Indianapolis Motor Speedway
July 5, 2020
FINAL STATUS
LAPS COMPLETED
PLAYOFF POINTS
1
Kevin Harvick
4 |
2
Matt Kenseth
42 |
3
Aric Almirola
10 |
4
Brad Keselowski
2 |
5
Cole Custer
41 |
6
Kyle Busch
18 |
7
Michael McDowell
34 |
8
Tyler Reddick
8 |
9
Bubba Wallace
43 |
10
Joey Logano
22 |
11
Chase Elliott
9 |
12
Christopher Bell
95 |
13
Kurt Busch
1 |
14
Ty Dillon
13 |
15
John H. Nemechek
38 |
16
Clint Bowyer
14 |
17
Ross Chastain
77 |
18
Austin Dillon
3 |
19
Matt DiBenedetto
21 |
20
Daniel Suarez
96 |
21
JJ Yeley
27 |
22
BJ McLeod
78 |
23
Quin Houff
00 |
24
Garrett Smithley
53 |
25
Josh Bilicki
7 |
26
Joey Gase
51 |
27
William Byron
24 |
28
Denny Hamlin
11 |
29
Timmy Hill
66 |
30
Alex Bowman
88 |
31
Chris Buescher
17 |
32
Ryan Blaney
12 |
33
Erik Jones
20 |
34
Ryan Newman
6 |
35
Brennan Poole
15 |
36
Ricky Stenhouse Jr
47 |
37
Justin Allgaier
48 |
38
Martin Truex Jr
19 |
39
Corey Lajoie
32 |
40
Ryan Preece
37 |
-
#1 | LEADER
Kevin Harvick
4|
-
#2 | 0.743
Matt Kenseth
42|
-
#3 | 1.626
Aric Almirola
10|
Kevin Harvick escapes in overtime, lands third Brickyard victory
In an action-filled afternoon of NASCAR Cup Series racing in Sunday‘s Big Machine Hand Sanitizer 400 Powered by Big Machine Records, Kevin Harvick held off the field in a overtime sprint to the finish line to earn his fourth victory of the season, and his second consecutive and third overall win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
To celebrate the big victory, Harvick and his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford team climbed the front grandstand fence — reminiscent of the fence celebration his team owner, Indiana native and NASCAR Hall of Famer Tony Stewart did during his wins in the race in 2005 and 2007.
RELATED: Official race results | Stage recaps
SHOP: Harvick gear
Although Harvick led a race-best 68 of the 161 laps, he and Denny Hamlin put on a legitimate high-speed duel to decide this victory. While leading Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota suffered a blown tire sending the car hard into the Turn 1 wall with only seven laps remaining – ending Hamlin‘s impressive run.
“We knew he [Hamlin] was going to be really close on tires and [crew chief] Rodney [Childers} told me on the radio, he said ‘just make sure you keep the pressure on him,” Harvick said. “That was all the pressure I could give.”
With Hamlin out, Harvick assumed the lead for the fourth time on the day and was next tasked with holding off 48-year old former series champion, Chip Ganassi Racing driver Matt Kenseth, on a restart with two laps remaining. A great jump on the ensuing start put Harvick back out front and ultimately to a 0.743-second victory.
Harvick‘s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Aric Almirola finished third followed by Brad Keselowski and Sunoco rookie Cole Custer.
Two-time Indianapolis winner and reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch finished sixth followed by Michael McDowell, rookie Tyler Reddick, Bubba Wallace and Joey Logano. It was an especially impressive outing by the series rookies — with four of the six finishing among the top 15. Christopher Bell and John Hunter Nemechek were 12th and 15th, respectively.
Hamlin, who took the lead on the race‘s final round of pit stops, ultimately finished 28th following his incident.
“It‘s tough, I hate it for the FedEx team [No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team],” Hamlin said post-race. “We did what we needed to do and it just didn‘t work out for us today. Had a fast car obviously. Proud of the whole FedEx Toyota team. We‘ve been so good lately. Feel like I‘m doing all I can, in these big races. A lot things like this don‘t go my way all the time, but we‘re still going to go next week and try to win the next one. Do all we can.”
RELATED: Denny Hamlin wrecks late at Indianapolis
And, he acknowledged of the competition with Harvick, “It‘s been a great battle, and those guys are great competitors. Last few weeks have been kind of a head-to-head with me and him. Probably not another guy I‘d rather battle with each and every week. Congrats to them and that team. We had two very close and equal cars but they got it today.”
One of the weekend‘s biggest stories involved seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson, a four-time Brickyard 400 winner, who was diagnosed with COVID-19 virus on Friday and had to sit the race out.
NASCAR Xfinity Series perennial championship contender Justin Allgaier was tabbed to drive Johnson‘s No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet — the first time in Johnson‘s legendary career that someone else drove his car in a NASCAR Cup Series race.
Allgaier had to start from the rear of the Indianapolis grid and was steadily making his way forward when he was collected in the pit road melee on Lap 15 — a chain-reaction accident involving several cars. The No. 48 Chevrolet suffered too much damage to continue and Allgaier was officially scored 37th in the 40-car field.
“Once the wreck started happening in front of us and we all got bottled up there, one car after another was getting run into,” Allgaier said. “Just a shame. I hate it for these guys on this Ally 48. They‘ve done such a good job, they prepared so well for the circumstances. Obviously our hearts and our thoughts are with Jimmie right now and his family. That‘s the most important piece of all this, getting him back to the race track soon. I wanted to do well for them today and it‘s just disappointing to be standing here talking to you [reporters] unfortunately. But we‘ll go on.
“I don‘t know what next week looks like yet. But we‘ll run the Xfinity Series race and have a good shot at it. Disappointing way to end the Brickyard 400.”
MORE: Justin Allgaier exits early at Brickyard
Zach Price, a rear tire changer for Ryan Blaney, was hit by a car on pit road while servicing Blaney‘s No. 12 Ford during the multi-car incident. The race was red-flagged for an ambulance to respond on pit road and Price — who smiled and waved to team members as he was loaded into the ambulance – was transported, treated and released from Indiana University Methodist Hospital. Team Penske said he will travel back to North Carolina with the team for further evaluation.
The NASCAR Cup Series’ next race is scheduled Sunday (2:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Kentucky Speedway.
Contributing: Staff reports
DRIVERS COMPARISON
- Kevin Harvick
- Matt Kenseth
- Flag State
- Fastest Lap
#1
- Kevin Harvick
#1
LAP SPEED
181.892MPH
LEADER
AVG RUNNING POS
4.525
BEST LAP TIME (SEC)
49.112
BEST LAP SPEED (MPH)
183.255
LAPS LED
65
#2
- Matt Kenseth
#2
LAP SPEED
181.657MPH
0.74300000000039 (Time Behind)
0.74300000000039 (Time Behind)
AVG RUNNING POS
8.025
BEST LAP TIME (SEC)
49.544
BEST LAP SPEED (MPH)
181.657
LAPS LED
0
LIVE STANDINGS
STAGE ONE POINTS
STAGE TWO POINTS
STAGE THREE POINTS
RACE POINTS
1
Brad Keselowski
2 |
2
A.J. Allmendinger
41 |
3
Martin Truex Jr.
41 |
LIVE STANDINGS
STAGE ONE POINTS
STAGE TWO POINTS
STAGE THREE POINTS
RACE POINTS
1
Martin Truex Jr.
2 |
2
Brad Keselowski
17 |
3
A.J. Allmendinger
41 |
4
Brad Keselowski
41 |
5
Martin Truex Jr.
17 |
6
Martin Truex Jr.
17 |
7
Martin Truex Jr.
2 |
8
Martin Truex Jr.
41 |
9
Martin Truex Jr.
2 |
10
Martin Truex Jr.
41 |
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