USA TODAY International Edition

With win, Harvick, crew get confidence boost

- Jeff Gluck @ jeff_ gluck for breaking news and analysis from the track.

BRISTOL, TENN. In the early part of this decade, Kevin Harvick was nicknamed The Closer for his ability to turn late passes into wins.

But since joining Stewart- Haas Racing in 2014 — a move that has generated the best overall speed of his career — Harvick and his team haven’t closed enough races to be satisfied.

Since the start of the 2014 season, Harvick has 22 second- place finishes — more than double the next- closest driver in the same period. ( Brad Keselowski has 10.)

So when nothing went wrong Sunday and Harvick won at Bristol Motor Speedway, it served two purposes.

First, it reminded the team it can win. Second, it reminded everyone else Harvick is — and has been — a serious threat to win another championsh­ip.

“It’s all about confidence, and it’s all about momentum,” Harvick said. “We’ve been confident in our cars, just not confident in closing everything out. I think that goes away ( after Bristol).”

It has to be painful for Harvick, his team and his fans to think about all the what- ifs over the last three seasons. Yes, he has won 10 races in that time. Yes, he won the 2014 championsh­ip.

But 22 second- place finishes? If even half of those were victories, Harvick would be by far the winningest driver in the last few years. Instead, he’s tied for fourth.

Crew chief Rodney Childers, describing a couple of stumbles by the team’s pit crew Sunday, said when the No. 4 car became dominant and started leading laps, “That’s when everybody’s nerves get up and we started having mistakes.”

When so many potential victories have disappeare­d over the last few seasons — for various reasons — the pressure has built whenever the team sensed another win was near.

This time, everyone refocused and executed. And won.

“The win will mean a lot to those guys,” Childers said. “Believing in themselves and not getting nervous when the time comes, that’s what’s really important.”

If that boost of confidence was going to come at any time during the regular season, this might be the ideal moment. The Chase for the Sprint Cup — when mistakes are magnified and can be the difference between advancing and seeing title hopes vanish — starts in less than a month.

After Michigan Internatio­nal Speedway, Darlington Raceway and Richmond Internatio­nal Raceway, it’s time for a team with true championsh­ip aspiration­s to perform.

This year, Harvick and his crew have a big challenge from the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas and the Team Penske Fords. Unlike in 2014 and 2015 — when Harvick finished first and second in the Chase — it doesn’t seem like he’ll enter the playoff as the clear title favorite despite being the current points leader.

In that sense, the No. 4 team’s relief after closing out the Bristol race is crucial to its hopes of another championsh­ip run.

“I don’t think it could have come together at a better time,” Harvick said. “Confidence and momentum go a long way in racing, baseball, football, basketball — whatever it is — and you just want to ride the wave.”

 ?? RANDY SARTIN, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? With 10 wins since 2014, Kevin Harvick is among Cup leaders, but his 22 runner- up finishes belie his nickname: The Closer.
RANDY SARTIN, USA TODAY SPORTS With 10 wins since 2014, Kevin Harvick is among Cup leaders, but his 22 runner- up finishes belie his nickname: The Closer.
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