Antioch,
 CA...May 23...Collen Winebarger won the 15 lap IMCA Modified Main Event
 Saturday night at Antioch Speedway. Winebarger is one of the top 
competitors in Oregon, and his win was worth $600. A track record 150 
competitors turned out between the three divisions.
2018
 IMCA State champion Shane DeVolder led the opening lap of the IMCA 
Modified Main Event. Following a yellow flag for a Riley Simmons spin in
 Turn 2, Winebarger charged past DeVolder for the lead. Reigning 
Watsonville champion Austin Burke settled into third, but he had his 
hands full battling Kellen Chadwick and John Campos. A low pass and Turn
 2 of the fifth lap put Chadwick into the third position, and a lap six 
yellow flag waved for reigning State champion Trevor Fitzgibbon, Darrell
 Hughes II and Burke. Winebarger led this restart and a final restart on
 the eighth lap as DeVolder held second ahead of Chadwick. From deep in 
the pack, reigning Merced champion Troy Foulger moved up to battle 
Chadwick. While that side-by-side battle ensued, Winebarger sprinted to 
victory ahead of DeVolder. Chadwick managed to beat Foulger back to the 
line for third as Cody Laney completed the Top 5.
The
 52 IMCA Modified competitors ran six 10 lap heat races. Wins went to 
Oregon competitors Winebarger, Craig Cassell and Jesse Bailey. Burke, 
Foulger and Nevada star Robert Miller won the other heats. The first of 
three 10 lap B Mains was won by Cody Burke ahead of Hughes and 
Fitzgibbon. Laney outran Simmons and Bobby Motts Jr to win the second B 
Main. Antioch Speedway Hall of Famer Jim Pettit II outdueled Oregon star
 Albert Gill to win the final B Main as JC Elrod finished third.
Bakersfield
 champion Michael Johnson won the 15 lap IMCA Sport Modified Main Event.
 This race was destined to go the distance without a yellow flag. 
Reigning Antioch Speedway champion Tommy Fraser set the early pace ahead
 of Johnson and Timothy Allerdings. Fraser set a good pace up front, but
 Johnson reeled him in and began a good battle by the eighth lap. 
Johnson made the inside pass on the backstretch of the ninth lap to take
 the lead, but they crossed the line in a dead heat. Johnson carried the
 momentum on the outside down the back stretch on the 11th lap that gave
 him the lead once again. This time, Johnson pulled away from Fraser for
 the impressive victory. Kenny Shrader finished third ahead of Brent 
Curran and Todd Gomez.
A track 
record 58 IMCA Sport Modifieds competed. Eight lap heat race wins were 
earned by Fraser, Todd Gomez, Curran, Brian Pearce, Watsonville champion
 Jarrod Mounce and Shrader. Reigning Merced Speedway champion Fred 
Ryland led flag-to-flag to win the first of three 10 lap B Mains ahead 
of Mark Garner and Les Friend. KC Keller made a last lap pass on Jason 
Ferguson to win the second B Main with Adriane Frost settling for third.
 2014 State champion and Nick Spainhoward won the final B Main ahead of 
Cottage Grove champion David Schmidt and Randy Miller.
Joe
 Gallaher won the 15 lap Jay's Mobile Welding Hobby Stock Main Event. 
Gallaher was the runner-up in last season's championship battle at Ocean
 Speedway. He charged into the lead at the start ahead of Tim Elias and 
Orland star Keith Ross. Three-time Watsonville champion Rob Gallaher 
came from deep in the pack to settle into third on the seventh lap. 
Before that lap was completed, he made an inside pass in Turn 4 to take 
second from Elias. As Joe Gallaher continued to lead the way, Rob 
Gallaher and Elias had a spirited dual for second. Rob Gallaher held the
 position until Elias made an inside pass on the 12th lap to regain 
second. Joe Gallaher went on to victory ahead of Elias, Rob Gallaher, 
Travis Dutra and Rick Etchieson. Unfortunately, Etchieson was 
disqualified in post-race tech, handing fifth to Breanna Troen
The
 Hobby Stocks had 40 cars. Ten lap heat race wins went to Dutra, past 
Watsonville champion Matt Kile, Jason Robles, Troen and Joe Gallaher. 
The first 10 lap B Main was a flag-to-flag victory for James Thomson 
ahead of Rob Gallaher and Dave Betancourt. Last season's top Antioch 
rookie Ken Johns won the second B Main ahead of Tyler Henrickson and 
Billy Garner.
For further information on the happenings at Antioch Speedway, go to 
www.antiochspeedway.com. 
Netto Nets Another Thrilling Victory At Marysville Raceway
Marysville,
 CA...May 25...Reigning  NARC/King of the West and King of Thunder 
Series champion DJ Netto returned to Marysville Raceway on Monday night 
and scored another impressive 25 lap Winged 360 Sprint Car Main Event 
win. Traffic proved to be the undoing of multiple leaders in this race, 
and Netto piloted the Netto Ag sponsored Sprinter from 11th starting to 
gain the lead on the 22nd lap.
Hoping
 to earn his first career feature win, Alec Justeson set the early pace 
ahead of reigning Placerville champion Andy Forsberg and Mitchell 
Faccinto. By the seventh lap, Justeson was already in traffic, which was
 running the low line in front of him. Justeson seemed to be a bit 
tentative as they went down the backstretch on the eighth lap, opening 
the door for Forsberg to move underneath him and make a pass for the 
lead in the third turn. Colby Copeland spun from fourth in the second 
turn for a lap nine yellow flag. On the restart, Justeson ended up 
spinning in the second turn for another yellow flag. Forsberg continued 
to lead Faccinto and Justyn Cox on the restart as Netto had already 
moved up to fourth. By the 16th lap, Forsberg had already caught slower 
traffic, enabling Faccinto and Cox to close in. Trying to avoid a slower
 car in the third turn, Forsberg spun, but he did a complete 360 and 
kept going in fourth. Faccinto led Cox and Netto, but traffic was still a
 factor. Seeing a faster line on the outside, Netto made an outside pass
 in the fourth turn to take second from Cox on the 21st lap. A lap 
later, Netto went around Faccinto in Turn 2 to grab the lead. A yellow 
flag flew for reigning champion Michael Ing in Turn 1 on the 24th lap, 
setting up a two lap showdown to the finish. However, Netto would not be
 denied as he led the restart and brought it home to victory. Faccinto 
settled for second, and Forsberg made an inside pass in the third turn 
on lap 25 to wrestle third from Cox, who settled for fourth. Chase 
Majdic finished fifth, followed by Jodie Robinson, JJ Hickle, Colby 
Wiesz, Willie Croft and Geoff Ensign.
The
 Sprint Cars produced a 45 car field for the special Monday night 
offering, and Forsberg had the fast time of 13.756, beating the 13.824 
of Faccinto. They ran four eight lap heat races with wins going to 
Copeland, newcomer Max Mittry, Jodie Robinson and Cox. Jesse Love won 
the 10 lap C Main ahead of Antioch champion Jacob Tuttle and Kevin 
Lovell. Croft picked up B Main honors ahead of Caden Sarale and Korey 
Lovell.
Todd Cooper won the 20 
lap IMCA Sport Modified Main Event. Brian Cooper drove the car to a 
$1,100 victory at Antioch Speedway the night before and let his brother 
drive the car on this occasion. Todd Cooper had a front-row start for 
the race and jumped into the early lead ahead of Jimmy Ford and Scott 
Savell. Three yellow flags waved during the first 10 laps, and Cooper 
led Ford and Savell on each restart. Saturday night Antioch winner 
Michael Johnson settled into fourth on a lap 10 restart and began 
battling Savell for third. Johnson made an outside pass on the 13th lap 
to grab the position, but Savell was running strong on the inside and 
managed to regain the position on lap 15. A yellow flag waved at that 
point. The result of this restart was Cooper again charging out front, 
and he was never really threatened on his way to an impressive victory. 
Ford was a strong second, followed by Savell, Timothy Allerdings, 
Johnson, Jason Ferguson, Theo Van de Sande, Shawn Smith, Shaun Merritt 
and Hunter Merritt. The two eight lap heat races were won by Cooper and 
Philip Shelby.
For information on coming events at the speedway and other things, go to 
www.marysvilleraceway.com.
Shaw, Courtnier, Wood, Vasconcellos Win Sunday Night Races At Dixon Speedway
Dixon,
 CA...May 24...Brandon Shaw won the 25 lap Wingless 600 Micro Sprint 
Main Event Sunday night at Dixon Speedway. Shaw gained the lead early on
 after Brandon Carey had problems as he was making a bid for his 
third-straight win. Shaw took over from there and went on to pick up the
 win.
Carey set the early pace 
ahead of Shaw. Timothy Vaught settled into third on the second lap, and 
Carey's run at the front of the pack ended with a lap five yellow flag. 
Shaw led Vaught and Travis Sullivan on the restart. Sullivan slipped 
past Vaught for second on lap 10 with Cody Gray gaining third a lap 
later. Following a lap 19 yellow flag, Shaw continued to lead the way on
 the restart and would go on to score the victory. Sullivan settled for 
second. Gray held off Austin Stone for third as Brody Fuson, Vaught, 
Tommy Carroll, Jonathan Henry, Kelvin Lewis and Austin Taborski 
completed the Top 10 at the checkered flag.
40
 Wingless Micros qualified, and Chris Parmely turned the 1/5 mile dirt 
oval with a time of 12.440 for the fastest lap. Vaught was second quick 
at 12.450. Gray, Shaw, Carey and Henry won their respective 10 lap heat 
races, and Shaw also claimed 10 lap Trophy Dash honors to make it a 
clean sweep. They had two 12 lap B Mains, and Taylor DeCarlo won a close
 race with Taborski to win the first one. Nick VanAtta finished third. 
Caden Sarale claimed the second B Main ahead of Jeremy Chapman and Jared
 Byrd.
Devin Courtnier scored the
 win in the 25 lap Super 600 Main Event. Brody Fuson shared the front 
row with Courtnier and charged into the early lead. Brad Hannum ran 
closely behind in third. Courtnier slipped past Fuson for the lead on 
the 12th lap before a yellow flag waved. On the restart, Hannum grabbed 
the second position from Fuson. Gauge Garcia took over third on the 16th
 lap, but he surrendered the position to Sage Bordenave a lap later. 
Following a lap 21 yellow flag, Garcia moved by Bordenave for third as 
Courtnier continued to set the pace ahead of Hannum. Garcia gained 
second from Hannum on the 24th lap. Hannum's strong run came to an end 
as the yellow flag waved, causing a two lap shootout to the finish. 
Undaunted, Courtnier continued to lead the pack on the restart and 
brought it home to an impressive victory. Garcia finished second. Caeden
 Steele finished third, followed by Ricky Sanders, Caden Sarale, 
reigning champion Kyle Mentch, Dillon Horsley, Mattix Salmon, Blaine 
Baxter and Fuson.
Hailey Wood waa
 the quickest of 32 qualifiers with a lap of 11.118, beating the 11.137 
of Mentch. 10 lap heat race wins were earned by Courtnier, Fuson, Salmon
 and Hannum, and Fuson won the 10 lap Trophy Dash. Caleb Debem scored 
the victory in the first 12 lap B Main ahead of Ron Singh and Garrett 
Williams. Sarale outran Blaine Baxter to win the second B Main as Logan 
Trevino finished third.
Austin 
Wood scored an impressive win in the 20 lap Restricted Micro Main Event.
 Wood led at the drop of the green flag ahead of Bryant Bell and Dominic
 Carter. Following a lap six yellow flag, Wood resumed command with Bell
 still holding on to second. By the 12th lap, Wood held a good lead, and
 he cruised to victory ahead of Bell, Carter, Izaak Sharp, Matthew 
Tatoole, Colin Kirby, Brandon Riveira, JJ Loss, Cash Lovenburg and 
Jayden Whitney. Sharp set the fast time of 11.568 with Riveira second 
quick at 11.758. The 17 car field ran two heat races with Bell and Wood 
scoring the victories. Wood also picked up the six lap Trophy Dash win 
to cap a clean sweep performance.
Braxon
 Vasconcellos won the 20 lap Junior Sprint Main Event. Vasconcellos had 
the pole and raced into the lead at the start ahead of Kyle Fernandez. 
Ty Lovenburg settled into third, and they ran in that order through 
three yellow flags during the first half of the race. Nathan Ward 
settled into third on lap 17 with a yellow flag waving moments later for
 Lovenburg. Vasconcellos continued to lead Fernandez on the restart, but
 Ward began to pressure Fernandez for second. On the final lap, Ward put
 the moves on Fernandez to grab second place. However, nobody could stop
 Vasconcellos from getting the victory. Fernandez settled for third, 
followed by Hayden Stepps, Kellen Harper, Brody Rubio, Ryder Byrd, 
Lovenburg, Briggs Davis and Chase Whitney. Reigning champion McKayla 
Tatoole was the fastest qualifier at 12.991 with Fernandez second quick 
at 13.014. Lovenburg and Rubio were the 10 lap heat race winners with 
Vasconcellos scoring the victory in the six lap Trophy Dash.
Dixon,
 CA...May 23...Brandon Carey won the 25 lap Wingless 600 Micro Sprint 
Main Event Saturday night at Dixon Speedway. It was the opening night of
 a two-night event. Carey shared the front row with Timothy Vaught, who 
had high hopes of getting the victory after setting the fast time 
earlier in the evening. Unfortunately, Vaught saw his race come to an 
end on the 15th lap. Carey had to contend with second row starter Kelvin
 Lewis, but he managed to hold him off for his second-straight victory. 
Kelvin Lewis settled for second ahead of Robbie Lewis, eighth starter 
Austin Stone, Travis Sullivan, Brandon Shaw, Jonathan Henry, Chris 
Parmley, Cody Gray and Drew Laeber.
The
 Wingless Micros produced an impressive 47 car field. The competitive 
qualifying session saw Vaught set the quickest lap on the 1/5 mile dirt 
oval of 11.641. Both Robbie Lewis and Carey had 11.642 efforts. Ten lap 
heat race wins went to Vaught, Robbie Lewis, Sullivan, Blake Bower and 
Henry. Vaught continued what could have been a clean sweep effort by 
winning the 12 lap Trophy Dash. The first of two 12 lap B Mains went to 
Katie Syra ahead of Matt Santana and Blake Parmely. Joe Silva just 
managed to beat Chris Parmely to the line to win the other B Main as 
Gray finished third.
.
Brad Hannum won
 the 25 lap Super 600 Main Event. Hannum shared the front row with 
two-time reigning champion Kyle Mentch. However, the challenge came from
 Caeden Steele in the waning laps. Hannum would hold off Steele for the 
victory as Mentch settled for third. Sage Bordenave finished fourth, 
followed by Brody Fuson, Devon Courtnier, Gauge Garcia, Jeffrey Pahule, 
Dillon Horsley and James Andrichuk.
Bordenave
 turned an impressive 10.222 for the quickest lap in qualifying, beating
 the 12.295 of Steele. There were 33 competitors. Ten lap heat race wins
 went to Caden Sarale, Hailey Wood, Hannum and Mentch. Hannum won 10 lap
 Trophy Dash to sweep all three of his races. Ron Singh outdueled fellow
 front row starter Joshua Rogers to win the 12 lap B Main as Garrett 
Williams finished third.
Austin 
Wood scored the victory in the 20 lap Restricted Micro Main Event. Wood 
had the pole position and held off some late pressure from Matthew 
Tatoole to claim the victory. Brandon Riveira finished third, followed 
by Izaak Sharp, Bryant Bell, Jackson Kohler, Mattix Salmon, Riley 
Whitehouse, Isabel Barnes and Cash Lovenburg. Wood had the fast time of 
11.194, beating the 11.261 of Colin Kirby. The 21 competitors ran three 
ten lap heat races with wins going to Sharp, Tatoole and Whitehouse. 
Wood won the eight lap Trophy Dash.
Lucas
 Mauldin scored an impressive victory in the 20 lap Junior Sprint Main 
Event. Kyle Fernandez had the pole in his quest for a second-straight 
feature win. However, Mauldin was just a bit quicker and prevailed at 
the checkered flag. Fernandez settled for second. Brody Rubio earned 
passing honors as he charged from 12th starting to finish third, 
followed by Nathan Wood, Ty Lovenburg, Kellen Harper, Hayden Stepps, 
Chase Whitney, Briggs Davis and Devon McLeister. Fernandez bested a 17 
car field in qualifying with a lap of 12.890, beating the 12.965 of 
Wood. Ten lap heat race wins went to Mauldin and Stepps, and Fernandez 
claimed six lap Trophy Dash honors.
For news on what's happening at the track next, go to 
www.dixonspeedway.net.
Marysville Raceway Unofficial Race Results May 25, 2020
Yuba River Gold Rush
360 Sprint Cars 
A Main 
D.J. Netto 
Mitchell Faccinto 
Andy Forsberg 
Justyn Cox 
Chase Majdic 
Jodie Robinson 
J.J. Hickle 
Colby Wiesz 
Willie Croft 
Geoff Ensign 
Caden Sarale 
Jake Haulot 
Colby Copeland 
Brad Bumgarner 
Korey Lovell 
Michael Ing 
Max Mittry 
Alec Justeson 
Michael Sellers 
Billy Wallace 
B Main 
Willie Croft 
Caden Sarale 
Korey Lovell 
Geoff Ensign 
Jake Wheeler 
Blake Carrick 
Greg DeCaires V 
Jesse Love 
Ben Worth 
Tyler Thompson 
Jacob Tuttle 
Stephen Ingraham 
Steven Snawder 
Steel Powell 
Nick Larsen 
C Main 
Jesse Love 
Jacob Tuttle 
Kevin Lovell 
Mike Monahan 
Pat Harvey Jr 
Tim Estenson 
Ashlyn Rodriguez 
Cody Spencer 
Devan Whitlock 
A.J. Alderman 
Jimmy Steward 
IMCA Sport Modifieds
Todd Copper 
Jimmy Ford 
Scott Savell 
Timothy Allerdings 
Michael Johnson 
Jason Ferguson 
Theo Van de Sande 
Shawn Smith 
Shaun Merritt 
Hunter Merritt 
Phillip Shelby 
Jason Pugh 
Jeramiah Zeiter 
Mike Merritt 
Donnie Fortney 
Dixon Speedway Unofficial Race Results May 24, 2020
Wingless 600 Micros
Main Event
Brandon Shaw 
Travis Sullivan 
Cody Gray 
Austin Stone 
Brody Fuson 
Tiimothy Vaught 
Tommy Carroll 
Jonathan Henry 
Kelvin Lewis 
Austin Taborski 
Chris Parmley 
Caden Sarale 
Jeremy Chapman 
Travis Henry 
Kyle Grissom 
Blake Parmley 
Jared Byrd 
Joe Silva 
George Nielson 
Taylor DeCarlo 
Nick VanAtta 
Brandon Carey 
B Main 1
Taylor DeCarlo 
Austin Taborski 
Nick VanAtta 
Tyler Chamorro 
Chuck Patterson 
Matthew Kaiser 
Katey Syra 
Ryan Holden 
Rob Brown 
Justen McConville 
Todd Job DNS
Derrick Patterson DQ
B Main 2
Caden Sarale 
Jeremy Chapman 
Jared Byrd 
Matt Santana 
Brandon Alvarado 
Drew Laeber 
Becca Clark 
Justin Stretch 
Norman Harley Rose 
Don McLeister DNS
Savannah Brown DNS
Robbie Lewis DQ
Super 600s 
Main Event 
Devon Courtnier 
Gauge Garcia 
Caeden Steele 
Ricky Sanders 
Caden Sarale 
Kyle Mentch 
Dillon Horsley 
Mattix Salmom 
Blaine Baxter 
Brody Fuson 
Eli Bookout 
Wyatt Bookout 
Garrett Williams 
Logan Trevino 
Caleb Debem 
Sage Bordenave 
Brad Hannum 
Jeffrey Pahule 
James Andrichuck 
Jarrett Rogers 
Ron Singh 
Hailey Wood 
B Main 1
Caleb Debem 
Ron Singh 
Garrett Williams 
Angel Cappas 
Joshua Rogers 
Tony Chavez DNS
Lane Taylor DNS
Jason Chapman DQ
B Main 2
Caden Sarale 
Blaine Baxter 
Logan Trevino 
Hayden Saich 
Jarrett Heimlich 
Tony Alosi 
Brett McColloch 
Christian Harris 
Restricted Micros 
Austin Wood 
Bryant Bell 
Dominic Carter 
Izaak Sharp 
Matthew Tatoole 
Colin Kirby 
Brandon Riveira 
JJ Loss 
Cash Lovenburg 
Jayden Whitney 
Taylor Mayhew 
Xan Miller 
Kyle Cravotta 
Mattix Salmon 
Zackary Williams 
Jesson Jacobson 
Destry Miller 
Jr Sprints 
Braxon Vasconcellos 
Nathan Ward 
Kyle Fernandez 
Hayden Stepps 
Kellen Harper 
Brody Rubio 
Ryder Byrd 
Ty Lovenburg 
Briggs Davis 
Chase Whitney 
Makayla Tatoole 
Jonathan Andrichuk 
Devin McLeister DNS
Dixon Speedway Unofficial Race Results May 23, 2020
Wingless 600 Micros
Main Event
Brandon Carey 
Kelvin Lewis 
Robbie Lewis 
Austin Stone 
Travis Sullivan 
Brandon Shaw 
Jonathan Henry 
Chris Parmley 
Cody Gray 
Drew Laeber 
Matt Santana 
Katey Syra 
Derrick Patterson 
Blake Parmley 
Joe Silva 
Kyle Grissom 
Chuck Patterson 
Justin Stretch 
Brody Fuson 
Tiimothy Vaught 
Blake Bower 
Nate Wait 
B Main 1
Katey Syra 
Matt Santana 
Blake Parmley 
Brody Petrie 
Brandon Alvarado 
Ryan Holden 
Rob Brown 
Tyson Davis 
Kevin Carter 
Matthew Kaiser 
Justen McConville 
George Nielson 
Taylor DeCarlo 
Darrell Busby 
Mark Baker DNS 
B Main 2
Joe Silva 
Chris Parmley 
Cody Gray 
Tucker LaCaze 
Mike Ibarra 
Austin Taborski 
Tommy Carroll 
Jared Byrd 
Norman Harley Rose 
Jeremy Chapman 
Clayton Harris 
Savannah Brown 
Nick VanAtta 
Don McLeister 
Becca Clark DNS
Super 600s 
Main Event
Brad Hannum 
Caeden Steele 
Kyle Mentch 
Sage Bordenave 
Brody Fuson 
Devon Courtnier 
Gauge Garcia 
Jeffrey Pahule 
Dillon Horsley 
James Andrichuck 
Blaine Baxter 
Joshua Rogers 
Ron Singh 
Garrett Williams 
Wyatt Bookout 
Hailey Wood 
Eli Bookout 
Brett McColloch 
Caleb Debem 
Jason Chapman 
Caden Sarale 
Tony Alosi
B Main 
Ron Singh 
Joshua Rogers 
Garrett Williams 
Caleb Debem 
Hayden Saich 
Jarrett Rogers 
Logan Trevino 
Angel Cappas 
Jarrett Heimlich 
Anthony Lewis 
Christian Harris 
Lane Taylor 
Chris Hinkle DNS
Colby Greig DNS
Darrell Busby DNS
Restricted Micros 
Austin Wood 
Matthew Tatoole 
Brandon Riveira 
Izaak Sharp 
Bryant Bell 
Jackson Kohler 
Mattix Salmon 
Rylee Whitehouse 
Isabel Barnes 
Cash Lovenburg 
Dominic Carter 
Jayden Whitney 
Taylor Mayhew 
Jesson Jacobson 
JJ Loss 
Kyle Cravotta 
Colin Kirby 
Zackary Williams 
Destry Miller 
Xan Miller DNS
Dalton Parreira DNS
Jr Sprints 
Lucas Mauldin 
Kyle Fernandez 
Brody Rubio 
Nathan Ward 
Ty Lovenburg 
Kellen Harper 
Hayden Stepps 
Chase Whitney 
Briggs Davis 
Devin McLeister 
Makayla Tatoole 
Ryder Byrd 
Peyton Whitehouse 
Jonathan Andrichuk DNS
Reid Baxter DNS
Braxon Vasconcellos DQ
The Editor's Viewpoint
My
 intent was to put this up after the races on Saturday night. I was 
gathering my thoughts from the afternoon through the races so that this 
column could be ready. However, it was such a crazy night that my mind 
was shot by the time the checkered flag waved at Antioch Speedway right 
at curfew. It was an exhausting night, which isn't necessarily a bad 
thing. Anyway, I decided to wait and just put everything out at once.
The
 racing community in California should feel lucky to have what they have
 so far. If certain powers that be had their way, we might not even be 
having limited practices. That's how much they want to shut everything 
down. It just so happens to be a time when things aren't really 
happening to a level that the hype would scare you into believing. 
Therefore, even in the strictest of states, things have to reopen. If 
they don't, we're going to be facing something worse than the virus 
itself. 
Speaking of opening up, 
Kevin Barba has been able to open Siskiyou Golden Speedway to limited 
practices. The county they are in is a little further behind the other 
counties. I'm really not sure how that can be the case given the 
population there, but they are at a point where only 10 people will be 
allowed into the pits. Therefore, Kevin decided to open things up to 
three hour blocks on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There would be three 
race cars allowed with a total of 10 people. It would be $600 for a 
session.
Obviously, some of the 
people grumbled just a little bit. Why is the price so high? Why? 
Because Kevin still has bills to pay so that he will be able to open 
this track to actual racing when he is able to do so. Therefore, this is
 the price that has to be paid in order for a session to happen. It's 
reasonable enough, and the racers who understand the situation and went 
to put their cars on the race track jumped in to make this happen. It's 
really not a bad deal. A car brings three people for the session and you
 can split the difference three ways. It's less than $100 per person 
that way. Or, you have a good sponsor or somebody willing to foot the 
bill for everybody.
Either way, 
things are happening and will continue to happen. I don't think they are
 going to put the lid on this momentum we seem to be establishing now, 
but I wont say I'm a 100% sure about that. There's always something that
 could happen to wipe out the progress we are making, but I'm going to 
be optimistic here. Tracks are opening up for limited practices, bigger 
practices and actual racing in front of closed grandstands. It's not the
 most ideal situation, but promoters have figured out a way to make it 
happen. We have four tracks in California racing this weekend, and that 
number should be more than doubled by the time we get to mid June. Will 
we have grandstands by then? I don't think so, but I don't know. We will
 get to grandstands not long after that if it hasn't started by then. My
 guess is July.
More bad news 
came out of Merced on Friday. They did say they were going to make a 
Memorial Day Weekend announcement, but they didn't say it would be the 
good news we wanted to hear. We already knew that the May 30th event had
 been canceled. This was a show that was to feature that USAC Western 
States Midgets. The hope was to hear something about a possible date in 
June. All management could say was we're still not able to go racing, 
but we hope to have some good news soon. All we can do is stay tuned to 
the Merced Speedway Facebook page and hope for the news to break in our 
favor soon. Mountain Valley Raceway in Hayfork also announced that there
 was no date set for when they could get back into racing, but they are 
working on that with the fairgrounds in Trinity County.
Limited
 practices and regular practices were happening. In the state of 
Washington, Skagit Speedway and Evergreen Speedway were two of the first
 to finally do some practicing on Saturday in the hopes of getting into 
some racing soon. In California, Siskiyou Golden Speedway wasn't the 
only track having some limited practices on Saturday. Madera Speedway 
was able to put some cars out on the paved oval, and Diamond Mountain 
Speedway in Susanville was also doing some limited practicing. Though 
it's not quite racing, it's better than nothing for the racers who have 
been waiting patiently. 
I hope 
the racers in Antioch know how lucky they are to have gotten Saturday's 
race in. We are very lucky. There are certain powers that be that would 
seek to drag their feet on things, and I think we are fortunate to know 
that they may not have been looking at our beloved race track. For 
instance, we had 100 cars for practice last week and who knows how many 
people. Somebody wanting to stoke the fear and keep the hype machine 
going might have taken a look around and said, "No. This needs to stop. 
No racing.*
The track didn't just
 open. It opened for what would be considered one of the biggest events 
of the season the speedway has had even in normal conditions. Two nights
 of great racing. With the exception of having no grandstands, 
management decided they were going to go all in and open things up with a
 bang. As I said, there are several reasons that this has been done. It 
certainly was a risk. But, let me boil it down this way. One of the 
fairgrounds race tracks in California had to take the first step, and 
that track was at the Antioch Fairgrounds. 
Speaking
 of fairgrounds, the El Dorado County Fairgrounds has sounded the alarm.
 If they are not able to have their County Fair, they are worried about 
being able to pay the bills needed to keep things going. They believe 
there is a real serious danger of the place closing. While I haven't 
seen much posted from the other fairgrounds, I would guess that 
Placerville isn't the only place feeling the pinch right now. Other 
fairgrounds could be in danger. 
These
 places are about more than just race tracks. There are other events, 
including the County Fairs, that happen year-round to keep them going. 
These are places where communities come to be together. I'm not sure 
what sort of movement will be started, but I hope the state takes that 
into consideration come budget time. They will probably need help, and I
 personally believe that having a fairgrounds in your town is better 
than putting up a strip mall or anything else in that location.
From
 Delta Speedway, management put up a dire Facebook post today explaining
 their situation. They thought they were making progress to do something
 at the little San Joaquin County Fairgrounds track, but they got 
nowhere when it came to the state agencies they had to deal with. Track 
management went so far as to say they were surprised that any track in 
the state was able to do any kind of racing as this clearly isn't 
allowed in Phase 2 of the reopening of the stare, though it might be 
possible in Phase 3. What he speculates on is that those tracks didn't 
contact the State agencies, and local agencies have pretty much decided 
to look the other way. I will add that what I've seen is that if a state
 agency does come in there and shut you down, they can smack you down 
with a huge fine. There's a risk involved with being a leader and 
forcing the reopening of the state earlier than the governor would 
allow.
Given what was going on in
 Contra Costa County compared to other counties, one might have been 
surprised that things began to happen at the track the way they did. It 
doesn't surprise me that the county fairgrounds would allow this to 
happen. Again, you've got to keep some revenue coming in. Management was
 given a crash course on how to best proceed here. This was going to 
involve little things like getting certain supplies that are needed to 
adhere to strict covid-19 guidelines, understanding how things must be 
done when an event is happening and preparations made during the week. 
Disinfecting areas and that sort of thing would be the priorities.
Even
 then, I can guarantee you that Promoter Chad Chadwick was holding his 
breath. Until you get to race day, you are nervously wondering if you 
are going to be able to pull it off  I think there's confidence among 
his crew that they can do their jobs and keep the show running, but in 
the back of their minds, there is concern that somebody could come in 
and pull the plug on them at any given time. The racers want to race. 
This is obvious. Social media and the track's website itself have been 
flooded with racer's questions wanting to know whatever details they 
needed to know, but they were coming in droves. How big? There were 
blank cars at Antioch on Saturday.
Sometimes
 we don't appreciate the effort that goes on behind the scenes to run 
even a regular show. It's just expected. Officials and everybody 
involved do their part to keep it all going and keep everybody happy. 
This situation was different because of the covid-19 guidelines that 
were put in place to even allow the race to be attempted. You have to 
maintain social distancing and all of that. Therefore, the regular pit 
area could not even contain the amount of cars that showed up for this 
big event. All three of the featured divisions had inflated car counts, 
and drivers had to park in the parking lot as well as the area 
surrounding the paintball arena. Sadly, this was made possible because 
fans still aren't allowed in the grandstands yet and had to be content 
to watch the awesome coverage provided by SpeedshiftTV. 
The
 place was an absolute madhouse from early in the morning as teams were 
arriving from out of state. This led to very long lines before the 
pit-gate was officially opened at 1pm, and at 3pm there were still 
around 70 people standing in line to get signed in. Obviously, this was 
going to raise the stress levels of everybody involved, and Chadwick and
 his crew knew the pressure would be on to keep this show going all 
night and get it done. Talk about trial by fire. The first race promoted
 by Chadwick as the official promoter of Antioch Speedway produced a 
record 150 car count. IMCA Sport Modifieds accounted for 58 of them, 
which was a record for the class. The Hobby Stocks had 40 cars, which 
was again a record.
The problem 
is you can't address the people through the pit PA system if they are 
parked in the parking lot. When you're calling those people out for 
their race, they aren't going to hear you. This meant that the track had
 to come up with a workaround to keep this show going. There were more 
cars, so that meant more races. Everybody was busy busting their rear 
ends to make it all happen. This was an impressive accomplishment and a 
very important one. I'll go so far as to say that not only was Antioch 
Speedway doing this show for itself and the racers in the area. They 
were doing it for California racing in general as we try to get back to 
some sort of normalcy again.
Thanks
 to a few updates from people going live in the afternoon, I was able to
 get a sense of the chaos happening around the track. Apparently, the 
fairgrounds still allowed the flea market to take place. I'm not sure 
how big the flea market actually was. By the time I saw some live 
footage around 1 in the afternoon, the parking lot had quite a few 
trailers in it. There was a very long line waiting to sign in, and that 
remained the case for at least three hours. They managed to get 
everybody signed in okay. From an organizational standpoint, it looked 
like the team had it all figured out. They seemed to stick to the 
schedule. 
..
The problem was they had
 so many cars that an earlier start would have been better. They were 
basically going to start racing at 6pm, knowing they had to run a total 
of 17 heat races, eight B Mains and three Main Events. The heat races 
themselves took up two hours of time. I'm not so sure I would have given
 the heat races as many laps as they were given, but this was done 
because management wanted to give the drivers plenty of laps to have an 
opportunity to earn feature starts. It's just that you wind up crunched 
for time later and risk having to cut laps from the Main Events to get 
it done before curfew.
I'm not 
sure how I feel about the track configuration, to be honest with you. I 
know there are people who liked to rip on the track as John had prepared
 it for years. A lot of times, John wasn't so worried about how heavy 
the track might be in heat races, because the goal was to prepare a fast
 and racy track come Main Event time. Because you didn't have the kind 
of car count that required B Mains, you could get away with that. Nobody
 was going to suffer for having a bad heat race, because everybody was 
in the Main Event. The other thing I liked about John's tracks was the 
amazing outside groove and how good the side by side racing could get. 
Part
 of the new philosophy with the racing surface now is to give the racers
 plenty of room. The hope is to promote three and sometimes four-wide 
racing, and you certainly can get that out of this track. These days, 
the sheepsfoot seems to be the go-to piece of equipment, because it's 
popular back east. I'm not in love with this, but a lot of people are. 
What it looks like to me is a racing surface designed to go dry, and 
that means dust. It's not going to be popular with some of the fans in 
the stands if this is a regular occurrence, and the neighborhood will 
probably voice their disapproval. I'm not trying to be negative here, 
but I am saying that nobody should be surprised if this becomes an 
issue. That being said, I want to give it some time and see how this 
concept plays out in the long run. You can't judge it based on one 
weekend.
It was decided during 
the offseason to get rid of the big tires and bury some tires halfway. 
The drivers are getting so much more room as the track goes down 
further, and yet the drivers somehow ended up trying to dig for more 
room in the infield. This resulted in knocking some tires onto the 
track. By midway through the heat races, the racers were just running on
 the bottom. There was no two-groove racing, which can't be seen as 
acceptable given the way the track was widened. It was decided after the
 heat races that they would grade the track a little bit on the outside 
and bring the high groove back in. This worked, and it helped the racing
 a little bit. However, the dust issue reared its ugly head by the time 
we saw the Main Events.
It really
 didn't take that long to grade the track. You might have been talking 
about 10 to 20 minutes, which has been normal intermission time at the 
speedway for the past few years. However, you're trying to run a 150 car
 program, and that requires a little bit of haste. When the B Mains 
started rolling onto the track, I knew that beating curfew was going to 
be a challenge. The Hobby Stock Main Event didn't roll out until 10:20 
pm. It was decided at that time that the Main Events would be 15 laps 
instead of 20 laps. This was the only time during the night in which 
laps were cut off of any of the races, so I can't complain too much. I 
know there were people complaining, but I'm not so sure how much of a 
difference five laps in any of those Main Events would have made. Then 
again, you never know. 
As much 
as I can be critical of the IMCA Sport Modified division at times, they 
deserve some praise. They went out there and ran a Main Event with no 
yellow flags. When you're up against curfew and trying to get things 
done, that's the kind of thing that makes a big difference. When the 
IMCA Modifieds rolled out and had a few yellow flags, they still managed
 to see a checkered flag just before curfew. I don't think that breaking
 curfew was an option, and I know management was trying hard not to cut 
any more laps. They were definitely under the gun, so they needed this 
to go their way.
You can have all
 the ideas in the world about how you're going to run a program once you
 become the promoter. However, you have to go out there and hold a race 
and see how your ideas play out. You have to learn and adjust. It's not 
many new promoters who have 150 cars for their first race. Talk about a 
test. This was a big test, and they got passing grades as far as I'm 
concerned. Were they high marks? Maybe not, but they got the job done 
and learned some things before Sunday's bigger show.
As
 I said, just getting this race on the schedule was a miracle. There's 
been some question as to whether any racing at all should be happening 
in California under the current covid-19 guidelines, and yet other 
tracks have already had races. The difference is Antioch Speedway was 
the first fairgrounds track to do it. When you know all that is expected
 of you under the guidelines, you're just hoping you do good enough to 
avoid any issues. I'm sure there's going to be some grumbling here and 
there, but they got it into the record books. Maybe you brace for impact
 to see what's said after the event is done. This was Saturday, so there
 was still one more day left to go. 
I
 admit I was a bit disappointed to find out that Speedshift's #1 guy 
wasn't out there announcing. He took a gig at one of the other events 
that they were covering. This left Wade handling things in the booth. 
Wade took a beating from critics, and I can understand that. He was 
seeing drivers in the field that he's not used to, and that is a 
challenge for any announcer. He got creative in some of his phrasing, 
which didn't go over very well. This might have been an occasion in 
which he needed somebody else up there with him to help him with the 
announcing duties. 
I know how it
 goes when you're announcing, so I am not going to be too critical here.
 The only thing I would suggest is that announcers should be using pen 
and paper at the race track. Don't rely on computers for your 
information. I know that technology is here and it's here to make things
 easier for us. However, if your computer gives you an issue, and if you
 don't know a good portion of the drivers who are in the field, you put 
yourself in a bad position. People are watching the stream at home, and 
they are counting on you to tell them what's going on. 
There
 were times during the races when he didn't have that information on 
screen and the action wasn't being described to the fans. There were 
times when he didn't know names or information about certain racers. One
 thing I do appreciate was that he did his best to give us a Top 5 
finishing order after every race. Since the track is not on electronic 
scoring yet, Wade was the lifeline to the people. We counted on him to 
let us know where the drivers finished 
I'm
 not going to tell you that I don't show up at a race track without a 
laptop computer these days. It's a tool of the trade that I need as I'm 
usually filing an article not long after the races are done. My records 
are kept on the computer, but my notes are on a piece of paper. I write 
the drivers names down on a piece of paper and also keep the point 
sheets and stats for the season printed on paper. If I am announcing, I 
also have sponsors handy. I can't use a computer. First of all, I can't 
always punch that stuff up easily on the computer. Secondly, if the 
computer malfunctions for some reason, what do I do? I memorize a lot of
 stuff, but my memory is going to fail me sometimes. That piece of paper
 with the names on it comes in very handy.
All
 in all, you do the best you can for the night, make notes of where you 
can improve and come back and try it again another day. This was an 
opportunity for Antioch Speedway to showcase itself to the world. There 
aren't too many other tracks on the West Coast having races right now, 
so many eyes were on the place. Did the track present itself as well as 
it could have on this occasion? Probably not. However, they still did 
pretty darn well under the circumstances. People are going to complain 
about the things that were wrong, and some things may deserve criticism.
 However, I still come back to the idea that we are lucky the gates have
 opened for a race anywhere at the moment. Sometime down the line, 
people are going to understand just how lucky we were that Antioch 
Speedway could even attempt this so soon. Give Chad credit for taking 
the risk and rolling the dice to make this happen.
I
 was monitoring Dixon Speedway on live scoring while Antioch was going. 
They were off to a later start than Antioch. The cool thing about it was
 they don't have the curfew out there, but I do think it gets a little 
bit cold there at night. The drivers flooded the pits in even bigger 
numbers this time than they did two weeks ago. I think they were 
somewhere in the 100 car range, but that's an estimate. Not only did the
 Wingless Micros have a field of almost 50 cars, the Super 600s checked 
in with over 30. The Micro Sprint drivers wanted to race, and this 
two-race weekend opportunity meant some teams were traveling from out of
 the area to Dixon.
I'm not sure 
how late this program went, but before live scoring disappeared on me, 
they were just wrapping up the final Wingless 600 heat race at 11. They 
still had B Mains and Main Events left to go, but they got them all in 
the record books. I actually doubt there were too many people 
complaining because sometimes these bigger events at Dixon do go a 
little bit longer. Furthermore, these guys just want to race. We have to
 understand that everything may not be perfect during this time, but 
these promoters are doing the best that they can to give us something.
Under
 normal circumstances, Dixon Speedway has a strong Micro Sprint program.
 This has been their focus since the Outlaw Karts faded away and 
interest seemed to wane as far as having Mini Stocks and Dwarf Cars 
there. When you can get over 30 Wingless Micros on an average night and 
usually 70-80 total competitors with your Micro program, why complain 
about that? This was a solid turn out of cars for some great racing. 
We'll look back as we push through this whole mess and appreciate that 
guys like Jeremy Prince, Dennis Gage and Chad Chadwick were leading the 
charge to get race tracks open again.
Sunday
 would have been a huge event for Antioch Speedway had we not had the 
virus situation. I can imagine the grandstands would have been fuller 
than usual as people came from out of town to watch. Some of the area 
tracks weren't scheduled to have a race this weekend, regardless of what
 happened with the virus. Chad Chadwick had a good friendship with the 
late George Steitz. It's probably not very well-known, but George 
actually took a shot at getting the contract at Antioch Speedway prior 
to the 2004 season and nearly won. At the time, George and Chad were 
talking about doing something together.
Memorial
 Day Weekend was to be the first of three scheduled holiday weekend 
events, which would be billed as the George Steitz Memorial Freedom 
Series. It looks like Chadwick is following through on those plans. It 
should be noted that the first time in my memory that I recall the 
Freedom Series being used in a racing sense in California was when Tom 
Sagmiller created the series at Chowchilla Speedway in 2001. George and 
Tom had already worked together on bringing the big Dirt Track Shootout 
race to Chowchilla after San Jose Speedway closed. They were keen on 
working together, so George sponsored this series as well. Tom isn't 
affiliated with this series, but I think it's fair to point out where 
the Freedom Series idea came from.
Everything
 has sort of been pieced together. I've mentioned how lucky we are that 
we were able to get this weekend in, so a lot of things were geared 
towards just making it happen. However, there were sponsors that came in
 to support the show, such as Competition Carburetors. Jay Bryant of 
Jay's Mobile Welding has come on board to sponsor the Hobby Stock 
division and also put money into the Hobby Stock purse. $500 of 
additional money was going to the Hobby Stock winner on Sunday. Jay gave
 $200 to the winner on Saturday.
Chadwick
 already announced a nice purse, especially for the IMCA Modifieds and 
IMCA Sport Modifieds. The Steitz family came in and upped the ante. They
 threw an additional $1,500 in purse money towards the three divisions. 
Each class would get $500 with $200 going to the winner, $100 going to 
2nd place and 3rd place and $50 going to 4th place and 5th place. This 
meant that the IMCA Modified winner would be receiving $2,100, while the
 IMCA Sport Modified winner would get a $1,100 payday. In addition to 
the money coming in from Jay's Mobile Welding, the Hobby Stock winner 
would now receive $1,000.
You 
really don't want to have such a big race under these circumstances. You
 want to pack the grandstands with fans, and people tend to get excited 
about watching a race when there's a bigger prize on the line. Thanks to
 the covid-19 situation, that wasn't possible. The fans would have to be
 content to watch things live on SpeedshiftTV, but I'm thinking there 
were many people tuned in to this program. We all have our fingers 
crossed that on Fourth of July Weekend Antioch Speedway will be having a
 race and will be able to have fans in the grandstands. We are a little 
bit over a month from knowing that for sure.
Sunday's
 race was slated to start an hour earlier than Saturday, which was a 
good move. It's obvious that the team figured a few things out from 
Saturday, which served to keep things moving quicker. What was 
interesting was that after hot laps were completed, the track crew was 
sent out there to do a little grading and watering before the Hobby 
Stocks were to run their heat races. That basically burned 45 minutes of
 the hour, but I think this was a good move. They were trying to keep 
two grooves of racing and at least had hopes early on of beating the 
dust problem.
Unfortunately, the 
dust would win the evening. I know racers well enough to know that 
there's a significant group of people out there that wish to have more 
dry slick race tracks. I get that. They talk of making it a racer's 
track and all of that. That's fine, but racers alone are not going to 
make this program thrive. You need fans in the stands, and you need the 
neighborhood to not be unhappy with you over dust issues. As I said, I'm
 going to reserve judgment on the track configuration until we've had a 
few races and some of the things have been worked out. I'm not fond of 
dry tracks, so I'll put that out there right now. I am fond of 
two-groove racing, and I think that even on a dry and dusty track, it 
can be accomplished. Too many dusty tracks, and we'll find out how well 
that goes over, but there's no denying that the track was getting high 
marks from everything I saw on social media. 
After
 the heat races were done, the crew went out there to work their magic 
with more water and grading. The racing overall wasn't too bad, but it 
was certainly a tricky track for racers. You couldn't just throw it in 
there and put your foot to the floor as you might be able to do on the 
track prior to these changes. Therefore, a few racers had miscues. As 
they get more track time, they'll figure this whole thing out. While I 
don't think having side by side racing was an issue with the track, 
despite being a bit more narrow before, there's no denying that this new
 track configuration will promote two-wide and three-wide racing for 
sure. It's just a question of finding the right combination when it 
comes to how it's prepared. Sometimes you've got to give these things 
time. 
When you bring in a new 
promoter and a new team, there will be challenges at first. This is 
under normal circumstances with your regular crowd, and I'm not even 
talking about a big special show. This team ran a 150 car show on 
Saturday and about 140 cars on Sunday and got the job done. They learned
 and adapted from one night to the next, and the racing was actually a 
bit better on Sunday. That's the good news. There are lots of things to 
think about as plans are made for how to move ahead. The one thing about
 Chadwick is he's always looking ahead and thinking about new things to 
try. This can be a positive. However, it should be pointed out that 
sometimes the old ways work just fine. Change is needed here, but 
sometimes there's something to be said about sticking with the old 
formula. That's just a thought.
I
 kind of feel bad for Wade up there in the press box. He was doing his 
best, but he did struggle a bit at times. You also have to understand 
that he hasn't had too many big shows at Antioch in his time. There have
 been a few increased car counts from the 60 or so that they would 
average on any given night. He was having to learn new names, and 
because there were some cars with the same numbers, that would serve to 
trip him up just a little bit. I wish I could have helped him out a 
little bit, especially when I heard him make the comment prior to the 
intermission after the heat races that he had no information on George 
Steitz. 
Back in the 1980's, it 
wasn't uncommon for an announcer to show up only an hour or so before 
racing and read the names from a sheet. They would get names wrong, and 
fans would have to go up there and correct them. Some of the better 
announcers would take time to talk with people in the pits before the 
races so they could know the names and a little bit about the racers. 
The late Kenny Takeuchi was certainly one of the best. I learned a bit 
from Butch Althar, who announced at Vallejo Speedway and other places 
prior to coming to Antioch.
The 
one thing about Butch was he was usually one of the first people to show
 up, and I learned from him. He would walk around the race cars and see 
if any new sponsors were on there that he needed to update. He would 
talk to the racers. Usually, he stood at the entrance by the sign up 
booth and didn't leave until a majority of the people had already signed
 in. I was already one of those people who would show up as early as 
possible so that I could get whatever scoop was out there for the 
magazine, but I learned about being prepared as an announcer from Butch.
 Even John Myers would show up pretty early to do the same thing. 
This
 was certainly one of those occasions where Wade should have gotten 
there early on both nights. I mean, get there before most of the people 
show up on Saturday and get there early on Sunday. The biggest reason is
 you get more time to mingle with people. You probably can't really 
mingle as much as you would like with the racers, but you are able to 
talk with some racers on Saturday that you don't catch on Sunday. As I 
mentioned above, I'm a strong believer in printed notes versus reading 
from a computer. Certainly after Saturday, he could have had a printout 
of the rosters that would have served to help him immensely on Sunday. 
I'm
 not sure that I will ever announce again. I'm receptive to the 
possibility but I'm okay with moving on and being grateful for the 
opportunities I've had. In Medford, I probably could have made a play 
for the microphone, but I had too many other duties during the four 
years that required my attention. I've been very confident with both 
Bryce Burtner and Cory Penfold. Both are professional in what they do, 
but I think Bryce was a bit skeptical of the notes that I provided him 
at first before he realized they were there to help him. 
Bryce
 had a way of doing the sponsors that I loved. Basically, all of the 
sponsors of every car in each division were on one or two pages for each
 class, and it made things pretty easy to plug those sponsors. What I 
tried to do was give them notes that they could look back on, such as 
the top feature finishers and dash winners from every race and point 
standings and anything important that needed to be announced. I even 
provided rosters.
I have been 
saying that a lot of people know the big events that George Steitz 
promoted for over 15 years but aren't aware of what a good racer he was.
 However, it's been almost 15 years since we lost him. There are people 
racing now that don't really remember anything about George at all. I 
would have liked for Wade to talk about George just a little bit going 
into the Main Events. It would have been nice. When you do these 
memorial races, you want to make sure you remember the people you are 
honoring. One of my gripes with memorial races is that sometimes that 
gets forgotten and it becomes about the money the racers are winning 
rather than even remembering the guy the race is named after.
The
 more I think about it, the more I wish I had announced every Dirt Track
 Shootout race that George asked me to do. I did the first two at 
Chowchilla, and it was an immense honor to be asked by him to do it. We 
had two hundred cars in the pits that first year and it was a big test. I
 went back and forth in those pits to make sure I spoke with everybody. I
 shuffled sponsor sheets in the press box to make sure I announced them 
all. I worked hard at that event. Somewhere there is footage with me 
announcing those two events, but I don't own a copy. I wish I did.
Without
 rehashing things from Just A Kid From The Grandstands, I remember back 
in 2003 sitting in the middle of the pits after the races with George. 
We were talking about his upcoming race at Chowchilla and the 
possibility of Mini Stocks being added, and he sought my thoughts on 
things. He also asked me to announce the show that year, which I didn't.
 I got caught in the middle of political things between Merced and 
Chowchilla, and I wish I had just taken a stand. George wasn't involved 
in any of that. I don't necessarily regret walking away from the sport 
at the end of the year like I did. In absence of a full-time gig at a 
race track, which I didn't have headed into 2004, I needed a clean 
break. 
That being said, I really
 should have come back at the end of every season to announce his big 
show at Chowchilla and the big Late Model show that he asked me to 
announce. It would have been fun just to catch up with everybody for one
 special weekend and enjoy the atmosphere. George didn't have to give me
 the opportunity he did, and I realize now more than ever that this was a
 sign of respect from the man. Though he was a legend as a racer and one
 of the best open show promoters for Stock Car racing, he didn't have an
 attitude. He appreciated each and every person who was involved, and he
 spent a lot of time thinking them personally for their support.
One
 thing I was skeptical of when the management change talk started 
happening last year was changing the rules of the Hobby Stocks at 
Antioch Speedway. I'm still sitting on the fence. As I said, it's not my
 desire to nitpick or be negative, so this is more of a wait and see 
thing. I agreed with what John said. The class was growing at Antioch 
with the rules they had, and you need your local support to keep those 
numbers up. My concern is that I can see the discrepancy between the 
guys that can now come from out of town because of the rule changes and 
the locals. I'm not sure what that's going to mean in the long run, but I
 would be lying to you if I said I wasn't nervous. I'm always going to 
be an advocate for rules that make it easier for the people in your area
 to support the track. Out-of-town drivers are nice, but how many of 
them will make the visit for every race? How many locals do you lose 
when trying to bring those drivers from out of town? It sort of reminds 
me of the way the Late Model division went, but it's too early to say 
history is repeating itself. Way too early.
Looking
 at some of the metric cars out there, I don't think it's too early to 
make the prediction that Antioch Speedway will start an IMCA Stock Car 
division in the next three years. I'm aware that Chad was talking about 
adding the class while he was still in negotiations with John to get the
 track. The IMCA Stock Car has a distinctive look from the Hobby Stocks,
 and you're not going to see cars like Camaros in the field. I think the
 IMCA Stock Car will have more of a presence on the West Coast in the 
next few years, so I'm not surprised. I also will say that just because 
this division could be added to the roster in the future does not mean 
that when it's done the Hobby Stocks will automatically be dropped. 
I
 recognize that I could be perceived as being negative towards things at
 Antioch Speedway now, but that's not the intent. I was supportive of 
the old regime, but change is an inevitability. Change is necessary to 
keep things going. You want a situation like this where the guy coming 
in has been a part of that race track for many years, knows the people 
and has a game plan. Some of the things that I am concerned with and a 
bit nervous about may still turn out to be what's needed. I certainly 
hope so and I'm cheering for that to be the case.
While
 I think the virus situation is going to have a negative effect in the 
long-term, there's no denying that people are climbing the fence to get 
back out there. As soon as fans are allowed to attend the races, I do 
believe you're going to see a bump. People just want to get out and do 
something. People who were only casual fans will be there, and that will
 certainly make the track the place to be. People remembering those days
 when the stands were packed will rejoice. However, it's very important 
that the track puts its best foot forward to entertain those fans and 
make them want to come back. You can gain new regulars this way when 
those numbers inevitably start to drop a little bit. Maybe you could get
 back to having a thousand or more people on a regular basis. If the 
numbers go up when the gates are allowed to open on the grandstand side 
of things, it's in the track's best interest to make the spectating 
experience as enjoyable as possible. Give them their bang for the buck 
and make them want to come back. That means a lot of things, which I'm 
not going to get into here. 
Dixon
 Speedway certainly had a late night. They had some 100 Micros in the 
pits on both nights, and racing went well into the early hours of the 
next morning. Live scoring disappeared on me on early Sunday morning, so
 I wasn't able to watch scoring in real time. However, I was watching in
 the early morning hours on Monday. It looked good from what I could 
see. I'm guessing everybody had a good time and racers were just happy 
to be back at the track again. It's nice to see Dixon doing well as they
 lead the way towards getting us back to some sort of normalcy.
I
 was skeptical of Jeremy Prince as he was taking a look at a new 
challenge in addition to Dixon Speedway, but I don't think I needed to 
be skeptical. Jeremy is another guy that comes from a racing family and 
has been in this sport for a long time. When he was looking at Antioch 
Speedway and if he had ultimately gotten the track, it wouldn't have 
been a bad thing. I certainly hope that the situation in Dixon continues
 to be positive enough that they can keep that race track open. I'm also
 happy that he's recovering from that terrible accident. If and when the
 time comes that Jeremy takes a look at trying to get a bigger track 
again, or if he tries to do bigger things at Dixon Speedway, I am 
certainly going to be more supportive of those efforts. We need people 
like Jeremy in the game.
I'm 
writing this on a Monday afternoon prior to the Marysville Raceway show.
 Dennis Gage has been a leader in the movement to get racing going 
again, and this will be his third event in front empty grandstands. One 
thing I appreciate about Dennis is that he is respecting the guidelines 
as outlined by the county and state. This has never been about making a 
grand statement with a big show. It's been about opening the gates and 
making something happen in the hopes of getting things back to normal as
 soon as possible. If he were inclined to do so, he surely could have 
held a big Winged 360 Sprint Car program with a bigger purse, and I bet 
that sponsors would have come on board for it. He could have packed the 
pits with 60-70 Sprint Cars alone before getting into any other 
division. Again, this is not what he was trying to do. That said, 
Monday's show had 45 Sprint Cars, which is still very impressive.
The
 reason that's important is because what he's trying to do is show that 
you can follow the guidelines and do this safely. We all have our 
opinions on this whole virus situation, and many of us believe it's BS. 
That notwithstanding, when you get your foot in the door to do 
something, you don't immediately put your middle finger in the air to 
the state and do what you feel like. You risk having the door slammed 
shut. You risk other things happening which could ultimately result in 
the race track closing. Granted, that's a worst-case scenario. In any 
event, I applaud Dennis for his efforts.
Dennis
 followed Paul Hawes as promoter of Marysville Raceway. Paul was 
succeeding Mel Hall, who had passed away. He gave that track over a 
decade of his time. Now granted, there were some highly publicized 
problems that happened at the track. It seems like the news media is 
keen on going to a race track when the news is bad, but they don't care 
to go there when it's an exceptionally good night. Negativity sells, 
which is obvious when we look at how the virus is being hyped. Through 
all of the bad times, Paul kept coming back and keeping those gates 
open. There were mistakes along the way, and maybe things could have 
ultimately been shut down, but they weren't. Paul was the guy keeping 
things going between Mel and Dennis.
Some
 of the promoters were a bit slow to embrace social media or message 
boards before that. I remember Tom Sagmiller at Chowchilla Speedway 
being one of the first to realize the value of communicating with the 
racers online. Paul was up on the old Sprint Car Fan board. He would 
answer questions and talk about his ideas for the next race. If you 
emailed him a question, which I did, he would get back to you. He seemed
 like a good guy to me, and unfortunately he has just passed away. He 
was diagnosed with Cancer and not given much time to live. The 
comforting part of the news is that he didn't suffer long. My 
condolences go out to his family. 
From
 what I've heard, the past two IMCA Sport Modified champions, Trevor 
Tiffee and Ethan Killingsworth, were two of the first drivers to run the
 limited practices at Siskiyou Golden Speedway. This is the beginning of
 hopefully even better news. I'm not sure how quickly the track will be 
able to open up for a race given the fact that Siskiyou County was one 
of the counties low on the performance list when it comes to handling 
the virus. There could be slightly bigger practices around the corner at
 any time. Kevin is in communication with all the people that he needs 
to talk to, and I know that as soon as they can do more, they will. 
Given the fact that I don't know where Oregon stands at this time, 
Siskiyou Golden Speedway could have a heck of a show if they are able to
 open for a race in the near future.
Mark
 Wauge was practicing his Late Model, but he took a longer trip to 
Diamond Mountain Speedway in Susanville to do it. They had slightly 
cheaper rates for their limited practice, but Roy Bain also put out the 
word in a recent live stream that Jeff Olschowka was interested in 
running a Late Model race when he gets going if there are enough drivers
 interested. Roy certainly beat the drum to get the attention of Oregon 
racers. I'm not sure where this stands, but Wauge reports that he made 
good laps and enjoyed his time on the track. We're still waiting for an 
official word on when Diamond Mountain Speedway may open for a race, 
though the rumor is June 13th.
This idea came to me as I was watching the first night of 
Antioch Speedway on SpeedshiftTV. It's just possible that the majority 
of the tracks in California that are going to even attempt to run races 
this year won't take their first shot at a race until July. Championship
 seasons are going to be abbreviated or not held at all. A thought 
occurred to me as I looked at the impressive roster of drivers across 
the three divisions that came to race at Antioch Speedway. This idea 
requires cooperation between at least five to seven promoters, and that 
sometimes can be a tall order.
When
 we're able to get crowds in the stands, even if that doesn't happen 
until September, what if we created a Speedweek Series? Seven tracks, 
seven dates. Modifieds and Sport Modifieds. IMCA sanctioned. Bring the 
best drivers that California, Oregon, Nevada and wherever else have to 
offer. You don't need a third division for this. If you eliminated the 
Hobby Stocks from the Antioch card on Saturday, you're still talking 
about 110 cars. Seven nights of racing, a champion is crowned. 
Considering we've lost so much this year, a California IMCA 
Modified/Sport Modified Speedweek might be just the thing.
Then
 again, this depends on being able to have a crowd. It's a good bet that
 you'll still be able to have SpeedshiftTV covering the whole thing. 
After all, they go up to Oregon to cover that one, and I could see them 
being interested in this. Still, you want butts in the seats watching 
the races. You want fans consuming your concessions. So, this type of 
deal doesn't happen unless you can have that. July probably wouldn't be 
the time. August might be iffy but I bet you could put a series together
 in September if you really tried. Something tells me promoters might be
 willing to do this. Knowing the racer's mentality, many of them would 
be up for this as well. 
.
I don't 
know what promoters would want to sit down at the table, but my mind 
starts to speculate. How about Ocean Speedway, Antioch Speedway, 
Petaluma Speedway, Bakersfield Speedway, Merced Speedway, Keller Auto 
Speedway and maybe Marysville Raceway or Chico Silver Dollar Speedway? 
I'm just saying it would be an interesting show. 
Given
 the year we've had thanks to the virus, we need something positive to 
go out on. I think one of the holdups is the fact that people are 
worried about being able to get fans to come to the race track during 
the week, but this is a different type of situation. Something tells me 
that people might be more willing to go to one of those tracks on a 
Tuesday or Wednesday this year. It's a thought anyway.
The
 goal is to put this up right after the races at Marysville, so I'm 
trying to get it ready. I don't want to wait to put this one out there. 
Therefore, I am going to record an audio show after I edit this column. I
 think I'm done at this point. Until next time...