she has experience. And typically good karma.

“I think (driving a stock car and an IndyCar) are equally challenging,’’ Patrick said. “When you get flat in an IndyCar, it’s generally fairly comfortable. But I think building up to that is, grab your gonads and go for it. And I think it’s similar in a stock car.

“You know, it’s just been some theme with my career that it seems like when the pressure is on, things tend to go better. ‘’

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora

 

Driver of No. 54 sets track record in winning fifth Coors Light Pole of season

Related: Results | Lineup | Pit stall assignments

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Kyle Busch, a seven-time winner this season in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, won the pole position for Saturday’s Indiana 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
Busch, driving the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, turned a series-record lap of 179.644 mph to claim his fifth Coors Light Pole Award of the season and a series record 31st of his career. He enters the race with 58 career wins, the most in the series all time.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

Series points leader Sam Hornish Jr., a former Indianapolis 500 winner, qualified second at 178.969 mph in the No. 12 Penske Racing Ford. He’ll share the front row with Busch at the start of the 100-lap, 250-mile race.
 
Trevor Bayne, Elliott Sadler and Parker Kligerman completed the top five in qualifying. Hornish, Sadler, Brian Vickers (starting sixth) and Austin Dillon (seventh) are eligible for a $100,000 bonus in Saturday’s race, the last of four events in the Nationwide Insurance Dash 4 Cash incentive program.
 
Three drivers crashed during their qualifying runs without completing a lap. Alex Bowman, Joey Gase and Travis Pastrana each slapped the wall. Gase joined Matt DiBenedetto, Carl Long and Morgan Shepherd as drivers who failed to qualify for the 40-car field.
 
Saturday’s race, the 19th of 33 Nationwide events this season, is scheduled for a 4:30 p.m. ET start with television coverage on ESPN starting at 4.

___________________________________________________________________________________________

Talk about this story with fans below and start a topic of your own in our fan forum.

The No. 78 posts a speed significantly faster than the track’s qualifying record

Related: Practice results | Qualifying order

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Kurt Busch, a frequent pace-setter in practice sessions this season, topped the speed charts again Saturday morning in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
Busch, driving the No. 78 Chevrolet for Furniture Row Racing, claimed the top of the leaderboard with a lap at 188.419 mph with about seven minutes left in the 85-minute session, which was cut short of its scheduled two-hour duration because of damp, drizzly conditions. Busch’s speed was significantly faster than the track qualifying record of 186.293 mph, set by Casey Mears in August 2004.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

Kasey Kahne, in the No. 5 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports, was second-fastest at 188.210 mph in final preparation for the Crown Royal Presents the Samuel Deeds 400 at the Brickyard (1 p.m. ET, Sunday, ESPN). He was just ahead of former Indianapolis 500 winner JuanPablo Montoya, who was third-best (187.664 mph) in the No. 42 Earnhardt Ganassi Racing Chevy.
 
Series points leader Jimmie Johnson — Kahne’s Hendrick teammate and a winner at Indy four times in the last seven years — was fourth-fastest in the opening practice as Chevrolet swept the top four spots on the leaderboard. Marcos Ambrose was fifth-fastest in the best Ford, just ahead of the fastest Toyota of Kyle Busch in sixth.
 
The Sprint Cup Series has Coors Light Pole qualifying scheduled later Saturday at 2:10 p.m. ET.

 

READ MORE:

READ: Complete coverage
from Eldora

READ: Complete coverage
from Indianapolis

READ: Memorable moments
of the first half

READ: Paint Scheme Preview:
Indianapolis, Eldora