With new crew chief, RCR’s No. 3 shows way on leaderboard

RELATED: Practice 1 results | Final practice results

Ty Dillon topped the leaderboard Friday afternoon in a lightly participated NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice at Daytona International Speedway.

Dillon wheeled the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet to a best lap of 179.978 mph on the 2.5-mile track. He’ll enter Saturday night’s Subway Firecracker 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) second in the series standings, but readying for his first race with new crew chief Nick Harrison.

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Mark Thompson and Derek White formed a two-car tandem draft late in the 55-minute session to take the second and third spots on the leaderboard in a pair of Dodges owned by White. The teammates posted identical speeds, each turning a lap at 179.579 mph.

Joey Logano, driving the Team Penske No. 22 Ford, was fourth-fastest with Timmy Hill completing the top five. Defending race winner Kasey Kahne was seventh-fastest in the JR Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet.

Only 23 of the 44 drivers entered turned laps in final practice, with most making single-car runs. Many teams opted to sit out practice rather than risk a possible crash in a large aerodynamic pack. Only Thompson and White turned more than 10 laps.

Coors Light Pole Qualifying to set the 40-car XFINITY Series field is scheduled Saturday at 2:35 p.m. ET (NBC Sports Network).

Ragan shows speed in opening XFINITY practice

David Ragan scooted to the top of the NASCAR XFINITY Series leaderboard in opening practice Friday afternoon at Daytona International Speedway.

Ragan rode an aerodynamic draft early in the 55-minute session, pushing the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota to a best lap of 190.573 mph on the 2.5-mile track. Ragan is scheduled to make his first XFINITY Series start of the season in Saturday night’s Subway Firecracker 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM).

XFINITY rookie Darrell Wallace Jr. was second-fastest with a lap of 190.388 mph in the Roush Fenway Racing No. 6 Ford. He was followed by Roush teammate Ryan Reed, the Daytona winner in February who drove the No. 16 to a best lap of 190.351 mph.

Daniel Suarez and Brian Scott completed the top five

Series points leader Chris Buescher was sixth-fastest in another Jack Roush-owned Ford. Defending XFINITY Series champion Chase Elliott was 19th-fastest in the JR Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet. Defending race winner Kasey Kahne, a Sprint Cup regular in JRM’s No. 88 Chevy, was ninth-fastest.

A second 55-minute practice session is scheduled at 4 p.m. ET, to be broadcast on NBC Sports Network.

Elliott, NAPA drive awareness for Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund

The JR Motorsports Chevrolet driven by defending NASCAR XFINITY Series champion Chase Elliott this weekend will sport a new patriotic look. The reason behind it is further cause to remember those who served.

The JRM No. 9 team will join several NASCAR organizations in flying the United States red, white and blue this weekend, both as part of the overarching NASCAR Salutes initiative and specifically through a campaign to drive awareness to the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund. NAPA Auto Parts, Elliott’s primary sponsor and an IFHF partner, launched the campaign Thursday, a day before opening practice at Daytona International Speedway.

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The IFHF program is intended to raise awareness of the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder, not just for veterans returning from active duty but also their families. The non-profit organization, which operates three Intrepid Spirit Centers near military bases in the U.S., claims it has provided more than $150 million in support of families of military personnel killed or wounded in service since its inception in 2000.

Elliott, third in the XFINITY standings entering Saturday’s Subway Firecracker 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM), said he plans to take time out from his weekend schedule to meet with military members and their families at the 2.5-mile track.

"It’s an honor to carry the Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund on the NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet this weekend at Daytona," Elliott said in a release provided by the team. "NAPA does a great job with this program and I’m excited to represent them under the lights at Daytona. Saturday’s meet-and-greets with the Honorary Pit Crew Members will be fulfilling experiences, knowing the sacrifice each has given to our country. I have so much respect for our military and can’t wait to show these guys a great time. NAPA has a tremendous amount of admiration for the men and women who fight for our freedom and I’m looking forward to celebrating them this weekend."

Despite recent struggles, ‘Smoke’ has confidence from previous wins at track

Throughout his 17-year NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career, Tony Stewart has averaged 17.5 top-10 finishes per season.

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This year, he only claims one — a sixth-place showing in April at Bristol.
 
And there are only 20 races left.
 
Stewart’s struggles have put him in an unescapable hole in the driver points standings. The three-time NSCS champion ranks 26th in the standings, 130 points behind Aric Almirola for the final spot on the current Chase Grid.
 
Luckily for Stewart, under the new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format, a win in the next 10 races is all he needs to secure a berth in NASCAR’s playoffs.
 
One visit to Victory Lane can turn his season around.
 
That visit could occur in Sunday’s Coke Zero 400 powered by Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway (Pre-Race: 7 p.m. ET on NBC | Race: 7:45 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN, SiriusXM) — a track Stewart has dominated in the month of July.
 
Stewart boasts 19 wins at DIS across NASCAR’s national series, more than any driver not named Dale Earnhardt. Of those 19 triumphs, four have come in a NSCS points race — all in the Coke Zero 400.
 
"Everybody has got a shot at Daytona," Stewart said. "We’ve been in that position before and have actually been able to take advantage quite a few times. The biggest thing is it gives you confidence that you’ve got a shot."
 
The last time Stewart took advantage of his position at Daytona was July 7, 2012. He led 22 laps just past the midway point before giving up the point to Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle. The No. 14 Chevrolet driver waited patiently all the way until a two-lap restart at the end of the race when he passed Kenseth and Biffle on the final go-around to win under caution.
 
"The biggest challenge was Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle because when they hooked up, I didn’t think there was anybody that could beat them," Stewart said. "But we were able to stay in touch with them, and I got a great restart with Kasey Kahne helping me.
 
"They were coming on the outside in (turns) three and four and the last wreck happened, and we were just fortunate enough to be leading still."
 
Stewart’s only win since his 2012 Daytona checkered came at Dover in 2013 (57 starts and 75 races ago). He will try to turn his performance around at the track where he has led the most July laps (369) among active drivers and where he’s the only active driver to win two consecutive July races (2005-06).
 
While Stewart has exceled in his career at restrictor-plate racing — particularly at Daytona — he finds it frustrating.
 
"I’m glad we’re halfway decent at it, but it’s still always frustrating when you have to rely on what everybody else does," Stewart said. "It’s not what you do. It’s what you do along with somebody else who decides that they’re going to follow you and help you. That’s the part that frustrates you as a driver.
 
"The great thing about restrictor-plate racing though is that 43 cars all have the same shot at winning the race, but again, that’s also part of what makes it frustrating, too. It’s just being at the right place at the right time."

Former owner Ray Evernham: ‘… There’s a championship driver in there’

RELATED: Kahne swims with the sharks

In the beginning, it came easy for Kasey Kahne.
 
Fast cars and a great team and all of a sudden there’s a new young gun for the established stars to deal with each weekend in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series.

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"Yeah, everything was pretty simple back then," Kahne, 35, says. "Every time I got in the car we were fast — practice, qualifying, race.
 
"Today it’s a little different; it’s more difficult to be on top. I think part of it is the competition, it’s so close today that it makes it tougher."
 
The competition’s tough, certainly, but finding that feeling behind the wheel, the one that often separates the winners from the losers, can be just as difficult.
 
That’s what Kahne enjoyed in those early years, back in 2004 and ’05 and ’06, and it’s what he is searching for today. It’s also what crew chief Keith Rodden is trying to find for his driver each and every day when he shows up for work.
 
"If you hit on something that really suits your driving, you can be on top and you can be there for a period of time," Kahne says. "That’s what we’re looking for, that’s what we hope to hit on eventually."
 
The quest continues this weekend at Daytona International Speedway, site of Sunday night’s Coke Zero 400 (7:45 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR).
 
Kasey Kahne has won 17 times at NASCAR’s top level. He has never won a restrictor-plate points race.
 
• • •
 
He was just 23 when he made his Sprint Cup Series debut, finishing near the bottom of the order in the 2004 Daytona 500 after the engine soured just 42 laps into the season-opening race.
 
But any questions about team owner Ray Evernham’s decision to hire the youngster were quickly put to rest. A week after his disappointing Daytona debut, Kahne finished second at Rockingham, North Carolina. After an early-season off-week, Kahne was second again, this time at Las Vegas.
 
All told, Kahne finished second five times as a rookie, then added a sixth early the following season. By the season’s 11th stop, at Richmond, he was no longer second — he was in Victory Lane.
 
A year later, he won six times, more than any other driver in the series, including champion Jimmie Johnson. By the time Evernham Motorsports became Gillett Evernham Motorsports in the latter stages of ’07, Kahne had seven wins and the look of a future champion.
 
And then it slowly began to unravel.
 
The wins haven’t ceased — he’s won 10 times since that memorable ’06 season — but the championships have thus far failed to materialize. The Gillett Evernham partnership eventually dismantled and by ’09, the Enumclaw, Washington, native had moved on to Richard Petty Motorsports for a two-year stint. A stint with Red Bull Racing followed, before team owner Rick Hendrick came calling, looking for a suitable replacement for veteran Mark Martin.
 
In 2012, Kahne settled in as the newest member of one of the most successful organizations in NASCAR. While he’s qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup all three years he’s been at HMS, he’s slowly been trending in the wrong direction, finishing fourth, 12th and 15th in points since his arrival.
 
RELATED: Kahne to become a father

Where did the kid with so much talent and promise go?
 
"I don’t know," says Evernham, now back at HMS as a member of the organization’s executive management team. "I really pushed Mr. Hendrick to hire him because I really feel like Kasey Kahne is a guy that should win a championship.
 
"We’ve not been able to get him over that hump. I certainly still believe in him. I think Keith Rodden has helped Kasey’s confidence. They’re still kind of sorting out their cars and things like that. I don’t know. I will be disappointed if Kasey Kahne ends his career without winning a championship.
 
"He’s got the talent, he’s got the ability, and he’s got the cars and equipment. I don’t know — communication, changes, where he’s at … again, I can’t answer that. It’s something we talk about a lot."
 
• • •
 
Kahne, who has six top-10 finishes through this year’s first 16 races, arrives in Daytona eighth in points. His last win came in Atlanta last season, and it was his only win of the year.
 
Still, he says, he believes his team is making gains.

Driver Reports: How will Kahne fare at Daytona?
 
"I think our cars are super close, our engines and our packages are right there," Kahne says. "I feel good about that.
 
"It’s just a matter of keep trying to find that little bit of feel. That’s what Martin Truex has right now; that’s what Kevin Harvick has had for a year and a half. Just that feel. They have it and they know how to find it each week. Their teams do a really nice job with that and the drivers do a great job with it. That’s what I’m looking for. I just hope I can find that feel that gives me just … you just floor it a touch sooner every lap and you go as fast as they do."
 
Kahne knows the feel, although he jokes that "it’s been a while since I’ve had it, so it’s hard to remember.
 
"I know it feels good," he says. "It gives you confidence; you feel like you can run (with anyone), you feel like you can win and you can battle at any time. You’re better on restarts, you’re better in traffic and you’re better when you’re on your own.
 
"When you do have that feel, you just always seem to be a tenth or two better and it helps every part of the race weekend."
 
Every driver that’s been around for the past decade has had to deal with tremendous changes in the cars as one generation was pushed aside for newer, safer vehicles. Some have had to alter their driving styles, adapting to cars that suddenly had more downforce but could be a handful around others.
 
A fortunate few found the changes worked in their favor and no changes were necessary.
 
"The interesting thing is today we run so much throttle compared to what we used to run," says Kahne. "When I first came in (to the series) you were off the throttle for a good period of time, you’d ease back to it and then floor it.
 
"Today it’s on and off. It’s like a light switch. And the percentage of the time that you’re wide open today compared to then is much higher. I think some of those things haven’t fit my driving style as well as I would have liked. As a driver, I need to keep working on that stuff and figure out how to make it fit my driving style.
 
"I think when I first came into the sport, it was all about getting off the brake as fast as you could and getting back to throttle as soon as possible. If you weren’t wide open that was OK, you were still part throttle and still gaining speed.
 
"Today, it’s like push the brake hard for a split second, get off it and hammer the throttle hard. Your off-throttle time is very small. It’s just so much different driving these cars today. I’m up for the challenge, but I think as we’ve gone through the changes (to the cars), it’s been a little more difficult for the way I learned to race."
 
• • •
 
For the majority of his career, Kahne was paired with crew chief Kenny Francis. That changed during the most recent off-season when Hendrick officials put former lead engineer Keith Rodden in charge.
 
Rodden is one of the new breed, an engineer that has transitioned into the role of crew chief. But carrying a degree, he said, doesn’t mean an engineer will make a successful crew chief.
 
“Absolutely not. It just doesn’t matter,” Rodden says.
 
“When you’re the crew chief, you’ve got to be the leader of the team, you have to work well with all the NASCAR people, you’ve got to be able to take all the information from all the people you have working whether it’s the engineer, the tire guy or literally the janitor sweeping the shop … you have to use everyone’s input."
 
Rodney Childers, crew chief for defending series champion Kevin Harvick "is very methodical," he says. "He’s a great racer. He probably could have gone to engineering school. He didn’t, he went to race. Whereas Matt McCall (crew chief for driver Jamie McMurray), he’s a great racer. He went to engineering school at home and kept racing.
 
"I think there are examples where it’s easy to say it works and others where it doesn’t. Just like (Tony Gibson) on the 41, he’s got (Johnny) Klausmeier he relies on a lot."
 
Gibson is crew chief of the Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet with driver Kurt Busch.
 
"I think the biggest thing is just using all the input from all your guys," Rodden said. "It’s too big for one person."
 
His cars have had speed this year, although Rodden takes no credit for that. Part of the reason, he says, may be the current rules package, one that features less downforce and less horsepower.
 
"We don’t really worry about the speed as much as trying to get the car to driving good because that always seems to race a little bit better," he says. "You get sad maybe if you’re not quite as fast as another car but we work on trying to get our car to drive good and have good speed, instead of just maybe being on the verge of spinning out every lap and being fast. Being smart about it, too."
 
• • •
 
NASCAR is a team sport, but Kahne knows his role is vital. As he goes, the fortunes of the No. 5 team follow.
 
Teams have gotten smarter and worked harder through the various changes in the cars in recent years.
 
"That’s where as a driver you need to be able to adapt and be able to do your part," Kahne says. "I feel like I’m always close but I don’t feel like I’m ever that guy on top.
 
"There were times in ’05 and ’06 for sure when I felt I was as fast as anyone in this garage on a lot of occasions. And there have been times like that since, but just not as many. It’s the way it goes.
 
"I still have a lot of drive, I still want to race cars. I want to win races. I think if you have all that and you have that passion that eventually you’ll get it figured out and get back on top."
 
No one would be more pleased to see that happen than Evernham, the former championship-winning crew chief with driver Jeff Gordon.
 
"We’re still searching for that key to unlock because I know there’s a big part of Kasey Kahne in there," Evernham says. "He’s 35 years old; we’ve got to unlock that but I believe that there’s a championship driver in there."

Hendrick driver kicks off Shark Week with special paint scheme

SHOP: Kahne gear
RELATED: Kahne driving full throttle into Cup future

The instructions were simple enough.
 
If you lose your balance or get knocked over, don’t wave your arms. Don’t attempt to catch yourself.
 
The sharks will come after you if you do.

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As if racing at nearly 200 mph while surrounded by 42 others all battling for the same real estate wasn’t dangerous enough, Kasey Kahne recently spent a few days in the water in the Bahamas. Surrounded by sharks.
 
"One time one rubbed me pretty good; the back half of him hit me," Kahne said. "I didn’t go over, but he rubbed me pretty good. Another time another one was pretty close, and I was like petting him in a way. I don’t know if you pet sharks, but I touched his skin. It was real hard and rough, really tough."
 
Kahne, driver of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series made the trip to film for Discovery Channel’s upcoming Shark Week effort that kicks off Sunday night.
 
Great Clips, a primary sponsor of Kahne’s team, has backed the network’s annual week-long programming for the past three seasons.
 
"Maybe they weren’t Great Whites, but they were big," Kahne said of the scuba diving excursion that placed him in the water surrounded by Caribbean reef sharks and other creatures from the deep. "I enjoyed it … it was a neat experience and I’m really glad I got to do that."
 
Kahne said he went through an hour-long class to familiarize himself with the equipment and the process. After diving to just under 40 feet, he settled in as a fellow diver drew the sharks in with food.
 
"The biggest thing is just to keep your hands to yourself, don’t move your hands because they’re looking for food," Kahne said. "We had a guy down there in something like a steel mesh suit feeding them to keep them around us. So keep your hands to yourself, kind of keep them close to your chest and if a shark runs into you, just fall over.
 
"You’re seated on the floor, kind of have your legs wrapped around a rock to kind of hold yourself up because you’re on your knees. Just fall over and kind of slowly get back up.
 
"It was more about not making quick moves so it doesn’t get their attention. It was really under control, really exciting. I loved it."
 
Kahne’s No. 5 Chevrolet will feature a Shark Week/Great Clips paint scheme for Sunday’s Coke Zero 400 (7:45 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM) at Daytona International Speedway.

RELATED: See Kahne’s paint scheme
 
"I grew up as a kid watching a lot of the Shark Week shows," he said. "I still do and it’ll be pretty fun to see myself on there for 2-3 minutes. I think kids love that type of stuff and I think that’s why it’s such a big deal to Great Clips. All the kids that they see, I think the Shark Week involvement is a pretty neat deal. They do a great job with it.
 
"I had a blast. I’ll go back and do it again. I don’t know if I’ll swim with sharks again — I don’t know how to set all that stuff up — but I’ll definitely scuba."

Watch Kahne swim with the sharks below.

Adjustments made for Coke Zero 400 weekend during $400 million makeover

RELATED: Spotters relocated at Daytona

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Consider it a sneak preview.

When NASCAR teams and fans show up for this weekend’s Coke Zero 400 at the sport’s most iconic track, they will see a Daytona International Speedway in the final and crucial stages of its $400 million makeover, called Daytona Rising.

From impressive new grandstands and modern amenities for fans to improved SAFER barriers for the competitors, it’s all full throttle ahead.

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"People will notice just how immense it is,” Daytona International Speedway President Joie Chitwood said of the remodeled and redesigned outer façade and entry that will greet fans.

"It’s gigantic, and it’s cool. The changes are so visible and people can see it and that’s what’s going to excite everybody, that the opening is just around the corner, a short seven months to get there."

Fans will notice what’s been made over, and what’s in the process.

Three of the five massive new entryways called "fan injectors" will be up and running with new escalators, elevators, concession stands and restrooms.

While there will be only 50,000 grandstand seats for Sunday’s Coke Zero 400, they are all the new wider, more comfy versions. And 10,000 of those  — located in Turn 4 — have never been used before.

Drivers such as Jamie McMurray, Austin Dillon and Joey Logano, who have previewed the various stages of construction and sampled the view from the grandstands, have all impressively declared, "there is no bad seat."

RELATED: Logano visits Daytona Rising, honors military

The press box and spotters stand will be smaller, temporary versions of themselves as work continues on a new tower. Timing and scoring will move across the track to the Daytona 500 Club in the infield. And the green flag will wave from a spotters stand at the start/finish line that stands alone against a backdrop of grandstand construction.

"It won’t be the most pretty Daytona International Speedway that we’ve ever had, but it’s just a step in the process to get us to the finished project in January of 2016,” Chitwood said. "So I know our fans will work with us. They understand this was the most critical window to get things done.

"So the Coke Zero will be a little bit of ‘pardon our dust’ opportunity, but it also shows just how much work we’ve gotten done so far."

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Equally as significant as the improved fan experience is the work completed for the competitors. While the famed 2.5-mile superspeedway surface remains the same, DIS has installed additional SAFER barriers, as promised, following Kyle Busch‘s bad crash in February’s season-opening XFINITY Series race at Daytona. Specifically the barriers were installed on the inside of Turn 1 and an additional 20,000 square feet of asphalt was added to extend the skid pad.

"I can say really for all tracks, this is starting that cycle of repeat visits so Daytona has really stepped up and talked to all of the competitors about where you’ll see changes heading in for this year with the goal of ’16, it’ll be SAFER everywhere,” NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Tuesday.

"We feel really good about the progress that’s been made and the changes you’ll see at each track going forward where there will be some solutions in place. And then in ’16, you’ll see more and more of it.

"The dialogue with the competitors has been terrific in this regard and certainly something that we said needed to happen, and we’re happy to see what’s taken place, especially at Daytona, leading into this weekend."

The Coke Zero 400 marks the traditional mid-point of the NASCAR season, the first time teams return to tracks for the second half of the schedule. And this year, that means a return of NBC as a broadcast partner with Sunday’s race marking the first race telecast for the network in a 10-year deal (7:45 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM).

RELATED: All you need to know about NBC

Chitwood says DAYTONA Rising in on schedule and on budget for completion in time for Daytona Speedweeks 2016 and promises that while the facility has been transformed, the history of the speedway is intact and the intense excitement produced on the track remains unchanged.

Sanctioning body remembers widow of NASCAR Hall of Famer Wendell Scott

RELATED: Family savors Scott’s NASCAR Hall of Fame induction

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (July 2, 2015) — "NASCAR extends its thoughts and condolences to the many family members and friends of Mary Scott, widow of Wendell Scott and matriarch of the Scott family.

"Loved by all, she was a friendly and welcoming presence in the garage during her husband’s competitive days in NASCAR. Her love and support provided Wendell a foundation for his many years of racing excellence, and helped guide his legend to NASCAR’s pinnacle — the NASCAR Hall of Fame."

Tracks aim to create an ‘all-inclusive’ atmosphere

“As members of the NASCAR industry, we join NASCAR in the desire to make our events among the most fan-friendly, welcoming environments in all of sports and entertainment.

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“To do that, we are asking our fans and partners to join us in a renewed effort to create an all-inclusive, even more welcoming atmosphere for all who attend our events. This will include the request to refrain from displaying the Confederate Flag at our facilities and NASCAR events.

“We are committed to providing a welcoming atmosphere free of offensive symbols. This is an opportunity for NASCAR Nation to demonstrate its sense of mutual respect and acceptance for all who attend our events while collectively sharing the tremendous experience of NASCAR racing.”

SIGNATORIES

International Speedway Corporation (ISC)

    Auto Club Speedway

    Chicagoland Speedway

    Darlington Raceway

    Daytona International Speedway

    Homestead-Miami Speedway

    Kansas Speedway

    Martinsville Speedway

    Michigan International Speedway

    Phoenix International Raceway

    Richmond International Raceway

    Route 66 Raceway

    Talladega Superspeedway

    Watkins Glen International

Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI)

    Atlanta Motor Speedway

    Bristol Motor Speedway

    Charlotte Motor Speedway

    Kentucky Speedway

    Las Vegas Motor Speedway

    New Hampshire Motor Speedway

    Sonoma Raceway

    Texas Motor Speedway

Dover International Speedway

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Pocono Raceway

Iowa Speedway

Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

Road America

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

Eldora Speedway

Gateway Motorsports Park       

Johnson’s hold over Harvick similar to some of tennis’ best rivalries

RELATED: H2H: Who’s more likely to win the Chase, Harvick or Johnson?

Sports rivalries have a way of heightening an event or a competition. Most sports fans usually associate the big team rivalries with Yankees-Red Sox in baseball, Duke-UNC in college basketball or Michigan-Ohio State in college football.



However, in individual sports those rivalries usually take shape on the big stage with lots on the line. And in most cases, one particular person has had a dominant hold over the other that must be overcome for success.

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Since moving to Stewart-Haas Racing for the start of the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, Kevin Harvick has been leading laps and leading laps and then even leading some more laps. He’s paced 3,362 circuits since the start of 2014 and won seven races during that stretch.

During that same time, Jimmie Johnson has led just over half of Harvick’s count (1,742), but has eight wins. And even more importantly, seven of those eight wins for Johnson have come with Harvick as the runner-up. 



The two California natives are friends, with Harvick crediting Johnson for his advice during the Championship 4 weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway that saw Harvick win the Ford EcoBoost 400 to capture the Sprint Cup championship.



Overall though, Johnson has gotten the best of Harvick head to head. Of their 13 1-2 finishes, Johnson has finished first 11 times to Harvick’s two, not to mention Johnson’s six championships to Harvick’s one.



With tennis’ third Grand Slam event, Wimbledon, starting this week, Johnson’s hold over Harvick reminded me of how Pete Sampras used to always be able to beat fellow American, friend and rival Andre Agassi in the big spot. 

Sampras only held a 20-14 advantage lifetime over Agassi, but in Grand Slam events (the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open), Sampras was 6-2 against him and 4-1 in finals.



A more recent comparison in tennis that fits better is Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal. For years, it seemed like it was a foregone conclusion that these two would meet in the finals of the French Open (on clay, Nadal’s best surface) and at Wimbledon (on grass, Federer’s best surface), with Nadal winning the French and Federer winning at Wimbledon. 



Early on, their rivalry was relatively even, but it really turned when Nadal beat Federer in the 2008 Wimbledon final, snapping Federer’s run of four straight titles at the All England Club. 

Overall, Nadal enjoys a 23-10 record over Federer and is 9-2 against him in Grand Slams (6-2 in Grand Slam finals). But since that Wimbledon final where he won, Nadal is 11-4 against him.



Federer’s dominance on grass, coupled with his defeat of Nadal twice at Wimbledon, helped the Spaniard raise his game to get past the Switzerland-born star and propel him to a long run of dominance over his rival.

Based on how the 2015 season has gone so far in NASCAR, we are very likely to see more Johnson-Harvick duels in the future. And the 2014 champion will almost certainly have more chances to best his friend and fellow championship competitor. Should one fall in Harvick’s favor, it could turn the tide of their rivalry and push him to a second straight championship, while denying Johnson’s quest for a seventh.



Special thanks to NASCAR.com’s Matt Strickert for his statistical analysis.