Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Harvick changes dirt attitude

Veteran was groaning about race at Bristol

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It only took one session in the dirt for Kevin Harvick to change his mind about NASCAR’s latest experiment.

Harvick was one of the loudest detractors headed into the first Cup Series race on a dirt track since 1970. He had been dreading the race Sunday at Bristol Motor Speedway from the moment NASCAR put this harbinger on the schedule.

And it was only two weeks ago that Harvick groaned about 250-laps around the Tennessee bullring — he called it “the longest dirt race in the history of mankind” — and predicted it would be a struggle for drivers so accustomed to concrete to even make it to the checkered flag.

After 51 laps of practice Friday — in a truck, no less — Harvick had done an about-face.

“This has been a weekend that I had big Xs through, and honestly, that’s as much fun as I’ve had in a race car in a long time,” Harvick said. “Just getting over my anxiety and being able to do something way outside my comfort zone was rewarding.”

Harvick is one of seven Cup regulars entered in Saturday night’s Truck Series race so they could get some experience on dirt. It will be his first Truck Series race since 2015 but Harvick wanted as much track time as possible on the red clay surface.

NASCAR returned to a traditiona­l three-day race weekend for the first time since the pandemic began and scheduled a pair of Friday practice sessions for the Truck Series and the Cup Series. When practice was complete, truck series regular Ben Rhodes called Harvick a contender.

The favorites for Sunday, though, are expected to be the drivers who both started their careers racing on dirt and still do throughout the NASCAR season. But race favorite Kyle Larson had a huge temperatur­e spike in Friday’s final practice and an engine change will send him to the back of the field at the start of Sunday’s race.

And of the 10 fastest drivers on the day, very few were dirt regulars. Ryan Blaney was fastest overall, followed by Alex Bowman and then Denny Hamlin, who last raced on dirt as an 8-year-old in a go-kart.

Blaney felt the track conditions changed dramatical­ly from the start of the day through the final practice session — and not for the good.

“It’s rough, slick. Really rough, actually,” Blaney said. “The track is kind of coming up and there are crazy big divots. It’s rough.”

Blaney also said dust made for poor visibility until the sun set.

The cars were indeed much slower — at least 5 seconds slower a lap from times turned on Bristol’s concrete — and Hamlin expected some changes to be made to either the track surface or the race format before Sunday.

The starting lineup will be set by heat races on Saturday and pit stops during the race will be controlled with only tire changes permitted. Rain is expected at Bristol Saturday and Sunday, which would impact a track surface that has drivers concerned about tire wear.

Rain Thursday already had made for changing track conditions.

“It was like a really thin layer of flaky dirt on top of the black, hard-packed, rubbered down dirt when I walked on it this morning. Then that went off pretty quickly,” said Blaney. “I just wish it was a little bit smoother because there are so many ruts and things like that, but maybe they’ll be able to put their heads together and work on it.”

Formula One

Max Verstappen started the F1 season on the front foot Friday by clocking the fastest times in the first two practice sessions at the Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir.

The Red Bull driver was 0.095 seconds ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris and 0.235 clear of world champion Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes under the floodlight­s at the desert track in Sakhir.

“Now we have to show what we can do in qualifying,” said Verstappen, who has taken only three career pole positions because of Mercedes’ dominance since 2014. “I think it’s going to be even more windy [on Saturday] so it will be even more difficult to drive.”

Ferrari’s new driver Carlos Sainz Jr. finished the day fourth quickest ahead of Hamilton’s teammate Valtteri Bottas and Daniel Ricciardo, the Australian driver who replaced Sainz Jr. at McLaren.

“It felt like we’re still not quite there with the car’s balance,” Bottas said. “(We have) work to do if we want to fight for the pole and the win.”

Fernando Alonso, who came out retirement to replace Ricciardo at the Alpine team, had a tricky evening and managed only the 15th-best time in the second practice.

Veteran Kimi Raikkonen spun his Alfa Romeo and hit a wall early in the evening session, but the 41-year-old Finn managed got the car back to the team garage without too much damage.

 ?? Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images ?? J.J. Yeley, driver of the No. 53 Chevrolet, spins in front of Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet, during practice Friday on the dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images J.J. Yeley, driver of the No. 53 Chevrolet, spins in front of Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet, during practice Friday on the dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway.

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