In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains

Kansas Speedway Readies For NASCAR Without Fans At The Track

Emporia native Chris Tidwell (holding the gas can on the left) served on the crew of Ryan Blaney during the fall 2019 Cup race at Kansas Speedway.
Greg Echlin

Kansas is about to find out the value of a NASCAR race without people in the stands.

Like every other sport and industry, NASCAR has been shaken by the coronavirus pandemic.

“Unfortunately we’ve had to endure layoffs as a company and we’ve had to furlough employees,” says Pat Warren, president of Kansas Speedway. “Both of those decisions were made so that when this is over, we will be a strong enough organization, as strong as possible, to move forward and survive in a post-COVID 19 environment.”

The expansive motorsports complex in Wyandotte County, covering more than 1,200 acres as an anchor in the Village West retail area, is one of 12 tracks around the country owned by NASCAR, which is headquartered in Daytona Beach, Florida.

When the pandemic shutdown hit, NASCAR was in the midst of its Cup series, the highest level of stock car racing in the country, capped by playoffs in the fall leading up to a championship. Two stops were scheduled for Kansas City, one on May 31 and the other on October 18 when the playoffs were scheduled to be underway.

As the nation began to reopen, NASCAR was the first major sport to resume its schedule. When it returned to competition on May 17 in Darlington, South Carolina, it was without fans. There have been no reports of anyone testing positive of COVID-19 in the five Cup races leading up to the race on Sunday, June 7 in Atlanta.

Kansas City’s May 31 race is now scheduled for July 23. Activity at the track will mostly be in the infield, with team crews working on cars in the garage area and television crews working on the broadcast.

Though attendance figures aren't announced for races, the Kansas Speedway's seating capacity is 48,000. Racing without fans will dramatically change the drivers’ experience, Warren says. After the victories normally come the triumphant donuts with spinning tires and billowing smoke at the start/finish line and the trip to victory lane for a celebration — everything to the roar of a crowd. Until recently.

Greg Echlin / KCUR 89.3
Pat Warren has been with Kansas Speedway since 2006, and president since 2010.

“It’ll be a crawl, walk, run approach, I would assume, like everything we’ve done. Not just us, but society with COVID-19,” says Warren, who has been with the Speedway since 2006 and president since 2010.

Even with the restrictions, Warren knows his facility is better off than Chicagoland Speedway, another NASCAR-owned track that opened in 2001, the same year as Kansas Speedway. NASCAR scratched Chicagoland’s June date and its long-term future in Joliet, Illinois, is in question.

Warren sees a different outlook for Kansas Speedway and envisions it as a catalyst for a recovering economy in the Kansas City area.

“One of the areas that’s been hit hardest with COVID-19 has been the travel and tourism industry. In Kansas City, we’re a big part of that,” he notes. “Regardless of what happens this year, we look forward to playing our part to try to help hotels and restaurants and other groups that have been really hit hard by this.”

Pat Warren has been with Kansas Speedway since 2006, and president since 2010.
Greg Echlin / KCUR 89.3

Copyright 2020 KCUR 89.3

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Ever since he set foot on the baseball diamond at Fernwood Park on Chicago's South Side, Greg Echlin began a love affair with the world of sports. After graduating from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, he worked as a TV sports anchor and a radio sportscaster in Salina, Kansas. He moved to Kansas City in 1984 and has been there since covering sports. Through the years, he has covered multiple Super Bowls, Final Fours and Major League Baseball's World Series and All-Star games.
  1. New Kansas law will allow homeowners to wipe away racist language from property deeds
  2. Kansas' health care system doesn't work as well for you if you're Black, research shows
  3. Getting property back from Kansas police is really hard, even for the innocent. That will change
  4. Kansas Republican Congressman Jake LaTurner won’t seek another term
  5. Kansans are clearing invasive species from woods and prairies so native wildlife can thrive again