Late Pass Gives Kevin Harvick Nationwide Win At Kentucky
June 27, 2014
(EDITORS: Updated with quotes and results)
Chris Knight
NASCAR Wire Service
A
late-race pass on Kyle Busch on the final restart of the night awarded
Kevin Harvick of JR Motorsports the win Friday night at Kentucky
Speedway in the running of the John
R. Elliott HERO Campaign 300 presented by Drive Sober or Get Pulled
Over.
Harvick,
though should thank Brad Keselowski for the trophy after Keselowski
foiled late in the race with a speeding penalty on Lap 148, which put
him behind and opened the
door for a classic shoot-out between two former Nationwide Series
champions.
“All in
all, it was a very strange night,” said Harvick, who noted that they
weren’t racing tonight three weeks ago. “In the beginning our car wasn’t
that bad, we needed some
adjustments, had some things happen on some pit stops, so we pitted and
put four tires on and everything kinda of fell our way. We were able to
get a little bit of a tire advantage there at the end and Ernie (Cope,
crew chief) made a really good adjustment
to the race car that allowed us to really take off and run the best we
had all night.”
Winning
his third pole of the season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series just an
hour before race time, Brad Keselowski led the 40-car starting field to
the green flag and quickly
walked away from outside pole sitter Kyle Busch.
While
the top-10 shuffled near the rear of the deck, Keselowski continued to
stretch his lead by Lap 20 and 10 laps later, the Team Penske driver
extended his lead to 2.6 seconds.
13 laps
later the caution flag fell for the first time of the night for debris
on the backstretch. Under the yellow, the lead pack elected to come to
pit road for tires, fuel
and adjustments. Quick work by Richard Childress Racing surged Paul
Menard from third to first, leading Keselowski, Matt Kenseth and Kevin
Harvick off pit road. Kyle Busch entered second, but lost several
positions after overshooting his pit stall.
Menard
was able to hold the lead on the initial restart, but Keselowski
throttled forward a lap later and reassumed control on Lap 48.
Twelve
laps later, Keselowski had grown his lead to 1.7 seconds over Menard. He
remained in control until Lap 83 when the caution flew for debris in
Turn 4. Under the yellow,
Shane Sieg turned Jeremy Clements in Turn 1, emotions rolling over --
stemming from some alleged light contact exiting Turn 4 the lap before.
Meanwhile,
the leaders pitted with teams utilizing varying strategies. A two-tire
stop for Elliott Sadler and Regan Smith moved them ahead of Keselowski,
Road America winner
Brendan Gaughan and Kyle Busch as they came off pit road.
Sadler
would be overtaken by Smith on the restart, but his time at the front
was short-lived as he would prove to be no match for a thundering
Keselowski, who reclaimed first
on Lap 90.
The
Rochester Hills, Michigan native would continue to lead through the
halfway point, until Matt Kenseth crashed on Lap 102 bringing out the
event’s third caution. A majority
of the leaders decided to stay out under the yellow, knowing that they
could not make it to the finish.
On the
restart, Keselowski, the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion
continued his race dominance and by Lap 135 was able to maneuver a
1.9-second gap.
Green
flag pit stop began on Lap 138 with Keselowski bringing his No. 22
Discount Tire Ford Mustang to pit road on Lap 148, but after a solid
stop, the Team Penske pilot would
be tagged with a speeding ticket and have to serve a pass-thru penalty.
Meanwhile,
Kevin Harvick took the lead when Keselowski pitted on Lap 149 with a
3.1 margin over Gaughan, until the caution waived on Lap 156 for debris.
Needing
to make a pit stop, the leaders came to pit road with Harvick leading
the parade off pit road, though not as the leader as Kyle Busch, Paul
Menard and Ryan Blaney remained
on the racetrack, holding the top-three spots. Harvick found himself
fourth for the impending restart.
With 39
Laps to go, Busch led the Nationwide train back to the green flag and
despite some controlled chaos racing behind, Busch held a steady lead
ahead of Harvick, but Keselowski,
who took a waive-around under the prior yellow flag had roared from
17th to ninth in just five green flag laps and set his sights forward.
Keselowski
needed a caution to close the gap and that came on Lap 168 when Ryan
Reed and Regan Smith made contact on the backstretch, which sent Smith’s
No. 7 into the wall.
When
racing resumed, Harvick attempted to take the lead from Busch, with
Keselowski lurking from behind in fifth, but Dakoda Armstrong wrecked on
the backstretch on Lap 176,
it stacked the field back together.
With 21
laps to go, racing resumed with intense side-by-side racing between
Busch and Harvick, with Menard, Gaughan and Keselowski stalking from
behind. With 16 Laps to go,
Busch cleared Harvick and built a small cushion between him.
A late
race caution on Lap 192 for an incident involving Trevor Bayne and Chase
Elliott bunched the field back together for a five-lap shootout.
On the
restart, Harvick powered using the low-line to pass Busch for the lead,
with Keselowski attacking his prey and moving into second and setting
his sights on the No. 5
Chevrolet of Harvick.
Keselowski
though would run out of time and Harvick soared to his second NASCAR
Nationwide Series win of the season. It was the fifth win of the year
for JR Motorsports (Chase
Elliott, 2, Kevin Harvick, 2 and Regan Smith, 1).
JR Motorsports co-owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. spoke about how proud he was of his Mooresville, North Carolina-based team.
“Kevin
(Harvick) just had enough opportunity on the restart,” Earnhardt said.
“I was real surprised it worked out. We’re having a lot of fun winning
some races and it’s definitely
going to benefit our company in the long run and I can’t thank Kevin
enough for coming to be a part of it.”
Keselowski
took responsibility for the slip in the race, but was equally proud of
the recovery. “We had a great Discount Tire Ford and I definitely put us
behind and was just
one spot away from catching back up,” offered Keselowski post-race.
“You still have to give credit to Kevin at the end there. He drove by
and took the lead, so he was really good.”
As for
Busch, who saw his second win of the weekend evaporate in the waning
laps said he shouldn’t be disappointed with third, but he was.
“We
didn’t have the car to beat so shouldn’t be upset with a third, but
there at the end we had the opportunity to win the race and through the
middle part of the race I passed
the 5 (Kevin Harvick) car and just didn’t have enough on the final
restarts unfortunately. Just not enough there to hold Kevin (Harvick)
off. He just flat drove right by me on the restart.”
Kyle
Busch finished third with Paul Menard fourth and Team Penske Racing
teammate Ryan Blaney in fifth. Richard Childress Racing claimed sixth
through eight with Gaughan, Ty
Dillon and Brian Scott with Larson and new points leader Elliott Sadler
comprising the top-10.
Elliott
Sadler grabbed the NASCAR Nationwide Series points lead exiting
Kentucky. He has a slim four point gap over Chase Elliott. Regan Smith
is third (-8), Ty Dillon fourth
(-29) and Brian Scott fifth (-47).
Next up
for the NASCAR Nationwide Series is their final restrictor plate race
of the season from Daytona (Fla.) Speedway on Independence Day (July 4)
next Friday night for
the running of the Subway Firecracker 250.
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