The Oklahoman

Harvick wins in New Hampshire

- BY DAN GELSTON

Kevin Harvick bumped Kyle Busch out of the way with seven laps left and held on to win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on Sunday for his sixth victory of the season.

LOUDON, N.H. — Kevin Harvick used a bump-and-run on Kyle Busch with seven laps left to win a thrilling battle of two of NASCAR’s dominant drivers Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Harvick aimed his Ford bumper at the right side of Busch’s Toyota and nudged the leader out of the way for the move of the race in another stellar showing for the leader of the Big Three.

“I felt like it was my best opportunit­y to do what I had to do to win,” Harvick said. “I didn’t want to wreck him. But I didn’t want to waste a bunch of time behind him.”

Added Busch: “How you race is you get raced.”

Harvick raced to his sixth victory of the season and went 1-2 in some order with Busch for the ninth time this year. Busch has five wins and Martin Truex Jr., fourth Sunday, has four.

The Big Three were threatened in a race delayed by rain for more than three hours by Aric Almirola, who replaced Danica Patrick in the No. 10 Ford, for a portion of the race. He threatened to crash the party and had his second career Cup victory in sight. He led for more than 40 laps but was derailed by a poor pit stop and spun his tires on a restart that cost him.

“You think I’d be happy,” he said.

Not in this race. Almirola was the latest also-ran to realize drivers have to be perfect to catch either of the Big Three.

Harvick, who won his 43rd career race, was in New Hampshire.

Harvick reeled off three straight victories at Atlanta, Las Vegas and Phoenix and went back-to-back in May at Dover and Kansas. It had been seven races since he reached victory lane.

He did what he had to do again in the No. 4 Ford to celebrate there again for Stewart-Haas Racing.

Here are some items of note from a wet day in New Hampshire.

One and done

New Hampshire hosted its only Cup weekend of the season because track owner Speedway Motorsport­s Inc. transferre­d the fall playoff race to Las Vegas Motor Speedway. New Hampshire ran its first Cup race in 1993 and got a second date in 1997.

The track will fill the open date in September with the NASCAR Modified Tour and the winner of the marquee Musket 250 race will claim a share of the $181,100 purse. New Hampshire also plans to hold a country music festival in 2019.

Many drivers feel the sport would be helped if it stopped racing twice a season at some tracks.

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 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Kevin Harvick celebrates in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Sunday in Loudon, N.H.
[AP PHOTO] Kevin Harvick celebrates in Victory Lane after winning a NASCAR Cup Series auto race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Sunday in Loudon, N.H.

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