Four for No. 4: Crew chiefs reflect on Kevin Harvick’s special bonds, lasting legacy
NASCAR Studios
The No. 4 has been nearly omnipresent this NASCAR season, almost as much as the 75 that's commemorated the sport's diamond-anniversary celebration. Both numbers have provided an opportunity to toast enduring success on two accounts -- 75 signifying a major milestone for the stock-car racing circuit, and No. 4 in recognition of one of the sport's greatest participants, who made that car number his own.
Kevin Harvick's journey with the No. 4 will end this week in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway as the 47-year-old driver -- a surefire NASCAR Hall of Famer when eligible -- brings his Cup Series career to a close. He leaves a compelling on-track legacy but will continue to write his racing story as an analyst with FOX Sports' broadcasting team next season.
Before crafting a lasting identity with the No. 4, Harvick forged into NASCAR's top division under the most traumatic of circumstances with No. 29. He won with both numbers, with both teams that employed him and in four -- there's that number again -- generations of Cup Series stock cars.
RELATED: Photos: Kevin Harvick through the years
Four also holds a special place for Harvick when counting the number of crew chiefs who won Cup Series races with him through the years. That impressive total of 60 wins is shared among Kevin Hamlin, Gil Martin, Todd Berrier and current crew chief Rodney Childers, and all four have lifetimes of racing memories in their blood.
In some cases, these crew chiefs worked alongside Harvick during times of tragedy. In all cases, there was triumph, and no denying their driver's talent, grit and tenacity to push each team forward. There was also that 56-year-old bottle of wine, an all-timer of a post-race press conference, the million-dollar bet sketched out on a napkin and the trip for ice cream that once launched the NASCAR rumor mill into a tizzy.
More on that in a bit.
NASCAR.com interviewed each crew chief during Harvick's last handful of weekends in Cup Series competition. In keeping with the spirit of the #4EVER theme for Harvick's farewell season, here is the best of those four conversations.
[caption id="attachment_412250" align="aligncenter" width="1300"] Richard Childress Racing[/caption]
Richard Childress Racing[/caption]
Hamlin speaks with a ready chuckle, dotting a thick northern accent that gives away his native Michigan roots. He laughs freely about some of those earlier days, noting the determination Harvick showed at a young age. "He failed to qualify at Rockingham after a good run at Daytona, and then he went missing for a whole week," Hamlin says of the two-race start to Harvick's rookie Xfinity season. "We always joked we were going to put his picture on a milk carton and see if we could find him."
Harvick finished third in the standings that year and was slated for another Xfinity championship go in 2001. But those plans included a partial campaign in the Cup Series in a No. 30 RCR entry, announced just days before Daytona.
"We knew that was going to be the future of RCR either way," Hamlin said. "Sooner or later, Dale was going to end up retiring, so we needed to have some kind of backup plan. And that was the direction that was supposed to go anyway. It just got accelerated quickly. ... The whole deal happened, and it was like, holy smokes, how do you even go on from there?"
The preparations for the following weekend at Rockingham were a blur, Hamlin said. The car was outfitted in white with the No. 29 for Harvick's Cup Series debut, and the team's grieving process was shared by the NASCAR community. Hamlin and the team pressed onward into the unknown with Harvick's name above the door, but the measures that RCR had taken to give Earnhardt a shot at title No. 8 began to show in the performance.
Harvick's talent stood out, too.
"The whole focus on Harvick that year was supposed to be to win the Busch championship, and that's the way it stayed," Hamlin said. "We focused on trying to get through that year and run the best we could, and golly, after we finally got our heads kind of straight -- or myself, anyway ... I don't know if any of us really did, but the best we could anyways – hell, Harvick probably could have won three of the first five races that he ran in that car. So that shows you how well Harvick adapted and kind of shows you how well-prepared we were to even race that year."
As hoped, Harvick did claim the Busch Series crown that year, collecting five wins in a remarkably consistent campaign. But his season was best remembered for the breakthrough in Atlanta on the Cup Series side that provided the entire sport with solace.
RELATED: Harvick relives emotional first Cup Series win
It also marked an upgrade for Hamlin's beverage menu, from the hard stuff to pricey, top-shelf vino.
"All's I can tell you is that Richard bought this bottle of wine that was the same year as his birthday -- Rothchilds -- and we're on the way home on the airplane, and he goes, 'Hamlin, I tell you what. You and Harvick win your first race, we're going to open this bottle of wine.' I was like, 'OK, hope you're planning on opening that pretty soon.' He's like, 'well, I hope we can,' maybe not really wanting to because it's pretty expensive."
[caption id="attachment_412249" align="aligncenter" width="1300"] Richard Childress Racing[/caption]
The 1945 vintage didn't stay on the shelf long. Harvick's narrow victory over Jeff Gordon at Atlanta Motor Speedway in just his third Cup Series race that March gave the team and the stock-car racing family an opportunity for healing.
The public celebration from that day remains etched in NASCAR lore. The private celebration later brought Harvick, Childress, Hamlin and their families together at the team owner's estate to toast their accomplishment. The wine, however ...
"Unfortunately, it wasn't very good," Hamlin said with a gleeful chortle. "We opened it, and he's like, 'what do you think?' and I'm like, 'uh, not sure you want me to really tell you what I think.' He said, 'Ah, c'mon.' Then he went over there and smelled it, and he goes, 'Oh, my goodness.' I said, 'well, we could just pour it back in the bottle, put a cork in it, and say we never opened it.' But we went ahead and drank it anyway. It was kind of a funny celebration."
Harvick and Hamlin paired for one more victory together – at Chicagoland Speedway that summer – before a crew chief shift the next season split them up. Hamlin won two more Cup Series races at RCR with Robby Gordon and later worked for team owner Bill Davis and the former Red Bull Racing group. These days, his motorsports involvement is connected to Coughlin Brothers Racing, and he dabbled in various short-track series with the team before shifting to its drag racing operations.
But looking back, Hamlin says he'll always have the fond memories of helping the young prospect from Bakersfield, California, with his first big-league shot.
"He was a very competitive driver, and he had the talent to back it up," Hamlin says. "He didn't necessarily do any big talking, or I didn't think he did anyway, but he just went out there and took care of business."
[caption id="attachment_412247" align="aligncenter" width="1300"] Getty Images[/caption]
Getty Images[/caption]
Martin returned to his familiar crew chief role in 2006 to work with a promising young rookie named Clint Bowyer. With RCR in search of a spark during the 2009 campaign, Martin was paired again with Harvick and the timing, he said, was right; both driver and crew chief had matured with Cup Series experience and were willing to find middle ground to make performance gains.
"I know it was good for me in the long run, and it was good for him, too, because sometimes you get complacent with where you're at, and you think that everything's always better on the other side," Martin says. "Sometimes it is, but I think it also helps you to grow, and it helps you to just take a good look at yourself that, knowing that everything you're doing is not right, that you need to make some changes, you need to be open to change."
Their second term together ended up being among Harvick's most successful stretches at RCR. He finished third in the Cup Series standings on three occasions with Martin and won multiple races in three of his last four seasons.
His last victory with the No. 29 team came in the wake of his midsummer announcement that he would depart the Childress organization at season's end, joining Stewart-Haas Racing for the next phase of his NASCAR career. The lame-duck status didn't stop the team from closing out strong, with Harvick prevailing on friendly turf at Phoenix Raceway in his next-to-last race at RCR.
MORE: NASCAR Classics, Phoenix 2013
The memories Martin carries from that triumph aren't necessarily the 70 laps led or Harvick's decisive grab of the top spot when Carl Edwards' fuel tank ran dry just before the white flag. What holds in Martin's mind is the unusually free-wheeling post-race press conference that followed, with Harvick and Childress seated to his left.
"Who knew this was going to be the press conference of the year?" Harvick said midway through their presser as the three sipped on tall, tall cans of their sponsor Budweiser's product. Martin recalls how loose the three were in celebration, and the crew chief took the opportunity to defend his team from its doubters: "They have to be the toughest group that I've been around because the simple reason of everybody's been expecting us to implode."
"Most of the time, it's very professional, and it's to the point," Martin says now. "I think with RC and myself there, that it was one of the more laid-back Q&As after a race, I think, just because we were kidding around, and we all knew that that chapter in all of our lives was basically over. Just what an incredible moment it was to be able to experience that, not go out with a bad finish or a bad ending to the year and everything. I think that was a surreal moment for all three of us – at least it was for me, because we were able to joke around and have a Budweiser and just enjoy the moment."
At 63, Martin still scratches the itch to race. His Cup Series tenure ended in 2015, but he returned to the track in the Trans Am Series last season with High Point, North Carolina-based Silver Hare Racing, now serving as the team's director of competition. He's also welcomed a return to winning ways, working with teenage prospect Connor Zilisch, who made history at Virginia International Raceway last month with a sweep of victories in the TA and TA2 classes.
"You write this down," Martin says when mentioning his name. "As soon as he turns 18, you're gonna see one of your top Chevrolet teams is going to sign him up."
If that superstar potential is realized, it will mark the next generation of drivers whom Martin has influenced. The impact of Harvick on Martin's career and the sport in general is still being felt.
"I think just as far as an innovator, just the way he handled the media, his personality," Martin says. "I mean, obviously with some of the things he did, whether it's some of the altercations we had or whatever else, it was ultimately really good for the sport because it let everybody know that it wasn't so vanilla. To me, that's one of the things that he'll always be remembered for, that he was extremely outspoken, and I think we need that even now. ... You've got to have that person that will stand up and say the things nobody wants to hear or know about. That's what he was really good at."
[caption id="attachment_412257" align="aligncenter" width="1300"] Getty Images[/caption]
Getty Images[/caption]
Getty Images[/caption]
The pairing found a spark before the season ever started. At an organizational test at Charlotte Motor Speedway that December, Childers had outfitted an old No. 39 chassis with new suspension, new geometry and other set-up features based on his best instincts. "Just stupid fast," is how Childers describes that car now, and it foretold the success that was to come as the No. 4 team took root.
"Throughout that process of hiring people, it seemed like everybody wanted to be involved in it," Childers says. "Everybody wanted to win races with Kevin and win a championship, and it's like every single person you hired, you would realize more and more that this was going to be something special."
Winning in their second race under the SHR banner with a dominant performance at Phoenix served notice to the rest of the field that there would be no first-year jitters for either Harvick or Childers. Their championship came early in their tenure, with Harvick securing the first Cup Series title of the playoffs' elimination era by winning the last two races of the year. Multiple wins came in nearly every season that followed, running Harvick's impressive total to an even 60 Cup Series victories.
MORE: NASCAR Classics, Homestead-Miami 2014
The chemistry the two developed, Childers said, helped to foster the on-track success, but the veteran crew chief also noted his driver's detail-oriented approach -- down to noticing seams or cracks in the asphalt of each track and noting how the car reacted to each nuance.
"I think it depends on what side of it you were on," Childers says. "If you were a competitor, you know how much grit he had, racing against him and all those things. But the people that have worked on teams with him see him completely different. We see him as just how good of a race car driver he is, and the reason he was good was because he worked hard."
The bonds of their work relationship, the on-track performance and their friendship have kept them together. Only Chase Elliott's current combo with crew chief Alan Gustafson, a pairing that began in 2016, comes close to matching their decade-long run.
Childers insists there's no secret ingredient to their staying power.
"I think the biggest thing is, we've had a lot of fun. When you're having fun, time flies by in a hurry. I think the other thing is just that we've had the same goals from the beginning, we've had the same mindset from the beginning. The last couple years with the new car has been difficult on us as a team, but our goals haven't changed, and the things that we want to do hasn't changed. ... It's really just that we have fun, we communicate really well, we talk almost every single day, and we're always talking about what we can do better.
"It doesn't seem like it's been 10 years. It seems like it's been three or four is how fast it's all went by, but it's really hard to be unhappy when you're winning nearly 10 races like we did in 2018, 2020. We were always in contention all the time, and the whole garage looked up to us as one of the best teams. It's pretty easy to keep it going when it's like that."
This Sunday at Phoenix, that chapter will close. Childers said that Harvick had flirted with retirement a few years earlier, with the lure of the broadcast booth making its first overtures. This offseason, during what Childers called "quiet time" working on their recreational late model program, those transitional talks became more serious.
Through the process of making farewell tour plans, Harvick took special care to keep Childers abreast of his final decision and the timing.
"I think he knows what he means to me, and I've always been a little of an emotional person. You can see that in every race that we win," Childers said. "But I think he knew that it was gonna be extremely tough on me all year this year, and he's definitely respected that."
The No. 4 team will continue next year, with Childers teaming up with Josh Berry, another rough-hewn veteran racer with a brilliant grassroots pedigree that he brought to his Xfinity Series career. Harvick will take his meticulous manner to FOX Sports' broadcast team, hanging up his Cup Series driving gloves after Sunday's season finale.
What Harvick leaves behind is a remarkable legacy with Hall of Fame worth. For Childers, that legacy has a more personal impact.
"I think everybody knew going into the 2014 season that I was a racer through and through, and I've worked really hard my whole life and maybe not ever got the right opportunity," Childers says. "But the reality of it is, I'd won three races as a crew chief, and now I've won 40. So, to say that has been life-changing is an understatement. It's a 4 team legacy, but it's something that will stand out for me the rest of my life. To have an opportunity to win big races with him, Brickyard 400s back-to-back, Southern 500, just all those different things, it's stuff you'll never forget.
"Then the other side of it is, it will also change my life going forward in the garage of different drivers and different teams and different crew members that would want to work for me, that maybe they wouldn't have wanted to work for me in 2012. So I think it's been life-changing for sure, and the cool thing I think with him is, I don't think it'll ever change. I see the friendships that he has with Todd Berrier and Gil Martin and all the people that have crew chiefed for him, and it's never changed. He still talks to them all the time, and so I'm hoping it stays that way for us."
[caption id="attachment_412255" align="aligncenter" width="1300"] Getty Images[/caption]