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Kyle Busch led 157 laps but a runaway tire left the driver fuming after the race.

Harvick finally drives his own car to victory at Bristol

Busch has dominant car but pit error costs him shot at win

By The Associated Press
August 21, 2009
09:22 AM EDT
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BRISTOL, Tenn. -- Kevin Harvick proved just how strong his organization is Saturday by winning the Nationwide Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway in his own race car.

Harvick led 46 laps in his Kevin Harvick Inc.-owned Chevrolet, his first victory in a car fielded by the race team he built with his wife.

"It is very emotional, he's tried so hard, so long in his own stuff," Delana Harvick said in Victory Lane. "Today was his day."

Although Harvick has won three times in a KHI-owned Truck -- in 2002, '03 and '08 -- he'd yet to win a race in the more prestigious Nationwide Series. Tony Stewart won twice for him in the series, and Bobby Labonte once.

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Results
Pos. Driver Make
1. Kevin Harvick Chevrolet
2. Carl Edwards Ford
3. Clint Bowyer Chevrolet
4. Matt Kenseth Ford
5. Justin Allgaier Dodge
6. Kyle Busch Toyota
7. Steve Wallace Chevrolet
8. Scott Speed Toyota
9. Joey Logano Toyota
10. Jason Leffler Toyota

At Bristol, though, it was finally Harvick's turn and he had a clear shot at the win after Kyle Busch was taken out of contention by a penalty on the final pit stop.

"It feels pretty good to get our car into Victory Lane," Harvick said. "Finally we got this out of the way. Delana and I built this company from basically dirt. It started as a hobby. It's been a tremendous amount of pressure that I've put on myself ... but it was well worth the reward today."

Harvick said his alternator failed during the race, making his cockpit almost unbearably hot as he rolled to the checkered flag.

Carl Edwards finished second and Clint Bowyer was third, and both credited Harvick for winning in his own car.

"To win in something that you build, I can only imagine what that feels like. That's pretty special," Edwards said.

Bowyer congratulated his Cup Series teammate, but also took a playful jab at the accomplishment.

"It's been a long time coming," Bowyer said. "Obviously, Kevin is qualified to win races. I knew it was only a matter of time. But forget him, I'm bummed I didn't win."

So was Busch, who led a race-high 156 laps but was taken out of contention when his crew let a tire slip away during the final pit stop. NASCAR sent Busch to the tail end of the longest line as punishment, and he was 14th on the restart with 41 laps to go.

"Ahhh, man, that's frustrating," Edwards said of Busch's penalty.

"Was he mad?" Bowyer deadpanned.

Was he ever.

Although he rallied to finish sixth, he appeared furious after the race when he stopped his car in Turn 3 and walked directly to the pedestrian tunnel to leave the track.

"We just got a gift with Kyle getting that penalty," Edwards said. "That's a great points day for us."

Edwards' lead in the Nationwide Standings was stretched to 114 points on Harvick and 124 on Busch, who still gained two spots in the standings despite the setback.

The End

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Nationwide Series

Driver Standings
Pos. +/- Driver Points Behind
1. -- Carl Edwards 690 Leader
2. +5 Kevin Harvick 576 -114
3. +2 Kyle Busch 566 -124
4. -- Brendan Gaughan 512 -178
5. +1 David Ragan 493 -197
6. +2 Jason Leffler 488 -202
7. -5 Brian Vickers 467 -223
8. +3 Justin Allgaier 466 -224
9. +3 Kenny Wallace 437 -253
10. +5 Scott Lagasse Jr. 423 -267

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