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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 Its technical references are outdated.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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Stars align: Duchene 2OT hero after no-goal call

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Stars align: Duchene 2OT hero after no-goal call

Matt Duchene‘s heroics Friday put his current team in the Western Conference finals at the expense of the team that drafted him more than a decade ago.

An unmarked Duchene flicked his wrists, and in less than a second scored the winning goal that sent the Dallas Stars to a 2-1 double-overtime win in Game 6 against the Colorado Avalanche to close out their semifinal series.

“Those guys mucked hard at the end, and it just popped out to me,” Duchene told Turner Sports after the game. “I put it in and then blacked out pretty much. I was so tired, I started skating and I got tired, and I don’t even know what I did after that. I was pretty pumped up.”

Duchene’s goal and the events that led to it came with several moving parts.

Most notably, it sends the Stars back to the Western Conference final for a second straight season and for the third time in the past five years. They will face either the Vancouver Canucks or the Edmonton Oilers. The Canucks have a 3-2 series lead and could end the series Saturday in Edmonton, or the Oilers could force a Game 7 set for Monday in Vancouver.

In last season’s conference final, the Stars lost in six games to the eventual champions, the Vegas Golden Knights.

The goal also came after some controversy in the first extra period, when Duchene was involved in a Mason Marchment goal that was called back because of goaltender interference.

With 7:29 remaining in the first overtime, Duchene was battling with Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar for position in front of Avs goaltender Alexandar Georgiev. Marchment fired a shot on net that beat Georgiev. However, the goal was reviewed, with Duchene appearing to have impeded Georgiev in the crease while contacting Makar.

The NHL Situation Room, which is charged with reviewing goals, determined that Duchene impaired Georgiev’s “ability to play his position in the crease prior to the puck entering the Colorado net.” The ruling was made in accordance with Rule 69.1, which states that “an attacking player, either by his positioning or by contact, impairs the goalkeeper’s ability to move freely within his crease or defend his goal.”

“Duchy’s ass was over the line,” Marchment told reporters after the game. “His feet were outside, but his ass was over the line. So that’s the explanation I got.”

Duchene opened the second overtime with a chance to win it early. Stars defenseman Esa Lindell recovered the puck near the Stars’ bench and played a pass through the seam that allowed Duchene to get the edge and skate toward the net. Duchene got a breakaway before Avs defenseman Josh Manson lunged forward and used his stick to disrupt Duchene’s stick, which saw his offering reach the net but get stopped by Georgiev’s right leg pad.

Duchene’s series-ending goal came soon after.

“You can imagine how we felt on the no-goal call,” Duchene told Turner Sports. “Then the breakaway, I felt like I had a really good chance to score there. Obviously, it was a slash, but it got me on the stick, so it was a legal play.”

Duchene’s winning goal eliminated the club that drafted him with the No. 3 pick in 2009. Since he requested a trade in 2017, the Avs won the Stanley Cup in 2022 while Duchene played in three markets before signing a one-year deal with the Stars last offseason.

Duchene was part of a youth movement in Colorado that was built around promising stars such as Gabriel Landeskog, Nathan MacKinnon and Mikko Rantanen but had gone through a challenging 2016-17 season that saw them finish with 48 points. At the time, that was the fewest points in the salary-cap era.

Finishing with the worst record in the league led to the Avs getting the No. 4 pick and drafting future Norris Trophy winner Makar. Months after they drafted Makar, Duchene requested a trade.

A childhood Avalanche fan, he was traded to the Ottawa Senators as part of a three-team trade that saw the Avs receive defenseman Samuel Girard along with draft picks that later became Bowen Byram and Justus Annunen.

It was a trade that would help the Avalanche strengthen a foundation that eventually saw them win the third Cup in franchise history back in 2022.

“I have a lot of fond memories of being an Avs and they were my favorite team growing up,” Duchene told TNT. “It was an absolute honor to be here, and it was one of the hardest things I had to do was to ask out. We were just at a crossroads, and they turned it around really quick, and I was happy for them when they won.”

Duchene lasted a season and a half in Ottawa before he was traded to the Columbus Blue Jackets. He helped the Jackets reached the playoffs that year before signing a seven-year contract with the Nashville Predators worth $8 million annually.

His time with the Predators was mixed. In 2021-22, he scored a career-high 43 goals and 86 points in 78 games. The following season saw him fall 30 points shy of 86 points while playing in seven fewer games.

A front-office shift led to the Predators making changes with one of those adjustments coming in the form of buying out Duchene. It made him a free agent and someone the Stars signed to a one-year deal worth $3 million.

With the Stars this season, Duchene reached the 20-goal mark for the 11th time in his career while hitting the 60-point plateau for the fourth time.

“God had a plan for me, and I’m just living out that plan,” Duchene told TNT. “It’s kind of fitting I guess that things went the way they did last night in a barn and in a place that meant a lot to me. … I’ve nothing but fond memories as an Av and nothing but good feelings toward them.”

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Hotel fire alarm a good omen as Panthers oust B’s

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Hotel fire alarm a good omen as Panthers oust B's

BOSTON — Florida Panthers coach Paul Maurice considered it a good omen when the fire alarm went off at the team hotel Friday afternoon, just as he was settling in for a pregame nap.

“In my career, the number of times that something got messed up at the hotel … it’s like a guaranteed win,” Maurice said after a 2-1 victory over Boston earned the Panthers a spot in the Eastern Conference finals. “I said, ‘If this holds true, I guarantee we’re winning today.'”

Maurice’s superstition held true a few hours later when defenseman Gustav Forsling scored the tiebreaking goal with 1:33 left, and Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 22 shots to help the Panthers beat the Bruins 2-1 and clinch their second-round playoff series in six games.

A year after playing for the Stanley Cup, the Panthers will meet the New York Rangers in the Eastern Conference finals. Maurice might have been deprived of a nap Friday, but his team has five days to prepare for Game 1 against the Rangers on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

“I’m not doing that. I’m not doing anything with that,” he said. “I need a day off.”

Anton Lundell scored for the Panthers and also set up the game winner when his shot was deflected to the left side of the net. Forsling came in and beat Jeremy Swayman on the short side.

“I didn’t see it go in,” said Forsling, who scored 10 goals this season — one of them a game winner. “I just saw someone else react. It was amazing. I’m not usually the guy who scores the game-winning goal; I’m out there trying to defend. It’s nice to help your team win, but I’ll stick to defense.”

Florida won all three games in Boston this series and has taken six straight playoff games at the TD Garden. The Panthers also knocked the record-setting Bruins out of the playoffs last year on their way to the Stanley Cup Final, where they lost to the Vegas Golden Knights.

“They had had such a big year last year,” Maurice said. “This series felt way different than last year’s. I think we’re a much better team than we were last year when we came in here.”

Swayman stopped 26 shots for the Bruins. Pavel Zacha scored to give Boston a 1-0 lead late in the first period, but it was unable to beat Bobrovsky again. In the series, the Panthers outshot the Bruins 198-135.

“You can’t win every game 2-1,” Bruins coach Jim Montgomery said. “Their goalie was good, and we didn’t beat him.”

“In my career, the number of times that something got messed up at the hotel … it’s like a guaranteed win. I said, ‘If this holds true, I guarantee we’re winning today.'”

Panthers coach Paul Maurice

The Bruins got captain Brad Marchand back after he missed two games with an injury believed to be a concussion. The longest-tenured member of the roster got a big ovation at introductions; Montgomery said it helped propel Boston to a better start than in previous games, when it spotted the Panthers to a lopsided shooting advantage early.

“That ovation at the beginning of the game says it all,” he said. “I thought it was going to be our night before the game. I thought our players were loose and confident. They went out and played that way.”

Boston took the lead with a minute left in the first period when Jake DeBrusk made a no-look backhanded pass to Zacha to send him on a breakaway. Brandon Carlo also helped by flattening Carter Verhaeghe at the blue line to keep him from pursuing the puck.

But Florida tied it with seven minutes left in the second, after a scramble in front of the Boston net that left DeBrusk on the ice. Lundell swooped into the slot and swept the puck past Swayman.

The Bruins were called for having too many men on the ice for a record seventh time this postseason. The bench minor early in the second period did not result in a goal for the Panthers.

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Stars win the race to the Western Conference finals: Keys to their rise, outlook for next matchup

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Stars win the race to the Western Conference finals: Keys to their rise, outlook for next matchup

The Dallas Stars outlasted the Colorado Avalanche in double overtime to advance to the Western Conference finals.

Next up for Dallas will be the winner of the Vancouver CanucksEdmonton Oilers series, which Vancouver leads 3-2.

Here’s a look at how the Stars got here and how they match up against either Vancouver or Edmonton.

Going farm-to-table has allowed the Stars to eat this postseason

Executives are always discussing the importance of trying to build a team through the draft and develop the sort of talent that can someday carry a franchise. The Stars have done just that recently, and this postseason has shown the value of taking such an approach.

Exactly how beneficial has the Stars’ model been? Eleven of the 21 players who’ve played at least four games for the club were drafted by the Stars. That’s tied with the Bruins for the most homegrown players to play at least one playoff game this postseason Their three top point leaders this postseason are homegrown talents — Miro Heiskanen, Wyatt Johnston and Jason Robertson — while four of their top five scorers were drafted by the club.

The same goes for the three players — Heiskanen, Thomas Harley and Esa Lindell — who lead them in average ice time. In fact, five of the six players who led the Stars in ice time during this playoff run were all drafted by the team — the lone exception being trade deadline acquisition Chris Tanev, who is fourth in minutes per game.

And then there’s goaltender Jake Oettinger whose performances have seen him post a 2.27 goals-against average and a .914 save percentage this postseason. Yes, there are key contributors who came over via free agency and trade, but this is a notably homegrown crew.


The young star who keeps burning bright

When Johnston scored 24 goals and 41 points as a rookie last season, it created the belief that the Stars might have something special. What Johnston has done throughout the 2023-24 season has further cemented that notion.

He broke out for 32 goals and 65 points in the regular season while averaging 17 minutes per game and playing all 82 of them. Then came the Stanley Cup playoffs, which has allowed Johnston to take an even bigger role as the Stars have now reached the Western Conference finals for a second straight season.

Johnston has paced the Stars with a team-high seven goals, while his 11 points are third on the team. His 20:10 of average ice time is top among Stars forwards and fifth on the team overall. In fact, he was the only Stars forward who averaged more than 20 minutes per game in the playoffs, with the next closest being Robertson at 19:05.

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Wyatt Johnston finds the back of the net for a second time

Wyatt Johnston notches his second goal of the night to add to the Stars’ lead over the Avalanche.


Even when they’ve lost, they’ve still made gains

Enough is in place to suggest the Stars have had arguably the hardest route of any team that will reach the conference final round this season.

It started when they beat the defending Stanley Cup champion Vegas Golden Knights in the first round before beating the 2022 champions Avalanche in Round 2. Facing the two most recent Cup champions allowed the Stars to showcase their ability to come back in the series. They initially opened the first round in an 0-2 series hole against the Golden Knights only to come back and win four of the next five games. Keep in mind, the Stars had lost their past six against the Golden Knights and nine of the past 11 prior to beating them in Game 3.

As for the Avalanche, the Stars watched a three-goal lead in Game 1 disappear and the Avs win in overtime. Since then, the Stars fended off a late Avs push to win Game 2, remaining patient during what was an offensive barrage in Game 3 before orchestrating one of their strongest offensive performances in Game 4. And after a loss in Game 5 to potentially close things out early, they rallied to seal the deal in Game 6.

This shows the strength of Dallas’ system, and its faith in it even when game results don’t go its way.


A not-so-false sense of security

Let’s just say that another hallmark of the Stars’ success is their ability to play the proverbial possum.

Perhaps the most bizarre detail about this iteration of the Stars’ ascension is their Game 1 struggles. Not only did they lose their respective Game 1s to the Golden Knights and Avalanche, but the Stars have lost six straight Game 1s as a whole. That said, they’ve won three of their past four series despite getting off to a slow start.

And if that’s not enough, how about having Peter DeBoer behind the bench, who is now 8-0 all time in Game 7, tied with Darryl Sutter for the most Game 7 wins by a coach in NHL history?


Regular season record vs. EDM: 2-0-1

Anyone that’s ever wanted to watch a penalty kill’s hopes and dreams die just needs to watch the Oilers’ power play this postseason. They lead the playoffs with a 46.7% success rate. Possessing one of the NHL’s most formidable power plays is one of the reasons why the Oilers are within striking distance of a second conference finals appearance in three years. Short-circuiting that power play is critical if this is the matchup for Dallas.

There is the possibility that the Stars could have solutions for how to deal with the Oilers on the extra-skater advantage. The first step in that plan is something that has served the Stars well this postseason: They don’t take many penalties. Entering Game 6, the Stars were the least-penalized squad of any team that made it to the second round, with just 66 penalty minutes. The next closest team was the Avalanche at 79 minutes.

On the whole, the Stars’ penalty kill is operating at 72.0%, which is worst among active teams. But what could help them against the Oilers is if they could find a way to replicate the success they had against the Avalanche’s power play going into Game 5. The Avs’ power play operated at a 37.5% success rate in the first round against the Winnipeg Jets. Game 1 saw the Avs score two power-play goals in their dramatic 4-3 overtime comeback victory. But then they had a stretch with no goals in eight power-play opportunities against the Stars.

And of course, having a goalie of Oettinger’s caliber helps out any penalty kill.


Regular season record vs. VAN: 2-1-0

The Stars are averaging exactly 3.00 goals per game while the Canucks are averaging 2.73 per game, the second fewest of the teams that are still in the playoffs. Those figures help reinforce the idea that the team that can either be the first to score three goals or the one who can consistently score three goals could have the edge.

Here’s why. Finding and continuing to trust the connection between their five-player defensive structure and goaltenders are how the Canucks and Stars have found success this postseason. Of the teams that were still alive heading into Friday night, the Stars have allowed the second-fewest goals per game (2.50) while the Canucks gave up the third-fewest (2.55).

And the other detail to consider is that both teams are quite comfortable with playing in tight contests. The Stars are 4-2 in this postseason in one-goal games, though their Games 2, 3 and 4 wins against the Avalanche saw them win by an average margin of three goals. As for the Canucks, all but two of their playoff games have been decided by a single goal, both of which came in the first two contests of their series against the Nashville Predators.

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