Kyle Busch and the No. 8 team at Richard Childress Racing were off to a dismal start in the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season.
A change of crew chief in late April brought Andy Street atop the pit box. And through two races, Busch has finally shown glimpses of speed again with competitive runs at both Texas Motor Speedway and Watkins Glen International, offering a glimmer of hope that the two-time Cup Series champion is on the verge of finding success again.
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In a team sport like NASCAR, one hire doesnât typically lead to a radical change in a teamâs performance. Yet itâs hard to ignore the uptick the No. 8 team has had since Street stepped in at Texas. But who is Andy Street, and why is the No. 8 car suddenly competitive again all of a sudden?
âIâll tell you the whole story,â Street said.
MORE: Cup Series standings
He offers an early disclaimer: Street says he hasnât done anything in particular to build speed into the No. 8 car. He instead points to the tireless efforts that have been taking place behind the scenes in different departments, and the Nos. 3 and 8 teams are reaping those rewards now.
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âThat may not be what you want to hear,â Street laughed.
But there is reason to take Street at his word. Let him explain.
Most people may recognize Streetâs name from his three years of success in the NASCAR OâReilly Auto Parts Series as crew chief for Austin Hill and the No. 21 Chevrolet, winning 10 races together and earning a 2024 Championship 4 appearance. What most likely donât know is Street has been a fixture at RCR since 2003. After an interview at Thanksgiving in 2002 while he was a student at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Street was eventually hired for a spot on the teamâs engineering department two weeks before he graduated from college in the spring of 2003.
âThe landscape of NASCAR has changed so much over the last 23 years, right?â Street said in a phone interview Wednesday evening. âRCR was structured different. I mean, at that time, you had four Cup cars, and they were all kind of like their individual teams. It wasnât this like big team aspect, and so you were exposed to a lot of different things.â
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Street loved motorsports and he wanted to be a part of it, but stock-car racing was new to him when he first joined RCR. Drag racing was where Streetâs passion for motorsports began. But as an engineer at RCR through the mid-2000s, Street got a crash course in NASCAR and found his strengths in research and development, designing through CAD drawings and working closely with the fabrication department to assist with the many midweek test sessions that occurred at that time, all providing valuable lessons before Street joined Kevin Harvickâs No. 29 team as an engineer in the 2006 season.
âIt was very cool because it was the turning point, I felt like, of a lot of development stuff with the aero side of things and the suspension side of things,â Street said. âIt was very cool. Todd Berrier was the crew chief on the 29 car with Kevin Harvick, and he and I got along really well. We still get along really well. And he took me under his wing and showed me a lot of things. He knew I was green to circle-track racing stuff, so it was very cool to have him take an interest in me and want to see me succeed.â
In all, Street spent time from 2006 through 2017 either working as an engineer on the road or in the teamâs R&D program back at the shop, with team leaders placing full belief in Street as the man who could help revamp the organizationâs development.
Street departed in 2017, however, for a brief sabbatical that helped fulfill his passion for drag racing, working with NHRA Pro Stock Car racer Tanner Gray â yes, the now-NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series driver â for just over a year. RCR and NASCAR called Street back, though, leading to Streetâs return in 2018 as engineer for the No. 2 Chevrolet in OâReilly Auto Parts Series competition.
Andy Street serves as crew chief during a NASCAR race.
But even after his debut as crew chief in a one-off opportunity in 2019, Streetâs strengths in development always shone brightest. What couldnât be ignored, though, was the speed he brought to his cars as crew chief. That led to his first full-time gig in 2020, heading the No. 21 team with four different drivers before he and Myatt Snider paired in 2021 in the No. 2 Chevrolet, earning a win at Homestead-Miami. One year later, he and Hill rocketed to success from 2022 through 2024.
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Street earned a promotion in 2025, becoming the organizationâs OâReilly Auto Parts Series engineer manager while also crew-chiefing RCRâs part-time entries in both OâReilly and Cup. He and Johnny Klausmeier, RCRâs technical director, alternated time at the track. That allowed Street to connect with all of the organizationâs drivers and teams through post-practice and post-race debriefs. So when RCR parted ways with then-crew chief Randall Burnett on the No. 8 team late in 2025, Street got the call to step in for the final five races of the year. Jim Pohlman began the 2026 campaign atop the No. 8 pit box, but Street was tabbed for the job again with Busch sitting 27th in points after 10 races.
MORE: Busch speaks on crew chief change: âThe writing is in the points standingsâ
âThe relationship that (was) established with Kyle in the post-race meetings or post-practice meetings and so forth, it was really good,â Street said. âIt was really good from the beginning. Itâs been easier this year for us to get into the transition with me back in that position because of our five races that we had together. But I will say that we were fine before the five races last year. But then during those five races to end the season, he and I got on the same page together. And his guidance â he knows that I donât have a ton of experience in the Cup Series, especially with these cars. And so last year, he was a huge asset for me to help me. Like he would tell me what heâs feeling and what he thinks. And Iâm like, âWell, Iâm thinking this,â and heâs like, âNo, I think you need to think thisâ and just constantly bouncing ideas off of each other.â
That brings us to the present. Busch enters Sundayâs NASCAR All-Star Race at Dover Motor Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FS1, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) 24th in points on the heels of an uptick in speed. Whatâs led to it, Street says, is a united belief within the walls of RCR.
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âThe team is incredible. That 8 team, everybody that works dedicated to the 8 team, that is an incredible group of guys,â Street said. âThey are dedicated. They are committed. They want to see the program succeed. And I canât tell you that thereâs one thing that I did anything different than the previous guy, or even Randall when he was on the program, or Jim. I mean, Iâve got a ton of respect for Randall and Jim, and so excited Jimâs at RCR. Heâs a great asset to us all. But I canât pinpoint anything other than the fact that Iâve just worked with (Busch), and I kind of understand what he needs a little bit better, maybe, than (others).â
The team wonât earn any points to better their position in Sundayâs exhibition, but the upcoming slate of tracks â Dover, Charlotte, Nashville, Michigan and Pocono â offers a chance to build upon this newfound positivity.
âI look forward to finishing out the year with Kyle,â Street said. âI mean, theyâre all not going to be top-10 weekends. Theyâre all not gonna be top-five weekends. But try to keep the momentum going as much as we can, and try to strive for those top fives and top 10s. And if you do that enough, you might squeak in a win or two.â
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