DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Kevin Harvick spent the past decade avoiding dealing with Dale Earnhardts death.
He was closed off to teammates. He was detached from fans. He was unwilling to broach the delicate subject with just about anyone.
Until recently.
With the anniversary of Earnhardts fatal crash looming at Daytona International Speedway, Harvick opened up to teammates during a Richard Childress Racing dinner earlier this month. With tears in his eyes and 10 years of emotion pouring from his heart, Harvick caught everyone by surprise.
And this much was clear: Harvick finally has embraced Earnhardts legacy.
Its hard to be in the shadow of somebody, teammate Jeff Burton said. Theres no way that Kevin Harvick steps into that car after the tragedy without being in his shadow. You know, thats hard. I dont want to speak for Kevin, but it takes a little while to separate yourself from that.
It took years.
Harvick was 25 when Earnhardt died on Feb. 18, 2001, in a final-lap wreck at the Daytona 500. Harvick was a budding star in NASCARs second-tier series. He envisioned making the jump to the Sprint Cup Series, but never could have imagined it happening the way it did.
Crew chief Kevin Hamlin summoned Harvick to Richard Childress office in the middle of night and asked him to do the unthinkable -- replace Earnhardt.
Harvick was woefully unprepared.
Instantly, its like everybody knows your name, everybody knows what youre doing, so you start from the wrong end of the spectrum and you dont have time, Harvick said. A lot of times when you come into something new you have time to learn. You have time to learn what youre supposed to say, when youre supposed to do things, how youre supposed to do it.
You start off with the biggest press conference that youll ever have in your whole career and you have more fans than youll ever have and you dont know how to manage your time, you dont know how to manage your money, you dont know what to say, and all of a sudden you have all that stuff at once. So, instantly, I just put up my defense, and it was easier just not to talk about it.
He didnt.
Instead, Harvick shut down. He figured that was the easiest way to cope with everything going on around him -- questions about Earnhardts death and tributes at every track.
Instantly, you had everything that you wanted, but you didnt have to do anything for it, Harvick said. It just didnt all make sense to me.
Life-changing moment
Racing in the same Chevrolet but with a different colored paint scheme with No. 29 on the side, Harvick got behind the wheel days after Earnhardts death and finished 14th at Rockingham. Harvick vividly remembers details of that day, from the bright lights of a news conference to a private conversation with Dale Earnhardt Jr.
When he drove that car at Rockingham, we told him it was going to be a life-changing moment, and it has been, Childress said.
Two weeks later, everything became a blur.
Harvick won over the legion of Earnhardt fans with a victory at Atlanta in his third race. He nipped Jeff Gordon at the finish line by six one-thousandths of a second, one of the closest finishes in NASCAR history, then dropped a reverse victory lap with three fingers out the window and everyone on their feet.
I dont remember a thing from the day, Harvick said. With the different emotions of everything we went through during that time period, I can go back and watch the video, but I couldnt tell you one thing that stuck out from that particular day because there were so many things happening.
I know it should be something I remember for the rest of my life, but there were so many different emotions and so many things happening, and to throw the win on top of that, you didnt know whether to be happy or sad. You want to be happy, but are you supposed to?
He won again that season but found mixed results in the years that followed. He did, however, develop his own brash style and reputation. He became known as the Instigator -- a derisive play on Earnhardts famed nickname the Intimidator -- and might have turned off some Earnhardt loyalists.
And while Harvick didnt always see eye-to-eye with Childress on the direction the team, any disagreements seemed to bring them closer together.
They got really tight in 2010 as Harvick contended for the title. He finished third in points, remaining in a tight race until the finale in Homestead. His success from last season, along with the 10 years that have passed, have helped him come to terms with replacing Earnhardt and accepting his leadership role at RCR.
His speech proved that to everyone else.
That was different. But he was serious. I can promise you that, teammate Clint Bowyer said. Its been a big part of his life. Obviously, his career is because of (Earnhardts death). That started his career. You know, he owes a lot to Dale. I know that thats important to him. It was just an emotional moment but definitely uncharacteristic.
Still, Harvick knows he never will escape Earnhardts shadow. And hes fine with it -- finally.
That legacy was always going to be with the car and the comparisons that came with it, Harvick said. It will always be a part of that car. Its not maddening. Its a good thing, so you try to embrace that and continue that legacy as strong as possible moving forward.


Castroneves, Franchitti chase 4th Indy 500 win

