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INDIANAPOLIS – Just one week after celebrating his 20th birthday, Braden Eves extended his string of Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship wins to four with another triumph in Saturday’s USF2000 Grand Prix of Indianapolis.
Eves fought off a challenge in the closing stages from Cape Motorsports teammate Darren Keane, who in turn remained under close scrutiny from Pabst Racing’s Hunter McElrea.
Eves joined an exclusive group to win the opening four races of the season alongside J.R. Hildebrand, who began his 2006 title-winning campaign by claiming the first seven races (and 12 out of 14 in total), and Jay Howard, who one year earlier won six races in a row to lay the foundation for his own championship.
Eves’ domination was such that he led all 20 laps, having started on the pole position with a new lap record of 1:24.5396. He also posted another new fastest race lap mark at 1:24.7440, an average speed of 103.611 mph. A trio of brief caution periods kept Eves on his toes, but on each occasion he timed his restarts to perfection to remain just out of Keane’s reach.
“With Darren behind me at the start, I was able to give him a little more of a draft because he’s further behind in the championship, but that was about it – we’re teammates off track and we help each other to get better, but it’s all on when we’re racing,” Eves said. “I focused on what I needed to do and keeping him behind me. But it still hasn’t set in, my start to the season, especially since Darren has been right with me all through testing. Everyone at Cape Motorsports is working super hard and they’re very good at what they do, and everything has worked in my favor so far. It was so cool to see all the fans out there today – it really puts it all in perspective on the cool down lap, when everyone is waving at you. It’s a great feeling.”
For Keane, the result represented a breakthrough of sorts following a desperately disappointing start to the season during which he has been struck by misfortune of one sort or another in each of the opening three races.
This time he spent most of the race focused on his battle with McElrea, who briefly snagged second place just before the second full-course caution period. Keane made amends at the ensuing restart, then mounted a strong challenge to Eves during the final three-lap dash to the checkered flag before coming up just more than a half-second short.
DEForce Racing’s Jak Crawford impressed on his USF2000 debut, taking over fourth place from teammate Manuel Sulaiman on the second lap when the Mexican encountered some gear-shifting problems which caused him to fall down the order. Sulaiman spun off a couple of laps later, then charged from 18th to 12th before making another mistake and ending his day early.
Another strong run for Cameron Shields also was ended by contact. The Australian’s misfortune opened the door for second-generation racer Eduardo Barrichello, who enjoyed his best result to date as he fought past Legacy Autosport teammates Alex Baron and Dakota Dickerson in the closing laps to finish fifth for Miller Vinatieri Motorsports.
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INDIANAPOLIS – Rasmus Lindh completed a sweep of the Indy Pro 2000 Grand Prix of Indianapolis, leading throughout Saturday’s 25-lap race to finish just more than two seconds clear of Juncos Racing teammate Sting Ray Robb.
Coming hot on the heels of his first Road to Indy Presented by Cooper Tires win yesterday, the victory catapults Lindh into the championship lead ahead of Canadian Parker Thompson, who finished fifth.
Rookie Danial Frost, extended his streak of podium finishes to three following another strong drive for Exclusive Autosport.
Lindh, who started on pole for the second straight race after narrowly eclipsing his own Indy Pro 2000 qualifying lap record on Friday, took off confidently at the start. Behind, a good getaway from third on the grid saw Kyle Kirkwood briefly challenging for the lead as the field accelerated toward the tight turn one.
The Jupiter, Fla., native elected not to push the issue and instead attempted to tuck in behind Lindh, but his conservative approach sadly backfired when Robb and Nikita Lastochkin made aggressive moves of their own to tag onto the leader’s tail.
In an instant, Kirkwood’s front wing was broken and he was obliged to head to the pit lane for repairs. He resumed a lap down and showed what might have been by turning the fastest lap of the race – for the third race in a row – but could manage no better than 13th at the finish.
The only other driver able to challenge Juncos Racing’s dominance was Frost, who overcame a poor start to demote Lastochkin from third on lap two. Frost quickly closed onto Robb’s tail but was unable to find a way past. Still, his third consecutive third-place finish represented another substantial points haul.
“The start was perfect from my perspective,” said Lindh. “I never let up. I saw that Sting Ray was behind me and while I knew I had been faster than him all weekend, I know where my weakness is and where I’m strong. So I focused forward, working on getting a gap and driving away as fast as I could. Once the gap got up to two seconds, I worked on keeping that gap. It was a perfect weekend for the team. But I still can’t believe it. We didn’t have the speed to win here last year (in USF2000), so I said to myself that I need to win here this year, and I did, so I am very happy for that.”
Lastochkin finished a distant fourth, having been embroiled in a close battle with Ian Rodriguez, from Guatemala, whose impressive debut weekend was sadly hindered by a mechanical problem which caused him to fall all the way to an unrepresentative 12th at the finish.
After sweeping both races at the opening event of the season at St. Petersburg, Fla., in March, Thompson suffered a torrid weekend with the Abel Motorsports team, although he was able to salvage a fifth-place finish following a protracted scrap with Mexico’s Moises de la Vara, who produced his strongest drive to date for DEForce Racing, and teammate Jacob Abel.
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KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Five teams who qualified inside the top-10 have had their qualifying times disallowed after failing inspection ahead of Saturday’s Digital Ally 400 at Kansas Speedway.
Aric Almirola, Daniel Suarez, Chase Elliott, Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Larson, all of whom qualified inside the top-10, will now be forced to start at the rear of the field after their cars failed inspection Saturday afternoon.
Almirola was originally scheduled to start second, Suarez was slated to start fourth, Chase Elliott was going to line up fifth, Truex was scheduled to start sixth and Larson was set to start eighth.
In addition, the cars of Elliott, Larson and Logano all failed inspection a second time, resulting one crew member from each team being ejected from the track.
Kevin Harvick will still lead the field to the green flag Saturday, but he’ll now be joined on the front row by Clint Bowyer. The rest of the top-10 starters are now William Byron, Brad Keselowski, Alex Bowman, Erik Jones, Darrell Wallace Jr., Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch and Paul Menard.
Others who also failed inspection and will be forced to start the race from the rear of the field include Ty Dillon (originally slated to start 15th), Joey Logano (20th), Michael McDowell (23rd), Landon Cassill (25th), Joey Gase (38th) and Timmy Hill (39th).
NASCAR officials have not indicated why the teams failed inspection. Those who failed inspection will be lined up at the tail of the field based on owner points.
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INDIANAPOLIS – Nothing was going to stop Simon Pagenaud from winning Saturday’s IndyCar Grand Prix on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Grand Prix circuit.
The driver of the No. 22 Menards Team Penske Chevrolet chased down Scott Dixon from more than five seconds back in the final laps and passed him on the penultimate lap to earn his first victory of the season.
Pagenaud started eighth in the 85-lap affair that featured varying levels of rain throughout the event. He charged from sixth in the final 18 laps on a slick track to hunt down Dixon, eventually beating him to the checkers by more than two seconds.
He first had to dispatch Matheius Leist and Jack Harvey, moving into second with five laps left. From there he quickly closed the gap on Dixon, who was doing his best to maintain a gap between himself and Pagenaud.
When the five-time series champion slid a little wide at the exit of turn seven on lap 84, Pagenaud pounced. He dove to the inside of Dixon’s No. 9 Honda and the two made slight contact. Pagenaud emerged from turn nine with the race lead and never looked back.
The victory, his third in the IndyCar Grand Prix, was his first in NTT IndyCar Series competition since the 2017 season finale.
This Story Will Be Updated
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David Perron on Joe Thornton hit: 'I think it's affected my life a lot'
Published in
Hockey
Saturday, 11 May 2019 06:05

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- As the San Jose Sharks face the St. Louis Blues in the Western Conference final, much of the attention is on 39-year-old center Joe Thornton, who is chasing his first Stanley Cup championship in a career that began in 1997. Each round, there has been focus on that pursuit, Thornton's legacy in the NHL and the impact he has had on his franchise.
St. Louis forward David Perron says Thornton had an impact on his career, too. Though not exactly a positive one.
On Nov. 4, 2010, Thornton made contact with Perron's head on a huge hit in the neutral zone. Perron was carrying the puck after a pass out of the Blues' defensive end. Thornton had just emerged from the penalty box and collided with him. Perron dropped to the ice headfirst and was motionless.
The concussion he suffered on the play ended his season after just 10 games. He wouldn't return to action for the Blues until the following season, on Dec. 3, 2011. Thornton was given a major penalty and suspended for two games in a decision that was hotly debated around the NHL.
"I think about it all the time, because I think it's affected my life a lot. I really do think that," Perron told ESPN on Friday, on the eve of Game 1 between the Blues and Sharks in San Jose. "Other than that, I hope it's not going to be too much of a story right now. It's been a long time ago."
Perron and Thornton have competed against each other on numerous occasions since the incident, both in the regular season and the postseason -- including the 2018 series between the Sharks and Perron's Vegas Golden Knights. They met in the playoffs in 2012: Perron recalled getting some measure of vengeance when the Blues ousted the Sharks in five games, as Perron scored the winning goal in the clinching game.
"The next year, when I came back, we beat them in five games. I was thinking more about it then," Perron said. "But maybe after [this series], we'll see. I want to win. It doesn't matter if he's on the team or not."
He recalled Thornton reaching out to him after the incident. "He's really respected around the league. I really admire him as a player. The skills he has, when he passes the puck -- I always try to do some of those things, and it's not easy," Perron said.
"The way he plays was awesome. But I really didn't like that other part."
That concussion was the first major one of Perron's NHL career, but far from his last. The latest one cost him 24 games this season with the Blues.
"It's harder and harder every time," he told NHL.com. "It's so hard on the mental side of it to go through. Basically, you have some situations that heal up quicker, and some that linger and there's no reason why, and that's why it gets harder on you, it gets harder on your family. You start to wonder about other things and you get in your head a lot."
The hit remains one of the most contentious of the past decade. At the time, the NHL's "Rule 48" was newly introduced, banning "lateral or blind side hit to an opponent where the head is targeted." The Sharks and Thornton argued that the hit was a "north/south" one as Thornton stepped in front of Perron.
"I didn't intend to hurt or do anything bad to him," Thornton said at the time. "He kind of ran into me, to be honest with you. Last night and this morning I had about three dozen text messages from players around the league saying they can't believe I even got a penalty."
They also argued that the size disparity between the players was a factor -- Thornton, at 6-foot-4, is four inches taller than Perron.
"I guess being 5-9 was Joe's only solution to avoid this suspension," John Thornton, Joe's brother and agent, said at the time.
Perron was accused by some partisans of embellishing on the play, as he did return to the game after the hit. But he missed his next game for the Blues and, in the end, 97 total games until his return the following season.
"With head injuries, sometimes these symptoms show up a little later," John Davidson, the Blues' president at the time, said in 2010. "What's really disappointing is to know there were people out there actually being critical of him and questioning the validity of it."
A lot has changed in the nearly nine years since the hit. While "Rule 48" was in place in 2010-11, the NHL Department of Player Safety wasn't created until the following season. How the league deals with concussions has changed -- it's stomach-turning to think how quickly Perron returned to that game, knowing what we know now. How the league punishes hits that target the head has changed. And how the hockey world reacts to head injuries may have changed most of all.
"It was a different time, for sure," Perron said on Friday. "We've come a long way."
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Reports: McIlroy meets deadline to maintain European Tour membership
Published in
Golf
Saturday, 11 May 2019 03:50

Rory McIlroy remains an active member of the European Tour.
Reports from The Independent and Daily Express indicate that McIlroy did meet the deadline to maintain his membership.
The news comes after McIlroy publicly mentioned last November at the DP World Tour Championship that he may opt to forfeit his status in 2019.
“Right now, that is all sort of up in the air, but if it were to be that I don’t fulfill my membership next year, it’s not a Ryder Cup year, so it’s not the end of the world,” he said at the time. “I am always going to want to play the Ryder Cup, so if that does happen, so be it, and I will try and make the Ryder Cup team the year after.”
McIlroy doubled down in January at the Sentry Tournament of Champions, saying he believes he has "done [his] time" on the European Tour, that he wants to travel less and spend more time at home, and that he would "much rather go down the stretch against Justin Thomas or Dustin Johnson."
"I’m not putting anyone down in Europe," he added, "but the depths of the field and everything is just that little bit better over here."
McIlroy needs to play just four European Tour events — not counting the majors or World Golf Championships — to satisfy the minimum membership requirement. Per the Express, he is expected to tee it up at the Scottish Open in July, the European Masters in August, the BMW PGA in September and the DP World Tour Championship in November. The Independent notes that McIlroy is unlikely to reverse course on his previously announced decision to skip the Irish Open, an event he has hosted in years past, in the run-up to The Open at Royal Portrush.
“If there is ever a year when I feel I can miss the Irish Open, it’s this year,” McIlroy told the BBC in February. “If I was to play the Irish Open, the Open Championship would be my third event in a row. For me, that’s not the best way to prepare for what could be the biggest event of my life.”
While declining membership in 2019 wouldn't have put McIlroy out of the running for the 2020 Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits, it could have had longer-term implications for the Ulsterman. The European Tour tournament committee introduced a new regulation in January 2018 that "players cannot be a European Ryder Cup captain or a vice captain if they decline membership of the European Tour or fail to fulfill their minimum event obligation in any season, from 2018 onwards."
While it is unclear whether the tour really would have turned down McIlroy for a future captaincy, his decision to hold on to his membership keeps that potentially awkward situation at bay.
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Duncan accidentally hits wife in head with errant approach
Published in
Golf
Saturday, 11 May 2019 04:36

Tyler Duncan finds himself hunting his first PGA Tour victory through 36 holes at the AT&T Byron Nelson.
Duncan enters the weekend at Trinity Forest tied for second place, four shots behind leader Sung Kang after a Friday 66.
The second-year Tour member dropped just one shot in the second round, but really made two mistakes: carding bogey and accidentally hitting his wife in the head when his approach to the 13th green sailed well to the right.
"Took a big bounce and hit her, I guess. I didn't know until after the round," he said. "I had a little mud on the ball, little unfortunate timing there and shot out to the right and didn't get up and down. ...
"I'm just happy she's not hurt."
Oddly, this was not the first time Duncan's wife, Maria, has been hit in the head by a ball and gotten away relatively unscathed.
"Not long after we started dating, she actually got hit in the head by another ball, a random ball from the driving range," he added. "She's dodged two hits to the head. I'm sure most people can't say that."
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Fleetwood (68) shrugs off illness to make charge at British Masters
Published in
Golf
Saturday, 11 May 2019 08:31

SOUTHPORT, England – Tommy Fleetwood shrugged off the effects of a virus to move into contention to win the British Masters as a late stumble from Matt Wallace in the third round threw the European Tour event wide open on Saturday.
After going 47 holes without dropping a shot, second-round leader Wallace bogeyed the 12th and ran up a double bogey on the 15th - after his wayward drive hit a spectator on the head - in shooting a 2-under 70. He was level in first place on 14-under 202 overall with Marcus Kinhult (68).
Fleetwood, who is hosting the tournament at Hillside in his home town of Southport in northern England, said he struggled for energy and believes his son Frankie, who had tonsillitis last week, ''has given me something.''
Still, the world No. 16 holed from 25 feet for an eagle on the 11th and also birdied Nos. 12, 14 and 17 to shoot a 68 and delight the sell-out crowd. Fleetwood was 11 under, three strokes off the lead alongside Robert MacIntyre (68).
''It's not been ideal,'' Fleetwood said. ''It's one of them things, just another challenge. I forgot my paracetamol in the bag so Clare (his wife) had to get me some on the 13th tee and that pretty much saved me on the way in.
''Whatever happens, I'm going to be going out late on the back nine on Sunday and the crowd comes to watch that, which is great.''
Scotland's Richie Ramsay, seeking his first win for four years, was two shots off the pace after a 71.
Wallace is still in a good position to claim a fifth European Tour title in just two years.
''We are in great shape,'' he said. ''It's not about winning it on Saturday. It's about putting yourself in good position, so looking forward to tomorrow now.''
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Stricker (70) in driver's seat after third round at Regions Tradition
Published in
Golf
Saturday, 11 May 2019 09:17

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Steve Stricker didn't have another near-flawless round, but he found a nice way to finish.
He birdied the final hole for a 2-under 70 and held the lead Saturday after three rounds at the Regions Tradition. Bernhard Langer was among three players two strokes back.
Stricker, who shot a second-round 64, enters the final round of the first of five PGA Tour Champions majors at 14-under 202. He was 1 over on the front nine on Greystone's Founders Course after his first bogey of the Tradition but birdied all three par 5s on the back nine.
On the final one, Stricker sent a shot onto the green above the hole on No. 18. His approach had landed in the rough near a bunker.
''I didn't hit the best of second shots,'' Stricker said. ''I tried to hit a 3-wood and hit it really hard and tried to get it into the green. Kind of hit a little thin and rolled it up there.
''I was just trying to give myself a 10-footer, try to play it off the back of the green. I was able to get a good read from Billy Andrade. He showed me the line a little bit and I was able to knock it in.''
Langer, who won the Tradition in 2016 and 2017, shot a 68. David Toms had a 70 and Andrade a 69 for the three-way tie for second. Tom Byrum and Paul Goydos were three shots back. Byrum shot a 66 and Goydos a 69.
The weather held out for the second straight day after the first round was halted at midday. But more thunderstorms were forecast overnight and throughout the morning Sunday, with leaders scheduled to start at 9 a.m. and a two-tee format.
Langer saved par on No. 13 with a nice pitch to a couple of feet from the hole after hitting it in the water. He had his first bogey of the tournament two holes later.
''I mean, there's good bogeys and bad bogeys, and 15 was horrible after a good tee shot, bad layup and then downhill from that point onward,'' Langer said.
He is seeking to become the Tradition's first three-time winner. He already has won a pair of majors three times each, the Senior Players Championship and the Senior Open Championship.
Toms, who counts the 2001 PGA Championship among his 13 PGA Tour wins, made a long putt from the edge of the green on No. 7 for his first birdie of the round.
He won the U.S. Senior Open last year for his only win on the 50-and-over circuit.
''Nobody in our group really got hot,'' Toms said. ''We all played pretty solid and within striking distance. That's kind of what you want come Sunday afternoon. Right there, just have to shoot a low one (Sunday).''
Stricker is seeking his fourth PGA Tour Champions win and first senior major after tying for second at the Tradition last year. He splits time on the PGA Tour but won three times in seven starts last year on the 50-plus circuit.
After a hot second round, he summed up this one as ''just hanging in there.''
''I struggled hitting it at times, didn't feel very comfortable,'' Stricker said. ''I was proud of the way that I hung in there and gutted it out and salvaged a good round out of a round that could have got away from me.''
Charles Schwab Cup leader Scott McCarron was 3 over after a 72, but will retain his No. 1 spot after this weekend.
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Watch: Harrington drains 80-foot birdie putt at Byron Nelson
Published in
Golf
Saturday, 11 May 2019 09:59

After a wave of thunderstorms rolled through the Dallas area, the third round of the AT&T Byron Nelson finally began just after 3:00 p.m. local time on Saturday. The lengthy delay didn't seem to faze Padraig Harrington.
The 2020 European Ryder Cup captain raced out of the gate with a birdie on the par-5 first hole, but his approach into the par-4 second left a little to be desired, landing 80 feet from the cup.
Harrington read the birdie putt perfectly and make the cross-country lag look like a routine tap-in. The birdie moved him to 2 under on the day, before giving one back at the par-4 third. Another birdie at the fifth moved Harrington back to 2 under and into the top 20.
The leaders aren't set to tee off until 5:40 p.m. local time and sunset is at 8:15 p.m., but play could be suspended because of darkness sooner than that with overcast skies.
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