logo
NASCAR Breaks It Up: Gibbs & Keselowski Pit Crews Nearly Come to Blows at Sonoma

NASCAR Breaks It Up: Gibbs & Keselowski Pit Crews Nearly Come to Blows at Sonoma

Yahoo14-07-2025
Pit stops got crazy on Sunday at Sonoma when a near miss between Ty Gibbs and Brad Keselowski's teams turned into a pit road fight during the Toyota/Save Mart 350.
It all went down late in Stage 2 when several front-runners, including Gibbs and Keselowski, came in early to get track position for the final stage. With their pit boxes right next to each other, it was already tight. It didn't take much for things to get ugly.
Advertisement
Gibbs, ahead of Keselowski on the track and in pit sequence, drove into his assigned stall by cutting through the RFK Racing pit box.
In doing so, Gibbs came within inches of RFK front tire carrier Telvin McClurkin, who was already in position and holding a tire for Keselowski's incoming №6 Ford. Gibbs' №54 Toyota clipped the tire, twisting McClurkin's wrist in the process. Despite the impact, McClurkin was able to complete his duties, but immediately after, tempers flared.
According to footage released by RFK Racing, McClurkin marched over to the Joe Gibbs Racing pit crew. The exchange quickly turned into pushing and shoving between the crews and NASCAR officials had to intervene and separate the teams before it got out of hand.
Also Read:: NASCAR points standings after Sonoma: Cup Series points leaders after today
Advertisement
NASCAR rules in favor of Ty Gibbs after pit road incident
NASCAR reviewed the incident mid-race and later said Gibbs did not break any rules. Drivers are allowed to go through up to three pit boxes when entering their own, and in this case, Gibbs, being ahead of Keselowski, was within his rights to cut across.
'Going in, I have the right-of-way,' Gibbs told NASCAR on TNT after the race, pointing to the orange lines on the pit wall. 'They're on the wall for a reason, they jump for a reason, and they kind of get out of the way. And those guys like to push it, and that's kind of the consequence you pay.'
Gibbs said he had clear procedural priority and NASCAR agreed, saying RFK Racing's crew should have given him more space as he approached.
Advertisement
Although Gibbs got off light, there was concern over the physical element of the confrontation, and how crew members were supposed to act and possibly be punished.
By Sunday night, NASCAR did not announce any fines or suspensions, but officials said they would further review the aftermath of the altercation.
Also Read:: NASCAR: Winners, Losers from the Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway, led by Shane van Gisbergen
Related Headlines
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jung hits game-ending homer after Pederson's pinch shot as Rangers beat Yankees
Jung hits game-ending homer after Pederson's pinch shot as Rangers beat Yankees

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jung hits game-ending homer after Pederson's pinch shot as Rangers beat Yankees

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Josh Jung hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning, after Joc Pederson's tying pinch-hit homer in the ninth, and the Texas Rangers beat the New York Yankees 8-5 on Monday night for their seventh consecutive home win. Jung connected off Jake Bird (4-2) for his 11th homer, a 401-foot drive to left-center after Wyatt Langford was intentionally walked with two outs. Pederson, hitting .132, tied it with a 408-foot shot off Devin Williams. That was the first homer since May 17 for Pederson, in only his eighth game since missing two months with a right hand fracture. Danny Coulombe (2-0), the fourth Texas pitcher and in his third game since being acquired from Minnesota at the trade deadline Thursday, worked the 10th for his first Rangers victory. Paul Goldschmidt led off the game with a home run and scored three times for the Yankees, who lost their fourth in a row. All-Star lefty Max Fried left with a 5-4 lead after scuffling through five innings but was denied a major league-best 13th win. The Yankees, just swept in three games at Miami and likely playing their final game before Aaron Judge returns from the injured list, led 5-4 on Giancarlo Stanton's two-run homer in the fourth. Fried needed 105 pitches and matched a season high by allowing eight hits in his 23rd start for the Yankees. He struck out seven but allowed four runs while six consecutive batters reached base in the second. His errant pickoff throw also allowed a run. Goldschmidt hit New York's ninth leadoff homer this season — only the Los Angeles Dodgers (11) have more. Stanton has 10 homers in his 32 games since missing the first 70 games this season with elbow issues. Key moment Coulombe fielded Austin Wells' comebacker to start an inning-ending 1-6-3 double play after walking a batter in the 10th. Key stat Texas, coming off a 2-5 trip, has won 12 of its last 15 home games. Up next Nathan Eovaldi (9-3, 1.49 ERA), who was 5-0 with a 0.59 ERA in July, starts for Texas on Tuesday night. His last loss was a 1-0 game at New York on May 22. Will Warren (6-5, 4.64) goes for the Yankees. ___ AP MLB:

Mavericks 'no-brainer' move hiding in plain sight?
Mavericks 'no-brainer' move hiding in plain sight?

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mavericks 'no-brainer' move hiding in plain sight?

Mavericks 'no-brainer' move hiding in plain sight? originally appeared on The Sporting News The Dallas Mavericks have had an eventful 2025 over the past few months to say the absolute least. We all remember what happened to begin the month of February, no need to reopen that wound for Mavericks fans. Barely a month after that fiasco, Mavs star guard Kyrie Irving suffered a torn ACL against the Sacramento Kings, and the Mavericks will likely have to go through at least half of the 2025-26 season without the former number one pick. However, losing one number one pick from Duke allowed them to gain another as they won the draft lottery and were able to draft Blue Devils superstar Cooper Flagg with the top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft. And now, according to Noah Weber of The Smoking Cuban, the next move for the team should be pretty easy for the team, a no-brainer as a matter of fact, and that move should be signing Kai Jones to an Exhibit 10 contract. The former Texas Longhorn played 12 games for the Mavs in the 2024-25 season, starting six of them and averaging 11.4 points per game, including a 21-point piece in March. "Dallas signed Jones to a two-way deal in the middle of the season, and he was everything they needed and more. He was immediately thrown into the fire thanks to the Mavs' crazy injury luck, and he even started in six games. He became a fan favorite in Dallas due to his energy and dunks, and he was one of the few bright spots during a rough stretch after the Doncic trade," Weber wrote. Even if they don't have room for him on the professional roster, a two-way contract that would allow him to flip back and forth between the Mavericks and their G-League team, the Texas Legends.

Yankees continue recent slide, get walked off by Rangers in extra innings
Yankees continue recent slide, get walked off by Rangers in extra innings

New York Times

time16 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Yankees continue recent slide, get walked off by Rangers in extra innings

ARLINGTON, Texas — The New York Yankees landed in Texas, fired up the grill and started BBQ-ing their own playoff hopes. After closer Devin Williams blew the save in the ninth inning, the Rangers walked the Yankees off in the 10th inning on Josh Jung's three-run, two-out blast to left-center field for a 8-5 defeat. Advertisement It happened right after pitching coach Matt Blake visited the mound and reliever Jake Bird intentionally walked Wyatt Langford. Jung blasted a 1-1 sinker from Bird that was middle-in. The homer was a no-doubter. It also came after an embarrassing weekend in which the Miami Marlins swept the Yankees as New York made awful mistakes in each loss. The Yankees are 0-4 since Thursday's trade deadline, when they were just about universally praised for the flurry of deals they made. WALK-OFF BOMB FROM THE JUNGSTER! #AllForTX — Texas Rangers (@Rangers) August 5, 2025 On Monday, the drama for the Yankees started when pinch hitter Joc Pederson crushed a solo homer off Williams to tie it 5-5 with two outs in the ninth. Pederson hammered a hanging changeup well into the seats in right field, sending the crowd at Globe Life Field into a frenzy. It was Williams' second blown save in as many chances. He hadn't pitched since Wednesday. In the top of the 10th, the Yankees squandered a chance to bring home the extra-innings runner when Austin Wells hit into an inning-ending double play. They started the day in third place in the American League East and 4 1/2 games back of the first-place Toronto Blue Jays. They had been holding on to the second wild-card position by just a half-game.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store