
Behind the scenes, crew members keep NASCAR Chicago Street Race running smoothly
She took advantage of a quiet moment between her caretaker duties for the racing team: Kennett washes all the drivers' suits and ensures the team is stocked with cold drinks and snacks. She and her husband, Gary — who drives the truck for the team — have been with DGM Racing for four years. They drive to all 33 race weekends from their home in Lake Wales, Florida, where Kennett uses her own washing machine to do the team's laundry.
'People work better when they're taken care of,' Kennett said.
Behind the many wire fences surrounding NASCAR's fan area, dozens of trailers and hauling trucks are lined up like oversized dominoes. Back here, everyone wears long black pants or heavy suits, protecting themselves from the gasoline and asphalt that makes racing dangerous for the large crews that come with every driver.
This is the sweaty world of NASCAR, where mechanics lie belly-up beneath racecars, their hands covered in grime. It's not glamorous or easy, but this work is the lifeblood of American racing.
Late Saturday morning, water poured out from under the hood of Joey Gase Motorsports' No. 53 car, driven by Sage Karam. Five team members, in green and black racing shirts, crowded around the vehicle. Sweat ran down everyone's foreheads as one mechanic crawled under the car, and two others set up a tent to shield them from the sun as they worked.
Mechanics often perform this kind of maintenance. When drivers do their practice loops at the beginning of a race weekend, their cars accrue all sorts of damage. The JR Motorsports team had at least 12 people working on one of its cars, while the Joey Gase group did its repairs just a few trailers away.
Behind another fence, Sunoco employees distributed dozens of gas tanks. To their right, technicians from Goodyear Racing carefully studied piles of tires, which were stacked up all over the NASCAR area.
Getting tires to cars is one of the more complex aspects of a race. , the Goodyear Racing product manager for NASCAR, said that his company provides roughly 3,000 tires to cars every NASCAR race weekend. Cup Series vehicles get a maximum of seven pairs of tires for each race. XFinity Series cars get a maximum of six pairs. Most teams hold onto a pair or two of 'scuffs' — used tires — as backups. Almost all the tires used in a race weekend are immediately recycled into rubber dust.
Heinrich and his team are usually the first to arrive at a race site. They have to unload and organize thousands of tires, and then collect data on every tire so that small manufacturing discrepancies can be accounted for and explained to teams, which receive tires at random.
'You really can't help but to have an appreciation, or be somewhat of a fan of racing, when you work for Goodyear,' Heinrich said, 'because, really, the core of the automotive business is racing.'
If it rains, all those numbers change, and teams are allotted an additional four sets of wet-weather tires. They're necessary to prevent slippage when it rains, but will slow down a driver once the track dries up again.
The Chicago Street Race, with its imperfect asphalt and lines of yellow and white paint for average city drivers, offers an unusual track for Goodyear tires. That aspect, however, is out of Heinrich's hands.
'That's why this place is so special,' Heinrich said. 'It's just different. It's not a purpose-built racetrack.'
The five-person crew at Cope Family Racing would agree that this weekend is different. Usually, the team has a trailer with all of its tools right behind the pit box. But because the pit road area is so limited, in the middle of downtown Chicago, the crew had to park elsewhere and lug all the tools to the pit road.
Bradley Carson is one of three mechanics on the Cope team, which is the smallest as well as one of the newest in the series, not that it has limited XFinity driver Thomas Annunziata, who qualified in the middle of the pack for the Chicago Street Race.
Saturday afternoon, as the temperature climbed into the mid-80s, an oil-caked Carson was sitting on a tire in the shade of his team's pit box.
'I'm exhausted,' he said.
He had every right to be. Carson, 62, who lives in Morrisville, North Carolina, and the two other mechanics on the team, rebuild Annunziata's car nearly every week and after a racing weekend, it requires a complete renewal. For Carson, a 19-hour day, four times a week, is nothing unusual.
He admitted that the job takes a lot. But he wouldn't give it up.
'People are doing this because they want to do this,' Carson said.
He got into motorsports as a 16-year-old not-always-legal drag racer in Los Angeles. Carson fell in love with 'the thrill' of being around cars and stuck with it.
'You build something and it comes to life,' he said. 'It's a calling, in a sense … something that drives inside of you.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
NASCAR's 2026 schedule shake-up: New street race, Chicagoland's return, and more
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR in 2026 will race on a new street course in San Diego, return Chicagoland Speedway to the schedule, move the All-Star race to Dover, Delaware, and end its 38-race season back at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The schedule released Wednesday includes two off weekends on a calendar that stretches from February to November. It begins with the exhibition Clash on Feb. 1 at Bowman-Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem for the second consecutive year, with the season-opening Daytona 500 to follow on Feb. 15. The season ends Nov. 8 in Florida at Homestead, which hosted the championship-deciding finale for 18 consecutive years before NASCAR shifted it to Phoenix Raceway in 2020. The race at Phoenix was given a different date in the playoffs and NASCAR is expected to rotate the season finale to various venues in ensuing years. Chicagoland is reopening after a six-year hiatus and a switch back to the track located in suburban Joliet after three seasons on a temporary street circuit in downtown Chicago. The San Diego event will be held on a military base in Coronado. To add Chicagoland and San Diego, NASCAR dropped the Chicago street race and will not return to Mexico City, where it held the first international Cup Series points race since the 1950s. A return to Mexico City in 2026 became difficult to schedule because of soccer's World Cup. NASCAR also moved Watkins Glen in New York from its traditional August date to Mother's Day weekend and the all-star race from North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, to Dover so that North Wilkesboro will be a points-paying Cup race, and New Hampshire lost its playoff race to become the penultimate race of the regular season. There also are two off weekends after just one this season, which ends with 28 straight races. The 2026 Cup Series schedule: Feb. 1 — Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium Feb. 15 — Daytona 500 Feb. 22 — Atlanta March 1 — Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas March 8 — Phoenix March 15 — Las Vegas March 22 — Darlington, South Carolina March 29 — Martinsville, Virginia April 5 — off weekend April 12 — Bristol, Tennessee April 19 — Kansas April 26 — Talladega, Alabama May 3 — Texas May 10 — Watkins Glen May 17 — All-Star Race (Dover) May 24 — Coca-Cola 600 (Charlotte) May 31 — Nashville, Tennessee June 7 — Michigan June 14 — Pocono in Long Pond, Pennsylvania June 21 — San Diego June 28 — Sonoma, California July 5 — Chicagoland July 12 — Atlanta July 19 — North Wilkesboro July 26 — Brickyard 400 (Indianapolis) Aug. 2 — off weekend Aug. 9 — Iowa Aug. 15 — Richmond, Virginia Aug. 23 — New Hampshire Aug. 29 — Daytona, Florida Sept. 6 — Darlington Sept. 13 — Gateway in Madison, Illinois Sept. 19 — Bristol Sept. 27 — Kansas Oct. 4 — Las Vegas Oct. 11 — Charlotte Roval Oct. 18 — Phoenix Oct. 25 — Talladega Nov. 1 — Martinsville Nov. 8 — Homestead ___ AP auto racing:


New York Times
14 minutes ago
- New York Times
Fantasy football hot takes for Malik Nabers, Jaxon Smith-Njigba and more
If you're looking for a little spice with your fantasy football analysis, you've come to the right place. We asked our fantasy football crew (writers and editors) to share one hot take for the 2025 season. The working definition here for hot take is a statement that you at least kinda, sorta believe — it falls a little short of a bold prediction. The guidance was that you don't need to believe it with every fiber of your being, but perhaps with roughly 50% of those fibers. What came forth were a lot of takes on Jaxon Smith-Njigba and other young wide receivers around the league. Don't sprint to the draft room with these takes, but understand that anything — anything — can happen in a given fantasy football season, and chasing ceilings is a good time. Andy Behrens: Jaxon Smith-Njigba will lead the NFL in receptions, and not by a small margin. He's about to finish as the overall WR1. Not bold enough, maybe? The league's first 150-catch receiver? Mike Hume: Counterpoint: Absent the TLC of Kevin O'Connell, Sam Darnold spirals into oblivion in Seattle and JSN finishes outside the Top 30 receivers in total fantasy points despite coming off the draft board at WR14 to start the season. Sorry, Andy. Advertisement Jake Ciely: Jayden Higgins is the second-best rookie wide receiver, behind only Tetairoa McMillan. C.J. Stroud was still great when throwing to Nico Collins while under pressure, so while we'd love a better offensive line, having a second receiver with ability/style similar to Collins will help Stroud rebound. And, if Stroud gets back to 4,000+ yards and throws 25+ touchdowns, Higgins will be a Top 30 wide receiver. Dalton Del Don: Malik Nabers breaks the all-time targets record and is frequently drafted as fantasy's No. 1 player in 2026. Bonus: George Pickens finishes as a Top 10 fantasy wideout. Brandon Funston: Buoyed by ROY-caliber play from QB Cam Ward, receiver Calvin Ridley catches 100 passes for the first time and ties his career-best with 10 touchdowns. KC Joyner: With Lions' new OC John Morton living up to his promise of sending more passes in his direction, Jameson Williams will make the jump to high-end WR2 status and could even end up as a low-tier WR1. Jay Felicio: Thirty-year-old Aaron Jones' production falls off a cliff, and newly acquired Jordan Mason proves the start of 2024 wasn't a fluke. Mason completes a hostile takeover in Minnesota, handling the majority of backfield work on the way to a mid-RB2 finish. Brad Evans: Speedy rookie wide receiver Matthew Golden becomes the Chosen One in Matt LaFleur's offense, compiling at least 75 receptions for 1,000+ yards and 7-9 TDs in a WR2-caliber inaugural campaign. Michael Salfino: Given the lack of an alpha in the Packers' wide receiving corps, the George Kittle-like Tucker Kraft matches his career totals in 2025 — 110 targets, 81 catches, 1,062 yards, 9 touchdowns. Jess Bryant: Tyler Warren has a Top 5 TE finish with over 888 yards receiving and 8+ touchdowns (says the Magic 8 Ball). Tyler Warren down the sideline from Daniel Jones! Stream on @NFLPlus — NFL (@NFL) August 16, 2025 Jacob Robinson: The Cardinals win their division thanks in part to Kyler Murray's Top 5 QB finish and career-high 850 rushing yards. Scott Engel: Braelon Allen will rush for 9 TDs, and Breece Hall will get traded. While Hall is with the Jets, Allen could become a lesser version of David Montgomery. If Justin Fields wasn't a running threat near the goal line, I would predict even more TDs for Allen. Brandon Funston, Part 2: With all due respect to Andy Behrens and JSN, Drake London finishes as the WR1, becoming the fifth player in NFL history to finish a season with at least 125 catches, 1,500 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns. (Photo of Jaxon Smith-Njigba: Steph Chambers / Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Associated Press
14 minutes ago
- Associated Press
NASCAR's 2026 schedule shake-up: New street race, Chicagoland's return, and more
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR in 2026 will race on a new street course in San Diego, return Chicagoland Speedway to the schedule, move the All-Star race to Dover, Delaware, and end its 38-race season back at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The schedule released Wednesday includes two off weekends on a calendar that stretches from February to November. It begins with the exhibition Clash on Feb. 1 at Bowman-Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem for the second consecutive year, with the season-opening Daytona 500 to follow on Feb. 15. The season ends Nov. 8 in Florida at Homestead, which hosted the championship-deciding finale for 18 consecutive years before NASCAR shifted it to Phoenix Raceway in 2020. The race at Phoenix was given a different date in the playoffs and NASCAR is expected to rotate the season finale to various venues in ensuing years. Chicagoland is reopening after a six-year hiatus and a switch back to the track located in suburban Joliet after three seasons on a temporary street circuit in downtown Chicago. The San Diego event will be held on a military base in Coronado. To add Chicagoland and San Diego, NASCAR dropped the Chicago street race and will not return to Mexico City, where it held the first international Cup Series points race since the 1950s. A return to Mexico City in 2026 became difficult to schedule because of soccer's World Cup. NASCAR also moved Watkins Glen in New York from its traditional August date to Mother's Day weekend and the all-star race from North Wilkesboro, North Carolina, to Dover so that North Wilkesboro will be a points-paying Cup race, and New Hampshire lost its playoff race to become the penultimate race of the regular season. There also are two off weekends after just one this season, which ends with 28 straight races. The 2026 Cup Series schedule: Feb. 1 — Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium Feb. 15 — Daytona 500 Feb. 22 — Atlanta March 1 — Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas March 8 — Phoenix March 15 — Las Vegas March 22 — Darlington, South Carolina March 29 — Martinsville, Virginia April 5 — off weekend April 12 — Bristol, Tennessee April 19 — Kansas April 26 — Talladega, Alabama May 3 — Texas May 10 — Watkins Glen May 17 — All-Star Race (Dover) May 24 — Coca-Cola 600 (Charlotte) May 31 — Nashville, Tennessee June 7 — Michigan June 14 — Pocono in Long Pond, Pennsylvania June 21 — San Diego June 28 — Sonoma, California July 5 — Chicagoland July 12 — Atlanta July 19 — North Wilkesboro July 26 — Brickyard 400 (Indianapolis) Aug. 2 — off weekend Aug. 9 — Iowa Aug. 15 — Richmond, Virginia Aug. 23 — New Hampshire Aug. 29 — Daytona, Florida Sept. 6 — Darlington Sept. 13 — Gateway in Madison, Illinois Sept. 19 — Bristol Sept. 27 — Kansas Oct. 4 — Las Vegas Oct. 11 — Charlotte Roval Oct. 18 — Phoenix Oct. 25 — Talladega Nov. 1 — Martinsville Nov. 8 — Homestead ___ AP auto racing: