Fourteen-Year Series Veteran Captures First Career Title
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Nov. 16, 2014)
– In a storybook finish to conclude a revamped Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup, Kevin Harvick won the season finale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway Sunday to claim his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
championship.
To win the title, Harvick needed to finish ahead of his fellow Championship 4 – and a win was the only way that
would’ve happened. Ryan Newman finished second, Denny Hamlin finished seventh and Joey Logano ended the night in 16th.
After finishing a career-best third in the standings in three of the last four seasons, the 14-year series mainstay
finally broke through for the premier series title in his first season with Stewart-Haas Racing.
A
veteran of all three of NASCAR’s national series, Harvick joins Bobby
Labonte and Brad Keselowski as the third
driver to win both NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide
Series crowns. Harvick, 38, is the 30th champion in the 66-year history
of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
The
No. 4 Budweiser/Jimmy John’s Chevrolet driver showed off his speed
throughout 2014, pacing the NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series in laps led and poles. Following a two-win regular season,
Harvick entered the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup as its No. 6 seed.
He adeptly navigated his way through the Chase’s Challenger and
Contender Rounds highlighted by his victory at Charlotte
Motor Speedway, but would still be searching for a championship without
his clutch performance in the Eliminator Round cutoff race at Phoenix
International Raceway.
Entering
the penultimate showdown at the one-mile tri-oval last among Chase
qualifiers, Harvick needed a win
at Phoenix to advance to the Championship 4. He responded to the
pressure by leading 264-of-312 laps and beating four-time series
champion Jeff Gordon on his way to Victory Lane. The Bakersfield,
California, native carried his momentum to Homestead, becoming
the first title-winner under NASCAR’s new playoff format.
Harvick’s
championship is the second for Stewart-Haas Racing. The racing outfit
jointly owned by three-time
premier series champion Tony Stewart and Gene Haas won its first NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series title behind the driving efforts of Stewart in 2011.
No. 4 team crew chief Rodney Childers, also in his first season with
SHR, won his first series crown as well.
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