8 midseason superlatives of the Jaguars’ 2022 season

Who stood out most in the first half of the Jaguars’ 2022 season?

A strong start to the 2022 season for the Jacksonville Jaguars went south when the team lost five straight games in October. A Week 9 win against the Las Vegas Raiders reintroduced some hope, but the team is still 3-6 entering Week 10.

With nine weeks of the NFL season down and nine left go, who have been the standout players and what have been the best (and worst) moments of the season so far?

NASCAR Superlatives 2022: We polled drivers to see what they think of everyone else

For The Win polled NASCAR drivers to see what they think about their competitors on and off the track.

The 2022 NASCAR Cup Series season ended Sunday with Joey Logano winning his second championship after taking the checkered flag at Phoenix Raceway. And the end of the season means it’s time for For The Win’s annual NASCAR Superlatives.

Throughout the last several weeks, we polled 13 drivers with the same 10 questions about their competitors’ skills behind the wheel, as well as their personalities away from the track.

Obviously, there have been numerous examples this year of drivers being furious and frustrated with each other, but some of them are friends who have been racing against each other for a while. Our annual investigation reveals what some of them really think about each other.

Here’s what some of NASCAR’s top drivers had to say about each other this year. And if you’re curious about previous editions…

NASCAR Superlatives: 20212020, 2019, 2018, 2017

These answers have been condensed and edited for clarity.

1. Which driver who is not a champion will be a champion at some point?

(Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)

Daniel Suárez: You’re talking to him.

Joey Logano: Probably Ryan Blaney. I see the improvement he’s made over the last few years, and he’s got a ton of speed. So I’d say he’s getting closer and closer. He’s consistently in the Round of 8 every year for the last few, so I’d say he’s on the brink of making it to the Championship 4.

Bubba Wallace: Ryan Blaney.

Chase Elliott: Ryan Blaney.

Ryan Blaney: I don’t want to say myself because that would be too obvious of like, boosting your own ego. But obviously you want see yourself win a championship. Other than me, [William] Byron has been strong. Obviously, Denny Hamlin has kind of been on the verge of one for a long time.

Austin Cindric: It’s hard to not say Denny Hamlin. He’s come very close, and I think he’s probably the most realistic answer.

Ross Chastain: Ross Chastain.

Kyle Larson: William Byron. I feel like he’s very driven, very focused, works really hard and has a lot of talent, mentally is pretty tough. He just seems like a NASCAR champion.

Martin Truex Jr.: Christopher Bell.

Alex Bowman: William Byron.

Brad Keselowski: I’m going to say William Byron. He’s growing, he’s maturing, he’s with a great team. I think it will click, it just hasn’t yet.

William Byron: I’d first like to say myself, selfishly. There’s a lot of options there. Denny Hamlin comes to mind. If he’s not a champion really soon, I think he’ll be a champion, just the way that he is able to run consistently well. And I think he’s an intelligent race car driver and knows how to put himself in position towards the end of the year to have a chance to win in this format.

Harrison Burton: I think there’s a lot of good young guys that haven’t won one yet. But I think a good one would probably be William Byron. He’s been fast a lot, won a lot of races, so he’ll probably end up being [a champion] one day.

2. Which driver who hasn’t won the Daytona 500 will win it at some point?

(Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Suárez: Same question, same answer, me.

Chastain: Ross Chastain.

Wallace: Us! It’s funny, [Ryan] Blaney’s also had two or three second-place finishes, so we’re kind of tied on that scenario. But I’m gonna go with myself.

Elliott: Same guy for me, [Blaney]. He’s finished second about 10 times.

Blaney: Either myself or I think Chase Elliott. He runs pretty good at superspeedways.

Truex: [Laughs] I want to say me.

Bowman: Probably also William Byron.

Larson: Ryan Blaney, for sure. I think he’s just a really good superspeedway racer and is in contention a lot of times. All drivers, they’ll probably mostly say Ryan Blaney.

Cindric: Ryan Blaney.

Logano: Pick one, anyone could win.

Byron: I’d say Ryan Blaney because I think he’s really good at the superspeedway races. He’s always, always at the front. He’s very aggressive, knows how to make the right decisions and stuff. He’s been close already.

Burton: That’s a hard, hard race to win. I think Ryan Blaney will probably get one soon.

Keselowski: Shoot, the last three years, I’ve been in the top-3 in the last few laps and gotten wrecked or something’s happened. Just gotta keep [getting into position] and eventually it’ll happen.

3. Which driver has the best social media personality?

Suárez: Oh my god, you want to have the same answer for every question?

Blaney: [Kevin] Harvick’s been cracking me up here the last couple months, which has been fun to watch. He’ll get all sassy with everybody, and I get a good chuckle out of that. He and Hamlin have a really funny Twitter. I love waking up and seeing [Harvick] go on rants the next morning. I love reading all through it.

Bowman: Me or Noah Gragson.

Chastain: Not Ross Chastain. Pretty much anybody but [me]. I honestly don’t even have a good working knowledge of what people are posting.

Logano: Can I pick myself? I pick myself because I like cars.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CfaMwfjpZ0y/

Wallace: Depends on what you’re going for. First ones that come to mind are Denny, Kyle [Busch], myself.

Byron: I don’t think any of us are that great at it, I’ll be honest. Bubba comes to mind. He’s probably the most comfortable with social media, I would say, so his personality comes across. I would look at it as who’s the most authentic? Whose personality is really showing? And I think he’s the most authentic on there, speaks his mind.

Keselowski: I like Erik Jones. I like that he does the reading to the kids thing and all that. That’s pretty cool.

Larson: Probably Denny [Hamlin]. Over the last probably three or four or five years, he’s really stepped up, it seems, his social media stuff, and he’s pretty funny on there. He does do, I would say, a lot of it himself, but I know his social media guy, and he’s pretty witty with all that too.

Cindric: I don’t really like Twitter. I use it, but I don’t like it. I like Instagram a lot better. But I don’t know.

Burton: I don’t follow them all. So I don’t know. I would say my dad, Jeff Burton. He’s killing his Instagram game recently. For an old guy, he’s doing pretty good.

4. Which driver has the best sense of humor?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Truex: I got nothing.

Bowman: Definitely me. Dry as the desert.

Blaney: Bubba [Wallace] and Chase [Elliott]. I think you get different personalities out of people away from their job. It’s kind of hard to judge somebody from how they act at the race track or something because a lot of times, you’re you’re dead-set focused on the task at hand, and it’s hard to kind of really let loose or joke around too much. Everyone’s personality is very different away from the race track.

Wallace: Myself.

Chastain: Ryan Blaney. It’s dry, but I think I understand it though. Most people probably don’t.

Keselowski: Blaney. He’s just a fun guy to be around, and he’s chill.

Elliott: Skip.

Logano: This used to be the Clint Bowyer answer back in the day. Can I pick myself again? I can’t keep picking myself [laughs].

Cindric: Kevin Harvick has a pretty dry sense of humor, which I always enjoy. Sometimes it’s at the expense of something or someone else, but it’s Kevin Harvick.

Byron: Kyle Busch kind of has a pretty funny sense of humor. Like, when I drove for for [Kyle Busch Motorsports], I always thought he was kind of funny. He’s pretty brash, but it’s kind of funny sometimes because he’s so unfiltered.

Suárez: Probably Noah Gragson.

Burton: Todd Gilliland is the guy that probably makes me laugh the most in the garage. He’s a rookie, so I hang out with him quite a bit. And yeah, he’s funny as heck, that’s for sure.

Larson: The first name that came to my mind was Corey LaJoie. He’s really funny and quick.

NASCAR’s Noah Gragson won at Bristol, vomited and shotgunned a White Claw opened with a gladiator sword

5. Which driver is most likely to drop an f-bomb in a live TV interview?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: Typically, I’d say Kyle Busch, but he seems like he’s cleaned it up a little lately. Kevin [Harvick] is not likely anymore either. Those are two likely candidates back in the day. Bubba [Wallace] maybe?

Suárez: Probably me! I did that a few times after I won.

Cindric: Kyle Busch.

Keselowski: Yeah, probably Kyle Busch.

Chastain: Darrell Wallace.

Elliott: [Kevin] Harvick.

Byron: Oh, for sure [Kyle Busch]. I think that’s already happened. He’s for sure halfway there, if not already there.

Burton: Kyle Busch, I’d say it’s a good guess.

Truex: Kyle Busch.

Larson: Probably Noah Gragson.

Wallace: Noah Gragson.

Bowman: Noah Gragson.

Blaney: Man, I think any of us are capable of it. It’s just a matter of how upset you are. But I feel like that’s a big one to drop. I could see dropping a number of other cuss words, so you really have to mean it to drop that one. I could see Kyle Busch dropping one, but he hasn’t yet, I don’t believe, in his whole career, so maybe he won’t.

6. Which driver has had the most surprising season?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Truex: I would say Ross Chastain because they just consistently perform well, and they’re still a fairly new team.

Keselowski: Ross Chastain. He’s still in the final four, and I guess I probably didn’t see that coming.

Blaney: Chastain’s had a really good first year at Trackhouse. Not surprising, he’s doing well, but I think he’s, you know, run better than people have thought in his first year over there. Another one who I’m surprised hasn’t run better or won like they’re used to doing is [Martin] Truex.

Cindric: Daniel Suárez. He’s been in the sport for a while and, quite honestly, in very capable cars. And whether he’s grown or he’s in a great situation or he wasn’t in good situations before, I feel like it’s kind of his third attempt at being in a top team, and he’s done very well with it.

Wallace: Probably Briscoe. Obviously got that win at Phoenix [in the spring], and the Stewart-Haas [Racing] cars haven’t been that great all year. But the last 10 races, he’s gotten hot at the right time.

Byron: Definitely Ross Chastain. I assumed he would be a playoff contender, for sure, based on how he ran the 42. But I felt like it would just be a steady progression from last year and the 42 car. Those guys, as soon as the season started, have been contenders and been difficult and hard to beat basically a lot of tracks.

Suárez: My team as a whole — not just myself but my teammate as well. Trackhouse as a whole, more [successful] than most people expected. We are having some good success and that has been very, very good.

Bowman: Ross Chastain. I just didn’t see that much success coming this year. They’ve been really strong, and I know Ross is really good. I just didn’t expect them to do what they’ve done.

Logano: This whole year’s been a surprise. Kurt Busch is one who comes to my mind, not for good reasons. Obviously, the win early in the year was great, but his whole year is just a surprise probably to all of us.

Burton: Chase Briscoe is having a really good year. Not that it’s surprising, I guess, because he’s won a lot of races in Xfinity, but he’s done a really good job from last year to this year, making it as far as he has in the playoffs and getting good finishes when he hasn’t run well. I feel like there are days where he’ll run towards the back and then find a way to finish up front, which is really hard to do in this series.

Larson: Surprisingly good — great! — Ross Chastain. I knew he was going to be good. I wasn’t surprised to see them strong early in the year, but I thought that that team might tail off as the season got on. But they haven’t. Surprisingly not good — not that he hasn’t been great because he’s been in contention a lot — but Martin Truex. I’m just surprised that they haven’t won.

Chastain: Ross Chastain. I’ve never won races. I’d only finished in the top-5 three times in my career before this year, and now we’ve done it [15] times. Brand-new team, new ownership and two drivers that had never competed at the front consistently, and we’ve done that this year. I’m a [watermelon] farmer, so it’s surprising that I can drive a race car.

7. You’re leading the race and there are two laps left; which driver would you want behind you?

(Logan Riely/Getty Images)

Blaney: None of them. I don’t think you want any of them within a car length or two of you.

Logano: All of them.

Elliott: No one. I hope they’re far enough away or nobody’s close to you.

Wallace: I’ll go with Blaney.

Bowman: I don’t care.

Truex: Probably Kyle Busch, just because I know he’d race with respect. We have a good relationship, and we always race well together. Very, very hard racing, but clean and fair.

Byron: A teammate would be better than than others probably. So I’d say maybe Chase [Elliott] or Alex [Bowman] or Kyle [Larson]. Any of those three would be a good one to have.

Larson: I guess it depends on the race track, but I don’t I don’t really care. I guess any of them.

Suárez: For a comfortable situation, I’d say my teammate, Ross [Chastain].

Keselowski: Probably Chris Buescher. He’s a good teammate.

Burton: Another rookie, probably Todd Gilliland or Austin Cindric, I’d say, because I feel like we’re all in the same boat. So we’ll be in good shape there.

Chastain: Line ’em up however they want, doesn’t matter.

8. You’re leading the race and there are two laps left; which driver do you absolutely not want behind you?

(John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: I really don’t care. You’ve got to beat them all, so it doesn’t matter. Whoever, I don’t think it makes a difference, honestly. Everybody’s gonna be willing to do something to win a race, and what they’re willing to do is sometimes pretty fluid. I think you treat them all the same because you just don’t know.

Truex: I guess best chance of getting run into would be Joey Logano.

Elliott: I’m good with any of them, no issues.

Wallace: Let’s go with Logano.

Suárez: A driver that is in a must-win situation, that has a lot of pressure. Any of the drivers that are in the playoffs that are below the cutline, those guys, they have to do whatever they have to do. If I was in their position, I would do the same thing. Those guys, it’s not good to have them behind me because they will have to do dumb moves to do whatever they have to do to get the job done.

Keselowski: Probably Chase Briscoe. the last few times he’s been running second with like two or three laps to go, he’s wrecked the leader — in case you were wondering the rationale.

Bowman: Ross [Chastain] is just gonna ride the wall, so maybe not Ross.

Byron: Man, I don’t want any of them behind me. But I don’t think really any of them intimidate me, per se. I think some are more strategic than others. It just depends on the situation. I can’t pick one there.

Blaney: It doesn’t really matter. To me, you kind of understand and you race around guys enough to where you know who will be more aggressive than others. But this year, everyone’s been really aggressive, so you never know.

Burton: I think I don’t want Ross Chastain behind me because I feel like he’s gonna probably put me in a spot where I’m gonna either have to crash us both, or crash him to try and win. So it’s gonna be crazy at the end if he’s right behind you.

Larson: Seems like Ross Chastain — and I’m not saying this on the on the part that he would crash you for the win — I just feel like he’s really good right now, and he’s really fast. He understands traffic really well. I feel like he does the best job of passing.

Cindric: Ross Chastain. Probably a popular answer.

Chastain: I don’t discriminate. Pick anybody you want, put them right behind me. That’s fine by me.

NASCAR drivers’ and spotters’ real-time reactions to Ross Chastain’s wild Martinsville move are pure gold

9. Which driver is most likely to believe in wild conspiracy theories?

(Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

Blaney: Oh, gosh, Chase [Elliott]. This was when we were living in the same apartment complex together in North Carolina years ago, like 2015. He’d go down rabbit holes of conspiracy theories all the time. And I’d be over at his apartment sitting there, and he’d just go into a deep dive. I don’t know if he’s still that way or not. But back in 2015, ’16, Chase was a big conspiracy theorist on the aliens, government schemes, all this kind of stuff. And I wasn’t really interested in them. But yeah, he was pretty big into it a handful of years ago.

Wallace: Brad Keselowski.

Logano: Brad [Keselowski] will read the conspiracy theories, for sure, and get fairly deep into stuff before he realizes what the heck’s going on.

Byron: Oh man, I’d say Brad Keselowski. He comes across that way on social media, I think. He definitely reads into things for sure. So I would say him. I’ve seen him do some things with his methods, [like] when he goes out to qualify, he’ll do something different than everybody else.

Bowman: Brad Keselowski.

Keselowski: Me. I’m assuming everybody else has answered me.

Larson: Kyle Busch, for sure. Kyle or Kurt — either of the Buschs.

Burton: I don’t really know why, but the first guy that came to my mind is Denny Hamlin.

Elliott: Tyler Reddick. He just strikes me as a conspiracy theorist maybe, I don’t know.

Cindric: Oh, Michael McDowell. I’ve got a hunch, I’ll leave it at that.

Chastain: Michael McDowell. I don’t think he gets the credit he deserves. I know him well, and so I can say this: He doesn’t get the credit he deserves for being a little different, little out there in some ways. I love him. I love everything about him and what he stands for and being his friend. But you give him a few crumbs of maybe truth, and he’s gonna run with it.

10. Which driver is having the largest impact on the sport this season?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: Kurt Busch. Kurt, right now, has a very loud voice, and he has more time than anybody to focus on the health of our sport and health of our drivers and health and the safety of our cars. And he has taken the ball and run with it. And we all should be appreciative for what Kurt’s been doing for us lately. Kurt takes the cake by a mile.

Truex: Kevin Harvick has had a big impact, especially in talks with NASCAR about the Next Gen car and just bringing things out in the open. And I feel like things are starting to get changed and looked at a lot harder because of him being outspoken.

Cindric: I’d say it’s a toss up between Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin. I wouldn’t say it’s positive or negative, just impact on the larger scale. They’ve been very outspoken about the car and the series and some things are productive. Some things probably aren’t aimed at being productive. So, from that standpoint, they’ve definitely been been the leaders in that category.

Keselowski: Probably either Kevin Harvick or Denny Hamlin because they’re so outspoken across the board.

Larson: Probably if I had to pick one over everybody, Harvick just on the safety side. Him and Denny together, them two. They’re moving the needle.

(Logan Riely/Getty Images)

Wallace: Ross Chastain. He’s obviously made a lot of headlines this year for the way he races, and obviously, Martinsville was no shortage of that.

Blaney: Honestly, I think like last two years, we’ve seen Bubba [Wallace] have a huge impact on the sport, reaching new audiences, and that’s grown the sport tremendously. I think he’s had a great influence on it. He’s grown different fan bases and grown the sport in a good way. So he’s had a massive impact on it, and I think it’s really cool what he’s done.

Chastain: I’ll say Darrell [Wallace]. He won a race. The following he has and the reach that he has, [it’s] far beyond what I have, in good and bad. What he does travels farther, and what he says carries a heavier weight than something I say. So I think in his winning moments and his not great moments, his car makes it to front pages and headlines farther than mine. He has this opportunity to carry the sport through his career and through his accomplishments on track that I hope to get to. He’s got the potential to just really elevate this sport. I’m glad to be his friend and a competitor. I want to beat him, right? But yeah, I think he’s got the most potential.

Suárez: Honestly, I will say myself because of the win that we had in Sonoma and everything that came with that. I felt like we gained a lot of traction with the Hispanic community, and that was great and I feel like that was amazing, not just for myself but for the entire sport and the history of the sport. So I think that that was pretty remarkable, and it just happened that I was driving.

Byron: I’d say Denny Hamlin because of just the 23XI being a new team and the national presence that the Jordan brand has and stuff like that. So I would say they’ve had the biggest impact on on the way the seasons gone with how vocal they are.

Blaney: Hard to argue against Ross [Chastain] after [Martinsville].

Burton: I’d say probably Kevin Harvick. Actually, I take that back — I’d say Kurt Busch is. Even though he was out for the year, he has been a really good advocate for the drivers and comes to meetings with NASCAR and the drivers and is really involved still. So a guy like that who kind of has just recently announced his retirement, I think he’s been really influencing the sport a lot. So either those two guys have been really influential though.

Chase Elliott: Ross Chastain has certainly been a storyline a lot throughout the year, both good and bad. But he’s been talked about quite a bit, so seems like a pretty good story between him and and Trackhouse and the things they’ve had going on.

Joey Logano on how he won his second NASCAR championship: ‘You can’t fake confidence’

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NASCAR Superlatives 2022: We polled drivers to see what they think of everyone else

For The Win polled NASCAR drivers to see what they think about their competitors on and off the track.

The 2022 NASCAR Cup Series season ended Sunday with Joey Logano winning his second championship after taking the checkered flag at Phoenix Raceway. And the end of the season means it’s time for For The Win’s annual NASCAR Superlatives.

Throughout the last several weeks, we polled 13 drivers with the same 10 questions about their competitors’ skills behind the wheel, as well as their personalities away from the track.

Obviously, there have been numerous examples this year of drivers being furious and frustrated with each other, but some of them are friends who have been racing against each other for a while. Our annual investigation reveals what some of them really think about each other.

Here’s what some of NASCAR’s top drivers had to say about each other this year. And if you’re curious about previous editions…

NASCAR Superlatives: 20212020, 2019, 2018, 2017

These answers have been condensed and edited for clarity.

1. Which driver who is not a champion will be a champion at some point?

(Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)

Daniel Suárez: You’re talking to him.

Joey Logano: Probably Ryan Blaney. I see the improvement he’s made over the last few years, and he’s got a ton of speed. So I’d say he’s getting closer and closer. He’s consistently in the Round of 8 every year for the last few, so I’d say he’s on the brink of making it to the Championship 4.

Bubba Wallace: Ryan Blaney.

Chase Elliott: Ryan Blaney.

Ryan Blaney: I don’t want to say myself because that would be too obvious of like, boosting your own ego. But obviously you want see yourself win a championship. Other than me, [William] Byron has been strong. Obviously, Denny Hamlin has kind of been on the verge of one for a long time.

Austin Cindric: It’s hard to not say Denny Hamlin. He’s come very close, and I think he’s probably the most realistic answer.

Ross Chastain: Ross Chastain.

Kyle Larson: William Byron. I feel like he’s very driven, very focused, works really hard and has a lot of talent, mentally is pretty tough. He just seems like a NASCAR champion.

Martin Truex Jr.: Christopher Bell.

Alex Bowman: William Byron.

Brad Keselowski: I’m going to say William Byron. He’s growing, he’s maturing, he’s with a great team. I think it will click, it just hasn’t yet.

William Byron: I’d first like to say myself, selfishly. There’s a lot of options there. Denny Hamlin comes to mind. If he’s not a champion really soon, I think he’ll be a champion, just the way that he is able to run consistently well. And I think he’s an intelligent race car driver and knows how to put himself in position towards the end of the year to have a chance to win in this format.

Harrison Burton: I think there’s a lot of good young guys that haven’t won one yet. But I think a good one would probably be William Byron. He’s been fast a lot, won a lot of races, so he’ll probably end up being [a champion] one day.

2. Which driver who hasn’t won the Daytona 500 will win it at some point?

(Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Suárez: Same question, same answer, me.

Chastain: Ross Chastain.

Wallace: Us! It’s funny, [Ryan] Blaney’s also had two or three second-place finishes, so we’re kind of tied on that scenario. But I’m gonna go with myself.

Elliott: Same guy for me, [Blaney]. He’s finished second about 10 times.

Blaney: Either myself or I think Chase Elliott. He runs pretty good at superspeedways.

Truex: [Laughs] I want to say me.

Bowman: Probably also William Byron.

Larson: Ryan Blaney, for sure. I think he’s just a really good superspeedway racer and is in contention a lot of times. All drivers, they’ll probably mostly say Ryan Blaney.

Cindric: Ryan Blaney.

Logano: Pick one, anyone could win.

Byron: I’d say Ryan Blaney because I think he’s really good at the superspeedway races. He’s always, always at the front. He’s very aggressive, knows how to make the right decisions and stuff. He’s been close already.

Burton: That’s a hard, hard race to win. I think Ryan Blaney will probably get one soon.

Keselowski: Shoot, the last three years, I’ve been in the top-3 in the last few laps and gotten wrecked or something’s happened. Just gotta keep [getting into position] and eventually it’ll happen.

3. Which driver has the best social media personality?

Suárez: Oh my god, you want to have the same answer for every question?

Blaney: [Kevin] Harvick’s been cracking me up here the last couple months, which has been fun to watch. He’ll get all sassy with everybody, and I get a good chuckle out of that. He and Hamlin have a really funny Twitter. I love waking up and seeing [Harvick] go on rants the next morning. I love reading all through it.

Bowman: Me or Noah Gragson.

Chastain: Not Ross Chastain. Pretty much anybody but [me]. I honestly don’t even have a good working knowledge of what people are posting.

Logano: Can I pick myself? I pick myself because I like cars.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CfaMwfjpZ0y/

Wallace: Depends on what you’re going for. First ones that come to mind are Denny, Kyle [Busch], myself.

Byron: I don’t think any of us are that great at it, I’ll be honest. Bubba comes to mind. He’s probably the most comfortable with social media, I would say, so his personality comes across. I would look at it as who’s the most authentic? Whose personality is really showing? And I think he’s the most authentic on there, speaks his mind.

Keselowski: I like Erik Jones. I like that he does the reading to the kids thing and all that. That’s pretty cool.

Larson: Probably Denny [Hamlin]. Over the last probably three or four or five years, he’s really stepped up, it seems, his social media stuff, and he’s pretty funny on there. He does do, I would say, a lot of it himself, but I know his social media guy, and he’s pretty witty with all that too.

Cindric: I don’t really like Twitter. I use it, but I don’t like it. I like Instagram a lot better. But I don’t know.

Burton: I don’t follow them all. So I don’t know. I would say my dad, Jeff Burton. He’s killing his Instagram game recently. For an old guy, he’s doing pretty good.

4. Which driver has the best sense of humor?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Truex: I got nothing.

Bowman: Definitely me. Dry as the desert.

Blaney: Bubba [Wallace] and Chase [Elliott]. I think you get different personalities out of people away from their job. It’s kind of hard to judge somebody from how they act at the race track or something because a lot of times, you’re you’re dead-set focused on the task at hand, and it’s hard to kind of really let loose or joke around too much. Everyone’s personality is very different away from the race track.

Wallace: Myself.

Chastain: Ryan Blaney. It’s dry, but I think I understand it though. Most people probably don’t.

Keselowski: Blaney. He’s just a fun guy to be around, and he’s chill.

Elliott: Skip.

Logano: This used to be the Clint Bowyer answer back in the day. Can I pick myself again? I can’t keep picking myself [laughs].

Cindric: Kevin Harvick has a pretty dry sense of humor, which I always enjoy. Sometimes it’s at the expense of something or someone else, but it’s Kevin Harvick.

Byron: Kyle Busch kind of has a pretty funny sense of humor. Like, when I drove for for [Kyle Busch Motorsports], I always thought he was kind of funny. He’s pretty brash, but it’s kind of funny sometimes because he’s so unfiltered.

Suárez: Probably Noah Gragson.

Burton: Todd Gilliland is the guy that probably makes me laugh the most in the garage. He’s a rookie, so I hang out with him quite a bit. And yeah, he’s funny as heck, that’s for sure.

Larson: The first name that came to my mind was Corey LaJoie. He’s really funny and quick.

NASCAR’s Noah Gragson won at Bristol, vomited and shotgunned a White Claw opened with a gladiator sword

5. Which driver is most likely to drop an f-bomb in a live TV interview?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: Typically, I’d say Kyle Busch, but he seems like he’s cleaned it up a little lately. Kevin [Harvick] is not likely anymore either. Those are two likely candidates back in the day. Bubba [Wallace] maybe?

Suárez: Probably me! I did that a few times after I won.

Cindric: Kyle Busch.

Keselowski: Yeah, probably Kyle Busch.

Chastain: Darrell Wallace.

Elliott: [Kevin] Harvick.

Byron: Oh, for sure [Kyle Busch]. I think that’s already happened. He’s for sure halfway there, if not already there.

Burton: Kyle Busch, I’d say it’s a good guess.

Truex: Kyle Busch.

Larson: Probably Noah Gragson.

Wallace: Noah Gragson.

Bowman: Noah Gragson.

Blaney: Man, I think any of us are capable of it. It’s just a matter of how upset you are. But I feel like that’s a big one to drop. I could see dropping a number of other cuss words, so you really have to mean it to drop that one. I could see Kyle Busch dropping one, but he hasn’t yet, I don’t believe, in his whole career, so maybe he won’t.

6. Which driver has had the most surprising season?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Truex: I would say Ross Chastain because they just consistently perform well, and they’re still a fairly new team.

Keselowski: Ross Chastain. He’s still in the final four, and I guess I probably didn’t see that coming.

Blaney: Chastain’s had a really good first year at Trackhouse. Not surprising, he’s doing well, but I think he’s, you know, run better than people have thought in his first year over there. Another one who I’m surprised hasn’t run better or won like they’re used to doing is [Martin] Truex.

Cindric: Daniel Suárez. He’s been in the sport for a while and, quite honestly, in very capable cars. And whether he’s grown or he’s in a great situation or he wasn’t in good situations before, I feel like it’s kind of his third attempt at being in a top team, and he’s done very well with it.

Wallace: Probably Briscoe. Obviously got that win at Phoenix [in the spring], and the Stewart-Haas [Racing] cars haven’t been that great all year. But the last 10 races, he’s gotten hot at the right time.

Byron: Definitely Ross Chastain. I assumed he would be a playoff contender, for sure, based on how he ran the 42. But I felt like it would just be a steady progression from last year and the 42 car. Those guys, as soon as the season started, have been contenders and been difficult and hard to beat basically a lot of tracks.

Suárez: My team as a whole — not just myself but my teammate as well. Trackhouse as a whole, more [successful] than most people expected. We are having some good success and that has been very, very good.

Bowman: Ross Chastain. I just didn’t see that much success coming this year. They’ve been really strong, and I know Ross is really good. I just didn’t expect them to do what they’ve done.

Logano: This whole year’s been a surprise. Kurt Busch is one who comes to my mind, not for good reasons. Obviously, the win early in the year was great, but his whole year is just a surprise probably to all of us.

Burton: Chase Briscoe is having a really good year. Not that it’s surprising, I guess, because he’s won a lot of races in Xfinity, but he’s done a really good job from last year to this year, making it as far as he has in the playoffs and getting good finishes when he hasn’t run well. I feel like there are days where he’ll run towards the back and then find a way to finish up front, which is really hard to do in this series.

Larson: Surprisingly good — great! — Ross Chastain. I knew he was going to be good. I wasn’t surprised to see them strong early in the year, but I thought that that team might tail off as the season got on. But they haven’t. Surprisingly not good — not that he hasn’t been great because he’s been in contention a lot — but Martin Truex. I’m just surprised that they haven’t won.

Chastain: Ross Chastain. I’ve never won races. I’d only finished in the top-5 three times in my career before this year, and now we’ve done it [15] times. Brand-new team, new ownership and two drivers that had never competed at the front consistently, and we’ve done that this year. I’m a [watermelon] farmer, so it’s surprising that I can drive a race car.

7. You’re leading the race and there are two laps left; which driver would you want behind you?

(Logan Riely/Getty Images)

Blaney: None of them. I don’t think you want any of them within a car length or two of you.

Logano: All of them.

Elliott: No one. I hope they’re far enough away or nobody’s close to you.

Wallace: I’ll go with Blaney.

Bowman: I don’t care.

Truex: Probably Kyle Busch, just because I know he’d race with respect. We have a good relationship, and we always race well together. Very, very hard racing, but clean and fair.

Byron: A teammate would be better than than others probably. So I’d say maybe Chase [Elliott] or Alex [Bowman] or Kyle [Larson]. Any of those three would be a good one to have.

Larson: I guess it depends on the race track, but I don’t I don’t really care. I guess any of them.

Suárez: For a comfortable situation, I’d say my teammate, Ross [Chastain].

Keselowski: Probably Chris Buescher. He’s a good teammate.

Burton: Another rookie, probably Todd Gilliland or Austin Cindric, I’d say, because I feel like we’re all in the same boat. So we’ll be in good shape there.

Chastain: Line ’em up however they want, doesn’t matter.

8. You’re leading the race and there are two laps left; which driver do you absolutely not want behind you?

(John David Mercer-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: I really don’t care. You’ve got to beat them all, so it doesn’t matter. Whoever, I don’t think it makes a difference, honestly. Everybody’s gonna be willing to do something to win a race, and what they’re willing to do is sometimes pretty fluid. I think you treat them all the same because you just don’t know.

Truex: I guess best chance of getting run into would be Joey Logano.

Elliott: I’m good with any of them, no issues.

Wallace: Let’s go with Logano.

Suárez: A driver that is in a must-win situation, that has a lot of pressure. Any of the drivers that are in the playoffs that are below the cutline, those guys, they have to do whatever they have to do. If I was in their position, I would do the same thing. Those guys, it’s not good to have them behind me because they will have to do dumb moves to do whatever they have to do to get the job done.

Keselowski: Probably Chase Briscoe. the last few times he’s been running second with like two or three laps to go, he’s wrecked the leader — in case you were wondering the rationale.

Bowman: Ross [Chastain] is just gonna ride the wall, so maybe not Ross.

Byron: Man, I don’t want any of them behind me. But I don’t think really any of them intimidate me, per se. I think some are more strategic than others. It just depends on the situation. I can’t pick one there.

Blaney: It doesn’t really matter. To me, you kind of understand and you race around guys enough to where you know who will be more aggressive than others. But this year, everyone’s been really aggressive, so you never know.

Burton: I think I don’t want Ross Chastain behind me because I feel like he’s gonna probably put me in a spot where I’m gonna either have to crash us both, or crash him to try and win. So it’s gonna be crazy at the end if he’s right behind you.

Larson: Seems like Ross Chastain — and I’m not saying this on the on the part that he would crash you for the win — I just feel like he’s really good right now, and he’s really fast. He understands traffic really well. I feel like he does the best job of passing.

Cindric: Ross Chastain. Probably a popular answer.

Chastain: I don’t discriminate. Pick anybody you want, put them right behind me. That’s fine by me.

NASCAR drivers’ and spotters’ real-time reactions to Ross Chastain’s wild Martinsville move are pure gold

9. Which driver is most likely to believe in wild conspiracy theories?

(Mike Mulholland/Getty Images)

Blaney: Oh, gosh, Chase [Elliott]. This was when we were living in the same apartment complex together in North Carolina years ago, like 2015. He’d go down rabbit holes of conspiracy theories all the time. And I’d be over at his apartment sitting there, and he’d just go into a deep dive. I don’t know if he’s still that way or not. But back in 2015, ’16, Chase was a big conspiracy theorist on the aliens, government schemes, all this kind of stuff. And I wasn’t really interested in them. But yeah, he was pretty big into it a handful of years ago.

Wallace: Brad Keselowski.

Logano: Brad [Keselowski] will read the conspiracy theories, for sure, and get fairly deep into stuff before he realizes what the heck’s going on.

Byron: Oh man, I’d say Brad Keselowski. He comes across that way on social media, I think. He definitely reads into things for sure. So I would say him. I’ve seen him do some things with his methods, [like] when he goes out to qualify, he’ll do something different than everybody else.

Bowman: Brad Keselowski.

Keselowski: Me. I’m assuming everybody else has answered me.

Larson: Kyle Busch, for sure. Kyle or Kurt — either of the Buschs.

Burton: I don’t really know why, but the first guy that came to my mind is Denny Hamlin.

Elliott: Tyler Reddick. He just strikes me as a conspiracy theorist maybe, I don’t know.

Cindric: Oh, Michael McDowell. I’ve got a hunch, I’ll leave it at that.

Chastain: Michael McDowell. I don’t think he gets the credit he deserves. I know him well, and so I can say this: He doesn’t get the credit he deserves for being a little different, little out there in some ways. I love him. I love everything about him and what he stands for and being his friend. But you give him a few crumbs of maybe truth, and he’s gonna run with it.

10. Which driver is having the largest impact on the sport this season?

(Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Logano: Kurt Busch. Kurt, right now, has a very loud voice, and he has more time than anybody to focus on the health of our sport and health of our drivers and health and the safety of our cars. And he has taken the ball and run with it. And we all should be appreciative for what Kurt’s been doing for us lately. Kurt takes the cake by a mile.

Truex: Kevin Harvick has had a big impact, especially in talks with NASCAR about the Next Gen car and just bringing things out in the open. And I feel like things are starting to get changed and looked at a lot harder because of him being outspoken.

Cindric: I’d say it’s a toss up between Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin. I wouldn’t say it’s positive or negative, just impact on the larger scale. They’ve been very outspoken about the car and the series and some things are productive. Some things probably aren’t aimed at being productive. So, from that standpoint, they’ve definitely been been the leaders in that category.

Keselowski: Probably either Kevin Harvick or Denny Hamlin because they’re so outspoken across the board.

Larson: Probably if I had to pick one over everybody, Harvick just on the safety side. Him and Denny together, them two. They’re moving the needle.

(Logan Riely/Getty Images)

Wallace: Ross Chastain. He’s obviously made a lot of headlines this year for the way he races, and obviously, Martinsville was no shortage of that.

Blaney: Honestly, I think like last two years, we’ve seen Bubba [Wallace] have a huge impact on the sport, reaching new audiences, and that’s grown the sport tremendously. I think he’s had a great influence on it. He’s grown different fan bases and grown the sport in a good way. So he’s had a massive impact on it, and I think it’s really cool what he’s done.

Chastain: I’ll say Darrell [Wallace]. He won a race. The following he has and the reach that he has, [it’s] far beyond what I have, in good and bad. What he does travels farther, and what he says carries a heavier weight than something I say. So I think in his winning moments and his not great moments, his car makes it to front pages and headlines farther than mine. He has this opportunity to carry the sport through his career and through his accomplishments on track that I hope to get to. He’s got the potential to just really elevate this sport. I’m glad to be his friend and a competitor. I want to beat him, right? But yeah, I think he’s got the most potential.

Suárez: Honestly, I will say myself because of the win that we had in Sonoma and everything that came with that. I felt like we gained a lot of traction with the Hispanic community, and that was great and I feel like that was amazing, not just for myself but for the entire sport and the history of the sport. So I think that that was pretty remarkable, and it just happened that I was driving.

Byron: I’d say Denny Hamlin because of just the 23XI being a new team and the national presence that the Jordan brand has and stuff like that. So I would say they’ve had the biggest impact on on the way the seasons gone with how vocal they are.

Blaney: Hard to argue against Ross [Chastain] after [Martinsville].

Burton: I’d say probably Kevin Harvick. Actually, I take that back — I’d say Kurt Busch is. Even though he was out for the year, he has been a really good advocate for the drivers and comes to meetings with NASCAR and the drivers and is really involved still. So a guy like that who kind of has just recently announced his retirement, I think he’s been really influencing the sport a lot. So either those two guys have been really influential though.

Chase Elliott: Ross Chastain has certainly been a storyline a lot throughout the year, both good and bad. But he’s been talked about quite a bit, so seems like a pretty good story between him and and Trackhouse and the things they’ve had going on.

Joey Logano on how he won his second NASCAR championship: ‘You can’t fake confidence’

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Laying out our SEC Superlatives through Week 9

From newcomers to the biggest troll in the SEC, LSU Wire lays out the superlatives through the first two months of the season.

As we head into November and the final stretch of the season, the picture is becoming clearer. On Saturday, we will see “divisional championship” games between the LSU Tigers and Alabama Crimson Tide while the Georgia Bulldogs host the Tennessee Volunteers. This could determine the SEC Championship game.

Lane Kiffin’s Ole Miss Rebels are still in the hunt but they don’t control their destiny after the Tigers took care of them a week ago. They will need some help.

There have been plenty of storylines, some that started long before the games even took place. New faces including LSU’s Brian Kelly and Florida’s Billy Napier took center stage. We also had Jimbo Fisher attacking both Lane Kiffin and Nick Saban in a press conference that he called in regard to the No. 1 recruiting class.

With so much left to play for, we dive into the superlatives with just one month left in the regular season.

Green Bay Packers season superlatives entering 2022

Inspired by @Paul_Bretl, here are Packers Wire’s season superlatives entering 2022.

Inspired by Packers Wire contributor Paul Bretl, here are our season superlatives for the Green Bay Packers entering the regular season in 2022:

Biggest concern: Special Teams

The third phase was a season-killer in 2021 and remains the biggest concern in Green Bay until proven otherwise. The preseason proved that just hiring Rich Bisaccia isn’t going to solve everything.

Rookie of the Year: Quay Walker

He’s the only expected rookie starter. Collecting 100 or more tackles is certainly possible, especially playing next to De’Vondre Campbell and playing behind the Packers defensive line. His size and speed jump off the screen.

Most underrated: A.J. Dillon

Even without an injury to Aaron Jones, he’ll be a featured player in the new-look offense. Getting to 1,275 total yards (or 75 per game over 17 games) is attainable. Dillon is a dominant runner and an ascending player as a receiver.

X-Factor: Jarran Reed

He was disruptive throughout training camp and the Packers think he can play all over the defensive front. If he’s a consistent one-on-one beater, the Packers are going to be near impossible to block up front.

Bounce back: Robert Tonyan

His 2021 season was trending in the right direction before his knee injury in Arizona. Now, he’s getting closer to 100 percent as the regular season approaches. Aaron Rodgers trusts him fully, and Matt LaFleur knows how to scheme open tight ends.

Don’t forget about: Preston Smith

The Packers are loaded with talent up front, and Rashan Gary and Kenny Clark are going to command double teams in most big situations. The biggest beneficiary? Smith, who is coming off arguably his best all-around season in 2021.

Breakout: Josh Myers

He is healthy entering Year 2 and was excellent during the preseason. This is the time for a big jump. While inconsistent as a rookie, he’s ready to become a solid and dependable player in the middle of the Packers offensive line.

Darkhorse contributor: Amari Rodgers

He’s going to be the primary returner, and he’ll also dabble as a gadget-like weapon on offense, potentially even in some running back roles. Can he be the new Tyler Ervin?

Unsung hero: Aaron Jones

With Davante Adams in Las Vegas, No. 33 is the new focal point of the offense. The Packers will make it a priority to get him the ball in space. He needs to be the big-play creator in 2022, both as a runner and receiver.

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Saints Wire Staff Picks: Training camp superlatives

Saints Wire Staff Picks: New Orleans Saints training camp superlatives

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New Orleans Saints training camp is in full swing, so our staff at Saints Wire have made our picks for the trendy superlatives flying around the Twittersphere. We chose players who fit our interpretation of various categories like Breakout Guy, Comeback Kid, and Under the Radar, occasionally coming into agreement. It’s a fun exercise, but who would you pick? Compare to our selections:

Exploring the Lions 2020 Draft class via PFF superlatives

Exploring the Detroit Lions 2020 Draft class via Pro Football Focus’ Pre-draft superlatives lists.

It’s no secret the Detroit Lions drafted a lot of Pro Football Focus’ favorites in this draft class — they gave the Lions an “A” grade overall — so it also shouldn’t be overly surprising that several of the Lions’ rookies also landed on a handful of PFF’s pre-draft articles.

One collection of articles that featured several Lions, was PFF’s 2020 NFL Draft superlatives series. These articles are always solid reads ahead of the draft, but it’s also fun to review them to better understand some of the Lions’ new players.

Note: keep in mind the questions below were asked and answered by PFF and cover the entire 2020 NFL Draft class.

Best CB in man coverage: Jeff Okudah

“Okudah’s combination of physicality at the line of scrimmage and makeup-burst out of his cuts is second to none in the draft class,” PFF’s Michael Renner said. “He’s so darn consistent snap-to-snap that it’s difficult to see him ‘busting’ in the NFL.”

The Lions feature a ton of man coverage in their scheme and landing the top player in this skill set has to make Lions fans feel warm inside.

Okudah also landed honorable mentions in several other PFF superlatives categories including, “Best CB in zone coverage”, “Best CB in press coverage”, and “Most fun to watch”.

Best receiving RB: D’Andre Swift

“Swift is the modern do-it-all running back,” Renner said. “His ability to torch linebackers one-on-one as a route-runner is what we here at PFF covet more than any other skill at the position. Over the course of his Georgia career, he hauled in 73 passes for 666 yards and five scores while breaking 19 tackles and dropping three targets.”

Best pass setting OL: Jonah Jackson

“This is a hotly contested superlative and quite easily the one you want to win on this list,” Renner said. “. At the end of the day, though, Jackson’s consistency takes the cake. The Ohio State guard uses his hands exceptionally well already and gets on guys immediately at the snap with his short sets. Of his 10 pressures allowed this past season, only one came one-on-one in pass protection. The rest were on stunts, miscommunications or pulling. That secures him the top spot for us.”

Most fun EDGE rusher to watch: Julian Okwara (honorable mention)

Chase Young won this category for PFF but Okwara was number two on the list. With Okwara’s recognition here, each of the Lions’ first four draft picks were highlighted by PFF pre-draft. But it wasn’t just drafted Lions’ players who were recognized, some undrafted players also made superlatives lists.

Best TE after the catch: Hunter Bryant

“This is where the Washington tight end is head-and-shoulders above the rest,” Renner said. “He broke 18 tackles on only 85 career catches and turned into a hulked-up wide receiver with the ball in his hands. He can not only pinball off would-be tacklers, but also shake defenders in the open field.”

Best tackling DB: Jeremiah Dinson (Honorable mention)

Dinson’s addition has flown a bit under the radar as the Lions appear loaded at safety, but if he is going to make the 53-man roster, his elite tackling ability could be his ticket.