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I Dig Sports
Ichiro to gift personal collection to Cooperstown
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Ichiro Suzuki plans to do more than just be inducted into the Hall of Fame this July. He also intends to donate his entire personal collection to the museum in Cooperstown, New York.
Former National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum president Jeff Idelson announced the news while sharing a previous discussion with Suzuki on a recent "Refuse to Lose" podcast.
"It culminated with him wanting to follow in the footsteps of Hank Aaron and Tom Seaver, two players who pledged their entire collections to Cooperstown," Idelson said. "Ichiro said, 'I want to be the third much later in my life.'"
Idelson, 60, served as the president of the Hall of Fame from 2008-19. He returned as interim president in 2021 after Tim Mead stepped down.
Idelson and Suzuki, 51, have shared a relationship that continued past the latter's baseball career.
Suzuki earned an astounding 99.9 percent of the vote last month to become the first Japanese-born inductee. He will enter the Hall of Fame alongside CC Sabathia, Billy Wagner, Dave Parker and Dick Allen when he is inducted on July 27.
Suzuki batted .311 with 3,089 hits, 509 stolen bases and 10 Gold Gloves despite debuting at age 27 in 2001, when he won the American League Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player awards for the Seattle Mariners.
After 11-plus years with Seattle, Suzuki was traded to the New York Yankees in 2012 and played three years with the Miami Marlins 2015-17 before ending his career with cameos the next two seasons for his original club.
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NORTH PORT, Fla. -- Ronald Acuña says he has almost completely recovered after tearing his left ACL while playing for the Atlanta Braves last May.
Acuña, the 2023 National League MVP, estimated his knee at 90-95%.
"I feel great," Acuña said Friday. "When they tell me I need to be there that day, I'll be there."
Acuña injured his left knee May 26 on a stolen-base attempt at Pittsburgh and had surgery June 4 with Los Angeles Dodgers head team physician Dr. Neal ElAttrache.
Acuña tore his right ACL on July 10, 2021, had surgery with ElAttrache 11 days later and missed the Braves' run to their first World Series title since 1995. He returned on April 28, 2022, after missing Atlanta's first 19 games.
He hit .337 with 41 home runs and 106 RBIs in his MVP season, leading the major leagues with 73 stolen bases.
"We think getting him back is going to be big," general manager Alex Anthopoulos said.
Compared to his previous experience with an ACL, Acuna said he "would feel more stable."
Stro shows: Yanks RHP returns, rejects relief role
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TAMPA, Fla. -- New York Yankees right-hander Marcus Stroman reported to camp Friday after missing the team's first two days of workouts, insisting he is ready to make 30-plus starts and will not change his role.
The problem: Stroman isn't projected to make the Yankees' starting rotation.
"I won't pitch in the bullpen," Stroman said. "I'm a starter."
It has been a turbulent offseason for Stroman. Personally, he said he lost his home in Malibu in last month's wildfires in Southern California. Professionally, he has been included in constant trade rumors, with the Yankees looking to move their sixth starter's $18.5 million salary a year after signing him.
Stroman reported to camp Tuesday for his physical but chose not to show up the next two days for workouts. Though every other Yankees pitcher and catcher reported as expected Wednesday and Thursday, players are not obligated to report for spring training until Feb. 22, per Major League Baseball's collective bargaining agreement. A year ago, entering his first season with the Yankees, Stroman was in attendance from the beginning of workouts.
"At this stage in my career, I put a priority on getting my body ready," said Stroman, who turns 34 in May. "I don't think there was a need for me to be here the last few days, given the climate."
So why did Stroman show up Friday?
"Just felt like today was a good day to come," Stroman said. "Valentine's Day, I felt like the vibes were going to be proper."
Stroman said he is "very detached" in the offseason and that he learned of the trade speculation through his mother and other people around him. He maintained the rumors did not upset him.
"I'm so grounded at this point," Stroman said. "Nothing can really faze me. I know who I am as a pitcher. I can compete at any level, with any team. If I'm here, if I'm not here, my body's ready to roll. I'm ready to go out there and give 30-plus starts."
Manager Aaron Boone on Thursday said the rumors swirling around Stroman entering the season and his decision not to show up for workouts made for "a little bit of an awkward situation." He said he had spoken with Stroman since seeing him Tuesday, noting that he was "nudging" him to report to camp. He said he and a few coaches had a "fun, good talk" with Stroman in his office Friday morning.
"He really is in a good frame of mind," Boone said.
Stroman, who is entering his 11th major league season, signed a two-year contract with a conditional third-year player option worth $37 million guaranteed before last season. Stroman can opt into an $18 million salary next season if he pitches at least 140 innings this year.
Reaching that mark would require starting for the majority of the season. Barring a setback, the Yankees' five-man rotation will consist of Gerrit Cole, Max Fried, Carlos Rodón, Luis Gil and Clarke Schmidt. Boone said the club is unlikely to deploy a six-man rotation.
"Never say never," Boone said. "I mean, I don't necessarily see us doing that, but we'll see where we're at. Again, that's a long way away."
Stroman surpassed the 140-inning threshold in 2024, logging 154 innings on his fourth major league team with a 4.31 ERA across 30 games (29 starts) during the regular season.
As in 2023, when he was an All-Star for the Chicago Cubs, it was a tale of two halves for Stroman: He posted a 3.51 ERA in 19 starts before the All-Star break and a 5.98 ERA in 10 starts and a relief appearance in the second half. Stroman also struggled at Yankee Stadium, tallying a 5.31 ERA in 16 home starts compared to a 3.09 ERA on the road.
Stroman didn't pitch in the playoffs during the Yankees' run to the World Series. He said not pitching in October did not bother him. The question now is whether he will throw another pitch for the Yankees again.
"Everyone in that clubhouse, I have nothing but love for and they all know that," Stroman said. "We all have a great relationship in there, from the staff and the employees all the way down. You can freely go ask anybody. I love everybody in that clubhouse. This is part of the business. It has nothing to do with my love for anybody in there."
'It should feel like this all the time': What could make or break a crucial season for the Cubs
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MESA, Ariz. -- Three and a half years after deciding to retool their major and minor league rosters at the 2021 MLB trade deadline, the Chicago Cubs believe this is the season it should pay off with a playoff appearance.
The Cubs haven't hidden their sense of urgency that has separated this winter from recent ones. From the moves the front office made to what has been said as the team reports to camp, Chicago has one thing in mind: playing October baseball for the first time in half a decade.
"I think we're in a competitive window," president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said when the Cubs reported this week. "I think we've gotten better each year. I think we're at a place where we have a chance to be really good and we've been trying to really maximize our resources within our budget to make sure that we can do that."
As they enter the heart of what they believe is their next contention window, the Cubs aren't spending like the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets (hence a slower rebuild after moving on from the 2016 championship core) but they aren't the Pittsburgh Pirates or Milwaukee Brewers either. The Cubs were one of nine teams with a payroll that exceeded the luxury tax limit last season and six of those teams reached the postseason. The Cubs were not one of them, and while ownership wants that to change in 2025, they were outbid by the Boston Red Sox for top remaining free agent Alex Bregman.
The team still is littered with $20 million-caliber players even without Bregman, such as newly acquired outfielder Kyle Tucker, whose arrival this winter signaled the shift in strategy. The Cubs traded three players, including a recent first-round draft pick, for the soon-to-be free agent Tucker.
"You don't make a trade for Kyle Tucker if you don't feel like you have a really strong team going into that year," general manager Carter Hawkins said. "And so certainly I would say objectively we've improved year over year in terms of just the talent level that's on the field -- and in the three-plus years I've been here, this is certainly the most talented team we've had."
The projection systems agree, with predictions as high as 87 (ESPN BET) to 90 wins (PECOTA) and a National League Central-best 84.9 wins that gives them a 39.3% chance of winning the division, according to ESPN's Bradford Doolittle. Whether they reach the loftiest projections, the team is primed to take a leap forward in Craig Counsell's second year as manager after back-to-back 83-win seasons.
"It should feel like this all the time," Counsell told ESPN earlier this week. "From that perspective, it makes me happy that we have high expectations.
"When you trade for a great player and he has one year left on his contract, that tells you a lot."
Counsell acknowledged the team had to "rebuild a few things" after trading former stars Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Baez in 2021. The process ate up a lot of the five-year contract Hoyer signed after Theo Epstein stepped down in November 2020. With this season left on his deal (and no extension imminent), Hoyer is well aware of the consequences this year could have on his future.
"I've been here for 14 years and sort of generally in my career, I haven't had much uncertainty," he said last weekend. "And so I think with uncertainty does come a level of anxiety. I think that would be a lie to say that it doesn't."
That feeling wasn't lost on his handpicked manager. It wasn't long ago that Hoyer shocked the baseball world when he plucked the well-regarded Counsell from division rival Milwaukee and made him the richest manager in the game. Now Hoyer's fate -- at least in part -- is dependent on Counsell getting the best out of the team the front office has built.
"That makes it fun in my opinion," Counsell said. "It provides a lot of clarity. And I've said that to Jed. It's like, 'Let's go.' I think that's how he sees it. It can give you a lot of clarity in how you do things. We're excited to try and do it together. I hope he's here for a long time."
As the Cubs' position players report to camp Friday, here is what could make or break a playoff-caliber season in Chicago.
The stars have to play like stars
Despite the talent bubbling up at Triple-A and a new group of depth players on the major league roster, Counsell acknowledged his best players need to carry the day. Perhaps that's the case for any roster, but with a team projected in the mid-80s win range that is often near the bar for playoff entry, there is little room for underachieving.
"Everything matters when you're trying to get extra wins," Counsell said. "You get it from wherever you can. Every decision is trying to add to that. ... We're going to rely on our regulars. We need production from our regulars, offensively and defensively."
That wasn't always the case last season. High-priced shortstop Dansby Swanson may have lost the Gold Glove award with his play in April, then slumped at the plate midseason. Swanson was battling a sports hernia injury that he didn't disclose until after the season, so his ramp-up will be a little slower this spring. Same goes for second baseman Nico Hoerner, who had flexor tendon surgery on his throwing arm. He could miss a few days at the start of the season. Both are going to be counted on, especially if rookie Matt Shaw is the starting third baseman.
In the outfield, Ian Happ has put up reliable 115 to 120 OPS+ seasons while dynamic center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong is just beginning to figure out how dangerous his skill set can be. And if this is the year Seiya Suzuki -- now the designated hitter -- can put together a solid six months, the Cubs offense could explode.
But the key to the lineup will undoubtedly be Tucker. He has the ability to impact a game in a way no other Cub can -- and it comes in his free agent season.
Before they traded for Tucker, Hoyer raised eyebrows when he said his players needed to "exceed" expectations, leading fans to wonder why the team wasn't just acquiring players with higher ceilings. Now that the club has one, it needs the best version of him with others filling their roles. It's a good offense that could be great if it clicks.
Who's on third?
Bregman wasn't one of the Cubs' primary targets entering the offseason, so perhaps they're not overly disappointed or surprised he's not on their team. But his potential fit at third base had fans salivating as the winter played out. Well at least until Wednesday night, when Bregman signed a three-year, $120 million deal with the Red Sox.
Adding Bregman would have pushed those projection models over 90 wins and given the Cubs a clear path to the postseason. The road to October remains a little less clear with Shaw the likely Opening Day third baseman, but the Cubs believe he could open some eyes around the league.
Shaw is the No. 23-ranked prospect in all of baseball entering the season, according to ESPN's Kiley McDaniel, but comes in a little undersized for the hot corner. At 5-foot-9, he has power that would certainly play at second base, but he'll be relied on to provide pop playing at a corner.
Michael Busch (who hit 21 homers in 152 games last season) is also on the smaller side for his position at the other infield corner as a 6-foot-1 first baseman.
"It's not the biggest group on the corners," one scout said. "But that doesn't mean they can't slug. Busch outperformed some expectations last year."
Not having traditional sluggers at the corners also means the true power hitters on the team -- Tucker, Swanson, Suzuki and Happ -- are going to be relied on even more.
The bullpen must deliver
The Cubs blew six games that they led entering the ninth inning last season -- third most in baseball. Six is also exactly the number of games Chicago finished behind the third NL wild-card team. In overhauling their bullpen for 2025, the urgency to lower that number came by adding experience.
The Cubs acquired five pitchers -- Ryan Pressly, Eli Morgan, Ryan Brasier, Matthew Boyd and Caleb Thielbar -- who took the mound in the playoffs over the past two seasons and four of them pitched last October.
"When I looked at the roster in spring training this year, compared to last year, I think that was the No. 1 thing," pitching coach Tommy Hottovy said. "It's not only the number of bodies but the amount of major league caliber pitchers that have been there and done that."
Acquired from the Houston Astros late last month, Pressly is the biggest name and could fill a crucial role for a bullpen searching for a competent closer after cycling through one failure after another last season. There were plenty of ninth-inning options on the free agent market this winter, but budget constraints along with Chicago's overall feelings on many of them outside of Tanner Scott (who chose the Dodgers over the Cubs last month) led to a trade for Pressly.
"I want to be somebody that all these guys can lean on," Pressly said in his introductory news conference. "Any questions that they have, on or off the field, I want to be that guy for them."
Counsell added: "When you pitch in those situations, your team is like 10 minutes away from a win. That's what makes it feel like more for guys that pitch in that situation. We rightly assign some credit for guys with experience there."
With a revamped lineup and bullpen entering a crucial season, the Cubs hope they are just a smooth ninth-inning away from enough wins to be one of the last teams standing in October.
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Before Packer heads into Six Nations camp as England's vice-captain, she will captain Saracens in the Premiership Women's Rugby league against Exeter Chiefs on Saturday.
Nine points separate second and fifth in a highly competitive PWR league, Saracens are in third and know victory over fifth-place Exeter would book their spot in the semi-finals.
However, pipping second-place Harlequins to a home semi-final spot is Packer's side's ultimate aim.
"We need to make sure that against Exeter we maximise the score and come away with five points and a good performance," the 108-cap flanker added.
"We are at the back end of the season now which is knockout rugby and we aren't usually when it comes to the league. It is knockout rugby to get into the top four. We want to get a home semi-final against whoever it is."
Gloucester-Hartpury, who sit top of the PWR, are chasing a third PWR title in a row, but have lost three league games this campaign, with Harlequins also losing three times.
"Usually the top two teams would lose one or two games max in the regular season. You would never get it quite all over the place like this league has gone," Packer added.
"It is really exciting for the PWR. It shows the calibre of players playing in all the teams and you have to show up every game.
"The best league in the world is here at the PWR with the competitiveness week in and week out."
Harlequins v Bristol Bears on Friday (19:45 GMT) is the first of four PWR matches that will be shown live on BBC iPlayer and the BBC Sport website and app in the run-in to the season finale.
Defending champions Gloucester-Hartpury's final regular-season match, when they take on Harlequins, will follow on 21 February.
BBC Sport will then show one of the semi-finals on the weekend of 1/2 March and the final, live from London's StoneX Stadium, on 16 March.
BBC Sport is the home of women's rugby this year with the Women's Six Nations kicking off in March and exclusive coverage of this summer's Women's Rugby World Cup in England, starting on 22 August.
Tixr & Rockingham Officials Partner For Easter Tripleheader
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ROCKINGHAM, N.C. The triumphant return to the historic Rockingham Speedway is just two months away (April 18-19), and the racing community is eagerly awaiting the return of NASCAR to the historic 1.017-mile track previously known as North Carolina Motor Speedway.
After five years of reimaging and rebuilding, Track Enterprises will promote the Easter weekend tripleheader that brings NASCAR back to the track for the first time since 2013.
With a new racing surface in place and other renovations nearing completion, Rockingham will host the Blacks Tire 200 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at 5 p.m. on April 18. The following day will see the ARCA Menards Series East compete at 1:30 p.m. and the North Carolina Education Lottery 250 presented by Blacks Tire for the NASCAR Xfinity Series wrap up the two-day schedule at 4 p.m. on April 19.
Longtime NASCAR Cup Series driver Kasey Kahne will return to NASCAR competition for the first time in several years, competing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series event, driving a car fielded by Richard Childress Racing. Kahne won the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Rockingham in 2012.
The track hosted 42 NASCAR Xfinity Series events between 1984 and 2004 and encourages fans of all ages to enjoy the weekend.
We know how nostalgic this event is among the NASCAR community in the Piedmont, and we recognize the fans who attended with their parents are now attending with their kids, said Bob Sargent, president of Track Enterprises. Its also a weekend for what is old is now new as we open our doors for a new generation of fans to watch the future of NASCAR go head-to-head.
Tickets are on sale for the weekend, powered by Tixr, starting at $35 with two-day reserved seating at $80 at https://racetherock.com/. Fans can bundle their event tickets, parking, camping and access to The 65 Club. Kids under the age of 12 can attend for free with the purchase of adult tickets.
Track Enterprises selected Tixr for its fresh approach to ticketing featuring a fast and seamless customer experience, an easy to use back-end, and an innovative platform that was designed to meet the needs of modern ticket buyers.
Tixr has a passion for motorsports and a rapidly growing portfolio of blue-chip race track partners such as the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, World Wide Technology Raceway and the Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix.
We are honored to be a part of the history at The Rock and to help deliver a seamless ticketing experience for the fans, said Nate Liberman, VP of Sports for Tixr. Weve worked side by side with Track Enterprises to put the fans first with our platform.
Craftsman Truck Series and Xfinity Series teams tested at Rockingham during the final week of January.
For fans who cannot attend the event, the Blacks Tire 200 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race will be broadcast on FS1, while the ARCA Menards Series East race will stream on FloRacing and radio on MRN/ARCARacing.com, and the North Carolina Education Lottery 250 presented by Blacks Tire NASCAR Xfinity Series race will be broadcast on CW with radio coverage by MRN.
For more information about Tixr and organizations utilizing the platform, logon to http://www.tixr.com.
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. While the majority of the drivers in the field for Sundays Daytona 500 are getting their season started, Kyle Larson has already won five races.
The driver of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet has won in three different types of open-wheel, dirt-track cars and he believes racing frequently keeps him sharp. Hes raced more this offseason than in recent years.
Ive done it both ways. Last couple years I havent done much dirt racing in the offseason, he said. Well, yeah, a couple years ago I didnt do any really besides Turkey Night I think. Then Ive had years where I raced a lot, even more than I ran this time.
I dont know. I think it keeps me sharp, for sure. Its not a big deal no matter one way or the other. I just like to race. I kind of like to stay in the rhythm of racing.
Larson had two wins and four top-three finishes in four World of Outlaws sprint car races last week at Volusia Speedway Park.
Ive never gone to Volusia and qualified well, Larson explained. Weve qualified decent, but you cant win from the seventh or eighth row. It was more fun to qualify good, giving ourselves an opportunity to win.
It was a fun week there, the best weve ever had at Volusia. Hopefully it can carry over to this week.
The Daytona 500 is one of a handful of the big NASCAR races that the 2021 Cup Series champion has not won.
Its a big, big race. Everybody in here wants to win the big one, Larson said. I think this is like the last of the big ones that I have left. I think that adds a little bit more to it. Yeah, Im not sure. Just get your season started, too, so its a lot of fun.
But does winning the Daytona 500 define a drivers career? Larsons not so sure.
Im not really sure. I dont know how it feels to them, Larson said during media day. I would imagine Tony Stewart or Kyle Busch is still racing, but I imagine Tony Stewart who doesnt have it doesnt lose sleep.
I think when you look at the style of racing, especially nowadays, how its difficult to win because you do have a lot of good fortune where theres a lot out of your control. I think that helps you sleep at night if you dont win, Larson added. So I dont think it does anything to Tonys legacy whether hes won the Daytona 500 or not. Hes in every Hall of Fame that hes deserving of being in. I dont think it does anything to his career.
Obviously, he would love to have it. Thats probably the same as me, Larson noted. Like, Im not going to lose sleep if I dont ever win this race, but I still want to win the race and have that ring and that trophy and be a part of the names that have won it.
But again, I think theres a lot else, a lot more that goes into winning and a lot of luck. Its not a big deal.
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SEBRING, Fla. Its been just over 12 months since Josef Newgarden last sat in a sports car. Its been just over 12 days for Scott McLaughlin.
Although neither will race in this years Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring, they spent north of 12 hours this week banking valuable laps and information to help Porsche Penske Motorsport prepare for the event as part of the IMSA-sanctioned test at Sebring Intl Raceway.
Newgarden, who shared the 2024 Rolex 24 At Daytona-winning No. 7 Porsche 963 with Felipe Nasr, Dane Cameron and Matt Campbell, made his first IMSA appearance since that point as a part of this weeks IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship test.
The two-time reigning Indianapolis 500 winner is back in the No. 7 car this time around, but the lineup is different as he joins this years Rolex 24-winning trio of Nasr, Nick Tandy and Laurens Vanthoor.
You can see even in 12 months how much progress this team has made, evidenced by what you saw in Daytona, Newgarden said after doing a few familiarization laps in the morning session. It was fun to watch. Im always cheering this group on, and theyre chipping away every single weekend.
McLaughlins sports car landscape is much more recent. He was back at this years Rolex 24 to cap off the month of January, sharing the Grand Touring Daytona Pro class No. 91 Trackhouse by TF Sport Corvette Z06 GT3.R with Shane van Gisbergen, Connor Zilisch and Ben Keating.
The New Zealander is enjoying a first this week, with his first laps in the Porsche 963. Its a fitting track for McLaughlin to do so, as he also had his first ever IndyCar test at Sebring five years ago and was part of the Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) class-winning lineup in the 2023 Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring with Tower Motorsport. McLaughlin is alongside the No. 6 trio of Mathieu Jaminet, Matt Campbell and Kevin Estre.
Ill tell you this thing rides a lot better than the P2 car does, McLaughlin laughed after completing his first 10-plus laps Thursday morning. Ive had some great times here at Sebring. The P2 was a lot of fun. This race is a lot of fun. Theres no plan beyond this test; Im not coming here to race with these guys. Its more of a chance to drive something.
Its my first time in the Porsche. Ive heard a lot about it. Ive spoken to Matty (Campbell) a number of times. Hes from Australia, so were sort of in the same realm there and Im from Down Under. Its cool to share a car with him and learn from him.
Both drivers have had limited track time in any series all offseason. An IndyCar test next week on Sebrings short course gives both drivers a chance to resume their full-time duties and re-stretch their muscles.
Any laps are helpful, but this team is pretty dialed in, Newgarden said. Its about trying to get them data for when they come back for the 12-hour and get reacclimated myself.
McLaughlin added, Its huge for me before my season to get some laps in, get the neck going. Im taking it lap-by-lap and enjoying it.
Campbell posted the fastest lap in Thursdays first of two sessions, at 1 minute, 48.215 seconds (124.418 mph) around Sebrings 3.74-mile, 17-turn circuit, which held as the fastest lap of the day.
The No. 10 Cadillac Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac V-Series.R was second at 1:48.576 ahead of the No. 7 Penske Porsche in third at 1:48.713.
The Rolex 24 At Daytona-winning No. 22 United Autosports USA ORECA LMP2 07 led the Le Mans Prototype 2 class, with Paul Di Resta lapping in 1:49.957 in the morning session. That also stood as the days fastest lap in class.
Nineteen of 20 prototypes between the two classes participated on Thursday. The only one which didnt was the No. 63 Automobili Lamborghini Squadra Corse Lamborghini SC63, which retired early from the test due to an issue discovered during Wednesdays sessions.
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Thursday afternoon practice for the ARCA Menards Series and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series at Daytona Intl Speedway has been cancelled.
Thunderstorms ascended over the 2.5-mile speedway mid-afternoon and forced officials to scrap both sessions. It is hoped the weather will clear and the Daytona Duels for the NASCAR Cup Series will be run as scheduled Thursday evening.
Qualifying is scheduled for ARCA and the Truck Series on Friday, with the Trucks racing on Friday night at ARCA hitting the track for its annual Speedweek race on Saturday.
NASCAR Notes: Busch Chases Daytona Win; Crew Chiefs Ejected
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. Kyle Busch will make his 20th Daytona 500 start on Sunday at Daytona Intl Speedway. The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion continues to chase his first victory in the Great American Race.
Seven-time series champion Dale Earnhardt famously won the 500 in his 20th start in 1998.
Youd certainly like to hope so. Twenty years of trying. There was another storied racer of the past that won on his 20th try and that was a pretty big deal, Busch said of Earnhardt. He was a former RCR driver as well so itd certainly be nice to win that race and do it with RCR in the No. 8 Zone Chevrolet. So that would be pretty cool.
Busch has been strong at Daytona since he joined RCR in 2023.
Weve had really good speed being down here. These guys build great restrictor-plate program racecars, so when we go to Daytona, Atlanta, Talladega, we feel like those places are really good for us, Busch said. Weve got really good speed. I just told someone that its 80 percent luck/20 percent skill race. Others would disagree but I feel like you have to have a lot of things go your way and you have to have the stars align. Being able to lead off the final pit stop is certainly going to put yourself in a really good position.
Crew chiefs for two NASCAR Cup Series teams were ejected Wednesday for improper weight violations on their respective race cars.
Chris Lawson, crew chief for Todd Gilliland and Front Row Motorsports and Billy Plourde, crew chief for Cody Wares Rick Ware Racing Ford, will sit out the remainder of the weekend.
Engineer Kevyn Robolledo replaces Lawson, while RWR competition director Tommy Baldwin sits in for Plourde.
Three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Joey Logano says racing at Daytona has changed a lot since he won the race in 2015.
In every way. Its changed in so many ways. The cars. The drivers are completely different, Logano explained. I said it earlier, you can put these drivers and crew chiefs and teams in the 2015 Daytona 500 and that race would look completely different. With the same cars it would look completely different, just because thats how people grow. Its the evolution. People keep getting smarter and doing things in different ways and because of that it changes, and then you have the difference of what the Next Gen car is compared to then. Its another huge change.
Tyler Reddick returns to Daytona on the heels of the best season of his career with 23XI Racing.
It was a good year. We did a lot of things right in the summer, Reddick recalled. We had to overcome a lot of incidents, a lot of blockades if you will that couldve kept us from advancing and couldve kept us from getting to Phoenix with a chance to compete.
We did a good job of overcoming that each step of the way and it was a pretty rocky road that we had to take in the Playoffs. To be able to overcome that was good especially when you look at how everything just kind of fell our way in the regular season. When things finally didnt go our way, we didnt fold up, we welcomed the pressure. It was a really good year for me as a driver. We won a number of races, we let some get away for sure. The wins were great, but I think the days outside of the wins were more of what made that season be as great as it was. Just the consistency we showed over long periods of the season.
Corey LaJoie is running a limited schedule with Rick Ware Racing in the Cup Series this season. Still, he thinks he has a chance to contend at Daytona, where he will drive a third entry for the team if he qualifies through Thursday nights Duels at Daytona.
Experience certainly helps. This is my ninth Daytona 500, LaJoie explained. Ive ran all of the Next Gen speedway races, so I think that will probably help me in the Thursday night race more so than qualifying. I feel like you can get in my car and drive it as fast as I can here tonight, but its the details.
Its how much fuel you can save and retain a bit of the track position, have a good pit road entry, have clean pit road in and out and then blend and try to get up to speed and you get your group to blend as close to the front as possible and thats where the money is made. The devil is in the details and hopefully we can stack enough pennies on Thursday night to put ourselves in a position to make it.
Riley Herbst is racing for rookie-of-the-year honors with 23XI Racing. After several seasons competing in the Xfinity Series, hes learned how to run NASCAR races.
The biggest thing I learned was how to run these NASCAR races properly, he said during media day. I know that is kind of a wordy answer, but it is just about taking a step back. There has been immense people that have helped me. One is them is Kevin Harvick. He really set me down helped me understand the process of running a race, from the green flag to the checkered flag and I feel like that is the biggest thing over four years is just the ability to run the whole race and race flow.