CHICAGO -- Cleveland Indians third baseman Jose Ramirez said he was "ready to play" after being activated from the injured list on Tuesday. Two home runs later, it seems he might have been understating matters.
The switch-hitting Ramirez smacked a first-inning grand slam in his first plate appearance since Aug. 24, swinging left-handed against Chicago White Sox starter Carson Fulmer. He followed that up with a three-run shot from the right side of plate in the third against reliever Hector Santiago.
With the Indians up 11-0 entering the bottom of the fifth inning, manager Terry Francona replaced Ramirez in the lineup with Yu Chang. Ramirez finished the game 2-for-3, striking out in his final at-bat. The Indians won by the same score.
"Seven RBIs his first two at-bats when he had surgery and hasn't played in a month, that's unbelievable," Francona said.
Ramirez had missed four weeks during Cleveland's drive for an American League playoff spot because of a broken fractured hamate bone in his right hand.
His seven RBIs through three innings on Tuesday were a career high for a game.
"I was super, super happy," Ramirez said after his big game. "It was great to be back with the guys and help however I [could]."
Ramirez was activated from the 10-day injured list prior to the contest. Ramirez, who turned 27 last week, suffered the hamate injury on Aug. 24 against the Kansas City Royals. He had surgery two days later.
Ramirez said before the game that he's still "not 100 percent on my wrist, but still I feel a big improvement."
The two-time All-Star hit .254 with 20 homers and 75 RBIs in his first 126 games this season. He was on a tear before getting hurt, hitting .320 with 15 homers and 45 RBIs in 46 games in July and August.
"The idea is that he can hopefully play a lot," Francona said pregame on Tuesday. "Pitchers have to respect who he is.
"It's one less position we have to pick and choose or kind of platoon or whatever we've been doing in a couple of positions."
Cleveland is a half-game back of the Tampa Bay Rays for the second AL wild card.
The Indians have been hit hard by injuries all year. Second baseman Jason Kipnis underwent season-ending surgery on Tuesday, also for a fractured hamate bone in his right hand.
Before Ramirez went on the IL, he had turned around a subpar first-half performance. Prior to the All-Star break, he hit .218 with a .652 OPS over 85 games. Ramirez began the second half before his injury by hitting .327 with a 1.068 OPS.
After his big outing in Chicago, it appears Ramirez has picked up where he left off.
"From the grand slam to the other [homer], it was really exciting, almost like storybook [for] Jose," Indians starting pitcher Mike Clevinger said.
ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Shohei Ohtani will soon navigate through another shortened offseason, this time because of knee surgery that interrupted the late stages of his throwing progression while recovering from Tommy John surgery. But the Los Angeles Angels are hopeful he won't lag too far behind the other pitchers when spring training opens next season.
"I would imagine he'd be a little behind, but I don't think he'll be terribly behind," Angels manager Brad Ausmus said. "Really, the issue is him being healthy. We're not going to rush it just to meet some timetable."
Ohtani, wearing a balky brace on his left knee and walking with crutches, spoke to reporters on Tuesday for the first time since undergoing a procedure to address discomfort from bipartite patella, a rare condition caused by the two bones of the kneecap not fusing together at birth. Ohtani, speaking 11 days after surgery, said the rehab process is "coming along smoothly" and that he hopes to begin light throwing "really soon."
The Angels will once again use him as a two-way player next season, planning to start him on the mound once a week and place him in the lineup as a designated hitter four times a week.
"I'm very excited, obviously," Ohtani said through his interpreter, "and since I got this surgery quick, I need to take each day preciously, try to get back early as possible and get back to full strength next season."
The surgery came with an estimated recovery time of 10 to 12 weeks and paused Ohtani's throwing program 11 weeks after he returned to the mound. The Angels' hope is that Ohtani can return to throwing off a mound around late November, then conclude his 2019 throwing program the following month and temporarily shut himself down.
Ohtani dismissed concerns about a shortened offseason because he doesn't believe it affected him this year. Asked if he expects to continue to be the effective two-way player he was as a rookie last year, Ohtani said: "I still need to win my spot in spring training, I feel like. Personally, I'm going to be ready to go."
Ohtani, 25, was named the American League Rookie of the Year in 2018 while posting a .925 OPS in 367 plate appearances and a 3.31 ERA in 51⅔ innings. This year, he juggled hitting with his recovery from surgery, putting together a .286/.343/.505 slash line as the Angels' primary DH. Ohtani finished with four fewer home runs (18) despite 58 more at-bats and experienced a stark decline in launch angle (from 12.3 degrees to 6.8).
Ausmus believes Ohtani "had a solid offensive year."
Ohtani didn't necessarily agree.
"I felt like I could've put together a lot better season," Ohtani said. "I feel like I was going through struggles that lasted a little too long. It wasn't what I imagined."
The Nationals clinched a wild-card berth with a 6-5 win over old friend Bryce Harper and the division rival Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday night. Technically, the spot wasn't locked up until three minutes after the last out. That's when the Chicago Cubs lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates, eliminating them from wild-card contention and sending Washington to the postseason.
The final out of the Cubs-Pirates contest was shown live on the giant video board at Nationals Park. As soon as Chicago slugger Kyle Schwarber grounded out to Pittsburgh's Adam Frazier to end it, the Nationals -- who had calmly congregated along the first-base line -- began their celebration in earnest, bouncing up and down as Panic! at the Disco's "Hey Look Ma, I Made It" blared throughout the stadium. It was a moment that, exactly four months ago, seemed improbable at best.
"I imagined it in spring training," said manager Davey Martinez, whose team was expected to be a World Series contender but went 19-31 over its first 50 games and had the third-worst record in the National League as of May 24.
Despite the slow start, Washington's second-year skipper remained his usual upbeat self.
"I said this team is going to bounce back and turn it around," Martinez said. "I thought we hit the bottom then, but this team -- we get everybody back, we get healthy, we're going to be OK. So let's just keep fighting, and here we are."
Although it's Martinez's first trip to the playoffs, it's the fifth time in eight years for the Nationals. Each of the previous four times, they were division winners. Not that anyone in Washington's clubhouse seemed to mind the team's wild-card status.
"Everybody in this clubhouse envisioned this exact thing right here," said shortstop Trea Turner, whose dramatic grand slam on Tuesday night was the decisive blow and resulted in a rousing curtain call from the surprisingly thin crowd of 22,214. "We talked about it when we were 19-31, we talked about how we were going to laugh at everybody else outside of this clubhouse for everything that they said about us, and we are here now."
"There's still a path for us to win it all," said ace Max Scherzer, who got the win Tuesday night and is expected to start the wild-card game next Tuesday. "We're going to get tested like we've never been tested during the regular season. But I love what this team has together. I love our chemistry. I love what we have. That's what it takes to win in the postseason."
Winning in the postseason is unfamiliar to the Nationals, who've never advanced past the first round in four tries under general manager Mike Rizzo.
"Each season is unique and special," said Rizzo, who joined the Nationals in 2007 and took over as GM two years later. "When you get to put plastic down and pour beer over each other, it's a special season. We don't take that for granted. These are things that a lot of teams wish they were doing."
One of those teams on the outside looking in is the Phillies, who had grand plans when they signed former Nationals star Harper to a 13-year, $330 million contract during the offseason, but were eliminated during the first game of Tuesday's doubleheader, a 4-1 loss. Their defeat in the nightcap, which came in spite of a pinch-hit homer from Harper, sent the former MVP's old club into celebration mode.
An impromptu conga line formed, propelling players around the clubhouse to the thumping beat of Latin music. Chants of M-V-P filled the Nats' locker room as teammates stood around third baseman Anthony Rendon and showered him with beer. Gerardo Parra led a rousing reprise of "Baby Shark," the toddler tune that the reserve outfielder adopted as his walk-up song earlier this season and has since become something of an anthem in the nation's capital.
"This is so awesome," said reliever Sean Doolittle. "After everything we've been through, coming together after everything over the course of the season and having to crawl out of the hole that we found ourselves in May, it makes it that much sweeter. This is really, really special."
After missing the playoffs in 2018, Harper's final campaign in D.C., the Nats are back in the postseason for the fifth time in the past eight years. It's the first time they've been there without Harper, and it's proof positive that there is, in fact, life after Bryce.
Here are five reasons Washington has been able to move on without its former franchise face:
1. Rendon is raking
Although he has one fewer MVP award than Harper, the dirty little secret in the District is that Anthony Rendon has been the team's best and most complete player for several years now. It's a secret finally starting to make its way around the league.
In July, after being an All-Star snub on multiple occasions in the past, the 29-year-old third baseman made the Midsummer Classic for the first time in his career. Batting almost exclusively in Harper's old No. 3 spot, Rendon has put up huge numbers. He's hitting .322 with 34 homers and leads the league with 124 RBIs and 43 doubles. He's also in the top three in runs, slugging and OPS. Combined with his dependable glove work at the hot corner (plus-3 runs saved), it's the kind of campaign that has him on the short list for a certain piece of hardware, along with names such as Christian Yelich, Cody Bellinger and Ketel Marte.
"For me, Rendon is the MVP," manager Davey Martinez said of the player who finished 11th in last year's balloting and sixth the year before that. "What he means to this organization, this city, our lineup, it's tremendous. He's earned all the accolades he's going to get."
Depending on how these last games shake out, it's possible that Rendon could wind up tied with Harper in the awards column.
2. Soto is a super soph
When Juan Soto exploded onto the scene last season as a 19-year-old rookie and did things that few if any teenagers had done, he instantly became a walking and talking insurance policy for if/when Harper departed via free agency. Although some wondered if the young outfielder would regress in his second big league campaign, he has done the opposite.
While the plate discipline has been just as good (his 106 walks are second in the NL), the power numbers have spiked (34 bombs). Between that and figuring out how to handle off-speed pitches, Soto has become a Harper-esque middle-of-the-order thumper. Said hitting coach Kevin Long: "He understands his skills and is also willing to try a few minor things to get even better."
Perhaps the most significant upgrades in Soto's game have nothing to do with the dish.
In spring training, the Dominican product said he spent the offseason trying to improve his speed and defense. By all appearances, the work has paid off. After swiping five bases as a rookie, Soto, whose minor league teammates called him Gamba (Spanish for bowlegged), is 12-for-13 in steals this year. That's a 92% success rate, and it's tied for third among NL players (minimum 10 stolen bases). In left field, where he's still very much a work-in-progress, he has accounted for zero runs saved, an improvement on the minus-5 he posted a year ago.
So much for that sophomore slump.
3. Robles is roaming center field like a vet
If Soto was Washington's insurance policy, then Victor Robles was the addendum. The flashy rookie, who entered 2019 as the 10th-best prospect in baseball according to ESPN's Keith Law, took over as the Opening Day center fielder and hasn't looked back. Actually, that's not true.
Back in April, it seemed that Robles was in over his head defensively, as he regularly misread and/or misplayed balls in the outfield. But he has learned on the fly and quickly become one of the better center fielders in the game.
"That kind of arm you don't see very often," Soto said of his teammate, whose 12 assists lead center fielders and whose 21 runs saved rank second among all outfielders.
Thanks to the speedy Robles, the Nationals didn't think twice about sliding veteran Adam Eaton to right field to fill the void created by Harper's departure. Together, Robles, Eaton and Soto have helped Washington's outfield lead the majors in outs above average (their 26 OAA are more than twice as many as that of the next best group).
Offensively, though Robles hasn't been as productive as Washington might have hoped and has made more than his share of mistakes on the bases, manager Davey Martinez will gladly take 17 homers and 26 steals from the rookie -- especially at the bottom of the order.
4. The Big 3 is living up to the hype
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Sutcliffe: I'd want Scherzer in the wild-card game
Rick Sutcliffe explains why he'd take Max Scherzer over the Nationals' other pitchers to start in a wild-card game.
When Washington inked lefty Patrick Corbin to a six-year, $140 million contract in December, it pretty much signaled the end of the Harper era in D.C. It also gave the Nationals' rotation a 1-2-3 punch as good as any in the game.
Corbin, ace Max Scherzer and deputy ace Stephen Strasburg all rank among the NL's top six in strikeouts. And FIP. And WAR. Together, they've led Nats starters to a 3.51 ERA that ranks second in the majors, behind only that of the Dodgers.
"They've been phenomenal," Martinez said of his three-headed mound monster. "The reason why we're doing what we're doing."
Perhaps most importantly, Washington's troika has logged more than 550 innings combined, which has helped the team overcome a historically bad bullpen -- and Harper's historic free-agent exodus.
5. Their foes are friendly
The NL East was supposed to be the NL Beast. With the exception of the Marlins, every other team in the division was expected to be stout. While the defending champion Braves have been as good as advertised (and then some), New York and Philly -- a pair of clubs that were billed as markedly improved -- have disappointed.
Yes, the dysfunctional Mets seemed to have Washington's number this year, winning 12 of 19 matchups, including several in dramatic comeback fashion. But against the rest of the league, the Mets have been essentially a .500 club. As for Harper's new team, the Phillies? Decimated by injuries to the bullpen and outfield, they were eliminated from the playoffs Tuesday ... by the Nats.
When it comes to cooperative competition, nobody has been more magnanimous than Miami. Against the Marlins, Washington coasted to a 15-4 record. But that was always going to happen.
Just like the Nationals were always going to be fine without Bryce Harper.
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0:28
Turner's grand slam seals Nationals' win, playoff berth
Trea Turner crushes a loud grand slam to give the Nationals a lead they wouldn't surrender, and Washington clinches a playoff berth.
Daniel Rees meets the full-time civil servant, who is the top-ranked 400m hurdler in the UK
It’s July 15, 2017, and it’s fair to say that Chris McAlister is not having the happiest of seasons. Stepping off the track and drenched from the heavy rain, he makes his way back inside having run almost three seconds slower than the personal best he had set the previous year.
I was in the same race as him that day, having finished another second behind him, and the two of us were sat next to each other inside the warm-up area afterwards. I was disappointed to see my season was fading away, but McAlister appeared disconsolate.
United in our collective disappointment, we made conversation about something, anything, to take our minds off our performances. We chatted about AFC Wimbledon. We chatted about John Maynard Keynes. But there was little we could do to hide our frustration, for both of us seemed stuck on a downward curve.
Fast-forward two years, and the politics and economics graduate is at the top of his game – his decision to persevere paying serious dividends. The Thames Valley Harrier now sits at the top of the UK rankings for the men’s 400m hurdles and is completing his final preparations for the IAAF World Championships in Doha. He is self-avowedly living the dream.
McAlister snuck under the qualifying time for Doha by 0.02 at the European Team Championships in Poland last month and a bronze medal at the British Championships two weeks later effectively secured his place on the squad. Yet when he looks back on the 2017 season where he had taken a step backwards, McAlister admits that he hardly thought of competing at the Worlds two years later.
“There was a lot going on that season,” he says. “It was a big moment in my life in terms of getting a job and moving back home, so getting settled was at the forefront of my mind. I was never ever thinking of quitting. I had in the back of my head that I wanted to get a GB vest and get to a major championship, but I never thought it would happen this quickly.”
This year is the first in three where Jack Green has not occupied top spot in the UK rankings. And with the familiar names of Dai Greene, Seb Rodger, Niall Flannery and Jacob Paul having previously rotated within the top five, it’s fair to say that two new names have gate-crashed the upper echelon of the rankings.
National under-20 record-holder Alistair Chalmers is one of them. McAlister – whose previous highest UK position was seventh – is the other. Having knocked over a second off his PB, which now sits at 49.28, the obvious question to ask is just how McAlister has done it. Part of the answer, perhaps unexpectedly, is that he works full-time.
“I’m working out how to get broadband to people the market won’t reach,” he says, explaining his job. “It’s a government priority because people are socially excluded from society if they can’t access the internet. Working helps me take my mind off athletics because I can overthink what’s happening on the track. I use work to get my head out of it and it’s worked well.”
Having been granted paid leave to compete in Doha, McAlister is now readying himself for his arrival on the world scene.
Notably, he will have another chance to take on Norwegian Karsten Warholm, whose eccentricity – coupled with several world-class performances – has seen him touted as an icon of the event. In true competitive spirit, McAlister is relishing taking on the second-fastest 400m hurdler in history.
“Warholm’s in a different class, but whoever I’m up against I have to get out there and do my thing,” he says. “I know he can make mistakes. I haven’t been able to get him this year, but you never know. He’s really put 400m hurdles on the map this year – he’s absolutely mental.
“At the end of the day though it’s still 400m with hurdles in the way – it’s the same as just running a British League.”
Out of the 41 entrants for the 400m hurdles, McAlister is ranked 28th. But such is the unpredictable nature of the event, he will step on to the track in Doha with every reason to believe he can make the semi-final. Attention will soon also turn to Tokyo 2020.
“I’ve stayed fit throughout this season and I need to sustain some fitness and build a base over winter to get moving into 2020,” he adds. “Hopefully I’ve been set up nicely and I can get into some good races early on and have a crack at that time [48.90]. That’s the plan.”
Given the great strides McAlister has made since that miserable outing in July two years ago, it would take a pessimist not to back him to make the Olympics – one just hopes he will be given the time off work.
Andy Murray earned his first singles victory at Tour level since January with a three-set win over Tennys Sandgren in the first round of the Zhuhai Championships in China.
Murray continued his comeback from hip resurfacing surgery by winning 6-3 6-7 (6-8) 6-1.
Defeating the world number 69 showed progress from Murray having lost to the same man in North Carolina in August.
He will play Australian world number 31 Alex de Minaur in the second round.
Murray, 32, said at the Australian Open that the ongoing problem with his hip could have forced him into retirement.
He instead underwent the resurfacing operation, from which no player has ever returned to play top-level singles tennis.
The former world number one's comeback initially was in doubles tournaments, including both men's and mixed at Wimbledon, and he began playing singles competitions at the beginning of August.
The Scot, now ranked 413, won two matches on the lower-level Challenger Tour at the Rafa Nadal Open at the end of last month.
This win over American Sandgren is his first on the ATP Tour since beating James Duckworth at the Brisbane International on 1 January.
He missed the opportunity of a match point in the second-set tie-break, only to race through the decider and complete victory in two hours and 41 minutes.
The refereeing at the Rugby World Cup's opening weekend has not been good enough, says the world governing body.
In an unprecedented step, World Rugby has released a statement criticising the standard of officiating over the first few days of the tournament.
The opening matches featured a number of controversial incidents.
"The match officials team recognise that performances were not consistently of the standards set by World Rugby and themselves," said World Rugby.
But the body added it is "confident of the highest standards of officiating moving forward".
Among the incidents, Australia wing Reece Hodge escaped punishment for a tackle on Fiji's Peceli Yato, who was forced to leave the field with a head injury.
Elsewhere, there was controversy at the end of France's win over Argentina, with England scrum-half Danny Care among those adamant that France's number eight Louis Picamoles should have been penalised for offside before making a crucial interception in the closing stages.
"For me that is the difference between a team going out at the pool stages and a team going through to a quarter-final," Care said on the Rugby Union Weekly podcast.
"It was an awful decision - he was a metre offside. I don't know what the touch judges are looking at."
World Rugby have publicly reprimanded officials in the past, such as when they confirmed South African referee Craig Joubert's mistake at the end of the Rugby World Cup quarter-final in 2015 between Scotland and Australia.
However, this is the first time the governing body has criticised the general standard of officiating across the board.
Three tries in eight minutes at the start of the second half saw Samoa overcome a slow start and earn a bonus-point win against spirited Russia.
The Pacific Islanders went down to 13 men in the first half as Rey Lee-Lo and Motu Matu'u were both sin-binned for high tackles on Vasily Artemyev.
Russia led at the break thanks to two penalties from Yury Kushnarev.
But Samoa found their fluency to run in five second-half tries and ease to victory as the Bears ran out of steam.
Samoa narrowly top Pool A - which also contains hosts Japan, as well as Ireland and Scotland - on points difference.
Russia were on top in the early stages at Kumagaya Stadium as Samoa were slow to find their feet, but it was the latter who opened the scoring through Alapati Leiua's try.
The Bears responded well and two penalties from Kushnarev put them into the lead in the 25th minute.
Samoa then received two yellow cards in three minutes when Lee-Lo and Matu'u were sent to the bin by referee Romain Poite.
In both instances, the players appeared to make contact with Russian skipper Artemyev's head, but Poite deemed that he was dipping into contact and that yellow cards were sufficient.
Samoa hit the ground running in the early stages of the second half, with Afaesetiti Amosa's score and a quickfire Ed Fidow double taking the game away from Russia.
Lee-Lo and Leiua's second wrapped up the scoring, with Russia held up on the line as they pressed in vain for a consolation try.
Samoa now face a crucial tie against Scotland on Monday (11:15 BST) in Kobe, whereas Russia meet Ireland in the same city on Thursday, October 3 (11:15 BST).
Russia coach Lyn Jones:
"It's very disappointing. The performance wasn't what we expected. However, the short turnaround has affected us tactically and mentally.
"I thought we could play the same tactics as Japan, but it wasn't going to be tonight. We needed more time to prepare.
"It's not the physical deterioration, it was the mental. We just weren't there tonight."
Samoa coach Steve Jackson:
"To lose two players, go down to 13 men and we didn't lose on the score, I'm really proud of the effort.
"We knew we would come out after half-time and the boys were still fresh. I'm just glad we got over the line."
ROSSBURG, Ohio – Jason McDougal has been named the driver of the Foxco Racing No. 56 for Saturday’s USAC Silver Crown Champ Car Series finale at Eldora Speedway, the 38th 4-Crown Nationals presented by NKT.tv.
One year ago, McDougal (Broken Arrow, Okla.) made an impressive Silver Crown debut during the 2018 4-Crown Nationals, starting seventh and finishing fourth.
His second series start may have been even more memorable, as he captured a victory in the qualifying race, then charged from 25th to sixth in this May’s Hoosier Hundred at the Indiana State Fairgrounds.
Saturday would mark just the third start of McDougal’s Silver Crown career, after being the top rookie finisher in each of his first two starts.
The Foxco Racing machine has a highly-successful history in the USAC Silver Crown Champ Car Series, especially at Eldora, where the car has won on four occasions. Dave Darland was triumphant for Foxco in 2004, 2005, 2008 and 2009.
Last fall at the 4-Crown Nationals, the Foxco ride led nine laps and finished second in the 50-lap main event with driver Kevin Thomas Jr.
McDougal will be pulling triple-duty this weekend, competing in all three USAC national divisions at Eldora. He’ll pilot the FMR Racing No. 76m midget and the Daigh/Phillips Motorsports No. 71p sprint car.
McDougal has been a standout on both the AMSOIL USAC National Sprint Car and NOS Energy Drink USAC National Midget trails this season. He’s one of five drivers to win a feature event in both series this year, alongside Tyler Courtney, Justin Grant, Thomas and Chris Windom.
McDougal won during June’s Eastern Storm round at Bridgeport (N.J.) Speedway, his second career USAC sprint win. He followed the victory up with his first triumph in USAC’s midget division during Mid-America Midget Week at Jefferson County Speedway in July.
He stands eighth in sprint car points and ninth in the midget standings.
MADISON, Ill. – In the span of a few hours, Richie Crampton’s season took a sudden turn at the Mello Yello Countdown to the Championship opener.
Now, the Top Fuel veteran is excited to see if he can keep the momentum rolling during this weekend’s eighth annual AAA Insurance NHRA Midwest Nationals at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway.
Crampton won the first event of the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series’ six-race playoffs, immediately throwing his name into the championship conversation in his 11,000-horsepower DHL dragster.
The stop in St. Louis is Crampton’s next opportunity to show that he’s a legit title contender, and the win has certainly sent a jolt of confidence through the entire Kalitta Motorsports team.
Crampton is now fifth in points, riding high at the most important time of the year.
“I’ve always had the utmost confidence in my team, but it does change the dynamic and outlook of the Countdown,” Crampton said. “We try to win every weekend, but seeing we have a real shot at it, it just makes everyone focused a lot more. Not that they weren’t already, but in a positive way, it just really makes it more real and more exciting.
“I’m enjoying it.”
Gateway marks the the 20th of 24 races during the season and Crampton is seeking his first St. Louis win.
The triumph at Maple Grove Raceway was the Australia native’s first win outside of Gainesville since 2015, a year when Crampton finished third in points. He won at Gainesville in 2018, but couldn’t find the winning combination the rest of the year.
Crampton and his team, led by legendary team owner Connie Kalitta and assistant crew chief Kurt Elliott, won Gainesville again this season, but had struggled to get another win.
Crampton fell in three straight first rounds before the playoffs, starting in ninth, but all of that went away with four impressive rounds in Reading.
“You can really only worry about yourself,” said Crampton, who has 10 career Top Fuel wins. “It’s going to take care of itself. At the end of the day, you don’t have the opportunity to race all the contenders in the first round at the next race. To me, it’s key that we can continue to keep moving forward. Winning races is the ultimate goal, but at the very least going a couple rounds each weekend.
“Nobody else is going to help you as much as you can help yourself.”
Crampton knocked off Kalitta Motorsports teammate Doug Kalitta in the final round at Maple Grove, but Kalitta took over the points lead from Steve Torrence, the reigning world champ who lost in the first round.
Crampton is now just 54 points back of Kalitta heading into St. Louis, but the likes of 2017 world champ Brittany Force, Antron Brown, Leah Pritchett, Clay Millican and Mike Salinas are within title reach as well.
That ups the ante heading to St. Louis, but Crampton is hopeful that brings out the best in his team and his driving again this weekend.
“We’ve got to continue to make good runs in qualifying and have a real solid four runs of information to work off of for raceday,” Crampton said. “I have every bit of faith in Connie and Kurt, and my team if we get some good runs under our belt, regardless of where we qualify, it will equate to round wins in St. Louis.
“It’s one of those races where the fans really get behind the race. The Midwest fans are great, so it’s going to be another good one and I’m really looking forward to it.”
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