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And to think, early in the race, Harvick didn't believe he had a chance.
His Chevrolet struggled mightily early, and he was a race-low 27th on lap 234 of the 500-lap race. But a 25-minute red flag to fix a wall damaged by a violent hit by Martin Truex Jr. gave the No. 29 crew a chance to regroup, and Harvick steadily climbed through the field.
"We were terrible, no other way to put it," crew chief Gil Martin said. "The red flag was actually a good thing for us because our team was able to almost be at halftime, and we went to the bottom of the pit box, six or seven of us together, and we thought about what we could do."
They got Harvick up near the front as the action intensified following a restart with 29 laps left in the race.
Busch was leading when Earnhardt pulled ahead with 20 laps to go with a pass that brought everyone in the grandstands to their feet. Harvick closed quickly, then pulled onto Earnhardt's bumper with four laps to go, and made his pass in the second turn.
Earnhardt tried to get the lead back, but conceded as they rounded the fourth turn. Harvick then sailed away for his second consecutive victory.
Earnhardt later battled the conflicting emotions of being disappointed at falling short and celebrating another strong run.
"I'll probably think about it a million times what I probably could have done differently," he said. "If I know what's best for me, I should probably have a good attitude about what happened today and probably go into the next race and use it as momentum and confidence, like any other good driver would do, instead of worrying about, you know, how close we came."
Busch led a race-high 151 laps, the second consecutive Sprint Cup race he's dominated, only to fade to third. And it's the second race he could have won this weekend at Martinsville, but didn't. Busch finished second Saturday to Johnny Sauter in the Trucks Series race.
Busch, who took over the points lead despite coming up short of the win, said Earnhardt was in bounds with the bump on him for the lead.
"I was holding him up, so it was good for him," Busch said. "I mean, he took the lead. No harm, no foul. I probably had the best car here today. Unfortunately just didn't win with it."
Juan Pablo Montoya was fourth, followed by Jeff Gordon and Matt Kenseth, who rallied from an early penalty that dropped him a lap down. Pole-sitter Jamie McMurray finished eighth, and David Ragan, Clint Bowyer and Mark Martin rounded out the top 10.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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