Kevin Harvick wins thrilling Richmond race in overtime
Apr. 27, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
RICHMOND,
Va.—Kevin Harvick sped away on fresh tires to win Sunday night’s Toyota
Owners 400 in a green-white-checkered-flag finish at Richmond
International Raceway, leaving
a grup of drivers with widely divergent emotions in his wake.
Harvick
beat Clint Bowyer to the finish line by .343 seconds to win his first
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of the season, his second at Richmond and
the 20th of his career.
Joey
Logano ran third, Juan Pablo Montoya came home fourth after leading
until the final caution, and Jeff Burton finished fifth after staying
out on old tires for the final
two-lap run that took the event six laps beyond its posted distance.
Harvick
came to pit road for tires on Lap 396, after Brian Vickers’ slapped the
Turn 3 wall to cause the 11th caution of the race. Harvick’s No. 29
Richard Childress racing
Chevrolet made short work of three drivers who had stayed out after the
race restarted on lap 405.
Though
he lost the chance to break a 94-race drought since his Cup victory at
Watkins Glen in August 2010, Montoya was elated just to get a top-five
finish after struggling
mightily for more than a year.
Not so
elated were Kurt Busch and Tony Stewart, who repeatedly swapped shots
with their Chevys on the cool-down lap. Stewart was fifth on the final
restart but dropped to 18th
at the finish after Busch rubbed him out of the racing groove during a
two-lap free-for-all that saw prolific contact throughout the field.
Harvick, however was all smiles when he climbed out of his car in Victory Lane.
“My car
launched, and I was able to drive it in the first corner and hope for
the best down there,” said Harvick, who surged into the lead through
Turns 3 and 4 after establishing
his position in the first corner on the final restart. “I figured four,
eight, 12...how many ever tires that were on the outside of me would be
better than none. It all worked out, and here we are."
The
decision to come to pit road for tires under the final caution was a
no-brainer, as Harvick and crew chief Gil Martin saw it.
“When
the tires fall off almost two seconds, you've got to come in and get
tires,” he said. “There's not very many guys that stayed out. It all
worked out tonight. We've been
on the other side of it this year, so to be in Victory Lane is great."
Bowyer led 113 laps but didn’t have a car that could stay with Harvick at the end.
“We had
a good car—we just didn’t have a great car,” Bowyer said. “It seemed
like we were just too tight on the throttle. It would quite turn and
come up off (the corner).
It really got wild there at the end. I was just lucky enough to be on
the bottom (for the final restart).
“They
started making holes up there in front of me, and the seas parted, and I
just followed suit behind Harvick. It was a good run.”
What
remained a two-man battle for more than half the race evolved into an
unpredictable nexus of varying strategy and unexpected attrition.
When
Kyle Busch passed Matt Kenseth for the top spot on Lap 254, that was the
first time all evening that a driver other than Kenseth or Bowyer had
led a lap. Busch made it
stick, leading 39 straight laps under green until Travis Kvapil smacked
the wall on Lap 292 to cause the sixth caution of the night.
But
brother Kurt Busch won the race off pit road under the yellow and led
the field to a restart on Lap 299. Busch held the point during an
intense battle against Carl Edwards
until NASCAR called the seventh caution on Lap 308 when Kvapil’s car
dropped fluid on the track.
Kurt
Busch, Carl Edwards, Kenseth and Ryan Newman stayed out under the yellow
on 16-lap-old tires. Jimmie Johnson paced the rest of the lead-lap cars
to pit road and took two
tires. Six laps after a restart on Lap 321, the entire tenor of the
race changed dramatically.
After
contact with Martin Truex Jr.’s Toyota on the restart, Johnson faded on
the restart. Running to the inside of Johnson on entering Turn 1 on Lap
327, Tony Stewart slid
sideways into Johnson’s Chevrolet. As Johnson slid to the inside of the
track in Turn 2, Kyle Busch’s Toyota nosed into him.
That
was just the start of frenetic action at the .75-mile high-speed short
track. Montoya led a pack of six cars who stayed out under the caution
to a restart on Lap 334,
but on Lap 338, a brutal wreck off Turn 2 involving Mark Martin, Kasey
Kahne and Brian Vickers slowed the field again.
One lap
after a restart on Lap 344, Truex spun in Turn 3 while battling Kurt
Busch in close quarters for the second position. Montoya retained the
lead until Brian Vickers’
wreck on Lap 395 set up the overtime.
Notes:
Despite Johnson’s troubles, the five-time champion gained ground on his
closest pursuers
in the standings with a 12th-place finish at RIR. He now leads
second-place Carl Edwards (sixth Saturday) by 43 points and Kahne and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (10th at Richmond) by 46… Reigning Cup champion Brad
Keselowski finished 33rd on the bottom end of a roller-coaster
day that saw him recover from a scrape with the turn 2 wall only to
drop a cylinder in the late going.
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