Bubba Wallace is now a NASCAR Cup Series race winner. Deal with it.
He did it Monday afternoon at Talladega Superspeedway, the crapshoot of all racetracks. He did it in a rain-shortened event, the crapshoot of all race strategies. He did it driving for a new team co-owned by the greatest basketball player who has ever lived, albeit backed by the technical juggernauts of Toyota and Joe Gibbs Racing.
Wallace celebrated the victory by crying, by jumping up and down like a kid and by dropping a big ol’ loud cuss word on live national television. And nary a hater weighed heavy on his mind, no matter how hard they tried.
“This is for all those kids out there that want to have an opportunity, whatever they want to achieve and be the best at what they want to do,” Wallace said while standing on a rain-saturated pit road moments after NASCAR called the race with 71 laps remaining and darkness looming. “You’re going to go through a lot of bulls—. But you’ve always got to stay true to your path and not let the nonsense get to you. Stay strong, stay humble, stay hungry. There were plenty of times I wanted to give up. But you surround yourself with the right people and it’s moments like this that you appreciate.”
For every congratulatory tweet posted Monday afternoon and throughout the evening, there was an equal number of brave-from-the-couch responses. The latter tried to discount what had just happened by bringing up all of what is listed above as detriments, trying to cheapen the moment. They also threw in the so-easily-predictable added extra bonus of debating what is or is not a noose, digging up social media-penned conspiracy theories and whatever other digital cave drawings they could scribble out.
The thing is, William Darrell Wallace Jr. doesn’t care what you think. He has no interest in your underhanded hot takes on the motorsports history that he and his team made at the end of a weather-delayed and weather-abbreviated Monday afternoon Talladega throwdown. No matter how much you might tweet and post and scream, you might as well have your smartphone bullhorns pointed into an empty closet.
Wallace isn’t listening to it. He certainly isn’t reading it. Not unless he’s looking for a late-night laugh as he’s still embracing the race trophy he now owns.
Wallace used to read it all, not with chuckles and shoulder shrugs but with disbelief and heartbreak. However, that was a while ago. Before he became the grown man he is now, newly engaged and only four days shy of his 28th birthday. Before he, at the very place where he won Monday, was unwittingly dragged through an embarrassing July 2020 controversy involving what the FBI repeatedly referred to as a noose, found in his garage stall. Before he was left stranded by NASCAR’s poor handling of the situation.
Before he became a race winner at stock car racing’s highest level.
History aside, what he did on Monday was impressive by any measure. He skirted the disaster of the Big One. He raced his wheels off during what became the final green-flag laps of the race. He won in just his fourth full-time Cup season, driving for Team 23XI, a team started by a current title contender, Denny Hamlin, along with six-time NBA champion Michael Jordan, and a team that didn’t have a crew or a race shop less than a year ago. Wallace’s win also capped the first-ever NASCAR race weekend to have first-time winners sweep all three national events.
But you can’t put the history aside. You can’t forget that Wallace became the first Black racer to win at NASCAR’s highest level since December 1963, a span of 2,040 races, and the second ever. Nor can you dismiss the fact that in 73 years of Cup Series racing, over 2,673 races, only 198 drivers have taken a checkered flag. On Monday, Bubba Wallace became that 198th race winner.
That’s one more Cup Series race victory than the combined career total of every social media Cro-Magnon who has ever tried to come after Wallace.
“This is not the time for those folks. This is Bubba’s time. This is the time for dreamers who love NASCAR racing. This is our time.” The man speaking on the phone was Warrick Scott, less than an hour after Wallace’s Talladega win. His grandfather was Wendell Scott, the man who won that race in ’63 and until Wallace came along had been the only full-time Black racer in NASCAR Cup Series history.
Today, Warrick works alongside his father, Frank, running the Wendell Scott Foundation in seeking to create better opportunities for at-risk youth. The organization is powered by passion and the promise of a better life. The Scott family, which has been close to Wallace since he was a teenager breaking into NASCAR, is always looking for real-world examples they can use to prove to those at-risk youth that hoping and dreaming isn’t something limited to fairy tales. It can actually happen.
On Monday afternoon, Bubba Wallace handed them their best example yet.
“To us, it wasn’t a question of, is Bubba going to win, but where was he going to win first?” Warrick Scott said from his home, where the noise of his family’s celebration could still be heard in the background. “Talladega is the racetrack where my grandfather almost died [in a wreck] in 1973, the place that really took Papa out of the game. Talladega is the place where Bubba had already endured so much. And Talladega, that place, you don’t win there by accident. You have to drive it at Talladega. You have to kick butt. And anyone who saw those last laps before the rain came knows that Bubba Wallace was up on that wheel. He was the maestro.”
Warrick Scott watched those laps with his sons, the great-grandsons of Wendell Scott, Warrick Jr., 11, and Wendell, 5. He’d raced through the Monday afternoon school carpool line and then raced home so they could all see the finish together. As they watched Wallace celebrate the victory, they jumped up and down in their den, and then the phone started ringing. It was Frank. Then it was everyone else in the family. Then it seemed like it was everyone else in the world.
“Every conversation has been the same,” Warrick said. “And it will be this way for a while now. Excitement. Inspiration. African American kids, from my boys to the Foundation to kids I’ll never meet, and Bubba will never meet, young Black racers, they will all believe a little more tonight. And that’s just beautiful for this sport that my grandfather truly loved, and Bubba truly loves.”
Warrick Scott can’t stop laughing. That giddy giggle that happens when your face doesn’t know what to do.
“This is just joy. There’s no hate here. And even if there was, we can’t hear them. We’re too busy celebrating.”
Ken Holland, who won four Stanley Cups as an executive with the Detroit Red Wings, is expected to become the next general manager of the Los Angeles Kings, multiple NHL sources told ESPN on Monday, confirming a report.
Inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame as a builder in 2020, Holland replaces Rob Blake, the Kings’ general manager and vice president of hockey operations whose contract was not renewed after a fourth straight first-round playoff exit.
An announcement is expected later this week. Rod Pedersen, host of “The Rod Pedersen Show,” first reported the news.
Holland, 69, was the executive vice president and general manager of the Red Wings from 1997 through 2019, winning four Stanley Cups for the franchise. He was bumped upstairs in 2019 to senior vice president, clearing the way for Steve Yzerman to become the team’s general manager.
That promotion lasted only a month, as Holland left to take over the Edmonton Oilers as general manager and president of hockey operations. Powered by stars Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, the team made the conference finals in 2022 and 2024, losing in Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final last year with a roster Holland constructed. Among his key acquisitions were forward Zach Hyman (free agent) and defensemen Mattias Ekholm (via trade with Nashville) and Philip Broberg (drafted eighth in 2019). The Oilers made the playoffs in all five seasons of Holland’s tenure.
Holland’s five-year contract with the Oilers expired on July 1, 2024. Edmonton eventually hired former Blackhawks GM Stan Bowman to replace him. Since then, Holland had been working as a consultant to the NHL’s hockey operations department.
Sources told ESPN that Holland had been considering a front office role with the New York Islanders, either as team president, general manager or both. Former Montreal Canadiens GM Marc Bergevin, a senior adviser for the Kings who many believed might be their next general manager, is in the mix for the Islanders’ openings.
Kings president Luc Robitaille played for Holland’s Red Wings from 2001-2003, winning his only Stanley Cup as a player in 2002. He will now reconnect with Holland, who will take over a Kings roster that features holdovers from their Stanley Cup wins in 2012 and 2014 (Anze Kopitar and Drew Doughty), scorers in their prime (Adrian Kempe and Kevin Fiala), young players on the rise (Quinton Byfield and Brandt Clarke) and goalie Darcy Kuemper, who was a finalist for the Vezina Trophy this season.
But Los Angeles has failed to advance past the first round of the playoffs since 2014. The Kings have lost four straight first-round series to the Oilers — conveniently, Holland’s former team — including their six-game defeat this postseason.
Holland will now determine the fate of Jim Hiller, who finished his first season as Kings head coach after serving on an interim basis in 2023-24. Hiller was an assistant coach with the Red Wings for one season (2014-15) during Holland’s time in Detroit.
Edmonton Oilers goaltender Calvin Pickard is expected to miss the remainder of the Western Conference semifinal series against the Vegas Golden Knights due to an injury, according to a TSN report on Monday.
Later Monday, with veteran Stuart Skinner in net, the Oilers defeated the Golden Knights, 3-0, in Game 4, securing a 3-1 series lead. Skinner made 23 saves in the victory.
Pickard has won all six starts in the net for the Oilers during this postseason run. After Edmonton lost the first two games against the Los Angeles Kings in the first round, coach Kris Knoblauch replaced Skinner, the team’s regular-season starter, with Pickard. The 33-year-old career backup posted wins in the next four games to help the Oilers oust the Kings and then earned victories in the first two games of the second round in Las Vegas.
Golden Knights forward Tomas Hertl fell into Pickard’s left leg during the Oilers’ 5-4 overtime triumph on May 8. The Moncton, New Brunswick, native finished the game but has not practiced since. With Skinner back in the net, host Edmonton lost 4-3 in Game 3, as Vegas forward Reilly Smith scored with 0.4 seconds remaining.
TSN reported “it will probably be at least a week” before Pickard could return, and during Game 4 on Monday night, Olivier Rodrigue was the backup netminder on the bench. Rodrigue, 24, played in just two games for Edmonton in his first NHL season.
Prior to Monday’s shutout, Skinner, who starred during the Oilers’ run to the Stanley Cup Final last spring, had allowed 15 goals in just 168 minutes of playing time this postseason and owns a lowly save percentage of .817. During the regular season, Skinner went 26-18-4, with a 2.81 goals-against average and an .896 save percentage.
Since falling down 2-0 to the Kings, the Oilers have won seven of eight postseason games. Game 5 is back in Las Vegas on Wednesday night.
Information from Field Level Media was used in this report.
RALEIGH, N..C. — The Carolina Hurricanes twice found their two-goal margin halved in the third period of their latest playoff game with the Washington Capitals.
Each time they found a prompt response.
And that pushed the Hurricanes to within a win of the Eastern Conference finals for the second time in three seasons.
Taylor Hall scored on a breakaway chance roughly three minutes after the Washington Capitals scored their first goal, then Sean Walker added one minutes after NHL all-time goals leader Alex Ovechkin struck with a 5-on-3 one-timer. Those kept the Hurricanes in control on the way to a 5-2 win Monday night, securing a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven second-round series.
“We get an individual effort, and that’s really what those were, good plays,” Carolina coach Rod Brind’Amour said. “But burying it, finishing your chances at a crucial time in the game. … Both of those goals were huge for us.”
Both Hall and Walker finished with two points, with Walker getting the second assist on Hall’s score and Hall returning the favor by springing Walker’s surge up the ice on the way to his first career postseason goal. But the timing of the goals stood out, with each blunting the momentum of a Washington team that had been shutout for five straight periods going back to Saturday’s 4-0 loss in Game 3.
Carolina carried a 2-0 lead into the third before Jakob Chychrun beat Frederik Andersen on a feed from Matt Roy after Roy had denied Carolina’s chance to clear the zone. That score came at the 5:18 mark of the third to add a jolt of tension rippling through the Lenovo Center after Carolina had kept a firm grip on the game to that point.
But Hall — acquired in January in the blockbuster deal that brought in Mikko Rantanen as the headliner — made a veteran read to blunt that momentum.
After being knocked to the ice in the offensive zone, Hall was getting up as the Capitals pushed the puck toward the other end. But as Hall got to center ice, he was alone — Washington coach Spencer Carbery said the defense lost track of Hall behind the forecheck and were too deep in the zone — and the Hurricanes were on the verge of collecting the puck as it went around the end wall.
So Hall turned in back toward the blue line, straddling it long enough to stay onside until Jack Roslovic‘s long pass arrived to spring the breakaway chance.
“Yeah, everyone’s asking me if I was cheating for offense,” Hall said, adding; “I thought it was just something to try.”
Hall skated in and beat Logan Thompson to the glove side at the 8:24 mark, pushing the margin back to 3-1.
“It’s a read, we had possession of the puck,” Brind’Amour said. “So that’s actually a good play by him.”
The Capitals again kept the pressure on with Ovechkin’s blast past Andersen on a two-man advantage at the 12:14 mark, dampening the rowdy zeal in Carolina’s home arena. But that’s when Hall and Walker teamed up for the goal that would reassert control.
It started on a puck battle and the unusual sight of Washington’s Rasmus Sandin skating in to get the puck from Walker, only to get the blade of his stick stuck in a gap along the boards. Walker got to his feet as Hall collected the puck, then flipped a pass to Walker as he charged up the left side.
Walker hesitated to cut inside Roslovic toward the slot and beat Thompson at the 16:45 mark, pushing the lead back to 4-2 in what became a backbreaking score.
“I feel like they were backchecking really hard, so I kind of just read that,” Walker said. “Tried to be patient. Once I stepped inside, I felt like I had a good lane so I shot it, and just happy it went in.”
Ovechkin’s blast got the NHL’s career goals leader on the scoresheet for the first time this series. Thompson finished with 32 saves.
“We’re giving ourselves some opportunities, we’re just not executing, making the play, whatever you want to call it,” Washington coach Spencer Carbery said. “And making some mistakes — and they’re capitalizing.”
To that point, the Eastern Conference’s top seed got a quick start after a Game 3 shutout, starting with Connor McMichael getting a 1-on-1 chance on Andersen in the opening minute. Aliaksei Protas followed by ringing the right post shortly after.
Washington also managed only one shot on goal during a 4-minute power play, the first 3½ minutes of those coming to close the first period.
“Their penalty kill is excellent, best in the league, has been for the last, whatever, five years call it,” Carbery said. “But it can’t look like that. It cannot look like that.”
Andrei Svechnikov added the empty-net clincher less than a minute later to deny Washington’s bid to retake home-ice advantage, the capper to Carolina’s steady response amid growing third-period danger.
“I think that’s something that’s really important, especially this time of year,” Walker said. “You’ve got to answer when teams are making their push.”
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.