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ROSSBURG, Ohio – Sammy Swindell will chase his fourth Kings Royal victory after announcing a deal to drive for his son, Kevin Swindell, and Swindell SpeedLab.
The announcement was made on Thursday evening via a video posted the official Swindell SpeedLab Twitter account.
Eldora Speedway 2019 King’s Royal Announcement… pic.twitter.com/ZU3VabF0Op
— Swindell SpeedLab (@SwindellSpdLab) July 11, 2019
The elder Swindell, 63, was recently released from his ride with Thone Motorsports because team owner Brandon Thone chose to shut the team down in order to focus on his business endeavors.
Swindell is a three-time winner of the Kings Royal at Eldora, capturing the event title in 2012, ’99 and ’92.
The Kings Royal, which will pay a whopping $175,000 to the winner, takes place July 17-20.
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SPARTA, Ky. – Justin Haley picked up the phone on Thursday afternoon at Kentucky Speedway and sounded just as calm, cool and collected as he did in the hours leading up to his breakthrough Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series win last weekend in the rain-shortened Coke Zero Sugar 400.
For him, the last five days have been “business as usual,” or as much as that statement can apply to a 20-year-old from small-town Indiana who broke through on stock-car racing’s grandest stage.
“I’ll be honest, my life the last few days has kind of been boring,” said Haley, who met with Kaulig Racing on Monday at the team’s shop before attending a Fraternal Order of Eagles sponsor appearance on Tuesday.
“Everyone’s been asking about the race, and I’ve just kept repeating myself … because there’s only so many words I know to describe how I felt, how the race went down and what I’ve gone through in this last week,” he added. “Maybe I’m taking it for granted a little bit, but it’s alright. I’ve been hanging out.
“I’m just doing normal me. I haven’t changed my schedule at all. I can’t break my habits.”
RELATED: Rain Hands Haley A Cup Win At Daytona
Even with nearly a week to soak in the fact that he won at Daytona Int’l Speedway, Haley admitted to SPEED SPORT prior to NASCAR Xfinity Series practice at Kentucky that he still can’t believe what he accomplished with Spire Motorsports over the Independence Day holiday weekend.
Haley survived a 17-car crash at lap 118, stayed out as other frontrunners pitted in front of him and the assumed the lead before a lightning delay stopped the race for more than two hours.
Rain finally moved in around the speedway and forced NASCAR officials to call the event, awarding Haley his first Cup Series victory in the most improbable of situations.
The Winamac, Ind., native was 27th prior to the accident that first catapulted him into contention.
“When you make it through the Big One at Daytona or Talladega, it’s a big accomplishment – I don’t care who you are,” Haley noted. “It wasn’t like we were in the middle of (the pack), so I could get the car slowed down a good bit.
“The biggest thing was realizing after we did get through it, just how many cars were involved,” he added. “I thought to myself, ‘Man, that was a lot of cars. We might have a shot at a top 10 … or even finish on the lead lap! And then five minutes later I was the leader of the dang race.”
If anything, Sunday’s race was a microcosm of the former NASCAR K&N Pro Series East champion’s entire NASCAR career.
He dug his heels in at the K&N level, winning the title in 2016, but then struggled during his rookie season in Trucks before making the Championship 4 last year on the strength of three victories.
“It was a whirlwind of emotions, just so up and down,” said Haley. “My whole career has been like that, in a way, but there hasn’t been a year where I haven’t found success somewhere. There’s never been a year where I haven’t won a race. I’ve always hung in there, even though I’ve questioned things at times.
“The biggest part of that is being fortunate and blessed enough to have good teams around me that would rally around me when I needed them to,” he added. “Honestly, the biggest up-and-down moment of my entire career was probably waiting out that dang rain delay. (laughs) We got out of the car, then waited for a bit, then got back in the car and was ready to fire it up again when they told me to get back out. It was just a crazy set of circumstances before they did finally call it.”
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SPARTA, Ky. – Austin Cindric started off his weekend by watching his crew chief get escorted out of the NASCAR Xfinity Series garage at Kentucky Speedway, but he rebounded Friday in a big way by winning the pole for the Alsco 300.
Cindric’s crew chief, Brian Wilson, was escorted from the garage area Thursday when NASCAR officials discovered an illegal body modification on the No. 22 Mazak Ford Mustang. The team was also penalized with the loss of 10 owner and driver points and Wilson was fined $10,000.
Fast forward to Friday and Cindric topped the qualifying charts with a 29.995-second lap at 180.030 mph to earn his first pole of the season and the fourth of his NASCAR Xfinity Series career.
“Unfortunately we haven’t run a lap of the race yet and that’s where they pay the points,” Cindric said. “This is an awesome start. Awesome to do this in Mazak’s backyard. We’ve got them on the car this weekend. They’ve been a partner with Team Penske for over 25 years.
“Starting from the right spot and hopefully we’ll finish in the right spot.”
Christopher Bell will start Friday’s race from the second position, followed by Noah Gragson, Justin Allgaier and Cole Custer. Custer had his car chief ejected Friday afternoon when his car failed to pass inspection after three attempts.
The remainder of the top-10 includes Brandon Jones, Riley Herbst, Tyler Reddick, Chase Briscoe and Michael Annett.
Alsco 300 Starting Lineup
1. Austin Cindric
2. Christopher Bell
3. Noah Gragson
4. Justin Allgaier
5. Cole Custer
6. Brandon Jones
7. Riley Herbst
8. Tyler Reddick
9. Chase Briscoe
10. Michael Annett
11. John Hunter Nemechek
12. Ryan Truex
13. Ryan Sieg
14. Justin Haley
15. Ray Black II
16. Gray Gaulding
17. Brandon Brown
18. Jeremy Clements
19. Ronnie Bassett Jr.
20. Timmy Hill
21. Jeff Green
22. Matt Mills
23. Stephen Leicht
24. B,J. McLeod
25. Josh Bilicki
26. Josh Williams
27. Joey Gase
28. Shane Lee
29. Chad Finchum
30. Landon Cassill
31. David Starr
32. JA Junior Avila
33. Morgan Shepherd
34. Camden Murphy
35. Garrett Smithley
36. Vinnie Miller
37. Mike Harmon
38. John Jackson
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SPARTA, Ky. – When Daniel Hemric leaves Kentucky Speedway after Saturday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race, he won’t be returning home to North Carolina right away.
Instead he’ll be heading to Indiana’s Anderson Speedway, where he’ll take part in his second major asphalt super late model event in less than a week.
After taking part in the Slinger Nationals last Tuesday at Slinger (Wis.) Super Speedway, Hemric will again return to his roots on Monday to take part in the 53rd annual Redbud 400 sanctioned by the ARCA/CRA Super Series.
“I am looking forward to Anderson,” noted Hemric. “The last few weeks I have been going short track racing and not had a chance to go to the NASCAR shop so much. I am fortunate Richard Childress gives me the opportunity to go back short track racing and reconnect with that fan base.”
Hemric is a former winner of the Redbud 400, having won the race at the historic Anderson quarter-mile in 2014. He’ll drive the No. 54 entry fielded by Wimmer Motorsports during Monday’s edition of the race in the hopes of taking home the $15,000 top prize.
“I was fortunate to win the Redbud race in 2014, and the fan base is great there,” said Hemric, a multi-time champion across multiple late model tours prior to his NASCAR career. “It is a race track I love going to, and with the CRA I won the JEGS championship with them in 2012, so it all feels good to go back. Anderson is wild, there probably is not another place like it. Slinger Speedway in Wisconsin may compare, they both have a lot of the same characteristics. They both have the same deal, quarter-mile racetrack, high banked and fast, you barely have enough time to breath, let alone enough time to think. Anybody that runs a pavement late model knows what I am talking about.”
After running two major super late model events in the span of a week, Hemric says he has one other race on his late model schedule this season.
“I want to run some more CRA events this year, but there are just too many conflicts of interest with my Cup schedule,” said Hemric, who is in the midst of his rookie season in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. “The CRA group is a great group to race with, a lot of nice people over there. I just like being a part of that series.
“As of right now we just have one bigger race in Wisconsin later in the year. Outside of that I don’t have any more plans for short track racing. Either way, I am going to enjoy it, and enjoy reconnecting with the race fans.”
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RALEIGH, N.C. -- The Carolina Hurricanes and free-agent center Ryan Dzingel have agreed on a two-year, $6.75 million contract.
The deal announced Friday by general manager Don Waddell will pay Dzingel $3.25 million this season and $3.5 million in 2020-21.
"Ryan has proven that he can be an impact player offensively," Waddell said. "His speed, skill and vision make him an excellent fit for our forward group and our style of play."
Dzingel, who is 27, had career highs last season with 26 goals, 30 assists and 56 points. He was acquired by Columbus right after Matt Duchene -- with both coming from the Ottawa Senators -- as the Blue Jackets went all-in on a playoff run,
He had a brutal postseason, however, with just one goal and zero assists in nine playoff games. He was a healthy scratch in Game 2 against the Boston Bruins.
The 2011 seventh-round draft pick has shown himself to be a consistent 20-goal scorer in his four years in the league. Dzingel is coming off a two-year, $3.6 million contract he signed after posting 32 points in his first full season in the league.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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PHILADELPHIA -- Philadelphia Flyers president Paul Holmgren has stepped down to become a senior adviser for the franchise.
General manager Chuck Fletcher becomes president of hockey operations in a related move. Fletcher reports directly to Comcast Spectacor Chairman and CEO Dave Scott.
Holmgren has been a Flyers player, assistant coach, head coach, general manager and president for 40 years. Scott says Holmgren has earned a place among the organization's all-time greats.
Philadelphia hired Fletcher seven months ago to replace the fired Ron Hextall in the hopes of winning the Stanley Cup for the first time since 1975. Fletcher previously was a general manager for the Minnesota Wild and worked for a handful of NHL teams.
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The St. Louis Blues' Stanley Cup championship run had a ubiquitous soundtrack to it: Laura Branigan's 1982 disco classic "Gloria," which became the team's postgame victory song, while "Play Gloria!" became a rallying cry found on T-shirts, hats and other trinkets sold inside and outside the arena during the postseason.
The Philadelphia bar that inspired the Blues' "Gloria" craze believes it's only fair that it share in the profits from those items.
The Jacks NYB, a bar in South Philadelphia, filed a trademark application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for "Play Gloria" on May 8 that covered usage on T-shirts, then a second one for "Play Gloria!" on June 1 that covered an assortment of items from hats and shirts to blankets and beverage cans.
The bar's legal representation has contacted St. Louis companies, including the Blues themselves, about sharing in the profits made from the sales of "Play Gloria" merchandise. In some cases, that has meant cease and desist letters. The Blues have not been sent one.
"There are companies out there making enormous profits, potentially, off of a brand that The Jacks undoubtedly created, fostered and supported," said Rob McKinley of Lauletta Birnbaum LLC, an attorney specializing in intellectual property who is representing the bar. "Our conversations with the Blues have been friendly and open."
The Blues were selling "Play Gloria" shirts in their arena store during the playoffs, but as of Friday had only shirts that read "Gloria Gloria" for sale on their official online store.
The 1980s pop classic "Gloria" has been the St. Louis Blues' victory anthem this season. Here's the new "Play Gloria" shirt design debuting at Game 3 between the Blues and Sharks. https://t.co/OJR5Wu5hWy pic.twitter.com/OQc5DFNO4z
— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) May 15, 2019
Mike Caruso, vice president of media and brand communications for the Blues, told ESPN that the action by The Jacks "has nothing to do with us, so no comment from us. But we heard that it's dead. The folks from the bar never followed up."
The Blues were inspired to adopt "Gloria" as their victory song after watching an Eagles NFC wild-card game against the Chicago Bears at Jacks NYB on Jan. 6.
"We got together with some friends and watched the game with a bunch of Philly guys who grew up there," Blues defenseman Joel Edmundson told StLouisBlues.com. "They had a DJ in the bar and whenever there was a commercial break, they would crank the tunes and all these guys from Philly would get up and start dancing around. They played this song 'Gloria' a couple of times, and this one guy looked at the DJ and said 'keep playing Gloria!', so they kept playing it. Everyone would get up and start singing and dancing. We just sat back and watched it happen. Right there we decided we should play the song after our wins."
McKinley said that origin story, and the subsequent "where it all began" coverage of the bar in St. Louis media and on NBC, bolsters the bar's trademark claim.
"The minute you start saying it is the minute you start to acquire trademark rights. You can establish the rights later. You have to prove the first use of it," he told ESPN on Friday. "I've been doing this for over 20 years. One of the things you have to establish under common-law trademark rights is you have to establish that you own the trademark. That's easy in this case."
From the land of unofficially licensed merch pic.twitter.com/ay3uNCXSWk
— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) June 1, 2019
McKinley disputed reports out of St. Louis that the bar has taken legal action.
"They didn't file any lawsuits against anyone. It's simply a business situation, where a company creates a valuable piece of intellectual property and wants to profit from it," he said. "We didn't try to sue the Blues. That's patently false."
According to Missouri Lawyers Weekly, which first reported on the letters from The Jacks NYB, a company called Arch Apparel initially stopped production on "Play Gloria" gear but then started selling it again after consulting with its legal representation.
On Friday, The Jacks NYB put out a statement on its Facebook page emphatically denying it has "threatened to sue the St. Louis Blues ever" while defending its trademark dispute with Arch Apparel in particular.
"Here's the truth. When we found out that other companies were using our PLAY GLORIA trademark to make money off of it, we reached out to them to try to make a deal with them. If they are going to profit from it, why shouldn't we get a small piece of the pie. Wouldn't you? Why should they keep all of the profits? In the case of Arch Apparel, rather than talk to us, they completely ignored us, then went on to make hundreds of THOUSANDS of dollars off of our #PlayGloria Trademark when fully knowing we owned the rights since our first letter in May," the bar said in the statement.
McKinley said there's been an "us against them" spin out of St. Louis regarding the trademark dispute.
"They look at the company as some out-of-own bar trying to sue a local St. Louis business. Why isn't the spin that those companies pay some fair amount of their profits to make more profits?" he said.
"To put things in context: If the St. Louis Blues owned the 'Play Gloria' trademark, and they sent cease and desist letters to unauthorized users of it, would we even be having this conversation? Unquestionably no. The St. Louis Blues, Anheuser-Busch, the NHL ... they respect the intellectual property rights of others."
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Kuchar moves past controversies with help from grandma, Mickelson
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Golf
Friday, 12 July 2019 03:41

Matt Kuchar has won twice this season and failed to finish worse than T-16 in each of the year's first three majors, but unfortunately for the 41-year-old, his performance has often been overshadowed by controversy.
From not paying his fill-in caddie properly in Mexico to an awkward moment with Sergio Garcia at the WGC-Dell Match Play to a lengthy discussion with a rules official at Memorial, Kuchar knows his aw-shucks reputation has taken a few hits this year. He's heard plenty of criticism.
So, too, has Kuchar's grandmother.
"I don't do the social media, so I think that helped to not see much," Kuchar said Wednesday at the Scottish Open. "However, hearing from my grandmother, you know, the things that she was hearing and talking to me about was really tough. You really want to make your parents proud, your grandparents proud. I've kind of always been that kid that had made my parents and grandparents proud. To see them hear some of the things said about me, was never something that I wanted to put them in that position, and that was very, very difficult."
Not only did Kuchar discuss his controversies with his grandmother, who offered her love and support to her grandson, but also a fellow Tour pro who can relate to being the subject of public scrutiny.
"Phil Mickelson has pulled me aside a couple times, though," Kuchar said, "and he's been one that says, 'Listen, this is a tough deal.' He said, 'I've been through way worse. It will pass. You keep being the guy you are and this will go away. Unfortunately it's a tough situation you're in, but just keep being the guy you are and time will heal.'"
Kuchar, though, has made an attempt to grow as a person.
"You don't learn from victories very often. You learn from your setbacks, and I think that's something where I've certainly learned from," Kuchar said, referring to the caddie situation. "I look at that and that's an opportunity for me to learn to be more generous across the board. You know, whether it's home with the family, with the kids, with the wife, with the fans, with you name it; there's just so many opportunities to be more generous, and that's one of the things you learn. Sometimes the setbacks are hard, but those are the lessons that you tend to learn from and come out better from."
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That was Tiger Woods in his red shirt on Sunday at the Masters. That was Tiger Woods slipping on the green jacket.
But it's not the same Tiger Woods.
The evidence has less to do with how he plays - still plenty good to beat the best in the world on the biggest stage - and more to do with how often he plays.
The chanting and cheering Sunday afternoon at Augusta National sounded as though it would go on forever. Woods, 11 years and four back surgeries removed from his last major, methodically worked his way around the back nine and beat a cast of contenders that included the last two major champions (Brooks Koepka and Francesco Molinari) and the No. 1 player in the world (Dustin Johnson).
It was his 15th major, and it started anew the countdown in his pursuit of Jack Nicklaus and his record 18 majors.
That now seems a lot longer than three months ago.
Woods has played just three tournaments - 10 rounds - since he won the Masters. For only the seventh time in his career, he went from one major to the next without having played in between, and then he missed the cut at Bethpage Black in the PGA Championship.
Unusual? Not anymore.
He goes into the British Open, which starts next week on a Royal Portrush links he has never seen, having not played since he shot 69 in the final round at Pebble Beach on June 16. A good back nine allowed him to tie for 21st. He finished 11 shots behind Gary Woodland.
There were not many options. Woods has not played the week after the U.S. Open since 2003. Instead of having the Quicken Loans National, which his foundation ran, the tour offered two new events in Detroit and Minnesota. The only time Woods has played a week before the British Open was in 1995, when he was still in college. He played the Scottish Open at Carnoustie ahead of the British Open at St. Andrews.
His only public activity since Pebble Beach was a social media post for Nike on Monday in which he says he is getting up at 1 a.m. because that would be 6 a.m. at Royal Portrush, and he wanted ''to be prepared for the time change.''
''If you want to succeed, if you want to get better, if you want to win, if you want to accomplish your goals, well, it starts with getting up early in the morning,'' he said.
The inactivity is another reminder that Woods is managing his health as much as his game.
Most telling was what he said at Bethpage Black: ''There are more days I feel older than my age than I do younger than my age,'' he said.
What to expect at the final major of the year?
Anything.
No one was more perplexed about his lack of competition going into The Open than Padraig Harrington.
''If you're serious about winning The Open, you've got to be playing tournament golf at least before it,'' Harrington said. ''You'd rather be playing links golf and being in a tournament than just on your own going into it.''
That was never the case with Woods.
In his younger days, Woods came over to Ireland with Mark O'Meara for a mix of links golf and fishing, either at Portmarnock or Royal County Down, and sometimes to the south in Waterville. In a 10-year stretch since he first went to Ireland, Woods won the Open three times and contended in three others.
''I think it has been instrumental in preparing for [The Open], not only for getting adjusted for the time, but also getting used to playing links golf,'' he said in 2002 in Ireland, where he won a World Golf Championship. ''We play in all different types of weather, which certainly makes it interesting. And I think it's instrumental in my preparation for The Open Championship.''
Harrington wasn't being as critical of Woods as the headlines suggested. There is simply a different way to prepare, and no one can argue with Woods' results.
''I was always mightily impressed when Tiger Woods would play in a major without playing the week before,'' Harrington said. ''I'd be a basket case if I didn't play the week before. Different personalities. Completely different.''
Woods finished last year with a victory in the Tour Championship, and he had been building toward that. He inched closer to contention two weeks before the The Open, and then had the lead briefly on Sunday at Carnoustie before tying for sixth. He pushed Koepka all the way to the end in a runner-up finish at the PGA Championship.
And then he won at East Lake.
Since then?
He was clearly fatigued at the Ryder Cup - where he didn't win a match - and after two months away from the game, he finished 17th against an 18-man field in the Bahamas. He played three tournaments in a five-week stretch to start this year and finished nearly 11 shots out of the lead on average. And then he skipped Bay Hill, citing soreness in his neck. His explanation was simple. Sometimes he doesn't feel that great, a product of age and injuries.
Woods lost in the quarterfinals of Match Play, and two weeks later won the Masters.
In the three events since then, he missed the cut and finished 10 shots and 11 shots out of the lead.
''If I feel good, then I feel like I can play any venue,'' Woods said at the U.S. Open. ''When I'm stiff and not moving as well, it becomes a little bit more difficult.''
This sounds like the new normal. He would not elaborate - that's the old normal - on how he felt at Bethpage, where he played only nine holes of practice in the three days leading up to the first round. ''I was in rough shape,'' he said.
Before leaving Pebble Beach, Woods said he would wind down and get his lifts up in the gym. His hope was that he would see more than one wind direction during practice at Royal Portrush, ''especially on a course I've never played.''
''I know Florida will not be the same temperature as Northern Ireland,'' he said with a smile. ''I'm not going to be practicing with any sweaters at home, but it will be nice to get to Portrush and get with it again.''
Which Tiger Woods will show up? Odds are, not even he knows.
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