Another dominating run puts Kevin Harvick in XFINITY Victory Lane at Fontana
March 21, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
FONTANA, Calif.—It’s about time to start reserving a spot on the NASCAR podium for Kevin Harvick.
With
a dominating victory in Saturday’s Drive4Clots.com 300 NASCAR XFINITY
Series race, Harvick won his second race of the season, his first at
Auto Club Speedway and the 46th of his career, third-most all-time.
Incredibly,
Harvick scored his 28th consecutive top 10 in the XFINITY Series,
dating to 2013. With two victories and two seconds in the NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series this year to go with two wins and a third in the XFINITY
Series, Harvick has recorded seven podium finishes in seven starts in
both series combined.
“I’m just a lucky guy to be piloting really fast cars,” Harvick said in Victory Lane. “We’ve just got to keep riding the wave.”
It
doesn’t seem to matter whether Harvick is driving his No. 4 Sprint Cup
car for Stewart-Haas Racing or the No. 88 Chevrolet he drove to victory
for JR Motorsports on Saturday. Once he got to the front from his
sixth-place starting position (taking the lead for the first time after a
restart on Lap 38), he stayed there, leading 100 of the 150 laps and
giving up the top spot only during cycles of green-flag pit stops.
JR
Motorsports car owner Dale Earnhardt Jr., who competes against Harvick
at NASCAR’s highest level, hasn’t been surprised by Harvick’s dominance
in both series this year.
“They’ve
got something figured out,” Earnhardt said. “Kevin’s an amazing driver.
He’s really focused, and his work outside the car helps him inside the
car and helps his team… It don’t last forever, so you’ve got to enjoy it
while it’s happening.
“Sooner
or later, what they know will be common knowledge, and somebody will be
in search of the next advantage — and find it. But they’ve got it right
now.”
Harvick
finished 3.317 seconds — roughly three football fields — ahead of
runner-up Brendan Gaughan, who moved from eighth to second after the
final restart of the race on Lap 122.
There
were three cautions in the race. Trailing Harvick by more than three
seconds in the closing laps, Gaughan was praying for a fourth.
“I
love the fact that I’m pissed off at being second,” Gaughan said. “I
love my restarts. My restart got us there… Any time you finish second to
Kevin Harvick, come on, but — I don’t care if we would have finished
fifth — I would have loved a shot at it. I know we’re pretty good on
restarts.
“I would have loved one shot at a restart, just to see if I still had something for him.”
But
the caution never came, and Gaughan had to settle for second.
Polesitter Erik Jones ran third, followed by defending series champion
Chase Elliott and Chris Buescher.
Ty Dillon finished 14th and retained the series lead by five points over Buescher, with Elliott 15 points back in third.
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