Harvick shows no sign of slowing down, wins eighth pole of 2014
Oct. 3, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KANSAS
CITY, Kan.—Kevin Harvick feels his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet
can beat every other car on the track, and on Friday he did—for the
eighth
time this season.
After
destroying his own track record in the second round of NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series knockout qualifying, Harvick sped around 1.5-mile Kansas
Speedway
in 27.235 seconds (197.621 mph) in the final session to win the pole
for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET on ESPN) and affirm his
status as the speed car in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
The
Coors Light pole award was Harvick’s third straight at Kansas, his
eighth of the season and the 14th of his career. Harvick’s money lap was
only
slightly slower than the 197.773 mph he ran in posting the top speed in
the second round, a lap that blew away the previous track record of
194.658 mph he set on May 9.
Non-Chaser
Brian Vickers qualified second at 196.307 mph for the first race in the
Contender Round of the Chase. Aric Almirola (196.150 mph), eliminated
from the Chase last week at Dover, claimed the third starting spot.
Chase
drivers occupied the next five spots on the grid: Joey Logano, Jeff
Gordon, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Though
Harvick now has eight poles, he has but two victories this year, and he
hasn’t won a Sprint Cup race since April at Darlington.
“For
whatever reason this (track) fits everything I have going on with my
driving style,” Harvick said. “In the end, it’s about having fast cars.
Obviously,
last year we had a fast car, and this year we’ve had a fast car as
well. I have to thank everyone on the Budweiser team for staying
focused, continuing to build faster race cars and doing everything we
need to do – that we can control.
“The
cars are fast, we’re qualifying well. The pit stops are good. The cars
are reliable. Everything is going good. We just need the good luck to go
with it. It’s like I keep telling these guys, everything will come full
circle, and hopefully it does it at the right time this year. ... With a
little bit of good luck, I just feel we can beat every car on the race
track on any given week at any style race
track, and that’s a really positive, good feeling to have.”
Gordon, last week’s winner at Dover, felt he got all he could out of his lap (196.050 mph) but was no match for Harvick.
“I’m happy with where we ended up,” Gordon said. “I feel like that’s about where we were. Kevin was in another league.”
In
sharp contrast to Harvick’s flawless qualifying performance, six-time
series champion Jimmie Johnson had more than his share of issues. Trying
to
improve on a lackluster first lap, Johnson spun during his second
attempt in the first round and will start 32nd on Sunday.
Other
Chase drivers qualified as follows: Kasey Kahne, 10th; Carl Edwards,
12th; Ryan Newman, 17th; Denny Hamlin, 25th; and Matt Kenseth, 27th.
No comments:
Post a Comment