Kevin Harvick advances to season finale with dominating win at Phoenix
Nov. 9, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
AVONDALE,
Ariz.— A victory at Phoenix—and a dominating one at that—was exactly
what Kevin Harvick needed to keep his hopes for a NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series championship alive.
But a
second-place finish in Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 did
Jeff Gordon no good, thanks to a final-lap banzai run by Ryan Newman,
who passed rookie Kyle Parson
for the 11th position on the final lap to eliminate Gordon from the
Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup by a single point.
Polesitter
Denny Hamlin and Joey Logano, who shared the Chase lead entering the
Eliminator Round’s final event, both recovered from bizarre errors on
pit road to join Harvick
and Newman in next Sunday’s championship race at Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
The driver who finishes highest among those four will claim the 2015 series title.
“Wow, I
guess that’s what it feels like to hit a walk-off in extra innings
there,” said Harvick, who completed the season sweep at Phoenix with his
fourth victory in the last
five races there. “I could tell that we were probably going to have to
win, because everybody was running up in the front of the pack that we
were racing against. That was our goal coming in here and that’s really
the goal every time you come to Phoenix.
“This
place has just been phenomenal for me personally and for this team this
year. To do that in front of all your almost hometown fans (Harvick is
from Bakersfield, Calif.)
and all these people who have been rooting for me since the mid-‘90s is
pretty unbelievable. Man, I think this says a lot about our team. I
think we have been through a lot this year. They put our backs against
the wall. We put it in Victory Lane and get to
go on.”
As
such, Harvick goes from desperation mode—needing a victory at Phoenix to
advance to the season finale—to the role of favorite at Homestead,
given the speed his cars have
shown all season long.
Asked
to handicap the championship race, Gordon was emphatic, and for good
reason. He chased Harvick to the finish line and fell 1.636 seconds
behind in the final 12-lap run.
“I like
Harvick,” Gordon asserted. “Yeah, I think Harvick looks really good…
the guy has led the most laps all year long, guys. It's not me that's
saying this. I do think that
Denny won that race (at Homestead) last year, so he can be really,
really strong there.
“But
Kevin looked good there in the test (in late October), and, man, they've
just been so strong lately, and it seems like they've gotten some of
the bugs worked out in their
team that they had early in the year. And I think if they do that next
week, they're going to be really tough to beat like they were today.”
In
winning for the fourth time this season and the 27th time in his career,
Harvick led 264 of 312 laps, 40 more circuits than he led in a
dominating win at the one-mile track
on Mar. 2.
In
addition to Gordon, third-place finisher Matt Kenseth, fourth-place Brad
Keselowski and 15th place Carl Edwards failed to advance to the final
race with their title eligibility
intact. Kenseth fell three points short of Newman in the final tally.
Conversely, Hamlin and Logano overcame potential Chase-ending mistakes to claim their positions in the final race.
On
Hamlin’s first pit stop, under caution on Lap 30, the rear tire
changer’s air gun inadvertently knocked the valve stem off and flattened
the tire. Hamlin returned to the
pits and restarted 36th. Twice during the race, he fell a lap down to
Harvick but took advantage of two free passes as the highest-scored
lapped car and ultimately finished fifth.
The
crew gained three positions for Hamlin on his final stop, from 11th to
eighth, even though five drivers stayed out on older tires. Hamlin
parlayed his improved track position
into a top five.
Logano
was penalized when he dragged a fuel can that had not disengaged from
the coupler out of his pit stall under caution on Lap 123. Like Hamlin,
Logano lost a lap to Harvick
but took advantage of a “lucky dog” before a restart on Lap 206 and
rallied to finish sixth.
Those comebacks gave Logano and Hamlin more than enough margin to qualify for the championship race.
“I
think Denny and I had the exact same day out there,” Logano observed.
“Both of us had a little issue on pit road and got stuck back there,
went down a lap, (and) we recovered
and we finished fifth and sixth. We really kept our cool throughout the
day. I think that was important. We were able to get the lucky dog,
then had some damage avoiding the 18's (Kyle Busch’s) crash, was able to
fix that and recover again to get ourselves
back in.
“Definitely
a drama filled day for sure, not what we wanted. We were hoping for
just a normal, uneventful day to just get a nice top 10 is all we
needed—which we ended up doing,
but it was definitely eventful along the way. Proud of my team, proud
of everyone to get us to this point, and we'll have some fun next week,
go for a championship.”
Amidst
all the uncertainty, one thing is guaranteed at Homestead: with Harvick,
Hamlin, Logano and Newman competing for the title, the NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series will have a
first-time champion.
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