Orlando Sentinel

Ornery teammates spice Cup Chase

- George Diaz Sentinel Columnist gdiaz@orlandosen­tinel.com

It’s crunch time in the Chase for the Cup, and Stewart-Haas teammates are crunching each other. Kevin Harvick, right, jabbed Kurt Busch in the face on Sunday after Busch sideswiped him in the cool-down lap. They’ll need to make peace if they’re going to beat the harmonious drivers of Joe Gibbs Racing.

Family dynamics are always an issue as we approach the holiday season. You invite Crazy Uncle Mike over for Thanksgivi­ng dinner and before you know it, Brother Larry takes a pumpkin pie to the face because Crazy Mike is off the meds. That’s the wholesome dynamic we see at Stewart-Haas Racing as we head into the fourrace stretch run of the Chase for the Cup.

While the stout four-driver Joe Gibbs Racing crew is hanging out, cool and calm, protecting their turf, the SHR gang seems intent on taking a wrecking ball to their championsh­ip chances. Why else would you jab a teammate in the face?

Kevin Harvick leaned inside the car of teammate

Kurt Busch and jabbed him after everyone had turned off their engines in Sunday’s race at Talladega. He was obviously miffed that Busch’s car made contact with his on the cool-down lap.

“Yeah, the final laps everybody is just pushing and shoving and then he [Busch] cleaned the side of our car out after the checkered flag,” Harvick said. “I don’t really understand that, but all-in-all the Jimmy John’s Chevrolet team did a great job and didn’t have a scratch on it until then.”

Busch tried to put an apologetic spin on it, although the visual evidence doesn’t match the kumbaya spirit.

“He has a misunderst­anding of the call at the end of the race,” Busch said. “He will understand it and I’m sure he will clear it up in his interview. For us, we are great teammates. We are doing good together. We have to work together to beat all these other teams out there and he knows that.”

Busch is right about one thing: They will need to work together, especially because the Gibbs guys have four drivers — Kyle Busch, Carl Edwards, Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth — advancing in the next-to-final round.

Racing teammates always are an unusual dynamic in motor sports. In the end, it is each driver for himself. But you don’t want any contentiou­s relationsh­ips in play before the green flag drops.

Harvick and Busch are two of the best drivers in the business. They are also among the most ornery.

To his credit, Busch has worked hard to rid himself of that Bad Boy image since crossing over to SHR in 2014. He’s qualified for the Chase three consecutiv­e seasons now.

Harvick has a contentiou­s body of work in the Chase involving physical confrontat­ions. Harvick shoved Jimmie Johnson in the chest following the Chase opener in Chicago last year. And in 2014, he helped trigger a fracas between Brad Keselowski and Jeff Gordon in Texas when he shoved Keselowski into Gordon. But they weren’t teammates.

Busch and Harvick have an edge to them, which can be both good and bad. They obviously take after their boss, Tony Stewart. Throw in Danica Patrick, who despite her struggles never suffers fools lightly. That gives you four Type-A personalit­ies under the same roof. You don’t have to be Dr.

Phil to realize that tensions can escalate in a hurry. But maybe this is a one-and-done deal. Regardless, these boys are going to be fun to watch. Just be careful of any flying pumpkin pies.

JGR rolling

The Internet was not kind to the guys from Joe Gibbs Racing on Sunday afternoon, a day on which Carl Edwards, Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch spent cruising in the back, their left-turn signals blinking as the proverbial slowpokes on Talladega’s super-speedway. They didn’t have anything to lose hanging in the back, but much could go wrong if they tried to race in the front. So what’s a man supposed to do? Exactly what they did. Fans took to their keyboards to express displeasur­e, but it was a pointless rant.

“I think really guys would rather be in the situation where they feel like they’ve got to go win,” owner Joe Gibbs said. “I think the drivers kind of all feel that way, but at the same time it’s a playoff and you’ve got to say what is smart and so you certainly don’t want to make a big mistake of some kind and cost your sponsor and everybody that’s wrapped into this. It’s a huge deal for us today.”

Each and every sport establishe­s the rules of engagement. The NASCAR Chase hybrid — a deal involving wins and points — encourages a cautionary approach if you are on the brink of qualifying for the next round, a move that gets you closer to a championsh­ip. And that is everyone’s goal, first and foremost.

Kenseth finished 28th, Edwards 29th and Busch 30th in the Hellmann’s 500. And teammate Denny

Hamlin — in a more precarious position — finished third, allowing all JGR drivers to advance. This is no different than teams running out the clock in a football game. The reality is to play within the rules and do everything you can within them to win a title. Kenseth, Edwards and Busch did that coming off strong finishes in the previous two races that virtually locked them into the Chase.

 ?? JARED C. TILTON/GETTY IMAGES ??
JARED C. TILTON/GETTY IMAGES
 ?? SARAH CRABILL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kevin Harvick, the 2014 season champ, took 7th at Talladega before heading into the Chase’s penultimat­e round.
SARAH CRABILL/GETTY IMAGES Kevin Harvick, the 2014 season champ, took 7th at Talladega before heading into the Chase’s penultimat­e round.
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