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Motorsports

Connor Zilisch gives Dale Earnhardt Jr. his first NASCAR win as a crew chief

LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the role seriously. He attended meetings. He took notes. He was at a pit practice. When the Xfinity Series garage opened Friday afternoon at at Pocono Raceway, he was there. This was not a publicity stunt or a chance to add another line to his Hall of […]

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LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the role seriously. He attended meetings. He took notes. He was at a pit practice.

When the Xfinity Series garage opened Friday afternoon at at Pocono Raceway, he was there.

This was not a publicity stunt or a chance to add another line to his Hall of Fame resume. Earnhardt was committed to filling the role vacated by Mardy Lindley, who was serving a one-race suspension after Connor Zilisch’s car had multiple lug nuts not secure earlier this month at Nashville.

It was Lindley who suggested that Earnhardt, co-owner of the JR Motorsports car, take the role of crew chief for Saturday’s race. Earnhardt accepted, having never served in that role in a NASCAR national series race.

Zilisch took the lead with five laps to go to score his third career Xfinity win (first on an oval) and give Earnhardt the win as crew chief.

“Certainly more of an adrenaline rush than being an owner,” Earnhardt said after becoming one of the few in NASCAR to have a win as a driver, owner and crew chief. “I love owning race cars, and I love racking up statistics and championships, but it does not have the competitive sort of skin in the game, if you will, this specific day does.

“When you’re the crew chief, you’re under a ton of pressure. I understand that I did not come in here and handle all of the layers that Mardy usually handles or any given crew chief manages, They were certainly putting me in a position to do some light lifting. As the race went on, we got more comfortable and more aggressive and it was fun.

“Felt like I really had some involvement and input in the energy that the crew had … keeping them pumped up and keeping everybody executing, keeping Connor aware of what our goals were, what our expectations were on these restarts. He wanted to deliver on all those expectations. I felt like in that aspect it was a good day.”

The hardest part of the day for Earnhardt?

Climbing down the pit box to stand behind the pit wall and roll a tire to the carrier during a pit stop.

“I think the one thing I was most nervous about was actually setting that left front tire. … There’s a tenth (of a second) or two or even half a second between how far you can get it out there to (the tire carrier). You need that stripe up so he knows where the lugs are and to place the tire quickly. All these things are very minute, but they’re important that he grabs the tire from you in a certain way, and I didn’t want to mess that up.”

Jesse Love finished second and was followed by Christian Eckes, Chase Elliott and Ryan Sieg.

Stage 1 winner: Brandon Jones

Stage 2 winner: Connor Zilisch

Next: The series races at 7:30 p.m. ET Friday, June 27 at Atlanta.





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Functional aesthetics and motorsport: Massimo Osti’s vision

The Massimo Osti Archive in Bologna has only one flaw: there’s no air conditioning, the best travel companion on a sweltering mid-July day. The fault lies with an outdated electrical system that doesn’t allow for a 380V socket connection. This is the first anecdote shared with us by Lorenzo Osti, Massimo’s son and president of […]

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The Massimo Osti Archive in Bologna has only one flaw: there’s no air conditioning, the best travel companion on a sweltering mid-July day. The fault lies with an outdated electrical system that doesn’t allow for a 380V socket connection. This is the first anecdote shared with us by Lorenzo Osti, Massimo’s son and president of C.P. Company, as he welcomes us into a space that calling an archive feels like an understatement. What stands before us is a treasure trove that gathers a tiny fraction of Massimo Osti’s production: around 2,000 garments ranging from military vintage and his early pioneering pieces for Anna Gobbo, to Chester Perry items, Stone Island coats, C.P. Company jackets, prototypes, sketches, and much more, including textile innovations developed under the Left Hand and Massimo Osti Production brands.

Between a jacket made from a friend’s stolen shower curtain and a sketch of the first version of the Goggle jacket, the archive exploration regularly reveals garments and accessories dedicated to the world of sports. For example, notable pieces include ski boots made for Stone Island and the iconic Stone Island-branded tennis bags with rubber patches outlining the racket heads. Every corner of the archive is decorated with a Stone Island-branded golf bag.

References to motorsport are not lacking. After all, the very legend of C.P. Company is strengthened by car racing and Massimo Osti’s intuition to create a garment that could be worn by drivers in the 1000 Miglia—the Goggle jacket developed for C.P. Company and inspired by a Japanese army helmet. On one of the exposed brick columns hangs a red and green motorcycle suit, bearing none of Osti’s brand names. This is no mistake or oversight—the suit is in the archive as a study object. Osti’s research was always guided by the functionality of a garment, the properties of the materials, and the meaning of every single component. Each evaluation was recorded in one of his signature notebooks, to later be translated into fashion whenever the opportunity arose.

In the case of motorcycle suits, this creative process culminated in the early 2000s with a collaboration with Levi’s, resulting in a reversible Modular Padded Jacket equipped with protective panels on the chest and back, inspired by the sliders found on motorcycle gear. As mentioned, the archive is also full of prototypes, such as a sky-blue mechanic’s jumpsuit hidden among hundreds of garments on racks. In 1984, Osti was tasked with redesigning the work uniforms for Volvo employees and entrusted Andrea Pazienza with the creation of illustrations. Each department would have had its own unique patch. It was a visionary collection dedicated solely to workers, but it was never produced due to cost constraints.

However, that jumpsuit is yet another example of how Osti’s genius continues to captivate even 20 years after his passing—an anniversary now marked by a special exhibition titled “Ideas From Massimo Osti” held at Palazzo Pepoli, right in Bologna, the city he was deeply connected to. Through evocative scenography, including a faithful reconstruction of his studio on Via Gaibola with worktable, chained scissors, and stapler to prevent loss, the exhibition traces the creative legacy of a visionary figure who revolutionized fashion with a unique and instantly recognizable aesthetic.

While the archive subtly suggests how motorsport may have influenced Osti’s vision, the exhibition walls flip the perspective, offering clear evidence of how Massimo Osti aimed to, and at times succeeded in, influencing motorsport. For instance, his name is associated with one of the first electric car races held on the streets of Rome in 1990. The Massimo Osti Studio label is clearly visible on the Boxel P488, designed by engineer Paolo Pasquini. Today, fashion brands compete for partnerships with Formula 1 teams, and much of that pioneering spirit can be credited to Osti—a visionary who helped bring fashion beyond its traditional boundaries. Also featured in the exhibition, open to the public until September 28, are further examples of fashion-motorsport fusion, such as Vespa design sketches featuring components developed with Stone Island, like rubber patches to protect the outer fairings from scratches and dents.

The exhibition offers a deep look into Massimo Osti’s multifaceted artistic soul. An engineer-designer who believed that the most innovative ideas could emerge from mistakes. A sportswear pioneer who, through a rigorous and visionary approach, reshaped the aesthetics of sportswear long before it became a trend. And if the curated selection of iconic garments from his career isn’t inspiring enough, the words of Massimo Osti himself may do the trick. Written in a notebook on display next to a Chinese-sourced agenda labeled with “MO”—which would later become the Massimo Osti Production logo—is a simple yet powerful handwritten phrase in block letters: “Say what you do and do what you say.”





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NASCAR Cup Series Heads to San Diego Street Course in 2026 – SportsTravel

NASCAR will hold a street race on Naval Base Coronado in San Diego next June to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy by hosting all three of its national series over a three-day weekend. It will be NASCAR’s second street race in the sport’s history, following a three-year run in Chicago and first […]

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NASCAR will hold a street race on Naval Base Coronado in San Diego next June to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy by hosting all three of its national series over a three-day weekend.

It will be NASCAR’s second street race in the sport’s history, following a three-year run in Chicago and first on an active military base. The course layout is not complete but is expected to be around 3 miles.

“This a huge win for San Diego and we are so grateful to NASCAR for their partnership,” said Mark Neville, Sports San Diego chief executive officer. “Without a doubt, the NASCAR San Diego Weekend will have a significant and favorable impact on San Diego’s tourism and hospitality industry. On top of that, being the first ever NASCAR race on an active military base is going to be quite the spectacle and you can’t beat Naval Base Coronado.”

NASCAR is partnering with Sports San Diego on operational and promotional support for the race weekend. The San Diego weekend will be a replacement for its downtown Chicago event that ran the past three years. The move to the San Diego area does not eliminate a return to Chicago, where NASCAR will still maintain an office and effort an eventual return, perhaps as early as 2027.

“As part of our nation’s 250th anniversary, we are honored for NASCAR to join the celebration as we host our first street race at a military base, Naval Base Coronado,” Ben Kennedy, executive vice president and chief venue and racing innovations officer, said Wednesday. “NASCAR San Diego Weekend will honor the Navy’s history and the men and women who serve as we take the best motorsports in the world to the streets of Naval Base Coronado.”

The base is known as the “West Coast Quarterdeck” and is a consortium of nine Navy installations that stretch from San Clemente Island 50 miles off the coast of Long Beach to the Mountain Warfare Training Facility 50 miles east of San Diego.

NASCAR named Amy Lupo, who has been with the series since 2021, as president of the race. She spent more than 20 years at ESPN expanding the X Games when she lived in San Diego early in her career.



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Front Row Motorsports: Indianapolis Motor Speedway Competition Notes- Todd Gilliland

Todd Gilliland and the No. 34 gener8tor Ford TeamIndianapolis Motor Speedway Competition NotesBrickyard 400 Date: Sunday, July 27, 2025Event: Race 24 of 38Series: NASCAR Cup SeriesLocation: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2.5-miles)#of Laps: 160Time/TV/Radio: 2:00 PM ET on TNT Sports/SiriusXM channel 90 Todd Gilliland Notes Todd Gilliland and the No. 34 team will face the Indianapolis Motor […]

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Todd Gilliland and the No. 34 gener8tor Ford Team
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Competition Notes
Brickyard 400

Date: Sunday, July 27, 2025
Event: Race 24 of 38
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Indianapolis Motor Speedway (2.5-miles)
#of Laps: 160
Time/TV/Radio: 2:00 PM ET on TNT Sports/SiriusXM channel 90

Todd Gilliland Notes

Todd Gilliland and the No. 34 team will face the Indianapolis Motor Speedway this weekend for the tracks Brickyard 400. In his sole previous start at the 2.5-mile oval in 2024, Gilliland started 24th and finished sixth in an overtime finish.

gener8tor & Gilliland reunite at The Brickyard, adding some local flair with IU LAB on board. IU LAB is a new Biosciences innovation center that Indiana University is building in downtown Indianapolis’ 16 Tech District. Where academia meets industry to drive biotech innovation and train the next generation of life science leaders & entrepreneurs, gener8tor is proud to provide accelerator services to the program. More information can be found at iulab.iu.edu.

“Dover was disappointing, but the good thing about this sport is there’s another opportunity every week,” said Gilliland. “I had a solid run at the Brickyard last season, so I’m hoping I can replicate that this weekend. It’s cool to have gener8tor make their season debut at Indy, and with IU LAB on board too. They are bringing a lot of guests this weekend, including innovators participating in the IU LAB program, so hopefully I can make them proud with a good, clean run.”

Road Crew

Driver: Todd Gilliland

Hometown: Sherrills Ford, North Carolina

Crew Chief: Chris Lawson

Hometown: Medway, Ohio

Car Chief: Joe Marra

Hometown: Somers, New York

Engineer: Marc Rullo

Hometown: Ringwood, New Jersey

Engineer: Kevyn Rebolledo

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Spotter: Brit Andersen

Hometown: Branford, Connecticut

Underneath Mechanic: Michael Brookes

Hometown: Columbus, Ohio

Interior Mechanic: Chance Burke

Hometown: Siler City, North Carolina

Tire Specialist: Billy John

Hometown: Pitman, New Jersey

Engine Tuner: Tim Meyer

Hometown: Beatrice, Nebraska

Transporter Driver: Randy Bernier

Hometown: Mooresville, North Carolina

Pit Crew

Front Tire Changer: Danny Olszowy

Hometown: Lexington, Kentucky

Rear Tire Changer: Justin Fox

Hometown: Concord, North Carolina

Tire Carrier: Paul Steele

Hometown: Wichita, Kansas

Jackman: Landon Honeycutt

Hometown: Mount Pleasant, North Carolina

Fueler: Zeke Nance

Hometown: Calhoun, Georgia

ABOUT GENER8TOR

gener8tor is a global venture firm and accelerator network that supports startups, workers, employers, artists and musicians across race, place and gender. gener8tor partners with companies, governments, universities, and nonprofits to operate programs and conferences in more than 41 communities across 22 states and two countries. Fast Company named gener8tor one of the Best Workplaces for Innovators in 2021 and 2022. The International Trade Council recognized gener8tor as the Global Venture Capital Firm of the Year in 2022.

ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Craftsman Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 Craftsman Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 4, No. 34, and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 34 and No. 38 Craftsman Truck Series teams from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @teamfrm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.





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NASCAR Cup Series qualifying order for Indianapolis Motor Speedway

The NASCAR Cup Series will tackle Round 5 of the 2025 In-Season Challenge this weekend, with the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway being the venue on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, TNT Sports/truTV, HBO Max, IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). QUALIFYING ORDER: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series All 39 cars will have […]

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The NASCAR Cup Series will tackle Round 5 of the 2025 In-Season Challenge this weekend, with the Brickyard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway being the venue on Sunday (2 p.m. ET, TNT Sports/truTV, HBO Max, IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

QUALIFYING ORDER: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

All 39 cars will have a chance to post a qualifying time Saturday (2:35 p.m. ET, truTV, IMS Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Saturday‘s qualifying session will be one lap and one round.

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The groups below are determined via a metric that combines the previous race finish by owner (70%) and current owner points position (30%).

MORE: How to watch on TNT Sports | Weekend schedule

# denotes series rookie
(i) denotes ineligible for driver points

Pos.

Car No.

Driver

Metric Score

Group

1

62

* Jesse Love(i)

42.5

1

2

66

* Josh Bilicki(i)

41.0

1

3

78

* Katherine Legge

39.8

1

4

51

Cody Ware

36.0

1

5

4

* Noah Gragson

32.3

1

6

77

Carson Hocevar

32.0

1

7

16

AJ Allmendinger

31.6

1

8

41

Cole Custer

30.5

1

9

88

Shane van Gisbergen #

28.8

1

10

35

* Riley Herbst #

27.3

1

11

34

* Todd Gilliland

27.1

1

12

99

Daniel Suárez

26.9

1

13

1

Ross Chastain

26.7

1

14

21

Josh Berry

26.2

1

15

43

Erik Jones

24.9

1

16

10

Ty Dillon

23.0

1

17

47

Ricky Stenhouse, Jr.

23.0

1

18

38

* Zane Smith

22.6

1

19

24

William Byron

22.3

1

20

7

Justin Haley

21.2

1

21

42

John Hunter Nemechek

21.0

2

22

3

Austin Dillon

18.9

2

23

60

Ryan Preece

17.5

2

24

2

Austin Cindric

15.7

2

25

6

Brad Keselowski

15.1

2

26

71

Michael McDowell

14.5

2

27

20

Christopher Bell

14.4

2

28

22

Joey Logano

13.1

2

29

8

Kyle Busch

12.5

2

30

45

* Tyler Reddick

9.9

2

31

17

Chris Buescher

9.3

2

32

23

* Bubba Wallace

8.8

2

33

54

Ty Gibbs

8.6

2

34

12

Ryan Blaney

7.7

2

35

48

Alex Bowman

4.8

2

36

9

Chase Elliott

4.5

2

37

5

Kyle Larson

4.0

2

38

19

Chase Briscoe

3.8

2

39

11

Denny Hamlin

1.6

2



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Ty Dillon lifts lid on reasons behind Richard Childress Racing exit – Motorsport – Sports

The 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season has been an unexpected whirlwind for Ty Dillon in the No. 10 Chevrolet for Kaulig Racing, with the inaugural In-Season Challenge, considered the brainchild of Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin, allowing him his moment in the limelight 11 years after making his debut with his grandfather’s team, Richard Childress […]

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The 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season has been an unexpected whirlwind for Ty Dillon in the No. 10 Chevrolet for Kaulig Racing, with the inaugural In-Season Challenge, considered the brainchild of Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin, allowing him his moment in the limelight 11 years after making his debut with his grandfather’s team, Richard Childress Racing.

33-year-old Dillon’s Cup Series journey has been a rocky one, spending two seasons on the books at RCR, where he failed to earn a full-time spot, before being dropped and forced to find his own way. 

For Dillon, failing to make it at RCR after racing with them in both the Xfinity and Truck Series was heartbreaking. He revealed: “I had success at RCR in the Truck Series and Xfinity Series and thought my path was just going to keep going that way, and hopefully race for RCR. That was my dream as a kid.” It comes after a NASCAR legend reveals he will be arrested if he visits his own father’s grave. 

Dillon continued on the Door Bumper Clear podcast: “I think a lot of people think that I chose to go my own way. But honestly, there just wasn’t a door there open. I think they had [Ryan] Newman at the time. I think Caterpillar wasn’t interested in having me as their driver, and having two brothers at RCR just wasn’t something that they wanted. 

“I don’t know all the politics behind it, but the door wasn’t there. And I wanted to continue my career. And Germain Racing gave me an opportunity with a four-year contract at that point. It’s just hard to turn down to be a Cup racer.”

Dillon said that he made the move to Germain, believing his success in the Xfinity Series would carry over and continue, but this wasn’t the case. After four seasons and just five top 10 finishes, sponsorship issues led Germain to cease operations after 2020, leaving Dillon without a team once again. 

This uncertainty led Dillon to question his racing future and consider hanging up his race suit for good in favor of a job working with his father-in-law building retaining walls. However, his wife Haley and her father convinced him not to give in, calling everyone he could think of in the Cup Series to work his way back into the mix.

Stints with Gaunt Brothers Racing, 23XI Racing, Petty GMS Motorsports, Spire Motorsports, Kaulig, Team AmeriVet, and even a one-off return to RCR followed before landing a full-time drive with Kaulig in 2025.

Despite these challenges, Dillon said that in hindsight, he wouldn’t change a thing, believing his experiences have helped him grow “as a person, as a man, as a husband, as a father, and just give me so much perspective for this time in my life to grind. 

“And I’m proud of who I am as far as somebody that like never giving up and never quitting has become so true to me. And I hope that that portrays not only to young kids or people trying to grow in the sport, but I can be a help to my kids, too, in their life, whether it’s racing or not, like just believing and continuing to push forward in what you want to do.”

Having narrowly beaten Legacy Motor Club’s John Hunter Nemechek in the fourth round of the Challenge at Dover, Dillon now heads to Indianapolis, where he’ll take on JGR’s Ty Gibbs for a shot at the $1 million prize fund.



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NASCAR will hold first street race on active military base at Naval Base Coronado in 2026 – News-Herald

By JENNA FRYER CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR will hold a street race on Naval Base Coronado in Southern California next June as a replacement for its downtown Chicago event that ran the last three years. The move to the San Diego area does not eliminate a return to Chicago, where NASCAR will still maintain an […]

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By JENNA FRYER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR will hold a street race on Naval Base Coronado in Southern California next June as a replacement for its downtown Chicago event that ran the last three years.

The move to the San Diego area does not eliminate a return to Chicago, where NASCAR will still maintain an office and effort an eventual return, perhaps as early as 2027.

But the shift next year will allow NASCAR to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Navy by hosting all three of its national series over a three-day weekend on June 19-21.

“As part of our nation’s 250th anniversary, we are honored for NASCAR to join the celebration as we host our first street race at a military base, Naval Base Coronado,” Ben Kennedy, executive vice president and chief venue and racing innovations officer, said July 23. “NASCAR San Diego Weekend will honor the Navy’s history and the men and women who serve as we take the best motorsports in the world to the streets of Naval Base Coronado.”

It will be NASCAR’s second street race in the sport’s history, following the three-year run in Chicago, and first on an active military base. The course layout is not complete but is expected to be around 3 miles.

NASCAR has seen Auto Club Speedway close after the 2023 race. It built a temporary short track inside Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum from 2002 through 2024 but moved that event to North Carolina.

Kennedy, who has been bullish on new endeavors for his family business, was the brains of the races at the Coliseum, Chicago, this year’s visit to Mexico City and now next year in San Diego, a venture the Navy is excited about.

“NASCAR embodies the very best of the American spirit through speed, precision and an unyielding pursuit of excellence,” Navy Secretary John C. Phelan said. “Hosting a race aboard Naval Air Station North Island, the birthplace of naval aviation, it’s not just a historic first, it’s a powerful tribute to the values we share: grit, teamwork and love of country.

“From the flight deck to the finish line, this collaboration reflects the operational intensity and unity of purpose that define both the United States Navy and NASCAR.”

The base is known as the “West Coast Quarterdeck” and is a consortium of nine Navy installations that stretch from San Clemente Island 50 miles off the coast of Long Beach to the Mountain Warfare Training Facility 50 miles east of San Diego.

NASCAR named Amy Lupo, who has been with the series since 2021 and helped launch the Coliseum, as president of the race. She spent more than 20 years at ESPN expanding the X Games when she lived in San Diego early in her career. She still lives in Southern California.

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