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NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. – Joey Logano has won 30 poles in his Cup Series career.

This one meant something extra to him.

Logano will start up front for the NASCAR All-Star race after turning a lap of 1:29.75 on Saturday during qualifying at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

The two 60-laps heats that were to determine the remainder of the field for Sunday night’s race were postponed Saturday after heavy rains pounded the area, leaving portions of the track under about a foot of water. NASCAR is determining how the remainder of the field for the All-Star race will be set, so Kyle Larson‘s starting position remains unclear.

The weather was so severe that it brought down power lines on the road outside of the racetrack, cutting off power and internet access to the track.

The Trucks Series race was postponed until 11:45 a.m. Sunday.

Earlier in the day, Logano was all smiles after winning his first All-Star race pole.

“It’s a very special pole, maybe the most special pole I’ve ever had because it’s a great example of how hard everybody works and I’m proud of that,” Logano said. “It’s a lot of work that goes into the minute-and-a-half out there.”

William Byron, one of the final drivers on the track, appeared to beat Logano’s time, but was assessed a 10-second penalty for speeding on pit road during the stop.

Logano, driver of the No. 22 Ford, turned the top lap even on the .625 short track though his pit crew only had the fifth-fastest stop, which means he made up significant time on the track.

But Logano called it a team win and a “momentum booster.”

“This qualifying session is the most fun session of the year,” Logano said. “And it really takes the whole team. The car has to go fast. We have to execute getting onto pit road, the spotter has to do a good job of getting everyone on the same page and the pit crew has to do their part, and then it’s back on to the track (to finish). So it really takes every crew member.”

Christopher Bell’s team won the pit crew challenge for the second straight year and the No. 20 Toyota team will have its choice of the top pit stall for the $1 million race on Sunday night.

Bell’s pit crew earned $100,000 for winning the pit crew challenge.

“What can you say about these guys, it’s two in a row,” Bell said as his crew celebrated around him. “They have been awesome and I’m incredibly happy for them. It’s an honor to be their driver.”

Twenty drivers will participate in the All-Star race, 17 of which have already earned their way in through past accomplishments. The top two finishers from Sunday’s preliminary Open race and the winner of the fan vote will also advance into the All-Star Race.

As part of the pit crew challenge, drivers took the green flag, ran one full lap at speed, and on the second lap proceeded to one of two NASCAR designated pit stalls for a four-tire stop with mock fuel delivery. Then the cars exited pit road and raced back to the checkered flag. The qualifying time was determined by the total elapsed time from green flag to checkered flag.

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Bulldogs’ reign over Vols continues with OT win

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Bulldogs' reign over Vols continues with OT win

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Georgia coach Kirby Smart lost four straight games against Tennessee as a Bulldogs defensive back in the 1990s.

After No. 6 Georgia came from behind to beat No. 15 Tennessee 44-41 in overtime at Neyland Stadium on Saturday, the Volunteers might feel like they will never beat the Bulldogs again as long as Smart is their coach.

After Georgia overcame a 14-point deficit and scored the tying touchdown and 2-point conversion with about 2½ minutes left in regulation, running back Josh McCray scored on a 1-yard run in overtime to give the Bulldogs (3-0, 1-0 SEC) their ninth straight victory over Tennessee and their fifth consecutive on the road.

McCray was initially ruled down at the 1-yard line, but the call was overturned by replay.

“I lost a lot of times here as a player,” Smart said. “It still sticks with me. I have a lot of memories, good and bad, about playing here. Five in a row is a lot.”

For a long time Saturday, it seemed as if the Volunteers (2-1, 0-1) would end their losing streak. Tennessee kicker Max Gilbert missed a 43-yard field goal wide left with three seconds to go in regulation that would have won the game.

The Volunteers had the ball first in overtime and gained only 1 yard on three plays. Gilbert kicked a 42-yard field goal to give his team a 41-38 lead.

“Unfortunately, he didn’t make the one before, but he had his head high,” Tennessee coach Josh Heupel said. “That’s the life of being a kicker, you know what I mean? I love the way he responded. He’ll continue to grow, and we have great trust in him. Unfortunately, he didn’t finish that one.”

On Georgia’s first play in overtime, tailback Nate Frazier ran for 21 yards to the UT 4. McCray plowed his way for 3 yards on the next play, then scored the winning touchdown.

The Bulldogs trailed 38-30 late in regulation. On fourth-and-6, Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton threw a perfectly placed 28-yard touchdown to London Humphrey with 2:32 to go. Zachariah Branch caught a pass and scored on a 2-point conversion attempt to tie the score.

“We were just going to take a shot there, and we needed to score fast,” Smart said. “We didn’t need to keep milking time. It felt like they were defending the sticks, and we were trying to get a touchdown. Sometimes, you get an advantage when people play the sticks and you’re willing to take a shot.”

Stockton completed 23 of 31 passes for 304 yards with 2 touchdowns and ran for another score.

“As you all can see, he’s a dog,” Georgia safety KJ Bolden said. “The whole team is behind him. He never let any of the scores phase him. Our defense kind of started off really slow, but it never fazed him. He always came back ready with a plan and ready to attack.”

The Bulldogs took plenty of blows early, especially on defense. The Volunteers drove down the field on their first possession, and quarterback Joey Aguilar scored on a 4-yard run. He threw touchdowns of 72 yards and 14 yards to Chris Brazzell II to take a 21-7 lead late in the first quarter.

“We talked about coming in here and conquering this place, which is not easy to do,” Smart said. “When you do something like that, you have to make your own way. You have to absorb blows. I don’t think I had any idea how many blows we’d have to absorb, but we did, and we’ve got a resilient group.”

Georgia’s defense bounced back from there, stopping the Vols on five straight possessions, including two interceptions. The Bulldogs scored 20 straight points to take a 27-21 lead late in the third quarter.

But then Georgia’s defense gave up another long touchdown — Aguilar found Brazzell for the third time on a 56-yard pass to give the Vols a 28-27 lead.

The Bulldogs went back in front 30-28 on Peyton Woodring‘s 24-yard field goal, before the Volunteers scored 10 straight points to go ahead by eight, setting up Stockton’s heroics late in the fourth quarter.

Aguilar completed 24 of 36 passes for 371 yards with 4 touchdowns and 2 interceptions. Brazzell had six receptions for 177 yards.

“Losses never ever feel good, taste good, that’s not the expectation inside of this locker room, just to play somebody tight,” Heupel said. “I think the disappointment of tonight can be a moment, something in our journey together that can springboard and propel us if we choose to use it that way.”

Smart says his team is far from a finished product. The Bulldogs are still shuffling players on the offensive line because of injuries, and their inexperienced defensive backs struggled in coverage against the Vols’ high-octane offense.

The Bulldogs will get a week off before hosting No. 19 Alabama at home Sept. 27.

“We’re nowhere near where we need to be; we’re a long way from being there,” Smart said. “But, boy, we’ve got some kids that aren’t afraid to fight.”

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Aggies’ Anderson has feeling in limbs after hit

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Aggies' Anderson has feeling in limbs after hit

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Texas A&M safety Bryce Anderson has feeling in his limbs after being taken to a local hospital following a play that left him motionless late in the first half at Notre Dame.

Anderson was carted to the locker room with 55 seconds left in the half. His head collided with Notre Dame tight end Eli Raridon on a 25-yard completion. Teammates immediately summoned medical personnel, who spent about 10 minutes stabilizing Anderson’s neck. The senior from Beaumont, Texas, gave a thumbs-up as he left the field.

Texas A&M’s entire team came off the sideline and knelt on the field while Anderson was down, and several players came over to him before he left.

Anderson had four tackles in the game.

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Jazz on Yankees’ surge: ‘We’re the team to beat’

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Jazz on Yankees' surge: 'We're the team to beat'

BOSTON — The New York Yankees outlasted the Boston Red Sox for the second straight day Saturday, beating their rivals 4-3 in front of a sellout crowd at Fenway Park to expand their lead for the top American League wild-card spot to 1½ games.

The Yankees’ 83-65 record ranks third in the American League, three games behind the first-place Toronto Blue Jays in the AL East. With 14 games remaining, New York has an outside shot at claiming the AL East title and the league’s top seed for the second consecutive year.

But Yankees second baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. doesn’t believe the standings accurately represent the league’s hierarchy. To him, the Yankees are the team to beat in the American League.

“I feel like any team that thinks they’re better than us, they should know that when we step on the field, that we’re coming with relentlessness and we’re coming to step on necks,” Chisholm said. “We’re not here to play around. We’re going to do the job and get the job done.”

After going 2-for-4 with two stolen bases Friday, Chisholm finished Saturday 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBIs to move within one home run of becoming the third Yankee ever to post a 30/30 season and the first since Alfonso Soriano in 2003.

He said a recent “talk” among the players that occurred away from the ballpark helped spark the Yankees’ recent turnaround after the team squandered a comfortable lead in the AL East in mid-June.

“Honestly, everybody just started locking in,” Chisholm said.

The Yankees are 13-5 since Aug. 24, a stretch that began with a win over the Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. The success was buoyed by winning six of seven games against the Washington Nationals and Chicago White Sox — two of the worst teams in the majors — but it has also included the Yankees going 7-4 against the Red Sox, Blue Jays, Houston Astros and Detroit Tigers — four AL clubs positioned to reach the postseason.

New York will complete the four-team gauntlet with Sunday night’s series finale at Fenway Park, facing AL Cy Young Award candidate Garrett Crochet. It will be the Yankees’ final regular-season game against a team over .500; they finish the schedule with three games against the Minnesota Twins, three against the White Sox and seven against the Baltimore Orioles.

“All these games are super important,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said. “So, to get another win in this place against, obviously a really good opponent and Crochet waiting tomorrow, so this was a good one to get. Hopefully, we can go out and finish off a great series.”

Through Saturday, the Yankees are 45-43 against teams over .500 this season. They’re 26-29 against AL teams with winning records. They’ll have to be better in October to reach the World Series again.

“We said it all year long, that we’ve been playing to everybody else’s level instead of our own level,” Chisholm said. “We’ve been letting games go. We’ve been losing games ourselves. Making errors, just having poor at-bats and stuff like that.

“So, at the end of the day, we finally looked ourselves in the mirror and realized we’re the team to beat, and that’s how we’ve been stepping on the field for the last two weeks.”

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