logo
Dennis Hauger Runs from Chaos To Win in Detroit, Pad Points Lead

Dennis Hauger Runs from Chaos To Win in Detroit, Pad Points Lead

Fox Sports4 days ago

INDYCAR
Dennis Hauger quickly figured out the best way to avoid potential and real chaos Sunday in the INDY NXT by Firestone Detroit Grand Prix – stay out front.
Pole sitter Hauger, from Norway, led all 45 laps of the race on the streets of downtown Detroit in the No. 28 Rental Group car for his fourth victory in five races this season in the INDYCAR development series. He held off the No. 76 HMD Motorsports car of 2024 series Rookie of the Year Caio Collet by 1.0460 seconds in a one-lap dash for the checkered flag after a restart at the end of Lap 44.
SEE: Race Results
'The tires, they cool down really quickly, so that last lap was sketchy,' Hauger said. 'I think I heated up the tires nicely, and we got a good gap after the back straight.
'Super happy with that. We kept it clean, and we got a good win today.'
Hauger expanded his series lead to 38 points over fellow rookie teammate Lochie Hughes, who is the only other driver to win a race this season.
Rookie Juan Manuel Correa earned his career-best finish of third in the No. 39 HMD Motorsports car. His previous best result was 14th in the second race of the Indianapolis road course doubleheader last month.
Series veteran Josh Pierson completed a solid day for HMD Motorsports, which fielded the cars that finished second, third and fourth, with a fourth-place result in the team's No. 16 machine. Hughes rallied from a late pit stop due to a damaged front wing to round out the top five in the No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship car.
Just six of the 20 cars in the race finished on the lead lap, as the tight confines of the nine-turn, 1.645-mile temporary circuit on the streets of downtown Detroit induced chaos nearly from the green flag.
At the start, Hauger and Hughes raced side by side into the first turn, with Hauger clinging to the top spot. In Turn 4 on the same lap, the No. 99 Abel/Force Indy car of Myles Rowe was sent into a spin due to rear contact from the No. 17 car of teammate Callum Hedge.
That incident spawned a caution period due to a bottleneck that blocked the track and led to an accordion effect of collisions, with nine cars involved and many suffering damage.
Hauger held steady on the restart on Lap 3 and gradually eased away from Hughes and Andretti Global teammate Salvador de Alba in the No. 27 Grupo Indi machine.
De Alba passed Hughes for second place on Lap 5 and stayed within four-tenths of a second of Hauger by Lap 10.
But Hauger expanded his lead to 1.5 seconds by Lap 19 as de Alba, Hughes, Collet and Correa dueled – often side by side – for second through fifth. There was some contact, and the front wings on the cars of Hughes and de Alba were damaged.
The wing damage, which also included rubbing a deep groove into his right front Firestone Firehawk tire, forced de Alba to pit from second place on Lap 24. Hauger had all but checked out up front by then, ahead by 6.5 seconds.
Hughes' front-wing damage compromised his car's performance, and Collet passed him for second on Lap 38. Hughes was forced to pit for a front wing change on Lap 39 from third place.
It looked like Hauger was going to canter to the checkered flag, as his lead had reached double digits by Lap 40. But Jordan Missig spun exiting Turn 2 on Lap 41 in the No. 48 Abel Motorsports car, triggering the second and final caution of the race and erasing Hauger's big lead.
The field lined up for a final restart and one-lap shootout at the end of Lap 44, but Hauger got a big jump at the green and never was threatened by Collet or Correa.
The next INDY NXT by Firestone race is Sunday, June 15 at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Illinois, just across the Mississippi River from St. Louis. It's the first of four oval races this season for the series.
recommended

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Rink at RBC Canadian Open is ready to rock. Will 2025 deliver the first hole-in-one?
The Rink at RBC Canadian Open is ready to rock. Will 2025 deliver the first hole-in-one?

USA Today

time7 hours ago

  • USA Today

The Rink at RBC Canadian Open is ready to rock. Will 2025 deliver the first hole-in-one?

The Rink at RBC Canadian Open is ready to rock. Will 2025 deliver the first hole-in-one? One year ago, during the third round of the RBC Canadian Open, Canadian golfer Mackenzie Hughes arrived at the par-3 13th hole at Hamilton Golf & Country Club and described the scene as pandemonium. Before he could hit his tee shot, the fans at The Rink, the hockey-themed hole wrapped in boards on both sides of the tee, goalie helmets as tee markers, a goal on the tee, and a Zamboni ice-resurfacing machine nearby, serenaded him with Canada's national anthem. 'The hair on the back of my neck stood up,' Hughes said. They sang 'Hey, Baby!' before Trace Crowe teed off and John Denver's 'Take Me Home, Country Roads,' in between groups, while Rory McIlroy was treated to a Ryder Cup-esque 'Ole! Ole! Ole! Ole!' When the pounding of hands slapping the boards slows down, there's organ music just like they used to play at the old Maple Leaf Gardens (now Scotiabank Arena) and DJ Summer Knocks, the official DJ of the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs added some authenticity this year. The Rink, born eight years ago, might see its first hole-in-one It was a hare-brained idea that debuted eight years ago and is now part of the fabric of the RBC Canadian Open. This year, The Rink is slimmed down from 230 yards a year ago and is set up at the downhill, 144-yard par-3 14th hole at TPC Toronto at Osprey Valley (North Course) in Greater Toronto's Caledon, Ontario, and some players say this could be the year for the first hole in one at The Rink. 'It's on a shorter par-3 and there's a couple pin locations (including back left) where you could see an ace and hopefully a lot of birdies and give the fans something to cheer for and get loud for,' said Canadian pro Taylor Pendrith, who dunked one on just his third swing of the day during charity scramble last summer. Credit goes to the executive director of Golf Saskatchewan, who suggested a hockey-themed hole to combine Canada's most popular pastimes, golf and hockey. It debuted originally in 2017 at Glenn Abbey. The first year, rowdy fans lined the hockey-style boards, which replaced traditional roping, on one side of the seventh hole. The next year, at St. George's, the boards were positioned on both sides of the 16th hole, which created a different vibe, and it just keeps growing with a double-decker tent lining the left side of the hole last year. Former RBC Canadian Open tournament director Bryan Crawford told PGA "I don't think anybody could have dreamed when that idea was brought forward that it would have grown to what it is today.' Shades of TPC Scottsdale's 16th hole It creates an electric atmosphere that is shades of the infamous 16th at TPC Scottsdale's Stadium Course during the WM Phoenix Open, only these fans tend to be buzzed rather than three sheets to the wind and while they slap the boards and singalong to their heart's content, it becomes quiet enough to hear a pin drop before a player tees off. "They get it," two-time RBC Canadian Open champion Rory McIlroy once said. So, too, do the pros, who have bought into putting a slice of Canada's national pastime into the act, wearing their favorite hockey jersey. Mike Weir has worn a Detroit Red Wings jersey. Dustin Johnson, a past champion before departing to LIV, used to rock an Edmonton Oilers jersey of his father-in-law, 'The Great One,' Wayne Gretzky. Former touring pro Graham DeLaet used to sport a Calgary Flames jersey. Three years ago, Golf Canada introduced The Rink at the Canadian Women's Open, with Brooke Henderson donning a sweater of her hometown Ottawa Senators and Nelly Korda a Chicago Blackhawks jersey, the team that her boyfriend played for at the time. And the players aren't the only ones dressing the part. The volunteer marshals rock the black-and-white vertical-striped shirts and black shorts resembling referees, and have dubbed the area around the tee "The Penalty Box." Just like at a hockey game, the fans booed and chanted 'Referees suck,' when one of them confiscated a plastic hockey puck that was being toss in the stands. It's fast become one of the more unique experiences at a professional golf tournament without feeling too contrived or the fans getting too out of control. 'On that Rink, there's like no space. It's just like the boards are right there on the tee and they're banging and they're screaming,' said Hughes, who wore a jersey as a tribute to a late friend last year. 'Walking on that tee, again, just a total hair-raising moment where, I mean, I'm trying to play it pretty cool, but inside I'm thinking this is really, really cool.'

Mystics' Kiki Iriafen makes WNBA rookie history not seen since Tina Charles
Mystics' Kiki Iriafen makes WNBA rookie history not seen since Tina Charles

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mystics' Kiki Iriafen makes WNBA rookie history not seen since Tina Charles

The post Mystics' Kiki Iriafen makes WNBA rookie history not seen since Tina Charles appeared first on ClutchPoints. The Washington Mystics are in somewhat of a transition year after losing a lot of their more experienced pieces on the roster, including longtime superstar Elena Delle Donne to retirement, but there are some good signs to build off of early in the year. Advertisement The Mystics had three picks in the top six of the WNBA Draft just before the season, and they are being put to good use. Even while rookie point guard Georgia Amoore sits out for the season with a knee injury suffered during the preseason, rookies Kiki Iriafen and Sonia Citron continue to impress. Iriafen has ben putting up big game after big game for the Mystics, and she did so once again on Tuesday night against the Indiana Fever. The No. 4 pick in the draft scored 20 points on a very efficient 9-of-11 shooting to go along with nine rebounds, but the Fever still got the 85-76 win without Caitlin Clark. Iriafen is still averaging a double-double through eight games with another great game in the books, a marker that puts her in some pretty rare company in the WNBA, via ESPN's Alexa Philippou. 'Kiki Iriafen is the 6th player in league history to average a double-double through their first eight career games and first since Tina Charles in 2010,' Philippou wrote on X, formerly Twitter. Advertisement Iriafen tore up the college game during her time at Stanford playing next to Cameron Brink, but she struggled to fully ingratiate herself into the system at USC last season. Now, however, she appears to have found some more comfort at the WNBA level and has broken out as one of the Mystics' go-to scorers. Coming into Tuesday's clash, Iriafen was Washington's third-leading scorer at 13.9 points per game, while Citron was the second-leading scorer at 14.3 points a night. The two rookies are clearly going places and are making a massive impact already as the Mystics look to remain in the playoff hunt. The two are also making up the Rookie of the Year race at this point while Paige Bueckers makes her way back from a concussion. When the former UConn star does get back on the floor, she will have some work to do to catch up to Iriafen's stellar pace.

Richard Hughes' £18m transfer GAMBLE pays off
Richard Hughes' £18m transfer GAMBLE pays off

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Richard Hughes' £18m transfer GAMBLE pays off

Richard Hughes pockets up to £18m for Kelleher The Scot has been winning over the doubters since his appointment - and don't forget one of his first tasks was landing Arne Slot. Liverpool have won the Premier League on the back of that appointment - and Hughes has certainly got more right than he has wrong so far throughout his tenure. Advertisement The club have sold well - including getting a cash deal for Alexander-Arnold when he had no intention of signing a new contract. Sepp van den Berg and Fabio Carvalho were sold to Brentford last summer for a combined total of over £50m. And Hughes has repeated the trick - getting up to £18m for reserve goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher. The 26-year-old only had one year left on his deal and has featured in fewer than 70 first-team games throughout six seasons at the club. He moves for a fee which could put him inside the top 10 for most expensive goalkeepers transferred between Premier League clubs. © IMAGO Kelleher grows over the course of the season That is a solid return on a goalkeeper who joined as a youth aged 15 and leaves behind Alisson Becker and Giorgi Mamardashvili in the pecking order. Advertisement It's true Liverpool might have banked more than that last summer but no offer reached what Hughes and the club deemed to be fair value. The terms of the deal have changed now of course - with Kelleher only 12 months away from being a free agent. But keeping Kelleher at the club is a transfer gamble which paid off. He played 20 times in all competitions for the Reds last season - making excellent contributions in the Premier League and Champions League and even had backing from several voices to replace Alisson on a regular basis. The Ireland international grew as a goalkeeper over the course of the last 12 months - becoming a commanding figure and demonstrating exactly why he deserves to be a No1 somewhere. © IMAGO Kelleher a difference-maker in title win Would Liverpool have been as successful this season with a less capable deputy? It's impossible to say but Arne Slot barely missed Alisson during his injury absences thanks to Kelleher. Advertisement The goalkeeper department at Anfield is set for a big shakeup this summer with Mamardashvili coming in from Valencia. He will go toe to toe with Alisson for the starting gloves and there was never going to be room for another excellent shotstopper in Kelleher. If he is too good to be a No2, then he is definitely too good to be a No3. Hughes looks like he played the situation really well in difficult circumstances. He stuck to his guns over Kelleher's valuation and that decision certainly helped Liverpool win the league. Now he's bolstered the coffers - with a sum that could cover more than half of the Mamardashvili fee through the sale of a third-choice goalkeeper who cost practically nothing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store