Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Harvick lapping NASCAR field with his fifth Cup win of season

Pulls past Truex Jr. with lap remaining, secures Kansas win

- By Dave Skretta

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Nobody has been able to keep pace with Kevin Harvick this season.

Not even the reigning series champion on a track where he swept both races last season.

Harvick surged past Martin Truex Jr. with one lap to go Saturday night at Kansas Speedway, winning for the fifth time in what has turned out to be a record-setting start to the year. His total matches a career high for Harvick, who still has 24 chances to win a few more NASCAR Cup Series races.

Nobody had ever won five of the first 12 races in NASCAR’s top series.

“Man, that was wild the last few laps,” said Harvick, who deftly dodged a couple late-race cautions, then used four fresh tires to roar to the front on the final restart with 10 laps remaining of the KC Masterpiec­e 400.

“That was so fun,” he said, “hearing those fans screaming and yelling. It was a great race.”

Harvick made the final pass as he crossed the start-finish line to take the white flag, while Truex chased him the final lap to finish second — a strong showing after his two wins at Kansas last year.

“He just got through traffic too quick and was too fast,” Truex said. “The flip switched, I got tight, started shaking the right front tire and I knew I was in trouble. He was coming quick.”

Joey Logano finished third, and Kyle Larson rallied from a late tangle with Ryan Blaney to finish fourth. Denny Hamlin rounded out the top five for Joe Gibbs Racing.

“Kevin was ripping there with the new tires at the end. He was the fastest,” Logano said. “My only show was those guys (Harvick and Truex) wrecking each other and they’re too good for that.”

The race was free of wrecks until the last 30 laps, when Alex Bowman and Daniel Suarez got into each other. But things really shook up a few laps later, when Harvick passed Larson on the restart to assume control, and the No. 42 car began bumping with Blaney down the front stretch.

Those two got together, sending Blaney into the wall and Larson into the pits.

“I’m definitely to blame on that,” said Blaney, who won the first stage before Larson had charged to the front to capture the second. “Just trying to side-drift too hard.”

The race had barely returned to green when William Byron triggered a heavy wreck in front of the grandstand. Local favorites Clint Bowyer and Jamie McMurray were among a half-dozen cars involved.

“That one hurt really bad, but I’m fine,” Byron said. “We took two tires and just couldn’t get it turned on the bottom. We were trying to kind of push some things there and it didn’t work out.”

The red flag set up one last sprint to the finish.

Truex used some pit strategy to restart in the lead, and quickly built a buffer.

But the No. 4 car swept past Logano and Hamlin on the outside to put Truex in his sights, then Harvick closed on the lead until finally overtaking the reigning series champion with a lap to go.

 ?? Colin E. Braley The Associated Press ?? Kevin Harvick is covered in confetti as he celebrates his fifth NASCAR Cup Series victory of the season, the KC Masterpiec­e 400 on Saturday at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan.
Colin E. Braley The Associated Press Kevin Harvick is covered in confetti as he celebrates his fifth NASCAR Cup Series victory of the season, the KC Masterpiec­e 400 on Saturday at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan.

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