“You can’t drive a slow car fast and you can’t beat good people,” Kevin Harvick said way back in 2018 when he was still racing for Stewart-Haas Racing. And now, in 2026, as a FOX analyst and a veteran of the sport, he is echoing the same sentiment. However, this time it is with a sharper edge. Now, Kevin Harvick isn’t just talking philosophy. Instead, he’s pointing straight at what he believes is a growing issue in NASCAR: drivers not pulling their weight when it matters most.

Kevin Harvick doubles down on driver responsibility

“Let me start by saying that you can’t drive a slow car fast. But I believe that the driver is the biggest piece of the puzzle. Even if you have the fastest car in the world to be able to get the details out of the racecar, you have to have the driver’s feedback.”

That’s Kevin Harvick laying it out as bluntly as possible, and it cuts straight to the core of what separates good teams from great ones in NASCAR.

At the top level, raw speed isn’t enough. A driver’s ability to communicate what the car is doing, for example, how it enters a corner, where it loses grip, how it reacts over long runs, can make or break a race weekend. That feedback feeds directly into simulation work, setup adjustments, and in-race strategy. Without it, even the fastest car can plateau, unable to unlock those final tenths that decide wins.

And in 2026, that contrast is becoming hard to ignore within the same garage.

While Tyler Reddick has stormed to four wins in six races, his teammate Bubba Wallace finds himself on a very different trajectory. Sitting third in the standings, Wallace has been consistent, but not dominant as Reddick. He’s yet to secure a pole position or a victory, with an average start of 15.3 and an average finish of 11.8.

It’s not a collapse. But it’s not contention either. And that’s exactly where Kevin Harvick’s point lands. At this level, the difference between running well and winning often comes down to the driver’s ability to elevate the car beyond its baseline. Because in NASCAR, speed is built as much in the garage as it is on the track, and the driver sits right at the center of it all.

Spire Motorsports emerges as Harvick’s surprise package

When it comes to early-season surprises, Kevin Harvick didn’t hesitate to point in one direction.

“That has to be Spire [Motorsports] for me. When Carson Hocevar is on the racetrack, he’s exciting,” Harvick said. “He’s electrifying, and he makes a lot of people mad, but he doesn’t care. Now he’s got the cars that are capable to go up there and consistently put himself in the front of the racetrack.”

“The one that sticks out the most to me is Daniel Suárez,” Harvick added. “He really backs it up for Spire to be able to put themselves in the front of the field as a contender week in and week out. He’s been so consistent, and that’s a very new situation for Daniel, Spire, and that team.”

And that consistency is key.

After leaving Trackhouse Racing at the end of 2025 following a five-year run, Suárez entered 2026 with plenty to prove. So far, he’s delivering. With two top-10 finishes in six races and sitting 14th in the standings, he’s quietly stabilizing a team that’s still building its identity.

For Spire Motorsports, this isn’t just a hot start but a bold statement to the entirety of the garage. And if Kevin Harvick’s read is right, they might not be done surprising the NASCAR world just yet.

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