SundayĂąÂÂs race at Darlington isnĂąÂÂt just the Cup Seriesù return to racing. ItĂąÂÂs also Ryan NewmanĂąÂÂs first race since his horrific Daytona crash.
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In todayâs FOX Sports Insider: Both Ryan Newman and NASCAR at large make their return this weekend, which makes Sunday even more special ... we get ready for the last night of âThe Last Danceâ ... and Jeremy Lin sends us into the weekend with another outstanding Kobe Bryant story.
Ryan Newman doesnât remember what happened on that chaotic final lap of the Daytona 500, but everyone else in stock car racing does â plus millions of others who found footage of the terrifying wreckage cross their vision and instantly freeze them to the spot.
As NASCARâs grandest event came towards its action-packed conclusion, Newmanâs Roush Fenway Racing No. 6 was nudged from behind by Ryan Blaney, then blasted into the wall just beyond the start-finish line. It flipped upside down, then was smashed into by Corey LaJoie, who was blinded by the smoke and could not slow his vehicle.
The second impact lifted Newmanâs car into the air again, and when it landed, it skidded down the track on its hood, fiery sparks shooting out into the Florida night, before stopping with fuel gushing dangerously near to the existing flames.
It caused track officials to put up screens as they winched Newman from the vehicle. It prompted FOX to not show him being taken out for reasons of sensitivity. It precipitated Newmanâs hasty transit to Halifax Medical Center, the same hospital where Dale Earnhardt was officially pronounced dead on one of motorsportâs darkest days in 2001.
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Newman was placed in an induced coma. The collision caused bruising to his brain. Heart-wrenching photo of him holding his two young daughters circulated, hauntingly, on social media.
It all took place less than three months ago. And Ryan Newman is racing this weekend.
Thus, as NASCAR starts its engines and gets its Cup Series back underway on Sunday at Darlington Raceway, it has an extraordinary feel-good story to go along with it.
The appeal of any elite motorsport is the ability to marvel at the skill, precision and utter fearlessness of its top competitors. As they marshal vehicles capable of outrageous speed, drivers negotiate countless factors and thread the narrowest of gaps and racing lines.
It is exhilarating spectacle, and, of course, the inherent danger and how drivers tackle it is part of it all. How drivers do what they do is a good enough question in its own right. How they can even think about doing it again after suffering something like Newman went through simply boggles the mind.
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Not only is Newman back, but he is rated a +2500 shot to win it at Darlington, squarely in the middle of the pack, odds that would have been shorter had he not drawn 21st position in the randomly allocated starting grid. (This weekendâs race will have no qualifying, hence the start line lottery.)
âEverything aligned perfectly for me to be alive and here with you today,â Newman told reporters on Thursday. âThere were multiple miracles that aligned for me to walk out days later with my arms around my daughters.â
NASCAR is far safer than it used to be. There have been no fatalities since Earnhardt in 2001, with measures such as head and neck restraints, enhanced seatbelt systems and energy absorbing barriers having served their purpose. Somehow, after we had all held our breath watching Newmanâs carnage, and despite his helmet having been crushed on impact, he did indeed walk out of the hospital under his own steam.
He was on site at Phoenix Raceway on Mar. 8 for the FanShield 500 and was spotted walking around pit lane, and undertook testing at Darlington in mid-March. If not for the shutdown caused by COVID-19, he would have been back racing before now.
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âEverybody was relieved when they saw him walk out of the hospital and to see him at Phoenix,â FOX Sports NASCAR expert Bob Pockrass told me in a telephone conversation. âHe walked around and talked to a lot of people. People have therefore known he was okay for a while, so they have been used to the fact that he could soon be back racing. For the drivers, the emotional part of it has already been felt.
âBut, in the industry as a whole, people are not immune to the danger, even though they donât have to deal with the consequences of it as much as in the 1980s and 1990s. Everyone is happy to see him back.â
Newmanâs return is the heartwarming story of a weekend that promises to be electrifying and unpredictable. NASCAR diehards are deeply intrigued as to what they are going to see on race day, due to the necessary precautions that have been taken.
âHaving been inside the sport, following it every week, you are more pegged on the drama of everyone going into turn one with no practice, no qualifying, no tire rubber on the track,â Pockrass added. âIt will be about who has prepared the best, who reacts the best. In a broader view, everybody in the industry recognizes that this is an opportunity to appeal to new fans; they do feel it is important to have a good race, and to show you are taking the safety precautions.â
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The amount of money wagered on the upcoming NASCAR races will also be of interest. NASCAR has historically generated lower gambling interest â for example, the last time there was a Cup race in Dover, Delawareâs entire NASCAR handle was still less than 2 percent of the stateâs overall sports betting number, Pockrass said.
However, as UFC 249 showed last weekend, bettors that have been starved of action are keener than ever to make sporting wagers.
There will be no shortage of horsepower-related action in the coming weeks. NASCAR surges back onto our screens starting Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, with seven Cup races in 25 days â two at Darlington on Sunday and Wednesday, followed right away by two more in Charlotte.
Drivers will face difficulties they have never had to contend with before, such as limited access to their team, no sight of the track beforehand, and no qualifying. Some will surely flounder amid the fresh challenges, yet others will adapt and thrive, producing worthy memories in what is by its very existence amid these unprecedented times, a historic race.
Talk to people within the sport and everyone has a vague idea of what to expect yet, more than anything, a general acceptance of this underlying concept: that anything is possible.
It is indeed. Ryan Newman already showed us that.
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Hereâs what others have said ...
Terrin Waack, NASCAR.com: âBefore NASCARâs COVID-19 competition pause back in March, Newman actually did a private test at Darlington Raceway. The run ended up being about 30 laps total at speed. It was Newmanâs first time behind the wheel of a race car on track since Daytona International Speedway. âI was so excited and ready to go and just kind of prove myself that I actually had to slow myself down and make sure that I didnât go out there and fence it on the first lap by trying too hard,â Newman said. âSo I never felt like I had to be apprehensive towards it, other than the fact that I wanted to make sure that I didnât mess up my own test. I was there to prove that I was valid in the seat again.ââ
Bob Pockrass, FOX Sports: âWhen NASCAR goes to Talladega next month, the cars will have about 40 less horsepower and no aero ducts in hopes of keeping the chances of such a crash from occurring. The cars will have additional roll bars and crush plates in hopes of keeping a driverâs head from being crushed as Newmanâs was. Those rules are specific to Daytona and Talladega â for all races starting in June, NASCAR has required additional roll bar padding. âEverything aligned in so many ways,â Newman said. âThe safety workers, the personnel that were involved that were inside the car with me, spent time with me during and after the crash, every layer of it there was multiple miracles. As I watched in the next 24 hours [in the hospital], as I watched the crash and had to make myself believe what I went through, I really looked to my dad to say, âDid this really happen?â he said.â
Pete Iacobelli, Associated Press: âDarlington hosted two NASCAR races every year from 1950-2003, including the Southern 500 on Labor Day weekend, an event considered a marquee race for the stock car series. But a push for bigger TV ratings and fancier, modern raceways â and some neglect in upkeep at the old country track â had some wondering if Darlington might join the list of shuttered, defunct Southern tracks like Rockingham and North Wilkesboro. Instead, it has held on as NASCAR embraced its history as the oldest paved superspeedway. Since 2015, Darlington has held the circuit's throwback weekend â back on Labor Day â with a popular celebration of NASCAR's colorful past. Come Sunday, that legacy will be one of hope as NASCAR powers back up. âFor us, it's exciting that we have our chance to go out there and compete,â Kurt Busch said.â
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Weâll never get enough Kobe Bryant stories â and this one from Jeremy Lin is a fantastic way to head into the weekend. Approaching the 2015 trade deadline, Kobe was injured, and he had been away from the team while rehabbing. But the day before the deadline, Kobe walked into the locker room to, as he put it, say goodbye to âsome of you bumsâ that were about to be traded. The best part? The Lakers didnât make any trades the next day.
[VIEWER'S GUIDE]
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Otis gets his Mr. Money in the Bank close-up on âMiz TV,â NXT Womenâs Champion Charlotte Flair makes her triumphant return to SmackDown, and the Intercontinental Title tournament is set to begin after Sam Zayn was forced to relinquish the title.
Bundesliga: Borussia Dortmund vs. FC Schalke 04 (Saturday, FS1, 9:30 a.m. ET)
Elite soccer is back this weekend, kicking off first thing Saturday morning with the Revierderby between these two local rivals, while RB Leipzig welcome Freiburg to Red Bull Arena at the same time on FS2.
NASCAR Cup Series: Darlington (Sunday, FOX, 3:30 p.m. ET)
NASCAR is back, and in a big way! Sunday marks the first of seven races in 11 days, including four Cup Series events. Brad Keselowski and Alex Bowman will start on the front row for The Real Heroes 400.
âThe Last Danceâ Episodes 9 & 10 (Sunday, ESPN, 9 p.m. ET)
Itâs the final night of ESPNâs docuseries on Michael Jordan and the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls, featuring Chicagoâs ultimate triumph in the NBA Finals against the Utah Jazz.
[BET OF THE DAY]
[BET OF THE DAY]
Odds provided by [FOX Bet](
Either Kevin Harvick or Kyle Busch to win: +400
Letâs drop the green flag on some NASCAR wagers! Busch (+550) and Harvick (+650) are two of the top three favorites to come away with the checkered on Sunday, with Denny Hamlin also going off at +550. But Busch and Harvick are also tied for the shortest odds to finish in the Top 3 (at +150) â so a prop on one or the other to end up in Victory Lane at 4-to-1 could be a worthwhile bit of action for your racing Sunday.
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