Connect with us

Published

on

NASCAR is investigating a spate of car fires that left one championship contender fuming after his Ford erupted into an inferno during the opening playoff race.

Kevin Harvick lashed out at NASCAR and the new Next Gen car after his inexplicably caught fire at Darlington Raceway. The Next Gen debuted this season and is a spec vehicle with single-source parts that is intended to both level the playing field and cut costs.

The Next Gen has achieved some of its goals but has also raised safety concerns unrelated to the fires involving the force of impact drivers are taking in crashes. Kurt Busch has been out with a concussion since late July.

Now comes a fire issue that can’t be ignored any longer after Harvick’s car burned Sunday night on national television. Although the Chevrolet of Alex Bowman caught fire at Darlington in May, the fire issues have predominantly plagued Fords. Chris Buescher and Joey Logano both had car fires at the Indianapolis road course, and Chase Briscoe‘s car caught on fire at Richmond.

“I’m sure it’s just crappy parts on the race car like we’ve seen so many times. They haven’t fixed anything. It’s kind of like the safety stuff. We just let it keep going and keep going,” said Harvick, who finished 33rd because of the fire.

“The car started burning and as it burned the flames started coming through the dash. I ran a couple laps and then as the flame got bigger it started burning stuff up. The fire was coming through the dash. What a disaster for no reason. We didn’t touch the wall. We didn’t touch a car and here we are in the pits with a burned-up car and we can’t finish the race during the playoffs because of crappy-ass parts.”

Harvick added that he stopped where he did on the track — bringing out a caution that some have said took NASCAR too long to call — “because the flames were coming through the dash and I couldn’t make myself sit in there and burn up.”

The fire dropped Harvick, winner of two races this season, to last in the 16-driver playoff field headed into Sunday’s Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway. Four drivers will be eliminated from contention after next week’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

NASCAR, which already has been looking into the rigidness of the Next Gen based on driver feedback, has acknowledged “it’s unacceptable for the cars to catch on fire,” and senior vice president of competition Scott Miller said series officials are investigating.

In the meantime, NASCAR ordered teams to replace a part of the polymer panel used in the passenger side door area with stainless steel. The design is intended to keep debris from the drivers. NASCAR is also permitting changes to the coating material used on the cars, and mandated a lateral seal across the engine panel.

Miller rebuked Harvick’s notion that NASCAR has not addressed Next Gen issues.

“To say that NASCAR doesn’t care is about as far from the truth as you could get. I think he actually does know we do care,” Miller said on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

“We’ve been working on different solutions for different things along the way that seem to maybe be the trigger. Obviously, we still have work to do,” Miller added.

Miller also said that NASCAR is taking a close look at Ford’s exhaust clearances “because they seem to be having more trouble with this than the others.

“There’s a lot of work going on, a lot of collaboration within the industry to get to the bottom of it. We have to get to the bottom of it quick, obviously,” he said.

One theory is that rubber buildup on the track is getting trapped inside the cars and then igniting, which is why NASCAR has mandated the splitter seal to “reduce the migration of tire debris to the splitter area.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Islanders ‘back in it’ after 2OT win over Hurricanes

Published

on

By

Islanders 'back in it' after 2OT win over Hurricanes

ELMONT, N.Y. — Instead of sweeping the New York Islanders out of the playoffs, Carolina Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour watched his team give its opponents new life on Saturday afternoon.

Forward Mathew Barzal‘s double-overtime deflection goal won Game 4 for the Islanders 3-2, sending the series back to Raleigh, North Carolina.

“They’re back in it. We gave them some hope here now,” Brind’Amour said. “We’ve talked about how tough it is to win four games in a row, especially with the game being as even as they are. It could have gone either way in the previous three. We expected it to be a long series and now we’ve just got to focus on the next one.”

Barzal powered the Islanders with his first two goals of the playoffs, tying the game in the second period and then winning it by deflecting home a shot from the point by defenseman Robert Bortuzzo at 1:24 of the second overtime.

“We weren’t going to go down without a fight and now we’re in a fight,” said Bortuzzo, who atoned for a critical third-period penalty with the assist. “The plan was to just get one win. We got that, we regroup and we move forward.”

All four games of the series have been competitive into the third period. Barzal said it’s the most tightly played series he has ever experienced. “I don’t think I’ve been in a series where the checking is this tight. It’s on both sides really,” he said. “Every shift we’re out there, the checking is on another level right now.”

For the Islanders, there was no margin for error. Carolina had a chance to eliminate them in four straight games; beyond that, the Hurricanes had a chance to eliminate the Islanders in overtime on Long Island for a second straight postseason, having beaten the Islanders in six games during the first round in 2023.

But coach Patrick Roy said that he didn’t stress those do-or-die stakes to his team during overtime.

“It never really crossed my mind that’d be the end of a season,” he said. “I just said to the guys [in overtime] that it doesn’t have to be pretty. A lot of times in overtime any shot could turn out to be dangerous.”

After the Islanders started the game strongly, captain Anders Lee took a tripping penalty 7:14 into the game. Seth Jarvis converted on the ensuing Carolina power play for the 1-0 lead. The Islanders found the equalizer at 10:10 of the second period, as Barzal scored his first of the playoffs on a shot from above the circles that beat Frederik Andersen.

New York grabbed the lead 1:38 into the third period on a Jean-Gabriel Pageau power-play goal, his first of the playoffs. Carolina’s Sebastian Aho was in the box on a late second-period tripping penalty. But Carolina knotted the game with 5:52 left in regulation. With Bortuzzo in the box for hooking, Stefan Noesen scored his second of the playoffs on a deflection in front of goalie Semyon Varlamov.

It remained tied until Barzal’s goal, thanks in part to 18 overtime saves by Varlamov.

“Awesome. Awesome game. We’re still in it, which is very exciting,” said Varlamov, who made 42 saves on his 36th birthday. “I was just happy because you don’t want to go to the third or fourth overtime. We want to finish the game as soon as you can.”

Roy started Varlamov in Games 1 and 2 but gave Ilya Sorokin the start in Game 3. That backfired, and Sorokin was pulled in the second period in favor of Varlamov.

“What I love about Varley right now is that everything seems easy. He’s not over-moving. He’s square, he’s big in the net,” Roy said.

There’s a lot about the Islanders’ Game 4 effort that Roy loved – especially the fact that there will now be a Game 5 on Tuesday night.

“You have no idea how proud I’m of this group. I mean, they came out and played hard. Even when (Carolina) took the lead, they stayed calm and stayed focused. The guys were determined to find a way to win this hockey game,” he said.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sergachev back from leg injury in time for Game 4

Published

on

By

Sergachev back from leg injury in time for Game 4

Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Mikhail Sergachev made a stunning return to the lineup as his club looked to avoid elimination in Game 4 of its first-round Stanley Cup playoff series against the Florida Panthers on Saturday.

Sergachev had been out since fracturing the tibia and fibula in his left leg on Feb. 7. The injury was so bad that Lightning coach Jon Cooper had said the Lightning would need to “go far” in the postseason to see Sergachev back in. But Tampa’s top defenseman was apparently cleared for action just 80 days following that break to be a last-minute addition to the Lightning’s starters on Saturday.

Having Sergachev available is exactly the boost Tampa could be looking for in a must-win game. The Lightning would be swept from the postseason with another loss to the Panthers, and Tampa Bay has struggled containing Florida’s top skaters throughout the series. Even if Sergachev isn’t at his best, he can have a positive impact on Tampa Bay’s defensive effort as they try to slow down Matthew Tkachuk (three goals in three games) and Carter Verhaeghe (five points).

Tampa Bay spent most of the regular season without Sergachev available in a difficult year health-wise for the blueliner. Prior to breaking his leg, Sergachev had missed 17 games in the fall because of another lower-body injury. He skated in just 34 tilts total, with two goals and 17 assists.

Whatever Sergachev can offer to Tampa Bay now might swing some momentum back in their favor. The recent two-time Stanley Cup champions haven’t tapped into their scoring depth or found enough ways to beat Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky, their power play has been misfiring (at 16.7%) and the Lightning are tied for the second-most goals against in the postseason (11) going into Game 4.

That latter statistic is where Sergachev can do the most to help Tampa and give the Lightning a chance to extend their season another game.

Continue Reading

Sports

Jets’ Dillon iffy for Game 4 with stitched-up hand

Published

on

By

Jets' Dillon iffy for Game 4 with stitched-up hand

DENVER — Winnipeg Jets defenseman Brenden Dillon is day-to-day and his Game 4 status is unclear after he lacerated his hand at the end of Game 3 against the Colorado Avalanche on Friday.

Jets coach Rick Bowness said after practice Saturday that Dillon’s hand required multiple stitches after it appeared to have been cut by a skate blade.

“It didn’t look good,” Bowness said. “So, it was a big sigh of relief that there wasn’t any damage done. Give our doctors credit. They got right at it and did a great job stitching him up.”

Dillon’s injury came at the end of a third period that saw the Jets surrender a 2-1 lead and allow five unanswered goals in a 6-2 loss, which gave the Avs a 2-1 series lead.

Several players were involved in the scrum before Dillon skated off the ice toward the Jets’ bench clutching his bloodied, lacerated hand.

While there were replays of the incident, there are still questions about what specific events led to Dillon’s hand being cut.

Dillon’s defense partner, Neal Pionk, said he didn’t know something happened to his teammate until he skated back to the bench. Pionk said he has also watched replays of the scrum and still didn’t know the specifics of what led to Dillon’s lacerated hand.

“You get mayhem in there and all those bodies in there, it’s tough to figure it out,” Bowness said. “But, it’s obviously a skate blade got in there somewhere.”

His potential return or his possible absence comes at a time when the Jets are trying to solve their defensive issues while evening the series or they risk returning to Winnipeg facing potential elimination.

The Jets opened with a 7-6 win only to allow five goals in the three-goal loss in Game 2 that saw the Avalanche tie the series.

After allowing just four goals in three regular-season games against the Avs, the Jets have allowed 17 goals in three playoff games.

“He’s one of our toughest competitors and a tremendous teammate,” Bowness said of Dillon. “He gives you 100 percent every shift out there. He’s tough as nails, he battles everybody, he blocks shots. He does everything you want your veteran D to do. He’s a great leader on the ice and in the room too. He brings a lot to our team.”

Continue Reading

Trending