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It is no secret that Ryan Blaney is obsessed with Star Wars. He wears an elaborate Darth Vader tattoo on his right thigh. He once went viral for dressing as Princess Leia at a Halloween party. The motorcoach he lives in on race weekends at the racetrack is fashioned with custom Star Wars decor.

So, it should also come as no surprise that on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway, at the most crucial moment of his NASCAR career, in a bumper-banging fight with two cars at once, one blocking his path to a potential race win and the other racing against him for a championship, that his blood pressure, nerves, heart rate, all of it, was soothed and schooled by two voices in his head, one quite literally.

“Roger Penske came over the radio and instantly calmed me down,” Blaney recalled of his car owner and boss, aka The Captain. The 29-year-old was surprisingly sharp after 24 consecutive hours of celebrating his crowning as NASCAR’s newest Cup Series champion. “Roger has seen everything there is to see in motorsports and his calm made me calm. He knew when to come onto the radio to motivate me and also remind me to reel the reins in a little bit on me.”

Like Obi-Wan Kenobi speaking to Luke Skywalker during a Death Star trench run?

“Exactly.”

Penske’s voice has been in his ear for the better part of a decade, the, ahem, force behind every ride of Blaney’s NASCAR career, from Trucks and Xfinity to his first Cup ride with Wood Brothers Racing and, since 2018, Team Penske.

The other voice has been with him since the day he was born. His father, Dave Blaney, is a second-generation Ohio short track legend who moved south and into stock cars full time in 1998, when Ryan was 4 years old. As the elder Blaney moved in the Cup Series, he developed a reputation as a man who raced as hard on the track as he was quiet when he was outside the cockpit. Dave never won a Cup Series race in 17 years and nearly 500 starts of trying. He came close so many times, most notably in the 2012 Daytona 500, when he had the lead when the race was red flagged past the halfway point when Juan Pablo Montoya crashed into a jet dryer and caused a huge fire. The race, surprisingly to many, was restarted at midnight and Blaney fell back to finish 15th.

All the while, the father was working with his son to move him up the racing ladder. Ryan Blaney started racing against future NASCAR rivals and friends such as Bubba Wallace and Chase Elliott when they were all preteens. While the rest of the world knew Dave Blaney as one of the world’s seemingly most uncomfortable conversationalists (he was certainly difficult to interview, very polite but very short on words), his kid had a much different experience.

“Everyone knows how reserved my dad is, but my whole life he has known exactly what to say at just the right time,” the kid explained. “But I don’t know if he was ever as perfectly helpful as he has been this fall. He believed in our chances to win a championship all along, even when those of us on the team probably had our doubts.”

Those doubts were well earned. The No. 12 Ford started the season 1-for-30, the lone win coming in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway way back in May, and Blaney’s final race of the regular season ended with a 36th-place finish after crashing at Daytona.

“We were pretty down and Dad said to me, ‘I can see the path,'” Blaney recalled of the start of NASCAR’s 10-week, bracket-style Playoffs that started with the No. 12 car ranked 12th out of 16 teams. Three races later, Blaney had barely made the cut into the next round, still stalled in 12th. That next round started with another crash, at Texas. Then:

“We won at Talladega, so we’re in the Round of 8, and after, Dad just said to me, ‘Now I can really see it. I can see the path to a championship.'”

When Blaney, sitting sixth in the standings, won in dramatic fashion at Martinsville Speedway, his first victory there in 16 tries, to punch his ticket to the Championship 4 at Phoenix, it was Dad who was once again waiting after the celebration, full-on sounding like Yoda himself.

“He said, ‘Now that path is lit up. … You went down the path, you made it through the gate and now you are here, with a chance to win a championship.’ He believed it all along and he made me believe it, too. I truly believed going into that race at Phoenix, and when I found myself getting too emotional, too fired up, running the risk of making a mistake because my emotions or the moment got the best of me, I could hear Dad in my head and I could hear Roger on my radio.”

That’s why Blaney broke down crying so many times when the title was finally his. After losing ground to fellow title contender Kyle Larson during the final pit stop with only 30 laps remaining, Blaney had to grind past Larson in a spirited battle in the closing laps and then keep Larson’s Chevy in the rearview mirror while Ross Chastain, who was not a title contender, was blocking up ahead to protect his eventual race win.

“I think we all talk a big game about treating this race like just another race, but that was so intense, no way that was just another race,” Blaney recalled, laughing. “So, the intensity of that, plus the realization of what we had just achieved, plus thinking about the fulfilling of our family’s dream, that’s why I was so much more emotional than I think anyone had ever seen of me before.”

He cried on the front stretch on live TV. He cried in Victory Lane. He cried when his friends, Wallace and Elliott among them, came running in to see him. And yes, he cried when he saw his father.

Anyone who saw their embrace and really knew the family likely thought of a similar hug nearly a decade ago. The lone time that the two Blaneys almost raced in this series together. It was May 2014 at Kansas Speedway. Ryan Blaney was attempting to qualify for his first Cup Series start and barely made the 43-car field on speed. To do so he knocked the only remaining car off the grid, a low-budget start-and-park ride driven by Dave Blaney.

“Here’s all you need to know about Dad, and really about us,” the son and just-minted Cup Series championship recalled of that Saturday afternoon at Kansas Speedway. “I went to him to apologize for knocking him out of the race and before I could say a word, he was grabbing me and saying, ‘You’re making your first Cup start and you had to knock me out to do it! I wouldn’t have it any other way.'”

Not that day and certainly not this day. To quote the guy tattooed on Ryan Blaney’s thigh, it was their destiny.

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Stankoven’s 2 goals jolt Canes in playoff opener

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Stankoven's 2 goals jolt Canes in playoff opener

RALEIGH, N.C. — Logan Stankoven provided an immediate jolt in his first playoff game with the Carolina Hurricanes.

The 22-year-old forward scored twice in the second period Sunday to help the Hurricanes beat the New Jersey Devils 4-1 in the opener of their first-round playoff series. It was part of a strong debut that included his work on the Hurricanes’ top defensive forward line with captain Jordan Staal and Jordan Martinook.

“I love playing in the big games and meaningful hockey. I’m motivated to try to contribute in any way possible,” Stankoven said. “Yeah, it’s always a nice feeling to get on the scoresheet.”

Stankoven’s play was part of a strong top-to-bottom start for the Hurricanes in their seventh straight trip to the playoffs. And it offered an example of why he was the primary return in a trade-deadline deal that allowed Carolina to pivot out of its big-swing January addition of scoring winger Mikko Rantanen.

“He’s got a little more skill than me and Marty, and obviously he can put the puck in the net,” Staal said. “He’s a good little player obviously: finds holes, he’s got good speed, and he can shoot the puck. So he’s just getting warmed up.”

The 5-foot-8, 165-pound Stankoven had five goals and four assists in 19 regular-season games with Carolina, with coach Rod Brind’Amour tinkering with the line groupings to find Stankoven’s best fit. That eventually led to Stankoven playing alongside the 6-4, 220-pound Staal and the 6-1, 208-pound Martinook more as the Hurricanes closed the regular season, even as they lost seven of eight after clinching their playoff spot on April 3 while resting key guys with the goal of being healthy for the postseason.

“It worked tonight,” Brind’Amour said. “But you’re right, it’s a safety net for players to play with two guys that do it the right way every shift — or at least certainly try to. there’s a lot of comfort there I think for any player that gets to play with guys like that.”

Stankoven’s first goal offered an example of the fit, coming when Martinook pushed up ice on the right side and tried to send a backhand feed across the ice back toward the crease. Devils center Nico Hischier knocked it down, but Martinook stayed on the forecheck and forced Hischier into a turnover behind the goal.

Martinook then slipped the puck to a trailing Stankoven, who sent the puck past Jacob Markstrom for a 2-0 lead. Stankoven slid to a stop as he bumped into Staal, the linemates facing each other as they raised both arms in victory before embracing with Martinook skating over to join them.

“I mean, I think they’ve got skill, too,” Stankoven said with a smile of his linemates. “It’s nice having a couple of big bodies on my line. They do such a good job of creating space for me, and I think we can thrive down low.”

Minutes later, Stankoven provided a needed punch to a power play. Fellow new addition Taylor Hall whipped a cross-ice pass to the right side to Stankoven, who had a clean lane from the faceoff dot with Markstrom. Stankoven whipped a rising shot past Markstrom’s right shoulder, the puck pinging off the inside of the left post and into the net for a 3-0 lead.

“I’m just trying to adapt to those players and be in the right spots to get pucks off,” Stankoven said. “Like you said, it takes a bit of time at first, but I think I’ve been adjusting pretty well. The guys have done a good job of communicating with me and helping me out.”

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Padres’ Arraez exits on stretcher after collision

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Padres' Arraez exits on stretcher after collision

HOUSTON — San Diego Padres designated hitter Luis Arraez was carted off after colliding with Mauricio Dubon on a play at first base in the first inning of Sunday night’s game against the Houston Astros.

According to the Padres, Arraez was transported to Houston Methodist Hospital for further evaluation, and he was stable, conscious, responsive and could move his extremities.

During an in-game interview with ESPN’s Buster Olney on “Sunday Night Baseball,” Padres manager Mike Shildt said that Arraez has “a little bit of a cut on the jaw,” and that the club is “worried about the jaw, the stability of that.”

Arraez was seen in the Padres’ clubhouse after the game, which San Diego won 3-2.

On the first pitch of his at-bat, Arraez hit a drag bunt down the first-base line to Christian Walker, who flipped it to second baseman Dubon as he ran to cover first. Dubon then collided with Arraez, who appeared to hit Dubon’s arm or elbow with his face.

Both players hit the ground, but Arraez took the worst of it, lying motionless in foul territory next to first base as trainers and coaches from both teams attended to him.

Dubon and Walker, as well as Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado, watched as Arraez was placed on a backboard and carted out of the stadium. As he was being placed on the cart, Arraez put his arm around Shildt.

Arraez entered hitting .287 with three home runs and seven RBIs this season. He is in his second season with the club after he was dealt to San Diego by the Miami Marlins last year.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Top portal QB Iamaleava transferring to UCLA

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Top portal QB Iamaleava transferring to UCLA

Tennessee quarterback Nico Iamaleava officially announced his transfer to UCLA via a social media post Sunday.

“My journey at UT has come to an end,” he wrote on Instagram. “This decision was incredibly difficult, and truthfully, not something I expected to make this soon. But I trust God’s timing, and I believe He’s leading me where I need to be.

“Even though this chapter is ending, a new chapter has begun and I am committed to UCLA!”

Iamaleava was a highly regarded recruit who led Tennessee to the College Football Playoff last season. He was No. 1 in ESPN’s transfer portal rankings and immediately gives UCLA one of the best-known players in the sport upon his arrival. The Bruins are coming off a 5-7 debut season by coach DeShaun Foster.

Iamaleava, a five-star prospect from Long Beach, California, was recruited by UCLA out of high school. His younger brother, Madden Iamaleava, committed to UCLA out of high school but changed his commitment on the morning of signing day and signed with Arkansas.

Those recruitments gave both sides plenty of familiarity and the ability to potentially move quickly.

Iamaleava passed for 2,616 yards, 19 touchdowns and 5 interceptions in his first season as a starter, but in nine games against SEC opponents and Ohio State in the playoff, he threw for more than 200 yards only twice.

Tennessee’s offense finished No. 9 in the conference in scoring with 25.0 points per game in SEC play. The Volunteers’ offense was No. 1 in rushing and No. 11 in passing in league play.

UCLA is coming off a season in which it finished No. 14 in scoring offense and No. 12 in total offense in Big Ten play.

Iamaleava was earning $2.4 million at Tennessee under the contract he signed with Spyre Sports Group, the Tennessee-based collective, when he was still in high school. The deal would have paid him in the $10 million range altogether had he stayed four years at Tennessee.

Tennessee coach Josh Heupel announced last week after the Volunteers’ spring game that the program was moving forward without Iamaleava after he missed practice and meetings April 11. He hadn’t alerted anyone on the team and was unresponsive afterward.

Heupel thanked Iamaleava and called the situation unfortunate, but added, “There’s no one bigger than the Power T, and that includes me.”

Iamaleava, a rising redshirt sophomore, officially entered the transfer portal Wednesday with a do-not-contact tag.

ESPN’s Pete Thamel contributed to this report.

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