NASCAR points standings: Cup Series points update after Michigan race
Hamlin was already locked into the playoffs but now ties Christopher Bell and Kyle Larson with the most wins of the 2025 season.
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Here are the NASCAR Cup Series points standings after the Michigan race.
MICHIGAN RACE RESULTS: NASCAR Michigan results: Denny Hamlin is winner, plus full leaderboard for FireKeepers Casino 400
MICHIGAN WINNERS AND LOSERS: NASCAR Michigan winners and losers: Denny Hamlin wins on 701st start, Carson Hocevar blows tire
NASCAR points standings: Cup Series points update after Michigan race
Unofficial after Michigan
William Byron 576 points (1 win, 12 playoff points)
Kyle Larson -41 (3 wins, 23 playoff points
Denny Hamlin -82 (3 wins, 18 playoff points
Christopher Bell -96 (3 wins, 16 playoff points)
Chase Elliott -112
Tyler Reddick -116
Ryan Blaney -149 (1 win, 8 playoff points)
Ross Chastain -162 (1 win, 5 playoff points)
Joey Logano -181 (1 win, 7 playoff points)
Bubba Wallace -193 (2 playoff points)
Chase Briscoe -213
Chris Buescher -234 (-4 playoff points)
Alex Bowman -241
Ryan Preece -254 (1 playoff point)
Kyle Busch -254
Austin Cindric -258 (1 win, 7 playoff points)
Josh Berry -267 (1 win, 6 playoff points)
Carson Hocevar -272
AJ Allmendinger -272
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. -274
Erik Jones -290
Zane Smith -291
Michael McDowell -291
Ty Gibbs -306
Austin Dillon -306
John Hunter Nemechek -306
Todd Gilliland -311
Daniel Suarez -322
Justin Haley -342
Ty Dillon -344
Noah Gragson -352
Brad Keselowski -355
Shane van Gisbergen -384
Riley Herbst -391
Cole Custer -401
Cody Ware -541
NASCAR playoff picture after Michigan
Kyle Larson (3 wins)
Denny Hamlin (3 wins)
Christopher Bell (3 wins)
William Byron (1 win)
Ryan Blaney (1 win)
Joey Logano (1 win)
Austin Cindric (1 win)
Josh Berry (1 win)
Ross Chastain (1 win)
Chase Elliott +142 ahead of playoff cutline
Tyler Reddick +138
Bubba Wallace +61
Chase Briscoe +41
Chris Buescher +20
Alex Bowman +15
Ryan Preece +0 (Preece is ahead of Busch in driver standings)
Kyle Busch -0
Carson Hocevar -18 behind 16th
AJ Allmendinger -18
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. -20
Erik Jones -36
Zane Smith -37
Michael McDowell -37
Ty Gibbs -52
John Hunter Nemechek -52
Austin Dillon -52
Todd Gilliland -57
Daniel Suarez -66
Justin Haley -86
Ty Dillon -88
Noah Gragson -96
Brad Keselowski -99
Shane van Gisbergen -108
Riley Herbst -115
Cole Custer -125
Cody Ware -205
This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: NASCAR points standings: Cup Series points update after Michigan race
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Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Meet Colin Cummings: US air force officer and greatest air hockey player of all time
About an hour before our scheduled chat, Colin Cummings accompanies his polite request to delay with a photograph of an image familiar to parents worldwide, a grizzling newborn strapped to his front, resolutely refusing to succumb to her morning nap. Cummings has gone about this week's defence of his air hockey world title rather differently to his many others. Partly, that is thanks to baby Clara's arrival a couple of months ago, which has dominated most of the summer. The rest of it has been dictated by a job relocation to Hawaii where he has been given a three-year posting as a personnel officer in the US air force. The air hockey table at his Oahu home represents the only professional-style playing surface in the whole multi-island state. Shorn of suitable playing partners, Cummings has geared up for his tilt at a sixth successive world crown in an unconventional manner. Irregular solo practises – increasingly infrequent since Clara's birth – have been the air hockey equivalent of a tennis player hitting balls against a wall. He has also attempted to keep track of opponents on the mainland through video streams of their matches, but his main physical activity of late involves surfing Hawaii's famous waves. Related: Brazilian table tennis star denied entry to US due to having competed in Cuba Aged just 26, Cummings is already almost universally considered the air hockey GOAT (Greatest Of All Time). Two other players, Danny Hynes and Jesse Douty, are now tied with his 12 world titles, but that pair are generally bracketed alongside a couple of others on the second rung of air hockey's all-time pyramid. Cummings, alone, stands at the top. It was he who, at 16, became the youngest ever world champion in the sport – and Cummings is absolutely adamant that air hockey is a sport. And it is he who has relinquished just one of the 13 world championships held over the past decade. Ask the man himself and he is in no doubt over his GOAT status: 'Oh hell yeah, bro, I got to be. I've even got a little goat sticker on my mallet.' Most people Cummings encounters are surprised to hear that air hockey even possesses a competitive life outside arcades and home basements. Played on a low-friction table, with opposing players attempting to hit the puck into goals using handheld mallets, the elite side of the sport has, in fact, been around for almost 50 years, beginning soon after air hockey's invention. Texas, North Carolina, Illinois and Idaho are America's four major competitive hubs, while the recent boom in barcades – drinking establishments featuring retro entertainment offerings – has provided a resurgence in pockets across the country. Aside from a Venezuelan contingent, and a smattering of Russians and Spaniards, air hockey tends to be an all-American affair. Cummings' route in began when his family relocated to Texas in 2009 and happened to move across the road from the world No 4 player. Invited over for a game by the man's son – who was the top-ranked Under-12 player – Cummings received a pasting and vowed not to let it happen again: 'I instantly knew I had to beat the kid. He was so cocky.' Within six months, the Cummings family found a small table of their own at a garage sale; half a year later, they had upgraded it to a professional-standard table. While Colin emerged as the star, air hockey quickly became something for the whole family to play. His younger brother Connor is now ranked world No 3, while their father, Mike, is No 15. As he has done for close to a decade, Colin tops the pile. In the smallest of niche sporting ponds, the biochemistry graduate is a superstar. But unlike his world-beating peers – think Roger Federer, Lionel Messi or Oleksandr Usyk – he receives next to no external recognition. 'It's definitely a challenge,' he says, of his vastly contrasting lives on and off the air hockey table. 'I have to be versatile. 'I have my air force persona where I have to embody a leadership character. Then there's the air hockey champion persona where I walk into a room and people all want to meet me when I have no idea who they are. Then there's normal life. 'I remember when I won my first world title in 2015, I went back to my day job where I was a salad boy/janitor, just mopping the floor in a hair net. I'd gone from being world champion to mopping floors.' In the fledgling days of his relationship with his now-wife Meg, Cummings sent her a video link of an interview he did with CNN. 'She was like: 'You're the world champion? What the heck?' But she's very supportive.' 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USA Today
25 minutes ago
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NCAA sanctions of Michigan signal major change in enforcement penalties
The NCAA cited a failure 'to create a culture of compliance' in disciplining Michigan for the controversial sign-stealing scandal that occurred under former coach Jim Harbaugh, assigning probation, a new form of recruiting restrictions and a substantial fine tied to the program's overall budget and future postseason revenue. 'However, the true scope and scale of the scheme — including the competitive advantage it conferred — will never be known due to individuals' intentional destruction and withholding of materials and information,' the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions wrote. 'That said, this case and the decision that follows are limited to the information ultimately demonstrated through the NCAA enforcement staff's investigation.' Harbaugh, now the head coach of the Los Angeles Chargers, was given a 10-year show-cause ban by the NCAA that effectively ends his college coaching career. (This new penalty won't even begin until 2028, when Harbaugh completes a current four-year ban stemming from another NCAA investigation.) Former off-field assistant coach Connor Stalions was handed an eight-year ban. PATH TO PLAYOFF: Sign up for our college football newsletter Current coach Sherrone Moore, now entering his second season, was given a two-year show-cause order and was suspended for one game in 2026, joining the self-imposed two-game suspension Moore will serve this September. The monetary penalty features a $50,000 fine plus 10% of the program's operating budget, an additional fine 'equivalent to the anticipated loss of all postseason competition revenue sharing associated with the 2025-26 and 2026-27 football seasons' and another fine equal to 10% 'of the scholarships awarded in Michigan's football program for the 2025-26 academic year.' The total cost could be upwards of $30 million. 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CNN
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Carlos Alcaraz wins first Cincinnati Open title as Jannik Sinner retires with illness
Carlos Alcaraz won the Cincinnati Open title in anticlimactic circumstances as rival Jannik Sinner retired due to illness just 23 minutes into the match. Alcaraz raced into a 5-0 lead in the first set of Monday's final, the 14th matchup between the world's two best players, when an out-of-sorts and emotional Sinner announced that he was unable to continue. 'I'm super, super sorry to disappoint you,' Sinner said to the crowd in his on-court interview. 'From yesterday, I didn't feel great. I thought that I would improve during the night, but it came up worse. 'I tried to come out, tried to make it at least a small match, but I couldn't handle more, so I'm very, very sorry for all of you.' This was Alcaraz's sixth ATP title this year and 22nd overall, going some way to avenging his loss to Sinner in the Wimbledon final last month. He now heads to the US Open hoping to win a sixth grand slam crown. 'I'm so sorry for Jannik!' Alcaraz wrote on X. 'Nobody likes to win because their opponent retires, especially in a final like this. Wishing you a speedy recovery! Very happy with my week in Cincinnati and feeling ready for the US Open.' The Spaniard's victory ended Sinner's 26-match winning streak on hard courts, as well as denying his opponent back-to-back titles in Cincinnati. Sinner is scheduled to play in a revamped mixed doubles competition at the US Open alongside Czech Republic's Kateřina Siniaková on Tuesday, though his participation is now in doubt. Asked about how he now switches his focus to the US Open, Sinner said that he has 'a couple of days of recovery,' per the ATP Tour, suggesting that he will skip the mixed doubles to focus on singles. Alcaraz and Sinner have split the past seven grand slam titles, while Alcaraz's first title in Cincinnati sees him close the gap on his rival at the top of the world rankings. In the women's final, Iga Świątek defeated Jasmine Paolini 7-5, 6-4 to claim a first Cincinnati title and 24th on the WTA Tour, adding to the maiden Wimbledon crown she won last month. Despite trailing 3-0 in the first set, Świątek rallied to take the victory in an hour and 49 minutes and maintain her unbeaten record against Paolini across six matches. 'Playing so well here in Cincinnati where it's always tough and on faster, hard courts – it's a great boost of confidence,' Świątek, who didn't drop a set throughout the tournament, told Tennis Channel. 'I'm really happy that the work that I've been doing paid off … Everything clicked and I could play better and better every match of the tournament.'