Daytona 500 Classic: Harvick beats Martin by 0.02s in frantic 2007 finish
Kevin Harvick didnāt have the quickest car at Daytona and struggled against an overheating problem that dropped him back into the murkier zones of the whirling dervish pack, but what he did have was the right move up his sleeve at the crucial moment.
He grasped American racingās biggest prize away from one of its best-loved racers, Mark Martin, in brilliant ā yet controversial ā style.
Harvickās sensational final lap move dashed the dreams of Martin, the now part-time Cup veteran who once again had to settle for being the bridesmaid. Heās never won this race, or the championship, but Martin put himself in a position to win after gambling on taking only two tires in his final pitstop.
He always looked prone to attack from constant challenger Kyle Buschās Hendrick Chevrolet, which had taken fresh rubber all-round, but his true opposition was coming from much further back in the field.
Mark Martin leads Kyle Busch on the last restart
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
Busch had moved ominously into second place as the race entered its endgame, and was challenging Martin for the lead with four laps remaining when a multi-car accident caused a red flag, leading to a two-lap green/white-checkered race to the flag.
āWe can win this thing,ā Martin told his crew over the radio as he sat waiting for the restart, while Buschās crew chief Alan Gustafson pointed out bluntly to his charge: āWeāve got four new tires; heās only got two.ā
Having led briefly in the first half of the race, Harvick appeared to be out of the frame after his car received a bang on its nose that sent the water temperatures sky high. Fortunately, the team was able to rectify its cooling duct in a pitstop, and from 29th with 22 laps to go, he rallied his way back into seventh place for the crucial restart.
The racing had been positively restrained by NASCAR restrictor plate racing standards, but it was just about to get a whole lot wilder. As the evening turned to twilight, and with the ultimate bragging rights of the year at stake, as one driver put it: āThe risk versus reward ratio changes and people do things they wouldnāt normally do.ā Or, as Harvick put it: āA bunch of demons came out when it got dark.ā
Mark Martin leads Kyle Busch with one lap to go
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
As the crowd took to their feet, Martin made a solid getaway and hugged the yellow line at the bottom of the track forcing Busch to follow him as the pack built its precious momentum, hamstrung by their strangled engines. Further back, Harvick was the aggressor, but his first move to the outside on the back straight only gained him one place, so it seemed a top five finish was his only realistic target.
On the final lap, however, Martin was busy blocking Busch going into Turn 3, while Harvick again opted for the high line. This time, he got a mega bump draft from a combination of Matt Kenseth and Jeff Burton, and they āpushed the hell out of meā to help him rocket past Elliott Sadler, David Gilliand and Greg Biffle on the back straight.
As he approached Turn 3, Harvick also roared past Busch ā who tried to block but couldnāt cope with Kevinās āfreight-trainā momentum.
Kevin Harvick takes the lead over Mark Martin in turn 4
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
Unbelievably, Harvick then drew level with Martin going into the final yards and edged ahead exiting Turn 4, with just inches separating them as they raced to the line. Behind them, a huge accident kicked off as the chasing pack self-destructed, but the front two kept it clean as they dipped for the line.
Hereās where the controversy arose, as NASCAR no longer allows the practice of racing back to the finish line if thereās a crash. But this is the Daytona 500, and as Martin would shrug later: āNASCAR did its best to get an exciting finish ā itās never over until itās over.ā
NASCAR insisted that the yellow was called, but only when Clint Bowyer began his alarming somersault, and not for the initial crash instigated by a spinning Busch. The sanctioning body maintained that Harvick had already crossed the finish line at that point, although many took issue with its stance.
Kevin Harvick takes the victory ahead of Mark Martin
Photo by: NASCAR Media
The winning margin was 0.02secs, which was the closest finish in the Daytona 500ās history at the time ā although they only timed it accurately since 1993, and took three days to decide the winner of the first one.
Martin said of the situation: āI was leading when they were wrecking. I noticed the smoke in my mirrors, but my focus was on beating the 29 [Harvick] to the finish line, and I thought had Kyle behind me. But Iād lost Kyle, so I was hoping for a push but there was nobody there. It was looking good, but I let it slip through my fingers and Iām fine with that. Iām not going to cry over it.ā
Mark Martin
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
Harvick said of the grandstand finish: āI saw the yellow come out right after we crossed the finish line. I donāt really know when it came out, but I was concentrating on Mark because I was in front of him but he side-drafted as we came off Turn 4, so I knew it would be close.ā
What Martin really needed was the benefit of push from behind, but the most likely provider, Busch, wasnāt there because he was spinning like a top exiting Turn 4. This triggered a huge crash as Matt Kenseth spun in sympathy, provoking Casey Mears, Sterling Marlin (who managed to slam into the pitwall), Jeff Gordon, David Stremme and last, but certainly not least, Bowyer to crash. He would cross the finish line upside down and on fire, but quickly hopped out as the flames licked around his windscreen.
Last lap crash: Clint Bowyer flips over and catches fire
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
āI saw them all wreck and thought I was clear,ā said Bowyer. āThen somebody clipped me and turned me over. I wrecked the race car; itās pretty much junk. Oh well.ā
The man with the strongest car in the race was Tony Stewart. The winner of the Bud Shootout and a Gatorade Duel 150 qualifier looked on course for his first Daytona 500 victory ā this despite running over debris while leading, getting stuck behind a spinning car in the pitlane and then getting caught speeding as he left the pits.
From 40th position on lap 80, Stewart was back at the front with 50 laps to go. But just after he got there, he ran too low in Turn 4, got into a slide and was collected twice by a close following Kurt Busch (who probably the second-best car in the event) sending both into the wall and out of a race either could have won.
āI mishandled in the corner and the car just took off on me,ā said Stewart, whose days of petulant rants seem a thing of the past. āIt was pretty impressive to come back to the front after going all the way to the back, though.ā
Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch crash in turn 4
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
Busch shouldered the blame for the crash, although it didnāt seem to be his fault: āWe were both taken out of the Daytona 500 because of my mistake. We were poised for a good run at the end, but got bottled up in that turn.ā
With that duo out of the way, Martin Truex took over at the front as the race entered its final quarter, under pressure from Kenseth and Martin. Kenseth grabbed the lead with a smart pass leading up to the crucial yellow period during which Martin took his two-tire gamble to gain track position. Although he would play a major role in Harvickās win, Kenseth went unrewarded after his last-gasp rotation.
But he wasnāt the only hard luck story. After the Busch brothers had looked so strong earlier, it was harsh that neither of them would score the finish they deserved. Kyleās last-lap block attempt on Harvick meant he was very tight to the bottom of the track and he suddenly spun out of third place exiting that fateful last corner, triggering the ābig oneā that had taken so long in coming.
Last lap crash: Casey Mears collide with Sterling Marlin and Clint Bowyer
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
It also eliminated Biffle from the leading places, who had a prime view of what happened but could still only surmise that āKyle got loose and we all wreckedā.
There were some good fortune stories to be found from this race, however, as Jeff Burton emerged through the chaos to grab an unexpected third. āThe last 40 laps were insane. I had my eyes closed the whole time after the restart! I had a great seat for the wreck as we came off Turn 4, it got really wild.ā
Burton deserved his slice of luck, as he dropped back from second place with 70 laps to go due to a slow pitstop, caused by his jackman tearing his calf muscle as he ran around the car. āI saw him literally hopping around the car, still carrying the jack,ā said Burton. āIām really proud of him for doing that.ā
Mike Wallace
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
An even more unlikely top five finisher was Mike Wallace, who only made the main event via the qualifying races. His plucky underdog run was rewarded with fourth as much bigger names contrived to eliminate each other.
The top rookie was fifth placed David Ragan, the youngster that Jack Roush has chosen to replace Martin. He had only raced into the top 10 in the closing stages before dodging the bullets of the last lap crashfest, having started the penultimate lap back in 15th.
Behind Ragan were the Evernham-run Dodges of Elliott Sadler and Kasey Kahne ā not bad considering their crew chiefs had been banned for cheating in qualifying ā and poleman David Gilliland, who led for 18 laps but lost a lap when he collided with Robby Gordon in the pits. Joe Nemechek and Jeff Gordon rounded out the top 10 but bore the scars of battle.
Juan Pablo Montoya finished his first Daytona 500 in 19th place, getting back on the lead lap after struggling with handling issues and a transmission that only offered second and fourth gears by the end. āA top 20 finish is kind of what I wanted to do here,ā he said.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. spins in turn 4 after the crash on the Superstretch
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
Other pre-race favourites fell by the wayside. Fan favourite Dale Earnhardt Jr endured a day that had more downs than ups, and he was eventually taken out in a pile-up that was triggered by Jamie McMurray. Earnhardt rammed front row starter Ricky Rudd in the melee that followed, but admitted: āItās very frustrating to make things happen when the car wonāt cooperate. I couldnāt see what caused the wreck but Rudd slowed down and I got into him.ā
2006 Daytona 500 winner Jimmie Johnson looked like an accident waiting to happen at Turn 2 all day, and he delivered with 26 laps remaining. Unable to avoid the fallout were Denny Hamlin, Jeff Green and David Reutimann.
To complete Penskeās misery, Kurt Buschās team-mate Ryan Newman dropped out with a blown engine, legacy of a holed radiator, incurred soon after heād led a lap.
Toyotaās arrival at the top level of stock car racing was a damp squib. Dale Jarrett finished on the lead lap in 22nd, with Michael Waltrip two laps down in 30th.
Ken Schrader spins
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
In fact, the most remarkable aspect of its debut was Dave Blaney, who avoided a collision between Reed Sorenson and Carl Edwards exiting Turn 4 by driving down the pitlane, but he rejoined at almost full speed, complete with a blown right-front tire, and was slammed into by Ken Schraderās Ford. Blaney was given a five-lap penalty for the maneuver, but his car was too badly damaged to continue anyway.
After a week where cheating in qualifying had made headline news across America, it was fitting Daytona provided a thrilling finale. As a poignant postscript, Harvickās win was the first Daytona 500 success for Richard Childress Racing since the late Dale Earnhardtās sole victory in 1998.
After the race, an emotional Childress said: āIt gives me thoughts back to ā98 and Iām going to cherish this. Winning tonight is great, but I donāt think anything will replace a friend, Dale Earnhardt, a great American racing driver.ā
On the subject of the race itself, Childress added: āIt was unbelievable to see the moves that Kevin made. I told Kevin I kept my eyes shut because it was so wild!ā
Victory lane: race winner Kevin Harvick celebrates
Photo by: Eric Gilbert
And the violence didnāt stop there. Harvickās victory celebration also got out of hand: āI guess I didnāt realized how excited I was and punched the dang mirror out of the car! That really hurt my hand.ā
It didnāt stop him celebrating a remarkable race win, as Martin left the track with that familiar second place feeling.