The Daily Courier

Premier race tight

- BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Arsenal survived a late scare at Tottenham to stay narrowly ahead in the race for the Premier League title on Sunday.

A 3-2 win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium ensured Mikel Arteta’s team remained at the top of the standings, ahead of defending champion Manchester City, which won 2-0 at Nottingham Forest.

But Arsenal had to endure a nervous finish despite powering to 3-0 lead in a London derby that was supposed to be one of its biggest tests in the title chase.

“The last 20 minutes wasn’t nice, but it was worth it,” Arsenal forward Bukayo Saka said afterward. “We know it is a big derby and they don’t want to lose 3-0 at home. Momentum shifted their way, but I am proud of the boys -- we managed to get the three points.”

An own-goal from Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg and further strikes from Saka and Kai Havertz put Arsenal into a commanding position at the break. But in the face of a potential rout, Tottenham responded in the second half through Cristian Romero and a penalty from Son Heung-min in the 87th minute.

Under pressure, Arsenal held on and remains one point clear at the top, having played a game more than City.

The advantage is still with Pep Guardiola’s team, which will clinch a fourth-straight title if it wins its remaining games this season and responded to Arsenal’s win with victory of its own at relegation-fighting Forest.

With Liverpool’s title hopes further diminishin­g after dropping five points in two games this week, it is down to Arsenal to challenge City’s domestic dominance.

Arsenal’s win meant the pressure was on City to keep the heat on its title rival.

It was always favourite to beat a Forest team that is desperatel­y fighting for survival but without Phil Foden, who was ill, and Erling Haaland on the bench, Guardiola was without two of its big match-winners in the starting 11.

DOVER, Del. -- Denny Hamlin took his cut -- he gripped the checkered flag like a Louisville Slugger and took a swing moments after he delivered on his called shot at Dover -- and then lobbed a high, hard one at some of the NASCAR greats before him.

Yeah, maybe 36 drivers have won Cup championsh­ips.

Not all of them were as great as Denny Hamlin.

Hamlin is off to one of the best starts of his two-decade career, with three wins for Joe Gibbs Racing -- plus a victory in the exhibition Clash at the Coliseum -- over the first 11 races. Again, Hamlin is in the mix to win his first career Cup title. Again, Hamlin knows his season will be judged not on his start, but on his finish.

Can he ever get over the hump in the No. 11 Toyota and score NASCAR’s biggest prize, the pursuit of which has caused him all kinds of heartache through the years?

Sure, he can. But if he doesn’t win it all, Hamlin seems at peace with the knowledge that his career has hovered in the rarified air as one of the best in NASCAR history.

His 54th career win -- one he predicted on his podcast -- was just the latest reminder of his elite ability behind the wheel. Hamlin tied Lee Petty for 12th on the career wins list, and only Hall of Famers Kyle Busch and recently-retired Kevin Harvick are ahead of him.

Hamlin can’t knock ‘em.

As for the “does a championsh­ip define greatness?” crowd, Hamlin told the haters to take a hike.

“I know that I’m a championsh­ip-caliber driver,” Hamlin said. “I’ll just say it. I think there’s been worse drivers to win a championsh­ip than me.” Like who?

Stroll through the garage or flip through the history book

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Scott McLaughlin and Team Penske proved they’re a force on the track, no matter what’s going on elsewhere.

McLaughlin won his second straight race at Barber Motorsport­s Park, giving Team Penske a much-needed triumph on Sunday just days after IndyCar erased Josef Newgarden’s victory and also and it’s easy to find championsh­ip drivers Hamlin would be foolish to trade careers with just for a title.

-- Brad Keselowski won the 2012 title but has only three other top-five series finishes over that span and is winless (he has 35 overall) since 2021. Hamlin also has three Daytona 500 wins to none for Keselowski.

-- Matt Kenseth is as respected as any driver in recent NASCAR history and currently serves as a competitio­n advisor for Legacy Motor Club. His one win in his 2003 championsh­ip season made him a scapegoat the following year when NASCAR upended the championsh­ip process and moved to a playoff-type format. He won 39 career races.

-- Hey, who doesn’t love Dale Jarrett? The popular NBC announcer failed to win a race in his first four seasons and had only two wins in his last four full seasons. He did win four of his 32 career races in his 1999 championsh­ip season. disqualifi­ed McLaughlin from the season opener.

The team went from damage control to celebratio­n, at least temporaril­y.

“It was a little emotional for sure,” McLaughlin said. “It’s just nice. It was just a nice cap after obviously it was a pretty tough week.”

McLaughlin and Penske’s fuel strategy worked to perfection, with teammate Will Power finishing second -- the same order they started in.

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