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Power Rankings: Marcus Armstrong, Christian Rasmussen Jump In
Power Rankings: Marcus Armstrong, Christian Rasmussen Jump In

Fox Sports

time3 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Fox Sports

Power Rankings: Marcus Armstrong, Christian Rasmussen Jump In

INDYCAR The recent stretch in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES showcased the full range of the sport's diversity with four races on four distinct track types. Each tested driver skills and team strategies, which led to some shake-ups in the Power Rankings since early May. The Sonsio Grand Prix on the 2.439-mile, 14-turn Indianapolis Motor Speedway natural road course on May 10 kicked off the stretch on a track favoring technical road course specialists. The 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge on May 25 on the 2.5-mile IMS superspeedway oval is the crown jewel of the series, demanding high-speed precision and pit strategy. Next was the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear, a tight, unforgiving street course with little margin for error June 1. Finally, last Sunday's Bommarito Automotive Group 500 presented by Axalta and Valvoline at World Wide Technology Raceway emphasized short-track handling with strategic adjustments on the 1.25-mile oval. Through it all, Alex Palou, Kyle Kirkwood and Pato O'Ward emerged as the consistent top three performers, anchoring Power Rankings amid the shake-ups beneath them. Their ability to perform across disciplines has been astiff test Palou, Kirkwood and O'Ward have passed, as they stayed in the top three spots in the Power Rankings this week ahead of the XPEL Grand Prix at Road America Presented by AMR on Sunday, June 22 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Sports app and INDYCAR Radio Network). But there are two new faces in the rankings based on their strong performances at WWTR: ↑10. Christian Rasmussen (No. 21 ECR Splenda Chevrolet; Last Rank: NR) Rasmussen came from the back to the front twice at WWTR after starting 25th, earning a career-best third-place finish. He has two top-six finishes in the last three races. ↑9. Marcus Armstrong (No. 66 SiriusXM/Root Insurance Honda; Last Rank: NR) Armstrong catapulted to 10th in points following his third top-10 finish in the last four races by crossing the finish line ninth at WWTR. He was the top Honda-powered qualifier at WWTR by starting sixth. ↔8. David Malukas (No. 4 Clarience Technologies Chevrolet; Last Rank: 8) Malukas hasn't delivered headline results in the last two races, but a closer look reveals a driver performing at an elite level, just without the final box score to match. Malukas qualified second in Detroit and was positioned for a second straight top-five finish before an avoidable contact penalty left him 14th at the checkered flag. He qualified fourth at WWTR and led a race-high 67 laps. He was in serious contention for the win before brushing the Turn 4 SAFER Barrier on Lap 195, leaving him 12th. Still, the speed is undeniable, and a runner-up finish in the Indy 500, the biggest stage in the series, cemented Malukas' ability to perform up front. ↓7. Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet; Last Rank: 4) Power's season has been a roller coaster, flashing brilliance offset by costly setbacks. He was involved in a first-lap crash in the St. Petersburg season opener, finishing 26th. Power started 33rd in the '500' and managed to claw up to 16th, but still not the kind of result that matches Power's championship-winning pedigree. At WWTR, Power earned NTT P1 Award honors but crashed early in Turn 4, finishing last. Outside of those three trouble spots, Power has five top-six finishes, a clear indication that when things go right, he's still among the best in the series. ↑6. Scott Dixon (No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda; Last Rank: 10) Dixon was on the verge of dropping out of the Power Rankings but finished fourth at WWTR for his third top-five finish of the season. The six-time series champion delivered another solid result, even when the raw speed isn't always there. He's fifth in points and remains a master in execution of various fuel-saving strategies. ↔5. Christian Lundgaard (No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet; Last Rank: 5) Lundgaard slipped at WWTR by finishing 14th, but his overall body of work keeps him firmly in the Power Rankings and championship conversation. The Dane is fourth in points and had six top-eight finishes in the seven races before WWTR, including three straight podiums at The Thermal Club INDYCAR Grand Prix, the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach and a runner-up at Barber Motorsports Park. The bigger picture proves he's not just a sneaky talent but a legitimate threat for victory at each race. ↑4. Santino Ferrucci (No. 14 Bommarito Automotive Group; Last Rank: 7) Ferrucci is riding a wave of momentum that's making him one of the hottest NTT INDYCAR SERIES drivers. He's pieced together three consecutive top-five finishes that no one on the grid can match heading to Road America. A week after Ferrucci earned his best-career finish by crossing the finish line second in Detroit, he charged from 19th to finish fifth at WWTR. ↔3. Pato O'Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet; Last Rank: 3) O'Ward is on a heater, and it's not just flashes of brilliance anymore. He's sustained high-level execution across all types of tracks. O'Ward finished runner-up to Kirkwood on Sunday night at WWTR, his second runner-up finish in the last four races and third of the season. He also finished second to Palou at The Thermal Club and the Sonsio Grand Prix. Since the Children's of Alabama Indy Grand Prix presented by AmFirst in early May at Barber Motorsports Park, O'Ward has a fourth-place average finish, with a worst result of seventh on the streets of Detroit. He has three top-three finishes in the last four races and is second in points, 73 behind Palou. ↔2. Kyle Kirkwood (No. 27 Siemens Honda; Last Rank: 2) Kirkwood proved he's not just a one-dimensional street course specialist by claiming his first oval win Sunday night at WWTR. His previous four victories each took place on street circuits. However, Kirkwood has achieved three of those five wins this season, including two straight. He has four top-five finishes this season and six top-10 results. The Andretti Global driver is third in points, trailing Palou by 75. Palou and Kirkwood have combined to win all eight races this season. ↔1. Alex Palou (No. 10 Ridgeline Chip Ganassi Racing Honda; Last Rank: 1) Palou began 2025 with five wins and a runner-up finish in six races. However, he slipped the last two races, finishing 25th on the streets of Detroit and eighth at WWTR. Still, Palou has outperformed everyone this season, and barring a third straight finish outside the top five, his top spot isn't seriously threatened. recommended

NASCAR Power Rankings: Denny Hamlin says hola to 3rd child, adios to Mexico, gets rewarded
NASCAR Power Rankings: Denny Hamlin says hola to 3rd child, adios to Mexico, gets rewarded

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

NASCAR Power Rankings: Denny Hamlin says hola to 3rd child, adios to Mexico, gets rewarded

The longtime theory (around here, anyway) said NASCAR babies are always born on a Tuesday. The modern miracles of obstetrics, glove-in-glove with the racing schedule, always managed to make that happen. Tuesday was the safest day for such things in order to avoid conflicting with last weekend's or the coming weekend's race. Can't have it on Monday, because that becomes race day in the case of a Sunday rainout. Advertisement Well, it turns out, Denny Hamlin and longtime girlfriend/partner/fiancé (and I mean LONG time, as in 17 years) Jordan Fish only missed it by one day. Their third child, a boy, was born last Wednesday. Could Denny have hopped on the jet Friday and done his duties in Mexico City? Denny Hamlin, just several weeks back at Martinsville, with Jordan and their daughters, Molly and Taylor. Yep. But did it make more sense to stay home and help with all that goes into prepping for a fifth family member? In this case, absolutely. Listen, if they'd been racing in, say, Darlington or Richmond or certainly Charlotte, I'm guessing Denny would've baked a couple of casseroles, loaded the fridge with juice and milk, and gone to work. Advertisement But even though this was just one time zone to the west and a few blocks to the south, Mexico City is still international travel, and international travel can bring unforeseen obstacles. Great opportunistic call by Denny. His reward? The best imaginable. He gets to remain in the top spot on our weekly NASCAR Power Rankings. Ask any father of a newborn, Denny will be absolutely ITCHING to get to Pocono this weekend. So don't be surprised if he stays up top for at least another week. 1. Denny Hamlin Misses a race, stays at No. 1? Call it the "new dad" mulligan. Can only burn it once during the year. 2. Christopher Bell He's a closer runner-up here than he was in Mexico City this past Sunday. 3. Kyle Larson Went halfway to South America to run half a race. 4. William Byron Sounds odd, but he hasn't won in over four months. Needed to be pointed out. 5. Ross Chastain He'll get back on that top-10 train at Pocono this week. 6. Chase Elliott Did you see him on that third-place podium? Whew, looked like a teenager at family-picture time. 7. Ryan Blaney Raise your hand if you're the most recent Cup winner at Pocono ... 8. Joey Logano Also won at Pocono — 13 years ago! 9. Chris Buescher For what it's worth, his hometown (Prosper, Texas) produced TWO Olympic male figure skaters: Todd Eldredge and Ronald Kauffman. 10. Chase Briscoe While Shane van Gisbergen lost his lunch in Mexico, Chase lost his streak of three straight poles. This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: NASCAR driver power rankings: New dad Denny Hamlin gets a mulligan

MLB Power Rankings: Another new No. 1? Mets make their way back to the top, plus a top-10 debut
MLB Power Rankings: Another new No. 1? Mets make their way back to the top, plus a top-10 debut

New York Times

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

MLB Power Rankings: Another new No. 1? Mets make their way back to the top, plus a top-10 debut

By Tim Britton, Chad Jennings and Levi Weaver Every week,​ we​ ask a selected group of our baseball​ writers​ — local and national — to rank the teams from first to worst. Here are the collective results. As we near closer to the season's midway point, it feels like a good time to check in to see how each team is stacking up against expectations going into the 2025 season. Some teams, like the Dodgers and Phillies, are performing close to where we anticipated — and where we slotted them in our preseason power rankings. Some, like the Tigers and Blue Jays, have outperformed our predictions, while teams like the Braves and Diamondbacks have surprised us and fallen short. Not all of this is purely performance-based, of course. Injuries play a part, as do the decisions made by ownership. But ultimately, we can glean some insight by looking at how a team has performed beyond the advantages or disadvantages with which it started. Many things can happen throughout a season that can change a team's trajectory, but let's break down why — at this point — each team turned out to be better or worse or just as good as we anticipated and what that might mean for the rest of their season. Record: 45-27 Last Power Ranking: 2 Preseason Power Ranking: 5 In late March, the Mets were a top-five team that felt kinda similar to the other teams around them in the rankings. By late April, the Mets were the first team this season to supplant the Dodgers as the No. 1 team in our Power Rankings. They've gotten less than expected from Juan Soto — though Soto's coming around — and Sean Manaea has yet to pitch, but Pete Alonso's been awesome, same for Francisco Lindor, and the rotation has been shockingly good (and deep). The NL East isn't the three-team race we anticipated — for more on that, see No. 15 — but the Mets have helped keep the division strong at the top. We expected them to be pretty good, and they've been better than that. — Chad Jennings Advertisement Record: 44-29 Last Power Ranking: T-3 Preseason Power Ranking: 1 When the Dodgers ran off to an 8-0 start, it appeared possible our No. 1 position in the rankings might never change. But the team everyone expected to be dominant has merely been very good — good enough to lead arguably the best division in baseball, good enough to be within shouting distance of the best record in the sport, good enough that most every projection system still thinks LA will finish with more wins after 162 than anyone else. The Dodgers have endured the, by now, annual pilgrimage to the injured list of basically every one of their starters, and provided they get most of them back at the right time, they're still the frontrunners. — Tim Britton Record: 46-27 Last Power Ranking: 1 Preseason Power Ranking: T-16 Here's what has happened in Detroit: Almost everything has gone right. Tarik Skubal's Cy Young 2024 season wasn't a fluke. Spencer Torkelson found himself. So did Javy Báez. Dillon Dingler is one of the game's most productive catchers. Wenceel Pérez has a .967 OPS since returning from injury last month. Need I go on? OK, I will: Casey Mize has been the pitching version of Torkelson — the nearly-a-bust who put it all together this year. Tommy Kahnle has a sub-2.00 ERA. An aerospace engineer has an ERA of 2.11 out of the bullpen. This week marks the beginning of a test, of sorts, as closer Will Vest went on the IL. Let's see if the magic can continue now that they're facing a bit of hardship. — Levi Weaver Record: 42-29 Last Power Ranking: T-3 Preseason Power Ranking: 7 The first line of our preseason Yankees analysis: 'The past few months have not gone well for the franchise.' We wrote our first Power Rankings shortly after Gerrit Cole and Luis Gil got hurt, but before Devin Williams pitched so poorly that he lost the closer role. The Yankees remain a team whose flaws get a lot of attention, but they've also consistently remained one of the two best teams in the American League. Aaron Judge and Max Fried can make up for a lot, but Luke Weaver, Carlos Rodón, Paul Goldschmidt and Trent Grisham have helped a lot too. We pegged the Yankees as one of several pretty good teams, and they've since separated themselves among the very best in baseball. — Jennings Advertisement Record: 44-28 Last Power Ranking: 5 Preseason Power Ranking: 12 The short version of what's happened since then: Pete Crow-Armstrong. OK, it's not just PCA, but the 23-year-old's breakout season has been the gasoline pumping through an engine that has stayed revved all year. His 4.0 bWAR is best among NL position players (and fourth in the sport, behind Aaron Judge, Jeremy Peña and Paul Skenes). Other things that have gone right: Carson Kelly's career year, Michael Boyd and Drew Pomeranz turning into winning lotto tickets, and Kyle Tucker being every bit the star the front office expected it was getting in the trade with the Astros. It doesn't appear that anyone else in the Central is going to threaten them. The focus is now on setting up the roster at the trade deadline to be built for a deep October run. — Weaver Record: 43-29 Last Power Ranking: 7 Preseason Power Ranking: 4 Much of the Phillies' preseason upside was tied to their rotation, with the emergence of Cristopher Sanchez and the arrival of Jesús Luzardo. Indeed, the rotation has been excellent — Zack Wheeler is still Zack Wheeler — and the Phillies have remained one of the game's best teams, but with enough flaws that keep them from overtaking the Mets in the NL East or from consistently remaining in the top five of our Power Rankings. They're more or less what we expected: a team that still looks like it could challenge for a championship (but also a team that needs an outfielder and a reliever at the trade deadline). — Jennings Record: 41-31 Last Power Ranking: 6 Preseason Power Ranking: 20 At least one more middle-of-the-order threat. That's what we wrote about at the start of the season: Man, if this team had that one more bat, maybe it could actually compete in the NL West. We're about to find out just how much that extra bat can propel a team that has already outstripped the preseason expectations. The bullpen has been exceptional, and Robbie Ray is rejuvenated in the rotation. Now, Rafael Devers is the kind of lineup presence the Giants haven't been able to buy for the last seven years, and he addresses a serious need at 1B/DH. — Britton Advertisement Record: 39-32 Last Power Ranking: 8 Preseason Power Ranking: 13 A 14-3 start surged San Diego up the rankings, and it's fallen steadily in the time since, with the squad under .500 after Game 17 — which, we should point out, is only fatal if you're a football team. The lineup lacks the depth of the best in the sport, so it's leaning especially hard on the quite capable shoulders of Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado. Few contenders have as gaping a hole as the Friars do in left field, and no contenders have a general manager as eager to address weaknesses in season as A.J. Preller. — Britton Record: 41-31 Last Power Ranking: 9 Preseason Power Ranking: 8 While Houston remains in the rankings about where we expected coming into the season, the path has endured a few twists, and what's beyond the horizon is unclear. The Astros are in first in an AL West that has underwhelmed, they've misdiagnosed a star player's injury for the second straight season, and they've lost multiple key members of their pitching staff to injury. Jeremy Peña and Hunter Brown have been phenomenal, and Houston should get more in the second half from Alvarez (eventually), Christian Walker and Yainer Díaz. Whether there's enough arms to get the Astros across the finish line is another question. — Britton Record: 40-32 Last Power Ranking: 12 Preseason Power Ranking: 14 Honestly, if we'd known Shane McClanahan was going to miss this much time, we probably would have ranked the Rays even lower coming into the season. But even without their ace, the Rays have played their way into the AL wild-card race. Drew Rasmussen has stepped into the No. 1 starter role while Jonathan Aranda is the latest multi-position Rays hitter to emerge from obscurity. The Rays endured loads of injuries in their outfield, but once again, they've found a way to stay competitive. They have a winning record in their temporary home ballpark. — Jennings Record: 36-35 Last Power Ranking: 11 Preseason Power Ranking: 11 What kept Seattle outside the preseason top 10, of course, was its pitching staff. In that initial writeup, Grant Brisbee went on and on about Cal Raleigh's chase of 60 home runs and the genius of bringing back Jorge Polanco and all of why J.P. Crawford would rebound with the stick — and how if this team could just find a couple starters … Yeah, so sometimes teams follow broad expectations while confounding on every specific. The Mariners' offense is the best it's been since ancient times, and that foundational starting rotation has instead been their albatross. The division is still winnable, and the ceiling for the roster looks higher now than it did in March if all aspects of the game align. — Britton Record: 38-33 Last Power Ranking: T-14 Preseason Power Ranking: 18 We asked three Blue Jays questions in our preseason Power Rankings: 1. Will the addition of Anthony Santander jolt the lineup? Answer: Nope. He's been awful. 2. What does Max Scherzer have left? Answer: So far, only one start. 3. Will the team make the most of what could be Vladimir Guerrero Jr.'s final season as a Blue Jay? Answer: Guerrero signed an extension, but it remains to be seen whether the Blue Jays can make the most of this year (which could be the last for Bo Bichette in Toronto). Advertisement Toronto has a winning record, but a negative run differential. Plenty of questions remain. — Jennings Record: 39-34 Last Power Ranking: T-14 Preseason Power Ranking: 15 They're still over .500, which seems to be the case every year, of late. Their pitching is good but not great (though Jacob Misiorowski's debut was very exciting). Their offense is bad but not terrible — near the bottom of the league in batting average and OPS, and in the top half of the league in runs scored, thanks in part to an emphasis on speed. Put it together, and the final product is just about what we expected. They're not bad, but if you're one of the other wild-card contenders, do they strike fear in your heart? Not yet. Alas, the team that has spent the better part of a decade playing the part of scrappy and inspiring underdog seems to be trying on a new costume: the rather boring middle-of-the-pack team. So, what happened? About what we expected. — Weaver Record: 36-36 Last Power Ranking: 22 Preseason Power Ranking: 10 Old heads will remember a time when the Texas Rangers routinely punished opposing pitchers, only for their own pitching to attempt reconciliation with the enemy by allowing runs by the fistful. For maybe the first time ever, the roles have changed. The Rangers have the best ERA in the American League, and they've spent most of the season passing up any and all scoring opportunities. It's been better of late, and they're in the midst of a schedule-breather. The AL West is a weak division, so it's not too late. But what has happened is that they've backed themselves into a corner. — Weaver Record: 31-39 Last Power Ranking: 16 Preseason Power Ranking: 2 In our defense, nearly everyone seemed to be bullish on the Braves at the start of the season. Data-based projections routinely pegged them as one of the teams to beat, in large part because they seemed to be on the verge of a healthy, proven roster with Ronald Acuña Jr. and Spencer Strider, and newcomer Jurickson Profar providing an offensive boost in the outfield. Instead, Profar got suspended soon after our preseason rankings were released, Acuña took a long time to get back, and Strider hasn't been nearly as good as we all remember him. We've been waiting for the Braves to get on a roll. We're still waiting. — Jennings Record: 36-35 Last Power Ranking: 19 Preseason Power Ranking: 3 Arizona had the best offense in baseball last season. With a mildly better pitching staff, the thinking was that it should be a contender not just for the postseason but for the pennant, and then the Diamondbacks added Corbin Burnes. The offense is still quite good, but the best-laid pitching plans always go awry. Jordan Montgomery was lost for the season before it started. Burnes is done for this season and probably next, and so is emerging closer Justin Martinez. The rest of the rotation is performing well below expectations, to the point that Arizona should contemplate selling come July 31. — Britton Advertisement Record: 36-35 Last Power Ranking: 12 Preseason Power Ranking: T-16 Surprise, surprise: the problem is injuries, again. Byron Buxton is healthy, which is a sentence Twins fans have been longing to hear for quite some time. Unfortunately, the monkey's paw put down a finger to grant the wish, and the next thing you know, the Twins IL has a lot of other names on it: Royce Lewis (again), Pablo López, Zebby Matthews, Michael Tonkin … Luke Keaschall got called up, hit .368 over seven games and then broke his arm. Meanwhile, Carlos Correa's OPS is under .700. And yet, thanks in part to strong performances by guys like Joe Ryan, Jhoan Durán and — albeit inconsistently — Chris Paddack, the Twins are still very much in the mix for an AL wild-card position. — Weaver Record: 37-35 Last Power Ranking: 10 Preseason Power Ranking: 24 The Cardinals were probably not worse than 23 other baseball teams at the start of spring, but the feeling around them was sunk by a sense of stagnation. St. Louis had added a single free agent (Phil Maton) over the winter, and it hadn't sold off assets the way it suggested it would when the offseason began. What was left was a team frustratingly in the middle — not good enough to actually compete for a postseason spot, not bad enough to accumulate talent. And that's kind of where the Cardinals remain now. That 12-1 stretch in May was outstanding; they were five under .500 before it, and they're four under .500 after it. — Britton Record: 37-35 Last Power Ranking: 21 Preseason Power Ranking: 23 There have been a few high spots in Terry Francona's first year in Cincinnati — Andrew Abbott has been a revelation in the rotation, Nick Martinez has lived up to the qualifying offer and Elly De La Cruz has an OPS in the mid-.800s (despite having 81 strikeouts in 310 plate appearances). Advertisement Unfortunately, the sum of the parts has still been fairly mediocre. Spencer Steer and Matt McLain have yet to really take off. Hunter Greene was brilliant when he was healthy, but he hasn't pitched since June 3 and isn't likely to be back soon. The Reds have some good building blocks. So far, they haven't quite been able to stack them into anything stable. — Weaver Record: 38-36 Last Power Ranking: 20 Preseason Power Ranking: 6 Our preseason Power Rankings analysis of the Red Sox was actually pretty on-point — Alex Bregman and Garrett Crochet have been awesome, and the farm system has had an impact — but Bregman's also been hurt, the rest of the rotation has struggled, and the farm system's impact has not overwhelmed (Kristian Campbell's hot start faded, and Roman Anthony just arrived). Rafael Devers had been elite at DH … but he was just traded. Aroldis Chapman has been as dominant as ever, so is he the next to go, or is he going to help them right the ship and set course for the postseason? The Red Sox are a weird team. They've had quite a few things go right, but they've struggled to stay above .500. The pieces just haven't quite fit together. — Jennings Record: 34-38 Last Power Ranking: 17 Preseason Power Ranking: 19 One of last year's Cinderella stories, the Royals have crashed back to earth a bit this season. Bobby Witt Jr. played at an MVP level in 2024, and this year, he has been simply a very good player. Jonathan India hasn't been the cure-all in the leadoff spot. Jac Caglianone wasn't the solution either — his OPS currently sits at a dismal .484, which is higher than both Hunter Renfroe's and Michael Massey's. The pitching staff that blossomed into a force in 2024 has still been pretty good — Cole Ragans' 5.18 ERA has been offset by sub-2.00 marks for Kris Bubic and rookie sensation Noah Cameron. But until the offense awakens, Kansas City appears to be in the 'one step back' phase after taking three steps forward last year. — Weaver Advertisement Record: 35-35 Last Power Ranking: 18 Preseason Power Ranking: 21 OK, look — José Ramírez has been brilliant yet again. His .928 OPS is third best in the AL, and he is exempt from the rest of what I'm about to say, which is: the offense has not been very good. Nobody else on the team has an OPS over .784 — and that's Steven Kwan, whose .361 OBP is carrying the bulk of the load. The only non-Ramírez hitter with double-digit home runs is Kyle Manzardo (11), who has a sub-.300 OBP. Meanwhile, Emmanuel Clase has looked human. When you're winning in the sliver-thin margins, it would help to have Superman in the bullpen — as Clase was last year before the playoffs. At just one game over .500, the Guardians do not appear to be any threat to overtake the Tigers in the Central. Can their offense rebound enough to threaten for a wild-card spot? As of this writing, they're just a game out. — Weaver Record: 30-41 Last Power Ranking: 24 Preseason Power Ranking: 9 Upon clicking our preseason Power Rankings and searching for the Orioles, I was bracing to discover we'd ranked them in the top five or something to start the season, but instead, we were skeptical about whether they'd done enough to supplement their young core and rebuild their rotation. Both concerns were justified; we just didn't take them far enough. The Orioles have, in fact, been a mess. They have the fourth-worst run differential in baseball, the rotation has been awful and even their lineup has been mediocre. We weren't sold on the Orioles heading into the season, but even that skepticism was far too optimistic. — Jennings Record: 34-37 Last Power Ranking: 25 Preseason Power Ranking: 27 Please, as you approach The Big A, remember to bend the knee at the Unofficial Kings of California, 2025. For all their warts, the Angels own a sweep at Dodger Stadium, a spotless record in seven games with the Athletics and a series win over the Giants. Even including dropping one set to the Padres, that's a 13-3 mark against foes in the Golden State. (They won 12 games against those teams all last season.) Advertisement Yes, the run differential is the same as that of the White Sox, and the third-order winning percentage expects serious decline, but the overall record is within three games of a playoff spot, and did we mention that sweep at Dodger Stadium? — Britton Record: 30-42 Last Power Ranking: 23 Preseason Power Ranking: 26 Our preseason Power Rankings describe the Nationals as being 'bound for a fourth-place finish, at best.' Much of that was due to the division in which they play, but the Nats haven't done themselves many favors. They have a good young core to build around — James Wood, CJ Abrams, MacKenzie Gore — but the supporting cast just hasn't done enough to make much of a difference. Top prospect Dylan Crews didn't exactly hit the ground running, and short-term additions this offseason have been most disappointing. Somehow, the Nats' season has been both disheartening and predictable. — Jennings Record: 29-44 Last Power Ranking: 26 Preseason Power Ranking: 22 It's less what has happened, and more what hasn't: Paul Skenes hasn't been able to single-handedly lift the Pirates out of the mire. Would you like to guess who leads the NL in starting pitcher wins? Fine, I'll just tell you: it's a tie (8) between Robbie Ray of the Giants (2.55 ERA, 2.0 bWAR) and Brandon Pfaadt of the Diamondbacks (5.50 ERA, 0.2 bWAR). Skenes has an ERA of 1.78 and leads the NL in bWAR at 4.0. He's 4-6. The win is dead, and this is its obituary. The Pirates still can't score runs with any regularity, and unfortunately, scoring runs is a prerequisite to winning baseball games. The only real intrigue remaining is: Will they be able to capitalize at the trade deadline, and can Skenes win the Cy Young with a losing record? It's only happened once before, but never by a starter. Eric Gagne went 2-3 in 2003 (but also saved 55 games). — Weaver Advertisement Record: 30-44 Last Power Ranking: 27 Preseason Power Ranking: 25 I mean, you'd love to toss out that one month where the Athletics went 3-24. Outside of that, they've played some compelling baseball, fueled by more young talent that has you encouraged about the team's on-field future, however discouraging the team's which-field-are-we-talking-about future remains. On the other hand, you can't dismiss a full month when it represents a little under 40 percent of the season and when it completely tanks any incipient reveries about a wild-card push in the underwhelming American League. — Britton Record: 28-42 Last Power Ranking: 28 Preseason Power Ranking: 28 Gotta give us credit for this one, because we nailed it! We looked at a team that didn't have much of a lineup, didn't win much last season, and wasn't really trying to win this year, and said to ourselves: You know, this looks like one of the five worst teams in baseball. That's analysis, people! Now, if you want to nitpick, you could point out that we singled out Sandy Alcantara's return from the IL as a bright spot — he's unfortunately been not great — but that would be rude, and we're certain you'd never do that. Instead, we humbly accept your pat on the back for correctly identifying the Marlins as a not-very-good baseball team.— Jennings Record: 23-49 Last Power Ranking: 29 Preseason Power Ranking: 30 Unfortunately, the new Pope didn't work a miracle. What, did you think they were going to break a record for losses one year and then contend for the playoffs less than 12 months later? At least the Rockies spared them from perma-dwelling in the No. 30 spot, I guess. I'll leave this section to the world's premier White Sox fan: — Weaver Record: 15-57 Last Power Ranking: 30 Preseason Power Ranking: 29 In our preseason rankings, we had the Rockies ahead of the franchise that just set the record for most losses in a season, and the Rockies took umbrage. This was bulletin-board material. Were we not paying attention to another offseason of inertia? That the roster would legitimately suffer from the loss of the retired Charlie Blackmon, and that Brenton Doyle probably wouldn't be as good as he was last season? Did we overlook how they tied for the worst preseason projection Baseball Prospectus had ever handed out? More than 70 games into the season, Colorado is on pace to underperform that 55-win projection by 23 and to smash the record for losses set by the White Sox just last year by nine. — Britton

Power Rankings: Detroit Victory Helps Kirkwood Climb
Power Rankings: Detroit Victory Helps Kirkwood Climb

Fox Sports

time03-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • Fox Sports

Power Rankings: Detroit Victory Helps Kirkwood Climb

INDYCAR Kyle Kirkwood climbed in Power Rankings following his second victory of the season at the Sunday's Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix presented by Lear. The win, coupled with his earlier triumph at the Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach, underscores Kirkwood's rising prominence in the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. Kirkwood is the only driver besides points leader Alex Palou to win a race this season. Palou – who won five of the first six races of the season – finally fell to Earth in Detroit by placing 25th after an accident. But one crash doesn't drop the driver with six top-two finishes in seven races. Here are the rest of Power Rankings entering the Bommarito Automotive Group 500 presented by Axalta and Valvoline on Sunday evening, June 15 at World Wide Technology Raceway (8 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio Network). ↓10. Scott Dixon (No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda; Last Rank: 8) Dixon remains a fixture in the Power Rankings, holding steady at 10th. Despite a challenging stretch with three finishes of 11th or worse in the last four races, Dixon's presence in the top 10 of the standings – he's seventh – has kept him in the rankings. He kicked off the season with a strong runner-up finish in St. Petersburg and finished fifth in the Sonsio Grand Prix on May 10. ↓9. Scott McLaughlin (No. 3 Chevrolet; Last Rank: 7) McLaughlin spun Nolan Siegel early in Detroit, sparking an avoidable contact penalty that dropped him from the lead on the primary strategy to outside the top 10. Despite the setback, he recovered to finish 12th. This is two straight finishes outside the top 10, following a 30th-place finish in the '500' on May 25. Before the downturn, McLaughlin was on a strong run, finishing sixth or better in four of the first five races. ↑8. David Malukas (No. 4 Clarience Technologies Chevrolet; Last Rank: 10) Malukas finished 14th in Detroit, but that result doesn't reflect the full story. He was in the mix for a second consecutive top-five finish before a Lap 73 incident with Alex Palou, which led to an avoidable contact penalty that derailed his race. Malukas qualified second in Detroit, building off an impressive second-place finish in the Indy 500 just a week earlier. ↑7. Santino Ferrucci (No. 14 Sexton Properties/AJ Foyt Racing; Last Rank: NR) Ferrucci earned his best-career finish by crossing the finish line second in Detroit. That comes a week after finishing fifth in the '500.' ↑6. Colton Herta (No. 26 Gainbridge Honda; Last Rank: 9) Herta earned his first NTT P1 Award of the season in Detroit and third front-row start this season. Unfortunately, he didn't convert the pole to a win, but he still finished third. That's enough to boost him up the Power Rankings, earning his fourth top-seven finish in the last six races. The outliers are an underwhelming Month of May at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. In the Sonsio Grand Prix, Herta qualified 13th but finished 25th after a challenging race. In the '500,' he started 27th and managed to finish 14th. ↓5. Christian Lundgaard (No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet; Last Rank: 3) Lundgaard earned his best-career '500' finish with a seventh-place last Sunday and crossed the finish line eighth in Detroit. He has six top-10 finishes in seven races this season. ↔4. Will Power (No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet; Last Rank: 4) Power rebounded in Detroit to finish fourth, scoring his fifth top-six finish in the last six races. The outlier was the Indianapolis 500, where he started 33rd and finished 16th. Power has crossed the finish line ahead of his Team Penske teammates in five of the last six races, too. ↓3. Pato O'Ward (No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet; Last Rank: 2) O'Ward drops to third but limited the damage at Detroit by climbing from 18th to finish seventh. That's his best street course result this season after finishing 11th in St. Petersburg and 13th at Long Beach. Up next is an oval at World Wide Technology Raceway. O'Ward has three runner-up finishes there and five top-seven finishes in seven starts this season. ↑2. Kyle Kirkwood (No. 27 Siemens AWS Honda; Last Rank: 5) Kirkwood won from the third starting spot in Detroit after leading 48 of 100 laps. He has three top-five finishes this season, including two victories. He is third in points with five top-10 results, too. ↔1. Alex Palou (No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda; Last Rank: 1) Palou finished 25th in Detroit, but five wins in seven races leave him on top under further notice. He still leads the standings by 90 points over O'Ward, a gap of nearly two races. recommended

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