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Herta Rebounds From Indy 500 Qualifying Wreck to Make the Field; Armstrong Still Has Work to Do

Herta Rebounds From Indy 500 Qualifying Wreck to Make the Field; Armstrong Still Has Work to Do

Epoch Times18-05-2025

INDIANAPOLIS—Colton Herta began qualifying day for the Indianapolis 500 on Saturday with a trip to the infield care center after a scary wreck in Turn 1, and he ended it with a backup car that was safely in the race Memorial Day weekend.
Marcus Armstrong wasn't quite so fortunate.
Just like Herta, the 24-year-old from New Zealand crashed early Saturday—his during an hour-long practice ahead of the nearly 7-hour qualifying window. But unlike the Andretti Autosport driver, Armstrong was unable to get a car hastily pieced together by Meyer Shank Racing among the top 30 on the speed chart to ensure his spot in 'The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.'
So, he will return Sunday as one of four drivers in a shootout for the final three spots on the 33-car starting grid.
'We didn't have the car built up at all. They pretty much put it together as they were rolling me out,' said Armstrong, who made two qualifying attempts but had both waved off because they were not quick enough. 'They were putting together the headrest, and I was questioning whether the seat was intact after the crash. We hadn't tested that.
'They got it done,' Armstrong added, 'and the car was definitely in a decent window where we can work on it for tomorrow.'
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Qualifying on Saturday decided the fast 12 that will have a chance Sunday at the first four rows—and ultimately the pole—for the race on May 25. Those that qualified in spots 13-30 locked in their positions, while Armstrong was joined by Marco Andretti, Rinus Veekay and Jacob Abel in the last-chance shootout to fill the final row for the race.
Herta wound up 29th with a four-lap average of 230.192 mph. But while he was proud of what he called a 'heroic' effort by his team to build a car in about 4 1/2 hours, Herta lamented his lost shot at the Indianapolis 500 pole.
'It sucks. I think from our standpoint of where we want to be, and what we want to contend with, we're not happy just making the show,' he said. 'So when we don't get a chance to do that, it's pretty disappointing.'
Herta and Armstrong both wrecked in Turn 1, where winds gusting up to 30 mph that are largely blocked by the grandstands down the front stretch suddenly switch to behind the car. It was a spot that flummoxed drivers throughout qualifying, and many drivers were forced to get off the accelerator to avoid a similar fate.
Herta's car hit the outside wall and then landed on its side, sliding into the short chute amid a flurry of sparks. Once it finally came to rest, the safety crew had to work together to flip it back on its tires. Herta was shaken enough that he needed help to get to a vehicle for the trip to the infield care center, but he was quickly evaluated and released.
'Luckily these days these crashes look a lot scarier than they feel—not to say that one felt good,' Herta said. 'There were no real signs leading to it. We were super happy with the car this morning. Went out loose and couldn't even get Lap 1 in.'
Armstrong also was able to climb from his wrecked car but was immediately helped onto a stretcher. He gave a thumbs up as he was loaded into an ambulance and taken to the care center, but he wasn't released until about 90 minutes later.
Armstrong insisted that his confidence was unshaken, despite the hard hit. If anything, it was buoyed by the fact that his Meyer Shank Racing teammate Felix Rosenqvist was eighth-quickest in the session and will have a shot at the pole on Sunday.
'I'm good as gold, mate. I'm ready to crack one tomorrow,' Armstrong said.
By Dave Skretta

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Column: Tarik Skubal, Javier Báez and Pete Crow-Armstrong bring an October-like buzz to Cubs-Tigers series
Column: Tarik Skubal, Javier Báez and Pete Crow-Armstrong bring an October-like buzz to Cubs-Tigers series

Chicago Tribune

time2 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Column: Tarik Skubal, Javier Báez and Pete Crow-Armstrong bring an October-like buzz to Cubs-Tigers series

DETROIT — Detroit Tigers fans have been pointing to this weekend's three-game series against the Chicago Cubs as a measuring stick. Comerica Park was buzzing Friday night as the best pitcher in baseball, Tigers left-hander Tarik Skubal, faced the major league's top-hitting offense in the series opener, while Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong, one of the game's most exciting young players, matched up against former Cubs shortstop Javier Báez, whom Crow-Armstrong was traded for in the summer of 2021. 'It should set up for a pretty fun weekend in Detroit,' Skubal said earlier this week in Chicago. 'They've already posted stuff about how tickets are standing-room only. It'll be fun and a good series. That's a good team, a good lineup. They kind of do everything well.' So do the Tigers, who came in with baseball's best record at 41-23. The Cubs were right behind them at 39-23 and had the majors' best run differential at plus-106. Even so, Cubs manager Craig Counsell wouldn't take a bite out of the apple when asked if this resonated more than any other series. 'Look, it's a series in June,' Counsell said. 'There are going to be a lot of people here this weekend. That's fun for our players. They love that. It's a challenge against a good team. We love that. But other than that, it's three games. That's how you've got to treat it.' That's why Counsell is a manager and not a hype man. He never wavers in his lifelong pursuit of treating every day the same. But he knew fans and media would supersize this series into a made-for-October matchup in early June. Facing Skubal — the 2024 AL Cy Young Award winner — would be a monumental challenge for the Cubs, who just finished a 21-game stretch against sub-.500 teams with a 16-5 record. In his previous 10 starts, Skubal had 89 strikeouts to only three walks — the first pitcher in major-league history to post those numbers in a 10-game span during the same season. His 14.14-1 strikeouts-to-walks ratio coming in was nearly double the next-closest competitor, and he had a 14-1 record and 1.95 ERA in 22 starts at Comerica Park since the start of the 2024 season. Hitters facing Skubal know he's going to throw strikes, so some just try to be aggressive early in the at-bat and hope he makes a mistake sooner or later. 'Hope is not really a strategy,' Counsell correctly said. Maybe, but as Andy Dufresne said in 'The Shawshank Redemption,' 'Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.' While Skubal was centerstage Friday, it also was a chance for Crow-Armstrong and the rejuvenated Báez to put on a show for a national streaming audience on Apple TV. With 16 home runs, 53 RBIs and 21 steals, Crow-Armstrong was the only player in the majors with at least 15 home runs, 50 RBI and 20 stolen bases. Báez, who was limited to 80 games last year due to injuries, is hitting .275 and playing four positions, making a bid for the Comeback Player of the Year award. Cubs President Jed Hoyer dealt Báez and pitcher Trevor Williams to the New York Mets at the 2021 trade deadline for the skinny prospect who was injured in Class A. It broke the hearts of many Cubs fans who grew to love Báez for his eye-opening skills at short and on the basepaths. Crow-Armstrong isn't really comparable to Báez, but they both love showing off their skills and playing to the crowds — and swinging at every pitch. Counsell said it's easy to see why they're linked together. 'I absolutely understand it, and the way they both hit — it's a free-swinging approach to hitting, if that translates well,' Counsell said. 'But it's really the other parts of the game that draws you to them. 'In Javy's case, it was kind of the flair on defense and the instinctual base running. In Pete's case, it's the thing you can do with speed. You can not know much about baseball and sports and say, 'That kid is fast.' And that's fun, and your eyes are drawn to that.' Báez is OK with the comparisons with Crow-Armstrong. 'If they say that, it's for a reason,' he said. 'He's been putting up the numbers. I've been seeing the type of athlete he is, and he's a really good athlete. Obviously it's great for the Cubs that he's playing really good baseball too. I'm just trying to stay healthy and play the whole season, and hopefully we can play against them in the playoffs.' That wouldn't just be the playoffs. It would be the World Series. If that happens, it would be a rematch of the 1945 World Series, which the Tigers won in seven games. The Cubs and Tigers were aiming for that rematch in 1984 until the Cubs lost to the San Diego Padres in the National League Championship Series after blowing a 2-0 lead in a best-of-five series. That '84 season would be the Tigers' last championship. But that's not something anyone was thinking about as the series began Friday. As Counsell said, it's just three games in June. Is anyone buying that?

Musk-Trump Feud: 5 Things To Watch For
Musk-Trump Feud: 5 Things To Watch For

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Musk-Trump Feud: 5 Things To Watch For

President Donald Trump, left, and Elon Musk. Credit - Alex Wroblewski and Allison Robbert—AFP via Getty Images This article is part of The D.C. Brief, TIME's politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox. Like so many pieces of President Donald Trump's self-created reality, the key he handed to fellow billionaire and government hater Elon Musk was oversized and appeared to be coated with gold coloration. That Potemkin moment was merely one week ago today. Indeed, last Friday, Trump held the unusual send-off party for an adviser tasked with helping him destroy the spine of the federal workforce and a patron to his rise to power. Fast forward a week, and Trump has all but declared war on his one-time ally, lobbing threats to cancel federal contracts for everything from clean-energy cars, shuttles into the heavens, and access to satellite orbits. In turn, Musk kept pushing Republicans on the Hill to reject Trump's ambitious domestic policy agenda while throwing open the doors to conspiracy theories. The back-and-forth brinksmanship captivated Washington as the week headed toward its end. Both parties seemed to understand their ownership of the news cycle, and it's entirely possible that most of this spat was as scripted as a professional-wrestling beef. 'One thing's for sure,' Musk posted on X, 'it ain't boring!' That doesn't make it any less reckless. Here are five things to watch as this story unfolds. As catty as this feud has been, it is ultimately a huge distraction from Trump's agenda. The more time spent on a personality clash between this pair of mercurial iconoclasts, the less time is being dedicated to getting Trump's pending domestic agenda across the finish line. This is, to be clear, a fight that could leave both men empty handed. Trump is heading to his country club in New Jersey for the weekend, away from the White House and the churn of that campus. That may give Trump time to cool to a simmer—or to boil over if he's left alone with his DVR, social media feeds, and cell phone that gives him a constant hum of agitation. Establishment Republicans fear the window for a once-an-administration legislative reach is closing fast. The White House set a Memorial Day deadline for House passage and just barely got there. Administration officials are now looking at a July 4 target for the Senate following suit. The sooner Trump can quiet his frustrations, the better the odds of snagging the brass ring. Once Musk suggested—without evidence—that Trump is somehow implicated in the sex-trafficking criminality tied to the late billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, there really was no telling where this goes next. The mega-rich like Musk don't exactly have a huge degree of self-awareness or self-control. Musk knows he is already under Trump's skin, and any plays to exploit Trump's insecurities don't exactly take terrible imagination. That's why this stands to go further sideways in a big way. Musk is not exactly known for keeping the savviest of political minds at his table. Unlike other deep-pocketed patrons, Musk does not have an army of consultants and so-called donor-advisers at the ready. But he does have the ear of some in Trump's inner circle, especially Donald Trump Jr. and Vice President J.D. Vance. If the White House is looking for an off-ramp, it might avail itself of those two lesser-appreciated insiders. At its core, this spat began over Musk's criticism of the deficit spending that would accompany the Trump-branded 'One Big Beautiful Bill' that preserves and expands Trump's first-term tax cuts, slices into clean-energy initiatives carried in Joe Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, and boosts spending on border and immigration policing. It's poised to add trillions to the national debt. Musk, a newly converted deficit hawk, has said he sees the red ink as an existential threat. House Republicans powered their first leg of this marathon across the line with the barest of majorities and zero margin for error. Democrats were unified in their opposition, and remain even more so now that they've had time to unpack everything in a 1,000-plus-page bill that also would limit how much courts could rein in Trump and neuter the ability of states to regulate artificial intelligence. In the Senate, things were already iffy. The White House plans to use a procedural trick that allows Senate Republicans to sidestep the typical filibuster rules and pass the legislation with a simple majority. But that's going to require keeping the parameters narrow and keeping the crayons inside the line, especially when it comes to long-term spending obligations. But Senate Republicans also plan to edit the bill text. Add in there Musk's threats of consequences for rubber stamping the House version and it's even murkier where this one goes. As soon as Musk and Trump began bashing one another in earnest on Thursday, the GOP base immediately started agitating in three big directions. In one corner were those bucking up Trump's flank. Former White House strategist Steve Bannon went so far as to suggest the feds look at Musk's immigration status, hinting that the South African-born Musk could find himself on the losing side of a deportation skirmish. In another stood Musk's defenders, who said maybe the world's richest man was onto something when it came to the criticism that sparked the fallout: that the tax cuts in the bill would balloon the nation's already terrifying pile of IOUs. Musk's following remains huge, but he does not have a natural constituency the way other political leaders enjoy. 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I wish he wouldn't argue with me on how to craft legislation and pass it.' Since Musk started busting-up the federal government in January, Hill Democrats have been in a listless tilt in search of a strategy. A few fiery speeches have not stopped Musk's march through the federal workforce. Some of the actions have been reversed, either through quiet climbdown or court-ordered pivots. But by and large, Democrats have been left on the sidelines and powerless to query Musk and his deputies, let alone stop them. That may shift now. Musk is clearly no longer a loyalist to Trump, who could still avail himself of claims of executive privilege and block Musk's cooperation with the Hill Democrats. But with Musk openly encouraging Trump's impeachment—which would be a record third time!—there are chances that this escalates in truly history-making ways. Hill Republicans have so far stuck together to protect Trump and, by extension, Musk from any real scrutiny. While much of Trump's Cabinet has bristled over Musk's over-reach into their fiefdoms, they have still dutifully shielded Musk and Co from any real oversight. Through some clever administrative trickery, the White House ensured that Musk was never technically a real federal employee, and even claimed he was never in charge of the office he was actually running. Efforts to haul him in for oversight hit a brick wall. Hill Republicans kept their frustrations buttoned-up and limited to closed-door venting. Now that Musk is untethered, the game may have changed. If the White House wanted to, it could go so far as to encourage Congress to make use of its subpoena power. While that's an unlikely outcome, Musk can no longer be assured of the safe bunker in Washington he had when this second Trump term began. Make sense of what matters in Washington. Sign up for the D.C. Brief newsletter. Write to Philip Elliott at

'Missed My Bonus By One': Dodge Salesman Says May Was Terrible For Sales. Here's Why
'Missed My Bonus By One': Dodge Salesman Says May Was Terrible For Sales. Here's Why

Motor 1

time7 hours ago

  • Motor 1

'Missed My Bonus By One': Dodge Salesman Says May Was Terrible For Sales. Here's Why

So much for Memorial Day sales. Memorial Day weekend is usually one of the best times of the year to buy a car, as dealerships are eager to move older inventory to make room for fall's new models. But despite big banners and flashy promos, this year was a flop, according to a car salesperson who had an unexpectedly bad sales month. Are tariffs to blame, or is something else scaring off potential buyers? Dodge Salesman Vents About Bad Month In a trending video, Dodge salesman Dalton Stacey (@daltonstaceycars97), who's based in Oklahoma, shared what it's really like to sell cars in this market. Surprise, surprise, it's not pretty. Stacey explained that despite his employer giving the team an extra day to wrap up deals (instead of the cutoff being on Sunday, when customers might still be wavering on a decision), he made way fewer sales than he expected. 'I had so many people back out on me,' Stacey explained. 'It ain't even funny.' Because of all of the reneges, Stacey missed his bonus. What really hurts is that he was just one car shy of making the cutoff. 'Today sucked. May sucked. June better come correct,' Stacey said in the caption, clearly frustrated by the situation. Some people might hear this and think Stacey is making too big a deal about missing a bonus. But most people in the United States live paycheck to paycheck, and if you're relying on that extra income to cover your expenses, not getting it (especially by such a small margin) stings. Why Did People Back Out? Stacey doesn't explicitly state why his customers backed out, but we've got some context that'll help put things in perspective. Cars are getting more expensive—are tariffs to blame? Short answer: yes and no. In April, the average price of a new car jumped by a rare 2.5% to just under $49,000—a sharp rise for just a month's turnaround, Kelley Blue Book (KBB) reported . Even used car pricing increased. KBB described it as 'likely the first, softest wave of a storm.' Why? Tariff-related sticker shock is only a few months or just a few weeks away, depending on the brand. Right now, dealers are trying to get rid of their pre-tariff inventory. But when tariffs hit, vehicles could have up to a 25-percent markup baked in. (That 2.5 percent doesn't look so bad now.) The other factor affecting affordability is loans. Most people don't have the cash on hand to buy a car outright, so they rely on loans. But a good loan (meaning one with a low interest rate) is getting harder to qualify for. So even if you cop a deal, the loan may be what screws you over. No wonder so many people were sending Stacey the 'Actually, I need to think about it' texts. What to Do If You're Thinking About Buying a Car It depends on your situation, but here's a good place to start: If you're ready to buy soon: Shop around now while there's still pre-tariff inventory available, and take advantage of the slow market to negotiate, negotiate, negotiate. If you're using a car loan: Shop around for loan rates and consider getting pre-approved through a credit union or your bank. If you're on the fence: If your vehicle is running fine, then waiting things out could help you avoid peak tariff prices. But have a backup plan, like a budget, in case your car ends up needing a major repair. If you're selling or trading in: You're in a good position here since used inventory is tight. Get multiple quotes and don't forget online retailers like Carvana and CarMax, which may offer you a better price. Motor1 reached out to Stacey for comment via email and TikTok direct message and to Dodge's parent company, Stellanis, via email. We'll be sure to update this article when we hear back. Now Trending Woman Starts Driving. Then Water Starts Pouring Onto Her Mercedes G-Wagon's Dashboard and Touchscreen Woman Gets Into Her Kia. Then Out of Nowhere, Her Screen Starts Smoking Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily. back Sign up For more information, read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use . Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )

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