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Weekend Preview: Bristol Motor Speedway

NASCAR: Playoff Media DaySep 4, 2024; Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; Denny Hamlin speaks to media members during the NASCAR Playoffs Media Day at the Charlotte Convention Center. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

Denny Hamlin faces the equivalent of a last-chance qualifier in the Bass Pro Shops Night Race on Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway.

The first round of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs certainly hasn’t gone according to plan for the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. A conservative strategy and a late wreck led to a 24th-place finish in the Round of 16 opener at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Hamiln is six points below the current cut line for the Round of 12, but the 43-year-old can point to his record at Bristol with confidence. He’s the defending winner of the Night Race, and he added a fourth career victory at Thunder Valley in March.

“I feel like we can go to Bristol and win,” Hamlin said. “We can control our own destiny there. If we can run in the top two or three all day and score stage points and be there at the end like we are capable of doing, then I feel good about it.”

Hamlin insists he’s not in a must-win situation, but there are few convenient targets available in his quest to advance on points.

To catch Hendrick Motorsports teammates Kyle Larson and William Byron — ninth and 10th, respectively, in the standings — Hamlin would have to overcome respective deficits of 26 and 25 points.

Clearly, the best-case scenario for Hamlin is a victory and automatic advancement to the Round of 12.

Veterans Brad Keselowski and Martin Truex Jr. face even more daunting challenges.

Entering the elimination race Saturday, Keselowski is 12 points below the current cutoff, Truex 14.

Keselowski is a three-time Bristol winner, while Truex has never won a Cup race on the high-banked concrete track.

It might be a good omen that Truex’s No. 19 Toyota is carrying the livery of the race’s entitlement sponsor. It’s a better predictor that the Cup Series drivers will be racing on the same rubber that made the spring race a tire-management challenge.

“I’m certainly looking forward to it more than in past years,” said Truex, who has scored just three top fives in 34 Bristol starts. “Bristol has been in the past, just hammer it as hard as you can all day. Track position was huge.

“Tires didn’t really wear out and it was all about pit stops, restarts and track position. Now, in the spring, it was like old-school racing. I enjoyed that more and had better success at it than I did in previous years at Bristol, so I’m excited for that.”

Through two playoff races, Joey Logano is the only driver who has clinched a spot in the Round of 12, thanks to his victory in the Atlanta opener. Points leader Christopher Bell (+46), Austin Cindric (+43) and Alex Bowman (+41) merely need solid, problem-free runs to advance.

At the World’s Fastest Half-Mile, however, there are no guarantees.

Meanwhile, JR Motorsports driver Sammy Smith and Big Machine Racing driver Parker Kligerman would like nothing better than for the status quo to hold firm in Friday night’s Food City 300 at Bristol.

Kligerman can clinch a playoff spot by scoring 14 points on Friday, while Smith has a commanding 43-point advantage for the final playoff spot.

“I’m looking forward to running under the lights this Friday at Bristol as we contend for our position in the playoffs,” Smith said. “I’ve had good runs there in the past, and JRM has always brought strong cars there, so I’m excited to get there and close out the regular season on a high note.”

The Xfinity regular-season title is also up for grabs, though Justin Allgaier has a 43-point lead over reigning series champion Cole Custer entering the race that will decide who earns the 15-playoff-point bonus.

Allgaier is the defending winner of the Food City 300. He’ll have a competitive teammate in his boss, Dale Earnhardt Jr., who will make his first start of the season on Friday. Earnhardt led 47 laps in the Bristol race last year before exiting with ignition problems after 271 of 300 circuits.

Little was decided in the Aug. 25 first race of the Truck Series Playoffs at the Milwaukee Mile, but the race for the title should take on more definition after the UNOH 200 on Thursday at Bristol.

Non-playoff driver Layne Riggs won at Milwaukee, denying all 10 title contenders the prospect of advancing to the Round of 8 with a victory.

In addition, the two drivers who enter Friday’s race below the current cut line — defending series champion Ben Rhodes and Rajah Caruth — are well within sight of the positive side of the playoff bubble.

With the field set to be cut from 10 to eight drivers on Sept. 27 at Kansas, Rhodes and Caruth trail eighth-place Grant Enfinger by two points and four points, respectively.

“The key to success at Bristol is precision,” Caruth said. “You have to be plugged in and remain aware of everything going on around you. It’s a super-fun race track, but you are going fast, there’s a lot of banking, it is tough to see, and things happen very quickly.

“I’ve raced pretty much everything there, from ARCA to Trucks to Xfinity. Hopefully, we can build off our past runs and punch our ticket to the next round of the playoffs.”

–By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media

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Wyndham Clark up by 6 at US Open, Scottie Scheffler leads chasing pack

Jun 20, 2026; Southampton, New York, USA; Wyndham Clark makes a tee shot on the sixth green during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn ImagesJun 20, 2026; Southampton, New York, USA; Wyndham Clark makes a tee shot on the sixth green during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Wyndham Clark has a reputation he wants to shake.

Clark outlasted Rory McIlroy to win the 2023 U.S. Open. But just last year at the same championship, he was banned from Oakmont Country Club after destroying a locker in anger when he missed the cut.

Clark is back on the upswing of navigating a fiendish setup at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club. He made a magnificent eagle at No. 16 and posted an even-par 70 Saturday to give himself a six-shot cushion entering the final round of the U.S. Open in Southampton, N.Y.

“It was very up and down, holy smokes,” Clark said after he could be heard criticizing his play more than once on the telecast. “I hit some good shots; I hit some terrible shots. Yeah, I was a little frustrated with myself with some of the execution.”

Coming off a bogey at the previous hole, Clark hit the peak of his round at the par-5 16th. From the fairway, 275 yards from the pin, Clark struck a 3-wood that avoided a greenside bunker and settled 4 feet from the hole for eagle.

That boosted him from 6 under par to 8 under, and even after pushing his par putt at No. 18 past the cup, Clark made himself difficult to catch at 7-under 203.

“I feel like I’m trying to get more consistent. That’s something I’ve always wanted to be, and I think I’m trending in that direction,” Clark said. “Today was very volatile. Hopefully tomorrow it can be definitely a little more low-key, and hopefully I can play some boring golf.”

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler will be Clark’s biggest threat after a back-nine rally got him back into the championship. He made four birdies on the back, including three in a row for the first time at a U.S. Open, and shot 69 to get to 1 under for the week.

Tied with Scheffler for second are Sahith Theegala (70), Sam Stevens (72) and South Korea’s Tom Kim (72).

Scheffler turns 30 on Sunday and would complete the career Grand Slam with a victory. He’ll tee off in the final pairing with Clark.

“We’ve been battling hard for a few days, and I did a good job of keeping myself in the tournament,” Scheffler said. “I’ll need a really nice round tomorrow if I’m going to try and catch Wyndham.”

Scheffler had one of only two sub-70 rounds on a day where the scoring average settled at 73.62, the highest of the week so far. Earlier Saturday, Argentina’s Emiliano Grillo shot a 3-under 67 featuring four straight birdies at Nos. 6-9, climbing to even for the championship.

Tied with Grillo at even are Keith Mitchell (70), Sam Burns (71) and Xander Schauffele (73).

Clark began the day with a four-shot lead but saw that cut in half in short order. Stevens birdied the first hole to reach 4 under, and Clark’s approach at No. 1 rolled down the false front of the green, leading to a three-putt bogey.

He got it back with a birdie at No. 5, then scrambled for pars at Nos. 6 and 7.

“The one on 7, I was into the grain, I didn’t hit the best of chips, but it looked like I hit it to 4 feet, which is normally good,” Clark explained. “But that putt was diabolical, and I could three-putt from there, it was so sloped. The fact I made that one was huge.”

At No. 8, Clark was heard on the broadcast apparently calling it the “worst shot of my life” when his approach bounced into a front-right bunker, leading to a bogey. He went birdie-bogey at Nos. 14-15 before the eagle gave him a massive boost.

Scheffler began his day bogey-bogey and parred his way through the rest of the front nine. His patience was rewarded with a straightforward birdie at No. 10 before the shot of the day, a chip-in birdie from 65 feet away at No. 15.

His approach, like many others throughout the round, rolled off the firm green and down a slope. Scheffler pitched his third shot at No. 15 on a tight line and gave an unusually emphatic fist pump and “Let’s go!” when it dropped.

“At that point I’m still over par for the tournament, staring at a pretty tough up-and-down,” he said later. “So to steal a shot there at least is a pretty good feeling.”

He followed that with 12-foot and 13-foot birdie putts to climb to 2 under before bogeying No. 17.

Theegala’s round of 70 featured exactly one bogey and one birdie, the latter coming at No. 18 when his approach sat down 12 inches from the cup.

“I think the first, I don’t know, 9 to 12 holes (on Sunday), I can’t even worry about what Wyndham is doing,” said Theegala, eyeing his first major. “It just requires so much mental energy to play each and every hole out there. …

“The goal is to put yourself in position come back nine on Sunday, and then that’s when you can start leaderboard watching and kind of see what the lead is at.”

–Field Level Media

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Aces star A'ja Wilson 'warmed up,' which may be bad news for Valkyries

May 3, 2026; Austin, TX, USA; Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) reacts after scoring while drawing a foul during the first half against the Dallas Wings at Moody Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn ImagesMay 3, 2026; Austin, TX, USA; Las Vegas Aces center A’ja Wilson (22) reacts after scoring while drawing a foul during the first half against the Dallas Wings at Moody Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

The Las Vegas Aces are looking to continue their nearly unblemished June against the visiting Golden State Valkyries on Sunday after splitting their two-game road trip this past week.

The Aces (11-4) sustained their lone loss this month in a 96-66 setback against the Dallas Wings on Monday, but they bounced back with an 86-76 win over the Phoenix Mercury on Wednesday. That victory secured their position in the WNBA Commissioner’s Cup Final against the New York Liberty on June 30.

Center A’ja Wilson, the league’s leading scorer at 26.1 points per game, predictably led the Aces with a double-double of 33 points and 10 rebounds in the winning effort, while NaLyssa Smith tallied 21 points on 8-of-10 shooting from the field.

Sunday’s game is the first of a three-game homestand for the Aces, who will then travel to Chicago for a matchup with the Sky on June 28 before departing to New York for the Commissioner’s Cup Final. The Aces have won seven of their last eight games since back-to-back losses to the Los Angeles Sparks and Wings dropped them to 5-3 in late May, and the expectation in Las Vegas is that the team will only continue to heat up.

“I don’t play basketball in the offseason, so it kind of takes me time to warm up and kind of get into the flow of playing 5-on-5,” said Wilson, the four-time and reigning league MVP and a seven-time All-Star. “Sometimes, in some years, it takes me seven games. Sometimes it takes me 17 games. Overall, I’m very pleased about how I’m really just trying to get in the flow of things. For me, probably on the defensive end is where I’m really trying to be super hard on myself, only because I know I have to anchor this defense for us.”

The Valkyries (10-6), on the other hand, are looking to bounce back from an 81-75 home loss to the league-best Minnesota Lynx on Friday. Despite the setback, the Valkyries were the first team to really solve the problem that is Rookie of the Year frontrunner Olivia Miles, holding her to season-low seven points on 1-of-10 shooting. Still, the Valkyries had won four games in a row before Friday’s loss and certainly pose a threat to hand the Aces their fifth loss of the season.

Gabby Williams has been the Valkyries’ most important piece on both ends of the floor, averaging a team-high 16.3 points per game while anchoring the team on the defensive end. Janelle Salaun and Veronica Burton have also built on their breakout 2025 campaigns, each improving their scoring averages to over 13 points per game.

“We’re being super intentional on how we’re preparing for Vegas,” Valkyries coach Natalie Nakase said. “Going into our second year, I think we’re having really good conversations on preparation. We were right there (against Minnesota), a couple possessions away. Not going to hang our hats, we’re not going to point fingers off of this loss, but we’re going to learn from it.”

–Field Level Media

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Dodgers place RHP Blake Treinen (elbow inflammation) on 15-day IL

Apr 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen (49) pitches during the eighth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn ImagesApr 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Blake Treinen (49) pitches during the eighth inning against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images

The Dodgers placed right-hander Blake Treinen on the 15-day injured list with right elbow inflammation ahead of Saturday night’s game against the visiting Baltimore Orioles.

Los Angeles recalled right-hander Chayce McDermott from Triple-A Oklahoma City in a corresponding move.

Treinen, who turns 38 on June 30, is in his sixth season with the Dodgers. He has a 4-1 record and 3.52 ERA in 29 relief appearances this season with 25 strikeouts, 10 walks and one save. The 2018 All-Star has a 49-42 record, 83 saves and a career 2.93 ERA over 560 games (seven starts) with the Washington Nationals (2014-17), Oakland Athletics (2017-19) and Dodgers (2020-22; 2024-26). He has tossed 621 strikeouts against 233 walks.

McDermott, 27, is entering his second major league stint of the season. He made one previous appearance with the Dodgers, tossing one shutout inning with a strikeout May 17 against the Angels. He has an 0-1 career record and 11.85 ERA over six games (two starts) at the major league level, pitching sparingly for the Orioles the prior two seasons.

–Field Level Media

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