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    Saturday, May 25, 2024

    Harvick nips McMurray for Talladega victory

    Marcos Ambrose (47), Elliott Sadler (19), Ryan Newman (39), Joey Logano (20), Bobby Labonte (71), Brad Keselowski (12), Sam Hornish Jr. (77), Kasey Kahne (9) and Brian Vickers (83) crash during Sunday's NASCAR Sprint cup Series Aaron's 499 race at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala.

    Talladega, Ala. - Kevin Harvick executed the pass exactly how his team drew it up in the playbook.

    With a last-second slingshot past Jamie McMurray, Harvick snapped a 115-race winless drought with an overdue victory Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway. It was the payoff for perfect strategy devised in conversations over the weekend with crew chief Gil Martin and their Richard Childress Racing team.

    Harvick lurked behind in traffic, trying to move his way into second place as the race hit the closing laps. His plan was to set himself up for one attempt at the lead, which he made roughly 500 yards from the finish line by sliding inside of McMurray then drag-racing him to the checkered flag.

    "We made a plan, and I'm telling you, every piece of it played out exactly how we wanted to play it," Harvick said. "Coming into to the last lap, that's exactly how we planned it out on paper."

    The win gave Harvick his first victory since the 2007 season-opening Daytona 500, and it came in the longest Talladega race in Sprint Cup history. Because NASCAR's new overtime rule allows for three attempts at its version of overtime, the race went 12 laps past the scheduled distance of 188 trips around the 2.66-mile superspeedway.

    It covered a record 88 lead changes among a record 29 drivers, and the final pass was the one that had everyone talking.

    "I hate to show my age, but that was a tremendous pass just like the old days, like you would have seen Buddy Baker or Cale Yarborough," Martin said. "That was a tremendous pass, and it was timed perfectly."

    McMurray, this year's Daytona 500 winner after winning the October race at Talladega, couldn't hide his disappointment at misplaying the final half-lap. Seeking his third consecutive restrictor-plate victory, he stretched his fuel tank to the bitter end while racing wide-open to the finish line.

    He held the bottom line, one eye on the finish line and the other in his rearview mirror, certain that Harvick's lone attempt to pass would be on the outside.

    He was wrong.

    "I really thought that Kevin was going to go high," McMurray said after his second-place finish. "I felt like I was close enough to the yellow line that there was a lot more racetrack to the right. I was really guarding against the outside. It's hard to explain to you guys that aren't in cars, but when there's someone directly behind you and they pull their car out of line really fast, it's like you pull a parachute in your car.

    "It literally feels like you lose three or five miles an hour immediately, and when that happens, the car that's doing the passing just has the momentum."

    The margin of victory of 0.011 seconds was the eighth-closest in NASCAR since it began using electronic scoring in 1993.

    But Felix Sabates, co-owner of McMurray's Earnhardt Ganassi Racing team, questioned whether Harvick's pass was even legal. Because McMurray left so little real estate below him, Sabates believed Harvick dipped below the yellow out-of-bounds line.

    "He passed Jamie under the yellow line and the rule is very specific," Sabates argued.

    Harvick's victory celebration was a short one.

    Because rain postponed the Nationwide Series race Saturday, the winner had to hustle across the garage to run another 312 miles. He was joined in the Nationwide field by nine other Cup drivers doing double-duty, including a weary McMurray, who asked his crew for aspirin to treat a headache on an early pit stop in the second event.

    Juan Pablo Montoya, teammates with McMurray at EGR, finished third and silently watched a replay of the finish as he waited to start his post-race interviews.

    "Wow," he said with a sympathetic shrug for his teammate.

    The race was fairly clean for the first 465 miles, as drivers simply tried to ensure they'd be around at the end. That's when the chaos usually breaks out at Talladega, and Sunday was no exception.

    Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson tangled on the track in the second consecutive race. Gordon believes Johnson squeezed him down the track late in the race, triggering a crash that took Gordon out of contention, and Gordon didn't mask his anger after the race.

    "The 48 is testing my patience, I can tell you that," said Gordon, who finished 22nd. "It takes a lot to make me mad. I am (mad) right now. I don't know what it is with me and him right now."

    Johnson was later involved in his own accident, tangling with Greg Biffle on the second attempt at overtime. Biffle had been second on that restart, but struggled taking off and dropped back through the field.

    Johnson had thought he cleared him, but then drifted into his lane to trigger a crash that sent the defending four-time champion hard into the inside retaining wall.

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