Kevin Harvick continues hot streak with pole run at Phoenix
Mar. 13, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz.—The most surprising thing about Kevin Harvick’s pole at Phoenix
International Raceway was that it was his first one.
Riding
a tidal wave that carried him to his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
title last year and continued with two runner-up finishes and a victory
in the first three races of the current season, Harvick toured the
one-mile track in the Sonoran Desert in 25.577 seconds (140.751 mph)
during the final round of Friday’s knockout qualifying to win his first
Coors Light Pole Award of the season and the 15th of his career.
“Every
week’s just a new adventure,” said Harvick after scratching yet another
item from his career bucket list. “This particular team in (crew chief)
Rodney (Childers) and everybody on the team, even if we’re off, they
make great adjustments and just communicate and do the things we have to
do to make the car better.
“So,
we don’t pay a lot of attention to the scoreboard. We just try to make
our cars drive as good as we can, and in the end, that’s working out for
us right now.”
Stewart-Haas
Racing teammate Kurt Busch, who qualified eighth in his first event
back from a three-race suspension, summed up his view of Harvick’s
recent success.
“Kevin
Harvick is in one of the strongest sequences that I’ve ever seen in
this sport,” said the 2004 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion.
Harvick
will lead the field to green in Sunday’s CampingWorld.com 500 (3:30
p.m. ET on FOX) with second-place qualifier Joey Logano (140.543 mph)
beside him. For Logano, it’s a familiar spot; the driver of the No. 22
Ford also started on the outside of the first row in the first Phoenix
race last year.
Logano described his car during time trials as “just a little bit on the snug side.”
“I
want to be first - second’s just the first loser,” said the 2015
Daytona 500 winner. “But we definitely picked up a lot of speed when we
went to qualifying trim.”
Logano
hopes his team can translate some of that speed into race trim. They’ll
have to do so to beat Harvick, who has won the last three races at PIR
and four of the last five.
“He’s
human like anyone else,” Logano said. “He’s beatable, believe me. We
just have to figure out the way to do it. I feel plenty confident in my
team that we can do it. We have to work hard and try to figure it out.
He knows something running here – he just knows what he needs in the
race car, whether he’s figuring that out in practice or it is a setup
thing.
“I
doubt it is a setup thing, though, because he has been fast in both
cars he has driven here. I think it is something he looks for and a feel
that he’s able to maintain his tires throughout a long run. I think
that’s what we all strive for, to figure that part out. We have
identified that is where he beats us, we have to fix it. Half the battle
is figuring out where you are getting beat. We are making strides and I
feel like we’re getting closer.”
Jamie
McMurray qualified third at 140.422 mph, followed by Matt Kenseth
(140.072 mph) and Ryan Newman (139.833 mph). Dale Earnhardt Jr. will
start 16th and Danica Patrick 23rd.
Tanner Berryhill and Travis Kvapil failed to make the 43-car field.
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