Langevin Dynamics simulations of polymer translocation are performed where the polymer is stretched via two opposing forces applied on the first and last monomer before and during translocation. In this setup, polymer translocation is achieved by imposing a bias between the two pulling forces such that there is net displacement towards the textit{trans}-side. Under the influence of pre-stretching forces, the elongated polymer ensemble contains less variations in conformations compared to an unstretched ensemble. Simulations demonstrate that this reduced spread in initial conformations yields a reduced variation in translocations times relative to the mean translocation time. This effect is explored for different ratios of the amplitude of thermal fluctuations to driving forces to control for the relative influence of the thermal path sampled by the polymer. Since the variance in translocation times is due to contributions coming from sampling both thermal noise and initial conformations, our simulations offer independent control over the two main sources of noise, and allow us to shed light on how they both contribute to translocation dynamics. Experimentally relevant conditions are highlighted and shown to correspond to a significant decrease in the spread of translocation times, thus indicating that stretching DNA prior to translocation could assist in nanopore-based sequencing and sizing applications.