The Commercial Appeal

Harvick on mission to silence his critics

- Jenna Fryer AP AUTO RACING WRITER

AVONDALE, Ariz. – The mood in the desert is tense headed into the final eliminatio­n race before NASCAR’s championsh­ip, a title Kevin Harvick is determined to win.

The 2014 champion is on a mission to lead his Stewart-Haas Racing team into the title race, prove they honestly are the best group in the garage and that a wave of adversity cannot unravel their success . NASCAR said the No. 4 team cheated in last weekend’s victory at Texas by building their own spoiler and passing it off as one supplied by the required vendor. The punishment was severe and put Harvick in danger of not qualifying for the championsh­ip.

But the road to the final four goes through ISM Raceway outside of Phoenix. It’s a track where Harvick has won nine times previously, including this year – a week after a different No. 4 Ford was found to be illegal following a victory.

This track was critical in Harvick’s run to his first title four years ago when he had to win, and did, at Phoenix to advance to the championsh­ip round.

A win isn’t required Sunday, and Harvick needs only to avoid any on-track issues to secure his ticket at HomesteadM­iami Speedway.

Only a quiet Sunday drive is not Harvick’s style.

He arrived in Phoenix without his crew chief and car chief, both suspended for the final two races of the season . The berth he’d earned into the final four by winning last week at Texas had been stripped away as punishment by NASCAR. His team has been branded a cheat.

The situation is less than ideal, and Harvick is disinteres­ted in discussing the penalty or the plight of his race team. He’s instead letting his performanc­e speak for itself. He went out and won the pole . Then he was fastest in both of Saturday’s practices.

It’s quite clear Harvick came to Arizona with every intention of rolling over the competitio­n on his way to Homestead. The penalty is old news to him and he’s not looking back.

“I show up and do the best that I can,” Harvick said. “The best thing that shows up are results on the race track. I drive and try to do the best that I can and we go from there.”

He’s one of seven drivers racing Sunday for three remaining spots in the finale. Only Joey Logano is locked in – and it is no coincidenc­e he’s the most relaxed playoff driver right now – and all three of Harvick’s teammates are vying for slots.

The penalty issued Wednesday against Harvick not only cost him his automatic berth to Homestead but the points deduction left him only three points above the cutline.

Lurking right behind him is teammate Kurt Busch, who recognized the opportunit­y Harvick’s penalty opened for the last driver to win the Cup title in a Ford.

“This week with the penalty, it’s like we won two stages without even firing up the engine on our car,” said Busch, champion in 2004 in the first year of NASCAR’s playoff system. “Now we’re equal and the job now is to get stage one, stage two and to see how things pan out for the end of the race. We know our job is going to be tough, but we just have to go after it.”

While Harvick was laying the groundwork for a rout on Sunday, his competitio­n was preparing for an intense push for those final three berths. Among the drivers who haven’t qualified for Homestead are Kyle Busch and reigning series champion Martin Truex Jr., who stood by his car and watched as it took his team four tries to pass prequalify­ing inspection. Kyle Busch, Truex and Harvick were NASCAR’s socalled Big Three this year as they dominated the regular season yet none are guaranteed to race for the title.

So it left Logano as the only relaxed driver and feeling mighty confident about his title chances.

“When the playoffs started, I kind of felt like we were an underdog,” Logano said. “The last six or seven weeks we’ve led a lot more laps, we’ve won a lot of stages, won a race, was fast at Kansas, was fast at Texas and you know what? I think we’re the favorite now to win.”

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