
How to watch 2025 NASCAR Dover: Schedule, start time, TV channel for Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400
The Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 is scheduled for Sunday, July 20th at 2 p.m. ET.
The Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 will take place at Dover International Speedway in Dover, Delaware.
The Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 will consist of 400 laps across 400 miles.
The race will be broadcast live on TNT.
The Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 can be streamed on TNT Sports and MAX.
There are 37 drivers entered into the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400. Qualifying starts on Friday, 7/18.
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Associated Press
a minute ago
- Associated Press
Tauchman has 3-run double in 6-run 6th in the White Sox's victory over the Pirates
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Mike Tauchman had a go-ahead three-run double in a six-run sixth inning, Lenyn Sosa had three hits and three RBIs and the Chicago White Sox beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 10-4 on Saturday night. Tauchman gave Chicago a 7-4 lead with the two-out double off Isaac Mattson. The White Sox scored the first four runs of the inning off Caleb Ferguson (2-2), who retired one batter and gave up four hits. Bryan Reynolds and Nick Gonzales had back-to-back singles leading off the fourth against Adrian Houser. Both scored on a one-out double by Ke'Bryan Hayes, who scored on a two-out single by Isiah Kiner-Falefa to give the Pirates a 3-0 lead. Luis Robert Jr. had the first hit off rookie Mike Burrows when he reached on an infield single with one out in the fifth. Robert stole his 24th base before scoring on a single by Sosa. Josh Rojas' RBI double cut it to 3-2. Andrew McCutchen had a leadoff single in the Pirates' fifth before scoring on a Gonzales double for a 4-2 lead. Burrows allowed two runs on three hits in five innings and left with the lead in his 10th career start. Robert and Austin Slater had RBI singles off Ferguson to tie it at 4. Mattson entered and hit Sosa with a pitch to load the bases before Rojas struck out looking. Tauchman cleared the bases then scored on Chase Meidroth's single. Sosa's two-run single in the seventh off Carmen Mlodzinski made it 10-4. Houser allowed four runs — three earned — on 10 hits in 4 1/3 innings. Tyler Gilbert (3-1) got the final two outs in the fifth for the victory. Key moment Tauchman's go-ahead double came on a 0-2 pitch from Mattson. Key stat Chicago goes for the sweep after outscoring Pittsburgh 20-5 in the first two games. Up next White Sox RHP Aaron Civale (1-6, 5.30) was set to start Sunday opposite LHP Andrew Heaney (4-8, 4.59). ___ AP MLB:


New York Times
a minute ago
- New York Times
David Wright, Mets celebrate ‘unbreakable bond' with number retirement
NEW YORK — As he neared the end of his nine-minute speech Saturday, having watched his No. 5 take up permanent residence on Citi Field's left-field facade, David Wright turned to his three kids on his left. 'My three wonderful kids often use the term 'for real life' when on occasion they're telling the truth,' Wright said. 'To borrow their term, this sure doesn't feel like for real life.' Advertisement Wright became the eighth player in team history to have his number retired — and the first who never wore another uniform. Saturday's party for 5 (and of a sellout crowd of 42,605) had been inevitable in these parts for years — dating to before the New York Mets relaxed their standards for retiring numbers, to his unforgettable last night at Citi Field, to before Wright's playing career even neared its end. There was never going to be another No. 5 in blue and orange. Early in the ceremony, the Citi Field scoreboard presented a video titled 'The Wright Blueprint,' and during his speech, Wright himself outlined the steps it takes to become this kind of professional baseball player — you know, generalizable concepts like being born to Rhon and Elisa Wright and growing up with three ultracompetitive younger brothers consistently pushing you to get better at everything you do. But indeed, Wright is a blueprint for the Mets — the model for what this franchise could be at its best. How do you build a baseball superstar? Start with a kid who grew up rooting for your team even though he lived five states and 350 miles away. Instill in him a work ethic and a preternatural professionalism, one that permitted a person who still says (as Wright did Saturday) he's uncomfortable in the spotlight to never once come across that way in New York City. Promote a genuine humility that fuels self-improvement, season after season, and sets an example for all to follow. Oh, and make sure he's really good at baseball. Wright comprehensively checked those boxes over 14 big-league seasons. For anyone who entered the Mets organization after Wright, he was the archetype. 'He was The Guy you wanted to be like,' said Brandon Nimmo, the only active Met who played with Wright. 'To be able to have that relationship in this game with the fans is something special.' Advertisement That relationship is hard-earned. These are fans who challenge you, their affection not given easily or unconditionally. That much was clear when a 55-43 team earned their ire on multiple occasions in Saturday's 5-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, its defensive miscues and offensive shortcomings inspiring plenty of booing from hometown faithful. To earn their love — and that indeed is what Wright accomplished over his career with the Mets — takes daily devotion to the craft. Wright began forging that relationship before he even knew it. From his youth in southeastern Virginia, a short drive from the Mets' Triple-A affiliate in Norfolk at the time, Wright embraced all that the Mets were and are — and all that they could be. (Who else would dare thank the Wilpons the way Wright did in front of a sellout crowd?) The Mets were never second fiddle, never the younger brother. (The oldest of four would never.) And so for a generation of Mets fans, Wright will forever be the standard — the player who sparked their appreciation of, their devotion to, their obsession with the Mets. No players may wear No. 5 ever again, but spend a summer weeknight at Citi Field, and you'll see a hundred of those jerseys, in plain white or pinstripes, in black or blue. He could spark that fandom because he understood its heart. 'I view this as an incredible, organic relationship between me and my family and the city, the organization, the fan base,' he said Saturday. 'To me, the Mets' fan base is a blue-collar, bring-your-lunch-pail-to-work kind of fan base. That's how I tried to approach the game each day. I think that's why the relationship with the Mets fan base has become so special.' Thank you, Captain. 🫡 — New York Mets (@Mets) July 19, 2025 Back when he played his last game for the Mets in 2018, Wright struggled with the finality of it. 'I can't sit here and tell you that I'm good with where I'm at right now,' he said seven years ago. 'I'm at peace with the work and the time and the effort and dedication I put into this. But I'm certainly not at peace with the end result.' Advertisement He's found that peace since, he said Saturday, his heart and his brain coming to terms with what his body had dictated. And a large part of that process was understanding what that last game signified. 'To me, that meant the world,' Wright said to the crowd Saturday. 'That night, I fully realized the extent of the relationship I'd developed with the city of New York and particularly this fan base. 'We have truly formed something extraordinary in this game — an 18-year-old kid from Virginia having the privilege of being a lifelong Met and developing an unbreakable bond with the best fan base in baseball.' An unbreakable bond and an immortal legacy. He said that last game felt like yesterday. And Saturday? 'Like the feeling you get when you come home from a long trip.' Earlier in the day, Wright talked about conclusions. 'Very few athletes get the ending they want — that storybook ending,' he said. 'I certainly wouldn't call mine a storybook ending, but it's better than 99 percent of athletes get.' Storybook? Not quite. This was for real life.

Associated Press
a minute ago
- Associated Press
WNBA All-Stars make statement with warmup shirts over CBA
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — All of the players on Team Clark and Team Collier warmed up for Saturday night's WNBA All-Star Game in shirts that read 'Pay us what you owe us.' The shirts come after the players and the league failed to reach a new collective bargaining agreement at an in-person meeting Thursday. The league's players opted out of their last CBA in October, and are looking for a better revenue-sharing model, increased salaries, improved benefits and a softer salary cap. 'I'm just so inspired by the amount of players that showed up, the engagement that was there,' WNBPA President Nneka Ogwumike said. 'That's really what it's all about. Because the more that happens, the more that we're going to be able to get things done. I think today we're going to be able to use this conversation to start rolling the ball on things.' After the failed negotiations, many players said there was a large discrepancy between what they wanted and what the league was offering. If a new CBA is not reached by October some players, including All-Stars Napheesa Collier and Angel Reese, have mentioned the potential of a walkout. ___ AP WNBA: