Kevin Harvick isn’t much on predictions. The 2007 Daytona 500 winner would rather let his car do the talking.
Still, Harvick didn’t hesitate after a dramatic win in the Budweiser Shootout last Saturday when asked if his No. 29 Chevrolet is ready to make a serious run at ending Jimmie Johnson’s three-year reign atop NASCAR’s premiere circuit.
“I’m not going to sit up here and promise you can we beat the 48 because they’ve been hard to beat the last three years,” Harvick said.
Then, without skipping a beat, he added with a smile “right now we don’t think anybody can beat us.”
It was the kind of statement Harvick didn’t dare make a year ago, when he came to Daytona as defending champion knowing he had little shot at a repeat.
“Last year at this point it was like, ‘Man, I hope we can keep up with the draft,’” Harvick said.
It marked the start of a frustrating four months as Richard Childress Racing’s longest tenured driver struggled to find any consistency. He went 12 straight races without making the top 10 and was in danger of missing the Chase for the championship for the first time since 2005.
Harvick has done his best to move on, focusing this offseason on fine tuning a team that’s finished in the season’s top 10 four times in eight years.
“I think over the last five years we’ve had moments of everything that we needed to do, but we just need to put it all in one year,” Harvick said. “Last year from Chicago on, we ran in the top 10, top five every week. In 2006 we won a ton of races. (In) 2003 we were consistent (but) just kind of fell behind in the beginning.”

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