Folks, it’s here. Race week. I know, it’s just the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum, but NASCAR Cup Series cars are on track this week! The quarter-mile track is tight, hard to get around, and even harder to pass on. Who will come away with the win?
A year ago, Martin Truex Jr. won the Busch Light Clash. He was really solid all day at the Coliseum. He managed to move up and take the lead, and he didn’t give it up, either.
We saw a ton of pushing and shoving last year in this race as well. Denny Hamlin complained he felt a little sick from all of the fumes he inhaled in the close-quarters race.
But more importantly, we have odds for The Clash now. Martin Truex Jr. is the favorite at +800 odds according to Draft Kings Sportsbook.
Busch Light Clash: Odds to win
Martin Truex Jr.: +800
Kyle Larson: +850
William Byron: +900
Kyle Busch: +900
Ryan Blaney: +1000
Joey Logano: +1000
Denny Hamlin: +1000
Christopher Bell: +1200
Chase Elliott: +1600
Tyler Reddick: +2000
So, there is your top-10 for The Clash. Austin Dillon, last year’s P3 finisher is listed down at +3000 odds. Corey LaJoie, Kaz Grala, and Todd Gilliland are at the bottom of the list at +30000.
I think that the Busch Light Clash has been a success. People have tuned in. It’s in the week between Championship Sunday and Super Bowl Sunday in the NFL. That’s perfect! This year, adding the Mexico Series and making the heat races on Saturday open to the public for free and you’ve got a really neat event in Los Angeles.
This will be year three of the LA Coliseum project, and I think it is a success. Drivers and fans were intrigued by this track, and we’ve had some fun moments come from it. Last year, drivers were ready to get out of their cars and go at it with how everyone played bumper cars the entire race.
While it has been a good project for NASCAR, it is probably time to move on from it. Between the Coliseum and reviving North Wilkesboro, NASCAR has shown they can go anywhere they want and put on a hell of a show.
Most fans are probably feeling burnt out on the Coliseum and after this year’s race, they will be able to breathe a sigh of relief. Don’t look at it as a race, exactly. This is an event, like a parade to start the year, that is meant to bring in new fans and put new eyes on the Cup Series.
If you aren’t growing, you’re shrinking. New fans are key to the success and future of NASCAR. Races and events like the Busch Light Clash are going to help the sport succeed as it heads into the future.
More must-reads:
For the first time in his career, Shane van Gisbergen is experiencing what it is like to be fully involved in the drama of the NASCAR Cup Series. The ongoing tussle in the sport over the championship format and the elimination-style playoffs has led to him providing an opinion based on what he has seen thus far, and it is not something that would make everybody happy. The former Australian Supercars champion was asked for his thoughts on allotting playoff berths to drivers who win a race in the regular season during a recent appearance on Corey LaJoie’s Stacking Pennies podcast. Van Gisbergen himself has a playoff spot secured through this means, for his victories in Mexico, Chicago, and Sonoma. He responded by expressing strong self-awareness right off the bat. Admitting that he made it to the playoffs only through the courtesy of the current system, he said, “When I first won the race, I was 32nd or something [in points], so I can see why, but I really want Brad Keselowski to win a race ’cause he was like 30th as well at the time. “And it would have been interesting to see what people thought about that because he’s a champion. And he could run pretty deep in the playoffs. So, I really like the dynamic it brings now, especially with Bubba [Wallace] winning.” He pointed out how there are drivers on the bubble who are desperate for a win, and that their competitiveness makes things a lot more exciting. This is not a stand that the likes of Denny Hamlin and Mark Martin would appreciate. They’ve been pitching for a full-season points-based format devoid of the formula by which drivers get to the playoffs through regular-season victories. SVG expressed openness to restructuring how the championship is being decided by a single race, but he is too fond of how drivers become eligible to race in the playoffs currently. Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Hamlin have discussed multiple formats in the past through which the champion can be decided through two, three, or more races. The purpose behind this is to crown the most worthy driver. The season finale going down at a single track can turn out to be hugely advantageous for a single driver. For instance, if the finale went down in a road course, van Gisbergen is the likely driver to end up being the champion, due to his mastery of the track type, even if he hasn’t necessarily been the best driver of the season. This is something NASCAR must try to avoid, and the Kiwi is all there to see change on this front.
DENVER — There's nothing like coming to Coors Field to fix what ails you. Just ask the Toronto Blue Jays. Losers of six of eight games before arriving in Denver, the Blue Jays posted an MLB-record 63 hits in a three-game series while easily sweeping a road series from the Colorado Rockies. By totaling 25 hits on Monday night, 14 on Tuesday and 24 in Wednesday's matinee, the Blue Jays set a new MLB standard for offensive prowess. Toronto passed the MLB record of 62 hits in a three-game series, set by the Boston Red Sox in a June 7-9, 1950 matchup against the St. Louis Browns. As part of the hit parade, Toronto smashed 13 home runs, the most ever surrendered by the Rockies in a three-game set. Included in that barrage were three hits by Bo Bichette, including a three-run shot on Wednesday afternoon that got the Blue Jays rolling in the third inning. Kyle Freeland, Wednesday's starter for Colorado, allowed seven hits in his 4.2 innings of work. That was the fewest amount of hits given up by a Rockies starter against Toronto, as Rockies starter Tanner Gordon allowed 11 in 2.2 frames on Monday, while Anthony Molina surrendered nine in 5.0 innings on Tuesday. "We need to pitch with confidence as starting pitchers. We need to command the baseball better in general," said Rockies interim manager Warren Schaeffer as his team slipped to 30-84 on the season. "We have to put hitters away when we have that opportunity." That was something Colorado couldn't do against the Blue Jays on Wednesday, as their first six runs of a 20-1 blowout win came with two outs in the frame. Wednesday's offensive explosion helped Toronto outscore the Rockies, 45-6, in the series. That run differential was the second-most in MLB's modern era and the most runs scored by an MLB team in a three-game series since the 2019 Chicago Cubs scored 47 runs against the Pittsburgh Pirates from Sept. 13-15, 2019. In all, the 45 runs, 63 hits and 13 home runs allowed in the series were each the most allowed by Colorado pitchers in a three-game set in franchise history. How bad did it get for Colorado at the end of the series? Down 12-1 entering the ninth inning on Wednesday, the Rockies put catcher Austin Nola on the mound for his first-ever pitching appearance. He was nothing like his younger brother, Philadelphia Phillies ace Aaron Nola, as he promptly gave up four consecutive doubles, including RBI shots from Bichette and Vladimir Guerrero Jr., as part of eight hits and eight runs posted by the Blue Jays against him. "It hurts when you get beat that bad for three games," Nola said. "We can compete with anybody. I know we can. We're all Major League players, so it definitely hurts. We're going to have to flush this one and get back out there on Friday in Arizona and have a new competitive attitude." All quotations obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.
Marshall Faulk is Colorado's new running backs coach, and the Buffaloes could not ask for someone with better experience for the job. That's, of course, because this is Faulk's first coaching gig. As a player, though, there were few better than the Pro Football Hall of Famer. In 12 seasons in the NFL, he rushed 2,836 times for 12,279 yards and 100 total touchdowns. He was a league MVP, a seven-time Pro Bowler and a Super Bowl champ. Faulk was the real deal, and now he has a chance to pass his experiences on to the running backs at Colorado. For him, it's more than just the opportunity to coach football, though. He gets to coach under Deion Sanders, whom he views as a major difference-maker for the game of football. "You guys know him in a different way than I know him," Faulk said in a recent media availability (h/t On3). "We’ve been friends for many years. We worked together in television. We always talk just about the game and probably more about kids coming up in the game. How do you affect and make sure they come into the game the right way? He’s one of those way makers. When you pay attention to kids that’s gonna leave this program and go to the next level, they’re gonna do it in a certain way and you’re gonna say, 'Wow, they were coached by a guy who understands how to get it done.' I identify with that." Colorado can certainly use Faulk's expertise heading into 2025. There are several players battling for the starting role after Isaiah Augustave transferred to South Carolina. Even then, he was Colorado's leading rusher last season while rushing for just 384 yards and four touchdowns, so it's not like the Buffs have a big gap that they're trying to replace. Dekalon Taylor transferred in from Incarnate Word, where he rushed for 909 yards and nine touchdowns last season, so he'll be a player to watch. Dallan Hayden, Micah Welch, Simeon Price and Charlie Offerdahl are also names to know. Faulk will have his work cut out for him, but he seems excited to make a difference both on and off the field for these young Buffaloes. "So coming here not just to win games on the field, but to win the game off the field, which is to make sure that these young men in life become what they want to become outside of football. They become the father that they want to be, the brother, the husband. Making sure that they do that, that’s the important part. That was attractive," he said.
Despite boasting a core of elite contracts that include Connor McDavid, Leon Draisaitl and Zach Hyman, the Edmonton Oilers saw their overall contract value rankings take a hit in a recent article by The Athletic. Dom Luszczyszyn looks at every team and its contract situations each season. The Oilers ranked 8th overall, but that dropped them down the standings, largely due to the new eight-year, $3.9 million AAV deal handed to forward Trent Frederic. In a recent analysis evaluating NHL contract efficiency, Frederic’s deal earned a D-grade — one of the lowest marks handed out — alongside the much-maligned Darnell Nurse contract. He was signed to the new deal this offseason after arriving to the Oilers via a trade at the deadline. Injured, but in the lineup for the playoffs, he wasn’t exactly the most effective forward. The Oilers believe he has a lot more to give and GM Stan Bowman bet on the forward. Frederic’s extension, which carries a modest annual cap hit but stretches through 2033, is projected to offer just a +20.1% positive value while delivering a -$15.2 million total surplus over its duration. Frederic’s ranking is particularly glaring when placed next to the six A-grade contracts on the Oilers’ books. No other forward has a grade lower than a C. The team also has four different A-grades, an A for McDavid and an A+ for Draisaitl. Combined with team-friendly deals for stars like McDavid and Draisaitl, Edmonton remains one of the league’s most efficient teams in terms of contract value. Will the Oilers shed either of these bad contracts? According to this ranking, Frederic and Nurse deals are two glaring liabilities. Don’t expect the Oilers to move off either contract anytime soon. Bowman said of the Frederic deal: “…he’s a very unique player with the skillset that he has. He’s a big guy, he’s a physical player, he’s not afraid. He’s got that intimidation factor where he’ll go to the other team’s bench and challenge anybody, like stop messing around with our group. That’s something that I find, you either have that or you don’t. … And he’s scored, you know, he scored what, 18 goals twice in a row at a fairly young, younger age. So I think he’s got the game in him. And I think when you add all that up, it comes down to he’s a very unique player. It’s not like if we passed on Frederic, we’ll just go get so-and-so, who’s maybe a little different, but the same type of player. Not a lot of guys like that out there. They just aren’t anymore.” As for Nurse, there was talk that the Oilers approached him and others about their no-move clauses, and Nurse declined to waive his. The hope is that he elevates his game, and with the rising salary cap, his deal doesn’t look like such an albatross. With several key contracts set to expire soon — including McDavid’s — and questions lingering around term for others, the Oilers need to be cautious with long-term commitments. As it stands, the Frederic deal is a warning sign that not every extension is created equal, even on a Cup-contending roster.
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!