Monster mistake, stunning finish
Keselowski wins race at Atlanta speedway after Harvick speeds on his final pit stop.
HAMPTON, Ga. — Kevin Harvick was faster than everyone at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Too fast, it turned out. Harvick ruined a dominating performance by speeding on his final pit stop, allowing Brad Keselowski to steal a NASCAR Monster Energy Cup victory Sunday.
“I'm just snakebit here,” Harvick said. “But it's my own doing.”
Harvick won the first two stages under NASCAR’s new race format and led a staggering 293 out of 325 laps overall. But, after a late yellow came out when Austin Dillon lost power, the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford eclipsed the 45 mph speed limit going into the pits.
“I thought I was being conservative,” Harvick said. “I guess I wasn't. I was just pushing it too hard.”
The ensuing drive-thru penalty pushed Kyle Larson to the lead but he couldn'’t hold off Keselowski, who surged ahead on the backstretch with six laps to go and cruised to a 0.564-second victory.
Keselowski wasn’t about to turn down Harvick’s gift.
“We’ve had races where we led a bunch of laps and things just fall apart at the end,” Keselowski said. “That’s just how this sport works. You take advantage of the opportunities when they come. We certainly caught an opportunity.”
Harvick seemed poised to win at the 1.54-mile trioval for the first time since his initial Cup victory in 2001, just three races after he got his chance following the death of Dale Earnhardt.
Instead, it was another bitter disappointment.
Harvick also led more laps than anyone each of the last three years, a total of 442 in all, but was never ahead when it mattered.
This mistake cost Stewart-Haas its second straight victory to start the season after Kurt Busch won the Daytona 500.
“I didn’t think I was pushing it,” Harvick told his crew over the radio. “I’m so sorry, guys.”
He clearly had the fastest car all weekend. After starting from the pole, he took the first 85-lap stage by more than 2.5 seconds and was ahead by a staggering 5.4 seconds at the end of the second stage — turning the new format into a total snoozer.
The speeding penalty on pit road — an issue that plagued a bunch of drivers, including two-time defending race winner Jimmie Johnson — knocked Harvick to the end of the lead pack with 11 laps remaining.
He couldn’t make up for the mistake, forcing him to settle for a ninth-place showing that should’ve been so much better.