
Citi Open Player Betting Odds & Tournament Info - Men's Singles 2025
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Citi Open info
Tennis odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Monday at 9:30 AM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
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- Yahoo
7 NASCAR Cup Car Numbers Worth Retiring for All Time
Having your number retired is the ultimate honor in sports. It's the ultimate nod to what that number, and subsequently the athlete, meant to the sport. While individual teams in the major sports retire numbers almost to the point of diluting the honor, only the rarest of rare get their number retired by an entire league. Major League Baseball retired No. 42 in 1997 to honor pioneer Jackie Robinson. The National Hockey League in 2000 retired the No. 99 of Wayne Gretzky. Some numbers are a tough call because multiple drivers had success in the same car number. The No. 11, for example, found victory lane with Denny Hamlin (58 wins), Cale Yarborough (55 wins), Ned Jarrett (48 wins), Darrell Waltrip (43 wins). That No. 11 means different drivers to different fans... which in our mind disqualifies it from this particular list. Bobby Allison has a massive number of wins (85), but he never scored more than 25 wins with the same car number (12). He also drove the 22, 28, 2, 15, 88, 16, 24, 6, 29, 14, 09, 11, 40, 37, 49, 07, and 1. It's ways good to bave Allison on any NASCAR honor list, but hard to say there was ever a definitive Bobby Allison car number. Here's seven drivers whose success, association with a specific car number or pioneering impact on the sport are deserving of having their number retired:No. 43 - RIchard Petty Richard Petty was, and always will be, NASCAR's GOAT. No one will come close to 200 career wins and no one with any sense of NASCAR history can look at the No. 43 car in the Cup Series and not at least have a flashback to Petty. Petty is NASCAR's Babe Ruth, Tom Brady and Bill Russell. He'll always be the 3 - Dale Earnhardt No one should be allowed in the No. 3 car. That's Dale Earnhardt's ride, forever. Many fans (me, included) will never be comfortable seeing Austin Dillon—or anyone else, for that matter-—in the No. 3 car. Earnhardt was a seven-time champion, and his untimely death at the 2001 Daytona 500 will forever be etched in the minds of his fans. More than two decades later, the Intimidator is still in the top 10 in terms of driver merchandise 24 - Jeff Gordon No offense to William Byron, the current caretaker of the 24, but Jeff Gordon will always synonymous with the No. 24. Gordon's four Cup championships are fourth most in series history, and his 93 wins in the No. 24 checks in third. And maybe it would be appropriate to retire any future rainbow paint schemes in honor of NASCAR's Rainbow 21 - David Pearson Four-time Cup champion David Pearson, with 105 wins, is second on the all-time wins list and had 43 wins and his greatest moments in the Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 in the 1970s. Pearson showed up for the inaugural NASCAR Hall of Fame announcement for the 2010 Hall Class only to be snubbed. Let's not snub the late Pearson and his most famous car number from this 34 - Wendell Scott Wendell Scott broke the color barrier in NASCAR, driving the No. 87 Chevy at Hub City Speedway in Spartanburg, S.C in 1961. Nearly the rest of Scott's career was spent in the 34 car, and he drove the 34 into victory lane at Jacksonville in 1964. The only other time Scott drove in Cup in a car outside the 34 was his in his final Cup race in 1973, where he drove the No. 5 in the National 500 at Charlotte. It would only be fitting to forever remember the 34 in honor of a true 48 - Jimmie Johnson Forever in the minds of man NASCAR fans, the 48 will be Jimmie Johnson and Lowe's. It was a car number and sponsorship that brought the majority of Johnson's 83 wins and record-tying seven championships. Sorry, current Hendrick Motorsports driver Alex Bowman, that 48 belongs to Jimmie Johnson... and the 71 - Sara Christian Sara Christian, the first woman to start a NASCAR Cup Series race, finished 13th in the inaugural season championship in 1949. Her husband, Frank, finished in a tie for 26th. Christian is still the highest-finishing woman in a NASCAR Cup Race. She finished fifth at Heidelberg Raceway, near Pittsburgh, in 1949. Sara and Frank are the only couple honored by the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame. How about NASCAR giving Sara a nod, too.

NBC Sports
17 minutes ago
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Patrick Mahomes: "There's stuff we've got to get better at"
The last time the Chiefs lost the Super Bowl, they made it back to the AFC Championship. And then, the next year, they won the first of two more Super Bowls. Now, they've lost another Super Bowl. What's next for the team that has gone to five of the last six Super Bowls? 'There's stuff we've got to get better at,' Mahomes told Jarrett Bell of USA Today. 'Especially myself. There's plays on the football field that I didn't make last year, that I've made in previous years. At the end of the day, I'm going to do whatever it takes to win, whether that's passing for a lot of yards, not passing for a lot of yards. But I think if I play better, that's going to make it better for the team. So, I've got to be better at executing whenever the shots are there, making those throws. Because that's going to alleviate pressure on our defense and make them play more free and make the team play more free.' So what does the sting of a loss do to Mahomes's approach to the job? 'It just gives you a little extra in some of the workouts and those film sessions, to try to find the little things to get even better,' Mahomes said. 'You try to do that when you have success, but at the same time when you have success you can sometimes be complacent. Obviously, you don't want to lose the game, but it can give you a little bit more motivation to be even better.' There's another potential source of motivation. The Broncos and Chargers are on their heels. Some (including Chris Simms on Tuesday's PFT Live) have predicted the Chiefs will yield the AFC West title to the Denver Broncos. It could end up being a crossroads season for the Chiefs and Mahomes, in his ninth NFL campaign and the year he'll turn 30. His worst finish as a starter is losing in overtime of the AFC Championship. His best is three Super Bowl wins in seven seasons.
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an hour ago
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Louisiana-Monroe coach Bryant Vincent named as school's interim athletic director
Louisiana-Monroe football coach Bryant Vincent is now the school's interim athletic director. Vincent was placed in charge of the school's athletic department on Tuesday following John Hartwell's resignation on Monday. Vincent, who is entering just his second season at ULM, will continue to coach the football team as the interim AD in a unique situation. No other head coach at the FBS level also serves as his school's athletic director. 'I am grateful to Bryant for stepping up to serve as the interim AD,' ULM president Carrie Castille said in a statement. 'Not only is Bryant a leader, but he builds teams and communities. Bryant has the support of the associate ADs and will be working closely with them to ensure he can serve both roles and win games. He has already gained the support of this community as a head coach, and I hope that everyone will join me in rallying around him to support ULM athletics.' According to Hartwell resigned over budget issues. The school has one of the smallest athletic department budgets among those that compete at the top level of college football and there could be more cuts coming to that budget. The school said Monday that Hartwell "will be pursuing other professional opportunities." Hartwell hired Vincent after the 2023 season. Vincent, who was the interim coach at UAB in 2022, was passed over for the permanent job with the Blazers and moved to Monroe, where the team had its best season since 2019. ULM was a win away from the school's first bowl game since 2012 halfway through the 2024 season, but ended the year on a six-game losing streak.