Gordon likes new car (for one day at least)



The Car of Tomorrow critic earned the pole at Bristol.
BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP) -- Jeff Gordon won the first pole of the Car of Tomorrow era, putting his Chevrolet Impala in the top starting spot at Bristol Motor Speedway Friday.
Gordon ran a lap at 125.453 mph to win his fifth career pole at Bristol. He beat Evernham Motorsports teammates Kasey Kahne and Elliott Sadler, who qualified second and third in Dodge Avengers.
Kahne posted a lap at 125.313 mph, while Sadler came in at 125.183. Hartford native Dave Blaney qualified seventh at 124.768.
"Did I mention how much I love the Car of Tomorrow?" joked Gordon, critical of the car during its developmental stage.
"I've said the whole time, whether I like the car or not, we are going to do our best to be competitive. I don't care what the car is."
Chevrolet and Dodge are both introducing new models with the COT, a NASCAR-developed car that makes its Nextel Cup debut Sunday. Ford is sticking with its Fusion model, and Toyota, in its first year at NASCAR's top level, is using the Camry.
The COT spent seven years in development, and NASCAR hopes it will improve safety, reduce team costs and improve the competition. Bristol is the first of the 16 races that will use the COT this season. It's scheduled to be phased in through 2009, but NASCAR hopes teams will ask to use the car full-time next year.
Based on Friday's results, the Toyota teams probably want to use the COT everywhere.
The Japanese automaker has struggled to get its cars into the first four races this season, and hit a low three weeks ago in Las Vegas when only two of seven Camrys made the field.
But five Toyota drivers qualified at Bristol, including A.J. Allmendinger and Jeremy Mayfield, who will make their long-awaited season debuts Sunday.
Rough transition
Allmendinger, a former Champ Car driver, has had a rough transition to NASCAR. His Team Red Bull car struggled in qualifying, and at Las Vegas he was bumped out of the race by the final driver attempting to make the field.
But he's in this week, and will start 43rd. Brian Vickers, his teammate who scored Toyotas best finish of the season with a 10th at California, qualified 25th.
Mayfield, who also missed the first four races, qualified 23rd to put both of Bill Davis Racing's entries in the race.
"I think we've taken the disappointment of the first four races like men," Mayfield said. "We don't want people to feel sorry for us. Nobody has given up."
The struggles continued for Michael Waltrip Racing, which only put Dale Jarrett in the field. Waltrip failed to qualify for the fourth consecutive week, and rookie David Reutimann also missed the cut.
Regan Smith, meanwhile, qualified 12th in the third Ginn Racing entry. That car is normally driven by Mark Martin, the current Nextel Cup points leader, but he ended his streak of 621 consecutive starts this weekend in his attempt to ease away from a full-time schedule.
Tony Stewart, a fierce critic of the COT, qualified fourth. He was followed by Jamie McMurray in a Ford and Nextel Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, winner of the past two Cup races.
Scott Riggs, Jeff Green and Denny Hamlin rounded out the top 10.
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