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  • AMA Supercross Releases 450SX and 250SX Detroit Highlights

    AMA Supercross Releases 450SX and 250SX Detroit Highlights

    The AMA Supercross Championship Official released short-form highlight packages recapping the Detroit stop, issuing pieces titled “450SX Highlights | Detroit” and “250SX Highlights | Detroit.” These releases present condensed overviews of each class’s action from the Detroit venue.

    Each package focuses on the most notable moments from its respective series, surfacing standout performances, decisive on-track moments and significant incidents that shaped the races. The pieces are designed as quick recaps rather than full race reports.

    Both highlights aggregate key race action into single, high-level overviews and intentionally omit specific competitor names, podium results, detailed statistics and points implications. The available information does not supply full article text.

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  • Bearman suffers 50G crash at Japanese GP; knee contusion

    Bearman suffers 50G crash at Japanese GP; knee contusion

    Oliver Bearman suffered a heavy, peak-50G crash at the Japanese Grand Prix when he clipped Alpine driver Franco Colapinto’s gearbox while attempting an overtake at Spoon Curve on lap 22. The 20-year-old Haas driver, a member of the Ferrari academy, dipped onto the grass, spun across the track and made heavy contact with the outside barrier; the impact brought out the safety car. Stewards reviewed the incident and said no investigation was necessary.

    Bearman exited the car with a limp, sat beside the barrier and, after being helped by marshals, walked away from the wreck before being taken to the circuit medical center. He was later assessed at the FIA medical center, where X-rays showed no fractures but he was diagnosed with a right-knee contusion; Haas said the contusion will be monitored and noted he had FIA dispensation not to attend the post-race media pen.

    Haas team principal Ayao Komatsu (spelled Aayo in some reports) said he did not think Colapinto was to blame and pointed to “a huge closing speed” as a contributing factor. Haas added Bearman should have time to recuperate before the season resumes in Miami in May, noting the April Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands had been canceled earlier.

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  • Kimi Antonelli takes pole as Mercedes lock 1-2 at Suzuka

    Kimi Antonelli takes pole as Mercedes lock 1-2 at Suzuka

    Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) took pole for the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka, though timing sources differ on his lap time — listed as either 1:28.778 or 1:29.362. It is his second consecutive pole and teammate George Russell completed a Mercedes 1–2, around 0.3 seconds behind Antonelli.

    Behind Mercedes, McLaren put Oscar Piastri third and Lando Norris fifth, with Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) fourth; Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) was sixth. Pierre Gasly was seventh, Isack Hadjar eighth, Gabriel Bortoleto ninth and Arvid Lindblad tenth. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) suffered an unexpected Q2 exit and will start 11th, while Sergio Perez (Red Bull) will start 19th.

    The official entry list and primary reports use the spelling Oliver Bearman; he was eliminated in Q1 and will start well down the grid, though some outlets give different exact slots. Qualifying was run in the standard three-part knockout format (Q1/Q2/Q3) and the FIA reduced the allowed energy recharge per lap for qualifying from 9 MJ to 8 MJ for this weekend.

    Practice times suggested Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari were closely matched. The race is scheduled to start Sunday afternoon local time (reported as either 14:00 or 15:00 JST) and will run 53 laps of the 5.807 km Suzuka Circuit. Teams and drivers face a tactical contest over tire degradation, energy deployment and track position on the high-speed figure-of-eight layout; consult the official timing and grid for any remaining discrepancies (pole time, exact start time and some grid slots).

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  • Conor Cooke to make U.S. debut vs. Jaren Warren in

    Porter stops Haze Wilson to reach 4-0 in BKFC

    At a sold-out Mohegan Sun Arena in Uncasville, Connecticut, Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship staged Fight Night Mohegan Sun. In the main event, Parker Porter stopped Haze ‘The Hooligan’ Wilson at the end of the third round, marking Porter’s fourth straight stoppage and improving his BKFC record to 4-0.

    Porter, a New Britain, Connecticut native and former UFC fighter who entered the night as the No. 4 BKFC heavyweight contender, rose off the canvas before the ringside doctor called the fight. After the victory he told the crowd he wants the belt: “I’m not here to play around.” Wilson, who fights out of Tulsa, Oklahoma, fell to 4-2 in bare-knuckle competition.

    Official weigh-ins produced the announced weights; BKFC described them as final pre-fight confirmations and published the full list while emphasizing the promotion’s return to the New England market. Porter weighed in at 251 lbs and Wilson at 258.2 lbs. The card also featured a heavyweight matchup between Guilherme Viana (257 lbs) and Joseph White (263.2 lbs). Other listed bouts included Pat Casey vs. Zeb Vincent, Alexandra Ballou vs. Taylor Dagner and Sophia Hayes vs. Nadia Moreno; David Burke and David Sanchez both weighed in at 188.5 lbs. The event aired on the BKFC App.

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  • Detroit press day previews Motown Supercross; Sexton back

    Detroit press day previews Motown Supercross; Sexton back

    Detroit press day gave fans and media an early look at Motown Supercross, focusing on rider footage and interviews rather than competitive results. Early coverage emphasized on-track activity and behind-the-scenes access as a first-look kickoff to the weekend.

    Media pieces led by a RacerX video package combined short on-camera interviews, soundbites and candid venue moments with unedited riding footage to provide an immediate, unvarnished view for fans and journalists.

    Video highlights included on-track moments of Chase Sexton’s return, a last-minute Kyle Peters substitution for the PRMX team, and a raw lap clip of Luke Neese tackling the track’s prominent “big booter” jumps. The clips were framed as pre-race preparation and fan-facing, short shareable items that emphasized technique, atmosphere and rider impressions rather than race outcomes or detailed analysis.

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  • Thorson Leads Rod Gross No. 88 to Wire-to-Wire Win

    Thorson Leads Rod Gross No. 88 to Wire-to-Wire Win

    Tanner Thorson of Minden, Nevada led every lap at Route 66 Motor Speedway in Amarillo to take a wire-to-wire victory in the Interstate Batteries High Limit Racing feature on Friday night. Piloting the Rod Gross Motorsports No. 88, Thorson notched his second win of the season and the fourth High Limit Racing victory of his career — all four coming since September — which returned him to Whiskey Myers Victory Lane and pushed his championship lead to 21 points after the eighth night of the 64-race season.

    Aaron Reutzel of Clute, Texas, making his first start at the West Texas oval, closed to within 0.133 seconds on Lap 22 while the leaders navigated heavy lapped traffic and finished second for Ridge & Sons Racing, a team that has logged five podiums in the first eight races.

    Justin Peck posted a season-best third, Daison Pursley was fourth in the Kasey Kahne Racing w/ Mike Curb No. 9, and Tanner Holmes recorded a season-best fifth in the Buch Motorsports No. 13. Rounding out the top 10 were Brent Marks, Hank Davis, Sam Hafertepe Jr., Kerry Madsen and Giovanni Scelzi.

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  • Leclerc blasts F1 hybrid qualifying rules at Suzuka

    Leclerc blasts F1 hybrid qualifying rules at Suzuka

    After Suzuka qualifying, Charles Leclerc erupted over team radio, calling the session “a f***ing joke” and sharply criticizing Formula 1’s new hybrid energy and qualifying rules. He said the regulations forced drivers to compromise throttle application and left the battery depleted down the straights, so any time gained through aggressive cornering was wiped out on the following straight. Leclerc argued deployment timing and the requirement to manage energy harvesting and deployment — including a 50/50 split of electrical output with the internal combustion engine under the rules — can determine straight-line power in qualifying. The FIA had already reduced the maximum permitted energy recharge for qualifying in Japan from nine megajoules to eight to curb so-called “super clipping,” and officials were reported to be looking into potential fixes; Leclerc used the outburst to frame what he called the sport’s broader identity crisis over hybrid energy management.

    The radio rant followed a Q3 in which Leclerc qualified fourth after briefly threatening pole by setting the fastest time in sector one on his final lap, only to lose time after a snap of oversteer coming out of Spoon Curve and a separate moment through turn eight. Onboard footage captured Leclerc visibly furious and making an expletive-laced complaint that he couldn’t understand qualifying; he said he was losing significant straight-line speed compared with his Q2 lap and urged Ferrari to improve power-unit optimization, adding that his high-risk approach to final laps “bites you more than it pays off.”

    The result left Mercedes locked on the front row — Kimi Antonelli on pole with George Russell second — and Oscar Piastri third, reinforcing that Ferrari’s SF-26, despite a strong start to 2026, still looked a step behind. Observers noted Mercedes, and possibly McLaren, appeared better able to extract extra Q3 performance. Reddit fans reacted strongly to the new qualifying rule, and articles characterized Leclerc’s comments as a reaction to the outcome rather than a formal regulatory protest.

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  • Mercedes rear tweak hampered Russell, nearly spun in Q1

    Mercedes rear tweak hampered Russell, nearly spun in Q1

    George Russell said a rear set-up tweak to his Mercedes W17 ahead of Suzuka qualifying backfired, leaving him “handcuffed” and inducing heavy oversteer through the esses and the final sector. The change compromised his ability to attack corners, forced him to make a “massive” in-session front-wing adjustment and left him struggling in Q1, briefly dropping as low as P7/P8 and nearly spinning on his flying lap.

    Despite Russell’s problems, Mercedes locked out the front row: teammate Kimi Antonelli took pole for a second consecutive race with a 1:28.778, around 0.298 seconds clear of Russell, who qualified P2. Oscar Piastri led McLaren in third as qualifying tightened up between Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari; the session also produced surprise exits, with Max Verstappen eliminated in Q2 and describing his Red Bull as “undriveable” after being bumped out by Arvid Lindblad.

    Under parc fermé rules Russell will have to carry the compromised balance into Sunday’s race. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff acknowledged the rear tweak produced more oversteer than expected and put Russell at a disadvantage; the team said it will investigate the rear-end change overnight. Russell added the situation is “not ideal” for the long race and that he may need to alter his driving style to manage the handling deficit. Russell had entered the weekend leading Antonelli by four championship points after the opening two races, while Antonelli’s pole extended his early run of form following his maiden victory in China.

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  • Kevin Thomas Jr. sweeps USAC sprint features in Arizona

    USAC Midget National releases schedules, broadcast, payouts

    The USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship has published schedules, formats, rules, broadcast and payout/entry details for upcoming stops. Live video for both events will stream on FloRacing, with audio available via the USAC app for both shows and via Mixlr for the Wayne County stop only. Live timing will be provided through MyRacePass and Race Monitor, and USAC will post live updates on its Facebook and X pages. The published prize-and-points structure awards the winner 70 points and $5,000 (second place listed as 67 points and $2,000), and Race Director Kirk Spridgeon is listed to oversee the events.

    The Riverside Chevrolet Midwest Midget Championship presented by Westin Packaged Meats and Schmidt’s Sanitation will feature the USAC Midget National Championship at Jefferson County Speedway in Fairbury, Neb., on Friday, July 10. Gates open at 5:00 p.m. CT, the drivers meeting is at 5:30 p.m. CT, and cars go on track at 6:00 p.m. CT for qualifying and racing. The USAC feature at Jefferson County is scheduled for 30 laps with a $5,000 winner’s purse and 70 points for the winner; USAC regulations — including qualifying and heat formats, transfer rules and tire stamping — will govern the event. The facility will host USAC Midget practice and a full NOW600/Jay-Husker Non-Wing Micro Sprints program on July 9, with a free shrimp boil/BBQ that evening. General admission for July 10 is $25 (reduced to $10 for high school students and younger); all-access pit passes are $40 and will be available at the pit gate, with advance tickets sold online.

    The USAC Midget National stop at Wayne County Speedway in Wayne City, Ill., is set for Friday, Sept. 4 on the track’s 1/8-mile dirt oval. Qualifying will be two laps with the fastest lap counting; heat races are 10 laps with a top-six inversion (heat/semi structure may be adjusted by car count), semifinals are 12 laps, and there may be a 10-lap C-Main depending on entries. The Wayne County feature is scheduled for 40 laps, limited to 24 starters, with a six-car inversion up front. All sessions require use of a stamped SP3 right-rear tire; changing the stamped SP3 right-rear tire moves a car to the tail unless a verified puncture is documented. Entry fees are $30 for USAC members and $40 for non-members, and a driver radio on frequency 464.5500 is mandatory for competitors. Broadcast and timing platforms match the series coverage noted above, with Mixlr audio available for this stop.

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