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The Thunder’s anonymous dominance, plus a NASCAR controversy

The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Gather some assets today. While You Were Clinching: The Thunder have found their final form For years, the NBA had an inside joke of sorts about Sam Presti. The Thunder […]

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The Pulse Newsletter
📣 | This is The Athletic’s daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox.


Good morning! Gather some assets today.


While You Were Clinching: The Thunder have found their final form

For years, the NBA had an inside joke of sorts about Sam Presti. The Thunder general manager was always building, always hoarding assets, always making the smart move — but what was it all for? Kevin Durant, Paul George, Russell Westbrook. Superstars all out the door with no rings to show. 

Now, a ring sits four wins away after Oklahoma City thundered past the Timberwolves in a decisive 124-94 Game 5 win at home last night. Consider this arc: 

  • Entering last season, the joke was very much valid. Oklahoma City started the 2023-24 year with a ragtag group of young, talented players no one knew what to do with. Vegas had them winning 44.5 games — they won 57. They leaped ahead of Presti’s originally theorized timeline to contention. He went out and acquired Alex Caruso and Isaiah Hartenstein in the offseason to turn a surprise contender into a legitimate behemoth.

  • And, voila, this year’s Thunder — which still entered the year as the NBA’s youngest team — won 68 games, tied for the fifth-best season in league history. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a return piece from the Clippers in the George trade, just won MVP. The future is fully built. 

Not so suddenly, the Thunder are both the NBA’s best team and the clear favorite entering next week’s finals. They are terrifying to play against. BetMGM has them -750 to win it all. 

OKC isn’t flashy, either, and I’d wager this might be our most anonymous elite team/MVP pairing in recent memory. 

More eyes than ever will be on the Thunder next Thursday when they face the winner of Indiana-New York in Game 1 of the finals. I can’t wait. 

  • Not so surprising? In the NHL, the Panthers advanced to their third straight Stanley Cup final with a boffo win in a tight Game 5 on the road. The last three minutes of this game were a microcosm of Carolina’s entire series: down 4-3, on a power play, unable to score, with the penalized Sam Bennett racing out of the box to score an empty-netter for Florida with less than a minute left to seal the series. Brutal. 

We have two more clinch possibilities tonight. Onward:


News to Know

Vrabel addresses Diggs video
If you have logged on to any slice of sports social media in the last 24 hours, you’ve seen the video of new Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs on a boat partying, handing women a bag of an unknown pink substance. New England coach Mike Vrabel acknowledged yesterday he had seen the video and emphasized he wants players to “make great decisions on and off the field.” Diggs was not present at OTAs yesterday. More on this developing story here.

France scraps NASCAR plan after backlash
Jim France, NASCAR’s co-owner and CEO, was close to a deal that would’ve funded a car in an upcoming Cup Series race before intense backlash led him to step away. According to an exclusive report from The Athletic, France scrapped the deal after our reporters started asking around about the arrangement, which would present pretty obvious ethical hurdles. Owning a series and a team/car is not wholly unheard of — see the Penske dynasty/debacle in IndyCar — but France’s proposed involvement here still made people quite angry. Read the full report here.

More news

  • Baylor redshirt freshman defensive lineman Alex Foster died at just 18. Read our full report.
  • Former Sonic Shawn Kemp could face jail time in connection to a 2023 assault. More details here.
  • Roland Garros has not been nice to Casper Ruud. His French Open exit headlined yesterday’s action, which you can catch up on here.
  • Marlins second baseman Ronny Simon was grateful for the outpouring of support after his three-error game Tuesday. It’s a nice story.
  • The Wrexham documentary series was renewed for a fifth season, which I already assumed was happening.

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Phenoms: The teenager has fully taken over


Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Jonathan Moscrop/Getty Images

In the sports world, there will always be phenoms. Young, shooting stars that take our breath away before making us say, “Wait, how old?” LeBron James posed on the cover of Sports Illustrated at 16. Tiger Woods won the U.S. Amateur at 15. 

Lamine Yamal is different. 

  • Over the last two years, we have seen Yamal go through the awkward stages of adolescence while taking over the soccer universe. Before his 18th birthday, Yamal helped Spain win Euro 2024 and become FC Barcelona’s best player. So much for plebeians like myself, who tended to plants at a local nursery for minimum wage at 17.
  • There is an argument to be made that Yamal is the best soccer player in the world at 17 years old. Many in the sport agree. Yamal has scored 18 goals and dished 21 assists while helping Barca win La Liga this year. He will soon take his talented left foot back to the Spanish squad for Nations League next week. Trust me, watch any game and his play will jump off the screen.

  • This week, Barcelona signed Yamal to a new contract that will keep him at the club until 2031 and pay him $45 million per year, which makes him the team’s highest earner before the U.S. would allow him to buy cigarettes. Off the pitch, he is the emerging face of a brand worth billions

Pol Ballús, our excellent Barca reporter, has the inside story of how the club signed Yamal to such a remarkable deal. It’s worth a read this morning. 

And try to catch this kid on TV soon if you can. 

  • In other phenom news: Woods’ son, Charlie, won his first junior golf tournament at 16 years old yesterday. He beat the top-ranked junior in America by six shots. Watch out.

What to Watch

📺 NBA: Pacers at Knicks
8 p.m. ET on TNT/Max
Do-or-die for the best Knicks season in 25 years. Indiana can book its first finals trip of this century. The atmosphere should be buzzy. This is why we watch sports. 

📺 NHL: Oilers at Stars
8 p.m. ET on ESPN
Copy and paste from above. The road team can clinch a trip to the Stanley Cup Final. The home team plays for its season in front of a home crowd. Fun night. 

Get tickets to games like these here.


Pulse Picks

Mike Sando picked his favorite offseason moves for each NFL team. Hooray for a QB retiring. 

Also, Dane Brugler revisited his 2025 NFL Draft top 50 rankings. See the hits and misses here

🎥 The “No Dunks” guys ranked Tyrese Haliburton’s flawless Game 4 among the best playoff performances so far. Watch it here

The Pirates don’t want to trade Paul Skenes but … they’d have to consider these five packages

Women’s golf has a new star in 16-year-old Asterisk Talley, as Brody Miller writes. The sport is wrestling with how to protect her

Great guest spot: Matt Antonelli was a first-round MLB bust. He gave us five lessons he learned

Sam Blum bought a ticket to attend a Sacramento A’s home game as a fan, and it doesn’t sound like anyone is happy there

Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Antonio Morales’ ranking of every five-star QB in the recruiting era. 

Most-read on the website yesterday: Our latest 2025 NHL Mock Draft.

Ticketing links in this article are provided by partners of The Athletic. Restrictions may apply. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Top photo: Trevor Ruszkowski / Imagn Images)



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Estre puts Manthey Porsche on pole for Nürburgring 24

Photo credit: Porsche Porsche’s Manthey EMA squad grabbed pole for this weekend’s Nürburgring 24 Hours after factory driver Kévin Estre produced a blistering 8:12.741 lap in Friday’s Top Qualifying. The Frenchman’s time in the No. 911 “Grello” Porsche 911 GT3 R was more than a second clear of the field despite air temps in the […]

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Photo credit: Porsche

Photo credit: Porsche

Porsche’s Manthey EMA squad grabbed pole for this weekend’s Nürburgring 24 Hours after factory driver Kévin Estre produced a blistering 8:12.741 lap in Friday’s Top Qualifying. The Frenchman’s time in the No. 911 “Grello” Porsche 911 GT3 R was more than a second clear of the field despite air temps in the 90s °F and track temps topping 125 °F. Estre will share the car with Thomas Preining and Ayhancan Güven.

The session was halted for 75 minutes when Laurens Vanthoor crashed the No. 16 Scherer Sport PHX Porsche at Schwedenkreuz on his first flying lap. Vanthoor was unhurt, but the damage ruled the car out of the race. When qualifying resumed and was shortened to a single timed lap, Estre delivered sector-best times in four of nine splits to secure pole.

Photo credit: Porsche

Photo credit: Porsche

Falken Motorsports placed its No. 33 Porsche fourth with local driver Nico Menzel, while teammate Morris Schuring put the sister No. 44 entry 12th. The Black Falcon Porsche qualified 11th after a post-lap penalty, third among Pro-Am runners.

With victories already this season at Daytona, Sebring, Long Beach, and Laguna Seca, Porsche heads into the six-hour Watkins Glen round of the IMSA championship atop every points table, but focus in Germany is firmly on the twice-around-the-clock classic. Porsche has 12 overall wins at the event, including last year’s triumph for the 963 prototype.

Green flag for the 25.378-kilometer Nordschleife–GP circuit combination drops Saturday at 4 p.m. local time (10 a.m. EDT). Germany’s Nitro channel carries full live coverage; an English-language stream and timing are available at the official race website.





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Front Row Motorsports Aims Cold-Blooded Message at Carson Hocevar After Pocono Disaster

Front Row Motorsports took a jab at Carson Hocevar via social media after a costly mistake ruined his shot at victory in the NASCAR Truck Series race at Pocono Raceway on Friday, June 20, 2025. The No. 7 Spire Motorsports driver was penalized for jumping FRM’s No. 34 driver, Layne Riggs, during the final restart after […]

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Front Row Motorsports took a jab at Carson Hocevar via social media after a costly mistake ruined his shot at victory in the NASCAR Truck Series race at Pocono Raceway on Friday, June 20, 2025.

The No. 7 Spire Motorsports driver was penalized for jumping FRM’s No. 34 driver, Layne Riggs, during the final restart after race leader Corey Heim had to pit unexpectedly due to a rear right tire going flat.

Front Row Motorsports Roasted Carson Hocevar With a Brutal GIF

The incident happened with just 19 laps to go in the 80-lap race. Hocevar moved ahead of Layne Riggs during the restart after leader Corey Heim pitted with a flat tire. NASCAR rules say the second-place driver becomes the “control” car if the leader pits.

In this case, Riggs was in second, and Hocevar should have waited. Instead, he surged forward and took control of the restart, which was against the rules. NASCAR handed Hocevar a pass-through penalty for the restart violation. He was forced to pit under green with 18 laps left, which dropped him out of contention.

Hocevar ended the race in 13th place. Riggs took over the lead and went on to win the race for Front Row Motorsports. Clearly upset over the call, he called the penalty a “joke” via team radio and sarcastically told race director Seth Kramlich, “Good job, Seth.”

However, the Spire Motorsports driver had not seen the end of it, as not long after the race, FRM fired back with a mocking post online.

FRM wrote, “Hey Hocevar” on X to go along with a GIF that read, “Shoo… Go Away.”

Hocevar will be back on track this Sunday, June 22, in the Cup Series race at Pocono, the Great American Getaway 400. The race begins at 2:00 p.m. ET.

More: Carson Hocevar Unleashes Scathing Radio Message on NASCAR After Costly Truck Series Setback

Hocevar Learned His ‘Lesson’ After Making Derogatory Comments About Mexico City

Hocevar faced strong backlash in the past week after making offensive remarks about Mexico City during a livestream. Before NASCAR’s first Cup Series points race outside the United States since 1958, Hocevar reportedly made controversial remarks about Mexico’s capital and questioned its safety and travel conditions.

His comments quickly spread and drew criticism from fans and the racing community. Spire Motorsports acted quickly. The team fined Hocevar $50,000 and ordered him to complete cultural-sensitivity and bias-awareness training. The team said his words did not reflect their values.

The money from the fine will be donated equally to Cruz Roja Mexicana, United Way Mexico, and Un Kilo de Ayuda. In a public statement, Spire said the team expects its members to treat all communities with respect, both on and off the track.

After the race weekend, Hocevar apologized on social media. On Monday, June 16, he said he was “embarrassed” by what he said and admitted he had no real knowledge of the city. In his message, he said:

“Maybe a kid that had never been out of the country until Thursday should ever give an opinion about what any place is like… I am embarrassed by my comments, by the race I ran.. Count this as another lesson for me in a season I’ve learned so much. Don’t believe everything you hear without seeing it yourself.”

After receiving the penalties, Hocevar expressed that he had judged the city based on things he had heard from others but now knew better, and promised to take the experience as a lesson and work on being more respectful in the future.





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NASCAR Hall of Fame Inductee Kurt Busch Named Grand Marshal for the Great American Getaway 400 Presented by visitpa.com – Speedway Digest

Kurt Busch, a member of the 2026 NASCAR Hall of Fame class, has been named the Grand Marshal for The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.COM NASCAR Cup Series race set for Sunday at Pocono Raceway. Busch will deliver the official command for the drivers to start their engines in his role while Pennsylvania Governor Josh […]

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Kurt Busch, a member of the 2026 NASCAR Hall of Fame class, has been named the Grand Marshal for The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.COM NASCAR Cup Series race set for Sunday at Pocono Raceway.

Busch will deliver the official command for the drivers to start their engines in his role while Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro will serve as the Honorary Starter and wave the green flag to commence The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.COM at 2 p.m. ET (TV: Amazon Prime, Radio: MRN, SiriusXM).

“We’re honored to celebrate Kurt’s Hall-of-Fame career with our fans during The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.com race weekend,” Pocono Raceway President Ben May said. “Pocono Raceway is proud to be a small part of that illustrious career with Kurt being a three-time race winner and two-time polesitter at ‘The Tricky Triangle.’”

The 46-year-old Busch culminated a stellar NASCAR career with the May 20 announcement that he, along with Harry Gant and Ray Hendrick, would make up the 2026 Hall of Fame class. The induction ceremony will take place in Charlotte, N.C. on Jan. 23, 2026. 

Over a 23-year Cup Series career, Busch recorded 34 victories, including the 2017 Daytona 500, 28 pole positions and earned the 2004 championship. He also posted at least four wins in all three NASCAR national series (Cup, Xfinity, CRAFTSMAN Truck); was named the 2014 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year after finishing sixth in the historic open-wheel race; and competed in the NHRA as just the fourth driver to transition from NASCAR to the drag racing series.

Busch also was a three-time winner (2005, ’07, ’16) and two-time polesitter (2005, ’11) at Pocono Raceway. He amassed 21 top-10 finishes, including 14 among the top five, in 41 career starts at “The Tricky Triangle.”

In addition to the Grand Marshal position, Busch will be honored by Pocono Raceway with “TY KURT” painted on the start/finish line and the Mattioli Foundation donating $10,000 to Vet Tix in his honor.

Pocono Raceway will play host to a NASCAR national series race each day, beginning with Friday’s CRAFTSMAN Truck Series MillerTech Battery 200 at 5 p.m. ET (TV: FS1). That race will be followed by the Explore the Pocono Mountains 250 Xfinity Series race Saturday at 3:30 p.m. (TV: The CW). The weekend culminates with The Great American Getaway 400 presented by VISITPA.COM Cup Series race Sunday at 2 p.m. (TV: Amazon Prime).

In celebration of The Great American Getaway 400, Visit PA will host additional fan-focused experiences all weekend long at Pocono Raceway. NASCAR fans can explore an interactive Fan Zone featuring giveaways, games, and the ultimate summer thrill – UTV rides around the infield campground. Fans will also have a chance to win tickets to iconic Pennsylvania attractions including Hersheypark, Kalahari Resorts, and more.

As part of Visit PA’s commitment to giving back, the organization donated its race-day sponsorship ticket package to Pennsylvania veterans, welcoming 125 service members to enjoy the race.

“The Great American Getaway is all about the perfect summer road trip, so I can’t think of a better backdrop for Visit PA than Pocono Raceway – or a better Grand Marshal than Kurt Busch to come and cheer on the drivers at the ‘Tricky Triangle,’” said Anne Ryan, Deputy Secretary of Tourism.

For more information on the NASCAR weekend or to purchase tickets, please visit www.poconoraceway.com.

Pocono Raceway PR



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Enter for Your Chance at NASCAR Tickets

NASCAR is coming back to downtown Chicago July 4th weekend and we have your grounds passes! Yup, that means you’ll have access to more standing-room only trackside viewing locations along the race, legendary Chicago food & beverage options while you watch plus you’ll enjoy Zac Brown Band (!) on Saturday night as part of the Busch […]

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NASCAR is coming back to downtown Chicago July 4th weekend and we have your grounds passes!

Yup, that means you’ll have access to more standing-room only trackside viewing locations along the race, legendary Chicago food & beverage options while you watch plus you’ll enjoy Zac Brown Band (!) on Saturday night as part of the Busch Light Summer Music Series!

Enter for a chance to win a pair of passes!

July 5th – 6th Nascar Chicago Street Race Season – Amazing racing downtown and Sac Brown band!

Kids are free – Nascarchicago.com



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DiBenedetto rebuilding his career in Xfinity Series – Scranton Times-Tribune

Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Show Caption 1 of 8 Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency) Expand LONG POND — Things […]

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Matt DiBenedetto. (Clear 28 Agency)

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LONG POND — Things were going well for Matt DiBenedetto five years ago. He was driving full time in the NASCAR Cup Series and qualified for the 2020 playoffs.

Then, it all came apart. He lost his ride with Wood Brothers Racing at the end of the 2021 season.

Since then, the 33-year-old driver from California has been working his way back. He finds himself in the Xfinity Series with independent Viking Motorsports. He will be behind the wheel of the No. 99 Chevrolet on Saturday in the 10th annual Explore the Pocono Mountains 250 at Pocono Raceway. His car is being sponsored by the Pocono Mountains Visitors Bureau.

Viking Motorsports and DiBenedetto appear to be the perfect fit for each other. The team is building in its first season on its own after getting help last season in an alliance with Ryan Sieg Racing. The driver provides talent and experience while starting his career over.

DiBenedetto admits being a bit humbled when he lost his Cup Series ride.

“Sometimes when you get stripped of things in life, you get a lot of clarity and you learn to appreciate the things you forget to appreciate,” he said.

“Today, I’m truly having more fun than I’ve ever had in my whole life and career. I appreciate it so much more and my faith journey has changed. I’ve had so much fun doing it and this team giving me this opportunity to build something together. I’m driving for such good people, I’m hoping to drive for this team for the remainder of my career, which hopefully is a long time.”

In seven seasons and 248 races in the Cup Series, DiBenedetto had nine top-five and 31 top-10 finishes. Three times he placed second — at Bristol in 2019 and both Las Vegas races in 2020.

After losing his ride with the Wood Brothers, he spent two seasons in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, making 43 starts with one win at Talladega in 2022.

Last year, DiBenedetto was recommended to Viking Motorsports owner Don Sackett as someone who could help the new team qualify for races and get its feet off the ground. His first race was at Richmond, six races into the Xfinity season. What started as ‘Let’s try this for five races’ turned into 10 races, which turned into the rest of the season. He posted three top-10 finishes.

Then, in January, DiBenedetto was announced as the team’s full-time driver for the 2025 campaign.

“After getting to know him (Sackett) in a short time, I was like, Man, I want to be a part of what this guy is building and be a part of his vision,” DiBenedetto said.

Through 15 races, DiBenedetto has a season-best finish of fifth at Talladega, along with four top-20s, including a 16th last week at Mexico City. There have been plenty of challenges and ups and downs such as moving its operation from Georgia to North Carolina and switching manufacturers from Ford to Chevrolet. But DiBenedetto likes the direction the team is moving.

“We’ve had our successes, our good runs, but we’ve also had DNFs or crazy circumstances bite us,” he said.

“But recently we’ve had a lot of very fast race cars where our speed is continuing to improve. We’re all meshing as a team, everything is starting to come together. We’re all synched up and unified, our communication is really good. I would expect the rest of the season to be a lot more speed and consistency than the first part of the year.”

Finishing in the top 20 in points would be a good accomplishment for the team. But DiBenedetto feels he can run consistently in the top 15 during the second half of the season. It wouldn’t even surprise him if he had a shot to win a race and qualify for the playoffs.

“That would be an extra bonus and total overachievement for the year,” DiBenedetto said. “But I’m not ruling that out, especially seeing the speed and confidence I’ve had. We’ve had fast, good, consistent race cars. Me and my crew chief Pat (Tryson) are really firing on all cylinders.

“I’m like a little kid in a candy store because I can see it all coming together. We’re going to be rockin’ and rollin’ the rest of this year.”

At Pocono, DiBenedetto ran 14 Cup races with his best finish being sixth in 2020. He also has two Truck Series starts and Saturday will be his third Xfinity start there.

“As a driver, coming here is one of my favorite places,” DiBenedetto said. “We always go to tracks that you can compare to somewhere else. Except for here. This is the only track we come to where it’s absolutely not comparable to anywhere else we go, which is what makes it fun. You’ve got three completely different, unique corners that present a lot of challenges, the racing is really fun. You’ve got to really plan ahead in the decision you make; you’ve got to be really calculated.”

Among the keys to success at Pocono, according to DiBenedetto, are a good qualifying effort, surviving the wild restarts and being able to get your car off Turn 3 well.

“It needs to turn and exit Turn 3 well because you’ve got a really, really long straightaway that it leads into,” he said. “If you’re not good off Turn 3, you’re going to struggle all day and struggle to pass.”

Practice for the Explore the Mountains 250 is 10 a.m. with qualifying to follow at 11:05 a.m. The race is scheduled to get the green flag at 3:40 p.m.

One interesting aspect for the race is Dale Earnhardt Jr. serving a crew chief for his team’s No. 88 Chevrolet and driver Connor Zilisch. Earnhardt is making his debut as crew chief while Mardy Lindley serves a one-race suspension for a missing lug nuts violation following the race at Nashville three weeks ago.

Also, Cup Series regular Chase Elliott is pulling double duty. He is driving the No. 17 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports. Elliott also ran the Xfinity race at Darlington in April and finished second.



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Is NASCAR moving its street race from Chicago to sunny San Diego next year? |

After two years of rain-soaked July Fourth weekend events, could the NASCAR Chicago Street Race be heading west to eternally sunny San Diego? The Athletic reported Wednesday that NASCAR and the Southern California city’s sports tourism commission are in negotiations to hold a race on the streets of San Diego in 2026. A NASCAR spokesperson […]

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After two years of rain-soaked July Fourth weekend events, could the NASCAR Chicago Street Race be heading west to eternally sunny San Diego?

The Athletic reported Wednesday that NASCAR and the Southern California city’s sports tourism commission are in negotiations to hold a race on the streets of San Diego in 2026.

A NASCAR spokesperson declined to comment on the unconfirmed report, while the San Diego Sports Commission did not respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Chicago is set to host the third annual street race July 5-6 on a pop-up course in and around Grant Park, completing an inaugural three-year agreement with NASCAR. The deal, struck during former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration, includes a two-year renewal option.

“We continue to have positive conversations with the city of Chicago, and right now, we’re focused on making 2025 the best event yet,” a NASCAR spokesperson said Thursday.

A spokesperson for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office did not respond to a request for comment Thursday. The city, which had an annual 180-day exit clause after the first two races, committed to this year’s event in August.

Adding a San Diego street race next year does not necessarily affect the future of the Chicago Street Race.

Most NASCAR tracks range from a quarter-mile to 2 ½-mile banked ovals, but the Florida-based sanctioning body for stock car racing holds several events at road courses, including Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, in Sonoma, California, and at Watkins Glen in New York. NASCAR might similarly be building its portfolio of urban street races, with Chicago paving the way.

The Chicago Street Race has nonetheless had its challenges in the first two years, including pushback over the disruption and street closures to set up the 12-turn, 2.2-mile course through Grant Park, down DuSable Lake Shore Drive and up Michigan Avenue.

This year, NASCAR has streamlined the buildout and reduced major street closings to 18 days, starting with the shutdown Thursday of Balbo Drive from Columbus Drive to DuSable Lake Shore Drive. All streets are scheduled to be reopened by July 14.

But the biggest issue facing the first two street races was inclement weather.

In 2023, the inaugural Fourth of July weekend event navigated record rainfall that curtailed races, canceled concerts and left fans soaked. The first Cup Series street race also garnered a huge national TV audience with Chicago as a rainy backdrop, averaging nearly 4.8 million viewers during a four-hour broadcast on NBC.

Last year’s race generated $128 million in total economic impact and drew 53,036 unique visitors, according to a study commissioned by Choose Chicago, the city’s tourism arm.

This year, the Grant Park 165 main event on Sunday is scheduled to start at 1 p.m., 2 ½ hours earlier than last year, in hopes of finally getting the race to the finish line. The nationally televised broadcast is moving from NBC to cable channel TNT.

If the San Diego Street Race comes to fruition for 2026, whether as a competitive event or supplanting Chicago, the forecast for a dry run is likely much brighter. San Diego, which is considered to have among the best year-round climates in the nation, averages less than 10 inches of annual rainfall, according to National Weather Service data.

The Windy City is far wetter than Southern California. Chicago averages closer to 40 inches of annual precipitation, with a record 3 to 7 inches of rain hitting the city and flooding the street course during the first Cup Series race in 2023.



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