Day: February 15, 2021

Michael Jordan’s Daytona 500 debut was as astonishing as his free-throw dunkMichael Jordan’s Daytona 500 debut was as astonishing as his free-throw dunk

The Bulls legend and Bubba Wallace's black-owned team broke barriers in a sport with a history of intolerance. But Nascar's redemption is not complete Bubba Wallace's No 23 car leads the field during Sunday's Daytona 500. Photograph: Mark J Rebilas/USA Today Sports With one lap left in Sunday's Daytona 500, Bubba Wallace made his move. Pinned behind 15 cars arranged in a neat row on the top groove of Daytona's 2.5-mile oval, Wallace charged into the bottom lane behind Kevin Harvick in hope of running down race leader Joey Logano. Just when Wallace appeared to be gathering steam - disaster. Brad Keselowski, jostled by an extra-hard shove from Michael McDowell, rocketed him into Logano's left-side rear bumper, triggering a multicar pile-up. Wallace might have snuck through if Logano's windmilling Ford hadn't hit his Toyota flush on the nose. In the end Wallace finished a fiery 17th while McDowell stole the checkered flag under caution. Needless to say, you can expect Michael Jordan to take this personally. Besides maybe Harry and Meghan, you would be hard pressed to name another couple people are rooting harder for than Jordan and Wallace - Nascar's new racing royalty. Wallace is the supremely gifted Nascar driver who happens to be an anti-racism trailblazer. And Jordan is a lifelong racing fan who finally has some skin in the game after decades of fence sitting. Last September they would make their relationship official, forming a single-car operation called 23XI Racing (pronounced twenty-three eleven). Wallace signed on as a free agent, Jordan as a co-owner alongside the veteran Cup driver and longtime Jordan Brand ambassador Denny Hamlin. Together, Jordan and Wallace give Nascar folk not one but two black friends to point to the next time the sport's grim track record of intolerance is challenged. After all it wasn't that long before the announcement of this new "Dream Team" that we heard Kyle Larson, the half-Japanese-American star of Nascar's driver diversity program, casually drop the n-word during an online race. After being deserted by all his sponsors and booted from his Cup drive, Larson spent the next 10 months in exile undergoing diversity training as he continued to earn a comfortable living racing dirt track events - only to wind up in a better Nascar Cup seat with Hendrick Motorsports last October. In a pre-race interview with FS1's Emmanuel Acho on Sunday, Larson pleaded ignorance to the slur while blaming a small circle of friends for "allowing myself to be comfortable enough with that group to say it." Pressed on whether these were Nascar folk he was referring to, Larson, finally, was unequivocal. "Oh no, not at all in Nascar," he said. "I think racing in general has maybe had that reputation, but I don't believe that to be true. In the last 10 months or so, we've seen a lot of change in the sport." And while it's true that hip hop and black athlete interviewers crept into Fox's Daytona telecast, Pitbull owns a stake in the team fronted by Mexico-born driver Daniel Suarez, and the WWE's Sasha Banks green-flagged Sunday's race, the fundamental change in this Nascar season boils down to the two absurdly qualified black men who must still prove they belong. AN ABSOLUTELY WILD FINISH TO THE #DAYTONA500Michael McDowell walks away with the win, everyone in the crash managed to exit their cars safely. (🎥: @NASCAR) pic.twitter.com/bBuR1HJ49J— TSN (@TSN_Sports) February 15, 2021 Wallace of course persuaded Nascar to ban displays of the Confederate flag, only to find a noose in his garage - an incident many maintain was a hoax despite Nascar and the FBI's grave reactions. And then there's the matter of Wallace racing in Cup in the first place, what with only four top-ten finishes in his first two years racing primarily for the famed Richard Petty. Last year, though, he distinguished himself as the kind of consistent challenger who could lead races with better equipment - and all while stepping outside his low-key personality to tear down America's most stubborn symbol of white supremacy, even as the US president denounced him. Now on a far better resourced team in 23XI, it won't be enough for Wallace to just keep up with traffic anymore. His haters will pounce if he falls even a little bit short of the realistic expectations set by his insanely competitive boss. Likewise, Jordan has felt more compelled to give voice - and money - to righteous political causes in ways he never had before. Throwing his support behind the only black driver in Nascar's top level is not only consistent with his evolved thinking, but also his penchant for huge gambles. But this one may be his riskiest yet. A number of famous black athletes have tried fielding racing teams only to see those efforts crash and burn: Tim Brown. Jackie Joyner-Kersee. In the late-90s, Jordan's idol, Julius Erving, partnered with former NFL running back Joe Washington to launch a Cup team. But the effort never took shape as Erving and Washington mostly failed to marshal sponsorship. In 1998 they turned up at Daytona with a Busch Series car and struggled to make subsequent races. Two years later they were out of business. Jordan, however, doesn't figure to go away as meekly. For one thing he's a billionaire and the owner of the NBA's Charlotte Hornets to boot. For another he's not starting a team from scratch as much as he is fronting a sister team of Joe Gibbs Racing, a perennial Cup favorite with considerable resources to bear - not least a technical alliance with Toyota. Not long after Wallace signed on the dotted line, McDonald's, Columbia Sportswear and DoorDash followed suit. In a pre-race interview with Fox Sports' Michael Strahan, Jordan said he believed Wallace could win "at least a couple races". Until then the scrutiny on their No 23 car risks reaching Danica Patrick levels of intensity. Doubtless, Wallace's haters were encouraged to see the 23XI car get off to an Erving-like start on Sunday. After qualifying a career-high sixth at Daytona, Wallace was sent to the back of the grid after his Toyota repeatedly failed inspection and risked being scratched from the race altogether. But a route to victory looked possible after a lap 14 crash that cleared 16 cars from the middle of the field just before a five-hour rain delay. Once racing resumed under the lights around 9.30pm, Wallace resurfaced near the top of the field no worse for wear to tangle with the top cars and even lead a lap - the first time a black driver has ever done so at Daytona. He hung in until the bitter end before McDowell - a 100-1 underdog - claimed the first victory of his otherwise unremarkable 14-year Cup career after midnight. And while 17th place may not seem like a big deal for Wallace, who usually finishes right around there, a little perspective is helpful. As Jordan himself acknowledged in the Fox interview, so much of this sport is out of the driver's control. "When I'm on the court, I can go rebound, I can go shoot. I can play defense," he told Strahan. "Here, all I can do is cheer." That a black owner and a black driver even showed up at Daytona 500 for the first time since 1969, stayed in hunt for the entire race and will keep going for the rest of this season and beyond is a feat on par with Jordan's free-throw line slam dunk - simply astonishing. That they, under shrewd Hamlin's direction, were able to accomplish so much so quickly is a testament to viability of this promising new venture. Still, it will take a few more copycats, and far less virtue-signaling, before Nascar can truly call this progress.

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Monday Finish: Daniel Berger captures AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-AmMonday Finish: Daniel Berger captures AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

The eagle has landed. Clinging to a one-shot lead over Bay Area product Maverick McNealy (66), Daniel Berger leaves no doubt with an eagle at the par-5 18th hole to shoot 65 and salt away his fourth PGA TOUR victory at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Berger's second eagle of the day (par-5 second hole) was his fourth of the week, a career high and the most by a winner at this tournament. He moves from 63rd to 10th in the FedExCup. Here are five stories you may have missed from the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. 1. Berger eyes mountaintop. Berger's second eagle of the day (par-5 second hole) was his fourth of the week, a career high and the most by a winner at this tournament. He moves from 63rd to 10th in the FedExCup. Although he is often overlooked in comparison to other members of golf's vaunted high school class of 2011 (Schauffele, Spieth, Thomas), Berger says that's fine with him. He's plenty used to playing with a chip on his shoulder, and he's not about to settle for average or even pretty good. "I do feel like I’m underrated, but that’s OK with me," said Berger, 27, who prevailed just one week after his former Florida State teammate, Brooks Koepka, won the Waste Management Phoenix Open. "I just think it’s puts a little chip on my shoulder which is totally fine. I think a lot of the guys that they give credit to deserve credit. But I’ve been pretty consistent, and I’ve accomplished a lot for the short amount of time that I’ve played out here on TOUR." Pretty consistent? That's an understatement. Berger's closing 65 was his 26th consecutive round of par or better, the longest active streak on TOUR. Cameron Tringale (67, T7) is next with 24. "I just want to continue to get better," Berger continued. "I feel like, my goal has always been to be the No. 1 player in the world and some people will laugh at that and that’s fine, but that’s something that every day I wake up and I strive for." Read more about his brilliant win here. 2. McNealy threatening to break through. Runner-up McNealy, a 12-time winner at Stanford just a few hours up the coast, now has two top-10 finishes in 50 career TOUR starts. He tied for fifth at the 2020 AT&T at Pebble. "It was fun," McNealy said after making five back-nine birdies for an inward 31. "I had the adrenaline pumping coming down the stretch there and feelings that I hadn’t really felt on the golf course in a little while, trying to close this out and give myself a chance." Knowing he was in contention, he was especially proud to smash his drive and reach the green in two at the par-5 18th, where he gave himself an eagle look from just inside 22 feet. Alas, the ball veered away at the last instant and he settled for a tap-in birdie. "I’ve always been a guy that has to earn my own confidence," said McNealy, who will tee it up at The Genesis Invitational at Riviera this week. "I can’t stand there and just tell myself I’m good at something or I’m doing something right. I have to earn it with myself too. "I feel like I earned a lot of confidence ... I’m excited to get to playing again." 3. Spieth comeback still ‘progressing'. Former world No. 1 and 2015 FedExCup champ Jordan Spieth (70, T3) hit his fewest fairways of the week Sunday (42.86%), and it proved costly as his three bogeys left him three back. On the bright side, he has gone from FedExCup 179th to 64th the last two weeks, what with his T3 at Pebble coming on the heels of a T4 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open - his first back-to-back top-five finishes since 2018 (Vivint Houston Open, Masters Tournament). What's more, Spieth has had at least a share of the 54-hole lead in two consecutive starts after getting lost with his swing and missing the cut at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. "If I look back at Friday night of San Diego and you tell me I was going to share and have the 54-hole lead two weeks in a row and really just fight, finish strong to both weeks, I would have said you’re crazy, to be honest," Spieth said. "I was not in a great head space following that missed cut there and just did some really phenomenal work from Sunday through Wednesday of last week that was probably the best period of a few days of work that I’ve put in in a long time." It's just a matter of time, he added, before he wins again. "If I put myself in the position of leading after 54 holes enough times," he said, "especially with how I know I’m going to fight even if it’s not going my way, I’ll end up on top one of these days." 4. Knox battles back after penalty. Two-time TOUR winner Russell Knox (70, T7) hadn't been in contention for a while, so it was especially frustrating to be dealt a one-shot penalty on the very first hole. He was over his second shot when he saw the ball move. Had he addressed it? If so, he would get a one-shot penalty as per the Rules of Golf, as happened to playing partner Maverick McNealy on Saturday. Knox made par and wrote it down. Rules officials went to the videotape. He birdied the second and third holes, hit his approach to three feet at the fourth. He was, he said, "flying." Then he came back to earth. His birdie putt at the fourth horseshoed out, his tee at the par-3 fifth found the bunker, and while walking toward the green he was told that he would be dealt a one-shot penalty for the ball moving at address at the first "It’s just one of those horrible Rules which every one of us is against," Knox said after birdies at 17 and 18 gave him his first top-10 finish since a T9 at the Safeway Open in September. "There’s no advantage gained in any way, and it happened to Maverick yesterday, my playing partner." Still, Knox, who barely missed the FedExCup Playoffs last season (127th), moved from 73rd to 54th in the standings as he continues to chase his form of 2016, when he won twice. "I’m super happy the way I played," he said. "Obviously a few weird things happened today, so obviously it wasn’t my day, but my game is in good shape and I look forward to the future." 5. Cantlay new FedExCup No. 1. Patrick Cantlay (68, T3) hit the ball well enough to win but faulted his putting. "I didn’t get them to go in today," he said after a five-birdie, one-bogey effort. Still, he moved to FedExCup No. 1 with a victory (ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP @ SHERWOOD), runner-up (The American Express) and T3 (AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am) on the young season. Now the Southern California and UCLA product heads to his hometown tournament, The Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club, where he will be one of the heavy favorites. "All parts of my game are really good," he said, "and I really love Riviera, so I’m going to ... get rested over the next couple days and know that my game’s in a good spot." TOUR TOP 10

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