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Lee Carsley simply doesn’t sound like the England manager – the FA should end interim spell before huge Greece clash

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Lee Carsley simply doesn't sound like the England manager - the FA should end interim spell before huge Greece clash

AFTER three months of uncertainty, it is now absolutely as clear as mud.

Does Lee Carsley want to be England’s permanent manager or not?

Lee Carsley has been reluctant to say whether or not he wants the England job permanently

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Lee Carsley has been reluctant to say whether or not he wants the England job permanentlyCredit: Reuters

And why is he so reluctant to say ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to such a simple question?

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Following a team selection which brought a welcome return to common sense — and an England victory which restored a certain amount of pride — came another chaotic round of post-match interviews in which Carsley contradicted himself several times.

And given that communication is such an important part of the England job, it does not help his cause when you feel as if you are disappearing down a rabbit hole every time you speak to Carsley.

He is a likeable man and a gifted coach — but he simply doesn’t sound like an England manager.

There simply isn’t enough authority or clarity about him.

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At the age of 50, Carsley has never been the full-time manager of any senior football team and it shows.

That is irrespective of the tactical car crash of Thursday’s 2-1 home defeat by Greece.

After goals from Jack Grealish, Trent Alexander-Arnold and Declan Rice had comfortably defeated a limited Finland side, came another round of riddles and muddle.

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First, the Three Lions’ interim boss told ITV the England job “deserves a world-class manager who has won trophies” and admitted that he was “still on the path to that”.

This sounded like confirmation of stories Carsley does not want the job.

England ratings: Angel Gomes is the runaway success of Lee Carsley era but Cole Palmer is anonymous

England player ratings vs Finland

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ENGLAND secured a commanding 3-1 win over Finland following their horror show at home to Greece

Here’s how SunSport’s Tom Barclay assessed the Three Lions’ stars performances.

Dean Henderson – 6

Only his second cap after long-time No1 Jordan Pickford was dropped. Not a lot to do, but pretty assured when he was called into action, including a smart, first-half stop to repel a Benjamin Kallman strike – even if the Finn was later flagged offside. Could do little to prevent Finland’s goal.

Kyle Walker – 6

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After the calamity against Greece, it was no surprise to see Lee Carsley turn to his most experienced defender. Now just nine caps shy of a century, Walker was solid. Could have had an assist late on but his cushioned down header was poor.

John Stones – 6

England’s more conventional system meant the defence was far less exposed – though Carsley’s attacking approach did still see the Finns create chances. Stones made a good early block to deny Kallman after Angel Gomes gave the ball away.

Marc Guehi – 6

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Our best defender in the Euros group stages, Guehi was back in here with Levi Colwill dropping out. Pretty assured for a player who by his own admission has not started the season particularly well for his club.

Trent Alexander-Arnold – 7

We saw him in midfield at the Euros, and here the Liverpool right-back was shunted to left-back. Looked vulnerable defensively at times but who cares when he produces such quality on the ball – epitomised by his terrific free-kick to kill off this game.

Angel Gomes – 8

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The big success story of the Carsley era, however long it lasts, has been bringing Gomes into the fold. He created Jack Grealish’s opener with a beautiful, flicked-pass round the corner and was excellent in possession – barring one sloppy early pass.

Declan Rice – 7

Looked far more comfortable with Gomes playing in behind him, as opposed to the one-man defensive operation he was forced to put up against the Greeks. Looked proud as punch after stroking home England’s third from Watkins’ cross.

Cole Palmer – 5

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Played in a more familiar wide right position compared to his central-midfield experiment against Greece. Yet it reduced him to a peripheral figure, adding more questions than answers as to where best to deploy him, Jude Bellingham and Phil Foden.

Jude Bellingham – 6

The Real Madrid superstar played off Harry Kane and had the occasional, exciting link-up with Grealish, but this was not one of his more memorable games overall.

Jack Grealish – 8

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No doubt will be hoping Carsley does get the job full-time as his fellow Brummie seems to appreciate his talents. His composed finish was his second goal in three games under Carsley – doubling his overall haul from 39 caps.

Harry Kane – 6

Cap 101 for the captain but not one he will remember particularly fondly. He offered the presence the team lacked against Greece when they played with no striker, but did not get much of a sniff in front of goal.

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Noni Madueke (for Palmer, 69) – 7
This game was made for him to make an impact off the bench and he almost teed up Watkins after one fine run but the Finns cleared.

Ollie Watkins (for Kane, 69) – 7

Low cross for Rice’s third was right on the money.

Rico Lewis (for Gomes, 80) – 6

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Slotted in at centre midfield when coming on and looked busy.

Phil Foden (for Bellingham, 80) – 5

Embraced the post ruefully after Madueke opted to shoot instead of crossing to him for a tap-in seconds after Finland’s goal. Was marking Arttu Hoskonen when the Finn headed home a consolatio.

Conor Gallagher (for Rice, 89) – 6

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His first appearance under Carsley but too late to make an impact.

Lee Carsley – 7

His tactical gamble backfired against Greece but he held his hands up and went more conventional here. It paid off as England were relatively comfortable – although his teams have looked defensively vulnerable at times in all four of his games and this was no different.

But the three best players, Gomes, Grealish and Alexander-Arnold, were all given starring roles by Carsley when used sparingly or not at all by predecessor Gareth Southgate – and for that, the interim boss should take credit.

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Given that there are literally no English world-class trophy-winning managers, did this mean Carsley was preparing us for the imminent arrival of Thomas Tuchel?

Apparently that isn’t the case either.

When asked if this comment meant he was ruling himself out of the running, he said that was not the case.

Asked why he won’t give a straight answer, Carsley said he had talked himself out of jobs when he had been a caretaker boss at clubs and didn’t want to make the same mistake again.

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So if he does want the job, why not say that?

Curiouser and curiouser.

The FA’s decision to appoint Carsley for all six Nations League fixtures —  over three separate international breaks — always felt like an unnecessary stretch.

This is a long period of uncertainty to go through before the really serious business of World Cup qualification begins next year.

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The Three Lions bounced back from defeat to Greece by beating Finland 3-1 on Sunday

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The Three Lions bounced back from defeat to Greece by beating Finland 3-1 on SundayCredit: Getty
Carsley has won three of his four matches as interim manager in the Nations League

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Carsley has won three of his four matches as interim manager in the Nations LeagueCredit: Getty

Surely the FA would be better off making their long-term decision before next month’s matches against Greece in Athens and the Republic of Ireland at Wembley? Still, there have been some genuine positives from Carsley’s reign — all three of yesterday’s goalscorers in Helsinki having benefited from his management.

The hugely-popular Grealish, who became a father for the first time last week, was a shock omission from Southgate’s Euros squad but has netted twice in three starts under Carsley.

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Alexander-Arnold has started all four matches under the current regime — this one as a makeshift left-back — and he conjured a gorgeous curling free-kick for the killer second goal here.

Rice, meanwhile, has enjoyed playing in his preferred No 8 role rather than the holding job he usually performed under Southgate.

Except, of course, for Thursday’s debacle against the Greeks, when the Arsenal man was horribly exposed by a gung-ho team selection.

This was England’s first journey to Helsinki’s historic Olympic Stadium since 2000 — and that also came on the back of a Wembley shambles.

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Kevin Keegan had just quit in the toilets of the old national stadium with Howard Wilkinson taking charge of a goalless World Cup qualifying draw here in the Finnish capital.

After Thursday’s fiasco, Carsley selected a much more conventional team with Harry Kane fit enough to start up front after an ankle injury.

Former Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel has been linked with the full-time role

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Former Chelsea manager Thomas Tuchel has been linked with the full-time roleCredit: Getty

The interim manager’s decision to drop Jordan Pickford — something Southgate barely did — made sense too after an extremely jittery display against Greece, with Dean Henderson handed a first England start.

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Angel Gomes, one of Carsley’s Under-21 European champions, was polished again on his second full international start. And after turning two defenders, the little Lille anchor man provided a gorgeous outside-of-the-boot assist for Grealish to slot home the early opener.

It was only the Manchester City man’s fourth goal from 39 caps but his second under Carsley.

England were sloppy before and after half-time, Finland centre-forward Fredrik Jensen firing over from close range either side of the interval.

Alexander-Arnold and Rice both forced saves from Lukas Hradecky but England were hardly tearing it up. Midway through the second half, Carsley freshened it up by sending on Ollie Watkins for Kane and Noni Madueke for the largely anonymous Cole Palmer.

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After England won a free-kick on the left, just over 26 yards out, Alexander-Arnold sized it up and curled his effort deftly into the postage stamp, Hradecky doing well even to get a hand to the ball.

Soon, Ollie Watkins darted down the left and centred low to the near post where Rice tapped in. Arttu Hoskinen then headed home a consolation from a corner, denying Henderson his clean sheet.

That mattered little, though.

Carsley’s team had played with common sense and clarity.

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As for the interim manager’s post-match comments, that is an entirely different story.

Carsley is set to remain in charge to face Greece and the Republic of Ireland next month

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Carsley is set to remain in charge to face Greece and the Republic of Ireland next monthCredit: Getty

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Man Utd ‘rejected by up-and-coming manager’ who followed similar path to under-fire Ten Hag

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Man Utd ‘rejected by up-and-coming manager’ who followed similar path to under-fire Ten Hag

MANCHESTER UNITED were reportedly rejected by a manager who has followed a similar path to Erik ten Hag.

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The Dutch coach faces an uncertain future at Old Trafford after the club’s horror start to the Premier League season.

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There are doubts over Erik ten Hag’s future at Manchester United[/caption]

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Sebastian Hoeness is believed to have turned down the job[/caption]

Ten Hag, 54, is still in charge of the team despite club chiefs holding talks over his position during the international break.

Despite the former Ajax boss still being employed, it has not stopped other candidates from being linked with the post.

Thomas Tuchel, Graham Potter and Gareth Southgate have all been talked up as potential successors.

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However, it has been reported that Man United made an approach to appoint VfB Stuttgart manager Sebastian Hoeness.

German outlet Bild have claimed that he was flattered by the interest from the Red Devils.

But it is thought that he has turned down the chance to swap Stuttgart for Manchester.

The report adds that Hoeness, 42, believes he still has work to do at the MHP Arena.

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Last season, he guided his side to a second-place finish in the Bundesliga ahead of Bayern Munich.

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Stuttgart only missed on a famous title to the invincible Bayer Leverkusen, managed by Xabi Alonso.

Hoeness has been in charge of Die Roten since 2023, when he took charge of the club in the relegation zone.

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man utd worst starts to a season poster with erik ten hag and ole gunnar solskjaer

He was able to lead the strugglers to the relegation play-offs and beat Hamburg in order to maintain their Bundesliga status.

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Hoesness started his managerial career at Bayern Munich II.

He landed the job just four years after it was vacated by Ten Hag who left the job for Dutch side Utrecht in 2015.

Another new name that has been linked with the top job at Old Trafford is Edin Terzic.

The former Borussia Dortmund coach is an unexpected target but had admirers at the club.

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Meanwhile at Man United, club captain Bruno Fernandes has revealed he could have left in the summer.

The midfielder admitted that he had “concrete offers” to leave but stayed at Old Trafford.

Why NOBODY is the right man to replace Erik ten Hag at Man Utd

SunSport's DAVE KIDD says Erik ten Hag's time at Man Utd is up… and explains what's wrong with all the potential candidates to replace him.

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THIS is a mid-table squad at an underachieving club, with a lot of unwanted players on big money.

And Ratcliffe is an instinctive cost-cutter who may not pay top dollar to the next manager.

If this club wasn’t called ‘Manchester United’, it wouldn’t be an especially desirable job.

The good news for United is that their new sporting director, Dan Ashworth, is a very decent judge of a manager.

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He has been instrumental in three previous managerial appointments — Gareth Southgate for England, Graham Potter for Brighton and Eddie Howe for Newcastle.

None were wildly popular at the time, all were conspicuous successes.

Interestingly, Ashworth’s No 1 choice for the Newcastle job was Unai Emery, who turned him down to stay at Villarreal but has since proved that judgment right by excelling at Aston Villa.

Emery may well deliver the coup de grace to Ten Hag on Sunday — especially with Bruno Fernandes suspended and Kobbie Mainoo an injury doubt.

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And the Spaniard would be an excellent fit for United — yet there is next to no chance that he would abandon Villa’s Champions League campaign to take the Old Trafford job, not least because he isn’t a stark raving madman.

Howe would be another good candidate to succeed Ten Hag but, although he has become frustrated on Tyneside, the Saudis would surely not allow Ratcliffe to poach Howe, as they reluctantly did with Ashworth.

Potter is available but his Chelsea experience and lack of charisma would make him a tough sell.

Which brings us to Southgate, who remains close with Ashworth and is an excellent man-manager who was seriously considered by United last spring.

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Yet, despite having led England to two of their three major finals, Southgate’s reputation for over-caution was only enhanced during the Euros.

Mauricio Pochettino, passed over twice by United, is out of the equation having taken the United States job.

Thomas Tuchel would be a popular and gettable option but, despite being a fine coach and a very engaging man, he is considered something of a loose cannon.

Likewise, Roberto De Zerbi, now at Marseille after his brief Brighton stint sparkled then fizzled out.

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Kieran McKenna — a gifted former United coach who has won back-to-back promotions with Ipswich Town — is an intriguing candidate but the imminent vacancy may come a year or so too soon.

Marco Silva, the extremely under-rated Fulham boss, has been on United’s radar and should not be discounted.

Sporting Lisbon’s Ruben Amorim, last season’s ‘next big thing’, was passed over by West Ham as well as Liverpool this summer and is not an easy man to pin down.

Zinedine Zidane, who has taken over from Alan Curbishley as a 20-1 shot for every Premier League job, is a ‘figurehead’ manager and not an Ashworth type.

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Ruud van Nistelrooy, the former United goal machine who joined Ten Hag’s coaching team in the summer is the bookies’ favourite. Simply because he’s in the building and he’s Dutch.

So, yes, getting rid of Ten Hag is the easy part.

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Will Bathurst throw up another classic to match 2014’s drama?

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A decade is a long time in motor racing but, in the land of Supercars, it’s maybe a little bit difficult to acknowledge that the 2014 Bathurst 1000 did not happen just yesterday. Even for an event known for its great finishes, the 2014 edition was possibly the greatest. At a minute less than eight hours in length, it was certainly the longest, due to an unprecedented number of crashes, 10 safety car appearances and a 63-minute red flag period to repair a damaged racetrack.

Think of the unlikeliest of final laps storyboards you may have seen in Formula 1 history. Jenson Button winning from dead last in Montreal in 2011? Not even close. Riccardo Patrese spinning away a maiden world championship grand prix win and then reclaiming it in Monaco in 1982? Humbug.

What we saw a decade ago was the two cars that started last and second-last on the grid fighting tooth and nail for the win, with just two of the 1000 kilometres remaining – one of the teams begging, then cajoling, its star driver, after coming from a lap down, to ease off and save fuel. Right behind him, having driven from last not once but twice after the car was crashed by a co-driver twice his age, was a 22-year-old rising star, asking his team when the car in front was going to run dry. And the car that eventually did come second – which itself was crashed twice – took the flag looking more like race tape than automobile.

Times change but many of the players have not. Jamie Whincup was the man at the point of that race 10 years ago; he will be back this year, with the same Triple Eight team of which he is now a co-owner. The man who snatched the win away from him, Chaz Mostert, will be there too, now in a Walkinshaw Andretti United Ford Mustang. Second on that day, way back when, was James Moffat, then in a Nissan but now a Tickford Ford co-driver. Third place a decade ago went to Walkinshaw driver Nick Percat, who will race this time around for Matt Stone Racing.

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For all those changes, and even if 2023 race winner Shane van Gisbergen has moved on to NASCAR, the name of the game remains the same: beat Triple Eight and you will likely be in the hunt for a win.

That was exactly the case at Sandown last month when the team’s Chevrolet Camaros dominated the 500km race, Will Brown and new co-driver Scott Pye edging out Broc Feeney and Whincup for a 1-2 finish. To rub salt into the wounds of the opposition, T8’s wildcard entry, piloted by the now 50-year-old Craig Lowndes and rising star Cooper Murray, finished fifth.

Mostert led home to a stunning victory at Bathurst a decade ago

Mostert led home to a stunning victory at Bathurst a decade ago

Photo by: Daniel Kalisz / Motorsport Images

Mistakes will be crucial. Some of the fancied runners – Mostert, both Erebus Motorsport and Dick Johnson Racing entries – took themselves out of contention for the win at Sandown with self-inflicted mistakes or mechanical dramas, while the previously unfancied PremiAir pair of James Golding/David Russell took third place. Youth is all well and good but, sometimes, there is no substitute for a safe pair of hands.

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There will be other curveballs. This will be the second Bathurst 1000 for the Gen3 Chevrolets and Fords, introduced at the start of last season. But at Bathurst a year ago the cars raced on the softer of Dunlop’s control tyres, which led to a build-up of marbles from mid-race and a one-line race track. This time the cars will be on Dunlop’s sturdier control rubber, but there will be another variable – a new, softer wet tyre – so if it rains, the teams will be driving into the unknown.

Most teams will have to take into account new driving combinations; of the 26 cars entered only seven will feature the same pair of drivers as a year ago

Likewise, there is a new Virtual Safety Car regulation to deal with. Even though it has featured widely in other forms of the sport, the VSC for Supercars was introduced only at Sandown, and it took some of the teams time to adjust their race strategies; how will they cope on the longest track on the calendar?

And then most teams will have to take into account new driving combinations; of the 26 cars entered only seven will feature the same pair of drivers as a year ago. Those are just the known unknowns, rather than the unknown unknowns, which Mount Panorama always seems to throw up.

Perhaps we will give the last word to the co-driver who took third place in 2014. Asked if he had ever seen a race like that one, he replied: “I’ve never even heard of a race like that one!” That driver was Oliver Gavin who, in his long career, had seen just about everything there is to see in motor racing. Bathurst can be like that – roll on this weekend’s 2024 edition.

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With no van Gisbergen on the grid, who will strike gold at this year's Bathurst 1000?

With no van Gisbergen on the grid, who will strike gold at this year’s Bathurst 1000?

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Terland scores stunner as Man Utd beat Spurs

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Terland scores stunner as Man Utd beat Spurs

Elisabeth Terland scores her first two goals in Manchester United colours to help them cruise to a 3-0 win over Tottenham in the Women’s Super League.

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Football

Shaw scores twice as Man City go top of WSL

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Shaw scores twice as Man City go top of WSL



Watch highlights as Manchester City come from behind against Liverpool to regain the top spot in the Women’s Super League.



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How Reddick survived the Roval

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After winning the opening stage by staying out, Tyler Reddick restarted deep in the field for Stage 2. When Austin Dillon spun in the tight Turn 7 just ahead, Reddick was entering the corner too hot and started to slide out of control. Reddick was slowed by slamming doors with his car owner and fellow Toyota driver Denny Hamlin, an act that lifted the No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota completely off the ground and bending a toelink.

“Yeah, I thought I was gonna flip,” said Reddick post-race. “I think I was behind the No. 19 [Martin Truex Jr.] just trying to work the move to the inside. I got clear of him —  I saw the No. 3 [Dillon] spun and everybody was on the binders coming to a stop. Of course, me and my boss [Hamlin] get together. Felt like I was gonna do a front flip — this thing was absolutely destroyed. Just real hats off to everybody on this Monster Energy Camry. This thing couldn’t go four seconds of what the pace was. And we just kept working on it and we made it a lot better for Stage 3.”

 

The team managed to keep the car on the lead lap while fixing the damage to the rear of the car, replacing the right-rear toelink. He missed out on Stage 2 points, putting him in an uncomfortable position for the final half of the race.

It looked like he would be chasing aftter Chase Elliott for the final transfer spot, but he eventually got out of reach as the Hendrick Motorsports climbed up through the field. When Austin Dillon lost a wheel late in the race, it set up the final restart with 26 laps to go.

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The final charge

Reddick’s crew chief Bill Scott made the aggressive call to give up track position and pit for fresh tires, restarting the race in 26th place, 14 points behind Joey Logano. The problem for Logano is that he was already running inside the top-five, so there wasn’t much else he could do pad his margin with one position equalling one point.

To make matters worse, road course aces A.J. Allmendinger and Shane van Gisbergen ran Logano down with fresh tires and pushed him to the backend of the top-ten.

Meanwhile, Reddick was flying. He nearly spun out with 20 laps to go, instead turning Daniel Hemric as the two cars collided in the same corner where Reddick crashed earlier. This time, Reddick escaped mostly unscathed. He continued his charge without hesitation. On Lap 100 of 109, he finally passed none other than his boss — Hamlin — this time without running into the side of him, finally moving above the cut-line with only nine laps to spare.

Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing, DraftKings Toyota Camry

Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing, DraftKings Toyota Camry

Photo by: Nigel Kinrade / NKP / Motorsport Images

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At the checkered flag, Reddick had driven from 26th to 11th on track while Logano fell back to eighth. By just four points, the driver of the No. 45 moved onward to the penultimate round while the two-time Cup champion was eliminated.

“It’s tough but you just got to stay calm, stay focused,” said Reddick. “In those moments, it’s so easy to lose track of what you can control. Either way, I was going to drive the car as fast as I could. It just worked out for us. This thing was able to get back up through the field and get us to the good side of the NASCAR cut-line.”

23XI Racing co-owner Michael Jordan, as well as Hamlin were right there to congratulate Reddick on his strong charge to the flag and surviving yet another week of playoffs eliminations.

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Horse racing tips: Templegate’s 11-4 NAP has loads more to come in bid for a quick double

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Horse racing tips: Templegate's NAP can run them into submission under a jockey who dominates in front

TEMPLEGATE tackles Monday’s racing looking for winners.

Back a horse by clicking their odds.

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SPACE NINJA (4.20 Musselburgh, nap)

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He improved when winning over course and distance last time, hitting the front a way out and fighting off the challengers. A 3lb rise looks fair for this progressive son of Kodiac. He is versatile when it comes to ground and there’s more to come.

THANKUAPPRECIATE (3.12 Windsor, nb)

Enjoyed the soft ground when going close at Chester last month. He was just a neck away at the line and this race looks no tougher. Trainer Declan Carroll is in good form and he’ll go close again.

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SOUTH PARADE (2.50 Musselburgh, treble)

Rarely runs a bad race and was less than a length away at Chester last time. She was forced wide – which is never ideal on the Roodee – and should be too good on this drop in grade.

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DESPERATE DAN (4.50 Windsor, Lucky 15)

Had five lengths in hand scoring in the mud at Nottingham last week and is hard to fault.

Templegate’s tips

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