Motorsports
Without charters, what would happen to 23XI and FRM as open teams?
Thursday, news broke that the U.S. Court of Appeals plans to overturn the preliminary injunction that allowed 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports to compete with charters while suing NASCAR over the 2025 Charter Agreement. Should the ruling go uncontested, it will take effect on June 26th and both teams will lose their charters ahead […]
Thursday, news broke that the U.S. Court of Appeals plans to overturn the preliminary injunction that allowed 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports to compete with charters while suing NASCAR over the 2025 Charter Agreement. Should the ruling go uncontested, it will take effect on June 26th and both teams will lose their charters ahead of the Atlanta race weekend, but what does this mean? We’re here to explain it all.
Contracts voided, qualify on time, and loss of income
The most glaring issue involves guaranteed grid spots. Chartered teams are guaranteed a spot on the grid each week while Open teams have to qualify on time. However, only one race this year has had more than a full field of entries, sending cars home (the Daytona 500). The Coca-Cola 600 was the only other race that reached the cap for field size with 40 cars starting.
Open teams will not benefit from the financial aspect of the Charter Agreement either, meaning that they will earn far less money than chartered teams every race weekend, regardless of where they finish. Part of that is revenue from NASCAR’s multi-billion dollar broadcasting deal, and only Chartered teams get a slice of that pie. While exact figures aren’t made public, it’s clearly several million dollars.
As pointed out by 23XI/FRM attorney Jeffrey Kessler, this will also compromise and void contracts with sponsors and drivers. Drivers such as Tyler Reddick can move to other teams while sponsorship deals that were locked in will suddenly be in jeopardy. There are clauses in some contract that nullify any previously existing agreements.
With no charters, teams will have to rely heavily on sponsorship dollars and in the case of 23XI, funding from team co-owner Michael Jordan. In this situation, things would likely be tighter for a FRM team owner and restaurant entrepreneur Bob Jenkins. Either way, they will surely be operating in the red as even chartered teams have spoken about struggling to make a profit due to the cost of business.

Michael McDowell, Front Row Motorsports Ford; Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing Toyota
Photo by: Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Now, what it does not have an impact on is the championship. The points system is identical for both open and chartered entries. Open teams are eligible to compete in the playoffs and run for the championship. And if an open team fails to qualify for a race but is competing full-time, they do not need a playoff waiver because they attempted the race.
This won’t compromise on-track speed other than being a possible distraction, but an open entry hasn’t won a Cup race since Shane van Gisbergen’s 2023 victory in the Chicago Street Course race in Trackhouse’s Project 91 entry.
Contrary to what some mistakingly believe, losing charters does not mean a team will lose their car numbers. Charters are numbered, yes, but that is not tied directly to actual car numbers.
What becomes of the charters
Another interesting question in this specific scenario is what becomes of the six charters the teams now hold. If this ruling holds, NASCAR could choose to just run with 30 charters, increasing the payout for the remaining teams.
However, no one is sure what will happen in the case of the charters that helped create the third teams for both 23XI and FRM. They each purchased a charter from Stewart-Haas Racing at the end of the 2024 season, a team that has since shut down. The deal only went through because 23XI and FRM used the courts to push it through. These charters cannot be returned to SHR because SHR doesn’t exist. Gene Haas continues to race, but only as a single-car team in the Cup Series.
In this article
Nick DeGroot
NASCAR Cup
Front Row Motorsports
23XI Racing
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Motorsports
If this is it for NASCAR’s Chicago Street Race, drivers will miss a ‘favorite event’
CHICAGO — NASCAR stock cars will roar down Michigan Avenue, DuSable Lake Shore Drive and other streets around Chicago’s Grant Park for perhaps the final time on Sunday afternoon, marking the conclusion of an eventful and weather-marred three-year contract. Meteorologists are calling for rain on race day for the third consecutive year, and the long-term […]

CHICAGO — NASCAR stock cars will roar down Michigan Avenue, DuSable Lake Shore Drive and other streets around Chicago’s Grant Park for perhaps the final time on Sunday afternoon, marking the conclusion of an eventful and weather-marred three-year contract.
Meteorologists are calling for rain on race day for the third consecutive year, and the long-term forecast for the race’s future on the NASCAR schedule looks gloomier. While considered a remarkable feat in the NASCAR world, the race has also been an expensive proposition for the sanctioning body — more than $50 million spent for the inaugural race in 2023, with less attendance than originally hoped.
The grandstands, hospitality areas and concert venue have been pared down for this year’s edition of the race. Meanwhile, The Athletic has reported NASCAR is in talks for a San Diego street race next year — and it’s unclear whether there could be room for two such events on the calendar.
But if this is the last one in Chicago, drivers certainly aren’t cheering its demise. Despite widespread industry skepticism before the first edition of the race, Chicago has become a signature event that presents a different experience than most on the NASCAR schedule.
“It’s probably my favorite event in NASCAR each year,” said Kyle Larson, a three-time winner this season in the Cup Series.
Favorite? Of all 38 races?
“I mean, name a better one,” he said.
Larson rattled off a list of pluses for the Chicago race: Drivers enjoy staying in a hotel across the street and walking to the racetrack. There are endless nice restaurants. The city is beautiful. And the racing has been surprisingly good. From Larson’s view, what’s not to like?
It wasn’t always evident it would turn out this way. In the lead-up to the inaugural race, Chicago politicians and residents alike raised a fuss over road closures, traffic, and concerns about everything from dog-walking disruptions to asking track president Julie Giese if there was a chance of cars crashing into buildings.
Meanwhile, there was hand-wringing in the NASCAR garage over headlines about high crime and worries about whether the Cup Series cars would be able to have a good show on such a narrow course.
Then, in the middle of the first day of on-track activity in 2023, the first rain hit. The city evacuated the entire park due to lightning, and NASCAR was forced to cancel high-profile concerts that night to the dismay of many fans who were sold on the “music festival with a race” concept.
Suddenly, it seemed like the event might be doomed before it even got started.
“That first year on the Saturday, the amount of people coming in here for the concert was insanity,” Spire Motorsports driver Michael McDowell said. “It was going to be a giant success. And then, obviously,
The next day, a large storm caused the track to flood. The rain swirled around on the radar like a small hurricane. Finally, the skies cleared enough for New Zealand native Shane van Gisbergen to win a thrilling race in his NASCAR debut, broadcaster NBC had its highest NASCAR viewership in six years, and the race was viewed as a hit despite the rain. It won “Event of the Year” at the Sports Business Awards.

Shane van Gisbergen won the inaugural Chicago Street Race in 2023. The event has earned praise despite two years of rain-marred competition. (Michael Reaves / Getty Images)
Mother Nature struck again last year, causing more delays and shortening the race. And Chicago might get drenched again on Sunday, if those forecasts are correct.
Still, an often-cynical NASCAR garage has refreshingly focused on the rays of sunshine poking through the clouds when it comes to Chicago.
“It’s had to go through a lot of adversity, but the race itself and the city and the track are awesome,” McDowell said. “It accomplished what we wanted to accomplish: Bringing the race to the fans and not the fans to the race.”
Giese said more than 80 percent of ticket-buyers in the first year had never previously been to a NASCAR race; that number dipped to a still-impressive 70 percent in Year 2 and was tracking similarly for Sunday.
Drivers don’t have that data at their fingertips, but their anecdotal evidence has put Chicago in a favorable light. Driver/team owner Denny Hamlin said there was “more excitement around the venue itself than what a normal race venue has” and was pleased to hear non-NASCAR fans at his hotel discussing the race.
His experiences led him to stump Saturday for a return to Chicago because it has stayed true to the original goal: Creating a massive, in-person promotion geared toward an audience who might not otherwise even consider watching a NASCAR race.
“I (went) shopping, and I go to all these different stores,” Hamlin said. “(The conversations were,) ‘What are you in town for? Oh, yeah, there’s a race. We were talking about going to that. We didn’t go last year because of the rain, but we’re thinking about going.’
“That’s what you want. These are younger people who are not going to travel to Chicagoland (Speedway, an oval in Joliet, about 40 miles away from Grant Park) to go to a race. You have to have it right here where they can walk to it.”
But that’s also the dilemma for NASCAR. This isn’t F1, which never races on an oval and conducts its championship circuit exclusively on street circuits and road courses. Nor is this IndyCar, which has a sprinkling of ovals on a calendar otherwise dominated by road racing.
NASCAR has six non-ovals per season, and Chicago is the only street course race. Street courses are tighter and less forgiving than natural road courses, which have plenty of runoff areas unrestrained by real-life city avenues and obstacles like sidewalks and bus stops.
While Chicago has allowed new fans to see the cars and drivers up close, it’s also not a true sampling of the core NASCAR product.
That’s one reason Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott has been such a strong advocate of seeing NASCAR race at the Nashville Fairgrounds short track near that city’s center and repeatedly praised NASCAR for building a small oval inside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for its preseason exhibition “Clash” race from 2022-2024.
“There’s nothing that’s going to top giving people a true short track (in Nashville),” Elliott said. “What is NASCAR? Here it is. Take an Uber from Broadway to the racetrack and go watch.
“That is the biggest home run waiting to happen. But this is a good second choice, as far as getting inside a big-city market. It’s been a lot of fun to come do it.”
Regardless of whether Chicago sticks, it’s a given that the NASCAR schedule will continue evolving. And that’s a recent development for a series which once had such a stale calendar that Joey Logano considered a “big change” was “moving a date a couple weeks.”
These days, NASCAR has taken some wild chances. It raced inside the L.A. Coliseum. It tried a dirt race. It took a gamble on the small-capacity Bowman Gray Stadium earlier this year. It took the Cup Series to Mexico City last month for the first international points race in the Modern Era.
But nothing compares to what it accomplished logistically in Chicago. A series without any street course setup experience convinced city leaders they could pull it off and then did, constructing a world-class track that challenged drivers in the heart of the third-biggest American city.
It’s telling that in spite of a trifecta of rainy race days, the Chicago Street Course legacy is likely to still be viewed favorably and as a proof of concept for future street racing events.
“It’s proven being bold can have its benefits if you take big risks,” 2023 Cup champion Ryan Blaney said. “It’s something they’d never done before. They took it head-on.”
“I wish we would have gotten more fortune with the weather, but it’s been a big success. No matter what happens next year, going forward, it’s been really good NASCAR decided to do this. It was a win.”
(Top photo of Shane van Gisbergen celebrating his win Saturday in the Xfinity Series race in Chicago: Chris Graythen / Getty Images)
Motorsports
Rain for NASCAR… Again! – NBC Chicago
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Motorsports
NASCAR drivers prepared for another rain-filled Grant Park 165
NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace was succinct with his thoughts on whether the Chicago Street Race should return next year. “If it rains again, we ain’t coming back,” Wallace joked. For the third consecutive year, the Cup -Series race in Chicago likely will feel the effects of rain, which forced the first two races to be […]

NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace was succinct with his thoughts on whether the Chicago Street Race should return next year.
“If it rains again, we ain’t coming back,” Wallace joked.
For the third consecutive year, the Cup -Series race in Chicago likely will feel the effects of rain, which forced the first two races to be shortened.
The weather has diminished the overall experience for fans, who might see the last Chicago Street Race on Sunday. This is the final year of the original three-year contract between NASCAR and the city, although there are two option years.
Drivers have enjoyed coming to Chicago, staying downtown and navigating the different challenges the street course presents, but they think fans haven’t truly experienced all that NASCAR has to offer.
“We haven’t even given [the Chicago Street Race] a fair shake yet because of the weather, but I do think it’s been pretty successful,” Joey Logano told the Sun-Times. “I like moving things around. I like trying different things, and this is obviously way out of our comfort zone.”
Despite the rain, drivers still see the appeal of the race. The sport is attracting new fans and is a boon for sponsors. Though there’s a course at the Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, it can’t replicate the vibe and convenience that Chicago offers.
San Diego reportedly will host a street race next year, but even then, it won’t have the cultural resonance that Chicago provides.
“I believe [Chicago is] an important place for us,” said Denny Hamlin, who co-owns 23XI with Michael Jordan. “Chicagoland is not a substitute for this race. I’d like to see us run both.”
McDonald’s is a prominent partner with 23XI, and its headquarters are in Chicago. The 23XI team has Wallace, Riley Herbst and Tyler Reddick in the race, emphasizing the importance of the street race for sponsors. Hamlin said the event is one of the biggest on the schedule because of the atmosphere it generates, despite the weather.
Ryan Blaney, who drives the No. 12 Ford for Penske, said the rain doesn’t affect the drivers much. He said “it’s never really comfortable” driving through rainy conditions, but experiencing it the last two years has helped.
“It stinks more for the people coming out to watch,” Blaney said. “I feel bad for the spectators that want to come out to the race with their whole families because it’s a huge weekend and, you know, it’s a special, unique race in Chicago.”
Despite the narrow course, drivers still enjoy the experience because of its proximity to the city. Wallace, who finished 13th last year after being clipped by winner Alex Bowman, said he relishes the opportunity to run into fans as he heads to restaurants.
Hamlin shared a similar sentiment, saying he was out shopping Friday and overheard fans considering attending the race after declining to last year because of the rain.
“That’s what you want,” Hamlin said. “These are young people that … they’re not going to travel to Chicagoland for a race. You have to have it right here, where they belong to it. So I don’t know if anyone shares the same sentiment.”
“I don’t run the series, I don’t make the decisions. But it just seems like there’s more excitement around the venue itself than a normal NASCAR race.”
Motorsports
Chicago start time, TV, live stream, lineup
Jeff Gordon reflects on how to grow NASCAR’s popularity Jeff Gordon discusses the popularity of NASCAR and how the sport can continue to grow. Sports Seriously NASCAR’s inaugural In-Season Challenge got off to a chaotic start last week at Atlanta. Chase Elliott won on his home track in what became an event of attrition following […]


Jeff Gordon reflects on how to grow NASCAR’s popularity
Jeff Gordon discusses the popularity of NASCAR and how the sport can continue to grow.
Sports Seriously
NASCAR’s inaugural In-Season Challenge got off to a chaotic start last week at Atlanta. Chase Elliott won on his home track in what became an event of attrition following multiple big wrecks.
More than one-third of the grid did not finish the June 28 race at EchoPark Speedway, and Elliott passed leader Brad Keselowski on the final lap to take victory by 0.168 seconds.
That victory marked Elliott’s first win since his win at Texas Motor Speedway back in April 2024. It also closed the gap at the top of the drivers’ standings from Elliott in second to points leader William Byron, who was caught in one of the wrecks. Elliott now sits 37 points behind Byron atop the standings.
With many drivers knocked out of contention before the checkered flag, the in-season challenge bracket saw plenty of upsets. Top seed Denny Hamlin’s DNF gave No. 32 seed Ty Dillon the win and eliminated the Joe Gibbs Racing driver from contention. Same goes for Hamlin’s JGR teammate Chase Briscoe, the No. 2 seed.
This week marks the only street course event on the Cup Series calendar in 2025, so there will likely be even more surprises in store. Here’s everything you need to get ready for the Cup Series race in Chicago on July 6:
What time does the NASCAR Cup race in Chicago start?
The Grant Park 165 is scheduled to start at 2 p.m. ET (1 p.m. local) Sunday, July 6, on the street course in downtown Chicago.
What TV channel is the NASCAR Cup race in Chicago on?
The Grant Park 165 will be broadcast on TNT. It’s the second of four races to be broadcast on the network. Pre-race coverage will start at 1 p.m. ET.
Will there be a live stream of the NASCAR Cup race in Chicago?
Yes, the Grant Park 165 will be streamed on WatchTNT, Max and Sling TV.
Stream the NASCAR race at Chicago on Sling
How many laps is the NASCAR Cup race in Chicago?
The Grant Park 165 is 75 laps around the 2.2-mile track for a total of 165 miles. The race will have three segments (laps per stage) — Stage 1: 20 laps; Stage 2: 25 laps; Stage 3: 30 laps.
Who won the NASCAR Cup race at Chicago last year?
Alex Bowman led the final eight laps, taking the lead on Lap 51 of the shortened race that ended with a countdown clock on Lap 58 instead of the scheduled 75 after weather disrputed the race. When the clock hit zero, Bowman needed to maintain his lead for two laps – taking the white flag and the checkered flag – to earn his lone victory of 2024. Bowman pulled away from Tyler Reddick and won by 2.863 seconds.
NASCAR In-Season Challenge second round matchups
Thirty-two drivers qualified for the inaugural in-season challenge and 16 were eliminated in Atlanta. The 16 winners advanced to the second round and make up the remaining bracket. Here’s how things look entering Chicago:
Top half of draw
- No. 17 Brad Keselowski vs. No. 32 Ty Dillon
- No. 8 Alex Bowman vs. No. 9 Bubba Wallace
- No. 5 Chase Elliott vs. No. 12 John Hunter Nemechek
- No. 20 Erik Jones vs. No. 29 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Bottom half of draw
- No. 15 Ryan Preece vs. No. 31 Noah Gragson
- No. 23 Tyler Reddick vs. No. 26 Carson Hocevar
- No. 6 Ty Gibbs vs. No. 22 A.J. Allmendinger
- No. 3 Chris Buescher vs. No. 14 Zane Smith
What is the lineup for the Grant Park 165 at Chicago?
- Shane van Gisbergen, No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
- Michael McDowell, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
- Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
- Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
- Chase Briscoe, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
- Kyle Busch, No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
- Ryan Preece, No. 60 RFK Racing Ford
- Chris Buescher, No. 17 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford
- Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
- Austin Dillon, No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
- Alex Bowman, No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Joey Logano, No. 22 Team Penske Ford
- Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
- Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Brad Keselowski, No. 6 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford
- AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
- Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford
- Daniel Suarez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
- Will Brown, No. 13 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
- Todd Gilliland, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford
- Riley Herbst, No. 35 23XI Racing Toyota
- Ross Chastain, No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
- Cole Custer, No. 41 Haas Factory Team Ford
- Noah Gragson, No. 4 Front Row Motorsports Ford
- John Hunter Nemechek, No. 42 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
- Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
- Austin Cindric, No. 2 Team Penske Ford
- Justin Haley, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet
- Josh Berry, No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford
- Austin Hill, No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet
- Josh Bilicki, No. 66 Garage 66 Ford
- Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 47 HYAK Motorsports Chevrolet
- Katherine Legge, No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Chevrolet
- Erik Jones, No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota
- Cody Ware, No. 51 Rick Ware Racing Ford
- Ty Dillon, No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
- Bubba Wallace, No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota
- William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Chase Elliott, No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
- Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
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Motorsports
Alex Bowman is looking for a 2nd straight Cup Series win in Chicago
”I have had a lot of conversations with a lot of people, and there is going to be opportunities,” he said. ”We just have to see how things play out a little bit. I’m not going to lie. I believe that if this was happening next year, it was going to be way easier, because […]

”I have had a lot of conversations with a lot of people, and there is going to be opportunities,” he said. ”We just have to see how things play out a little bit. I’m not going to lie. I believe that if this was happening next year, it was going to be way easier, because next year there’s a lot more openings, but there is going to be some, and I’m confident that things are going to work out.”
Will Brown, the reigning champion in Australia’s Supercars, is making his second career Cup start. The driver of the No. 13 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet was 19th in qualifying.
Brown is hoping to duplicate the success of Shane van Gisbergen, a three-time Supercars champion from New Zealand who is on the pole Sunday. Van Gisbergen won the Chicago race in 2023.
”Obviously, a lot of us Supercar drivers after watching Shane in 2023 loved the look of Chicago and the event, so a lot of us wanted to come over and try this event,” Brown said. ”Very lucky to be here.”
Motorsports
Dennis Hauger Smashes Track Record To Take Mid-Ohio Pole
Dennis Hauger picked up two more accomplishments during his stellar rookie season, topping the track record and winning the pole Saturday for the INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix at Mid-Ohio. Hauger, from Norway, earned his sixth pole in eight starts this season in the INDYCAR development series with a top lap of 1 minute, […]

Dennis Hauger picked up two more accomplishments during his stellar rookie season, topping the track record and winning the pole Saturday for the INDY NXT by Firestone Grand Prix at Mid-Ohio.
Hauger, from Norway, earned his sixth pole in eight starts this season in the INDYCAR development series with a top lap of 1 minute, 9.7431 seconds in the No. 28 Nammo car fielded by Andretti Global. That smashed the INDY NXT track record of 1:10.2879 set by Caio Collet last season during qualifying.
SEE: Qualifying Results
“Super happy about the pole,” Hauger said. “Didn’t really expect it being in Group 1. It felt like the track evolution was quite big in our session. I hoped for (pole), and it came through. Time to get ready for tomorrow.”
The 35-lap race starts at 10:30 a.m. Sunday (FS1, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio Network). Hauger leads fellow Andretti Global rookie Lochie Hughes by 28 points in the championship standings after winning four of the first seven races this season.
Collet, who led practice this morning, didn’t repeat as pole winner but will join Hauger in the front row Sunday after qualifying second at 1:09.8612 in the No. 76 HMD Motorsports car.
Hughes will start directly behind his pole-winning teammate Hauger, qualifying third at 1:09.9894 in the No. 26 McGinley Clinic/USF Pro Championship car. Josh Pierson continued his recent improvement in form by qualifying fourth at 1:10.0315 in the No. 14 HMD Motorsports machine.
Salvador de Alba was the third Andretti Global driver in the top five with his best lap of 1:10.3916 in the No. 27 Grupo Indi entry. Callum Hedge will join de Alba in the third row of the starting grid after qualifying sixth at 1:10.2488 in the No. 17 Abel Motorsports car.
Hauger was the first driver in the opening group to break the 1:10 mark, dropping to 1:09.945 with six minutes remaining. He then laid down his best lap with two minutes left, and Hughes couldn’t top it.
“The track was getting better and better, so in the beginning, it was a bit weird,” Hauger said. “It felt like the tires and track really didn’t come together. The track was definitely better at the end. It was a good run. I maximized what I had with that lap.”
Collet wasted little time finding speed in the second group, dropping to 1:10.1 with nearly seven minutes remaining. He produced his best lap with six minutes left but couldn’t top it as the 13-turn, 2.258-mile track continued to bake under bright sunshine, which lifted track temperatures from 85 degrees this morning to over 120 degrees during qualifying.
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