Speed Sport, formerly the National Speed Sport News (NSSN) is a national American magazine and Web site. It covers local, regional, and national auto racing topics. Yahoo! News called it "one of the most famous motorsports publications in the country" when it stopped publishing the traditional weekly print version in 2011. The New York Times said it has "carried news and, when available, photos, from virtually any dirt track open on a Saturday night."
National Speed Sport News began during the Great Depression as a weekly print newspaper. Chris Economaki published the newspaper for forty years. It was published exclusively on the magazine's website for a year before being purchased by its current owners in 2012, with an accompanying monthly magazine, which became known as Speed Sport.
The newspaper was first published by East Paterson Herald Publishing Co. on August 16, 1934 as the National Auto Racing News. Future editor Chris Economaki sold some of the first copies at Ho-Ho-Kus Speedway. He started writing a column in 1936. It held the first national auto racing convention in New York in 1940. It became known as the National Speed Sport News in 1943 when the publisher William Kay formed The Kay Publishing Group. Auto racing was banned in the United States during World War II and the newspaper had moved to monthly publication in 1944. When the ban was lifted in August 16, 1945 and it switched to biweekly publications then back to weekly papers in 1947. Kay died from a heart attach in 1950 and assistant editor Economaki took over as the lead publisher.
A.J. Foyt was featured on a cover story on September 12, 1956, two years before he rose to prominence in Indy Car.Microfilm versions of the magazine were added to the Library of Congress in 1983. Corrine Economaki took over as publisher in 1990 from her father. The magazine began publishing columns online in November 2001.
The weekly magazine ceased print production on March 23, 2011.ESPN cited the reason for its demise to the "economy and this slow death knell of newspapers in general."NASCAR Scene had stopped publishing in 2010.AutoWeek associate publisher Dutch Mandel, a competitor, reacted "there wasn't a time that I didn't pore over NSSN when I could get my hands on it."