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What Really Happened in Seattle?

By Arich Knaub

Chase Sexton was faster than Cooper Webb on 15 of 25 timed laps, had an average lap time 0.1 seconds quicker, and had a staggering 9 second advantage in just one rhythm section! Sounds like a winning formula, right? Wrong. Against a competitor like Webb, no gap under three seconds is safe. And on Lap … Continued

What Really Happened in Birmingham?

By Arich Knaub

Chase Sexton used a different playbook in Birmingham. He didn’t just go fast—he raced smart. Instead of his usual all-or-nothing approach, he made calculated moves, knowing when to attack and when to back off. Look at these changes of pace: Sexton Race 3 – Change of Pace When Webb made his move, Sexton instinctively dropped … Continued