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From Worst To First For Dyson At Sebring

Published in Racing
Sunday, 21 February 2021 15:45

SEBRING, Fla. – Chris Dyson passed Ernie Francis Jr. in turn one on the final lap to complete a last-to-first victory in Sunday’s Trans-Am Series presented by Pirelli season opener at Sebring Int’l Raceway.

Electing to change Pirelli tires before the start, Dyson gave up his second-row grid position and started at the back of the 22-car grid. Undeterred, he charged through the field in the No. 20 Plaid Ford Mustang for his seventh-career TA victory in the caution-free event.

“Coming down and fighting with Ernie (Francis Jr.) is why we come here to race, he and I both come here and use each other as a benchmark.,” Dyson said. “The good Lord was looking down on us today, I am so blessed to be here. I’ve been down here for a week trying to prepare. I miss my family and I’m just happy to bring a win home.

“We didn’t have much of a choice after yesterday’s qualifying other than to change the tires and start from the back,” explained Dyson. “I was hoping for a yellow, but it never came, so I just had to drive my head off.”

Francis Jr. led nearly all the way in the No. 98 Future Star/Breathless Racing Ford Mustang to begin his quest for an eighth-consecutive Trans Am title.

Francis Jr. held off relentless pressure from both Tomy Drissi and later Dyson before finishing second, .659 seconds back.

“It was a really hard-fought battle with Chris Dyson out there,” said Francis Jr. “It’s always disappointing coming in second after leading most of the race. I have to thank my Breathless Racing team. They gave me a great car all weekend and we barely had to do anything to the car between sessions, it was there and it was on point all weekend. A little mistake by me in the race allowed Chris to get by, and I just burned up the equipment during the race.

“I will have to work on that for the next one.”

Adam Andretti finished third in the No. 43 ECC/Anchor Bolt & Screw Dodge Challenger, in the thick of the battle throughout the race before falling back with ignition box problems.

Francis pulled away at the start, but Drissi began trimming the lead in the No. 8 Lucas Oil Chevrolet Camaro. Drissi managed to briefly pull ahead at the start/finish line with 10 laps remaining, but Francis retook the lead in turn one.

Two laps later, Drissi spun in Turn 5 – costing him two positions and 30 seconds.

“Sorry guys,” Drissi said on his radio. “Big picture. Big picture.”

Dyson had taken third from Andretti moments before the Drissi spin and was 4.275-seconds behind Francis Jr. He nosed ahead with three laps remaining but spun, putting Francis Jr. back out front.

Dyson didn’t lose much ground and continued the charge, regaining the lead on the final lap.

Justin Marks took fifth in the No. 99 Ave Motorsports, followed by Amy Ruman in the No. 23 McNichols Co./Cornertech/CNC Solutions Corvette.

In SGT, Justin Oakes took his second victory in three races driving the No. 11 Droneworks Corvette.

“I had a blast out there,” said Oakes. “The whole team came together to give me a beast of a car. We made a lot of changes to it going into this race. We didn’t get any testing done because of the conditions in Texas (COTA), but we showed up and everything worked great. I want to thank my competitors. I came to this series basically to race with guys like Lee (Saunders) and Mike (Phillips) and everyone else, and had so much fun doing it.”

Defending series champion Lee Saunders led the opening four laps in the No. 84 Landsearch LLC Dodge Viper. Oakes needed five laps to take the lead, going on to win by 20 seconds.

Phillips took third in his Trans Am debut, driving the No. 97 F.A.S.T. Auto Racing Corvette. Aaron Pierce was in position for a podium finish before losing oil pressure with nine laps remaining.

Fourth-place finisher Lou Gigliotti was the Masters winner in SGT. He blew the head gasket in his No. 28 LG Motorsports Corvette during qualifying. His participation was doubtful when his team could not find a spare part.

Fortunately, a late-night search ended at a local junkyard where a Corvette was found and the needed part was procured.

Philip Di Pippo topped the podium for the GT class in the No. 94 Sasco Sports Ford Mustang.

Round two for Trans-Am competitors will be the Atlanta Speed Tour, March 26-28 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta.

Bell Tracks Down Logano For First Cup Series Win

Published in Racing
Sunday, 21 February 2021 16:06

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – With a masterful drive over the final eight laps, Christopher Bell chased down Joey Logano and went on to take his first NASCAR Cup Series win Sunday on the Daytona Int’l Speedway road course.

Bell restarted seventh when the O’Reilly Auto Parts 253 went back green for the final time on lap 63 of 70, and methodically picked his way through the field behind the wheel of the No. 20 Rheem Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.

The Norman, Okla., native got to third in less than a lap after the restart, but was held up for nearly two laps around the 3.61-mile, 14-turn circuit before finally dispatching Kurt Busch for second coming to five to go.

At that point, Bell had 3.4 seconds to make up if he wanted to catch Logano for the victory, as well as the threat of a tire rub following contact with Busch in the battle for second.

But Bell put his head down, dug deep and put on a drive for the ages. He cut the deficit to a second and a half over the next three laps, then caught Logano exiting the infield section with a lap and a half to go.

The forward drive provided by Bell’s fresher tires – put on during a caution for light rain with 15 laps left – paid dividends through the bus stop chicane, as Bell got alongside Logano coming to the white flag and completed the pass for the win through the frontstretch chicane.

Bell drove away to a 2.119-second margin of victory over the course of the final lap.

“This is definitely one of the highlights of my life so far,” Bell said in victory lane. “I’m just so incredibly thankful to be here at Joe Gibbs Racing with all of our partners – Rheem, DeWalt, Pristine Auction, Toyota, TRD. Thank you to Jack Irving and Tyler Gibbs. You guys believed in me since day one. It feels like I’ve prepared my whole life for this moment to race in the Cup Series, and now to win in the Cup Series.

“Last year was a huge learning curve for me, and I’m very grateful that I got the opportunity to run in Cup, because it definitely prepared me to move for Joe Gibbs Racing and I think we showed that today.”

Admittedly, Bell didn’t think he’d be able to catch Logano once he got past Busch for second place and had more than three seconds to try and make up.

Christopher Bell celebrates in victory lane after winning Sunday at the Daytona Road Course. (Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR photo)

“After we pitted, I liked where we lined up, but then the yellows kept coming and I thought the yellows were hurting me … because I felt like I needed laps to get back up through there,” Bell noted. “Honestly, I didn’t think I was going to get there, but Adam (Stevens, crew chief) up on the pit box kept telling me I was going to get there. I didn’t believe it, but he really struggled coming out of (turn) six one time and allowed me to close the gap.

“I wish my wife was here to celebrate with me, but man … this is awesome.”

Behind Bell and Logano, Denny Hamlin crossed the line third, followed by Busch and Brad Keselowski.

Kevin Harvick, NASCAR Xfinity Series regular A.J. Allmendinger, Daytona 500 winner Michael McDowell, Ryan Preece and Alex Bowman filled out the top 10.

Polesitter Chase Elliott dominated the race, leading 44 of the first 57 laps, topping the first stage and appearing to be on his way to a fifth-straight points-paying win in the NASCAR Cup Series.

However, his efforts came unraveled when nine drivers stayed out during the lap-56 caution for weather that shuffled the order of the frontrunners, as well as the strategy for the closing stages.

Elliott was hampered by a slow pit stop, which dropped him to 14th for the ensuing restart with 12 to go, as well as an off-track excursion at turn four when he was run wide by Corey LaJoie.

The defending Cup Series champion got back to fifth with six laps left, but was turned around in turn six by Hamlin while trying to pass Keselowski for fourth place. Elliott ended up with a 21st-place finish.

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to action Feb. 28 at Homestead-Miami (Fla.) Speedway with the running of the Dixie Vodka 400. Denny Hamlin is the defending winner of the event.

To view complete race results, advance to the next page.

Ducks, last in offense, recall top prospect Zegras

Published in Hockey
Sunday, 21 February 2021 16:21

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- The Anaheim Ducks have recalled top prospect Trevor Zegras from their AHL affiliate in San Diego, setting the stage for the 19-year-old forward's much-anticipated NHL debut.

The Ducks made the move Sunday. They play at Arizona on Monday night, although Anaheim coach Dallas Eakins didn't confirm Zegras will play immediately.

Zegras had four goals and five assists in eight games for San Diego, getting off to a blazing start with his first professional team. A few weeks before joining the Gulls, Zegras was named the MVP of the World Junior Championships, racking up seven goals and 11 assists while leading the U.S. team to the gold medal.

Zegras was the ninth overall pick in the 2019 draft, and Ducks fans have clamored for the New York native's debut since he signed a professional contract last year after playing for Boston University during the 2019-20 season.

No team in the league needs Zegras' offensive gifts more than the last-place Ducks, who are last in the NHL with just 33 goals in 18 games (1.83 per game).

Anaheim (6-9-3) has scored only one goal in nine of its 18 games, and its power play is the NHL's second-worst with a 7.5% success rate.

Zegras has played center extensively, but he skated on the left wing Sunday at practice in Anaheim alongside center Sam Steel and right wing Jakob Silfverberg. He also played left wing in San Diego.

While the Ducks appear to be heading nowhere this season as they attempt to avoid their third straight year out of the playoffs, their farm system remains promising. Mobile defenseman Jamie Drysdale, the sixth overall pick last year, has racked up three goals and five assists in his first eight games in San Diego.

LOS ANGELES – Tiger Woods spoke publicly for the first time since he underwent his fifth back surgery, but the 45-year-old didn’t appear poised for another comeback.

“I’m feeling fine. I’m a little stiff. I have one more MRI scheduled so that we’ll see if the annulus is scared over finally and then I can start doing more activities,” Woods said during Sunday's CBS telecast of the Genesis Invitational. “Still in the gym, still doing the mundane stuff that you have to do for rehab. The little things where I can start gravitating toward something more.”

Specific to when he might play next, Woods was asked if he planned to be at Augusta National for this April's Masters Tournament.

“God, I hope so,” he said.

Woods, who is the host of this week’s event at Riviera Country Club, announced in January that he wouldn’t be able to play the Genesis Invitational or the Farmers Insurance Open because of the surgery. He was also qualified for next week’s World Golf Championships event in Bradenton, Florida, but skipped that event, as well.

The Arnold Palmer Invitational, which he’s won eight times, is the week after the WGC at Concession, followed by The Players Championship and the Honda Classic, which is a home game for Woods, but the world No. 48 didn’t sound as if he was ramping up his golf activities any time soon.

Asked by CBS announcer Jim Nantz specifically about his game, Woods only mentioned his putting.

“I lengthened my putter, I don’t have to bend over as far,” he smiled. “I’ve gone to the same length as my sand wedge. I do a lot of putting drills, blading the sand wedge so I figured, I do a lot with that why don’t I just lengthen my putter, so I did and it helped.”

A day after punishing the field with help from the wind, Riviera Country Club didn’t disappoint as the stage to an exciting Sunday finish at the Genesis Invitational, where it was Max Homa and not Tony Finau winning his second PGA Tour title in a playoff. Here’s everything you need to know:

Leaderboard: Max Homa (-12; won on second playoff hole), Tony Finau (-12), Sam Burns (-11), Cameron Smith (-9), Jon Rahm (-7), Viktor Hovland (-7), Matt Fitzpatrick (-7)

What it means: A few times on Sunday it looked as if Finau would no longer have to answer to people questioning why he hasn't added to his maiden Tour win, which came at the 2016 Puerto Rico Open. But Homa had other plans, hitting some clutch shots down the stretch and overcoming a brutal lip-out on his 72nd hole to win for the first time since breaking through at the 2019 Wells Fargo Championship. The 30-year-old Homa, who was born in nearby Burbank, California, first attended the annual Riviera event when he was 2 years old. Finau, who bogeyed the second playoff hole, now has 10 runner-up finishes since his Puerto Rico win.

How it happened: Burns began Sunday’s final round with a two-shot advantage and chasing his first Tour victory. He wasn’t slow to get out of the gates, either. He birdied two of his first three holes and then stuck approach shots at Nos. 7 and 9 to set up two more birdies as part of a 4-under 31 on the opening nine. But the 24-year-old LSU product couldn’t sustain. He got a lucky bounce back in bounds after pulling his drive into the trees at No. 12, but he still bogeyed the hole. He’d also bogeyed Nos. 14 and 15 to fall out of the lead.

Meanwhile, Finau drained a 9-footer for birdie at the par-3 16th and followed with an up-and-down birdie at the par-5 17th hole to help grab the clubhouse lead at 12 under. Homa only carded two birdies on the back side yet teed off on No. 18 tied with the already finished Finau for the lead. Homa then stuck his approach shot from 128 yards to about 3 feet, only to lip out the birdie roll and send the tournament into a playoff.

Homa said he quickly forgave himself, which ended up helping him on the opening playoff hole, the par-4 10th, where Homa's drive went long of the green and nestled up against a tree trunk. Needing to hook a chip, Homa somehow found the green and managed to tie the hole with par after Finau missed a hard-breaking 7-footer for the win. After Finau found sand off the tee at the par-3 14th, the second extra hole, Homa got aggressive and landed his tee shot left of the hole, about 12 feet away. Homa easily two-putted and Finau couldn't get up and down to continue the playoff.

Round of the day: Finau’s closing 7-under 64 equaled his career-best final round on Tour and was two shots better than anyone else in the field on Sunday. He carded eight birdies, all but one of which came from inside of 10 feet.

Shot(s) of the day: The dart by Homa into No. 18 and his magical playoff escape on No. 10.

Biggest disappointment: Dustin Johnson. The world No. 1 kept pace early before fading mightily on the back nine. A sloppy bogey on the short par-4 10th hole low-lighted a stretch of five bogeys in eight holes. Johnson's closing 72 left him six back of the playoff.

Quote of the day: "Been watching this tournament my whole life, it's why I fell in love with golf – wow, didn't think it'd be like this (choking up). Tiger another reason I'm into golf. Had good feelings this week. Been playing great. City of champions, you know – Dodgers, Lakers and me now, so it's a weird feeling." – Homa

Genesis Invitational payout: Max Homa clears $1.6 million

Published in Golf
Sunday, 21 February 2021 11:46

Max Homa defeated Tony Finau in a two-hole playoff Sunday to win the Genesis Invitational. Here's the prize money and FedExCup points breakdowns for Homa and the rest of the players who made the cut at Riviera:

Finish Player FedEx Earnings ($)
1 Max Homa 550 1,674,000
2 Tony Finau 315 1,013,700
3 Sam Burns 200 641,700
4 Cameron Smith 140 455,700
5 Matthew Fitzpatrick 105 344,100
5 Viktor Hovland 105 344,100
5 Jon Rahm 105 344,100
8 Wyndham Clark 81 262,725
8 Dustin Johnson 81 262,725
8 Matt Jones 81 262,725
8 Francesco Molinari 81 262,725
12 Talor Gooch 65 197,625
12 Alex Noren 65 197,625
12 Patrick Rodgers 65 197,625
15 Patrick Cantlay 55 151,125
15 James Hahn 55 151,125
15 Xander Schauffele 55 151,125
15 Jordan Spieth 55 151,125
15 Will Zalatoris 0 151,125
20 Rickie Fowler 45 101,835
20 Branden Grace 45 101,835
20 Matthew NeSmith 45 101,835
20 C.T. Pan 45 101,835
20 Scottie Scheffler 45 101,835
20 Nick Taylor 45 101,835
26 Jim Furyk 34 67,890
26 Lanto Griffin 34 67,890
26 Adam Hadwin 34 67,890
26 Scott Harrington 34 67,890
26 Andrew Landry 34 67,890
26 Cameron Tringale 34 67,890
32 Bo Hoag 25 51,925
32 Mackenzie Hughes 25 51,925
32 Jason Kokrak 25 51,925
32 Marc Leishman 25 51,925
32 Andrew Putnam 25 51,925
32 Kyle Stanley 25 51,925
38 Tyler Duncan 18 40,455
38 Russell Henley 18 40,455
38 Brooks Koepka 18 40,455
38 Kevin Na 18 40,455
38 Adam Scott 18 40,455
43 Wesley Bryan 12 28,179
43 Cameron Davis 12 28,179
43 Brian Harman 12 28,179
43 Collin Morikawa 12 28,179
43 Sebastián Muñoz 12 28,179
43 Joaquin Niemann 12 28,179
43 J.T. Poston 12 28,179
43 Brendan Steele 12 28,179
43 Sepp Straka 12 28,179
52 Charley Hoffman 7 22,153
52 Tom Hoge 7 22,153
52 Danny Lee 7 22,153
52 Tyler McCumber 7 22,153
52 Kevin Streelman 7 22,153
57 J.B. Holmes 6 21,297
57 Nate Lashley 6 21,297
57 Richy Werenski 6 21,297
60 Keegan Bradley 6 20,832
60 Brian Gay 6 20,832
62 Charl Schwartzel 5 20,460
62 Harold Varner III 5 20,460
64 Scott Piercy 5 20,088
64 Matthew Wolff 5 20,088
66 Kyoung-Hoon Lee 4 19,809
67 Sung Kang 4 19,623

Tony Finau falls short again but fires Sunday low at Riviera

Published in Golf
Sunday, 21 February 2021 13:01

LOS ANGELES – Tony Finau has gotten used to unpacking potentially painful losses. His runner-up showing at the Genesis Invitational will be no different.

Finau admitted it was a “bittersweet” Sunday at Riviera Country Club. He closed with a 7-under 64, which was the round of the day by two shots, to force a playoff. He then lost the playoff to Max Homa on the second extra hole, the par-3 14th, following a poor tee shot. He also missed a 7-footer for victory on the first playoff hole, the short par-4 10th.

“Anytime I've had a chance to win, I haven't been the guy that went low and today I was, so I can take a lot of confidence from that,” Finau said. “That's something that I wanted to happen today to just prove to myself on Sundays that I can put myself in the thick of it and shoot a number and I was able to do that this week.”

Near misses have become a theme for Finau, especially this season. He began the final round last month at The American Express tied for the lead but closed with a 68 and finished fourth. A week later at the Farmers Insurance Open, he was again in contention to start the final day yet tied for second after a final-round 69.

Although he’s five years removed from his lone PGA Tour victory in Puerto Rico, a span that now includes 10 worldwide runner-up finishes, Finau has five top-10 finishes in nine starts this season and doesn’t appear to be under any added pressure to win.

“I grew up trying to win every tournament I play, nothing's changed,” Finau said. “I know at the end of the day you're going to lose a lot more times than you're going to win on the PGA Tour. Unfortunately for me that's come really close in the last few years. But I always challenge myself to play good golf and that's all I try to do.”

LOS ANGELES – Tony Finau’s first reaction as he walked toward the 10th green and noticed a golf ball resting up against one of Riviera Country Club’s ubiquitous trees was: “I hope it wasn't my ball.”

It wasn't. The unlucky bounce on the first playoff hole at the Genesis Invitational actually went to Max Homa, who had finished regulation tied with Finau at 12 under after missing a 3-footer for birdie at the 72nd hole.

“He was very calm for what I thought that we couldn’t hit the green [from beside the tree],” Homa’s caddie, Joe Greiner, said. “He goes, ‘I got it.’ He thought he could actually hit it closer than that and I was thinking just hit the fringe 15 feet away.”

Homa chipped a hooded 50-degree wedge onto the green to 12 feet for a two-putt par to match Finau. He won the event on the next hole with a par after Finau missed the green at the par-3 14th hole and failed to get up and down.

“I hit a good tee ball, I pulled it probably 5 yards left of where Tony was, which is kind of where you wanted to hit it,” Homa said. “What are you going to be mad about when you make a good swing when you're nervous? Obviously had a weird looking shot but I had a shot, which is cool.”

Napoli's Osimhen in hospital after knock to head

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 21 February 2021 17:25

Napoli forward Victor Osimhen will remain overnight in the hospital under observation after being knocked unconscious during the final minutes of Sunday's Italian league match at Atalanta.

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Osimhen fell awkwardly after a collision with Atalanta defender Cristian Romero and hit his head on the field. The Nigeria international was conscious as he was stretchered off and rushed to the hospital.

Napoli released a brief statement saying that "following his injury and head trauma ... he had undergone tests with negative results.''

The southern-based club said Osimhen would remain under observation in Bergamo until Monday. The incident occurred in stoppage time of Atalanta's 4-2 win over Napoli.

Osimhen joined Napoli from Lille at the end of July for a fee of around €80 million. He was injured on international duty in November and then tested positive for coronavirus over the winter break.

The 22-year-old Osimhen only returned to action on Jan. 24 after an absence of more than two months.

Mourinho: Our coaching method is world's best

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 21 February 2021 17:41

Tottenham boss Jose Mourinho has defended his coaching methods and staff's ability after his side slipped to their fifth Premier League defeat in six games against West Ham United on Sunday.

Spurs are now nine points off the top four after losing 2-1 at West Ham and the result continues their miserable run of form in the league. Mourinho refused to concede defeat in their race for a top four spot after the match, but he did admit "there are problems" at the club.

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With Tottenham's season hinging on cup form, with Spurs in the final of the EFL Cup and still in the Europa League, Mourinho is targeting success there, but after another loss -- despite a late rally and hitting the woodwork twice -- Mourinho was resolute postmatch.

When asked whether he had ever doubted his coaching methods amid this poor run of form, Mourinho answered: "No, not at all. The results are the consequences of multi-situations in football. Mine and my coaching staff methods are second to nobody in the world."

Mourinho also dismissed suggestions the team was in crisis but admitted there is "frustration and sadness" in the changing room, and said they are having a "bad run of results."

"Of course our team has problems, and the problems they have reflection on results and on points, but I also believe that a little bit of that light, a little bit of that luck that you also need in football to win matches, has to be back," Mourinho added.

"And if that light comes back, is different. You hit the post and the ball goes inside or goes outside. The VAR decisions, many times, I am not speaking about today because today I didn't watch, but many times are controversial, or are decisions by one inch.

"You sometimes need also a little bit of luck to go in your favour. I believe that if this team wins a couple of matches in a row, that the situation can change, and that we can still fight for top four. Of course if you say nine points now, it is difficult, is very possible."

But, talking to the BBC, Mourinho said there are problems in the club that are out of his control: "I feel that we are not in the position in relation to our potential -- even if I think for a long, long time that we have problems in the team that I cannot resolve by myself as a coach. Our potential is higher than where we are so there is frustration."

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