The Denver Post

Five top 200 mph in Texas tuneup

- By Stephen Hawkins

The Associated Press

FORT WORTH, TEXAS» Kurt Busch went faster than anyone has ever gone in NASCAR Cup qualifying on a 1 ½-mile track. While out of championsh­ip contention and uncertain who he will drive for next season, he is still trying to win races.

“The sensation of speed is, it’s unbelievab­le,” Busch said.

Busch averaged a record 200.915 mph on his only lap in the final round of qualifying Friday at Texas Motor Speedway. The StewartHaa­s driver was in one of the five cars that broke the 200-mph mark, with Denny Hamlin qualifying second and the highest of the remaining championsh­ip contenders.

“Developmen­t, that’s the biggest thing. That’s just the biggest thing,” Hamlin said, when asked about the high qualifying speeds. “And trust me, I don’t know of any driver that is comfortabl­e running at the speed we’re running right now. Kevin Harvick walked by and as soon as that was over, he said, ‘I’m glad that is over.’ It’s crazy speed.”

The top five all surpassed the previous qualifying record at the track, Tony Stewart’s 200.111 mph before the fall race three years ago.

Hamlin qualified at 200.617 mph, with the others going over 200 mph on the high-banked track being Harvick (200.372), Erik Jones (200.326) of Denver-based Furniture Row Racing and Kyle Busch (200.252). Hamlin, Harvick and Kyle Busch, the only driver locked into a title shot at Homestead, are all championsh­ip contenders.

Furniture Row Racing star Martin Truex Jr., leading in points, qualified seventh at 199.431 mph, directly ahead of fellow title contenders Ryan Blaney (199.380), Jimmie Johnson (198.727) and Brad Keselowski (198.478) in the eighth through 10th positions.

The only championsh­ip contender starting outside the top 10 was Chase Elliott, who was among seven drivers who didn’t make any qualifying laps after not making it through tech inspection in time. He will start 34th in Sunday’s race.

Harvick obviously made it through inspection, though it was a rush to get through the first round of the three-stage qualifying.

“This is a little bit of a nervewrack­ing lap because it’s so fast,” Harvick said. “For me, my heart rate has been up since I started because of the anxiety of getting in the car late, not having time to prep yourself getting in and calm down and then you get in there and it’s just lap after lap, but it worked out fine.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States