THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT

                         THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT
                 Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SATURDAY, June 18, 1994                    TAG: 9406180384 
SECTION: SPORTS                     PAGE: C3    EDITION: FINAL  
SOURCE: BY BOB ZELLER, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: 940618                                 LENGTH: BROOKLYN, MICH. 

FEAST OR FAMINE: ALLEN BEATS MICHIGAN HEAT FOR 3RD POLE\

{LEAD} The temperature was in the mid-90s at Michigan International Speedway Friday, the track was like a griddle and the asphalt was breaking up in turn three.

None of this, however, bothered rookie Loy Allen Jr., whose racing helmet must have blinders.

{REST} Allen wheeled his Ford Thunderbird onto the 2-mile oval, ignored the heat and the soupy surface and blew everyone else away, winning his third pole position of 1994 with a speed of 180.641 mph.

Allen's speed was almost a mile an hour quicker than Geoff Bodine, who took the outside pole in another Ford with a speed of 179.650 mph, giving Hoosier tires both front-row cars for Sunday's Miller 400.

``It's either feast or famine,'' Allen said.

After winning the Daytona 500 pole, Allen needed a provisional to make the Rockingham race. He failed to qualify at Richmond, came back with a track record to win the pole at Atlanta and then failed to qualify for the next four races. At Talladega, he won the outside pole. But at Sears Point, he failed to qualify for a sixth time this season.

Before winning the pole here Friday, the Raleigh, N.C., native started 37th, 39th and 31st in the previous three events.

``We're either there or we're not,'' said the 28-year-old Allen.

Bill Elliott was third fastest at 179.609 mph in a Ford, followed by Terry Labonte in the fastest Chevrolet Lumina at 179.596 mph and Rusty Wallace in a Ford at 179.574 mph.

Rounding out the top 10 were Ricky Rudd in a Ford at 179.109 mph, Jeff Gordon in a Chevy at 179.011 mph, Mark Martin in a Ford at 178.851 mph, Greg Sacks in a Ford at 178.302 mph and Brett Bodine in a Ford at 178.183 mph.

The second 10 included four more rookies - Jeff Purvis (13th), Ward Burton (15th), Joe Nemechek (17th) and Jeremy Mayfield (18th) - while some of the sport's biggest names were visiting unfamiliar territory at the bottom of the pack.

Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt was 41st fastest after nearly losing control in turn two. Points leader Ernie Irvan was 38th. Kyle Petty was 39th.

``It's pretty slippery out there,'' Irvan said. ``I slid all the way through turn three.''

The condition of turn three, where 780 feet was repaved over the winter, was the issue of the day.

During practice, horror stories about the conditions quickly spread through the garage. And those stories were borne out by crashes. Four drivers - Dave Marcis, Robby Gordon, Dick Trickle and Hut Stricklin - hit the wall. Marcis was unable to attempt to qualify. Stricklin was 37th fastest in his backup car. Trickle and Gordon were 33rd and 35th in their damaged cars.

``It's like running off the side of the road with all that gravel flying up there,'' said Sterling Marlin, who qualified 20th.

Martin told Estes he was ``scared to death something was going to go'' for him in turn three. He said his relatively quick speed may have been caused by his caution going into the turn.

But while the reports of trouble were making the rounds, Allen was semi-oblivious, generally avoiding the talk.

His car owner, George Bradshaw, said: ``We tried to keep all that stuff away'' to help Allen concentrate on the task at hand.

``I was really surprised,'' Allen said. ``The track felt really good to us.

``I really didn't see anything as far as (the track) coming up. There was still some of that Sta-Dri (oil absorbent) out of the groove, so you kinda had to run in the groove through the turn.''

Gene Haskett, the track's general manager, said there was marbling in the repaved section of turn three because the track temperature of 130 degrees was causing some of the top layer of the asphalt to come loose.

But Haskett said the track was not breaking up in chunks. ``We're watering it now to cool it,'' he said. ``Tonight we'll put some lime on it, broom it off in the morning and go.''

With 52 cars vying for 42 starting spots, the horror story today, at least for some drivers, will be second-round qualifying at 11 a.m.

The list of the endangered starts with Mike Wallace, who was 40th fastest, followed by Rick Carelli in 42nd, Ted Musgrave, Jimmy Spencer, Bobby Hamilton, Wally Dallenbach, Brad Teague, Jimmy Horton, Bob Brevak, Marcis, Billy Standridge and H.B. Bailey.

by CNB