It‘s been a recurring theme in the NASCAR Cup Series in recent weeks. Denny Hamlin is out front.
The veteran driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota claimed his fourth Busch Light Pole Award of the 2026 season Saturday afternoon at Pocono Raceway and will lead the field to green in Sunday‘s Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA (1 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Of note, with poor weather expected later Sunday afternoon, the green flag start time was moved up by two hours to 1 p.m. ET.
This marks the 51st pole position of Hamlin‘s career and comes as the popular veteran is attempting to win three consecutive races for the first time in his celebrated career after victories the last two weeks in Nashville and Michigan.
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He was the last driver to take to the track in Saturday‘s qualifying session and just nudged Hendrick Motorsports‘ driver Kyle Larson from the top position in the final minutes — Hamlin‘s lap of 173.250 mph around the 2.5-mile triangular-shaped Pocono track was 0.057 seconds quicker than Larson‘s best.
“Certainly had the grip, this whole team just did a great job with adjustments, making it a little better from practice, I didn‘t execute a very good lap there in Turn 2, but overall I thought I hit [turns] three and one pretty decent — just good enough,” Hamlin said.
He acknowledged he and the team are certainly on a hot streak at the moment, with wins in the non-points-paying All-Star Race four weeks ago, plus the two victories in the last two weeks. The effort has helped Hamlin cut 23XI Racing driver Tyler Reddick‘s 100-plus point advantage over him atop the standings to only 51 points heading into Pocono, a place Hamlin has won a record seven times.
“It‘s certainly going well and confidence is up with these guys [on the team] that every time I enter a corner at about 200, I know they‘ve built me a car that‘s going to stick,” Hamlin said, acknowledging his three-in-a-row opportunity.
“This is the best shot for sure, we‘ve got a little work to do on the car overnight to get it to be a race winner, but I feel like we‘re in that box where we need to be and we‘ll fine-tune it from here.”
Starting behind Hamlin and Larson are Daniel Suárez in the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet and Hamlin‘s JGR teammates Ty Gibbs (No. 54 Toyota) and defending race winner Chase Briscoe (No. 19 Toyota).
Chris Buescher, who won his first career Cup Series race at Pocono in 2016, qualified sixth — his No. 17 RFK Racing Ford was the first Ford on the grid. Legacy Motor Club teammates Erik Jones and John Hunter Nemechek will start their Toyotas seventh and eighth, respectively.
Hendrick Motorsports‘ William Byron (No. 24 Chevrolet) and Team Penske‘s Ryan Blaney (No. 12 Ford) — who also earned his first career series win at Pocono in 2017 — round out the top 10 on the grid.
Of note, 23XI Racing‘s Reddick will roll off 15th and his teammate, Bubba Wallace, will start from the rear of the field after a qualifying session accident. RFK owner-driver Brad Keselowski had engine trouble in the session and will start alongside Wallace on the last row.
Larson fastest in practice
Hendrick Motorsports’ Kyle Larson topped the leaderboard in practice, as his No. 5 Chevrolet posted a speed of 170.707 mph.
Denny Hamlin (170.245 mph), Daniel Suárez (170.168 mph), Carson Hocevar (169.994 mph) and Chris Buescher (169.847 mph) rounded out the top five.
Riley Herbst (169.728 mph), Ty Gibbs (169.622 mph), William Byron (169.610 mph), Ross Chastain (169.307 mph) and Chase Briscoe (169.144 mph) completed the top 10.
MORE: Practice results | NASCAR video highlights
The only caution during practice occurred in Group 1 when Hyak Motorsports driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. spun his No. 47 Chevrolet in Turn 3 and did not hit anything. In his first in-track session since suffering a left-wrist fracture last Sunday at Michigan, Christopher Bell (167.570 mph) was 25th fastest.