#29-Kevin Harvick is still upset with good friend #20-Tony Stewart, who ran into him in the closing laps at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and ruined what should have been a second-place finish. “He’s called. I just haven’t answered,” Harvick said Thursday between practice sessions for the inaugural Busch Series race at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. The contact between the two cars with 10 laps to go in Sunday’s race damaged Harvick’s front fender and ruined his Chevrolet’s handling. Stewart drove off to victory, Harvick faded to seventh, and the difference cost him 24 points in the standings and $116,439 in prize money. As they head to Pocono Raceway for this weekend’s Nextel Cup race, the duo will have to work through Harvick’s hard feelings. Stewart admitted right after Sunday’s race that he’d made a mistake by running into Harvick while attempting to retake the lead. “If I’m going to preach about give and take, it’s stupid for me to not do the same thing,” Stewart said. “If I want people to race me with respect, I’m going to race people with respect. I didn’t mean to get into Kevin. That wasn’t my intention. There was no logical reason to get into him. That was a mistake on my part.” It’s particularly awkward because Harvick and Stewart are good friends, and Stewart regularly drives Harvick-owned cars in the Busch Series. Stewart even drove Kevin Harvick Inc. cars to a pair of victories at Daytona. Harvick said he just needs some time. “I don’t think you let anything on the track affect your relationship off the race track,” he said. “For me, it’s better to just take some time and think about things and just realize where we are and go from there. I’ll get over it. At some point. And we’ll still be friends.”(Associated Press)(8-3-2007) UPDATE: from a GM Racing PR, #20-Tony Stewart was asked if had spoken to #29-Kevin Harvick: Q) Have You and Kevin Harvick Talked Since Indy? “Yeah, we talked last night. And I know what he was disappointed about. He should have run second. He had the second best car for sure. Kevin and I are good friends and we talked about it last night. I would have been upset if the roles were reversed too. I can’t blame him for that. I made a mistake. I let the car get too high. I’ve heard differences of opinions from people watching the tape but I still take responsibility for it. I would never race Kevin like that on purpose. I don’t race anybody like that on purpose because I’m big about racing guys clean and having them race me clean. But the thing is, when I make a mistake I fess up to it right away and I did it right in victory lane when we won the race. We had more to lose there then to gain in that situation. So it shows how big a race it is to everybody. Finishing second there would have been a heck of a lot better for him than seventh, for sure.”(GM Racing PR)(8-4-2007)
