The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Harvick looks to make it three straight wins

Driver would be first since Logano (2015) to accomplish feat.

- By John Nicholson

AVONDALE, ARIZ. — Kevin Harvick left everyone else behind the last two weeks in Atlanta and Las Vegas. He figures to be even harder to beat today at ISM Raceway, the mile oval in the foothills outside Phoenix where he has a record eight victories.

Trying to become the first driver to win three straight NASCAR Cup races since Joey Logano in 2015, Harvick topped the speed charts for both practice sessions Saturday. Fittingly, the 2014 season champion’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford has a Jimmy John’s “Freaky Fast!” paint scheme.

“When things are going good, you need to hammer it home,” Harvick said. “Let’s just keep pushing things forward and try not to stumble along the way and screw up what’s going on. To me, it feels a lot like 2014, except now you’ve got a team with five years of experience, and that’s pretty scary.”

Yes, it is.

“In Atlanta, we kind of chalked it up to Kevin being probably the best driver at Atlanta and we just thought it was Atlanta and he is typically fast there,” said Logano, the 2016 Phoenix fall winner. “Vegas was one of those things where we all thought, ‘Wow, maybe it wasn’t just Atlanta.’ Phoenix has always been a good track for him as well. It takes a

few weeks to realize where you stand. I think we are in good shape so far, but I do think that he is a

solid step in front of everybody right now.”

Harvick’s victory Sunday in Las Vegas was marred by penal

ties in part fueled by social media photos of his buckled rear windshield. NASCAR said inspectors at its research and developmen­t

center in North Carolina found the Ford violated a rule requiring rear window support braces

holding the glass rigid and another requiring the right rocker panel extension to be aluminum.

On Wednesday, Harvick was penalized the seven playoff points he earned for winning the race and the first two stages. He was docked 20 regular points and the team lost 20 owners’ points. Crew chief Rodney Childers was fined $50,000, and car chief Robert Smith suspended two races.

“I can’t wait to win another race and jump up and down in victory lane on the back of my car,” Harvick said Friday.

Defending series champion Martin Truex Jr. will start from the pole in the No. 78 Toyota. Hen- drick Motorsport­s has the next three spots, with Kyle Larson second, Chase Elliott third and Tucson driver Alex Bowman fourth. Logano will start fifth, and Harvick 10th.

Kyle Larson noted there’s little margin error in the 312-lap race.

“It’s a fairly short race for a Cup race, so you have to take advantage of your restarts,” Larson said. “It’s somewhat tough to pass here. You can’t make any mistakes on pit road or anything like that to set you back. All of our races are long, but relative to the rest of them, this is a short one. You’ve just got to be 100 percent every lap and not make any mistakes, and have a good balance on your car throughout a fuel run.”

Larson will start second in the

No. 42 Chevrolet. He was fighting wheel-hop problems in Turns

3 and 4 in practice. “We got a lot of smart guys,” Larson said. “They’ll figure it out.”

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kevin Harvick on today’s TicketGuar­dian 500 at ISM Raceway in Arizona: “When things are going good, you need to hammer it home.”
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN/GETTY IMAGES Kevin Harvick on today’s TicketGuar­dian 500 at ISM Raceway in Arizona: “When things are going good, you need to hammer it home.”

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