CONCORD, N.C. -- With 10 laps remaining in Sunday's Coca-Cola 600, Richard Childress descended from a team pit box and headed to his condominium overlooking Turn 1 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. "I said, 'I don't think we've got much of a chance to win, so I'm going to beat traffic,' " said the owner of Richard Childress Racing. "It's a good thing. I could see some things going on that I wouldn't have seen down here." Childress had a perfect vantage point to watch Kevin Harvick, the driver of his No. 29 Chevrolet, pull off his latest Sprint Cup stunner. Harvick inherited a victory in NASCAR's longest race of the season (and the longest in its history at 603 miles because of