Cole Custer made his return to the NASCAR Cup Series as a full-time wheelman over the weekend, as he’ll be racing the No. 41 for the Haas Factory Team after a couple seasons in the Xfinity Series.
He wasn’t expected to be a major factor in the Daytona 500, but that’s how it goes sometimes during the biggest race of the NASCAR season. Custer was in the mix at the end of the race, as the field was coming to the checkered flag, and he had a shot at hoisting the Harley J. Earl Trophy.
Custer has a run on Denny Hamlin and Austin Cindric, but instead of making a move for the lead, it led to a gigantic wreck that propelled William Byron to Victory Lane for the second consecutive season in The Great American Race.
In the time afterwards, Custer has received some backlash for his move, with the aforementioned Hamlin calling him out: “The No. 41 had the run and I chose not to block him. In these races, you gotta live to make it off of turn 4 and we just didn’t. I thought that the No. 41 came down. I’m pushing the No. 2 down as low as I can, giving the No. 41 all the space and not stopping his run,” the three-time Daytona 500 winner explained.
“I thought he steered left and was trying to crowd it. I understand everyone’s trying to go for it, and he’s going for it. All of us are. But in those situations, we gotta get off of 4, then we can do this. But we just never made it and someone else won. I don’t even know where William [Byron] was running.”
While it’s hard to pinpoint who’s at fault when it comes to the massive wrecks at Daytona each year, Hamlin seems to believe Custer is the one who ruined his evening. Nevertheless, he won’t go quietly into taking the blame, as the Haas wheelman defended himself while speaking with Bob Pockrass of FOX Sports following the Daytona 500.
“There was a lot going on. A lot of pushing, a lot of shoving. I wish we could’ve stayed together with Austin, but just how it all worked out, field blocking and everything, it just didn’t work out. But yeah, everybody just going for it. … At the end of the day, I mean, you’re just going as hard as you can,” Custer stated. “These super-speedway races, you’re pushing, you’re shoving, you’re side-drafting, and it’s the Daytona 500. This is the biggest race of our lives. The top of our sport. It’s a life-changing race. You’re just going for it all.
“At the end of the day, I need to see a replay of exactly what happened, if I side-drafted too hard, or if I hit in the left rear. I just need to see what happened. But I hate it. I mean, these guys work so hard on this car all week. From the Duels, getting it ready, and just a couple of corners short of having a shot at the win.”
In the end, it’s the Daytona 500, and Cole Custer was doing all he could to land in Victory Lane. Denny Hamlin and some other wheelman might take issue with the suddenness of his move, but he took his shot, and everyone will simply have to move on. At least William Byron is happy about the ordeal.
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Sunday's Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway appeared to be playing right into Kyle Larson's hands. A caution for rain with six laps to go gave Larson, who was over three seconds behind race leader Bubba Wallace at the time of the yellow, a shot to race Wallace for the win on a restart. Larson had taken four tires on his previous pit stop as opposed to Wallace's two. He had also pitted two laps later than Wallace, giving him a slight fuel advantage. While Wallace cleared Larson on the first overtime restart, a caution bunched the field back up and appeared to put Larson in the catbird's seat, as Wallace was reportedly on the verge of running out of gas. But once again, Wallace cleared Larson for the lead. Wallace's fuel tank didn't go dry, and all Larson could do was watch as Wallace flew under the checkered flag at IMS and denied Larson a second consecutive Brickyard 400 triumph. "The first (restart) played out a little bit better," Larson told TNT Sports. "(When) the leader has the inside, it's really hard to beat that. Kind of just hoping for some good fortune again with fuel and whatnot. Regardless, proud of my team today." "Wish we could've been one spot better."
Kirk Cousins might be relegated to the job of backup quarterback, but he is showing veteran leadership to his Atlanta Falcons teammates. Following Sunday's practice, Cousins pulled aside rookie defensive end James Pearce to encourage the first-round pick after his fourth practice in the league at Flowery Branch, Georgia. "QB Kirk Cousins pulled aside Pearce after practice to compliment him on a pass batted down," wrote Marc Raimondi of ESPN. Cousins reportedly had a solid day of practice on Sunday, going 7-of-12 passing against the first-team unit. If Cousins wants out of Atlanta, he's not showing it at practice. The four-time Pro Bowl quarterback is competing on the field and being a good teammate around the facility. Cousins' actions on the field backed up what Falcons general manager Terry Fontenot praised Cousins for before the team's practice on Sunday. “Outside, it's a lot more of a deal than it is in the building,” Fontenot said to the media about the idea of friction between the Falcons and Cousins, per video from D. Orlando Ledbetter of the Atlanta Journal Constitution. “He shows up, he does his job, just like anybody ... We've gotta build the best 70-man roster so we can go win games. "That's what we're focused on, and Kirk, just like all the other players, is focused on coming in here and doing their job. That's what he's been doing." Fontenot didn't dismiss the idea that Atlanta would trade Cousins before the season. He said the Falcons will do whatever it takes to make the team better, but stressed that Cousins has been a professional throughout the process of being replaced by Michael Penix Jr., a first-round pick from the 2024 draft. “In terms of making moves, whether it's trades or acquiring players, we're always looking at those factors," Fontenot said. "We're gonna do whatever we can do to make this team the best it can possibly be. But he's been a great professional, and he's handled himself well.” Cousins is coming to work in a manner that will make another owner want to take a chance on the veteran quarterback. That could be one of his best-selling points before he plays in his 13th season in the league.
Quarterback Aaron Rodgers spent the bulk of the spring as an unsigned free agent and, thus, only began officially practicing with Pittsburgh Steelers teammates during the team's three-day mandatory minicamp in June. During a Monday appearance on Pittsburgh radio station 102.5 WDVE, Steelers reporter Gerry Dulac of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette addressed how Rodgers looked during his first few training camp practices with the club. "His release is just astonishing to watch," Dulac said about Rodgers, as shared by Ross McCorkle of Steelers Depot. "Everybody knows about it, and when you see it in person, you see it every day in practice, you just marvel at it. To me, he's the greatest thrower of the football I have ever seen, even at 41 (years old). That flick of that wrist and that ball comes out, it's moving and it is something to see." Rodgers was with the New York Jets when he suffered a torn Achilles four offensive snaps into the 2023 regular-season opener. He was then slowed by a nagging hip issue, injuries to both his knees, a low ankle sprain and a serious hamstring problem as the 2024 Jets went 5-12. According to Pro Football Reference, Rodgers finished last season ranked 28th in the NFL among qualified players with a 48.0 adjusted QBR and 26th with a 43.9 percent passing success rate. That said, he was also eighth with 3,897 passing yards and tied for seventh with 28 passing touchdowns. Rodgers and Jets wide receiver Garrett Wilson endured some struggles during training camp sessions last summer before the two allegedly "never saw eye-to-eye" during the season. It sounds like Pittsburgh fans should be encouraged by how Rodgers performed in recent practices. "That guy can get rid of the ball as quick as anybody," Dulac added. "He made three throws in seven-on-seven (drills) the other day that the cumulative total I bet couldn't have exceeded 2.1 seconds. And two of those were for touchdowns." Rodgers wants to finish his career "the right way" and help the Steelers notch at least their first playoff win since January 2017. As of Monday morning, DraftKings Sportsbook had Pittsburgh at -150 betting odds to miss the playoffs for the upcoming season.
Boasting a 62-44 record in the NL Central, the Chicago Cubs are still searching for a way to pull ahead of the Milwaukee Brewers. The Brewers took sole possession of first place in the division from the Cubs in an 8-4 win on Monday. Chicago will get its chance before the three-game set is over, but if the Cubs should fall to the Brewers, the trade deadline will be viewed as essential for their World Series chances. Several rumors of Chicago’s interest in starters, relievers and third basemen have swirled nonstop. And while they have shown interest in several quality names — Mitch Keller, Eugenio Suárez, MacKenzie Gore — some of their other trade targets are less than ideal. Among their worst sources of interest (if not, the worst) is struggling Braves reliever Raisel Iglesias, who is in his walk year. Hiding behind his shining 2.99 career ERA is a rather shocking, career-high 4.97 ERA, to which he has pitched this season. He is still a strikeout pitcher, having accumulated 46 Ks in 41.2 innings, but his run prevention capabilities have seemingly deteriorated. It was only last season when Iglesias posted a stellar 1.95 ERA. Since then, his home run total doubled, from surrendering just four last year to eight so far this year. His opponent batting average has also jumped, from .160 to .250. Iglesias is no stranger to success. He threw to ERAs south of 3.00 in eight of his 11 MLB years. However, this season, he just doesn’t appear to have it. Any team that trades for Iglesias in the last year of his contract would be betting that he can return to elite form before the season is over. Taking a risk on a pitcher like Iglesias in his current condition, especially when there are several other more reliable arms on the market, would be ill-advised. And for the Cubs, who are in a win-now position, having secured one guaranteed year of Kyle Tucker, taking a gamble on Iglesias could easily risk everything they worked for this season.
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