Saturday New Hampshire Notebook
Notebook Items:
- Kevin Harvick’s predicament isn’t as dire as it was last year at Phoenix
- Johnson-Harvick feud still not settled
- Kennedy another kind of Iron Man
- Short Strokes
Sept. 26, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
Kevin Harvick’s predicament isn’t as dire as it was last year at Phoenix
LOUDON,
N.H. – In the final race of the Eliminator Round of the Chase for the
NASCAR Sprint Cup last November at Phoenix, Kevin Harvick had no choice.
A victory at his most
productive track was the only way he could remain in the running for a
series championship.
Harvick won at PIR, and a week later he secured his first title with another victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
After
a 42nd-place finish at Chicagoland Speedway in this year’s Chase
opener, Harvick’s presence in NASCAR’s playoff again is in serious
jeopardy. This time, however, Harvick
may be able to advance from the Contender to the Challenger Round
without winning one of the next two races, provided some of the drivers
he’s pursuing also have serious issues at New Hampshire or Dover.
“I
still think there are a few different ways that you make it into the
next round,” Harvick said on Friday afternoon, after putting his No. 4
Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet
on the outside of the front row for Sunday’s Sylvania 300 at New
Hampshire (2 p.m. ET on NBCSN). “In this situation last year, when we
were in Phoenix, a second-place finish still wouldn’t have gotten us
into where we needed to be to move on in the Chase without
a win.
“So,
I think you still have to go out with the mentality of trying to win a
race. I think everybody around us knows that. I think they are very
aware of the aggressive nature
that we need to go after that win.”
In
other words, if Harvick has a shot at a checkered flag on Sunday,
discretion might be the better part of valor for drivers who might be in
his way.
JOHNSON-HARVICK FEUD STILL NOT SETTLED
Kevin
Harvick’s 42nd-place finish at Chicagoland was directly attributable to
side-to-side contact between his No. 4 Chevy and Jimmie Johnson’s No.
48.
The
two cars rubbed moments after a restart, with Harvick pinning Johnson’s
Chevy down on the apron and Johnson forcing his way back onto the track
after going three-wide to
the inside.
Trying
to sort out the incident, Johnson approached Harvick in the motor coach
lot after the race and got a blow to the chest for his efforts.
“I
wasn’t surprised that he was that upset,” Johnson said on Friday, after
qualifying fifth for Sunday’s race. “Believe me, I knew good and well
going over there that he wasn’t
going to be in the best mood.
“It
was just important to me to try and make contact with him and try to
talk to him, based on experiences that I’ve had in the position that it
has put me in. That’s what
led me to going over there.”
Johnson
and Harvick haven’t spoken since, and the six-time champion will take
the green flag on Sunday not knowing what Harvick’s disposition on the
track might be.
“I
truthfully don’t know what to expect,” Johnson said. “I certainly know
what I hope for, but there is no telling what will end up taking place. I
think that’s the exciting
part about this Chase and the way you can advance, the way you can win
to carry on and the intensity that it brings.
“So,
it’s definitely going to be an exciting Chase for everyone, and right
now everybody is focused on us. But who is to know after this weekend
what conflict on track is going
to be the next story?”
ANOTHER KIND OF IRON MAN
When
Jeff Gordon takes the green flag for Sunday’s Sylvania 300 at New
Hampshire Motor Speedway, he’ll start his 789th consecutive race and
establish a new Iron man record
for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
On
the same day, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver Ben Kennedy will
be an Iron Man of a different sort, when he competes in an IRONMAN 70.3
event in Augusta, Georgia.
Kennedy and his mother Lesa France Kennedy, CEO of International
Speedway Corporation and a member of NASCAR’s board of directors, also
is participating in the race.
The
IRONMAN 70.3 starts with a 1.2-mile swim in the Savannah River,
continues with a 56-mile bike ride through Georgia and South Carolina
and concludes with a 13.1-mile run
in downtown Augusta. The IRONMAN 70.3, so named for its 70.3-mile total
distance, is half the length of a full IRONMAN triathlon.
Ben
Kennedy has been training for the event for five months, interspersing
distance and conditioning work with his Truck Series duties in the No.
11 Local Motors Toyota.
SHORT STROKES
Qualifying
trim? Race trim? It didn’t matter. Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick set
the fastest two laps in Saturday’s first Sprint Cup practice session,
just as they had, in
the same order, during Friday’s time trials. ... Harvick led the way in
Happy Hour, followed by Kyle Busch and Brad Keselowski. ... Chase
drivers grabbed the top nine positions on the speed chart during
Saturday’s first practice session. Austin Dillon (10th)
was the fastest non-Chaser. ... Dillon (eighth) and Kasey Kahne (sixth)
were the only non-Chase drivers to crack the top 10 in final practice.
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