Johnson has COVID-19, will miss Brickyard 400Johnson has COVID-19, will miss Brickyard 400
Jimmie Johnson is the first NASCAR driver publicly known to have the coronavirus. He will miss Sunday’s Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Jimmie Johnson is the first NASCAR driver publicly known to have the coronavirus. He will miss Sunday’s Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
He has a share of the lead at the Rocket Mortgage Classic after two rounds. But it how far he has come in his personal life after taking seven months to deal with depression, anxiety and alcoholism that matters most.
Friday’s release of initial COVID-19 testing numbers as training camps open is an important first step for Major League Baseball’s return, but it is just the beginning.
The Basketball Tournament has removed a third team in three days — and the fourth team overall — from the winner-take-all $1 million tournament that starts Saturday, because of a positive coronavirus test.
Pacers guard Victor Oladipo, who had been hesitant to commit to join the team for the league’s restart in Florida, has decided to opt out and not play, he told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski.
Jimmie Johnson will test an Indy car next week for Chip Ganassi Racing on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the first step the seven-time NASCAR champion must take to determine if actual races are in his future.
Racing Point, not Red Bull, seemed to emerge as Mercedes’ closest challenger ahead of the Austrian Grand Prix. Deeper analysis of Friday practice suggests Red Bull is closer than it appeared on the opening day of the season.
DETROIT – Webb Simpson and Chris Kirk share the second-round lead at the Rocket Mortgage Classic. A year after taking a leave of absence from the PGA TOUR to address alcohol abuse, Kirk has turned around his life and revived his career. Kirk had a 7-under 65 on Friday at the Detroit Golf Club, and Simpson later shot a 64 to pull into a tie atop the leaderboard at 12-under 132. RELATED: Leaderboard | Wolff: ‘Maybe I need to impress the old greats’ | Fowler rallies to make Rocket Mortgage Classic cut “I was out there thinking about him a little bit, just with his decision to take some time away from golf and take care of himself,” Simpson recalled. “I’m so proud of what he’s been able to do and come back and make the comeback he’s made, winning on the Korn Ferry Tour. And, now he’s out here trying to win a PGA TOUR event.” Kirk won a Korn Ferry Tour event two weeks ago. When Kirk stopped playing last year, he didn’t know what his future was in the sport. “I kind of just didn’t care at that point,” he recalled. “I was focused on doing what I needed to do to be healthy, to be a good husband for my wife and a good father to my kids. I was thankfully in a place financially where my career could wait.” The 35-year-old Kirk has won four times on the PGA TOUR, most recently in 2015. Simpson won the RBC Heritage two weeks ago in South Carolina, finishing at a tournament-record 22-under for his second win of the season and seventh of his career. He withdrew from the Travelers Championship last week because one of his daughters appeared to have COVID-19, but she later tested negative. Simpson and DeChambeau chose to come to the Motor City while many of the PGA TOUR’s top players skipped the tournament. “It’s a Donald Ross design and guys that played here last year that I talked to about it loved the golf tournament, they loved what Rocket Mortgage did,” Simpson said. Matthew Wolff, Seamus Power, Mark Hubbard, Ryan Armour and Richy Werenski also were a a shot off the lead going into the weekend. The 21-year-old Wolff put himself in position to take the the lead by himself with six straight birdies and eight over his first 10 holes after missing the cut in each of last two events. “I’ve learned the last couple weeks you definitely can’t win on the first two days, but you can sure as heck lose,” he said. The last time the former Oklahoma State star had six straight birdies, he won the 3M Open last year. Wolff joined Tiger Woods and Ben Crenshaw as winners of a PGA TOUR event and the individual NCAA title in the same year. Wolff missed opportunities to score on a pair of par 5s, including his 16th hole. His drive landed on an adjacent hole to the right and his second shot under tree branches caromed off a metal stake and landed in the rough on the left side of the No. 7 fairway. “It was just one of those shots you kind of have to laugh at,” Wolff said. “It was unfortunate it came on a day that I was hitting it so well, but it’s golf, you can’t hit every shot perfect.” Defending champion Nate Lashley missed the cut by a stroke as did Jason Day. Patrick Reed and Bubba Watson were two shots from making the cut.
A year after taking a leave of absence from the PGA Tour to address alcohol abuse and depression, Chris Kirk has turned around his life and revived his career.
Racing Point, not Red Bull, seemed to emerge as Mercedes’ closest challenger ahead of the Austrian Grand Prix. Deeper analysis of Friday practice suggests Red Bull is closer than it appeared on the opening day of the season.