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BILLS: Harvick drives through camp
By John Kekis
Associated Press
PITTSFORD — NASCAR met the NFL on Thursday, and it
was difficult to figure out who was more excited —
Cup driver Kevin Harvick or Buffalo Bills
defensive tackle Tim Anderson.
Call it a dead heat.
“These guys are huge,” Harvick said as the Bills
walked by during a break in the opening day of
training camp. “I told them coming here I was
going to get some shoulder pads and a helmet and
knock somebody down, but I don’t think I can. It’s
cool to see how somebody else prepares for what
they do. We all watch NFL games and watch these
guys play every week. It’s neat just to be able to
come and relate to somebody about what they do.”
Is he a fan of the Bills?
“No. I root for the 49ers,” said Harvick, who was
born in Bakersfield, Calif. “I haven’t had a whole
lot to root for, but they’re getting better. They
got a lot better the second half last year. It’ll
be fun to watch.”
Anderson is entering his fourth year with the
Bills, and the former Ohio State star easily is
the biggest auto racing fan on the team. And for
him, it’s strictly NASCAR. Anderson has been to
events at Charlotte, Daytona, Chicago, Michigan,
Bristol, and Watkins Glen, and he imagines
becoming a tire changer when his football career
ends.
“Saying I’m a fan might be a little bit of an
understatement,” said Anderson, a 6-foot-3,
328-pound reserve who counts a poster autographed
by Harvick as one of his prized souvenirs. “I
would say more borderline obsessed. I love it.
It’s four hours of total relaxation on a Sunday or
Saturday night. If I could fit in one of those
things (a Cup car), I’d go out. Unfortunately, I
probably won’t fit through the window.”
Anderson, who first met Harvick two years ago at
Chicagoland Speedway, swapped an autographed Bills
helmet and a couple of hats for one of Harvick’s
shirts as the two briefly chatted about racing.
“I want to go to the night race at Bristol (in
late August) badly,” Anderson said. “It’s kind of
a bad scheduling time for me, though. I’m going to
have to wait a few years, hopefully about seven
more. Then I could finally get to one.”
Harvick, who won the Daytona 500 in February and
is the lone driver in the Cup series to surpass $5
million in earnings this season, was in this
Rochester suburb for an obligatory appearance as
the defending winner of the Nextel Cup road race
at Watkins Glen International.
In recording his first road-course victory in the
Cup series last August, Harvick did what few
thought was possible: He passed Tony Stewart for
the lead with three laps to go and pulled away.
“Personally, it was a major accomplishment in my
career,” said Harvick, who is eighth in the Cup
points standings and second in the Busch Series.
“We’d been able to win on all the different types
of racetracks as we’ve gone through the years, but
the road-course thing, we always had this little
cloud over us. We had been in contention to win
and always had things happen here and there. To
finally do that was pretty satisfying. It’s almost
a sense of relief because you get so frustrated at
places you know you’re capable of winning and
haven’t been able to.”
Read the full story at www.tonawanda-news.com |
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