Detroit breakthrough brings a ‘huge sense of relief’ for WTRAndretti

Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque have been racing partners for four years, and have achieved much during that time. And there’s no denying the winning history of Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti in its various guises over the years – …

Ricky Taylor and Filipe Albuquerque have been racing partners for four years, and have achieved much during that time. And there’s no denying the winning history of Wayne Taylor Racing with Andretti in its various guises over the years — championships, Rolex 24 At Daytona victories, Sebring wins … Wayne Taylor is one of the most successful owners in IMSA’s recent history.

There’s also no denying that 2023 was a rough year for the team. Running a single Acura ARX-06 in the first year of the new GTP formula, WTRAndretti suffered a rare winless year, although there was still a chance for a championship heading into Motul Petit Le Mans. Until the team won at Sebring with the second car it added for 2024 with Jordan Taylor, Louis Delétraz and Colton Herta, the most recent victory was at Road America in 2022. That was the last win for Ricky Taylor and Albuquerque.

Until Saturday. And not only did they win, they won it in WTR style, with a ballsy pass for the lead, courtesy of Ricky. Albuquerque had put the No. 10 in position with a fantastic start, and Ricky Taylor sealed the victory despite the apparent overwhelming strength of Porsche Penske Motorsport.

Winning the Chevrolet Sports Car Classic on the streets of downtown Detroit — and, no, the irony of Acura winning in Detroit while Cadillac took the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach this year was not lost on them — ended a 21-month drought for Taylor and Albuquerque. That meant something.

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“Filipe and I have been together for … this our fourth year,” said Ricky following the Detroit victory. “We’ve had a lot of success together and the 10 car was on a roll for our first three years together. We’ve had a really rough last year and a half. Really struggling, haven’t had a win in a long, long time, and it seemed like nothing could go our way. I think first of all everybody at [Honda Racing Corporation], Wayne Taylor Racing Andretti worked really hard to kind of put us back in the game. Street courses were not our thing. This year we haven’t been fighting really for wins outside of Sebring, and they turned it around here.

“We had we had performance in qualifying — it looked like Filipe and Jordan [Taylor] could have been fighting for a top three very easily. And then at the start of the race, starting from fourth on such a tight track, it’s so difficult to pass we thought a podium would be a bit of a win.”

This is a team and driver pairing that has gone into the finale solidly in the championship fight for the last three years, to the point that finishing a single position ahead of its championship rival would have garnered a title. And for three years they’ve missed that target. But race victories were always on the table, and always a check in the achievement column until last year. But not standing on the top step of the podium didn’t break them; it only made them more determined.

“It’s almost like in a family when you are struggling… in a family when something goes wrong, you just get more united,” said Albuquerque. “Head down; be more humble. Look at details and try to motivate each other on the bad days. So many times we would deserve to win, but things were not coming our way. Just comforting each other — never lose that faith, sticking even more together and knowing that the tables will turn and it’s just around the corner. We just never stopped believing it and I think that’s what happened.”

Albuquerque is no stranger to winning races. And while this one wasn’t one of the “big ones,” it definitely meant something, to the point that it nearly brought him to tears.

“I think this moment just made our team, our Konica Minolta 10 car just stronger. I nearly cried. I mean, it’s just a race … but it felt like almost like winning the 24 hours of Le Mans or Daytona, just because it’s so special. We’ve been suffering so much … I’m not saying unfair but it’s sometimes like we would deserve definitely some wins, but things didn’t come our way. But today came to our side and I’m just super happy that it’s out of the way and now I think it’s the relief of going forward.”

Albuquerque (left) and Ricky Taylor had to wait a long time for this one… Brett Farmer/Motorsport Images

The gap between victories shouldn’t have been that big. Long Beach in 2023 should have gone their way, but a slight miscue during the single pit stop and driver change scuttled their chances. The team learned from its mistakes and made some changes. On Saturday, the single pit stop in the 100-minute race went perfectly.

“The guys nailed the pit stop with the driver change … the driver changes aren’t about the drivers – we can only mess it up – they nailed the pitstop and all the little details went well,” explained Taylor. “Filipe had an amazing start. Without any little detail of that happening the way it did, we don’t win the race. All the tiny decisions on the systems — the set up throughout the weekend understanding all of our practice without IndyCar rubber, and how it evolved…. I can name 100 things that led to the way that the car was and what led to us getting the win.”

Those are the details that make the difference between winning or being runner-up or missing the podium entirely. And finally the No. 10 notched a victory in GTP.

“It’s a huge sense of relief. Every weekend we keep saying we just need to put it together and it’s little details at this level where it separates wins from from being off the podium,” Taylor said. “One thing we can say is we’ve always done our best we’ve never sort of given up and motivation kept increasing, like it doesn’t go down when you stop winning — it keeps going up and we wanted to win more than ever coming in here.”

WNBA fines Angel Reese for failing to meet media responsibilities

Angel Reese was fined $1,000 by the WNBA after she didn’t make herself available to the media following Saturday’s loss.

Former LSU women’s basketball star and Chicago Sky rookie [autotag]Angel Reese[/autotag] has been fined $1,000 by the WNBA for failure to meet her media responsibilities.

Reese and the Sky lost by one point on Saturday night to fellow rookie Caitlin Clark and the Indiana Fever. Following the game, Reese apparently did not make her self available to the media, in violation of her contract.

The league also fined the Sky $5,000 for failing to ensure all players meet their media responsibilities.

Reese finished the 71-70 loss with 13 rebounds, marking just the second double-figure rebounding game of her career. But she managed just eight points on 2 of 9 shooting.

In seven games, Reese is averaging 10.6 points and 8.9 rebounds, including 5.6 offensive boards per game. Her field-goal percentage, which sits at 35.3%, has been the subject of some scrutiny, however.

She’ll take the court again on Tuesday as Chicago hosts the New York Liberty.

Contact/Follow us @LSUTigersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Louisiana State news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Tyler to continue the conversation on Twitter: @TylerNettuno

Eagles make a list of the NFL’s nine most improved teams ahead of 2024 NFL season

Philadelphia Eagles make a list of the NFL’s nine most improved teams

The Eagles are loaded after an offseason reboot that saw changes to both coordinators, a roster overhaul on defense, and the addition of an elite running back.

Teams with a Super Bowl-caliber roster don’t usually make the most improved list, but Philadelphia has done precisely that after free agency and an A+ NFL draft.

NFL.com’s Jeffri Chadiha listed the nine most improved teams around the league, and the Eagles landed high on the list.

Having Kellen Moore calling plays on offense and Vic Fangio running the defense will make Nick Sirianni’s job as head coach much easier. The signing of running back Saquon Barkley gives the offense another dynamic weapon while the defense added a disruptive edge rusher in Bryce Huff (to replace Haason Reddick) and a critical leader in the secondary (safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson returns to the team after a spending last year in Detroit). Philadelphia also killed it in the draft once again. The squad needed more help for a woeful pass defense and ultimately landed two stellar defensive backs with its first two picks (Quinyon Mitchell and Cooper DeJean).

Lockerroom chemistry and consistency at the linebacker position are the most significant remaining question marks for a team that should make the postseason for the fourth straight season under head coach Nick Sirianni.

Linebacker Jerome Baker likely out until training camp for Seahawks

Linebacker Jerome Baker likely out until training camp for Seahawks

The Seattle Seahawks are going to field plenty of new faces in 2024, especially on defense. During free agency, linebackers Bobby Wagner and Jordyn Brooks were both allowed to sign with the Commanders and Dolphins, respectively. Replacing them were Tyrell Dodson and Jerome Baker.

Unfortunately, Baker is having a bit of a health concern at the moment. One of the newest additions to the Seahawks is battling some injuries, and is going to be away for a while. Head coach Mike Macdonald explained to the media the status of Baker for the time being.

Baker had wrist surgery right before he signed a one-year, $7 million dollar contract with Seattle. Being able to get Baker healthy and back into the lineup will be critical for a Seahawks defense looking to improve from being among the worst in football for two-straight seasons now.

If Baker is unable to go, perhaps the potential future at inside linebacker for rookie Tyrice Knight could be coming a lot sooner than anticipated.

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ESPN releases FPI rankings for 2024 college football season, where is Duke?

ESPN released its Football Power Index for the 2024 season and weighed in on preseason expectations in the ACC and across the country.

ESPN released its preseason Football Power Index rankings for the 2024 college football season this week, finally calculating its expectations for the first year of the [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] era.

The Blue Devils finished with an FPI rating of 2.3, projecting them as the 52nd-best team in the country and the 10th-best team in the ACC. The formula gives Duke a projected record of 6.1-6.0 (the 12.1 total likely comes down to rounding) and a 60.3% chance to go bowling.

After back-to-back seasons with at least eight wins, the projection sounds a little tepid, but with a new head coach and a transfer quarterback, it makes sense that FPI is hesitant on such unknowns.

However, the rankings seem low on the ACC as a whole. No teams in the conference finished in the top 10, including defending champion Florida State after an undefeated regular season in 2023.

Check out Duke Wire’s early ACC power rankings for the 2024 college football season here.

By little surprise, the Georgia Bulldogs took the top spot after winning two of the last three national championships. Oregon, Texas, Ohio State, and Alabama rounded out the rest of the top five.

Exclusive Q&A: Joe Ogilvie on the PGA Tour’s future, the Saudi deal, and boardroom strife

Ogilvie sat down with Golfweek for a wide-ranging interview on the eve of the one-year anniversary of the controversial Framework Agreement with the Saudis.

In 14 seasons on the PGA Tour, Joe Ogilvie made 399 starts and notched one win before quitting a decade ago to become a money manager. Yet his impact seems destined to exceed his résumé after his recent appointment to the Tour’s Policy Board and to the board of the new for-profit entity, PGA Tour Enterprises. He is the eyes, ears (and perhaps the brain) of the Tour’s player-directors, and was also named to the committee that will directly negotiate with the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund.

In a wide-ranging interview on the eve of the one-year anniversary of the controversial Framework Agreement with the Saudis, Ogilvie talks about boardroom dysfunction, Jon Rahm’s miscalculation, Jay Monahan’s job performance, and how private equity might radically reshape the Tour.

Joe Ogilvie: Obviously I played for 15 years and was previously a board member. I’ve kept my eye on the game. When the Framework Agreement happened, I started to get a lot of calls. As we were starting to look at private equity, I was asked to write a letter just to say, hey, what are we looking at? Do we own the Tour? I was on the board of the Tour and when you’re trying to play with the best in the world and also trying to be a part of the governance structure, it’s a big learning curve. They don’t send you to Wharton to take a 3-day course on how to be a director. You’re thrown into it. I think my 10 years away from the game managing money and looking at companies, you learn a lot. Having business experience as well as player experience, I can translate both worlds. I think the players looked at that like it’s a valuable skill.

Enterprises is where the cash flow is going to go through, but Inc. is a huge part because they own about 88%, 88.4% of the business. Something like that. The way it happens is the money waterfalls down, 88.4% or whatever Inc. owns, they get that amount of the cash flow and that’s paid out as purses. The Enterprise board will have an outsized influence over the business. And I think Inc. has been somewhat, well, I guess a kind word would be dysfunctional. The Enterprise board is the one that’s making a lot of the decisions for the business.

Yeah, that is a fair statement. In retrospect, if you had a big mulligan you’d certainly handle the Framework Agreement differently. I think everybody involved would say they bungled the rollout of that. If you’d have had a kind of mea culpa and all got in a room and said we botched this, if everyone had humility. It’s really unfortunate because the independent directors — I mean, I’ve seen stories about how much they’re making, things like that. It’s the only board where I guarantee you it’s costing them a quarter of a million dollars a year to serve. They don’t get paid. A lot of them fly privately. They’re paying that cost. The PGA Tour doesn’t pay that cost. These are great businessmen and women that love the game and they’re lending their expertise to the PGA Tour. It was basically a very closed decision-making process on doing the Framework Agreement. It was almost unrecoverable from there. Something had to give once there wasn’t a two-week therapy session between the board. I don’t know if that’s the right way to term it, but it never happened. Humility goes a long way and I don’t think there was a whole lot of humility. That’s my take. I wasn’t involved in those discussions, but it did get divided. There were massive trust issues and once you lose trust, it’s incredibly hard to earn back.

Unfortunately, I think long-term it probably helps. Jimmy’s a force of nature and a highly-regarded figure in golf and investment banking. A legend. I think it was handled very poorly to not bring other board members in. The fact that he broke through that wall and actually started discussions will probably be looked at very kindly. But him going off the board was I think very helpful.

Obviously, you’re talking about [board chair] Ed Herlihy. I don’t know what Ed wants to do. His term as chair ends in November. He was a big part of ending the litigation, which is incredibly helpful. That’s his biggest service to the organization because that was just incredibly expensive and it would seem to be never-ending.

When the PGA Tour negotiated investment from Strategic Sports Group, there was a lot of heavy lifting that went into that agreement. That would probably be the basis for any other investor to come in now, whether they have to pay more or whatever. The basic structure is more or less the same. Keep in mind, in the year since the Framework Agreement the Department of Justice has come down on companies that have board representation with a conflict, where they had ownership stakes in companies that could be perceived as a competitor. You have that situation if the [Saudi Arabian} Public Investment Fund invested in the PGA Tour. Clearly with LIV, they’re a competitor. So there’s some nuances to it, but I think with that SSG deal a lot of the heavy lifting has already been done.

Patrick’s obviously a voice. When he speaks, and he doesn’t speak very often, he carries a lot of weight. But I’ve only been on the board since May 9th. Patrick is incredibly detail-oriented. I joked with him one time that if he wasn’t a professional golfer he could be a distressed debt investor and probably make more money. He remembers facts and he’s a bulldog. He has strong opinions. I’ve read what’s been said, about he’s controlling the board and all that kind of stuff. I don’t want to say it’s wildly inaccurate, but I would say it’s very inaccurate.

Under those circumstances, it was difficult. I realize Tiger Woods went on the board without a process, but the governance documents hadn’t been done yet. When Webb said he was going to resign and he was going to name his successor, there’s not a corporation in the world that would allow that to happen. Unless Webb was a 90% owner in the business. When you’ve been trying to fight for governance, under those circumstances, I think it was tough, no matter how important Rory McIlroy is. Rory’s opinion matters as much as any director in that room. I hope he eventually comes on the board.

It was a perfect first meeting. When we were going into the room, one of the big things was how do we address him? If we’re gonna address him as His Excellency, that’s just kind of weird. He comes in the room, shakes everyone’s hand, and looks you right in the eye and says, ‘My name is Yasir. Please call me Yasir.’ I had heard that he’s a nice man and that he loves the game of golf, and nothing told me otherwise after meeting him. It would be naive to think that we’re going to come out of that meeting with a handshake deal and say, ‘We’re done here.’  It was a very good meeting and you could see that there was a mutual respect between he and Jay, which is also good.

That was not raised.

When you do a deal with a partner, you want to know who you’re dealing with. I think it’s really difficult in a global economy. You certainly want great values and everything else. But cultures and countries evolve. And they don’t evolve as fast as sometimes we want them to evolve.

Yeah, I know. Look, it’s a very messy world. You hope things evolve. That society has by any measure gotten better. It’s better now than it was 10 years ago. It was better 10 years ago than it was 20 years ago. And I’m assuming it will be better 10 years from now. You can’t paralyze yourself. You can’t expect perfection. You just want things to evolve in a better way. And I think that’s obviously what the kingdom wants to do. They will get there, or they will have to get there because tourism is a big part of their push. If they don’t, it’s going to be very difficult to achieve their vision.

I think everybody in golf wants to figure it out. I mean, the PGA Championship was fantastic. Bryson put on a show, Xander obviously put on a show. It was better when everybody is playing the same events. So there’s a huge incentive to figure this thing out, and there’s a huge incentive on their side as well. I think they wanna do a deal. As far as SSG, they committed to $3 billion. I think that they committed with the hope that there would be another investor, specifically the PIF. There’s plenty of capital on their side, so I think that they would be happy to put in more. Now, it’s obviously harder to put in capital when you’ve got someone with deep pockets that is willing to lose a lot of money. That’s a tough thing to juxtapose. So we’ll see. I’m hopeful that something can happen. I think everybody wants it to happen, which is a prerequisite.

It doesn’t. It was certainly shocking. It was a negotiating tactic to take a player like Jon, and for Jon to go. That was definitely a shot across the bow.

It doesn’t help. It certainly doesn’t help. And that’s a sticking point. Guys that stayed loyal now have equity in the PGA Tour. Did they get as much money as if they would have gone to LIV? No. However, it’s a very valuable security. They are owners. It takes some of the sting out, but we’re going to have to figure that part out. If we were to come to a deal, those problems could be ironed out. But not everybody’s gonna be happy with the way they’re ironed out.

I don’t. I don’t think it’s much different than being a new parent. It’s a fundamental difference. We’re only approaching three months into this so there’ll be growing pains. Tour players have been through a lot in the last two years. They will see some changes. I don’t know what those will be.  Not only players but don’t forget our employees as well. Private equity expects a return. You can get a return by growing revenues, you can get a return by reducing expenses. It’s not all going to be reduction. It’s going to be growing a business. For this to work, we’ve got to grow the game of golf and grow the PGA Tour in the right way. So for the vast majority of Tour players, their job is still gonna be the same — go out and try to shoot 66.

That’s probably likely. You’re seeing it now, right? A Q-school guy will probably only get into 14 or 15 500-point events [non-Signature tournaments in the FedEx Cup schedule]. You’re behind the eight ball. It’ll be interesting. Next week, you’ve got the Memorial, then the U.S. Open and then the Travelers. The average guy will not play for three straight weeks. Everybody that I’ve listened to from the player side said, look, if you’re gonna call me a Tour player, I wanna be a Tour player. But maybe I’m not a PGA Tour player. Maybe I’m a Korn Ferry Tour player. Just tell me what I am and be honest about it. So I think you’re probably likely to have a reduction in the number of wholly exempt players.

I don’t know. It depends on a lot of different factors. What does the fall look like? We have a lot of tournaments in the fall that signed up when they were in the FedEx Cup season and now it’s different. So I don’t know that answer. That could be talked about. The 2025 schedule, there’s not going to be a whole lot of change. 2026 is when you’ll start seeing some change.

Clearly, you want to get to a place where the best are playing against each other more often. Our sponsors want that, our fans certainly want that, our network partners want it. Everybody wants that. So how does that work? Maybe it’s domestically and maybe it’s internationally. I think you’ve got opportunity in the fall. And to help the DP World Tour as well. They’re our partners and the DP World Tour can be a bridge in this, especially from a fall standpoint. If we can get it where there’s a peaceful co-existence, some of the rhetoric’s out and instead of talking about how much money a guy won on Sunday, they talk about a trophy. Money’s been talked about ad nauseam. I’m watching the Canadian Open right now. I can tell you that Mackenzie Hughes doesn’t care how much money they’re playing for. Same thing with Bobby MacIntyre and Ben Griffin and Ryan Fox. They want that trophy and hopefully that is recognized again sooner rather than later.

Six out of the last 10 weeks ratings have actually gone up. The sport of golf is in a good spot. You’re seeing massive uptake in women and junior golfers. The only people we’re seeing playing fewer rounds are Irish journalists.

But that normally translates. It may not translate right away, but I think professional golf should be in a pretty darn good place. The narrative that nothing’s going on and nothing’s getting done will be firmly retired in the next four months. You’re going to see a lot of energy out of Ponte Vedra Beach about what the future of professional golf is gonna look like.

Jay kind of got on his back foot with the Framework Agreement rollout being challenged but Jay is a survivor. He’s got a huge amount of respect from his team. The players over time went from, ‘Let’s get rid of this guy’ to ‘This is the guy who’s gonna lead us.’  He’s incredibly good when he’s engaged with sponsors, he’s incredibly good one-on-one with the guys. I think he wishes he had a one-year mulligan, It was obviously an incredibly stressful time. He might get the Comeback Player of the Year award.

Yeah, he does. Jay is uniquely suited to accomplish the goals of not only what SSG wants, but what the players want. He’s got the respect of other leaders of the game and I think he’s got the respect of the PIF.

I don’t think they want to run the business, I really don’t. They want to be in the room where it happens and they want a say on what goes on between the ropes, if there’s anything that’s going to affect their livelihoods. Like, you’ve gotta go play certain places, certain times a year. But I haven’t seen that they want to actually run the business. They look at Arthur Blank, at Joe Gorder, at John Henry and Sam Kennedy and Andy Cohen and they’re like, okay, these guys have run businesses, they own sports teams, they’ve seen what works and what doesn’t work. And we’re gonna take a lot of their suggestions, the vast majority of them. Some of them we’re probably not taking because they haven’t been in the game of golf and there’s some traditions in the game that are sacrosanct. Generally speaking, they know who the businessmen are in the room and they want to listen to them. That’s the way it should work.

Obviously, the business would be better if that was the case.

I don’t think it’s likely to happen in the next year or two, but you never say never. Is there a way to do it so while they’re not contracted, there are certain obligations? Maybe. If I have my business hat on, yeah, I want these guys to play as much as possible, and I want to make sure that I have at least x amount of top 10 players in the world playing every week. That would be ideal. If they played too much they’re gonna be injured at a much higher clip, so there’s a give and take.

They’ll start to see it hopefully by the playoffs, but if not they’ll definitely see it — well, the next time they see it on network television will be next year. But they will see it. I mean, if we are still talking about money or if that’s the dominating question in golf next year, we’ve failed miserably as a board. Hopefully that will go away. Max Homa was the guy who said let’s do the walk and talk, and now you’re seeing that in a major championship, which is kind of amazing. I realize social media can amplify anything, but players are talking about it, media is talking about it and I can tell you that Jay Monahan and certainly SSG and the board members are talking about it. So you’re gonna see more things. Hopefully these guys play together more often, and hopefully you’ll start to see it in ’25 and moreso in ’26.

Best NASCAR Betting Promos | Score $6000+ in Bonuses for Enjoy Illinois 300 at Gateway

New customers can use the best NASCAR betting promos to land more than $6K in bonuses that you can use on Sunday’s Enjoy Illinois 300 at Gateway.

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Believe it or not, we’re more than halfway through the NASCAR Cup Series’ regular season. Starting with Sunday’s Enjoy Illinois 300 at Gateway just outside St. Louis, there are just 12 more races until the NASCAR Cup Playoffs begin. If you’re thinking about betting on Sunday’s fun in Madison, Illinois, then you should capitalize on at least one of the special NASCAR betting promos created just for new customers.

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Best NASCAR Betting Promos: FanDuel Promo Code

Before we dive into FanDuel’s welcome offer, let’s make this official: You’re allowed to sign up for as many of these opportunities as you want. Now, here’s the scoop on FanDuel. When you launch an account with the FanDuel promo code, you’ll claim $150 in bonus bets if you win your $5 first bet.

To win that $5 first bet, put the odds in your favor and find a prohibitive favorite in a sport like tennis or soccer or Australian Rules football. For example, Geelong is -1200 on the moneyline to defeat Richmond in an early Saturday morning match.

If your $5 first bet wins, then your $150 in bonus bets shows up within 72 hours. Once it arrives, enjoy this cool wrinkle: FanDuel allows you to chop up your $150 into as many bonus bets as you want. If your favorite number is three, for example, why not make 50 $3 bets or three $50 bets?

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Use the Best NASCAR Betting Promos for Enjoy Illinois 300 at Gateway Betting

Current forecasts suggest only a small chance of showers and thunderstorms for Sunday’s Enjoy Illinois 300, which would be a welcome change from last week’s weather that cut short the Coca-Cola 600. Not that Christopher Bell is complaining about it — he jumped into fourth place in the NASCAR Cup standings while claiming his second win of the year.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the guys ahead of Bell in the season-long standings are the guys listed as the favorites to win the Enjoy Illinois 300. If you scan the nation’s best sports betting apps, you’ll see Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson with the lowest odds to take the checkered flag on Sunday — with William Byron just behind them.

If you’re looking for a bit of an underdog, maybe take a look at Kyle Busch. Yes, we know he hasn’t won in a year — but his most recent victory happened exactly a year ago at Gateway. He claimed the pole, led the most laps and then held off Hamlin in overtime to earn the win.

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Fantasy football injury round-up: June edition

Checking in on key fantasy football injuries from around the NFL.

Keeping up with injuries entering the fantasy football draft season is tremendously important. While it may be early yet, gamers should follow along to avoid any potential mishaps. At a minimum, it never hurts to stay in the know, even if you don’t typically draft until August or September.

The most notable names from the traditional pool of skill players are in focus below. We’ll monitor their statuses throughout the summer and advise accordingly.

UNC pitchers enjoy much-needed Saturday bounceback against defending champs

Diamond Heel pitchers enjoyed quite the turnaround in Saturday’s Chapel Hill Regional nightcap.

The North Carolina Tar Heels’ unusually shaky bullpen nearly put them in the elimination bracket of their own regional Friday night.

Holding onto a 5-3 lead over Long Island University entering the eighth inning, UNC head coach Scott Forbes brought in star closer Dalton Pence to close things out.

LIU tied the game at five in the ninth, scoring two runs against Pence and opting Forbes to call for reliever Matt Poston. The Sharks took an 8-5 lead into the bottom of the ninth, striking fear and disbelief into the hearts of Tar Heel Nation.

Lucky for the Diamond Heels, their bats came alive in the home half of the ninth, with freshman Gavin Gallagher capping off a 6-run ninth inning by hitting a walk-off grand slam. With UNC now knowing it’d match up against LSU, one had to wonder if North Carolina’s pitching staff would hold up against a significantly stronger offense.

It certainly did.

On Saturday, June 1, a day after giving up eight runs to the now-eliminated NEC Champions, Diamond Heel pitchers allowed just two runs on seven hits. This was a crucial factor in UNC’s 6-2 victory, which advanced them to Sunday’s 6 p.m. Chapel Hill Regional Final.

Starter Shea Sprague’s outing lowered his earned run average to a team-best 3.76. Ben Peterson lowered his ERA to under 5.00, one of 11 North Carolina pitchers to do so, while Pence’s 2 2/3 no-hit innings solidified his back-of-the-bullpen spot.

The Diamond Heels will play either Wofford for the first time – or LSU again – on Sunday at 6 p.m.

Will the UNC pitching staff show up and push them into the Super Regional?

Follow us @TarHeelsWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of North Carolina Tar Heels news, notes and opinions

Updated top cap hits for Cardinals after June 1

The Cardinals have 14 contracts that will count at least $5 million against the salary cap in 2024.

The Arizona Cardinals gained nearly $16 million in salary cap space on Sunday when the release of tackle D.J. Humphries finally took effect. He was released in March but, for cap purposes, was given a post-June 1 release. As a result, they carried his contract through the start of June.

He held the second-highest cap charge on the team at $22.9 million.

But his contract is now off the books and the Cardinals have over $35 million in cap space, the fourth-most in the league, per Over the Cap at publishing.

Let’s take a look at the top cap hits on the team, all that are at least $5 million, including dead money hits.

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Spotify.