‘We’ve gotta do something with it:’ Pens’ veterans back and hungry for another Cup
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adminPITTSBURGH — SIDNEY CROSBY DOESN’T scare easily. But the future of the Pittsburgh Penguins had him unnerved.
Center Evgeni Malkin and defenseman Kris Letang, Crosby’s teammates on all three of his Stanley Cup victories, were at the end of their contracts last season. Free agency loomed. Rare was the team, in hockey or any other sport, that would keep an aging core together that hadn’t advanced past the playoffs’ opening round in four straight seasons — let alone find a way to do so under a flat salary cap.
“I was sweatin’,” Crosby told ESPN. “You know how it works. The longer it goes, the closer it gets to free agency, the greater the chances are you might want to test it. You’re trying to balance being optimistic with being realistic about the fact it was a possible [they’d leave].”
Penguins coach Mike Sullivan led all three players to Stanley Cup wins in 2016 and 2017. He couldn’t begin to imagine how Crosby would captain a Pittsburgh team without Malkin and Letang on the roster.
“It would have been hard for him. Those three have been through a lot together,” Sullivan said. “They’ve had their fair amount of successes, but they’ve also had their disappointments. I think it means a lot to him to continue to try to win; but in particular, to continue to try to win with those guys.
“I can’t imagine what it would have been like for Sid to go through. I’m glad we don’t have to find out.”
Letang, 35, signed a six-year contract extension on July 7 worth $36 million. Five days later, Malkin, 36, signed a four-year, $24.4 million contract. That was right after news leaked that Malkin intended to test free agency, when tense talks with Pittsburgh finally stalled.
Sullivan remembers being optimistic that they’d both return to Pittsburgh — until hearing about Malkin’s negotiations, that is.
“I always believed we’d get it done, up until maybe the last 48 hours before free agency with Geno,” he said. “That was the only time that doubt crept into my mind. But in my heart I believed that we’d be able to retain these guys. I know what it means to them.”
What did it mean to Crosby?
“Just … happy,” he said. “Relieved. And then immediately thinking, ‘OK, we’ve got an opportunity. These guys are staying. And now we’ve gotta do something with it.'”
BRYAN RUST IS part of the band, too.
“Yeah, I might be the third backup singer,” he said.
Rust, 30, was expected to generate significant interest as an unrestricted free agent. The winger has been a perfect complement to Crosby and Jake Guentzel on the Penguins’ top line, and skated well when matched with Malkin, too.
There were times Rust wasn’t convinced the core would stay together. He remembers sitting at his locker after losing Game 7 in overtime to the New York Rangers last May and being unable to shake that dread.
“I was like, ‘Oh s— … is this my last chance with this team?'” he said. “Because of how the business works, and because the cap is the way it is.”
Turns out, Rust was the first member to stay with the band, signing a six-year contract extension on May 21 worth $30.75 million. He didn’t test the waters to see what other riches were out there from NHL contenders. He feels the free agents who stayed with the Penguins made out fine financially, with Pittsburgh understanding they weren’t going to take steep discounts to stay.
“Everyone has to do what’s best for them and the business, but [also] as a team and as individuals,” he said. “Those guys want to win. They want to be here. I’m no different. That point was made clear, but we weren’t going to lose out individually.”
Letang was another player many expected could test the market. Despite entering his 17th NHL season, his effectiveness as a defenseman hasn’t waned. He played 78 games last season and posted 68 points, with an average time on ice per game of 25:47. Letang finished seventh in the Norris Trophy race, the fourth straight season he received votes.
He would have elevated the blue line of many contenders. There was also talk of him joining his former agent, Kent Hughes, in Montreal, where Hughes is now the Canadiens‘ general manager.
Letang was never sure if he would end up staying with the Penguins. “Otherwise I would have been signed the summer before. Would have been easier, right?” he said with a laugh.
His conversations with Crosby hinted at that uncertainty.
“Sid is probably my closest friend. We talked about the entire summer and the entire year,” Letang said. “We weren’t sure if it was going to happen. So we’re glad it’s behind us and we can look forward.”
OF THE PENGUINS’ holy trinity, Crosby and Letang don’t have many doubters about their continued excellence at their advancing age.
Malkin is a different story.
The former Hart Trophy and Conn Smythe Award winner had major knee surgery before last season, as his right ACL was repaired for a second time. While his point production remained strong — he posted 42 points in 41 games, including 20 goals — it appeared he had lost a step. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette noted that Malkin’s rush attempts had trailed off significantly, as he generated 0.57 per 60 minutes two seasons before his 2021 knee surgery compared to just 0.22 rush attempts on average last season.
“On numerous instances, Malkin’s skating looked like what you’d expect from a 35-year-old less than a year removed from his second significant knee injury,” wrote the Gazette’s Mike DeFabo.
As the transition game is a key to Sullivan’s system, that impacted Malkin’s effectiveness at even strength. Sullivan called Malkin’s 5-on-5 game “sporadic” last season, but said last week that he hasn’t made many adjustments to Malkin’s usage based on that decline.
“Nothing’s really changed in how we use him,” Sullivan said. “He’s still a dynamic offensive talent who has the ability to single-handedly take over a game. There aren’t a lot of those guys around the league.”
One change Sullivan made last season that could stick for 2022-23: Moving Rust to play with Malkin. Sullivan said Malkin’s best games came with Rust on his wing, thanks to the latter’s ability to forecheck and his defensive awareness. Crosby and Guentzel have spent time this preseason with winger Rickard Rakell, who isn’t a “band member” per se but who signed a six-year, $30 million contract to stay in Pittsburgh before free agency this summer.
Rust was happy to see Malkin back. Much like with Letang, Rust couldn’t fathom how the Penguins could improve their impact on the ice without sacrificing something off the ice if they let the duo walk.
“Someone else could come in here, but why disrupt this chemistry in the face of getting more of the same, when we know we have a team that can do something?” he said. “[Without Malkin and Letang], there would have been a lot of conversations floating around about not having them in this room. Thank god those aren’t happening.”
Letang said the feeling was mutual about Rust and Malkin.
“If you lose Geno, if you lose Rusty, can you actually replace them? Are you getting better by not having them? I don’t think so.”
Does Letang believe there’s another Stanley Cup in this group?
“That’s what I want. For sure.”
MIKE SULLIVAN MIGHT not skate with Crosby, Malkin and Letang during games, but he’s a member of the band, too. The contract extensions weren’t exclusive to the players: Sullivan, who has coached the Penguins since the 2015-16 season, signed a three-year deal that pays him into 2026-27.
“We’ve been through a lot together. This hasn’t been all apple pie and ice cream. We’ve had hard conversations over the years,” Sullivan said of his core. “I couldn’t be more humbled to continue to get to coach these guys. I just think the world of them. It’s hard to keep a team together in sports. That’s what I think is so great about this circumstance.”
The Fenway Group, the Penguins’ new owners, didn’t balk at approving new contracts for Letang and Malkin. Neither did general manager Ron Hextall, who sought to build around the veteran stars as they play out the rest of their years in Pittsburgh.
“In a perfect world, Geno retires a Penguin. And I think Tanger’s the same,” Hextall said before free agency. “These two are generational players. They don’t come along very often.”
Rust believes the Penguins’ recent playoff performances made Hextall’s call easier.
“There’s such a fine line in the playoffs between winning and losing. There are some years when you get in when you can just tell,” he said. “You’re getting dominated and you’re like, ‘OK, maybe we need to make some changes.’ But you could see not just last year, but the year before, that those were series we could have and should have won. Management saw that too.”
On paper, they were opening-round failures: a six-game loss to the New York Islanders after the COVID-shortened 56-game season in 2020-21, and a seven-game loss to the Rangers last postseason. Yet both series had mitigating circumstances.
The Islanders defeated the Penguins in a series that saw goalie Tristan Jarry implode, with backup Casey DeSmith unavailable to bail them out due to injury.
Against the Rangers, nothing went right for the Penguins. DeSmith was injured during a brilliant Game 1 performance, leaving the game in double overtime with a core muscle issue that put him out for the series. Jarry was out with an injury until Game 7, when he replaced the struggling Louis Domingue only to lose in overtime. Defenseman Brian Dumoulin and Rakell were both lost after Game 1, too.
Pittsburgh had a 3-1 series lead when a Jacob Trouba hit injured Crosby in Game 5, turning the series on its ear: The Rangers scored three goals in 2:42 to take the lead for good, and rallied with three straight wins to take the series.
“We had a good team. It didn’t go our way. We played some of our best hockey in the playoffs and we didn’t manage to win those series,” Letang said. “We had the team to make a run for it, but we didn’t get the bounces we needed. To take a run at it again was the right thing to do.”
That hunger thrives as part of the Penguins’ culture. Defenseman Jeff Petry, whom they acquired from Montreal, felt it immediately when he arrived for training camp.
“What those guys have together is special,” he said. “They’ve obviously been to the top. The thing I noticed is that’s not enough. They want to do it again.”
That’s why the band is back together: To make another push toward a fourth Stanley Cup in the Sidney Crosby era. They know there will be skepticism. Some will see this as a nostalgia play from a team that refuses to turn the page on past glory. Some will note that Father Time is undefeated and that the Penguins’ core has a combined age of 106 years old — the window to contend must close at some point.
But Sullivan and his players make the following counterargument: Gaze upon the past two postseasons and tell us that window isn’t still agape. Tell us that this band doesn’t have another chart-topper in it.
“When you look at those two series — and both of those opponents went to the conference finals — we felt good about our team,” Sullivan said. “Our core players were a big part of it. They’re providing evidence that there’s still elite play in them.
“We recognize that we’re getting older. But we’re not old. There’s a difference.”
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Sports
‘I get to be one of the funny trivia answers!’ Meet the only NHL teammate of Ovechkin and Gretzky
Published
3 hours agoon
January 9, 2025By
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Greg Wyshynski, Senior NHL writerJan 9, 2025, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Greg Wyshynski is ESPN’s senior NHL writer.
Wayne Gretzky scored 894 goals in 1,487 career NHL games. Alex Ovechkin is poised to shatter that record, having scored 872 times in 1,451 games through Wednesday night.
That’s a combined 2,938 career games played between the two players, sharing the ice with hundreds of teammates, spanning from Hall of Famers to one-night wonders. Yet there’s only one player in NHL history that was a teammate to both Wayne Gretzky and Alex Ovechkin.
His name is Mike Knuble, a winger who played 16 hardscrabble seasons in the NHL. And he was as surprised as you are to learn he’s the unexpected link between two hockey legends whose careers didn’t overlap.
“I get to be one of the funny trivia answers! Got to put that in Trivial Pursuit or a bar game or something,” he told ESPN recently, with a laugh.
As Ovechkin neared the Gretzky record, Knuble started wondering whether he was the only player to have skated with both the Washington Capitals star and The Great One as a teammate.
“I kind of was spitballing with somebody: ‘Well, who’s played in Washington and with the New York Rangers that’s also about my age?’ I’m like, ‘There’s nobody really. So maybe it’s just me,'” he said.
Knuble was a 26-year-old forward with the New York Rangers in 1998-99, the final season of Gretzky’s career. He played three seasons with Ovechkin in Washington (2009-10 through 2011-12) before finishing his career at age 40 with the Philadelphia Flyers.
“The fact that Ovi is nipping at Gretzky’s heels is just crazy,” Knuble said.
Gretzky was in his elder statesman era with the Rangers, and Knuble got to witness the mania when it was announced he was retiring after 20 seasons. But Knuble was the elder statesmen when he arrived in Washington to find a 24-year-rock star in Ovechkin, who had just won his first Hart Trophy and scoring title, as the face of the Capitals’ “Young Guns” resurgence.
“I just felt so fortunate to play with them. They’re both such superstars,” he said.
In the process, Knuble became someone uniquely qualified to compare, contrast and analyze the two greatest goal scorers in NHL history as teammates.
KNUBLE WAS DRAFTED 76th overall by the Detroit Red Wings in 1991. After four seasons at the University of Michigan, and some time in the AHL, he joined the Red Wings as a rookie in 1996-97.
Knuble was no goal-scoring slouch, tallying 278 times in 1,068 NHL games, but he had a different approach to that art than Gretzky or Ovechkin did: He was famous for parking himself inches from the goaltender’s crease and scoring short-distance goals while being mauled by opposing defensemen.
“[Hockey Hall of Famer] Dino Ciccarelli was the pioneer of that. He was undersized, under-gunned and got the s— beat out of him all the time,” Knuble said. “He scored 600 goals back when they could be really mean to you. I went [to the crease] when they weren’t as mean.”
Knuble chuckles when he sees goal-scoring heat maps in coaches’ offices that show an intense crimson around the crease.
“I’ll be talking to young players and I draw the East Coast of the United States. I draw Florida and then I draw Cuba and then a draw a big shark further away,” he said. “And I’m like, ‘If all the fish are right here between Florida and Cuba, why would you be swimming all the way over here if you’re a shark and you’re hungry? All the fish are right here! Go to where the fish are!'”
For most of the 1980s and 1990s, the fish were wherever Wayne Gretzky had the puck on his stick.
Knuble had never met Gretzky before, but he was a fan — not just as a kid growing up in Toronto, but as an adult playing in the NHL.
Before the 1998 Olympics, he cornered Red Wings captain Steve Yzerman in the weight room to sheepishly ask if he might bring home a signed Gretzky stick from Nagano, Japan. Knuble was stunned when Yzerman returned with a personalized autographed stick, the butt end burned with an Olympic logo that incorporated Gretzky’s initials into it.
A few months later, the Red Wings traded Knuble to the Rangers for a second-round draft pick. Which meant the guy asking for Wayne Gretzky’s autograph was now Wayne Gretzky’s teammate.
“You see his jersey and you see your jersey, and it’s the same color as his. And you’re just like, ‘Holy s— here we go,'” Knuble said. “I remember saying my hellos and then just sitting in my stall, not talking to him for a couple of weeks. I was quiet on the bus with him, too. I’d just sit and listen to his recollections about his time in Edmonton, dropping names and telling stories.”
Time with Gretzky away from the rink was fleeting. There were cities on the road where Gretzky could grab dinner with his teammates and not get mobbed — mostly “non-traditional” hockey markets, according to Knuble — but everywhere else, fans would swarm the most famous hockey player in the world.
“He’d give the time, but it wasn’t going to be too much time. He knew how to handle that balance,” he said.
Gretzky wasn’t a boisterous presence in the Rangers’ dressing room. That’s partially because the Rangers had other leaders to whom he would defer, such as captain Brian Leetch. “He wasn’t trying to outshine anyone. But everyone knew that when he wanted to say something, the floor was his,” Knuble said.
Knuble wasn’t a primary linemate for Gretzky during his time with the Rangers. He’d watch from the bench as The Great One operated from his office behind the opponent’s net, and wait for his chance to join the Gretzky scoring ledger.
“You’re just hoping that he scored and you got a point with him. You just want to hear your name linked with him,” said Knuble, who scored two goals assisted by Gretzky in 1998-99.
Those goals by Knuble were some of the final points collected by Gretzky in his legendary career. That season would be his last.
The Rangers weren’t going to make the playoffs that season. As the games dwindled on the schedule, the speculation about Gretzky’s future grew louder. Knuble remembers the Rangers players purposefully avoiding the topic inside the room, but then it happened: It was officially announced very late in the season that Gretzky would be retiring.
The Rangers’ next game after that announcement was at the Ottawa Senators on April 15, 1999.
“We were in Ottawa and the Canadian National Guard surrounded our hotel because it was his last game in Canada,” Knuble recalled. “I’ll never forget coming out of the hotel for the game and seeing guys with rifles.”
The hotel restricted access to guests only, having people show some form of ID to get into the lobby, which was still jam-packed with people trying to find Gretzky. The Rangers’ bus would park in front of the hotel, drawing all of the attention from fans as Gretzky found another exit.
“Wayne was always really good about going out the back door, sending diversion out in the front, and then he’d slip out,” Knuble said. “And I’m sure Alex got good at playing those games, too.”
KNUBLE CURRENTLY COACHES teenage hockey players in Michigan. They know about his NHL career. They’ll ask whether he has Alex Ovechkin in his phone contacts list.
“I’ll show it to them and tell them that he’s probably changed his number like eight times. But go ahead and call him. Go knock yourselves out,” he said, laughing. “But I’m super proud to have it. The kids appreciate that. It’s a good cocktail party conversation, too.”
Knuble was in his third NHL season when he became Gretzky’s teammate. He was entering his 13th season when he signed with the Capitals as a free agent in 2009, having previously battled against Ovechkin & Co. as a member of the Flyers.
As much as he knew about Gretzky before becoming his teammate, Knuble knew little about Ovechkin before joining him.
“There was a little bit of mystery,” he said.
Ovechkin had scored 219 goals in his first four NHL seasons and would add another 50 goals to that total in Knuble’s first season in Washington. He skated fast, blasted more shots than anyone in the league and hit like a truck. He was a force of nature. Knuble said one of his biggest challenges as a teammate was not to be in awe of Ovechkin’s abilities.
“As a player you had to be very careful that you didn’t defer to him too much. You knew what he could do, but it wasn’t like ‘force it, force it, force it’ to him all the time,” he said. “I think you had to get him the puck when you could and do some of the legwork. But when you had a chance — and you were in a high-end, high percentage scoring area — you had to shoot the puck. You couldn’t defer all the time.”
Knuble assisted on 14 goals by Ovechkin during his 220 games with the Capitals.
“I think the biggest thing is you didn’t want to slow him down. He’s trending to be a hundred-point guy, and now you’re playing with him, you’re linked to him, you don’t want his percentage go down,” Knuble explained. “If he’s down to an 80-point pace, well, who are they going to point the finger at? It’s not because of him, it’s because of me. So you didn’t want to be that guy.”
Off the ice, the two didn’t spend much time together. Knuble was older and had children. Ovechkin hung with younger players, a crew who all grew up together on the Capitals. Knuble understood the dynamics.
“When I was in Detroit, it wasn’t like I was hanging out with Yzerman. You’re with your peers,” he said. “Maybe there’s the odd time you end up at the same restaurant or you have a team event where you hang out, but your boys are your boys.”
As he watched Ovechkin continue to pile on goals, playing with a variety of teammates — Knuble, for the record, thinks Ovechkin might already have the record if Nicklas Backstrom could have remained healthy — he figured Ovechkin had a shot at catching Gretzky if his body cooperated.
“If he stayed healthy, with the way he finishes … could he be second or third all-time? And then he stayed really healthy and kept playing well,” Knuble said. “He’s always been blessed with great health on the ice, where nothing super fluky happened to him. The most impressive thing about him is his longevity.”
Ovechkin’s maturity was a factor in that longevity, according to Knuble.
“I think Alex has just stood the test of time a little bit. You’re a young guy, you kind of live hard on and off the ice, and then when you’re older you realize, ‘I can’t be doing this as much,'” he said.
Finally hoisting something other than an individual trophy also helped.
“I think winning a Stanley Cup was really big for him, too. I think that was a big feather in his cap. You don’t want to be a golfer that’s never won a major, you know?” Knuble said. “I think him winning the team thing was just basically the last box he needed to check.”
Ovechkin is now older (39) than Gretzky was (38) when Knuble played with him in New York. The Capitals captain has matured, but Knuble still sees that spark of youth in his game as he chases Gretzky’s record.
“It’s fun to see him just happy, see him in his joy,” he said. “I think when he was younger, the joy that carried him was the most noticeable thing. Eventually you get older and the joy settles down a little bit, but still he plays with so much of it.”
KNUBLE ADMITS THAT Ovechkin and Gretzky are “different in the way they do their things,” but share one key similarity: the way the understood their responsibilities in selling the sport they love.
“Wayne was very good at being an ambassador of the game. He knew that it’s super inconvenient for him, but he’s going to do it with a smile on his face. He’s not going to bitch about it. It’s his job to move the game forward,” he said. “Alex is pretty good about that stuff too. And it was hard for him. He’s not a North American, but certainly Alex has been a great ambassador of the game here.”
Part of being an ambassador of the game is inspiring subsequent generations to pick up a stick or watch a game. Knuble said both players accomplished that during their careers.
“They’ve both been so good to the game, to the NHL and great role models for kids,” he said. “Wayne revamped the game in his way. And then Ovi revamped it again with his way — a little more flash, a little more flare. We all copied Wayne and then kids today copied Ovi.”
There have been other all-time players who starred in their respective eras, from Mario Lemieux to Sidney Crosby to Connor McDavid. But Knuble believes there’s something different about the way Gretzky and Ovechkin have broken through as sports celebrities.
“People coast to coast in the United States know who [Ovechkin] is, and what more can you ask for, especially as a hockey player?” he said. “You go to California and you can be on the beach there playing volleyball and be like, ‘Who’s Alex Ovechkin?’ And they’ll be like, ‘Oh, that Russian dude in D.C., right? Hockey player?’ If you can get that kind of thing, then that’s a successful athlete.”
As Knuble watches the Ovechkin record chase unfold, his thoughts are with Gretzky. He believes The Great One has shown exemplary class in watching an all-time mark potentially fall. Like Gordie Howe did when Gretzky chased his records, Gretzky has blessed Ovechkin’s own record pursuit.
“Wayne’s such an ambassador, saying, ‘Hey, I can’t wait to see this come to fruition. I can’t wait to see him chase it down. I’m going to be there and be thrilled for him when the time comes.’ And that’s not a lie. That’s not bulls—. And it’s just great,” Knuble said. “The league is thrilled that another generational player has come through. It’s just crazy that this even remotely had a chance to happen.”
Almost as crazy as an NHL veteran who kicked around with five different franchises being the only player to have called the top two goal scorers in league history as his teammates.
“I was on the ice with both. Got sticks signed by both. Got to say that I spent with each of them,” he said. “Again, I just feel so fortunate.”
Sports
NASCAR asks judge to dismiss antitrust lawsuit
Published
15 hours agoon
January 8, 2025By
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Associated Press
Jan 8, 2025, 06:30 PM ET
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR went before a federal judge Wednesday and asked for the antitrust suit filed against the stock car series to be dismissed. Should it proceed, NASCAR asked that the two teams suing be ordered to post a bond to cover fees they would not be legally owed if they lose the case.
NASCAR also asked U.S. District Judge Kenneth Bell of the Western District of North Carolina to dismiss chairman Jim France as a defendant in the suit filed by 23XI Racing, a team co-owned by NBA Hall of Famer Michael Jordan, and Front Row Motorsports, which is owned by entrepreneur Bob Jenkins.
Bell promised a fast ruling but indicated he was unlikely to dismiss the suit when he closed the 90-minute hearing. The calendar he set when he received the case last month calls for a December trial.
“This case is going to be tried this year, and deserves to be tried this year,” Bell said.
Bell replaced Judge Frank Whitney, who heard the first round of arguments in early November. The teams went before Whitney and asked to be recognized as chartered teams this year as the suit progresses, but Whitney denied the motion.
The teams appealed and the case was transferred to Bell, who overruled Whitney and granted an injunction that allow 23XI and Front Row to compete with charter recognition throughout the 2025 season. That led NASCAR to request the teams post a bond to cover all the payouts they will receive as chartered teams as collateral should the teams lose the case.
NASCAR and the teams that compete in the top Cup Series operate with a franchise system that was implemented in 2016 in which 36 cars have “charters” that guarantee them a spot in the field at every race and financial incentives. There are four “open” spots earmarked for the field each week.
The teams banded together in negotiations on an improved charter system in a contentious battle with NASCAR for nearly two years. NASCAR in September finally had enough and presented the teams with a take-it-or-leave-it offer that had to be signed same day — just 48 hours before the start of the playoffs.
23XI and Front Row were the only two teams out of 15 who refused to sign the new charter agreement. They then teamed together to sue NASCAR and France, arguing as the only stock car entity in the United States, NASCAR has a monopoly and the teams are not getting their fair share of the pie.
Both organizations maintained they would still compete as open cars, but convinced Bell last month to give them chartered status by arguing they would suffer irreparable harm as open cars. Among the claims was that 23XI driver Tyler Reddick, last year’s regular season champion, would contractually become an immediate free agent if the team did not have him in a guaranteed chartered car.
Bell peppered both sides with questions regarding payout structures, what harm NASCAR would suffer if the teams were open cars and other issues.
“Why give a charter to anyone?” he at one point asked NASCAR.
Replied NASCAR attorney Christopher Yates, of Latham & Watkins: “NASCAR would be perfectly fine going back to that (pre-charter) model.”
Bell admitted he doesn’t normally hear motions to dismiss but did Wednesday because “we’ve got to get this case moving.” He later said he felt the hearing was beneficial as he was able to “size up” the attorneys and they could do the same with him.
Bell also warned both sides to work together to avoid disputes and promised the losing side will pay the fees for the discovery portion of the case.
With all indications that Bell is not going to dismiss the suit, it appears the only suspense will be if he orders the teams to post bond before the season begins next month. NASCAR argued Wednesday that it needs that money earmarked because it would be redistributed to the chartered teams if 23XI and Front Row lose.
Jeffery Kessler, considered the top antitrust lawyer in the country, argued that NASCAR has made no such promise to redistribute the funds to other teams. Kessler said NASCAR told teams it was up to NASCAR’s discretion how it would use the money and didn’t rule out spending some on its own legal fees.
Jordan and Jenkins attended the first hearing but were not present Wednesday. Only 23XI co-owner Denny Hamlin was present, along with his fiancee and mother. France and vice chairman Mike Helton were in the gallery with NASCAR’s in-house legal counsel and members of the communications team.
Sports
Portal QB Van Dyke picks SMU for his third stop
Published
21 hours agoon
January 8, 2025By
adminFormer Wisconsin/Miami quarterback Tyler Van Dyke has committed to SMU, agent Shawn O’Dare of Rosenhaus Sports announced Wednesday.
The fifth-year quarterback entered the transfer portal after appearing in three games this fall during his debut season with the Badgers before sustaining a season-ending injury against Alabama on Sept. 14.
Van Dyke, a three-year starter at Miami from 2021 to 2023, has 7,891 career passing yards and 55 career touchdown passes and has one year of eligibility remaining. He was ranked by ESPN as the 25th best quarterback in the transfer portal.
With 33 career games played, the 6-foot-4, 225-pound passer was one of the most experienced quarterbacks available in the 2024 portal cycle.
Benched in his final season at Miami in 2023, Van Dyke arrived at Wisconsin last offseason and was named the Badgers’ starting quarterback on Aug. 14 after a camp competition with sophomore Braden Locke. Van Dyke completed 43 of 68 passes for 422 yards and a touchdown in three starts to open the 2024 season, but he was sidelined for the rest of the season after sustaining a knee injury on the opening drive of Wisconsin’s 42-10 loss to Alabama in Week 3.
The 2025 season will mark Van Dyke’s sixth in college football. He first burst onto the scene at Miami in 2021, taking over for injured D’Eriq King and throwing for 2,931 yards with 25 touchdowns and six interceptions on his way to ACC Rookie of the Year honors.
But Van Dyke’s next two seasons with the Hurricanes were marred by injury and turnover struggles, headlined by a 2023 campaign in which Van Dyke threw a career-high 12 interceptions and was benched in favor of backup Emory Williams before regaining the starting role after Williams sustained a season-ending injury.
ESPN’s Eli Lederman contributed to this report.
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Bank of England’s extraordinary response to government policy is almost unthinkable | Ed Conway