Two-tire strategy propels Kevin Harvick to Nationwide win at Chicagoland
Sept. 13, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
JOLIET,
Ill.—Kevin Harvick got the track position he needed with a two-tire
call under caution late in Saturday's Jimmy John's Freaky Fast 300.
Then he and crew chief Ernie Cope got the victory they deserved for choosing the right strategy at the right time.
Harvick
beat Kyle Larson to the finish line by 2.108 seconds to win for the
fourth time this season and the 44th time in his career—a numerologist’s
delight for those who favor
Harvick’s No. 4 Chevrolet in Sunday’s MyAFibStory.com 400, the first
race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
Larson
held off third-place finisher Kyle Busch in the closing laps. Ryan
Blaney ran fourth, followed by Trevor Bayne. Series leader Chase Elliott
came home 10th and maintained
an 18-point lead in the standings over second-place Regan Smith, his JR
Motorsports teammate.
For
Harvick, the tipping point came on Lap 154, when Cope called for the
two-tire stop while race leader Busch took four fresh tires and got
mired in traffic.
“Well,
we didn’t have many laps on the tires, but that’s the call that won us
the race,” Harvick said. “Ernie won the race for us, and the car was
fast, but when we got out
front and the tires not having many laps, and the 54 (Busch) being
buried in the field—that’s what won us this race today.”
Busch,
who led every lap in a dominating win last week at Richmond, looked to
make Saturday’s race a runaway, too, but caution for Jeremy Clements’
blown engine on Lap 151
created an opportunity for divergent strategies and scrambled the
field.
By the
time the field restarted on Lap 160, Busch had led 141 laps, but after a
four-tire stop under the yellow, he restarted 16th in the No. 54 Toyota
and made up eight positions
before the engine in teammate Denny Hamlin’s No. 20 Camry erupted on
Lap 165.
Harvick,
who had changed right-side tires only under the caution on Lap 154,
made short work of four cars that stayed out under the yellow and surged
into the lead past Aric
Almirola and polesitter Brian Scott on Lap 161. But the caution for
Hamlin’s engine failure bunched the field for a restart on Lap 174, with
Busch taking the green flag from the eighth spot.
Harvick
drove away after the restart, while Busch advanced quickly to third in
the running order. But the No. 54 Toyota stalled behind Larson’s No. 42
Chevy, as Harvick cruised
to the comfortable win.
“I
fought my butt off the last run of the race,” Busch said. “It sucks not
being in Victory Lane where we should be. This car was fast—but can’t
get through traffic.”
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