Kevin Harvick dominates Dover to preserve Sprint Cup title hopes
Oct. 4, 2015
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
DOVER, Del.—By Jove, he’s done it again!
Forced
to win at Dover International Speedway to keep his NASCAR Sprint Cup
Series championship hopes alive Sunday, Kevin Harvick did just that,
dominating Sunday’s AAA 400
to stave off elimination from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
In
a virtual carbon copy of last year’s Chase race at Phoenix, where the
2014 premier series champion had to win to advance to the Championship
Round at Homestead-Miami Speedway,
Harvick led 355 of 400 laps (a career best at any track) in winning for
the third time this year and the 31st time in his career.
“I
think we’re better than we were last year, just because of the
experiences and things that we’ve had,” Harvick said after the race. “I
think when we look at everything that’s
gone on over the last couple of years, it’s just been a lot of fun.
“So,
it’s just that never-quit attitude. That’s what (team co-owner) Tony
Stewart said when we went to Homestead last year. He said, ‘Whatever you
do, do not quit until they
throw that checkered flag.’”
Harvick won the race and secured his first Sprint Cup title by a half-second over Ryan Newman.
But
there was one major difference between last year’s must-win race and
the one on Sunday. Phoenix is Harvick’s best track. At Dover, on the
other hand, he had never won before
and had posted just four top-five finishes in 29 previous starts.
As
fast as Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet was, however,
none of the statistics mattered. After a restart with 24 laps left, he
pulled away to a 2.639-second
victory over Kyle Busch, who likewise secured a berth in the 12-driver
Contender Round with his second-place run.
Nor
did the stats help Jimmie Johnson, whose shocking ouster from the
playoffs took place at the Monster Mile where he holds a record 10
victories. The six-time series champion
took his No. 48 Chevrolet to the garage on Lap 106 after a rear axle
seal failed.
Johnson
lost 36 laps while his team replaced the rear end housing and was
credited with a 41st-place finish, leaving him 12 points shy of the
Chase cutoff, which came down
to a tiebreaker for the 12th and final spot between third-place
finisher Dale Earnhardt Jr. and fourth-place Jamie McMurray.
Joining
Johnson and McMurray on the Chase sidelines were Paul Menard (25th
Sunday) and Clint Bowyer, who like Harvick faced a win-or-bust scenario
at the one-mile concrete
track.
Narrowed
to 12, the field for the Contender Round now includes Challenger Round
winners Matt Kenseth (Chicago), Denny Hamlin (New Hampshire) and
Harvick, as well as Carl Edwards,
Martin Truex Jr., Kurt Busch, Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch,
Newman and Earnhardt.
But
on Sunday, Harvick showed his hand as the speed horse in the Chase,
just as he was last year. Harvick’s car was fast last week at New
Hampshire, but he ran out of fuel
while leading with three laps left to create the must-win scenario at
Dover.
“Anytime
you can go through moments like this and gain some momentum and prove
to yourself that you can do things like this, there’s no way you can’t
be stronger,” Harvick
said. “I’m just so proud of those guys and so proud of our fans and
everybody for all their support all week. There it is—stay the course.”
Kyle Busch conceded Harvick’s victory was bad news for everyone else still in the Chase.
“The
way he ran today—hell, yeah,” Busch said. “That was a guy that we
wanted to knock out. That's a guy that can win all these races, and you
don't want to have to compete
against a guy like that.
“But
that's why they're as good as they are, and they were last year's
champion, so they're going to have an opportunity to continue on. We'll
see what happens. There's still
two more rounds to figure out who's going to make it to Homestead.”
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