The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Harvick marks anniversar­y of emotional Atlanta victory

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C, - The first three weeks following Dale Earnhardt’s death were a whirlwind for Kevin Harvick, the driver suddenly tasked with carrying a race team reeling from grief.

Harvick was slated to race for the 2001 championsh­ip in NASCAR’S second- tier series but Richard Childress needed him to fill Earnhardt’s seat. Harvick, admittedly “young and dumb” at the time, told Childress he’d do both jobs.

Attempting to replace Earnhardt was an unenviable ask of any driver, let alone a 25- year- old at the start of his NASCAR career. By committing to that frantic two- series schedule, Harvick created a shield from the intense scrutiny of an emotionall­y draining season.

His Cup Series debut came seven days after Earnhardt’s death and then Harvick was off to Las Vegas for his wedding — it had been built into the NASCAR schedule before the season began — and the start of a year spent primarily in race cars and airplanes.

The standout moment of that tumultuous season came in his third Cup race when Harvick held off Jeff Gordon by 0.006 seconds — the edge of his front bumper — to win at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Harvick returns to Atlanta on Sunday for the 20th anniversar­y of that victory. He says he wishes he “would have realized then how big this moment was.”

His memories of that emotional win two decades later are scattered. He recalls the five- car battle over the final 10 laps, the fans lining the fence along the back straightaw­ay and the backward victory lap when he flashed three fingers out his window to honor Earnhardt.

The rest is a bit of a blur.

Harvick won two Cup races that year and beat Kurt Busch for top rookie honors. He won another five times in the Xfinity Series ( then called the Busch Series) and t he championsh­ip. Harvick spent 1 3 years driving for Richard Childress Racing and recognizes now how critical that 2001 season was. It was imperative that the organizati­on keep Earnhardt’s car on track all season and the Atlanta victory was a morale boost for a heartbroke­n crew.

“Knowing now what it meant to the sport, and just that moment in general of being able to carry on, was so important,” Harvick said.

He moved to Stewart- Haas Racing in 2014, the year he won his only Cup championsh­ip, but he’s been a perennial contender every season. He won a series- high nine races last year but failed to advance to the championsh­ip finale.

Five races into this new season, Harvick heads into the anniversar­y of his first Cup victory looking for some of that success from last year. He’s led only 17 laps so far this season, a far cry from the 318 laps he’d led through five races a year ago.

 ??  ?? Kevin Harvick
Kevin Harvick

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