Kevin Harvick wins wild Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte
May 26, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
CONCORD, N.C.--After 389 laps in NASCAR’s motorsports marathon, the 54th running of the Sunday night’s Coca-Cola
600 Sunday at Charlotte Motor Speedway came down to an 11-lap shootout--and Kevin Harvick won it.
Harvick pulled away during an 11-lap green-flag run to the finish to beat Kasey Kahne to the finish line by 1.491 seconds.
The victory was Harvick’s second of the season, his second at Charlotte and the 21st of his career.
Kurt Busch ran third, followed by polesitter Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano. Ryan Newman, Tony Stewart, Clint Bowyer,
Martin Truex Jr. and Marcos Ambrose completed the top 10.
On a night where the second half of the race produced non-stop action and plenty of contact, 10 spectators were injured
when a TV camera drive line broke, three of them seriously enough to warrant transportation to a local hospital.
The speedway announced after the race that all injured treated and released.
The
pivotal moment in the race was a decision by Harvick and crew chief Gil
Martin to come to pit road for two new
tires after NASCAR called a debris caution on Lap 384 of 400. Kahne
stayed out. In fact, he was the only driver to do so, and Harvick lined
up beside the driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet for a restart on Lap 390
with a distinct advantage.
"It
was a good strategy call there," Harvick said. "The 5 stayed out, and
we were able to have a little bit fresher
tires and get in front of him on the restart… This is one of those
nights where you just know going in that you’ve got to grind away, lap
after lap to keep yourself on the lead lap and not make any mistakes…
"This
is a long night. We’ve been here a lot of times and know that you just
have to grind through mile after mile,
keep your car running, don’t get tore up, don’t get a lap down, and
you’re going to be somewhere around at the end. Everybody did that on
our Budweiser Chevy tonight, and there we were at the end."
For
the third time this season on a 1.5-mile speedway, Kahne finished
second with arguably the fastest car. Both he
and crew chief Kenny Francis were surprised that Kahne was the only
driver who stayed on the track during the final caution. Fresh rubber
turned the tide in Harvick’s favor.
"We
had a great car from the drop of the green, drove to the front from
sixth," said Kahne, who led a race-high 161
laps. "It was definitely our race to lose, especially those last 100
laps. We thought that some of the guys would stay out. I think there
were three cars that had just pitted within the last couple laps, or
five or six laps, and (we) just felt like they’d
stay out, and that’d be a big enough buffer to someone who had two or
four (new) tires, that we could get away.
"It
didn’t happen. Harvick started right beside me and had two, and he held
it flat through (Turns) 1 and 2, and I
had to lift a little bit. I got a little free getting in, so I had to
back off the gas, and when I went back down, he was in front of me. So
that was the end of our race, and I had to make sure I got second from
there."
NASCAR’s
longest race took an extraordinary turn on Lap 122 when a guide cable
to the "CamCat," the remote-control
mobile camera that traverses the frontstretch, broke and fell across
the track. Several cars sustained damage from running across the cable,
most notably those of Ambrose and Kyle Busch, then the race leader.
A
length of cable wrapped around Ambrose’s rear housing and severed a
brake line. Contact with the fallen cable sliced
open the front right quarter panel of Busch’s Toyota. NASCAR went off
the pages of its own rule book under the exceptional circumstances and
allowed all teams to repair their cars during a 15-minute break in the
action.
The
sanctioning body restored the running order before the cable broke,
reinstating Ambrose, who lost four laps under
repairs, to the lead lap for a restart on Lap 131. Busch’s team worked
feverishly to reconstruct the damaged quarter panel with black Bear Bond
tape.
Two
red-flag periods totaling 27 minutes--the first for the broken cable,
the second for repairs--took the race from
daylight to dusk. Kyle Busch held the top spot after the Lap 131
restart, with brother Kurt Busch charging from sixth to second on the
first restart lap.
The
Busch brothers paced the field until Kenseth grabbed the lead from his
teammate during a cycle of green-flag pit
stops that began on Lap 171. From that point Kenseth dominated, until
simultaneous engine failures in Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Chevrolet and Kyle
Busch’s Toyota slowed the field on Lap 258.
Earnhardt’s calamity also was bad news for Greg Biffle, Travis Kvapil and Dave Blaney, who spun in the oil pouring
from the No. 88 Chevy SS and wrecked, sidelining all three drivers.
Kenseth
was the only driver who remained on the track under the ensuing yellow,
and he surrendered the lead to Kahne
seven laps after a restart on Lap 267. The decision to stay out cost
Kenseth, who lost track position after pitting early on Lap 301, three
laps before a caution for debris in Turn 1 interrupted a cycle of
green-flag pit stops.
Jeff
Gordon also lost a lap when the caution trapped him on pit road and was
an innocent victim of three-wide racing
after a spate of cautions to the race to a restart on Lap 325. Just
past the star/finish line after the restart lap, contact between the
cars of Mark Martin and Aric Almirola demolished those two machines as
well as Gordon’s.
NASCAR
red-flagged the race after Lap 326, and that proved disastrous to Kurt
Busch, who Chevy lost power under the
stoppage. Busch, who had wrested the lead from Kahne after a restart on
Lap 319, surrendered the top spot to Harvick when his car wouldn’t
start.
After a push from a safety truck, however, Busch’s car re-fired, and his crew changed the battery on pit road without
losing a lap.
The fireworks were far from over. Jimmie Johnson’s spin on Lap 333 battered the No. 48 Chevy of the five-time champion,
as well as the cars of Kenseth, Juan Pablo Montoya and Paul Menard.
That
left Kahne and Harvick to fight for the lead, which Kahne took
decisively on Lap 341, clearing Harvick to the
outside through Turns 3 and 4. Kahne gave up the top with a green-flag
pit stop on Lap 364, but regained it during the pit stop cycle before a
debris caution on Lap 384 set up 11-lap dash to the finish.
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