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DARLINGTON, S.C. — Chase Briscoe shared some history with his second straight Southern 500 victory at Darlington Raceway on Sunday. He hopes to make a bit more this season as he goes after his first NASCAR Cup Series title.

Briscoe held off Tyler Reddick on the final lap to become just the eighth driver in stock racing history with consecutive wins at the track dubbed “Too Tough to Tame.” The list includes Hall of Famers and greats such as Dale Earnhardt, Cale Yarborough, Jeff Gordon and Bobby Allison.

“The expectation was to go and contend for wins,” Briscoe said about his first season with Joe Gibbs Racing. “It definitely took more time than I expected, but tonight I feel like we showed what we’re capable of.”

Briscoe took the lead early, won both stages and led 309 of 367 laps. Not only did he advance into the round of 12, but he became the first driver with consecutive wins in NASCAR’s crown jewel race since Greg Biffle in 2005 and 2006.

“It’s so cool to win two Southern 500s in a row,” the 30-year-old Indiana driver said. “This is my favorite race of the year.”

A year ago, when the race was the last of the regular season, Briscoe used a late, four-wide pass to move in front and win his way into the playoffs. This time, he had the baddest machine on the block throughout.

“I definitely [feel] like I’m holding up my end of the bargain,” Briscoe said.

Briscoe moved in front early and cruised through most of the event on NASCAR’s oldest superspeedway. After Reddick swept past him on the restart for the final segment, Briscoe got back in front a lap later and easily moved into the lead after each of his final three pit stops.

Reddick went low and got to Briscoe’s door on the final lap but could not finish the pass. Briscoe held on to win for the second second time this season and fourth time in his career.

“That was way harder than it needed to be,” said Briscoe, also the winner at Pocono in June.

Briscoe’s team owner, Joe Gibbs, recalled greeting the driver in victory lane here last year when he was finishing up racing for now defunct Stewart-Haas Racing. Soon enough, Briscoe was picked to succeed retiring JGR champion Martin Truex Jr.

Gibbs was amazed how quickly Briscoe crew chief James Smalls had the car challenging for wins as it had in the past.

“Certainly, this wasn’t something we expected,” Gibbs said.

Two-time Southern 500 winner Erik Jones was third, followed by John Hunter Nemechek and AJ Allmendinger. Playoff racers Bubba Wallace and Denny Hamlin, Briscoe’s JGR teammate, were next.

Playoff problems

It was a not a great night for most of the playoff field as several contenders struggled. Only four playoff racers were in the top 10.

Josh Berry, who was already below the 12-man cutoff line entering Darlington, spun out moments after the race began and had to go into the garage. It was the first Cup Series playoff run for Berry, who drives for the Wood Brothers. Berry returned to the track midway through the second stage, 119 laps off the lead.

Alex Bowman was among just two playoff drivers without a win this year and needed a strong showing at Darlington to move up from 16th. Bowman pitted several times to find speed and instead found problems, including a malfunctioning air hose that kept him on pit road for about 30 seconds.

Penske driver Ryan Blaney, who won a NASCAR title two years ago and took Daytona last week, was one of the circuit’s hottest drivers with six straight top 10 finishes. But spun out on Lap 209 while 13th to slide down the playoff standings.

The four drivers below the cut line are defending champion Joey Logano in 13th, then Austin Dillon, Bowman and Berry.

“It was not what we were expecting,” Logano said about his 20th-place finish.

Toyota on top

The top four all drove Toyotas — just the third time that has happened since the manufacturer joined the Cup Series in 2007. In all six of the first seven were driving Toyotas, including playoff contenders Briscoe, Reddick, Wallace and Hamlin.

Hamlin is co-owner of 23XI Racing along with Michael Jordan with the team’s two playoff drivers in Reddick and Wallace in the top six.

“It was a good day for them and a great day for Toyota in general,” Hamlin said.

Up next

The playoffs continue Sept. 7 at World Wide Technology Raceway outside of St. Louis in second of three first-round races — the round concludes at Bristol on Sept. 13 — before the field is cut from 16 to 12.

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Bottom 10: Georgia Tech’s perfect season wrecked

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Bottom 10: Georgia Tech's perfect season wrecked

Inspirational thought of the week:

We’ve been through this such a long, long time
Just tryin’ to kill the pain, ooh, yeah
But lovers always come and lovers always go
And no one’s really sure who’s lettin’ it go today, walkin’ away
If we could take the time to lay it on the line
I could rest my head just knowin’ that you were mine, all mine

Nothin’ lasts forever
And we both know hearts can change
And it’s hard to hold a candle
In the cold November rain

— “November Rain,” Guns N’ Roses

Here at Bottom 10 Headquarters, located in the very empty wardrobe box labeled “Shirts For Pat McAfee To Wear For His Last Game Pick,” we love college football most of all for its dedication to traditions.

Like Alabama fans bellowing “Dixieland Delight” and pretending that the song isn’t actually about Tennessee. Or a season of Auburn football penning more drama than a season of “General Hospital.” Or people stopping me at the airport to explain why Lane Kiffin is going to totally quit Ole Miss to take the job at their alma mater. Or Sprit Halloween tweets always being funny … unless you’re a Clemson fan.

And, of course, the greatest, most unstoppable, inevitably occurring college football tradition of them all. No, not me jinxing another QB by doing a “College GameDay” feature on him. (My bad, Brendan Sorsby!) But rather, me being so tired and cranky entering Week 11 that as soon as I realize what month it is I just lazily and automatically fill the Inspirational Thought of the Week with the lyrics to “November Rain.”

With apologies to Cincy D-lineman Elijah Gunn, Navy safety Aaron Rose, Wyoming defensive end Axel Ramazani, Kordell “Slash” Stewart and Steve Harvey, here’s the post-Week 10 Bottom 10 rankings.

The Minuetmen sat out last weekend for two reasons. First, they were resting up for their #MACtion Tuesday night trip to the Artist Formerly Known As Akronmonious, which turned out to be a 44-10 loss. Second, the Commonwealth asked them to schedule a bye because, and I quote, “Between the Salem Witch Trials, pumpkin lagers and the Celtics from 3-point range, Halloween around here is already scary enough.”


For kontinuous weeks on the kalendar we have inkreased the kommotion toward this weekend’s klash with Oregon State. But the Beavers krushed our expektancy bekause they won konsecutive kontests. Kurses!


The Woof Pack also had the weekend off, but somehow still lost by two touchdowns.


Sources have told Bottom 10 JortsCenter that Georgia State, whose stadium was used as the home field for the South Georgia Catfish in the Hulu TV series “Chad Powers” starring Glen Powell, spent its bye week ahead of this weekend’s trip to Coastal Carolina down the street at Atlanta Falcons practice with Powell’s makeup kit trying to convince Michael Penix Jr. to try on rubber noses, wigs and a Georgia State uniform for “a trip to the beach with free concessions.”


In related news, Georgia Tech, located just around the corner from Georgia State, the Falcons and Chad Powers, are investigating if, like Powers, perhaps maybe against NC State someone replaced the entire Yellowjackets defense and secretly subbed in a bunch of old guys in disguise.


The Niners travel Down East to EC-Yew for an American contest. I like that description, American contest. That makes it sound like there will be a bunch of people dressed like Uncle Sam playing cornhole and drinking longnecks while Lee Greenwood sings and bald eagles circle overhead. And if you’ve ever tailgated in Greenville, North Carolina, then you know that there is a 99% chance that you will actually see that.


The good news is that BC’s past two games, both losses, came against ranked opponents. The bad news is that its earlier 41-10 home loss to Clemson is aging about as well as a bottle of truck stop merlot.


This year’s coaching carousel isn’t a carousel at all. It’s that whirling Gravitron ride at the county fair that spins so fast your feet no longer touch the floor and your girlfriend throws up on the stranger next to her. But sometimes a spin cycle is exactly what you need to finally find that matching sock that’s been missing for far too long. Which is a really long way for me to say that the team that calls itself the Pokes should totally hire Hugh Freeze.


Speaking of perfect fits, a reminder that on Week 13 MTSU hosts Sam Houston State. Kickoff time is listed as TBD, which stands for Totally Badass Day.


When the Golden Hurricane beat Oklahoma State back during Week 4, it felt like a much bigger deal than it turned out to be. And when we looked ahead to their Week 12 visit from Oregon State, that felt like a much bigger Bottom 10 deal than it is turning out to be. It’s the college football equivalent to my single dating days, when all those poor girls thought the evening was going to be a much bigger deal than it turned out to be.

Waiting List: UTEPid, Oregon Trail State (You have died of dysentery), Wisconsin Bad-gers, Northern Ill-ugh-noise, EMU Emus, Arkansaw, South Alabama Redundancies, limits on tortilla tosses.

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‘Are you serious?’: How the LSU band got a 66 year-old tuba player

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'Are you serious?': How the LSU band got a 66 year-old tuba player

BATON ROUGE, La. — Capt. Dale Dicharry, the commander of Homeland Security for the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office, has heard plenty of strange calls in his time in law enforcement, particularly here in south Louisiana. But this one beat all the others.

Someone had called in about a wounded animal, and the call was coming from right in his own neighborhood.

“He said, ‘A wounded moose,'” Dicharry said. “I said, ‘We ain’t got no moose around.'”

Then it struck him: That would be Kent.

Kent Broussard, Dicharry’s new neighbor, was a retiree who had just moved to Baton Rouge determined to fulfill his life’s dream: to join the Golden Band from Tigerland at LSU. And he was learning to play, of all things, the tuba.

Dicharry tells the story in the Broussards’ living room, alongside his wife Dawn, Broussard’s wife Cheryl and fellow neighbors Lynette Wilks and Barry Searles. They all immediately leap to Kent’s defense. He wasn’t so bad at the tuba that his playing was confused with moose noises, they say. It was just that confusion was natural; nobody in the neighborhood was expecting someone to be playing a tuba at all.

They say it takes a village to raise a child. But it turns out it takes this neighborhood, on the southern edge of Baton Rouge, to raise a 66-year-old tuba player. It was here that Broussard serenaded the neighbors from his porch, marched around the streets in a weighted vest to get his stamina up and avoided the heat by playing early in the morning and late at night.

Leaf blowers might be annoying at those hours. But nobody was ever bothered by Broussard’s brass. He was bringing a little bit of Tiger Stadium into everybody’s homes.

He soon became the envy of the neighborhood. He had a lifelong goal and made it happen. He is now a member of the LSU band, playing the fight songs on Saturday nights at Tiger Stadium. Welcome to the Tiger Tuba Kent Fan Club.

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A post shared by Kent Broussard (@tigertubakent)

“I’ve had ’em in my head for 60 years and now I’m getting the opportunity to play them,” Broussard said of the tunes.

It’s a quintessential Louisiana tale. The Broussards were among the first Acadian families (later shortened to Cajun) to settle in Louisiana two centuries ago, arriving from France via Canada where they were expelled after rebelling against the British. Kent Broussard, born in Cajun country in Lafayette, got an accounting degree and MBA from Southeastern Louisiana in Hammond and played trumpet in the band for two years. He went to work for Sazerac Spirits, named for a cocktail first invented in New Orleans, then was instrumental in the creation of the Sazerac House on the city’s Canal Street. He and Cheryl lived in LaPlace along the Mississippi River, but after two floods and Kent’s retirement, they decided to pick up and move to Baton Rouge so he could do the most Louisiana thing possible: Join the LSU band.

“You can’t get much more south Louisiana than that,” he joked.

Since the 1960s, Broussard had gone to LSU football games and loved hearing the band play. In the 1980s, when he and Cheryl started dating, he would take her to LSU games and make her stay after the game and watch the band play. So five years ago, before he retired, he emailed the band director and asked what he would have to do to join the band.

There were challenges. First, he would have to be a student. Second, competition was going to be tight, and he would have to learn to march, which most of the students had done for years in middle and high school. There would likely be too much competition on trumpet, he was told. But the world has fewer tuba players than trumpet players and the LSU band loves having a robust tuba line — after having 24 sousaphones last year, they decided to accept 32 this year. So that’s where Broussard decided to direct his energies.

“It started really 30 years ago when I made a commitment to myself that I wanted to do something that really no one else had ever done,” Broussard said. “I just love the band. And I didn’t look at it like, because of my age, I don’t think I should try out. That has really never crossed my mind. I’m young at heart.”

To practice at home, Broussard bought a $3,000 tuba off Facebook Marketplace — a friend jokingly called it a “Temu Tuba” — from a member of a mariachi band in Los Angeles who collects sousaphones, repairs them and sells them. An LSU student who helps the band repair instruments helped him assemble it and get it set up right. Dale Dicharry gave him the idea of walking around with the weighted vest. Over dinner conversations with neighbors, he would reveal his plan.

“We were all like, are you serious?” Dawn Dicharry said. Someone joked they thought they had all had too much wine. But Broussard was so enthusiastic about it that they all realized they could live vicariously through him.

“To watch that man train and persevere through this heat and do what he does on the daily has just simply been amazing,” said Lynette Wilks, who lives behind the Broussards. “My granddaughter is 11 and was out riding the bike in the neighborhood. She came in and threw the bike down. She said, ‘Lulu, there’s a man marching around in the street playing a tuba.’

“Yeah, that’s Tuba Kent,” she said.

He started out playing inside for a year. The first audition was basically a screening, just to make sure that the applicants could play. Kent had to perform assigned music and upload it to YouTube for the band directors to review. After he cleared that hurdle, he started going outside to get acclimated to the grueling summers because the LSU band practices outside every day. So he would play early in the morning or later in the evening. One morning, at about 7 a.m., Broussard said he was out marching through the streets with his tuba and two cyclists rode by. As they passed him, one looked at the other and said, “That’s not something you see every day.” Broussard shot back, “Go Tigers,” and he could hear them laughing as they rode away.

At a neighborhood event, a neighbor two doors down told the Broussards that her 12-year-old son was going to bed at about 9:15 one evening and told her he thought it was so cool that he was going to bed serenaded by one of the greatest fight songs in the country.

Kent thought it was awesome. Cheryl had another reaction: “I put him on a 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. curfew,” she said, laughing.

In mid-to-late August, Broussard was invited to the band’s preseason camp, a four-day long audition where he said they “learn the LSU way of playing,” along with their marching styles and do some sight-reading of music. Mostly, he said, it was a way to make sure the culture fit was right for band members.

There are 325 members in the LSU band, including the color guard and the Golden Girls dance line, with roughly 275 members who are strictly musicians. There are always more freshmen looking to join the band than there are spots. There are no guarantees.

So the entire gang waited anxiously for the final band roster to be announced. Once they got the news, everyone went crazy. Tiger Tuba Kent was officially a Tiger.

“Barry and I grabbed us a cocktail and we ran down the street,” Dawn said. She texted Cheryl, who told her Kent wasn’t home, but everyone could come over. Then they all celebrated together in the Broussards’ home.

“It makes us all feel good,” Searles said. “You get to a certain age and then you feel like you’re done, but we really don’t feel like we’re done. So it feels good to be accepted in the world.”

Broussard became a media darling. He did TV appearances on “Good Morning America” and the SEC Network, did interviews with NPR and PBS, and appeared on “The Kelly Clarkson Show” just this week. Dawn said she was never bothered by the tuba; it was the notifications on the group chat and the neighborhood board cheering Kent on that would wake her up at night.

So Cheryl has had to share her husband with everyone. First of all, he’s taking a full class load with 13 hours as a “non-matriculated student,” or without being in a degree program. He’s only taking classes that he finds interesting. He loves American Popular Music because it explains how all the music of his life is intertwined. His classes in Louisiana History, Fundamentals of Emergency Management and Comparative Politics all work together to explain the current LSU football situation, it seems. Then he has band practice and then the games. Cheryl said she misses seeing him tend to the yard because he was so meticulous about it, but she has picked up some tips and taken care of it in his place.

“We had gone from being together all the time, which was a little too much, to all the way over here,” she said of Kent’s retirement. “I’ll see him 20 or 30 minutes, and then he’ll need to go study.”

They go to dinner on Fridays and make the most of their time. But seeing Kent get to live his dream and become an inspiration for others has been worth it. She said she has already told him it’s totally up to him and she’ll support him if he wants to do it again next year.

Every time they show Broussard’s image on the video board at Tiger Stadium, the crowd erupts. Dawn, Barry and Lynette cried the first time they saw it happen.

“I’m one of almost 400 [in the band],” Broussard said. “The overwhelming support has been humbling. Maybe I was naive about the whole situation. I think it’s a good story. Hopefully it’s kind of pushing people my age or older to say, ‘This guy’s doing something really physically and mentally challenging. He’s going back to school.’ So I’m hoping that message is resonating with some folks.”

But one place where it has already made a big difference is in the Broussards’ neighborhood. They’re just happy to be along for the ride, helping encourage their local celebrity/tuba player.

“This has just been incredible for all of us,” Wilks said.

The year hasn’t gone according to plan for the Tigers on the field. But in the stands, they’re one of the best stories of the season. And Tiger Tuba Kent likes to keep the positivity.

“Come to cheer on the band,” he said.

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Preds irked as Wild score winner on displaced net

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Preds irked as Wild score winner on displaced net

The Nashville Predators disagreed that a “weird” Minnesota Wild overtime goal scored with the net displaced Tuesday night should have counted.

Wild forward Kirill Kaprizov sent a pass across the crease to teammate Marcus Johansson just as Predators goalie Justus Annunen pushed the net off its moorings. Johansson’s shot hit the side of the net as the cage continued to slide out of place. He collected the puck and then backhanded it over the goal line and off the end boards with the net dislodged.

The referee signaled a goal at 3:38 of overtime, and it was upheld after an NHL video review. Minnesota won, 3-2, overcoming an emotional letdown when Nashville’s Steven Stamkos tied the score with just 0.3 seconds left in regulation.

“The explanation was that, in [the referee’s] opinion, it was a goal. I disagree with his opinion, but that’s the way it is,” Nashville coach Andrew Brunette said.

Stamkos wasn’t pleased with the goal call after the game.

“Obviously, a weird play. I can see the confusion, but the confusing part for us was why it was so emphatically called [a goal]. I get it. Listen, the net came off. If the puck goes in right away, no problem if the net is off. But he missed the net, and the puck actually bounced back to him because the net was sideways,” he said.

The NHL’s Situation Room upheld the goal because it felt Annunen caused the net to be displaced before to an “imminent scoring opportunity” by Johansson and cited Rule 63.7 as justification. The rule reads:

“In the event that the goal post is displaced, either deliberately or accidentally, by a defending player, prior to the puck crossing the goal line between the normal position of the goalposts, the Referee may award a goal. In order to award a goal in this situation, the goal post must have been displaced by the actions of a defending player, the attacking player must have an imminent scoring opportunity prior to the goal post being displaced, and it must be determined that the puck would have entered the net between the normal position of the goal posts.”

Stamkos said he believed that Johansson’s goal-scoring shot was made possible only by the net having come off its moorings.

“I understand the net came off. I don’t think there was any intent from our goaltender to knock it off — it came off twice today. From our vantage point, we thought the puck came back to him on the second attempt because the net was off. If not, the puck goes behind the net, and we live to fight another day. So, that’s where we didn’t agree with the call,” he said.

Brunette said he didn’t believe his goalie intentionally dislodged the net.

“I don’t think just by the physics of pushing that’s what he was trying to do. I thought they missed the net. If the net didn’t dislodge, you would have ended up hitting the net,” he said.

“Unfortunately, they didn’t see it the same way. And you move on.”

This was the second win in a row for the Wild, moving them to 5-6-3 on the season. Nashville dropped to 5-6-4, losing its second straight overtime game.

“We deserved a lot better, for sure. One of our best games of the season, for sure,” Stamkos said.

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