NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards Banquet Notebook
Notebook Items:
·
NASCAR industry honors Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick at year-end gala
·
Notable quotes from the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards Banquet
NASCAR industry honors Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick at year-end gala
Dec. 5, 2014
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
LAS
VEGAS—As the culmination of a calculated risk that led to a NASCAR
Sprint Cup Series championship, the NASCAR industry joined together
Friday night at the Wynn to honor
2014 titleholder Kevin Harvick, who claimed stock car racing’s most
coveted prize in his first season with Stewart-Haas Racing.
In his
speech at the Sprint Cup Awards Banquet, Harvick revealed just how much
of a risk he took in changing teams after the 2013 season.
“After
13 seasons at Richard Childress Racing, I made the move to Stewart-Haas
Racing,” said Harvick, who joined forces with long-time friend and SHR
co-owner Tony Stewart
this year. “And I have to admit, I was scared to death. I tried to play
it cool, but it was a pivotal moment in my career.
“I was
venturing outside my comfort zone, and I had to make it work. Tony, I
consider you to be one of my best friends. You promised me if I came to
Stewart-Haas Racing, we
would win a championship, and we did just that. You are a man of your
word.”
In the
first year of a new elimination format for the Chase for the NASCAR
Sprint Cup, Harvick claimed the title with victories in the final two
races. His win at Phoenix International
Raceway propelled him into the Championship Round of the Chase at
Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he secured the title by triumphing in
the season finale.
All
told, Harvick won five races, three in the Chase, won a career-best
eight poles and led a series-best 2,137 laps. From day one at SHR, he
showed tremendous speed.
“The
first time I was able to get in my No. 4 Budweiser/Jimmy John’s
Chevrolet, we were fast,” Harvick said. “It didn’t matter if it was an
open test at Charlotte last December.
A practice, a qualifying session or a race—we wanted to be at the top
of the board.”
Nor was Harvick hesitant in offering praise to the architect of his race team, crew chief Rodney Childers.
“He
built new race cars and assembled a whole new group of guys between the
end of the 2013 season right until we loaded up for the Daytona 500,”
Harvick said. “Under his direction,
we accomplished a lot and became great friends in the process.
“From
the lead-up to the Daytona 500 until the checkered flag dropped at
Homestead, Rodney asked for a lot from our people on this race team.
Rodney, I can’t say thank you
enough for all that you've done.”
In
accepting the championship owner’s award, SHR co-owner Gene Haas pointed
out that both titles won by the organization since he partnered with
Stewart in 2009 required drivers
Stewart (2011) and Harvick to win the final race of the season at
Homestead.
And in fact, Harvick finished one position and a mere half-second ahead of series runner-up Ryan Newman in the season finale.
“We were one point away from our best finish of the season at Homestead,” Newman said after leaving the stage.
The
overwhelming consensus among the 16 drivers who appeared during the
ceremony was that the new Chase format had transformed the sport.
“Even
though we didn't make it to Homestead to battle for the championship, I
truly believe NASCAR got it right this year with the new knockout format
for the Sprint Cup,”
said Jeff Gordon, who won four times in 2014 but was eliminated from
the Chase at Phoenix by a single point.
“I
cannot begin to describe the pressure and the intensity we faced week
after week, race after race—and this year crowned a deserving champion.”
For the
12th straight year, Dale Earnhardt Jr. was named the NMPA Sprint Most
Popular Driver. Earnhardt, who finished eighth in the final standings,
began posting on Twitter
this year after his victory in the 2014 Daytona 500 and talked about
how gratifying it was to see his timeline explode with tweets from fans
who said they had voted for him as Most Popular Driver.
One of
the most touching moments of the evening was the awarding of the Betty
Jane France Humanitarian Award to Daniel Noltemeyer, a founder of the
Best Buddies of Kentucky,
an organization dedicated to facilitating the social inclusion of those
with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD).
Noltemeyer,
who has Down syndrome, has become an enthusiastic ambassador for Best
Buddies International. One of four national finalists, Noltemeyer
received a $100,000 grant
for his charity as the winner of the award, which was conferred for the
fourth year.
NOTABLE QUOTES
“If I
look like a wreck, it’s not because I have a hangover. It’s because I
wrestled a two-year-old down the red carpet and up here on stage.” –
Kevin Harvick, who brought
son Keelan with him to the head table.
“I’d
love to have an opportunity to tie the greats in Richard Petty and Dale
Earnhardt Sr.” – Jimmie Johnson. The six-time champion finished 11th in
the final standings, his
worst position since joining the Sprint Cup Series full-time in 2002.
“I
stand up here as an honorary member of the Hendrick Drivers’ Club.” –
former Hendrick driver Kyle Busch, now with Joe Gibbs Racing, standing
with Jimmie Johnson, Kasey
Kahne and Dale Earnhardt Jr., all of whom were eliminated from the
Chase in the Contender Round.
“I’m
not saying Joey Logano’s pit crew is slow, but tomorrow they’re
celebrating Thanksgiving.” – Banquet host Jay Mohr in a reference to the
mistake on pit road that cost
Logano a shot at the title.
No comments:
Post a Comment