Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Frankie Duarte obit

Frankie Duarte, former top bantamweight, dies aged 71

 He was not on the list.


Frankie Duarte, the thrill-seeking bantamweight and super-bantamweight contender from the 1970s and 80s, has passed away at the age of 71 from a brain tumor.

“A raging warrior in the ring and the most lovable person outside of it,” wrote his great friend Rich Marotta while paying tribute to Duarte. “The SoCal boxing community will miss him dearly.”

Duarte, from Santa Monica in California, started boxing at the age of 13 hoping that the sport would keep him on the straight and narrow. But Duarte, despite turning professional at 18, would frequently find himself battling his taste for fast living.

In a terrific contest, Duarte lost in five rounds to Albert Davila in a 1977 WBC bantamweight eliminator. But within two years Duarte was, by his own admission, lost to drugs.

Heroin addiction had taken hold. His mother kicked him out of the family home.

“I was living with an aunt,” Duarte told MaxBoxing in 2022. “I was strung out on heroin, I thought, ‘what am I doing?’ I dropped to my knees, and I cried. I thought, ‘this is no life’.”

What followed, in 1984, was the beginning of an incredible comeback. Trained by a young Joe Goossen, Duarte – by then widely written off – still had it all to do.

“I was making a comeback, but it wasn’t handed to me,” Duarte remembered. “I had to start back at square one. Nobody was handing anything to me. I really thought I’ll have two fights and then make enough to get a car and then get a job and be done with boxing. I really was thinking about having two fights and that was it.”

Though he would lose to Richie Sandoval, via 10-round split decision, he would beat Jesus Salad in 1986 before falling just short over the 15-round distance in a bid for Bernard Pinago’s WBA bantamweight title the following year.

But despite planning to then retire, what followed in 1987 saw him crowned as the winner of The Ring’s Comeback of the Year award when he stopped old rival Davila in a thrilling rematch.

In his last fight, in 1989, Duarte was stopped by WBC super-bantamweight boss, Daniel Zaragoza. By then, he was more than ready to walk away with an impressive 45-8-1 (33 KOs) record.

“I want to be remembered as a guy who gave fans an exciting fight,” Duarte once said. “A guy who always tried to give the fans good fights, remembered for putting on a good fight every time I got in the ring.”

Monday, May 25, 2026

Sonny Rollins obit

Sonny Rollins, Jazz’s ‘Saxophone Colossus,’ Dies at 95

 

He was not on the list.


Tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins, the “Saxophone Colossus” who was schooled by bebop’s legends as a prized sideman and became their peer as a formidable leader, improviser and composer, has died, according to a social media post from his family. No cause of death was cited; he was 95.

Sporting a burly tone, a tart sense of instrumental humor and keen melodic and harmonic ingenuity, Rollins was acknowledged as a jazz voice as groundbreaking as that of his friend and contemporary John Coltrane, with whom he unforgettably locked horns on “Tenor Madness” in 1956.

He penned such now-standard entries in the jazz book as “Airegin,” “Doxy,” “Oleo” and “St. Thomas,” the last of which was a calypso adaptation (one of several he recorded) that reflected his family’s Caribbean origins. He sported an all-encompassing knowledge of the standard repertoire, and could wring highly personalized statements from such unlikely vehicles as “Toot, Toot, Tootsie.” One of his most celebrated albums, 1957’s “Way Out West,” was built around his interpretations of cowboy songs.

Imposing, customarily taciturn and somewhat eccentric — he shaved his hair into a Mohawk style during the ’60s, long before punk fashion adopted it — the musician nicknamed “Newk” (after a resemblance to major league pitcher Don Newcombe) looked askance at the limelight, and took two protracted hiatuses from recording and performing at the height of his powers.

Over the course of a career that stretched back to the late 1940s, his stature was acknowledged with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, the Kennedy Center Honors and a National Medal of Arts.

Calling him “an invincible presence” on the 50th anniversary of his professional debut, critic Gary Giddins said Rollins was “one of the most cunning, surprising and original of jazz visionaries.”

He was born Theodore Walter Rollins in New York’s Harlem neighborhood. He began playing piano and then alto saxophone, finally taking up the tenor horn in emulation of his boyhood idol Coleman Hawkins, who lived in his neighborhood. He learned his jazz craft at Benjamin Franklin High in East Harlem, and played alongside such future stars as altoist Jackie McLean, pianist Kenny Drew and drummer Art Taylor. Through a classmate, he met pianist-composer Thelonious Monk, whose angular, puckish compositions would have an impact on his own work.

He made his recording debut at 18 in 1949 for Prestige Records in a band led by trombonist J.J. Johnson. In quick succession, he cut dates with pianist Bud Powell, the Modern Jazz Quartet, Monk and trumpeter Miles Davis, who recorded three of Rollins’ compositions at a 1954 session.

In spite of the attention his early work attracted in such glittering hard bop company, Rollins recorded only intermittently in the early ’50s, for — like many other young jazzmen who fell under the spell of star bebop altoist and notorious drug addict Charlie Parker — he had acquired a debilitating heroin habit.

He was arrested and jailed on drug charges in 1950 and for parole violation in 1953. At a ’53 Miles Davis date that paired him with Parker, the bop elder himself urged the young musician to clean up. In late 1954, he checked into the federal drug facility in Lexington, Kentucky, where he kicked his habit.

Rollins’ career took off in earnest in 1955 when he joined the august quintet led by trumpeter Clifford Brown and drummer Max Roach (who later appeared on a Prestige date led by the saxophonist). The year 1956 saw his breakout as a leader: He fronted Miles Davis’ working band (minus the trumpeter) on the Prestige album “Tenor Madness,” which featured the titular battle with Coltrane, and recorded “Saxophone Colossus,” which contained the lengthy, brilliantly imagined blues improvisation “Blue 7,” hailed by such critics as Gunther Schuller and Martin Williams as a jazz high water mark.

He also recorded for Blue Note during this period, making a mark with two volumes of “A Night at the Village Vanguard,” drawn from a pair of forceful trio sets with cut with two different rhythm sections in November 1957 at the noted New York club.

As his star continued to rise, Rollins notably recorded for a pair of West Coast-based labels, Orrin Keepnews’ Riverside and Lester Koenig’s Contemporary. His work for the former company included sideman duty on Monk’s “Brilliant Corners” (1956) and a storming trio session, “Freedom Suite” (1958). His Contemporary sides included “Way Out West” and “Sonny Rollins Meets the Contemporary Leaders” (1958), a satisfying collaboration with such California players as Barney Kessel and Hampton Hawes.

The spotlight grew too hot, however, and after the latter date Rollins dropped out of sight for nearly three years. He exercised and woodshedded, and a story in Metronome magazine revealed that he could be seen and heard playing on New York’s Williamsburg Bridge.

A 1977 television commercial for Pioneer Electronics featured Rollins performing on the bridge and re-enacting that period, although it mistook the Williamsburg Bridge for the Brooklyn Bridge.

He later told the New Yorker’s Whitney Balliett, “I found it’s a superb place to practice. Night or day. You’re up over the whole world. You can look down on the whole scene. There is the skyline, the water, the harbor. It’s a beautiful scene, a panoramic scene…You can blow as loud as you want. It makes you think. The grandeur gives you perspective.”

Upon emerging from his sabbatical, Rollins was signed to the major RCA Records in a rare, and uncommonly lucrative, deal for a jazz performer. His first two albums for the label, “The Bridge” and “What’s New?” (both 1962), were energetic and uncommonly lyrical affairs that featured the hushed guitar work of Jim Hall. The LPs also commenced his empathetic association with bassist Bob Cranshaw, who appeared on Rollins’ albums for the next half-century.

In his time off, Rollins had clearly cocked an ear to the roaring “new thing” of such exploratory musicians as Coltrane and altoist Ornette Coleman, and in the summer of 1962 he recorded a live album, “Our Man in Jazz,” at New York’s Village Gate with trumpeter Don Cherry and drummer Billy Higgins of Coleman’s group.

While Rollins more than held his own in this rarefied company, his exploration of the “free jazz” terrain proved short-lived. His other, more conservative but still expressive sets for RCA comprised a joint project with Coleman Hawkins, a recital of familiar bop tunes and a collection of standards.

A three-album stint for Impulse! Records followed; it was highlighted by “Alfie” (1966), a U.S. studio re-creation of the score he had composed and recorded with British sidemen for the soundtrack of Lewis Gilbert’s drama starring Michael Caine.

Rollins dropped out of sight again for another six years, to practice meditation and Eastern spiritual disciplines. He emerged again in 1972, when he began an association with Milestone Records that ran for nearly 30 years. While not entirely unrewarding, his time with the label found him working not always comfortably in electric settings; numbers like 1979’s “Disco Monk” did little to burnish his reputation.

Nonetheless, in 1981 he made a surprisingly fulfilling guest shot on the Rolling Stones’ album “Tattoo You,” contributing a breathtaking solo on the band’s “Waiting for a Friend.”

In 1986, filmmaker Robert Mugge released a documentary profile of Rollins, aptly titled “Saxophone Colossus.”

In his latter-day eminence, Rollins received a pair of Grammy Awards: His 2000 collection “This Is What I Do” was named best jazz instrumental album, while his playing on “Why Was I Born?” — from “Without a Song,” a live date cut shortly after the 9/11 attacks — was honored as best jazz instrumental solo.

Rollins, who lived near the World Trade Center in New York at the time, achieved a different kind of fame in the days after the 9/11 attack when CNN broadcast footage of him, horn in hand, and his neighbors waiting to be evacuated; ironically, the newscasters didn’t recognize him but some viewers did.

“I heard a big pow — I didn’t know what it was, but of course I found out a few minutes later,” Rollins told Variety in 2021. “I was living on the top floor, I think it was the 39th, and I went downstairs and everyone was on the street watching it all, completely in shock. These things like snowflakes began raining down — it was some kind of toxic stuff coming from the buildings.

“When we were evacuated the next day, I had my horn with me,” he continues. “People were looking at me strangely, because with all the police and ambulances and trucks and the army, it was like a World War II movie — and here’s me, this guy in a beret with a saxophone.”

Ironically, he nearly skipped the concert — in Boston, four nights after 9/11 — that won him the Grammy. “I told my wife, ‘I’m too messed up to make it,’ because along with everything else, I’d had to walk down 39 flights of stairs when we were evacuated,” he recalled to Variety. “But she said, ‘No, no — you must!’ And I’m glad she persuaded me, because there were other musicians from New York there, and the audience was very happy we did it. I think we sort of brought back a little sanity in the middle of all that madness.”

In 2008, he founded his own imprint, Doxy Records, which documented several of his live performances, including one in tandem with Ornette Coleman.

Rollins may have received the greatest attention of his latter-day career in 2014, when the New Yorker’s “Shouts & Murmurs” column ran a brief mock “profile,” unidentified as fiction, of the tenor player that featured fabricated quotes condemning jazz as art and lifestyle.

The jazz community went up in arms about the piece, which was quickly and apologetically relabeled as humor in the magazine’s Web edition. In an online video interview conducted in his home, Rollins himself called the story “scurrilous,” and compared it to something one might find in Mad magazine — to which, he said, he subscribed.

Rollins continued to perform regularly into the 2010s, but he was diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis and suffered respiratory issues that ultimately forced his retirement. His last public performance took place in 2012 at the Detroit Jazz Festival and officially stopped playing saxophone two years later. However, he made an appearance as himself on a 2013 episode of “The Simpsons” that also featured Tony Bennett.

In his later years, he received a National Medal of Arts from former president Barack Obama, a Kennedy Center Honor, and a honorary degree from the Julliard School in New York. His 1962 album “The Bridge” was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2015. In 2023, he sold the rights to his publishing and recorded music to Reservoir Media for an undisclosed amount.

Rollins is survived by his nephew Clifton Anderson and his nieces Vallyn Anderson and Gabrielle DeGroat. His second wife Lucille, to whom he was married for nearly 40 years, died in 2004.

No public memorial is planned at this time, according to the announcement.

Rollins said in 2009, “I think when the creative person ends, he continues in the next existence. I’m a person who believes this life isn’t the be-all and end-all of everything. A spiritual person doesn’t feel like that.”

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Manny Fernandez obit

Miami Dolphins legend Manny Fernandez dead at 79

 

He was not on the list.


Manny Fernandez, a star player with the Miami Dolphins when they won two Super Bowls, has died.

The NFL team announced his passing Tuesday morning ... saying in part, "His consistent and selfless contributions on the field were instrumental to the Dolphins' success."

In addition to his two Super Bowl rings ... the defensive lineman was part of the legendary 1972 perfect team -- as well as a member of the Ring of Honor.

Fernandez attended Chabot Junior College before enrolling at Utah ... and then signed with the Dolphins after he went undrafted.

In 2015, Yahoo! Sports ranked Fernandez as the 10th-best player of all time in Super Bowl history.

Fernandez was 79.

RIP

He played college football for the Utah Utes. He played in three consecutive Super Bowls for the Dolphins in the 1971, 1972, and 1973 seasons.

At San Lorenzo High School in San Lorenzo, California, he played football, wrestled, and threw the discus.

Fernandez attended Chabot Junior College before enrolling at Utah under head coach Mike Giddings. Fernandez wore number 65 at Utah and was a three-year letterman.

Fernandez went undrafted and signed with the Dolphins.

Fernandez was a strong contender for MVP of Super Bowl VII. Wrote Nick Buoniconti, "It was the game of his life–in fact, it was the most dominant game by a defensive lineman in the history of the game, and he would never be given much credit for it. They should have given out two game balls and made Manny Fernandez the co-MVP with Jake Scott." Larry Csonka also said he thought Fernandez should have been the MVP. The MVP was selected by Dick Schaap, the editor of Sport magazine. Schaap admitted later that he had been out late the previous night, struggled to watch the defense-dominated game, and was not aware that Fernandez had 17 tackles. Fernandez also recorded a sack against the Washington Redskins' quarterback Billy Kilmer.

"Winning the car never entered my mind until I heard that Jake won it," Fernandez said in the January 1974 issue of Sport magazine.[4] "I was happy for Jake, he played a helluva game for a guy who was healthy but he had two bad shoulders."

The following year, Fernandez recorded 5 tackles and 1 sack in Super Bowl VIII against the Minnesota Vikings. Two years earlier, Fernandez recorded 6 tackles, 1 sack and recovered a fumble in the Dolphins loss to the Dallas Cowboys. In his three Super Bowls Fernandez recorded three sacks and 28 tackles.

For his career Fernandez had 35 career sacks, a high number for a nose tackle, with a career high of 8 in 1971, which led the Dolphins.[5] In Dolphin history only one nose tackle (Bob Baumhower: 39.5) recorded more sacks. Fernandez recorded 5.5 sacks in post-season play which is currently 3rd in Dolphins history behind defensive ends Kim Bokamper (8) and Trace Armstrong (6).

Fernandez was 2nd team All-Pro in 1970 and 1973, and an All-AFC selection in 1971 and a second-team All-AFC choice in 1972 and 1973, marking four consecutive season with post-season honors. Fernandez is also credited with being one of the first nose tackles in the NFL, since the Dolphins played the famed "53" defense (which was a 3–4 defense) in 1972 through 1974, which put Manny over the center. Likely, no team played the 3–4 defense more until the New England Patriots when went to the 3–4 full-time in 1974.

In 2007 was voted to the Dolphins All-Time team. Fernandez had previously been voted to the 1990 Dolphins Silver Anniversary Team that celebrated the Dolphins' 25 years in the NFL. From 1968 through 1973 Fernandez was voted as the Dolphins' "Outstanding Defensive Lineman", even though Pro Bowlers like Bill Stanfill and Vern Den Herder were on the same line.

In January 2001, Fernandez was named to Pro Football Weekly's All-Time Super Bowl team. In 2006, USA Today named him to their All-time Super Bowl team.

In 2013, President Barack Obama honored the entire 1972 Perfect Season Dolphins at an event in the White House, but Fernandez declined to attend. He told sports columnist Dave Hyde of Ft. Lauderdale's Sun Sentinel "I'll just say my views are diametrically opposed to the President's... Enough said. Let's leave it at that. I hope everyone enjoys the trip who goes."

On December 21, 2014, Fernandez was inducted into the Miami Dolphin Honor Roll at Sun Life Stadium. On January 30, 2014, Frank Schwab from Yahoo! Sports ranked Manny Fernandez as the tenth-best player of all time in the past 48 Super Bowls

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Brian Large obit

Obituary: Television Producer Brian Large Dies at 87

 

He was not on the list.


On May 23, 2026, Brian James Large has died at the age of 87.

Born on Feb. 16, 1939 in London, England, Large went on to study at the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Academy in 1991.

After graduating from the University of London with doctorates in both music and philosophy, he did postgraduate work in Vienna and Prague and there he gained an interest in Czech and Slavic operas which resulted in the publication of two volumes on the music of Bedřich Smetana and Bohuslav Martinů.

From 1965 to 1980, Large worked with BBC2 television as a director with responsibility for music and opera and was appointed chief opera producer in 1970.

During that period he televised many productions including “Idomeneo,” “Peter Grimes,” “La traviata,” “Macbeth,” and “Amahl and the Night Visitors,” among others.

In 1966 the BBC commissioned an opera for television from Benjamin Britten and in August 1970, Large directed “Owen Wingrave” for broadcast on BBC2.

Large also directed many broadcast for the Royal Opera House including “Les Contes d’Hoffmann,” “La bohème,” “Don Carlo,” “Il trovatore,” “Tosca,” “Aida,” “Otello,” and the Bayreuth Festival including the famed Patrice Chereau production of “Der Ring des Nibelungen.”

He also directed for the Vienna State Opera, Salzburg Festival, Vienna Volksoper, Theater an der Wien, Glyndebourne, Teatro alla Scala, Bregenz Festival, Arena di Verona, and Mariinsky Theatre.

Starting in 1979, Large directed over 80 operas, recitals, and gala-telecasts from the Metropolitan Opera New York. He also worked the Los Angeles Opera, San Francisco Opera, Houston Grand Opera, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Washington National Opera and Philadelphia Opera.

Large won two primetime Emmy Awards for the 1992 Metropolitan Opera Silver Anniversary Gala and in 1993 for the live transmission of “Tosca” conducted by Zubin Mehta.

He was also a recipient of the Peabody Award and the British Television Society award for “Best Television Director.” In 1985, the French government named Large a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.

In 2020, OperaWire spoke to Large in which he said, “I feel especially honored to have created what I consider to be a piece of “television history” that documents the musical quality and standards of Met productions in the last years of the 20th century.”

Charlie Moore obit

Charlie Moore, a key member of 'Harvey's Wallbangers,' passes away at 72

 He was not on the list.


MILWAUKEE -- Charlie “Butch” Moore, who played 14 seasons with the Brewers and was the starting right-fielder on the beloved 1982 “Harvey’s Wallbangers” World Series team, died Saturday at the age of 72.

Though primarily a catcher for most of his 15-year career, his reliability and versatility secured him a key everyday role on the American League pennant-winning squad that would go on to make the franchise’s one and only appearance in the World Series, losing four games to three to the St. Louis Cardinals.

The Brewers held a moment of silence for Moore before their game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at American Family Field on Sunday.

Moore’s death was first announced by the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame, where Moore was a 2025 inductee.

The Brewers drafted Moore out of Minor High School, located in the Birmingham suburb of Adamsville, in the fifth round of the 1971 MLB Draft. He made his debut with the Brewers on Sept. 8, 1973.

Moore also spent one season with the Toronto Blue Jays. In 2014, he was named to the All-Time Alabama Baseball Team and the Milwaukee Brewers Wall of Honor.

Moore hit .262 with 35 homers and 401 RBIs in 1,283 games with the Brewers.

Only Robin Yount, Paul Molitor, Jim Gantner, Ryan Braun and Cecil Cooper have played more regular-season games in a Brewers uniform than Moore, who made starts at catcher and all three outfield positions -- mostly right field.

It was from his right-field position that Moore authored one of his signature moments for the Brewers, throwing out Reggie Jackson at third base in a pivotal moment of Milwaukee’s win over the Angels in decisive Game 5 of the 1982 ALCS. But most of Moore’s action -- 892 games -- came as a catcher.

On Oct. 1, 1980, Moore hit for the cycle against the Angels and stole two bases. Moore was the first player since at least 1900 to hit for the cycle and steal two bases in the same game. Cavan Biggio and Trea Turner are the only two players to have joined him with this accomplishment since.

Moore attended Minor High School in his hometown of Birmingham, Alabama and played quarterback on the football team. He originally planned to attend Auburn University on a football scholarship, but in June 1971 was selected by the Milwaukee Brewers in the fifth round of the 1971 MLB draft and elected to play professional baseball instead. He played in the Brewers' minor league system from 1971 through 1973, with the short season Class A Newark Co-Pilots (1971), Single-A Danville Warriors (1972), Double-A Shreveport Captains (1973), and Triple-A Evansville Triplets (1973).

During the 1976 season, he appeared in 87 games, batting .191 with three home runs and 16 RBIs. On October 3, 1976, at Milwaukee County Stadium, Moore was the last runner batted in by Hank Aaron, crossing the plate on Aaron's sixth-inning single in the Brewers' 5–2 loss to the Detroit Tigers. He also played for the Toronto Blue Jays.

Eugene Cussons obit

Conservation hero Eugene Cussons dies after a paramotor crash

Eugene Cussons, a popular conservationist, has died in a paramotor accident near Hartbeespoort Dam, leaving a lasting legacy. 

He was not on the list.


The conservation world is mourning the loss of Eugene Cussons, one of South Africa’s best-known wildlife protectors.

He died on 23 May after a paramotor accident near Hartbeespoort Dam. He was 47.

A family member is quoted in news reports as saying the accident occurred during an event at a new airfield near Hartbeespoort.

Grief spread across South Africa and beyond, because Cussons had spent decades fighting for animals that could not defend themselves.

WHO WAS EUGENE CUSSONS?

Eugene Cussons became known through Escape to Chimp Eden, the Animal Planet series that followed his rescue missions across Africa.

The programme first aired in 2008 and introduced viewers to the harsh realities of wildlife trafficking, illegal captivity and war-zone rescues.

Cussons served as managing director of Chimp Eden, the sanctuary linked to the Jane Goodall Institute in Mpumalanga. He worked as Rescue Director for the institute in South Africa, where he coordinated missions involving abused and abandoned chimpanzees.

His work often took him into unstable regions, including Angola and Sudan. There, he rescued primates from smugglers, conflict zones and illegal traders.

Those efforts later formed the basis of his book, Saving Chimpanzees: A Man on A Rescue Mission.

EUGENE CUSSONS’ CONTRIBUTION TO CONSERVATION

Cussons believed conservation needed both action and education. He founded Generation Now Africa, a youth initiative aimed at developing future conservation leaders across the continent.

He also launched The Eugene Cussons Podcast, where he discussed poaching, habitat destruction and environmental solutions. His approach connected younger audiences to conservation at a time when wildlife crime continues to threaten African biodiversity.

While Africa loses thousands of rhinos to poaching, South Africa has recently reported declines in poaching figures because of stronger enforcement and technology-driven monitoring.

Cussons pushed that technology further through Nirvana Africa, the aviation and powered paragliding company he founded.

The company supported anti-poaching patrols and aerial operations, particularly around rhino protection.

Nirvana Africa said it operated specialised paramotor missions alongside authorities in areas including the Kruger National Park.

A LEGACY THAT WILL OUTLIVE THE LOSS

Friends and relatives describe Cussons as deeply guided by faith, compassion and purpose. Yet many people will remember him for his calm presence in dangerous situations and his refusal to abandon vulnerable animals.

He leaves behind his family, as well as a conservation legacy that stretched from rescue centres to African skies.

In short, Eugene Cussons represented a conservationist willing to risk comfort, safety and even his life so humans and animals alike might have a future.

And while paramotoring remained one of his passions, it was his relentless protection of wildlife that defined his life.

He was also the host of Animal Planet's Escape to Chimp Eden, author of the book Saving Chimpanzees and was the executive director and Ambassador of the "Generation Now" movement.

Eugene Cussons was born in the Transvaal province of South Africa on 6 July 1979. For generations, the Cussons family has been deeply rooted in the African conservation ethic, and Eugene grew up with a special appreciation for African wildlife. He studied business management and economics at the University of Pretoria.


Phil Aaberg obit

Montana pianist Phil Aaberg dies after being hospitalized for pneumonia

 He was not on the list.


MISSOULA, Mont. — Nationally renowned pianist Phil Aaberg has died at the age of 77 years old.

Aaberg's family confirmed his death on social media, saying he passed away Saturday evening surrounded by loved ones.

The Montana musician had been admitted to the ICU in Minneapolis due to health complications related to pneumonia and chemotherapy treatments.

He was born and raised in the small town of Chester.

Aaberg was a Grammy and Emmy-nominated composer as well as a producer.

He gained international recognition through a series of successful piano recordings released on Windham Hill Records. Although classically trained, Aaberg incorporates classical, jazz, bluegrass, rock, and new music elements into his compositions and musical structures. Although best known for his solo piano work, he is most at home in the chamber jazz genre. His compositions are noted for their "rigorous keyboard technique, diverse influences, and colorful compositional style.

Aaberg was born in Havre, Montana, in 1949, and raised in Chester, Montana. By the age of 14, he was performing with local bands at dances. Aaberg won a Leonard Bernstein Scholarship to study music at Harvard. After receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree in music from Harvard, he moved to Oakland, California and played in blues clubs for several years. He also toured and recorded as a member of Elvin Bishop's Group at the time of its greatest popularity, and co-wrote the title song of the band's 1976 Struttin' My Stuff release, an album which also included Bishop's biggest hit, "Fooled Around and Fell in Love," featuring Aaberg on piano.

In 1985, Aaberg signed a recording contract with Windham Hill Records and released a solo album titled High Plains. He followed this up with three more solo albums: Out of the Frame (1988), Upright (1989), Cinema (1992). Aaberg also appeared regularly on the Windham Hill Sampler albums over the past 20 years and has had success in various collaborations and ensemble projects.

Aaberg has performed with the Boston Pops Orchestra and has appeared at the Marlboro Chamber Music Festival. As a guest artist, he has performed on over 200 albums and on PBS's All-American Jazz program, which earned him an Emmy Award nomination. He has appeared with Peter Gabriel and Tom Johnston of the Doobie Brothers in concert.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Rob Base obit

Rob Base, “It Takes Two” Rapper, Dies at 59

"Rob’s music, energy, and legacy helped shape a generation and brought joy to millions around the world," read a statement shared to his Instagram. 

He was not on the list.


Rob Base, the rapper best known for his hit track “It Takes Two” with DJ E-Z Rock, has died. He was 59.

Base died Friday surrounded by his family, after a private battle with cancer.

“Today, we share the heartbreaking news that hip hop legend Rob Base passed away peacefully on May 22, 2026, surrounded by family after a private battle with cancer,” a post on his official Instagram account reads. “Rob’s music, energy and legacy helped shape a generation and brought joy to millions around the world. Beyond the stage, he was a loving father, family man, friend and creative force whose impact will never be forgotten. Thank you for the music, the memories and the moments that became the soundtrack to our lives.”

Born May 18, 1967, Base began his career in hip-hop alongside DJ E-Z Rock (whose real name is Rodney Bryce). They released their single “It Takes Two” in 1988, which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart. Its accompanying album, also titled It Takes Two, landed at No. 4 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and went platinum.

Their follow-up to the single, “Get on the Dance Floor,” also spawned success; it peaked at the top spot on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart, and landed at No. 11 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

Base released his debut solo album, The Incredible Base, in 1989. The album landed on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart at No. 20. He and DJ E-Z Rock, who died in 2014, rejoined forces on their 1994 record Break of Dawn.

The rapper was recently part of the I Love the ’90’s Tour, which tapped a slate of performers from the era, including Vanilla Ice, All 4 One, Color Me Badd, Tone Loc and more.

Grizz Chapman obit

Grizz Chapman Dies: ’30 Rock’ Actor Was 52

 

He was not on the list.


Grizzwald ‘Grizz’ Chapman, the fan-favorite 30 Rock star who played Grizz on the NBC sitcom for its seven-season run, has died. He was 52.

The actor’s agent Renee Glicker confirmed to Deadline that Chapman died on Friday. Other details, including a cause of death, were not immediately made available.

“We are very sad for his family and friends and for all who knew him and worked with him,” said Glicker. “For all seven feet, 380 lbs of him, he was a very sweet man who loved his family very much. He enjoyed working on 30 Rock every minute. His poor health curtailed his career unfortunately.”

Chapman previously struggled with kidney disease and was a spokesperson for the National Kidney Foundation.

Born April 16, 1974 in Brooklyn, Chapman was known for towering at seven feet tall. He was working as a bouncer at a strip club when he met Tracy Morgan, who cast Chapman and Kevin Brown as his self-referential character Tracy Jordan’s two confidants Grizz and Dot Com in 30 Rock, which ran from 2006 to 2013.

In addition to creating his own YouTube variety series Grizz Chronicles, Chapman appeared in episodes of Blue Bloods, The Blacklist and The Good Fight.

In his commentary for the episode "Tracy Does Conan", Tracy Morgan revealed that they met when Chapman was working as a bouncer at a strip club. Chapman and fellow 30 Rock actor Kevin Brown were featured in season six on an episode of Hidden Potential, a home remodelling show on HGTV.

Chapman lived in the Washington, D.C., suburb of Woodbridge, Virginia. On December 2, 2024, his home was destroyed when a crash sent a tractor-trailer slamming into it. Chapman was not home but many of his belongings were damaged.

Actor

Use Me: The Life of Guy Whitcam

Alex

Post-production

 

Denielle M. Gray, Tim Victor, and Lynette Elouise in Diving in Stilettos First (2021)

Diving in Stilettos First

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Mover

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We the Internet TV (2015)

We the Internet TV

7.6

TV Series

InmateKmaha ChithiTT Gibbs

2018

3 episodes

 

Christine Baranski and Audra McDonald in The Good Fight (2017)

The Good Fight

8.3

TV Series

Bouncer

2018

1 episode

 

George Clooney, Julia Roberts, and Jack O'Connell in Money Monster (2016)

Money Monster

6.5

Network Security Guard

2016

 

Angela Cohen and Kelsey O'Brien in It's All About Me (2016)

It's All About Me

Short

Scott the Sommelier

2016

 

Alistair's Wednesday (2015)

Alistair's Wednesday

Short

Henry Finn Oliver

2015

 

Mismanagement

TV Series

Mack

2015

1 episode

 

Common Sense Police (2013)

Common Sense Police

8.8

TV Series

Booby Von Dark

2014–2015

5 episodes

 

#Lucky Number (2015)

#Lucky Number

5.0

Bouncer at Decadence

2015

 

The Blacklist (2013)

The Blacklist

7.9

TV Series

Jenkins

2015

1 episode

 

Common Sense Police

Video

Booby Von Dark

2014

 

John and Geoff are Married

TV Mini Series

2014

 

Adam Sandler in The Cobbler (2014)

The Cobbler

5.8

Tino

2014

 

Are You Joking? (2014)

Are You Joking?

5.2

Big Pete

2014

 

Step 9

TV Series

Lupe

2014

1 episode

 

That Fucking Elevator

Short

Murray

2014

 

Hypebeasts (2013)

Hypebeasts

6.6

Short

Jim

2013

 

Home (2013)

Home

7.4

Big G

2013

 

Bobby Moynihan, Chris Gethard, and Neil Casey in The Side Car (2012)

The Side Car

TV Series

Guy at the barBruce

2013

1 episode

 

Life of the Party (2013)

Life of the Party

Fake Cee Lo

2013

 

Tom Selleck, Bridget Moynahan, Donnie Wahlberg, and Will Estes in Blue Bloods (2010)

Blue Bloods

7.7

TV Series

Tiny Giondo

2013

1 episode

 

Alec Baldwin, Jane Krakowski, Tina Fey, Tracy Morgan, and Jack McBrayer in 30 Rock (2006)

30 Rock

8.3

TV Series

Grizz

2006–2013

80 episodes

 

UCB Comedy Originals (2007)

UCB Comedy Originals

5.5

TV Series

2012

1 episode

 

30 Rock: Livin' XL with Grizz & Dotcom

TV Series

Grizz

2010

4 episodes

 

Soundtrack

Alec Baldwin, Jane Krakowski, Tina Fey, Tracy Morgan, and Jack McBrayer in 30 Rock (2006)

30 Rock

8.3

TV Series

performer: "Midnight Train to Georgia" (uncredited)

2008

1 episode

 

Self

30 Rock (2006)

A One-Time Special

4.7

TV Special

Self - Grizz

2020

 

The Chris Gethard Show: Public Access (2011)

The Chris Gethard Show: Public Access

8.6

TV Series

Self

2012–2014

4 episodes

 

Big Evening Buzz with Carrie Keagan (2012)

Big Evening Buzz with Carrie Keagan

TV Series

Self - Guest

2012

1 episode

 

The Mo'Nique Show (2009)

The Mo'Nique Show

4.4

TV Series

Self

2011

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Mimi Fischer in The Chris Gethard Show: Public Access Web Videos (2011)

The Chris Gethard Show: Public Access Web Videos

TV Series

Self (archive footage)

2014

1 episode

 


Dick Parry obit

Dick Parry Dies: Sax Player On Pink Floyd Classics ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ & ‘Wish You Were Here’ Was 83

 

He was not on the list.


Dick Parry, whose saxophone solos on Pink Floyd‘s classic albums The Dark Side of the Moon and Wish You Were Here helped places such songs as “Money”, “Us and Them” and “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” in the classic rock firmament, died May 22. He was 83.

His death was announced by David Gilmour, the singer-guitarist of Pink Floyd’s iconic line-up and a lifelong friend. No cause of death was stated.

“My dear friend Dick Parry died this morning,” Gilmour wrote on Instagram (see the post below). “Since I was seventeen, I have played in bands with Dick on saxophone, including Pink Floyd. His feel and tone make his saxophone playing unmistakable, a signature of enormous beauty that is known to millions and is such a big part of songs such as Shine On You Crazy Diamond, Wish You Were Here, Us and Them and Money. He played in the last band I had that included Rick Wright for the On An Island Tour and at Live 8 with Pink Floyd.”

In his post, Gilmour shared photos of the two friends through the years, including one at a performance in Cambridge 1963.

In addition to 1973’s Dark Side of the Moon and 1975’s Wish You Were Here, Parry contributed saxophone on such albums as Let’s Make Up and Be Friendly by Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band (1972), Mad Dog by The Who’s John Entwistle (1975), Love Is a Five Letter Word by Jimmy Witherspoon (1975), and Jinx by Rory Gallagher (1982), among others.

He appeared on other Pink Floyd albums The Division Bell (1994) and Pulse (1995), as well as several Gilmour solo albums in the early 2000s. A recording of a 1974 Floyd concert was released in 2023 as The Dark Side of the Moon Live at Wembley 1974. He also played sax for The Who during the band’s tours in 1979 and 1980.

Born in Kentford, Suffolk on December 22, 1942, Parry launched his career as a professional musician in the early- to mid-1960s as part of the Cambridge-based band The Soul Committee. It was in Cambridge where he met Gilmour, who played for another local band. Gilmour would later invite Parry to Pink Floyd’s recording sessions, where Parry would create the sax solos that brought a mesmerizing, dreamy quality to “Us and Them” and “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” and a down-and-dirty grit to “Money,” sounds that became an indelible part of the decade’s progressive FM landscape and remain so on today’s classic rock radio.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

John Fabian obit

John Fabian, NASA astronaut who was first to catch a satellite, dies 

He was not on the list.

 


May 22, 2026 — Former NASA astronaut John Fabian, who in 1983 became the first person to deploy and then retrieve a free-flying satellite, has died at 87.

Fabian's death on Thursday (May 21) was reported by the Association of Space Explorers, the professional society for international astronauts and cosmonauts, which counted him among their distinguished members.

Selected as a NASA astronaut candidate in 1978 in the same 35-member group as the first female and minority trainees, Fabian flew twice into space. On his first mission, he launched on June 18, 1983 aboard the space shuttle Challenger as a fellow mission specialist with Sally Ride, the first U.S. woman to enter space.

Fabian's other crewmates on STS-7 included commander Bob Crippen, pilot Rick Hauck and mission specialist Norm Thagard. Prior to being assigned to the mission, Fabian, Thagard and Ride worked together on the development of the Canadarm, the shuttle's remote manipulator system contributed by the Canadian Space Agency.

"The manipulator is an intuitive thing. It really is quite easy to use, but it's also a little bit intimidating, because you've got this thing which is 50 feet long out there in the cargo bay, and if you're not careful, you could punch a hole in the wing or do something really stupid with it," said Fabian in a 2006 NASA oral history interview. "So learning how to operate it and learning what constraints need to be applied to that operation was kind of a part of the job that we set out to do."

He put his training to use on Challenger, when he used the robotic arm to let free the first shuttle pallet satellite (SPAS-1) as built by the West German aerospace firm MBB (Messerschmitt-Bölkow-Blohm). The platform carried material science and remote sensing experiments as well as a mass spectrometer to confirm the presence of gases in the orbiter's cargo hold.

"The most fun was using the robot arm to put the German satellite, the SPAS-01, out and then fly around it, practicing formation flying, and ultimately retrieval," said Fabian. "I did the retrieval and the deployment in the morning, and Sally did the one in the afternoon, so we split that."

Before being retrieved, SPAS-01 was also used to capture the first-ever photo in full of a winged spacecraft in orbit. The Canadarm was also posed to resemble the number "7" in reference to their mission designation.

"We worked hard on that. We really worked hard on that," said Fabian. "And we didn't tell anybody about this, of course. We had this on kind of a back-of-our-hand type of procedure, what angles each joint had to be in order for it to look like that."

"I was real proud of that," Fabian said. "It gave you a really strong indication that this is a spaceship we're talking about here."

The scene, from a different viewpoint, was repeated on their mission patch.

Fabian and his STS-7 crewmates also became the first astronauts to eat jelly beans in space, courtesy of the then-President of the United States Ronald Reagan. A noted fan of the candy, Reagan gifted them each with a jar during a pre-flight visit to the White House.

Challenger landed at Edwards Air Force Base in California on June 24, 1983, six days after it left the ground.

Close approaches

"I will tell you that I flew twice in space, and this is by far my favorite of the two flights. It's not only because it was the first. It was because of the people that I flew with," Fabian told his NASA interviewer, historian Jennifer Ross-Nazzal.

"Clearly, the vehicle is much more comfortable, much more fun, with five people in the front cockpit instead of seven in the front cockpit," he said. "On my second flight, we did a lot of the same kinds of things that we did on the first flight, letting a satellite out and going out and getting it so some of the uniqueness of the experience was gone on the second flight. But, this [STS-7] was just a joy, and I think at least 60 or 70 percent of that joy was working with this group of people."

Fabian's STS-51G crewmates included commander Dan Brandenstein, pilot John Creighton, mission specialists Shannon Lucid and Steven Nagel and payload specialists Patrick Baudry and Sultan Salman Al-Saud. Baudry, flying on behalf of CNES, was the second French citizen in space. Al-Saud was the first Arab, first Muslim and the first member of a royal family to fly into space.

Together, they lifted off aboard space shuttle Discovery on June 17, 1985.

"There were certain things, because of the seven-person crew and because of having two payload specialists and having three nationalities represented, which made it substantially different in terms of operation and tone than the first flight, but most of those were positive. Most of those differences were positive, not all, but most of them were," said Fabian.

STS-51G deployed three communications satellites into Earth orbit and temporarily released a free-flyer supporting astronomy studies (SPARTAN-1 or Shuttle Pointed Autonomous Research Tool for AstroNomy-1).

"The deployment was routine, at least it appeared to be," said Fabian. "But when we came back in to retrieve it, it was out of attitude. It was supposed to be in an attitude which would be easy for us to just fly up to and grab, and it turned out that the grapple fixture, instead of being out of plane to the two vehicles so that we could just go in and get it, was on top. So we were faced with a problem of trying to figure out just exactly what to do."

Relying on the training he received in the ground simulators (which he had helped develop), Fabian used the robotic arm to reach over the top of the SPARTAN and grab it from the top, just after Brandenstein flew the shuttle on a close approach so the arm was able to reach.

Fabian landed for his second time at Edwards exactly two years after his first return from space, on June 24, 1985. Over the course of his two shuttle missions, he logged 13 days, 4 hours and 3 minutes off the planet.

Two-flight limit

John McCreary Fabian was born on Jan. 28, 1939, in Goose Creek, Texas, but considered Pullman, Washington to be his hometown. He received a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering from Washington State University in 1962; a master of science degree in aerospace engineering from the U.S. Air Force Institute of Technology in 1964; and a Ph.D. in aeronautics and astronautics from the University of Washington in 1974.

An Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps student while at Washington State, he was commissioned after graduating. He attended flight training at Williams Air Force Base in Arizona, and spent five years flying KC-135 refueling tankers as co-pilot, aircraft commander and instructor at Wurtsmith Air Force Base in Michigan.

Fabian flew 90 combat missions during the Vietnam War. Following additional graduate work at the University of Washington, he served four years on the faculty of the Aeronautics Department at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado, where he was a tenured associate professor and was it was there when he was accepted by NASA as member of the agency's eighth group of astronauts.

In total, Fabian had 4,000 hours flying time, including 3,400 hours in jet aircraft.

After STS-51G, Fabian had been scheduled to fly on STS-61G in May 1986, and was also in training for space shuttle life science mission SLS-1. Instead, 27 days prior to the Challenger tragedy (and his 47th birthday), he left NASA to become the director of space and deputy chief of staff, plans and operations for the U.S. Air Force.

"My wife told me that my marriage had a two-flight limit, and I believed her," Fabian said. "It wasn't that I was looking for a job or wanted to go do something else. I was going to go do something because I couldn't continue to do this."

When Challenger was lost, Fabian found a position on the accident board, studying what had caused the vehicle to break apart. He retired from the Air Force with the rank of colonel in June 1987 and joined Analytic Services, a non-profit aerospace public service research institute, from which he retired as president and chief executive officer in 1998.

Fabian then became a public speaker and frequent participant in the "Astronaut Encounter" events at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida.

For his service to the U.S. space program, Fabian was awarded the NASA Space Flight and Exceptional Public Service medals, among other honors.

Fabian is preceded in death by his brother, Bill, who was killed while flying as a forward air controller during the Vietnam War, and three of his shuttle crewmates, Rick Hauck, Sally Ride and Steve Nagel. He is survived by his wife, Donna, two children, Michael and Amy, and three three grandchildren.

Kyle Busch obit

Kyle Busch, two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, dies at 41

 

He was not on the list.


May 21 (Reuters) - Kyle Busch, a generational talent ‌whose aggressive driving style earned him the nickname "Rowdy" and won him two NASCAR Cup Series championships, has died at the age of 41, his family announced on Thursday.

News of his death came just hours after ​Busch's family released a statement saying he had been hospitalized with a severe ​illness.

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"We are devastated to announce the sudden and tragic passing of ⁠Kyle Busch," his family, Richard Childress Racing and NASCAR said in a joint statement.

"Our ​entire NASCAR family is heartbroken by the loss of Kyle Busch. A future Hall of ​Famer, Kyle was a rare talent, one who comes along once in a generation.

"He was fierce, he was passionate, he was immensely skilled and he cared deeply about the sport and fans."

Busch was ​in his 22nd full-time season in NASCAR's top division, where he won two Cup ​Series titles (2015, 2019) and 63 races - a figure that ranks ninth on the circuit’s all-time win ‌list.

"Absolutely cannot ⁠comprehend this news," fellow driver and rival Denny Hamlin said on social media.

"We just need to think of his family during this time. We love you KB."

Born in Las Vegas, Busch entered the sport as a brash teenager with the nickname "Shrub" as the younger brother ​to Hall of Fame ​driver Kurt Busch.

But ⁠the alias of "Rowdy" - a nod to one of the main characters in the film "Days of Thunder" due to his aggressive style - ​is what stuck with him.

Busch got his start with Hendrick Motorsports ​as a ⁠heralded rookie, joined Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008, establishing a long-running partnership that made him the face of Toyota’s NASCAR endeavors, and spent the final stages of his career with ⁠Childress, ​arriving in 2023 and taking the reins of the ​No. 8 Chevrolet.

Busch is survived by his parents and his wife, Samantha, and children Brexton and Lennix.

He most notably driving the No. 18 (for the NASCAR Cup Series), No. 51 (primarily for the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series), and No. 54 (for the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series and occasionally the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series) Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing and Kyle Busch Motorsports between 2008 and 2023; Busch last competed full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 8 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Richard Childress Racing and part-time in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, driving the No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado RST for Spire Motorsports. Busch was the younger brother of 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series champion Kurt Busch.

Born and raised into a racing family in Las Vegas, Nevada, Busch began helping work on race cars as a child before moving into competitive driving in go-karts and short-track racing during his adolescence. By his early teens, he was already winning local championships; Busch’s rapid rise through stock car racing caught the attention of major teams. He made his national NASCAR debut in 2001 in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, competing for Roush Racing. In 2003, he joined Hendrick Motorsports as a development driver and later advancing to NASCAR's major touring series. Busch remained with Hendrick Motorsports through the 2007 season before joining Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008, where he competed through 2022 and achieved the most successful stretch of his career. In 2023, he moved to Richard Childress Racing, continuing his career with the organization until his death in 2026.

Known for his dominance across NASCAR's top three divisions series, Busch is widely regarded as one of the most accomplished and talented drivers in motorsports history. At the time of his death, he ranked ninth on the all-time NASCAR Cup Series wins list and first in overall wins between the top three NASCAR divisions. Amongst his various accolades, Busch was the 2009 NASCAR Nationwide Series champion and a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, winning titles in 2015 and 2019, and was named as one of the NASCAR's 75 Greatest Drivers class in 2023. He was also the recipient of several awards, including two NASCAR Rookie of the Year awards and two ESPY Awards for best driver. Outside of stock car racing, Busch briefly held the WWE 24/7 Championship. His aggressive driving style and demeanor led to Busch earning several nicknames over the course of his career. In addition to his driving career, Busch owned and operated Kyle Busch Motorsports, a race team that competed in the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series from 2011 to 2013 and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series from 2010 to 2023.

On May 24, 2011, Busch was cited for reckless driving and speeding near Troutman, North Carolina, after driving 128 mph (206 km/h) in a 45 mph (72 km/h) zone while test-driving a Lexus LFA. He later apologized, admitting he had gotten "carried away." On August 23, 2011, he pleaded guilty to speeding and received a US$1,000 fine, a 45-day license suspension, 30 hours of community service, and one year of unsupervised probation.

On April 29, 2014, Busch was cited for driving 60 mph (97 km/h) in a 45 mph (72 km/h) zone on NC 73 in Denver, North Carolina. He said he believed the speed limit was 55 mph (89 km/h).

On February 6, 2023, news reports revealed that Busch had been arrested in Cancún, Mexico, in January for handgun possession. According to the prosecutor, Busch was sentenced to 42 months in prison and fined US$1,100, though details about how the sentence would be served were not disclosed. Busch later issued a statement apologizing for his lack of awareness of Mexican laws and said he considered the matter resolved.

Rowdy Energy was an energy drink company based in Del Mar, California, founded in 2019 by NASCAR driver Kyle Busch and beverage entrepreneur Jeff Church.

 

Achievements 

2015, 2019 NASCAR Cup Series Champion

2018, 2019 NASCAR Cup Series Regular Season Champion

2009 Nationwide Series Champion

2008 Southern 500 Winner

2015, 2016 Brickyard 400 Winner

2018 Coca-Cola 600 Winner

2017 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race Winner

2012, 2021 Busch Clash Winner

2026 Daytona 500 pole winner

2009, 2013, 2016 Daytona Duel Winner

2009, 2017 Snowball Derby Winner

2011 Slinger Nationals Winner

All-Time Wins Leader in the top three NASCAR series overall (234)

All-Time Wins Leader in the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series (102)

All-Time Wins Leader in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series (69)

1st driver in the NASCAR Cup Series to win on every track competed (as of May 27, 2018)

1st driver to complete a Triple Threat in one weekend (twice)

Streak of 19 consecutive seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series with at least one win (series record)

Awards           

2004 NASCAR Busch Series Rookie of the Year

2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series Rookie of the Year

2016 ESPY Awards Best Driver

2019 ESPY Awards Best Driver

Named one of NASCAR's 75 Greatest Drivers (2023)

NASCAR Cup Series career

762 races run over 24 years

2025 position   21st

Best finish       1st (2015, 2019)

First race         2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 (Las Vegas)

Last race          2026 Go Bowling at The Glen (Watkins Glen)[a]

First win          2005 Sony HD 500 (California)

Last win          2023 Enjoy Illinois 300 (Gateway)

Wins    Top tens           Poles

63        395      35

NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series career

367 races run over 21 years

2024 position   88th

Best finish       1st (2009)

First race         2003 Carquest Auto Parts 300 (Charlotte)

Last race          2024 BetMGM 300 (Charlotte)

First win          2004 Funai 250 (Richmond)

Last win          2021 Credit Karma Money 250 (Atlanta)

Wins    Top tens           Poles

102      267      70

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series career

184 races run over 29 years

2025 position   76th

Best finish       14th (2008, 2010)

First race         2001 Power Stroke Diesel 200 (IRP)

Last race          2026 Ecosave 200 (Dover)

First win          2005 Quaker Steak and Lube 200 (Charlotte)

Last win          2026 Ecosave 200 (Dover)

Wins    Top tens           Poles

69        148      24

ARCA Menards Series career

9 races run over 3 years

Best finish       22nd (2003)

First race         2002 EasyCare Vehicle Service Contracts 150 (Charlotte)

Last race          2004 Advance Discount Auto Parts 200 (Daytona)

First win          2003 PFG Lester 150 (Nashville)

Last win          2004 Advance Discount Auto Parts 200 (Daytona)

Wins    Top tens           Poles

3          3          3

ARCA Menards Series East career

1 race run over 1 year

Best finish       44th (2009)

First race         2009 Long John Silver's 200 (Iowa)

First win          2009 Long John Silver's 200 (Iowa)

Wins    Top tens           Poles

1          1          1