Daily Press

‘Bristol, baby!’ Harvick savors ninth victory of year

Top 12 entering race all advance to second round of playoffs

- By Jenna Fryer

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Kevin Harvick steamrolle­d his way into the second round of the playoffs by holding off Kyle Busch on Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway for his series-best ninth victory of the season.

Harvick denied the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion his first win of the season when he took the lead a little more than 100 laps from the finish and held off every challenge from Busch the rest of the way. Busch furiously tried to catch him as the two weaved their way through lapped traffic, but Harvick held firm in the No. 4 Ford for Stewart-Haas Racing.

Only six cars finished on the lead lap in a tepid event at the 0.533-mile bullring revered for bumping and banging. Track officials sold all 30,000 tickets allowed — making Bristol one of the largest sporting events since the pandemic — and the spectators crowded the fence as Harvick celebrated his second win of the playoffs.

Harvick also won the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway to open the playoffs.

“Bristol, baby!” Harvick shouted, arms raised to the crowd. “I was so jacked up when we started this race because of you guys. To beat Kyle Busch at Bristol ... just kept fighting, wedidn’t have anything to lose. Just trying to win a race.”

Busch, who failed inspection

twice before the race and drove from the back of the field to lead in his Toyota, was disappoint­ed to finish second.

“Just didn’t have enough there at the end,” Busch said.

The first eliminatio­n race of the playoffs knocked William Byron, Cole Custer, Ryan Blaney and Matt DiBenedett­o from title contention. All four were below the cutline at the start of the race and failed to produce a finish strong enough to get them into the next round.

DiBenedett­o took a big swing with strategy during the first stage when he took just two tires on a pit stop. It cycled him into the lead briefly, but 11 drivers on a full set of fresh tires passed him and DiBenedett­o ended the stage 12th and ineligible for bonus points. He finished 19th.

“If we didn’t have bad luck, we wouldn’t have any luck at all,” said DiBenedett­o, who is hoping the option on his contract is picked up for 2021 by Wood Brothers Racing.

Blaney, whowasrank­edas highly as second in the standings earlier this season, had a third consecutiv­e below-average race. He finished13­th.

“That stinks,” Blaney said. “Unfortunat­e end. I’m not done; we can still go try to win races.”

Custer, the only rookie in the field, has been hampered by NASCAR’s protocols during the pandemic and hasn’t been able to practice or qualify for the bulk of the season. He was 23rd.

Byron, whobeganth­e race three points behind the cutline with a shot at advancing into the second round, was the first driver officially eliminated when he ran into the back of Christophe­r Bell late in the second stage. Byron was running 10th at the time and alleged Bell had to slow to avoid Joey Gase, who had stopped in the middle of the straightaw­ay.

“I had literally nowhere to go. You can’t stop in the middle of the straightaw­ay,” Byron said. “I’ve got to go back and watch that because that was kind of ridiculous.”

The second round of the playoffs begins next Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the opener of the most challengin­g three-race series. Theplayoff­s go from Las Vegas to Talladega Superspeed­way and then end at Charlotte Motor Speedway on the combinatio­n road course and oval.

Erik Jones, who is not eligible for the playoffs, finished third for Joe Gibbs Racing and was followed by rookie Tyler Reddick and playoff contenders Aric Almirola and Clint Bowyer. They were the only drivers on the lead lap.

Richmond-area native Denny Hamlin, considered the closest challenger to Harvick this year, closed out a sub-par opening round of the playoffs with a 21st-place finish. His Toyota also failed pre-race inspection and Hamlin started at the back. He’s been unable through three playoff races to crack the top10.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kevin Harvick celebrates in Victory Lane after driving his Ford to victory in the NASCAR Cup Series race Saturday in eastern Tennessee.
STEVE HELBER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Kevin Harvick celebrates in Victory Lane after driving his Ford to victory in the NASCAR Cup Series race Saturday in eastern Tennessee.

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