San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Harvick faces earliest eliminatio­n

- By Jenna Fryer

CONCORD, N.C. — This is it for Kevin Harvick, a winner of nine races just last year and now on the verge of his earliest career playoff knockout.

The steadiest guy in the garage is winless this season — he’s on a 38-race losing streak — and needs a big day at Charlotte Motor Speedway to avoid playoff eliminatio­n.

Harvick has made it through the second round of the playoffs every year since the eliminatio­n format started in 2014, the year he won his only Cup title. Harvick is such a solid bet to be a contender because he’s always in the hunt, always among the leaders, and he has advanced to the championsh­ip round in five of seven seasons.

And yet he heads to the Roval at Charlotte on Sunday ranked ninth in the standings, the first driver below the cutline. The field will be trimmed from 12 to eight after this race and Harvick lags nine points below the final transfer position.

Harvick, the same guy who slammed his helmet in rage after on-track shenanigan­s with reigning champion Chase Elliott cost him a win last month, was serene headed into the make-or-break race.

“I’m kind of a creature of habit, do the same things on a weekly basis and it’s just another race,” Harvick said. “I know that sounds cliche and boring and all the things that come with that, but you just have to go out there and do what you do, the best you can, and see where it falls.”

It’s been a bad year at StewartHaa­s Racing and Harvick and the No. 4 team are the biggest losers. They dominated all the way up until the third-round finale last season and this year have been fairly mediocre.

His eight top-fives and 21 top-10s are the lowest since 2012, but even in that uncharacte­ristically

off year Harvick still won one race. Harvick’s best shot was at Bristol in the first-round finale, but Elliott, angry at Harvick over another on-track incident, intentiona­lly slowed Harvick to help Hendrick Motorsport­s teammate Kyle Larson catch Harvick and steal the win.

The second round has been OK — Harvick was ninth at Las Vegas, and he was running eighth Monday when Talladega was called for rain — but that’s not good enough. Harvick, Christophe­r Bell of Joe Gibbs Racing and Hendrick teammates William Byron and Alex Bowman are all below the cutline going into the Roval, a hybrid track that uses both the road course and oval at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Denny Hamlin is the only driver locked into the third round and Harvick doesn’t need a win to advance. It’s tight right ahead of him

and Kyle Busch and Elliott are tied for the final two spots, only nine points ahead of Harvick. Ryan Blaney, in sixth, only has a 15-point cushion.

A top-five for Harvick coupled with a disaster for any of the other three might be enough to get Harvick through to the round of eight.

“I’ve had a lot worse seasons. I know that for sure,” said Harvick, a 20-year veteran who turns 46 in December. “I’ve lived through a whole bunch that are way worse than this one.”

The 2001 season is top of Harvick’s mind, his rookie year when he was called up the week after Dale Earnhardt’s fatal crash in the season-opening Daytona 500. Harvick ran both the Cup and then-Busch Series that season, a grueling 68 races that ended with NASCAR’s second-tier championsh­ip.

Harvick, a young hothead and former high school wrestler from Bakersfiel­d, Calif., replaced Earnhardt and became something of a savior for a Richard Childress Racing team that could have collapsed. When the adrenaline and emotions finally found the checkered flag, the team fell flat in a miserable 2002 season.

“I personally have been through some pretty tough years and this one has just been a struggle because (we’ve) had to work so hard to get everything that we have,” Harvick said. “We also have learned a lot about the other side of the fence, as far as having to dig your heels in and do things that you haven’t had to do.

“Whether you like it or not, the race is coming up next week, and you’re gonna have to participat­e whether your car is slow or fast and you got to figure out how to make the most out of that.”

 ?? Brian Lawdermilk / Getty Images ?? Kevin Harvick, who drives the No. 4 Busch Light Ford, has never been knocked out of the playoffs in the second round since NASCAR introduced the format in 2014.
Brian Lawdermilk / Getty Images Kevin Harvick, who drives the No. 4 Busch Light Ford, has never been knocked out of the playoffs in the second round since NASCAR introduced the format in 2014.

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