logo
Alex Bowman soars to pole in Bristol qualifying

Alex Bowman soars to pole in Bristol qualifying

Reuters13-04-2025
April 13 - BRISTOL, Tenn. -- A little ray of sunshine was all Alex Bowman needed to secure the pole position for Sunday's Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Well, not quite all. Bowman also had to turn a blistering lap in his No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet during Saturday's time trials at the 0.533-mile short track, and he did just that.
Bowman covered the distance in 14.912 seconds (128.675 mph) -- the fastest lap ever run at Bristol in the NASCAR Cup Series Next Gen car. That was good enough to hold off fellow Chevrolet driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (128.563 mph) by 0.013 seconds to secure the top starting spot for the ninth Cup Series race of the season.
It wasn't just the Busch Light Pole Award that had Bowman salivating. Extensive tire wear in the practice session that preceded qualifying compared to last year's spring event in Thunder Valley, where tire fall-off was a crucial aspect of the competition.
"I think we're all much more prepared than we were last spring," said Bowman, who ran his lap under favorable cloud cover -- with the sun coming out shortly after his qualifying attempt and warming the track slightly on an otherwise chilly day.
"I'm excited for a tire management race. It's going to be a lot of fun. We'll see what we've got," he added.
"We started practice with rubber already on the track from the Xfinity cars, peeled it right up and sawed the tires right off. Yeah, confusing why we're doing it again when we didn't do it in the fall.
"It's going to be warmer tomorrow. Maybe that changes it. It's really difficult to say. I think it's going to be like that (the spring race), but we'll find out together, I think."
Kyle Larson (128.511 mph) qualified third, after winning the pole position for Saturday's Xfinity Series race earlier in the day. Denny Hamlin, winner of the last two Cup events, was fourth in the fastest Toyota at 128.460 mph, and Ryan Blaney topped all other Ford drivers with a fifth-place qualifying lap at 128.305 mph.
In seven of the last eight Cup races at Bristol, the winner has come from the top five spots on the starting grid -- two from the pole and two from the second starting position.
Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Ty Gibbs and Christopher Bell claimed the sixth and seventh starting spots, with AJ Allmendinger, Carson Hocevar and Justin Haley claiming eighth, ninth and 10th, respectively.
Kyle Busch was 15th fastest in qualifying, but he spun off Turn 4 on his second lap and flat-spotted his tires. Joey Logano, who qualified immediately after Busch, broke loose off Turn 2 and smacked the outside wall with the right rear of his No. 22 Team Penske Ford. Logano will start 38th on Sunday.
Xfinity Series regular Jesse Love qualified 19th for his Cup Series debut on Sunday in the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.
Hyak Motorsports' Ricky Stenhouse Jr. topped the leaderboard in practice at 128.082 mph ahead of Team Penske drivers Blaney (127.571 mph) and Austin Cindric (127.140 mph).
Larson (126.737 mph) and Chase Elliott (126.520 mph) rounded out the top five for Hendrick Motorsports.
Brad Keselowski (126.495 mph), Hamlin (126.461 mph), Busch (126.337 mph), John Hunter Nemechek (126.187 mph) and Bowman (126.121 mph) completed the top 10.
--Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Crystal Palace launch scathing attack on Uefa over Europa League demotion
Crystal Palace launch scathing attack on Uefa over Europa League demotion

Telegraph

time8 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Crystal Palace launch scathing attack on Uefa over Europa League demotion

Crystal Palace have launched a blistering attack on Uefa over their demotion from the Europa League, claiming certain clubs 'have a unique privilege and power'. The club said that 'sporting merit was rendered meaningless' after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) rejected their appeal to stay in the Europa League as FA Cup winners having been judged by Uefa to have broken multi-club ownership (MCO) regulations. Palace said: 'This growing and unhealthy influence has shattered the hopes and dreams of Crystal Palace supporters, and does not bode well for aspirational teams all over Europe competing to progress when rules and sanctions are unevenly applied in the most flagrant way.' Palace also said that Uefa's rules ignored informal partnerships which did not fall under the remit of MCO rules. Their former investor John Textor, whose erstwhile stake in Palace is at the heart of the case, has traded players between his clubs – Ligue 1 Lyon and Botafogo in Brazil – and clubs belonging to Evangelos Marinakis, the Nottingham Forest owner. Forest have told Uefa from the start that Palace had to be demoted and have pursued the case. The Uefa decision, upheld by Cas, has meant Palace's Europa League place has gone to Forest. Palace said: 'Multi-club structures hide behind the charade of a 'blind trust' while clubs such as ours, who have no connection to another club whatsoever, are prevented from playing in the same competition. To compound the injustice, clubs that appear to have huge informal arrangements with each other are also allowed to participate and even possibly play against each other.' Big MCO groups such as City Football Group, Red Bull, and Ineos have all used the blind trust process to gain access to the same Uefa competition for more than one of their clubs. Palace said that the Cas board that heard the case was restricted in the evidence it could hear because of issues around disclosure, and also the calling of witnesses. For instance, it was never disclosed what agreements were reached with other clubs that did not meet the March 1 deadline for MCO clubs. Forest, who briefly faced the prospect of competing in the Champions League as well as Marinakis' Olympiacos, agreed a 'compliance structure' with Uefa that meant the blind trust process was completed after March 1. Palace said: 'The denial of all disclosure requests to obtain correspondence between the relevant parties, the refusal to allow witness testimony from those involved, and the general lack of formality and respect for law mean decisions cannot be properly challenged, leading to pre-determined outcomes. 'Uefa's decision has wider implications for the governance of the sport. A combination of poorly conceived regulations and their unequal application means our brilliant fans will be deprived of the chance to watch this team compete in the Europa League for the first time in our history.' Palace called upon Uefa to 'pass coherent rules' that allowed for clubs to resolve issues and a 'proper appeal process'. It noted that, as with the Manchester City case against the Premier League, such issues could eventually find their way into law courts if the governing body could not adapt. Palace, the FA Cup winners, were ultimately ejected because Uefa judged that former MCO investor John Textor controlled 50 per cent of a 43 per cent stake in the club by the March 1 MCO deadline. Textor's Eagle Football then also owned a stake in Ligue 1 Lyon which had qualified for the Europa League after Paris St-Germain won the French Cup final in May, creating what Uefa saw as the MCO issue. The previous year Uefa's Club Financial Control Body had moved the deadline forward to March 1 for MCOs to place control of one of their clubs in a blind trust. That would enable MCO clubs to compete in the same competition. When the issue became clear, Palace's key decision-makers, Steve Parish and boardroom allies, David Blitzer and Josh Harris, argued that Textor did not have decisive influence at the club. Textor also said the same. In addition, Palace argued that others had been able to remedy MCO issues after the March 1 deadline. Yet even the sale of Eagle Football's stake to US investor Woody Johnson last month for $200m could not change Uefa's view. At Cas, Forest, named as a respondent, sent a five-strong legal team that argued the case on behalf of their Europa League participation and that of Lyon. Palace said that the Cas appeal process made it 'almost impossible to receive a fair hearing'. In order to gain a Uefa licence, critical to being able to compete in Uefa competition, a club must agree to resolve any governance issues with Cas. Palace will now have to play a qualifying double header for the Europa Conference League on August 21 and August 28. A statement from Cas said: 'CAS rules are long-standing and designed to ensure fairness in the sporting world. 'In line with this practice, all Parties on 8 August 2025 were given a formal opportunity to raise any concern about the running of the process. No objections were raised to state that the right to a fair hearing was not respected.'

This sport has a self-confessed safety problem - could flashing mouthguards be the answer?
This sport has a self-confessed safety problem - could flashing mouthguards be the answer?

Sky News

time20 hours ago

  • Sky News

This sport has a self-confessed safety problem - could flashing mouthguards be the answer?

Rugby chiefs have admitted to Sky News their sport is not "incredibly safe" due to the "high risk of injuries", while insisting players should be encouraged they are prioritising addressing concussion concerns. The candour on the dangers from head collisions comes ahead of the Women's Rugby World Cup starting in England next week. At that tournament, for the first time at a World Cup, smart mouthguards will flash red if they detect potential concussions that require further assessment by measuring the force and movement from a head impact. "We could stick our head in the sand and pretend something doesn't exist, but that's not going to help anybody," World Rugby science and medical manager Dr Lindsay Starling told Sky News. "It is a sport that has a high risk of injuries and that comes from the physical contact nature of the game, which is also what we all love about watching it. And so that can't be ignored. "We can't pretend that the sport is incredibly safe and there's no risk of injury. And so by creating more awareness when there has been a substantial head knock, that's important to educate people." There is an expectation one player per match could be removed due to potential head injury at the World Cup, which opens with England playing the US in Sunderland next Friday. Players would then leave the pitch for a head injury assessment. Footage is then analysed to see how steady players are after the impact. Then they would be asked a series of questions to test memory and concentration. Players are asked to remember words from a list read out and to repeat numbers in a different sequence. A critical time for rugby Rugby being so candid about the potential risks from head injuries comes as the sport is facing legal action from more than 700 mostly male former players who claim leaders were negligent in failing to take reasonable action to protect them from brain injuries. The case is progressing slowly with challenges, including around historic medical records. "Concussion is obviously incredibly serious," Dr Starling said at the England team HQ at Twickenham. "It's absolutely our number one priority in terms of understanding why they happen and doing what we can to reduce that. "The other side of that argument, though, is that we know this information. It would be more scary or more of a worry if we didn't know that." World Rugby believes female players are more susceptible to being concussed than their male counterparts but at "much lower magnitudes". They are still exploring why. It could be due to physical differences in neck strength and blood flow metabolic rates, or it could combine with female players accessing more technical training later on. Parental concern over women's game But how does the spectre of brain injuries chime with the mission of the World Cup to super-charge the women's game in England, by expanding the audience and encouraging youngsters to play? Especially with those flashing mouthguards warning of potential concussions. Dr Starling admits it creates a concern. But to parents doubting whether their children should take up rugby, there's an attempt to offer some reassurances from those overseeing safety, citing enhanced technology. "We've never been in a situation where we know more about what the risk is," World Rugby chief medical officer Dr Eanna Falvey told Sky News. "That will improve over time, so our job is to give parents the autonomy to make a decision that they can about their daughter's playing. Ferocity at the heart of rugby "If their daughter wants to play, we want to help them arrive at a decision that they're happy with the level of exposure the daughter has and what they can do about it. "There's a lot of health dangers from not being involved in sport. Physical inactivity is the biggest health concern in the Western world right now. "So being involved with team sport has huge benefits." And Prof Falvey emphasised the essence of rugby is, at times, the ferocity. "It's a contact sport," he said. "Nobody shies away from that fact. I think people who play the game play it because they want to play contact sports. Our job is to make that game as safe as we can."

Premier League 2025-26 preview No 13: Manchester City
Premier League 2025-26 preview No 13: Manchester City

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Premier League 2025-26 preview No 13: Manchester City

Guardian writers' predicted position: 3rd (NB: this is not necessarily Will Unwin's prediction but the average of our writers' tips) Last season: 3rd Plenty of money, about £300m, has been spent over the past eight months to get City back on track after a disastrous season by their standards. They finished a distant third and lost the FA Cup final, leaving them trophyless. The latest crop of incomings got a brief taste of life under Pep Guardiola at the Club World Cup and all showed promise. After Rodri missed most of last season, it feels as if his fitness will decide the fate of the team. If Guardiola can get him back to his best – and keep him fit – after a horrible injury, then City can feel excited once again. Guardiola has indicated City need to adapt to the evolution of football, having struggled with the increase in physicality and fitness that has blunted their skills. There could be a greater emphasis on dribbling past opponents to try to open up the spaces. Rayan Cherki, Phil Foden, Jérémy Doku and Savinho will be extremely important in a post-Kevin De Bruyne world. City struggled more than ever when it came to breaking down teams last season and Guardiola felt his team were unable to cope with the physicality of others. It will be interesting to see who gets the nod in goal on the opening weekend. Ederson has been Guardiola's No 1 for years, but the arrival of James Trafford could change that. The Brazilian has redefined the position and Trafford, a former City academy player, is part of a new generation who followed his strategy and have attempted to replicate his ability to distribute the ball short and long. Trafford is young and not the finished article, but he has all the qualities to be a world-class goalkeeper for years to come. At the other end, Erling Haaland will be as dangerous as always, with fitness the only question mark hanging over him after some disruptions. Unlike this time last year, Guardiola has a second striker he can all upon if needs be in Omar Marmoush. The Egyptian was integral in reigniting City's season after arriving in January and should be fully settled, giving them extra dimensions. Pep Guardiola took last season personally, upset with himself for failing to arrest the slide and irritated by underperforming players. He will not accept a similar showing this season, especially after the sizable outlay on reshaping the squad. Guardiola overhauled his coaching staff, with the most eye-catching appointment being Jürgen Klopp's former No 2 Pep Ljinders, who joins as an assistant coach. The change in personnel will bring new ideas, something Guardiola was seeking as he sought a refresh on the pitch and in the dugout. Those pesky charges just will not go away for Manchester City and the Premier League. It feels as if this situation has dragged on since Adam was a lad and rivals will continue to use it as a stick to beat the club with, while City plead innocence and claim a witch-hunt. No one is satisfied with the state of affairs and everyone will want finality as soon as possible because it is a constant distraction. A freeze on ticket prices brought some goodwill after lengthy criticism of the club's desire to squeeze every penny they could out of supporters. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion It is a positive that City finally have a proper left-back in Rayan Aït-Nouri, but Rayan Cherki is the more exciting acquisition. The 21-year-old has been linked with top clubs since his teenage years, but City finally got their hands on Lyon's attacking midfielder, who falls into the maverick category. He dribbles, creates and scores goals, while also possessing the ability to produce the unpredictable with the ball at his feet, and he can play in numerous positions behind a striker. It is hard to predict what he will do next, which will concern defenders. In an era when football is prescribed, Cherki can be the rule breaker. A year ago, Oscar Bobb scored in the Community Shield to signal he was about to break out. He had enjoyed a great pre-season and Guardiola was confident in his qualities. The highly rated Bobb was the reason City were happy to part with Cole Palmer, thinking they had someone who could surpass him in their ranks. Unfortunately for Bobb, he broke a leg in training and required a lengthy rehabilitation period, taking longer than anyone expected, meaning he made three Premier League appearances, all as a substitute. There is greater competition in the positions he wants to play, but given a chance he could be a star turn. By his own admission, 2024-25 did not live up to Phil Foden's high standards. From claiming the Professional Footballers' Association's player of the year award for the previous season, Foden dropped off dramatically. He attributed the problems on the pitch to various factors, including facing challenges 'off the pitch mentally' and it is understandable that those affected his ability to perform. The 25-year-old is a generational talent, possessing everything his manager wants in a player, and he will be desperate to show it. Given the correct freedom, he should be the man leading the latest incarnation of Guardiola's football and a new era at City.

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