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Jimmie Johnson takes pole at Dover

Saturday, September 26, 2009

DOVER, Del. (AP) — Jimmie Johnson will go for the Dover sweep from the pole.

Johnson turned a lap of 157.356 mph on Friday at Dover International Speedway and will start first for only the second time this season. He led a career-high 298 laps in May to win at the Monster Mile.

“A pole today will make the start of the weekend much better and give us a lot of direction and momentum moving into tomorrow,” Johnson said. “It does carry you, and there is an aspect of momentum. But at the same time, you’ve got to go out and perform.”

The top four spots at qualifying spots for Sunday’s race all went to Chase for the championship drivers. Juan Pablo Montoya was second, Ryan Newman third and Greg Biffle fourth.

“When Jimmie ran those laps in practice, I knew unless he did a huge mistake, we’re not going to get that pole,” Montoya said. “There was no way I was going to get any more out of the car. I didn’t have anything else.”

Johnson has four career victories at Dover and had one of the more dominating performances of his career on the concrete track the last time out. He led the majority of the race until a poor pit stop dropped him back in the field and he had to chase down Tony Stewart before pulling into Victory Lane a winner.

“You kind of hope things end up your way with pit strategy,” Johnson said. “It’s important to have a fast and stable race car so that you can come up through the pack if you lose track position. I think it was real helpful for us in the spring race. If I didn’t have a comfortable car to drive, I wouldn’t have gone anywhere.”

The remainder of the Chase drivers were scattered among the field.

Kasey Kahne was sixth and four-time series champion Jeff Gordon seventh. Brian Vickers was 12th and Denny Hamlin 13th. Points leader Mark Martin qualified 14th and Kurt Busch was 16th.

Kahne needed to strong starting position to bolster his chances of a top-10 finish and bouncing back from placing 39th in the Chase opener at New Hampshire after he lost his motor early. He is 12th in the standings, 161 points out of first place and 48 out of 11th.

“We’re definitely in a hole, that’s part of it,” he said. “Hopefully everybody has a bad race and if not, we gain some points back and just do the best job that we can.”