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SportsNovember 20, 2004

The series point leader will start at the front in Sunday's season finale. By Mike Harris ~ The Associated Press HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- Pressure? What pressure? Kurt Busch, last in the qualifying line and first in the NASCAR Nextel Cup points, waited out 54 other drivers Friday and then won the pole for the season-ending Ford 400, which will determine the 2004 champion...

The series point leader will start at the front in Sunday's season finale.

By Mike Harris ~ The Associated Press

HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- Pressure? What pressure?

Kurt Busch, last in the qualifying line and first in the NASCAR Nextel Cup points, waited out 54 other drivers Friday and then won the pole for the season-ending Ford 400, which will determine the 2004 champion.

Busch goes into Sunday's race at the front of the closest five-man championship battle in NASCAR history, leading runner-up Jimmie Johnson by just 18 points and with Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Mark Martin all within 82 points of the top spot.

Busch, who isn't known as a good qualifier, grinned and asked: "Is this Friday? I never knew we could do things like this on Friday."

It's the second week in a row that the fourth-year cup driver will start from the top qualifying spot, though last week's pole was handed to him as the points leader when time trials were rained out at Darlington. This one is the first pole Busch has won on the track since taking the top spot here in November 2002.

He went on to win that race, although the 1 1/2-mile track at Homestead-Miami Speedway has since been reconfigured, with more banking in the turns.

Busch turned a lap of 179.319 mph Friday, easily beating out the 179.307 of Greg Biffle for the third pole of his career.

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"It was just one of those laps," Busch said. "It's really been a storybook effort so far in this championship chase."

Johnson came to Homestead -- the last race in NASCAR's new 10-man, 10-race playoff-style championship -- with a ton of momentum, having won four of the last five races to come from far off the pace and give himself a shot at the title. But his qualifying effort Friday took away some of the steam he had built up.

While the other contenders qualified among the top 16, Johnson went out early and had a disastrous lap at 175.029. As driver after driver went around the track, Johnson and his No. 48 team watched their position drop lower and lower, finally stopping at 39th, which is where he will start in the 43-car field. It's his worst qualifying effort since starting 34th on the road course in Sonoma, Calif., in June.

Johnson didn't wait around to see the final result. His team covered his car with a tarp and he hurried out of the garage.

"The car was really, really loose," was the only thing he said before walking quickly to his team's hauler.

Four-time series champion Gordon, Johnson's teammate and just 21 points behind Busch, will start fifth Sunday, with fourth-place Earnhardt, 72 points out, starting 16th and Martin, 82 points behind, in the 11th spot.

Gordon was pleased with his team's qualifying effort and said he is looking forward to the race.

"I feel like we need to approach it like we're racing 42 other guys and go for a win," said Gordon, who has finished third the past two weeks. "This is a track I haven't won at in the cup series, but I feel like we've got momentum from the last couple of weeks.

"I think we're focused on our own program and on what we need to go out there and do to win the race, instead of focusing on Kurt Busch, Jimmie Johnson and Mark Martin. We're going to go out there and do a better job throughout the race."

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