TALLADEGA, Alabama — Kasey Kahne took pole position Saturday for the NASCAR race at Talladega Speedway — a potentially vital event in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. The fourth race in the Chase could be the one that shuffles the 12-driver championship field. The use of restrictor plates bunches the field, and the unpredictability of drafting and relying on partners usually creates a chaotic race that can end a driver's title hopes. So when qualifying ended Saturday, and Kahne sat on the pole for the first time at a plate race, drivers began discussing in earnest how they will attack the event. “We just really need to race and race hard,” he said. “We're a long way back right now, and if we can't make up points at a track like this, we probably aren't going to make them up.” Kahne qualified ahead of Ryan Newman, putting a pair of Chevrolets on the front row for Sunday's race. “It means I'm going to start first, that's it,” Kahne said. “I'll try to lead that first lap. If we're up there, we'll try to stay up there.” That's the big debate among drivers who differ on strategy for Talladega. Some may ride around in the back of the field waiting to make a late charge in an effort to avoid potential dicey situations, but some want to be aggressive and be out front as much as possible. Kahne, who is sixth in the standings and trails leader Brad Keselowski by 32 points, insists he'll race. So will two-time defending race winner Clint Bowyer, who has had Talladega circled as the track that can most help his championship chances. He's fourth in the standings and has talked all week about gaining some big ground Sunday. Then he surprised himself with a third-place qualifying run that forced him to reconsider his race strategy. “I am blown away, shocked, that we were top three,” Bowyer said. “My whole plan for the weekend was we were going to qualify poorly and ride around in the back. Well, we're in the front, and I'm going to try to stay there.” Three-time NASCAR champion Tony Stewart qualified fourth and was followed by Greg Biffle as Chase drivers took four of the top five starting sports. Jeff Gordon was next, and was followed by Carl Edwards, Trevor Bayne, Martin Truex Jr. and Sam Hornish Jr. — AP