Daily Press

RERUN OF ‘HAPPY’ DAYS

Harvick capitalize­s at Brickyard after Hamlin crashes from tire wear

- By Michael Marot Associated Press

INDIANAPOL­IS — Kevin Harvick turned up the heat on Denny Hamlin late in the Brickyard 400.

And on a cooling track, Hamlin’s worn tires simply gave out.

With the sun setting Sunday over Indianapol­is Motor Speedway and Hamlin seven laps from victory, he went careening into the first-turn wall, and Harvick beat Matt Kenseth off the final restart to pull away.

“We knew he was really close on tires, so (crew chief ) Rodney (Childers) said on the radio to keep the pressure on him,” Harvick said. “It’s the Brickyard, this is what I grew up wanting to do, so to come here and win for the third time is something I couldn’t have dreamed up.”

Harvick won for the 53rd time to move within one of tying Lee Petty for 11th on NASCAR’s career list, and it gave Stewart-Haas Racing a sweep of the weekend, including Chase Briscoe’s win Saturday in the Xfinity Series race.

For the third straight race, Harvick, nicknamed “Happy,” and Chesterfie­ld County native Hamlin were in a league of their own.

Until the stunning twist on the historic 2.5-mile oval, it looked is if Harvick and Hamlin would sweep the top two spots for the third consecutiv­e race.

How good have they been?

Each has won four times, tied for the most in the series. And since racing resumed at Darlington in mid-May, Hamlin and Harvick have combined to win

seven of 12 races.

But the crash ended Hamlin’s run of four straight top-five finishes with Joe Gibbs Racing.

“It’s just, it’s tough. I hate it for the FedEx team,”

Hamlin said. “It was just kind of roulette if it stays together or not, and mine didn’t.”

NASCAR’s weather problems continued, too, with the start delayed 55 minutes because of lightning strikes within an eightmile radius of the track.

On lap 16, the race was red-flagged briefly after a six-car pileup near the entrance of pit road. Five of those involved didn’t finish the race, and each driver was checked at the infield medical center and released.

But NASCAR officials said Ryan Blaney’s tire changer, Zachary Price, was transporte­d to a hospital after getting pinned between Blaney’s car and another. Price appeared to be smiling as he was placed on a stretcher before he was taken away in an ambulance.

Blaney continued racing in the No. 12 Ford, and Justin Allgaier got in three more laps before calling it a day. Allgaier replaced Jimmie Johnson in the No. 48 after Johnson tested positive for coronaviru­s Friday.

Johnson’s absence ended the longest active streak of consecutiv­e starts at 663 — fifth overall — and perhaps his quest to join Jeff Gordon and former Formula One star Michael Schumacher as the only five-time winners at Indy. The 44-yearold Johnson said he would be watching from his home in Aspen, Colorado.

It’s the first time since 1993 that the No. 48 was used in a points race without Johnson driving.

“I didn’t know if I got the gentleman on the No. 12 or not,” Allgaier said. “Once the wreck started happening in front of us and we all got bottled up there, one car after another was getting run into. It’s just a shame. I hate it for these guys.”

It was a tough day for Kurt Busch, whose hopes of winning in his 700th career start ended with an early pit-stop mistake. A plane flew over the track during pre-race activities to celebrate the milestone. Busch broke a tie with Hall of Famer Buddy Baker for No. 16 on NASCAR’s career list and moved within six of tying Rusty Wallce for No. 15.

William Byron won the first stage after deciding not to pit under caution with nine laps left. Harvick led the final 12 laps to claim the second stage.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Race driver Kevin “Happy” Harvick celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. Harvick won for the 53rd time to move within one of tying Lee Petty for 11th on NASCAR’s career list, and won at Indy for the third time.
DARRON CUMMINGS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Race driver Kevin “Happy” Harvick celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway. Harvick won for the 53rd time to move within one of tying Lee Petty for 11th on NASCAR’s career list, and won at Indy for the third time.
 ??  ?? Kevin Harvick, second from left, and his crew climb the fence after winning Sunday before the empty grandstand­s in Indianapol­is.
Kevin Harvick, second from left, and his crew climb the fence after winning Sunday before the empty grandstand­s in Indianapol­is.

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