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Everyone has tried to convince us that “Days of Thunder” was a farce, but every now and again a Sunday afternoon at the racetrack comes along to remind us that the story of Cole Trickle and crew chief Harry Hogge is more of a documentary than anyone seems willing to admit.

During this latest Sunday, throughout the 3-hour, 20-minute entirety of the Food City 500, as the collective voices of the drivers crackling over the radio were moving into higher octaves … and stacks of shredded rubber were beginning to pile up in the Bristol Motor Speedway pits … and Goodyear workers were scrambling to mount extra rings onto exhausted wheels … it was impossible not to hear Robert Duvall’s voice echoing off the walls of Thunder Valley.

“Tires is what wins a race,” Hogge explains to Trickle. “If we can’t figure out a way to run so you don’t melt the damn tires, we can’t finish a race.”

“There’s 40 other vultures out there who manage to finish the race on their tires,” Hogge later asks his driver. “You see Darrell Waltrip using up his tires?”

That movie dropped nearly 34 years ago. That makes it old school. Its technical references are outdated. They have also crossed over into nostalgia. NASCAR fans and competitors alike point to the boxier, decidedly non-Next Gen cars, the tales of wild modifications made to those cars’ bodies and frames that bent the pages of the rulebook, and yes, the Goodyear tires that wore down to the cords, and wonder aloud, “Why don’t we see that anymore? Wouldn’t that be fun?”

By the end of Sunday’s second round of pit stops, barely a quarter of the way into the event, the mechanics in the trenches and atop the pit boxes were looking at the Eagles that had just been pulled off their race cars and saw something that has become a bit of stock car racing unicorn. Their tires looked like a unicorn had been gnawing the tread off of them. Then they looked at their NASCAR-mandated limit of ten sets of tires and realized, that, Oh damn, we aren’t going to have enough to finish the race.

“You calibrate your entire world around a certain set of parameters for Bristol. It was pretty clear right after practice, again pretty clear after 80 laps into the race, all of that had to go out the window,” confessed crew chief Chris Gabehart, who ultimately helped his driver Denny Hamlin navigate the day all the way to Victory Lane for the team’s first win of the 2024 season. How? “Now, it’s instincts. A lot of your prep work, tools and planning, for the most part, are invalid. It’s still a race car. It’s still got an engine, driver, four black things on it for a while ’til they turn gray. It’s way different. You have to go off instinct every part of the race. That’s everybody. That’s the tire guy, the car chief, the mechanics helping.”

On the racetrack, that plan wasn’t met with warm, fuzzy feelings. As tire specialists collected data and used that info to lobby Goodyear to rustle an 11th set of tires — which they ultimately did — they also began communicating to their drivers in a very Hogge-to-Trickle manner.

“Run 50 laps any way you like. Then run 50 laps the way I want you to,” Hogge says. “Give me an honest run. If you do, I’m going to beat you.”

In other words, slow down. Don’t wear those tires out at the beginning of a green flag run, but rather save as much rubber as you can for the end of that run with the goal of having the best conditions possible at the end of the day, when it matters. Run too hard and you’ll run out rubber and lose control. Even worse, you’ll run completely out of shoes for the marathon that is a 500-lap, close-quarters event on a high-banked, white concrete-covered cereal bowl that is Bristol.

Kyle Larson‘s crew chief, Cliff Daniels, told his driver they would need to average 50 laps per set of tires to make it to the end. “Good luck,” Larson said. Daniels replied: “Good luck everyone.”

Bubba Wallace wondered aloud if they might red flag the race so that Goodyear could have time to haul a truckload of extra tires up to East Tennessee from their Charlotte warehouse. Even eventual race winner Hamlin compared the situation to the all-time darkest moment for NASCAR tire wear, the 2008 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. To be clear, this day was not that day. Not even close. On that surface-of-Mercury hot afternoon, teams barely made it ten laps before their tires came apart like a wet roll of toilet paper. It was such a living nightmare for NASCAR and Goodyear that it not only forced the sanctioning body to change the format of the race from the oval to the road course (it’s finally switching back this year), it was also the day that from henceforth the concept of tire wear — a longtime pillar of the sport — was essentially shelved.

In the near decade and a half since, drivers and teams eventually moved on from their Brickyard nightmare, and after years of relief from worrying about excessive tire wear (except for the cheese grater of Darlington Raceway), they began to ask when it might return.

“We all come from some form of short track racing as we moved toward the Cup Series,” Hamlin explained during the offseason when asked what could be done to add some spice into the very racy but very homogenized world of the NASCAR’s current car model, the one-size-fits-all Next Gen machines that don’t allow for much if any mechanical creativity considering they are no longer constructed by teams, but rather pieced together from NASCAR-selected parts suppliers. “The answer to put the races back in the drivers’ hands and to reintroduce some more strategy for the crew chiefs and engineers is what we had at those short tracks. That’s tire wear. It rubbers up the track. It makes the cars slide around. It makes us have to manage what we are doing while also going fast. It’s stressful as hell, but it’s also a helluva lot of fun.”

On Sunday, that stress was very evident and very loud over those radios. So, those of us listening and watching braced for disaster.

Then, a funny thing happened on the way to driving over a cliff like Wile E. Coyote. The whining certainly never completely stopped, especially from the younger, less experienced racers who spent time at the front early but could not hang onto their tires as the checkered flag grew closer, but it was silenced from the veterans. Drivers like Hamlin, Brad Keselowski, even Larson, who admitted after the race that he had no idea how he had finished fifth. They all hunkered down and went to work, leaning on their crew chiefs and finding just the right times to cruise, at least as much as Bristol ever allows anyone to cruise, and when to drop the hammer.

The result was a race with 54 lead changes, the most ever for a short track in NASCAR’s bullring-packed 76-year history.

“Looking at the dash, here is the lap time. [Gabehart] would keep me updated, ‘You’re running a little quicker this time.’ He did a good job of kind of reeling me back in,” Hamlin explained after earning his 52nd career win and his second straight at Bristol. “It was a chess match. There was a time where me and Larson were up front. I was on the outside. He was leading. I could tell he was just really going slow. I told the spotter, ‘Hey, if we want to run side by side, I’m good like that, block up both lanes, block the whole field.’ I didn’t realize till later the line I was running was just killing my tires. You learned on the fly. You just made adjustments. Each run we made, we just got a little better.”

As the drivers climbed out of their cars, most seemed to have made the transition from their early-race panic to a postrace smile. Not all, though. As third-place finisher Alex Bowman said, “That was fun, but I don’t know if I ever wanna do that again.”

Chances are, he won’t. Everyone seems to agree that the return of tire fall-off is plenty welcome. It had been missed. But 40 laps were too soon. The sweet spot would seem to be in the 80-lap range. When the series returns to Bristol for the night race in mid-September, cooler temperatures under the lights might just be the perfect addition to the mixture. NASCAR and the track operators will also likely change the way the surface is treated; it was covered with a resin this weekend that was a departure from the PJ1 mixture used here before.

No matter what happens then, or what happens anywhere else this season, everyone also seems to be in lockstep on the idea of being challenged. The exhausted smiles on the faces of the competitors as they rolled back down the mountain home toward Charlotte was the only proof anyone needed to know that.

“This is supposed to be a sport. It’s supposed to be hard,” explained Gabehart. “It’s supposed to force these guys to make decisions in the car. ‘Do I go now? Do I not?’ The crew chiefs make decisions on how they treat the tire, what their setup is, how long do you want to run this stint. You can’t just run the fuel tank out and the tire not blow. It might blow on you. Was that difficult? Yeah. But that’s racing, man.”

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Sources: Dodgers’ Betts out due to fractured toe

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Sources: Dodgers' Betts out due to fractured toe

LOS ANGELES — Mookie Betts stubbed a toe in his left foot during an off-the-field incident and missed the opener of the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ highly anticipated series against the New York Yankees on Friday.

Betts is not expected to go on the injured list, according to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, but he will not start against the Yankees on Saturday or Sunday. Roberts said the hope is that Betts will return to the lineup shortly thereafter.

“For me, right now, it’s just day-to-day,” Roberts said after the Dodgers’ 8-5, come-from-behind win.

The incident, which affected the tip of Betts’ second toe, was believed to have occurred late Wednesday night, after the Dodgers returned from a six-game road trip, when Betts banged his toe against a piece of furniture at his house. Betts called Roberts to inform him about his toe on Friday morning, then underwent X-rays at Dodger Stadium later that afternoon.

Those X-rays revealed a fracture, a source told ESPN, confirming what Betts told the Los Angeles Times after Friday’s game. The Dodgers’ training staff will spend the weekend attempting to get the swelling down on his toe. At this point, the Dodgers don’t believe he can make the injury any worse by playing on it.

Said Roberts: “It’s going to be one of those situations per his [pain] tolerance.”

Betts’ injury isn’t the Dodgers’ most serious at the moment. Late-inning reliever Evan Phillips, who was rehabbing a forearm injury, didn’t feel right playing catch earlier this week and will undergo Tommy John surgery next week, knocking him out for all of 2025 and most of 2026.

Phillips, 30, was released by the Baltimore Orioles in August 2021 and designated for assignment by the Tampa Bay Rays less than two weeks later. The Dodgers picked him up and turned him into a valuable late-game option. From 2022 to 2024, Phillips posted a 2.21 ERA and 0.92 WHIP, saved 44 games and struck out 206 batters in 179 regular-season innings.

But Phillips dealt with arm issues during last year’s postseason run and was left off the team’s World Series roster. He then went on the IL because of a rotator cuff strain in the middle of March, returned a month later, notched seven scoreless appearances, then went back on the IL on May 7 because of what the team called forearm discomfort. Platelet-rich-plasma injections did not take. Phillips never got better.

“As we started getting into it, it wasn’t really responding,” Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said. “We felt like this could be a possibility, so as he got deeper into the process and it wasn’t really getting better, the decision to do it was pretty much evident with our information.” The loss of Phillips is coupled with the Dodgers having four other high-leverage relievers on the IL — Brusdar Graterol, Blake Treinen, Kirby Yates and Michael Kopech, all of whom are right-handed.

The Dodgers tried to backfill some of that depth by trading for former All-Star closer Alexis Diaz on Thursday. But Diaz, who struggled so badly this season that the Cincinnati Reds optioned him to Triple-A, will initially work out of the Dodgers’ spring training complex in Glendale, Arizona.

The Dodgers also have three starting pitchers — Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Roki Sasaki — recovering from shoulder injuries, with Shohei Ohtani not expected to join the rotation until sometime after the All-Star break.

The lineup, at least, had been healthy. Until now.

Betts, 32, got off to a slow start but was still slashing .254/.338/.405 with eight home runs and five stolen bases while slotting between the hot-hitting Ohtani and Freddie Freeman in the No. 2 spot. More notably, Betts had proved to be a capable major league shortstop after working during the offseason at the position.

The hope is that the toe injury doesn’t set him back much longer than the rest of this weekend.

In the meantime, Miguel Rojas will continue to get starts at shortstop.

“It’s a good part about having depth,” Gomes said. “Keep the train moving.”

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Trout returns in new spot, has hit in Angels’ win

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Trout returns in new spot, has hit in Angels' win

CLEVELAND — Mike Trout originally expected to return to the Los Angeles Angels‘ lineup Monday in Boston.

But the timeline was moved up one series and three days.

Trout was activated off the injured list and went 1-for-5 as the designated hitter in Friday night’s 4-1 win over the Cleveland Guardians. The Angels slugger missed 26 games because of soreness in his left knee that was eventually diagnosed as a bone bruise. The three-time American League MVP had two operations last year on the knee after tearing his meniscus.

“Felt good. Struck out on two at-bats, but other than that, felt all right,” said Trout, who batted fifth for the first time in 1,532 starts.

Trout lined a base hit to left-center in the fourth inning. He thought he had a hit in his first at-bat in the second inning, but Cleveland third baseman José Ramírez made a nice grab on a low line drive.

“I thought he had some good at-bats, considering that he hadn’t seen live pitching in a while,” Angels manager Ron Washington said. “He hit the ball hard three times today. They made some good pitches when he struck out. But welcome back, Mike.”

Trout’s return also helped the Angels snap a five-game losing streak and improve to 28-30.

It was the first time since Sept. 26, 2011, Trout’s rookie season, that he started a game hitting lower than third.

Washington is happy to have Trout back, especially because he noted Trout wasn’t aggressive in rushing in his return. Washington also knows that Trout isn’t ready to return to his normal spot batting second or third.

“He hasn’t seen anything. So when you look at what we have, that’s where he sits,” Washington said before the game. “It doesn’t make sense for him to protect [Logan] O’Hoppe. So, I’ll put Mike behind him to protect O’Hoppe. He’s not ready to be at the top of the lineup, especially with those guys up there. As we go along the next couple of days, he’s not going to remain fifth.”

The 33-year-old Trout is hitting .180 with 9 home runs, 18 RBIs and a .712 OPS in 30 games. He will be the designated hitter for the weekend series against the Guardians before possibly returning to right field when the Halos head to Boston on Monday for a three-game series.

Even though Trout has shied away from wanting to be the designated hitter, he has done well in that spot. In eight games this season, he is 9-for-33 (.273) with 6 home runs and 9 RBIs.

Trout said whether he plays more games than originally planned at DH the remainder of the season is something that remains to be seen.

“Bone bruises are tricky. I know I am going to be sore, but I can deal with it,” he said. “I definitely have to be cautious, especially the first couple games.”

Trout has missed 404 of the Angels’ 665 games — almost 60% — since May 17, 2021, when he tore his calf muscle against Cleveland and was sidelined for the rest of that season. This is the fifth straight year he has had a stint of at least 25 games on the IL.

He missed five weeks of the 2022 season because of a back injury, and all but one game after July 3, 2023, after he broke a bone in his hand on a foul ball. Trout played in 29 games last season before the meniscus injury.

“There’s so many games that any sense of newness or something to make you excited is something that you’d latch on to. So, today is definitely a moment like that,” O’Hoppe said about Trout’s return. “He’s the heart of this organization. So, we’re happy to have our heart beating again for sure.”

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L.A.’s Betts day-to-day after stubbing toe in mishap

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Sources: Dodgers' Betts out due to fractured toe

LOS ANGELES — Mookie Betts stubbed a toe on his left foot during an off-the-field incident and was out of the Los Angeles Dodgers‘ lineup Friday night for the opener of a highly anticipated weekend series against the New York Yankees.

Betts was scheduled to undergo X-rays at Dodger Stadium before first pitch. Until then, the team will hope for the best.

“It’s day-to-day right now,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “So, that’s where we’re at.”

The incident — affecting Betts’ second toe — was believed to occur late Wednesday night, after the Dodgers returned from a six-game road trip through New York and Cleveland. Roberts didn’t find out until Betts called him Friday morning. He was vague on the details.

“I really don’t know,” Roberts said when asked how the injury occurred. “I think it was at home. It’s probably a dresser, nightstand, something like that. It’s just kind of an accident. I think that Mookie will be able to give more context, but that’s kind of from the training staff what I heard. So hopefully, it’s benign, it’s negative. Not sure, but I feel confident saying it’s day-to-day … but putting on a shoe today was difficult for him.”

Betts’ injury isn’t the Dodgers’ most serious at the moment. Late-inning reliever Evan Phillips, who was rehabbing a forearm injury, didn’t feel right playing catch earlier this week and will undergo Tommy John surgery next week, knocking him out for all of 2025 and most of 2026.

Phillips, 30, was released by the Baltimore Orioles in August 2021 and designated for assignment by the Tampa Bay Rays less than two weeks later. The Dodgers picked him up and turned him into a valuable late-game option. From 2022 to 2024, Phillips posted a 2.21 ERA and 0.92 WHIP, saved 44 games and struck out 206 batters in 179 regular-season innings.

But Phillips dealt with arm issues during last year’s postseason run and was left off the team’s World Series roster. He then went on the IL because of a rotator cuff strain in the middle of March, returned a month later, notched seven scoreless appearances, then went back on the IL on May 7 because of what the team called forearm discomfort. Platelet-rich-plasma injections did not take. Phillips never got better.

“As we started getting into it, it wasn’t really responding,” Dodgers general manager Brandon Gomes said. “We felt like this could be a possibility, so as he got deeper into the process and it wasn’t really getting better, the decision to do it was pretty much evident with our information.”

The loss of Phillips is coupled with the Dodgers having four other high-leverage relievers on the IL — Brusdar Graterol, Blake Treinen, Kirby Yates and Michael Kopech, all of whom are right-handed.

The Dodgers tried to backfill some of that depth by trading for former All-Star closer Alexis Diaz on Thursday. But Diaz, who struggled so badly this season that the Cincinnati Reds optioned him to Triple-A, will initially work out of the Dodgers’ spring training complex in Glendale, Ariz.

The Dodgers also have three starting pitchers — Blake Snell, Tyler Glasnow and Roki Sasaki — recovering from shoulder injuries, with Shohei Ohtani not expected to join the rotation until sometime after the All-Star break.

The lineup, at least, had been healthy. Until now.

Betts, 32, got off to a slow start but was still slashing .254/.338/.405 with 8 home runs and 5 stolen bases while slotting between the hot-hitting Ohtani and Freddie Freeman in the No. 2 spot. More notably, Betts had proven to be a capable major league shortstop after working during the offseason at the position.

But the toe injury could set him back, in much the same way a broken left hand robbed him of nearly two months in 2024.

At this point, Roberts said, “I don’t see it being long term.” But the Dodgers can’t say that definitively yet.

“We need to see the doctors and kind of get a better sense of it,” Gomes said. “It happened pretty recently, so it’ll take some time before we have a better understanding.”

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