Saturday Texas Notebook
Notebook Item:
- Kevin Harvick isn’t waiting for Phoenix to correct Chase deficit
- DiBenedetto's car honors fallen Dallas police officers
- Short Strokes
November 5, 2016
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
KEVIN HARVICK ISN'T WAITING FOR PHOENIX TO CORRECT CHASE DEFICIT
FORT WORTH, Tex. – Kevin Harvick is at his best when he makes life difficult for himself.
A
lackluster 20th-place finish last Sunday at Martinsville left the 2014
NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion sixth in the Chase standings, 16
points out of the final transfer position
currently held by Kyle Busch.
Then
again, Harvick always has Phoenix, where he has won five of the last
six races and six of the last eight. But Phoenix, the final track in the
Chase’s Round of 8, is two
weeks away, and Harvick seems ready to make his move toward the
Championship 4 in Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway (2 p.m.
ET on NBC).
Harvick,
nicknamed “The Closer” for his ability to excel under challenging
circumstances, qualified third for Sunday’s race. And after three rounds
of knockout time trials, Harvick
felt he left something on the track, from a speed standpoint.
“I
think the car was better than the decisions that the driver made,”
Harvick said of his lap in the final round. “I went into Turn 1, and I
didn’t get it all the way to the
bottom and pointed in the right direction before the bump. I got greedy
and tried to leave the throttle down, and then it hit the bump and then
it got further out of the groove, so I had to wait longer.
“(But)
that’s a lot better than the spring (when Harvick qualified 22nd).
We’ve worked hard on this particular race. ... I feel like we’re in a
good spot. The car’s got good
speed. If I could go back and do it again, I would do a lot better.”
Harvick
hasn’t won a Sprint Cup race at Texas yet, but don’t be surprised to
find him in Victory Lane on Sunday. That sort of reaction to pressure
has become routine for the
No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team, which has advanced to the Championship 4
finale in each of the first two years of the Chase’s elimination
format.
DIBENEDETTO’S CAR HONORS FALLEN DALLAS POLICE OFFICERS
No, Matt DiBenedetto’s No. 83 BK Racing Toyota isn’t about to pull you over.
But
the police-oriented paint scheme is no accident. DiBenedetto’s “Back
the Blue” Toyota honors the Dallas Police Officers who lost their lives
in a July 7 attack by a lone
gunman and simultaneously embodies a fund-raising effort through the
Assist the Officer Foundation.
Accomplished
through the cooperation of sponsor ZAK Products, the official fuel
additive of NASCAR, the paint scheme honors not only the officers slain
on July 7 but all Dallas
Police fallen officers since the formation of the department in 1881.
“It’s
really neat to be able to honor the Dallas Police Department,”
DiBenedetto said. “I don’t feel they get the respect they deserve
sometimes, and it’s that all of us at BK
can push for this effort to honor them. Vic Keller is the founder of
ZAK Products, and he’s a lifetime Dallas citizen, so it hits close to
home for him as well.
“(The
response) has been incredible. So many people just thanking us. We
don’t deserve any of the credit for it. We just felt it was something
cool we could do as a NASCAR community
and do together to honor them. But the response from the fans, and even
other teams, has been really neat around here. People are really
passionate about it.”
SHORT STROKES
Ford
drivers paced both NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice sessions on
Saturday, with Ryan Blaney leading the morning session with a lap at
188.515 mph and Brad Keselowski topping
the speed chart at 190.685 mph in Happy Hour. ... Chase driver Denny
Hamlin, along with Roush Fenway Racing’s Greg Biffle and Trevor Bayne,
are paying the price for incurring fourth warnings during the at-track
inspection process. Those three drivers lost
their choice of pit stalls for Sunday’s race. Hamlin got pit stall No.
7, behind the No. 88 Chevrolet of Alex Bowman and in front of the No. 43
Ford of Aric Almirola.
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