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Mitchell Starc adapts to conditional Ashes role

Published in Cricket
Saturday, 10 August 2019 10:56

Between January 2004 and July 2005, Brett Lee missed 14 consecutive Test matches for Australia. It wasn't because he was injured, nor because he was making his way back from any sort of ailment. Over that period, for reasons of team balance and planning, Michael Kasprowicz and Jason Gillespie were preferred, initially without Glenn McGrath in Sri Lanka, and then alongside him when the senior paceman returned from his own injury to face India, New Zealand and Pakistan.

It's a relevant example to Australia in 2019, principally because of the role so far played in this Ashes series by Mitchell Starc. Like Lee, Starc is the fastest and arguably most high-profile member of the Australian pace sextet in England. But, like Lee, his tendency to go for pace and all-out attack has left him on the fringes of the team at a time when the strategy is not to blast opponents out, but to strangle them through control.

Having already experienced a lot of missed matches over his career for reasons of injury and, at times, "informed player management", Starc is a chance to figure in the Ashes, but only if the conditions and the balance of the attack suit. He is trying to keep his hopes up, while also recognising the way that the coach Justin Langer and the captain Tim Paine wish to operate on this tour in particular.

"Everyone prefers to play but it's pretty exciting that the cupboard is full of fast bowlers," Starc said. "It's awesome to see Jimmy back after what he's been through and I guess similarly what Pat Cummins has been through previously. It's a while ago now but to have those guys back fit and firing ... Jimmy, it was fantastic to see him playing Test cricket again, someone with I guess such a fantastic record. Having his body let him down and to come back and play Test cricket again was pretty special.

"It makes Josh and I have to work that bit harder to try and make it back as well, which I think you want from a whole squad. We're really close mates, so having that competition there whether it be Josh and I playing or a different two playing, it is that squad mentality. We're here to win the Ashes. We're not just here to make it on the park. We want to win this Ashes. Whether that's a different bowling attack each game, or the same through five Test matches, it's pretty exciting."

At times prior to this tour, there was a sense that the "big three" of Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood had been relied upon too much, and had also got into a pattern of being chosen simply as the best bowlers in any circumstances, rather than paying more attention to the prevailing conditions. Paine has spoken about "selling" the concept that a wider spread will lengthen all of their careers, and Starc added also that the 2019 plan for the Ashes has been a far more subtle one than 2013 or 2015.

"I've been conscious of trying to build pressure from both ends," said Starc. "I think we've got an attack that do different things and build pressure different ways. We've got a couple of more aggressive guys, a couple of holders there that build pressure and take wickets that way and a couple of guys that are probably a hybrid of both.

"We're quite a well-rounded attack and then you throw in Nathan Lyon, who just knows how to get it done in all conditions. We're prepared for all conditions whether it be flat, green, seaming, swinging, slow, fast. Again it's exciting to have everyone up and firing and plenty to choose from.

"We've taken the squad mentality in the whole tour so far, whether it be the World Cup and now into the Ashes … if called up at Lord's I'm ready to go as well."

Something notable about Edgbaston, even if Starc did not experience it, was a lack of swing from the Dukes ball, although there was plenty of seam movement and later on, variable bounce. The sorts of wickets served up by England for the remainder of the series will have a major bearing on how much of a role Starc ends up playing, with his best chances seemingly on the harder surfaces of Old Trafford and The Oval at the back end of the campaign.

"I hadn't held one in four years until I bowled with one in Southampton because I hadn't played with one in Australia," Starc said of the Dukes ball. "It's nice having them back in my hand and swinging them round the net. It didn't do a lot during this game in the air, there was a little bit off the wicket with the harder seam and the harder surface. I guess conditions can play a part in how much it moves around off the wicket or in the air. We saw the white ball move around a fair bit more at Lord's in the World Cup so maybe that's the same with the red ball.

"Judging by the Irish Test there a few weeks ago that's probably going to be the case there off the surface. Again, we'll have to see what that wicket is going to look like. Hopefully it moves around at training and we can take that into the game as well.

"Australia has got a pretty good record at Lord's and obviously we'll be looking to continue that. We're not sure what the conditions are going to be. If it's anything like that Irish Test match it's perfect for us bowlers. We'll wait and see what it is when we get there and start training. It's a wonderful place to play cricket, whether it be white-ball or red-ball, for Australia or for a franchise. I'm looking forward to it this week."

And if you're wondering how Australia performed during that 14-match period in which Lee was spelled, the record was this: five series victories in a row, memorably in Sri Lanka and India, then a little more routinely against New Zealand home and away and also Pakistan. The streak was broken when Lee returned to the team - for the 2005 Ashes series.

Shreyas Iyer has said India are looking forward to a full match in Port-of-Spain after the first ODI in Guyana was washed out after only 13 overs.

Last month, rain had pushed India's World Cup semi-final against New Zealand into a reserve day, and Iyer hoped the weather won't wash away this series as well. It's particularly valuable that he gets some time on the field in the remaining two ODIs on August 11 and August 14 as India try to solve their No. 4 puzzle.

India haven't had a chance to discuss the spot so far with the first match rained out, but Iyer said the team will experiment and give several players a chance to bat at the spot.

That could mean KL Rahul, Rishabh Pant and Iyer himself, over the next two matches.

"Personally, I am not thinking about batting only at No.4," Iyer said. "I want to be someone who is very flexible batting at any number or if you go into any situation you should be able to grab that opportunity and make the best use of it."

When asked about switching to ODIs from T20Is, Iyer said India have the momentum going into this series coming off a 3-0 sweep.

"The way the team is playing currently, it's totally amazing," he said. "If one doesn't perform, the next one raises his hand and he takes the responsibility to take the team through and this is what has been happening throughout the year."

Rain interrupted India's Saturday training session in Port-of-Spain, forcing it indoors. But despite the lack of practice, Iyer drew confidence from his India A stint in the Caribbean, where he was the third-highest run-getter in the one-dayers with 187 runs in four innings.

"It's going to be another two opportunities for me to make the best use of it," Iyer said. "Hopefully this also doesn't rain off. We are hardly getting any net practice. I am eager to go out there and carry forward the momentum which I got from my India A matches. Looking forward to a good series finish."

Sources: Bama RB Sanders could miss season

Published in Breaking News
Saturday, 10 August 2019 12:05

Alabama true freshman running back Trey Sanders suffered what team officials fear is a season-ending foot injury Thursday night in practice, sources confirmed to ESPN.

AL.com first reported that Sanders suffered a significant foot injury on the last play of the team's practice Thursday night and was expected to miss the entire season. The Crimson Tide are holding their first full scrimmage of the preseason on Saturday, and coach Nick Saban is expected to address the severity of Sanders' injury following the scrimmage.

Saban said earlier in the week that the 6-foot, 214-pound Sanders, who played at IMG Academy, had shown a lot of promise since arriving on campus as ESPN's No. 2-ranked running back prospect nationally in the 2019 signing class.

The loss of Sanders would put a dent in Alabama's running back depth. Josh Jacobs and Damien Harris are both now in the NFL after being drafted in the first and third rounds, respectively, earlier this year.

The Crimson Tide's leading returning rusher is junior Najee Harris, who was second on the team to Damien Harris with 783 rushing yards last season and a team-leading 6.7 yards per carry.

Alabama coaches are especially high on junior Brian Robinson Jr., who played in 15 games and rushed for 272 yards a year ago. His role will grow considerably this season. The Crimson Tide also brought in ESPN 300 running back Keilan Robinson of Washington, D.C., in this signing class.

Jays place OF Gurriel Jr. (quad strain) on IL

Published in Baseball
Saturday, 10 August 2019 10:41

The Toronto Blue Jays put slugging outfielder Lourdes Gurriel Jr. on the 10-day injured list Saturday with a left quad strain.

Gurriel suffered the injury against the Yankees on Thursday night, running down the first-base line to leg out an infield single.

Manager Charlie Montoya said it was a Grade 1 strain and said he hoped Gurriel would be able to return in 10 days.

Gurriel is batting .279/.331/.548 with 19 home runs and 47 RBIs.

To take his spot on the roster, the Blue Jays recalled Brock Stewart from the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons.

As August gets cooking, the races for the 2019 awards are heating up, with most of the MVP, Cy Young and Rookie of the Year hardware still there for the taking. ESPN's David Schoenfield and Bradford Doolittle use Doolittle's Awards Index formula and their own observations to break down where things stand as we get ready for the season's homestretch.

Jump to ... MVP races | Cy Young battles | Top rookies

National League MVP

Awards Index leaders

1. Cody Bellinger

2. Christian Yelich

3. Max Muncy

4. Freddie Freeman

5. Ronald Acuna Jr.

Hypothetical odds: Bellinger -135, Yelich +125, Anthony Rendon +1,800, Ketel Marte +2,000, Freeman +2,500, Javier Baez +2,500, Acuna +2,500, Jeff McNeil +3,000, Pete Alonso +3,500, Trevor Story +7,500, Muncy +7,500, Fernando Tatis Jr. +10,000

How close is this race? At the moment, it could hardly be closer. Bellinger's NL-best Awards Index figure is 4.80; Yelich is at 4.73. These figures represent the number of standard deviations a player's performance is above (or below) average, so it's a virtual dead heat. But the last time we ran the leaders, Bellinger had a full standard deviation lead. Thus, it's shaping up as a tortoise-and-hare race, with the steady Yelich closing the gap with another consistently epic season. Yelich leads the majors in win probability added, so his contextualized performance has been stellar, as well. But the thing with a season shaped like the one Bellinger is having is that one more sustained hot streak could put him over the top. It's a great race. -- Bradford Doolittle

Why the numbers favor ... In addition to the WPA edge, Yelich also paces the NL in championship probability added, according to thebaseballgauge.com. If the Brewers get back to the postseason, it most likely will be on the strength of another big stretch run from Yelich, and that will propel the CPA figure even higher. Put in a narrative context: Yelich's excellence can put the Brewers over the top; the Dodgers are going to finish on top no matter what Bellinger does. In a race in which bottom-line performance is so close, these narrative aspects are important, as Dave is about to point out. -- Doolittle

But the narrative belongs to ... Brad mentioned Yelich's edge in win probability, but I'll mention that Bellinger holds a significant edge in Baseball-Reference WAR (7.3 to 6.1), as his defensive runs saved numbers are off the chart (plus-16 in the outfield and plus-4 at first base). Yelich does have that one clear advantage, however: Since the Dodgers have such a big lead in the NL West, the Brewers' games down the stretch will "matter" more, in the context that Yelich has a chance to have big hits in big games that could help send the Brewers into the playoffs. In what otherwise is a coin flip of a race, that could help Yelich win the narrative, similar to Chipper Jones in 1999, Vlad Guerrero in 2004 or Josh Donaldson in 2015. -- David Schoenfield

A dark horse to watch: As has been the case all season, there really isn't one -- unless Bellinger and Yelich both decide to suddenly retire and become professional yoga instructors. Acuna will go 30-30 -- that's 30 home runs and 30 stolen bases -- and 40-40 isn't out of the question. Acuna might lead the league in runs scored. His overall batting line doesn't compare to that of Bellinger and Yelich, but he has some flashy numbers that could impress voters. -- Schoenfield

The bottom line: To me, Yelich is just the better and more consistent all-around player. Unless the Brewers collapse -- a possibility given their issues on the pitching side -- it's Yeli's race to lose. -- Doolittle

I'm giving the very, very slight edge to Bellinger. I think his defense has been a difference-maker -- plus, Yelich has missed more games. It's not Bellinger's fault he has better teammates and thus fewer opportunities in close games. -- Schoenfield


American League MVP

Awards Index leaders

1. Mike Trout

2. Alex Bregman

3. Xander Bogaerts

4. DJ LeMahieu

5. Mookie Betts

Hypothetical odds: Trout -1,000, Field +650

How close is this race? It's not close at all. It wasn't when we ran the Awards Watch in June, and since then, only five players have improved their Awards Index more than Trout. Which hardly seems possible. Trout is on a different tier -- even above Bellinger and Yelich -- that he has all to himself. -- Doolittle

Why the numbers favor ... Trout is on his way to perhaps his best end-of-season numbers, and the only way anyone is going to close the gap is if he gets hurt. And that injury would have to happen pretty soon. You kind of hate to even suggest it. But if it happened, Bregman would be ready to step into the void. -- Doolittle

But the narrative belongs to ... If there's a non-Trout narrative, I guess it belongs to LeMahieu, who has left Coors Field and had the best season of his career. He has an OPS+ of 142 -- after finishing above 100 just once in his career. Combined with all the injuries, LeMahieu has received credit for being the one constant in the Yankees' lineup. That's nice, but LeMahieu's season pales in comparison to Trout's. -- Schoenfield

A dark horse to watch: Again, one doesn't really exist. Bogaerts has better offensive numbers than LeMahieu and plays shortstop, but his defensive metrics once again are well below average (minus-17 DRS). Otherwise, Bogaerts would be the clear No. 2 guy behind Trout. -- Schoenfield

The bottom line: The race is Trout's to lose, a conclusion that really hasn't changed since spring training. -- Doolittle

I'll be surprised if Trout isn't the unanimous winner. He's that good. -- Schoenfield


NL Cy Young

Awards Index leaders

1. Hyun-Jin Ryu

2. Max Scherzer

3. Jacob deGrom

4. Aaron Nola

5. Sonny Gray

Note: Zack Greinke would have ranked third had he not be traded to the AL.

Hypothetical odds: Scherzer -140; Ryu +140; deGrom +900; Luis Castillo +1,500; Clayton Kershaw +2,000; Stephen Strasburg +2,200; Mike Soroka +2,500; Walker Buehler +2,500

How close is this race? This has become a wide-open race thanks to Scherzer's back trouble. In the Index, Gray somewhat shockingly nudged past Strasburg for the No. 5 spot. Since the last rankings, only four players in all of baseball have improved their Awards Index more than Gray. One of them, however, is Nola, who stands alone in terms of Watch-over-Watch improvement. Thus, the top five has taken on a 2018 look, with deGrom and Nola rejoining Scherzer in the chase. Ryu is probably the current favorite, as the Index suggests, with no other clear front-runner. And after all, his 1.53 ERA is nearly a run better than second-ranked Scherzer (2.41). But watch out for a Nola-deGrom duel down the stretch, as each could be making some big starts for teams angling for playoff slots. -- Doolittle

Why the numbers favor ... Assuming Ryu returns from his "injury" in peak form, it seems like he can actually win this thing. He hasn't had a month with an ERA over 3, and in July, he gave up two earned runs in 32⅔ innings. If the Dodgers don't suppress his innings too severely, he can still end up with 190 or so frames, 15 wins and that minuscule ERA. The higher metrics might not anoint Ryu, but this is the path Blake Snell took to last season's AL Cy Young. -- Doolittle

But the narrative belongs to ... As long as that ERA remains a run better than everyone else, it's still Ryu. He had that one bad start in Colorado, where he allowed seven runs, but then reeled off a 0.55 ERA over his next five starts. -- Schoenfield

A dark horse to watch: As Brad points out, deGrom is surging up the list, with a 1.35 ERA over his past six starts. He has seven double-digit strikeout games, as compared to one for Ryu, and has passed him in innings. If you factor in that Ryu has a very good defense behind him and deGrom has a poor one, maybe this race tightens up down the stretch. -- Schoenfield

The bottom line: Ryu is well-positioned, but it's far too early to call this race. That's especially true when you have recognized sharks such as Scherzer, deGrom, Nola and Strasburg still circling in the water. -- Doolittle

I'm with Brad. Ryu's injury is really just a breather, but there's no need to push him down the stretch. All it takes is a couple of bad outings and that ERA rises to where the others have a chance to catch him. But he remains the favorite right now. -- Schoenfield


AL Cy Young

Awards Index leaders

1. Charlie Morton

2. Justin Verlander

3. Lance Lynn

4. Mike Minor

5. Gerrit Cole

Hypothetical odds: Verlander +150; Cole +150; Morton +600; Shane Bieber +900; Lynn +1,800; Lucas Giolito +2,000; Minor +2,500; Jose Berrios +2,500; Jake Odorizzi +4,000; Domingo German +6,000

How close is this race? If we counted Zack Greinke as an American Leaguer, Houston would have the Nos. 2, 3, 6 and 14 pitchers in the league. And one overlooked aspect of the newly supercharged Astros rotation is that they let Morton go as a free agent! If you plugged him in for Aaron Sanchez, it would be even more ridiculous. But the Cy Young race is close, with eight pitchers (all starters) between 2.2 and 2.8 in Awards Index. It's a gap that any of them can close between now and the end of the season. In addition to the Index leaders listed above, Lucas Giolito, Shane Bieber and Jose Berrios are part of that group. -- Doolittle

Why the numbers favor ... Taking the opposite tack, let's knock some contenders out. There is a huge discrepancy between the fWAR and bWAR figures for Minor, so even the leading metrics don't know how to measure him. That bleeds over to Lynn, to some degree, even though the metrics agree on him. Both pitchers suffer from ballpark and defensive-support murkiness, and the Rangers aren't enough of a factor for most analysts/voters to pry into the real story. Verlander is on a strikeout spree, but Cole has been on one all season and his Index has improved more than the other starters mentioned here. So, he gets a trajectory boost over his more famous teammate. With big finishes, win- and championship-probability indicators could swing things to Morton or Bieber, who are both pitching for prime wild-card contenders in a tight race. Beyond that, however, if the picture doesn't become clearer, the perceived best-at-the-moment hurler would get the nod, and that's almost certainly Verlander. -- Doolittle

But the narrative belongs to ... Verlander. At age 36, he leads the league in wins, ERA, innings and strikeout-to-walk ratio. Also home runs allowed, but he has had so few other baserunners that he still is having a dominant season. -- Schoenfield

A dark horse to watch: Bieber is red hot, with a 2.50 ERA over his past 10 starts, a stretch in which he has allowed just three home runs in 72 innings, with an opponents' batting line of .191/.233/.285. If he can keep that going, he is going to slip into the conversation. -- Schoenfield

The bottom line: As close as the metrics view this race, Verlander has a chance at the pitching Triple Crown. If he gets that, forget about it. -- Doolittle

The Astros have a cakewalk schedule down the stretch, so even while AJ Hinch might back off Verlander and Cole a little bit, they're going to continue to rack up the wins and strikeouts. I think it comes down to those two in the end. -- Schoenfield


NL Rookie of the Year

Awards Index leaders

1. Fernando Tatis Jr.

2. Pete Alonso

3. Bryan Reynolds

4. Alex Verdugo

5. Christian Walker

Hypothetical odds: Mike Soroka +200, Tatis, +200, Alonso +250, Reynolds +700

How close is this race? It's a good race between Tatis and Alonso. The last time we ran the Awards Watch, Tatis' numbers were tamped down by his early injury, so you had to have some sample-size skepticism. No more. The kid is for real. Still, if the Mets continue their current run and Alonso contributes to a wild-card push while mashing 50 homers, it's going to be an awfully tough choice. -- Doolittle

The bottom line: Christian Walker! OK, not really. But he deserves a mention because he is 28 years old and playing in his fifth big league season yet, somehow, has retained rookie status. No, this is a duel between Alonso and Tatis, and it's a great one, much better than the race in the AL. -- Doolittle

Where's Mike Soroka? He is 10-2 with a 2.45 ERA in 20 starts, so I view this as a three-way race. Look, it's going to be difficult to beat Alonso if he hits 50 home runs and drives in 120-something runs. But in terms of value, it's basically a dead heat right now with Tatis and Soroka. -- Schoenfield


AL Rookie of the Year

Awards Index leaders

1. Yordan Alvarez

2. Brandon Lowe

3. John Means

4. Zach Plesac

5. Luis Arraez

Hypothetical odds: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. +160, Lowe +160, Means +500, Michael Chavis +900, Eloy Jimenez +1,200

How close is this race? With the rookie voting, quantity often is as important as quality, which works against Plesac, Arraez and Alvarez, and for Lowe (if he can get healthy) and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Vlady Jr.'s Awards Index ranking has improved from 328th to 248th since our last edition, but his pace is quickening. Alvarez's candidacy is fascinating. He didn't debut in the majors until June 9. Since that time, he has a 1.119 OPS and has driven in more runs (43) than all but six players in the majors. Can he get those season-end numbers to a level where voters will overlook his late start? -- Doolittle

The bottom line: Before an 0-for-5 outing on Aug. 5, Guerrero had a scorching nine-game stretch with a .463/.488/.878 batting line with five homers and 18 RBIs. Despite his preseason-favorite status, he'll have to post a couple of more of those stretches to get back in the race. If he doesn't do something like that and Alvarez's quantities aren't high enough to convince the voters and if Lowe can get back soon, then if feels like the Rays' infielder is a slight favorite. But there are a lot of ways this race could go. -- Doolittle

No doubt Alvarez has the momentum and shows no signs of slowing down. He has so much raw power and enough discipline (league-average strikeout rate) that he is putting balls in play, which is why the batting average and extra-base hit rates are so high. You would think some regression is in order (projections are along the lines of .270/.340/.510 the rest of the way), but maybe he's really this good. -- Schoenfield

Winner on the ITTF World Junior Circuit of the cadet boys’ singles event in 2017 in Tweed Heads, Nathan Xu justified his top seeded billing.

Facing Australian adversaries, at the semi-final stage he beat Isaiah Lee (11-7, 11-7, 11-1, 15-13), prior to securing the title at the final expense of Lee Yonghun, the no.2 seed (11-8, 11-8, 6-11, 12-10, 6-11, 9-11, 11-2). In the counterpart semi-final, Lee Yonghun had ousted compatriot, Hayden Green, the no.4 seed (6-11, 11-8, 11-9, 3-11, 11-9, 11-2).

Success for Nathan Xu but that was to be the only title to elude Australia.

In the junior girls’ singles event, Parleen Kaur, the top seed, accounted for New Zealand’s Zhou Jiayi, the no.2 seed (5-11, 9-11, 11-3, 11-5, 11-4, 11-4), after having in the penultimate found overcome compatriot Matilda Alexandersson (7-11, 8-11, 11-9, 11-9, 11-7, 13-11). In the adjacent half of the draw, Zhou Jiayi had ended the hopes of Michelle Wu, the no.3 seed and like Parleen Kaur from Australia (7-11, 11-8, 9-11, 11-7, 11-4, 11-5).

The win recorded by Parleen Kaur meant she completed a clean sweep of available titles. Earlier she had joined forces with Michelle Wu and Matilda Alexandersson to secure the junior girls’ team title, before partnering Finn Luu to junior mixed doubles gold and Matilda Alexandersson the top spot in the junior girls’ team competition.

Gold for Parleen Kaur, who represented Australia in the 2018 World Team Cup in London but she did not emerge the player with the largest selection of gold medals; that honour befell colleague Finn Luu.

On the concluding day of play he secured the cadet boys’ singles title beating Nicholas Lum in the final (12-10, 11-9, 9-11, 7-11, 11-7). Thus he collected his fifth title of the tournament, like Parleen Kaur remaining unbeaten throughout the four days of action.

Previously he had been a member of the successful junior boys’ team, before partnering Parleen Kaur to junior mixed doubles gold and Nicholas Lum to the top prize in both the junior boys’ doubles and cadet boys’ doubles events.

Adding to the list, it was the same for Chermaine Quah; she beat New Zealand’s Takaimaania Ngata-Henare to secure cadet girls’ singles gold (11-2, 11-9, 11-7) and thus gained her third title; earlier she had partnered Constantina Psihogios to cadet girls’ team and cadet girls’ doubles gold.

A total of 14 titles on offer, no less than 13 finished in Australian hands, a golden tournament for the green and gold.

Shebester Scores First ASCS Elite Triumph

Published in Racing
Saturday, 10 August 2019 06:30

CRANDALL, Texas – Wheeling the Ray Williams/City Vending No. 22x Friday night, Oklahoma’s Steven Shebester added his name to the record books with this first victory with the ASCS Elite Non-Wing Series presented by Abilene Powder Coating at RPM Speedway.

Fifth the first in the opening Heat Race, Shebester drew the right of the third row for the feature.

Up to third before a caution, and eventually a red working Lap 2, the No. 22x threaded the needle for the runner-up spot as Jason Howell shot by Stephen Smith for the lead. Trying the lower groove briefly the following lap, Shebester returned to the cushion with the pass for the point on through turns one and two with five laps complete.

Keeping pace through the remainder of the feature, Shebester was chased to the line by Raven Culp, who worked to the runner-up spot from eighth. Jason Howell slipped back to third with Paul White fourth and Stephen Smith fifth.

The finish:

1. 22X-Steven Shebester, [6]; 2. 3-Raven Culp, [8]; 3. 44-Jason Howell, [4]; 4. 1-Paul White, [5]; 5. 3S-Stephen Smith, [3]; 6. 118-Scott Evans, [7]; 7. 1X-Justin Zimmerman, [2]; 8. 49-Justin Fifield, [11]; 9. 57-Chase Parson, [9]; 10. 48-Gary Floyd, [19]; 11. 98J-Jarrod Jennings, [12]; 12. 15-Johnny Miller, [16]; 13. 21-Michelle Melton, [1]; 14. 45-Martin Edwards, [13]; 15. 12.5-James Griffin, [20]; 16. 54-David Sherry, [21]; 17. 2-Michael Day, [10]; 18. 48N-Jason Ingalls, [17]; 19. 52-J.D. Fry, [14]; 20. 13M-Chance McCrary, [18]; 21. 33-Mike Merrell, [15]

Chastain Takes First Truck Series Pole Since 2013

Published in Racing
Saturday, 10 August 2019 08:00

BROOKLYN, Mich. – Ross Chastain’s mission to end the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series regular season on a high note continued Saturday morning during qualifying at Michigan Int’l Speedway.

Chastain took the pole for the LTi Printing 250 at the two-mile oval, turning a lap of 39.179 seconds (183.772 mph) with his No. 45 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado.

The pole marked the third of Chastain’s Gander Trucks career, his first at Michigan and first since 2013, when the Alva, Fla., native was still with Brad Keselowski Racing.

Chastain will chase his fourth win of the season during the regular-season finale Saturday afternoon.

“I said this morning that I had a lot of confidence, and this team is rolling down the hill like a watermelon rolls down a hill; we’re only gaining momentum,” quipped Chastain. “I’m super proud of all these Niece boys and girls. Al Niece gives us all the tools we need to be successful, even though it’s not always easy. This morning, I was just the guy that got to hold the wheel.

“It scared me a little bit, because I think the throttle did get hung a little bit, but there’s raw speed in the race truck and we got the pole by that much … so that’s all that matters.”

New York teenager Christian Eckes will join Chastain on the front row after touring the two-mile Michigan oval in 39.187 seconds (183.734 mph) with his No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota Tundra.

Playoff driver Tyler Ankrum rolls off third alongside playoff hopeful Todd Gilliland, with a third KBM driver in Harrison Burton following that duo in the fifth position.

Austin Hill, Ben Rhodes, Brett Moffitt, Grant Enfinger and Joe Nemechek completed the top 10.

The LTi Printing 250 takes the green flag at 1 p.m. ET, with live coverage on FOX Sports 1, the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, channel 90.

STARTING LINEUP: NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series; Michigan Int’l Speedway; Aug. 10, 2019

  1. #45 – Ross Chastain, 39.179 seconds (183.772 mph)
  2. #51 – Christian Eckes, 39.187 seconds (183.734 mph)
  3. #17 – Tyler Ankrum, 39.251 seconds (183.435 mph)
  4. #4 – Todd Gilliland, 39.287 seconds (183.267 mph)
  5. #18 – Harrison Burton, 39.299 seconds (183.211 mph)
  6. #16 – Austin Hill, 39.324 seconds (183.094 mph)
  7. #99 – Ben Rhodes, 39.332 seconds (183.057 mph)
  8. #24 – Brett Moffitt, 39.345 seconds (182.997 mph)
  9. #98 – Grant Enfinger, 39.378 seconds (182.843 mph)
  10. #8 – Joe Nemechek, 39.380 seconds (182.834 mph)
  11. #44 – Bayley Currey, 39.438 seconds (182.565 mph)
  12. #88 – Matt Crafton, 39.459 seconds (182.468 mph)
  13. #3 – Jordan Anderson, 39.493 seconds (182.311 mph)
  14. #13 – Johnny Sauter, 39.523 seconds (182.172 mph)
  15. #04 – Cory Roper, 39.558 seconds (182.011 mph)
  16. #54 – Natalie Decker, 39.578 seconds (181.919 mph)
  17. #02 – Tyler Dippel, 39.597 seconds (181.832 mph)
  18. #2 – Sheldon Creed, 39.601 seconds (181.814 mph)
  19. #15 – Anthony Alfredo, 39.620 seconds (181.726 mph)
  20. #52 – Stewart Friesen, 39.622 seconds (181.717 mph)
  21. #9 – Codie Rohrbaugh, 39.706 seconds (181.333 mph)
  22. #12 – Gus Dean, 39.754 seconds (181.114 mph)
  23. #22 – Austin Wayne Self, 39.801 seconds (180.900 mph)
  24. #14 – Trey Hutchens III, 39.947 seconds (180.239 mph)
  25. #87 – Camden Murphy, 40.068 seconds (179.695 mph)
  26. #38 – T.J. Bell, 40.324 seconds (178.554 mph)
  27. #20 – Spencer Boyd, 40.400 seconds (178.218 mph)
  28. #34 – Jesse Iwuji, 40.844 seconds (176.280 mph)
  29. #33 – Josh Reaume, 40.987 seconds (175.665 mph)
  30. #49 – Ray Ciccarelli, 41.163 seconds (174.914 mph)
  31. #10 – Jennifer Jo Cobb, 43.238 seconds (166.520 mph)
  32. #6 – Norm Benning, NT (0.000 mph)

DNQ: #0 – Daniel Sasnett.

VIDEO: McMahan Set For 20th Nationals Start

Published in Racing
Saturday, 10 August 2019 08:28

LIVE from the Knoxville Nationals
Presented by Mobil 1 Truck & SUV Oil
Paul McMahan Interview

Veteran sprint car ace Paul McMahan will start his 20th Knoxville Nationals main event tonight. As he prepares for tonight’s big race, he took a few minutes to catch up with Tony Bokhoven.

Mobil 1 – the best choice for your Truck or SUV. Learn more about Mobil 1 Truck & SUV oil and enter for a chance to win a Toyota pickup or SUV at dirtgiveaway.com.

KNOXVILLE: Through The Years

Published in Racing
Saturday, 10 August 2019 09:00

This year marks the 59th running of the NOS Energy Drink Knoxville Nationals at Knoxville (Iowa) Raceway. SPEED SPORT, one of the few motorsports properties with a longer history than the Nationals, has covered every one of them.

From Roy Robbins in 1961 to Steve Kinser’s 12 victories, to Donny Schatz’s 10 triumphs and finally to Brad Sweet’s dramatic victory last August, we’ve been there for them all.

As SPEED SPORT celebrates its 85th anniversary, we felt it appropriate to look back at the Knoxville Nationals through the SPEED SPORT archives:

1961: Roy Robbins earned $1,000 for winning the first Super Modified National Championship. Robbins’ car carried an “air scoop,” which was similar to the wings we are familiar with today. The following week, wings were banned.

1962: Jerry Richert romped from 14th on the grid to pocket the $1,200 top prize.

1963: Greg Weld outran his older brother, Jerry, and earned $1,500 for the victory.

1964: Eighteen-year-old Kenny Weld led a one-two finish for the family, as Greg Weld came home second.

1965: Kenny Weld became the first two-time Nationals winner, while his father Taylor Weld was the winning car owner for the third straight year.

1966: Jay Woodside won the rain-plagued event and took home the $2,500 winner’s check.

1967: Thad Dasher held off Bob Williams to win the seventh annual Knoxville Nationals.

1968: Ray Lee Goodwin led every lap to top the first $3,000-to-win Nationals feature.

1969: Kenny Gritz passed Jan Opperman to secure one of the biggest upsets in Nationals history. Gritz was killed two weeks later at the Nebraska State Fairgrounds.

1970: The 10th running of the event saw Joe Saldana lead all 30 laps.

1971: Opperman led every lap to redeem a heartbreaking loss in 1969.

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