Craven out front for Subway 400
from staff reports
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. -- Ricky Craven is feeling momentum
and sitting on the pole after qualifying Friday for the Subway
400 at North Carolina Speedway.
After a strong finish in 2001, Craven wobbled
a little in the season-opening Daytona 500. He started last
in a field of 43, but drove to a 17th-place finish.
Jeff Gordon is all smiles before qualifying on
Friday at Rockingham. Gordon qualified 33rd later in the day.
"I've got a lot better perspective than I had
five years ago," Craven said after beating runner-up Ken Schrader
by about 1 1/2 mph in qualifying for today's race at Rockingham.
"Starting last was tough on the team, but finishing 17th,
that was higher than we finished in the points last year,
so we're off to a good start.
"It's all about being realistic."
Craven's fast lap of 156.008 mph in Cal Wells'
Ford was plenty quick enough to beat the 154.696 of Schrader's
Pontiac. It also was considerably faster than the speeds Craven
turned earlier in the day in practice on the 1.017-mile oval.
"I was really loose off the truck and I couldn't
power down in the corners," Craven explained. "I told my guys,
'If you can tie this thing down, it's a rocket.' "
He said crew chief Mike Beam and engineer Roy
McCauley made the right decisions.
"This can be a difficult business, but when the
car runs like that, it's not very hard," Craven said. "When
we ran that lap, I said, 'Guys, thank you!' "
It was the fifth pole of Craven's career and
his second since joining Wells' team last season. After a
slow start, Craven earned an emotional first victory in Martinsville,
Va., and a runner-up finish in Michigan en route to 21st in
the final Winston Cup standings.
That had everyone on the team looking forward
to 2002.
"From the second half of 2001 to today, we have
turned the corner," Craven said. "We didn't lose anybody from
last year, and it's like the season didn't end. We just picked
up where we left off.
"After Daytona, it's nice to win the pole and
pick up on the momentum, but we still have to finish the job
on Sunday."
Johnny Benson, Schrader's teammate, was third
in another Pontiac at 154.631, followed at 154.507 by the
Ford of Dale Jarrett, who has eight top-fives and 12 top-10s
in the last 12 races here.
Jerry Nadeau was fifth in a Chevrolet at 154.357,
with sixth-place Sterling Marlin the top-qualifying Dodge
driver at 154.292.
Rookie Jimmie Johnson, who won the pole in Daytona
and finished 15th, qualified 11th at 153.683.
Ward Burton, who won last Sunday, was 18th in
a Dodge at 153.394.
"That's OK," Burton said. "We don't normally
set the record qualifying, but we'll run good come Sunday."
Series champion Jeff Gordon, ninth in Daytona,
qualified 33rd Friday at 152.671.
Among the drivers who didn't make the 43-car
field for Sunday's race was Dick Trickle. He's driving for
the first event for car owner Dave Marcis, who ended his 33-year
driving career following a 42nd-place finish in Daytona.