Dirt Racing
Macri Wins Weikert Memorial Preliminary
PORT ROYAL, PA (May 27, 2023): Anthony Macri scorched the field in round one of the Bob Weikert Memorial at the Port Royal Speedway. His seventh All Stars victory at the track and twenty-second of his career was worth a hefty $10,000 and it made him the odds-on favorite to take home $29,000 more when the weekend celebration of speed concludes on Sunday evening. But finishing behind the Dillsburg pilot were four other members of the PA Posse.
Macri dominated the top like no other racer in the twenty-nine lap affair that went non-stop. His margin of victory was 9.667 seconds. Macri was unsure of his race strategy. He did not know if he should get to the front early or whether he should hold back and let his competitors “burn up their stuff.” Ultimately, he let his car make the decision for him. “I was making decent speed, so I decided to go up top. I figured that I couldn’t pass anybody running the same line as they were.” He summed, that “it was a pleasure” to drive he car this night.
A re-draw of the top ten drivers in passing points determined teh starting line-up. Mike Wagner was the lucky fellow to grab the pole. Next to him was Justin Whittal. Tyler Courtney and Macri populated row two. Zeb Wise and Devon Borden ahd the third row. Tim Shaffer and Brent Marks mad up the fourth row. Behind them were Tyler Bear and Logan Wagner. Cory Eliason and Jeff Halligan were in row six.
Lance Dewease rolled away from the outside of row eight, and Dylan Cisney from the inside of row ten. After experiencing engine problems in his heat and failing to transfer from the B, Danny Dietrich used a track provisional to start dead last.
Mike Wagner fought off Whittal and Courtney in turn one to take the lead. Macri, Wise, Logan Wagner, who is back in black, Marks, Borden, Halligan, and Bear followed.
Mike Wagner led the first ten laps. However, toward the end of that run, he encountered lapped traffic, and many of those drivers were using the inside line, which he preferred. That enabled Macri to close in. With Mike Wagner stick behind some slower cars, Macri blasted around the top of turns one and two to take the lead with eleven laps completed.
“He (Macri) was really good. I was good the first ten laps but then the car loosened up,” the Legend noted. Mike Wagner added that he had pulled his wing all the way back, but he was still spinning his tires, and Macri just drove away from him.
While the first two positions were well settled, the rest of the top ten was in doubt. Courtney held third until the second half of the race. Logan Wagner took third with about ten laps to go. But both Logan Wagner and Courtney faded in the final few laps. Marks and Dewease chased them down to get third and fourth, respectively. Logan Wagner held on for fifth.
Wise, Halligan, and Whittal also passed Courtney in the stretch run. Courtney was ninth and Blane Heimbach was tenth.
Although Heimbach passed eleven cars in the race, he lost the hard charger honors to Dewease, who was plus twelve.
There were four heats. The winners were Gerrard McIntyre, Jr., Logan Wagner, Macri, and Heimbach. Heimbach also won the B Main. He was
required to run the B becasue his heat win came from the pole position, and he did not earn enough passing points to make the A Main.
The evening’s fastest qualifier was Borden, with a remarkable lap of 16.940 seconds.
In the twenty lapper for the PASS IMCA 305 Sprint Cars, Logan Spahr chased drown early leader Jared Zionkowski just past halfway. Spahr led the rest of the way to earn his sixth series win in a row!
Zionkowski, who started on the pole, held on for second. Seth Schnoke ran third the full twenty laps. Jeff Weaver, Jr. and Ken Duke completed the top five.
Kenny Heffner, Doug Dodson, Mike Melair, Austin Reed, and Zach Rhoades were sixth through tenth.
The quartet of heat winners consisted of Dodson, Jason Roush, Dustin Young, and Heffner. Mike Alleman took the B Main. Heffner was also the evening’s fastest qualifier in the timed hot lap sessions. He toured the big half mile in 18.557 seconds.
A Feature (29 Laps): 1. 39M-Anthony Macri[4]; 2. 55W-Mike Wagner[1]; 3. 19-Brent Marks[8]; 4. 69K-Lance Dewease[16]; 5. 1-Logan Wagner[10]; 6. 26-Zeb Wise[5]; 7. 45H-Jeff Halligan[12]; 8. 67-Justin Whittall[2]; 9. 7BC-Tyler Courtney[3]; 10. 12-Blane Heimbach; 11. 23-Devon Borden[6]; 12. 45-Tim Shaffer[7]; 13. 77K-Tyler Bear[9]; 14. 11-Cory Eliason[11]; 15. 29W-Danny Dietrich; 16. 5-Dylan Cisney[19]; 17. 5W-Lucas Wolfe[13]; 18. 33M-Gerard McIntyre Jr[20]; 19. 15H-Sam Hafertepe Jr[18]; 20. 4-Chris Windom[17]; 21. 35-Austin Bishop[14]; 22. 47K-Kody Lehman; 23. 55-Hunter Schuerenberg[15]; 24. 29-Sye Lynch; 25. 33W-Michael Walter; 26. 35S-Jason Shultz LAP LEADERS: Mike Wagner (1-10), Anthony Macri (11-29)
2023 All Star Circuit of Champions DRIVER Standings (As of 5/27):
Tyler Courtney – 1348
Chris Windom – 1256
Hunter Schuerenberg – 1246
Tim Shaffer – 1240
J.J. Hickle – 1180
Scotty Thiel – 1178
Conner Morrell – 1114
Zeb Wise – 1066
Parker Price-Miller – 956
Sye Lynch – 898
Dirt Racing
Dietz Does It Again
ABBOTTSTOWN, PA (February 28, 2026): For the second straight year, Chase Dietz won the Icebreaker 30 at the fabulous Lincoln Speedway. The young veteran from York, PA chased down Danny Dietrich and used some lapped cars to gain the advantage in turns three and four on lap eighteen. Dietz scooped up $6,000 for his first victory of the 2026 season.
“The traffic got Danny (Dietrich) and Cameron (Smith) moving around,” Dietz observed. That enabled him to close the gap on them quickly. He added, “the lapped traffic made it interesting. I went low, it had some ruts, but it seemed to be the fastest way around.”
Dietz, who had a very maneuverable car the entire race, commended the track preparation by Fred Putney just before the feature started. “I knew it was going to have some hot characteristics to it. Fred did such a great job. The top came in. I went up there a little early and I fell back, but I was able to come back up.”
“I was very fortunate to start the season like we did there,” he summed.
Dietrich, who led some laps in the middle of the event, remarked that he was pleased with second, “especially the way (turns) three and four were.” He joked that, in previous years, he probably would have wadded up the car trying to get more speed in those corners. “I was happy to be able to race with him (gesturing toward Dietz) there. I thought I could compete with him after the yellow (on lap nineteen), but he was really good.”
Third place finisher, Freddie Rahmer, Jr., thought that his car was better than Dietz’ “at different parts of the race.” He conceded, though, “maybe he was better at moving around.” He cited as an example, “he found the top sooner. I went up there, but I wasn’t as good.”
An Ohio invader, Zeth Sabo, drew the pole for the opener in the Pigeon Hills. To his right was Lance Dewease, making his debut at the controls of Rich Eichelberger’s potent machine. Row two paired Cameron Smith and Danny Dietrich. They were followed by Freddie Rahmer, Jr. and Chase Dietz. Logan Rumsey and Steven Snyder, Jr. occupied row four. Chad Trout and Billy Dietrich comprised row five, with Rick Lafferty and Matt Campbell next in line.
Sabo started his second race at Lincoln somewhat unexpectedly. He popped a wheelie coming off turn four. When he gathered it back up entering turn one, he slid high, forcing Dewease out of the groove. That opened the inside line for Smith, who took advantage of the opportunity to grab the early lead. Sabo and Dewease followed, with Danny Dietrich, Snyder, and Rahmer in hot pursuit.
Smith started to get some separation in the first few laps, but a caution for Tyler Ross on lap six brought Smith back to the fold. While the cars were pacing under the yellow, Dewease pulled to the top of turn three with a brake problem. He retired from the race at that point.
On the restart, Smith began to assert himself once again. Sabo got up on two wheels coming through turn two, losing five spots in the process. That moved Danny Dietrich and Freddie Rahmer into second and third, respectively. Rumsey and Dietz rounded out the top five.
Within a few laps, Smith reached the slower cars at the rear of the field. His pace slowed considerably, and Danny Dietrich went on the offensive. By the halfway mark, Dietrich was closing rapidly on Smith, who was still being cautious attempting to lap the slower cars.
Dietrich got a good run coming off turn two and he moved to the outside of Smith and the lappers. Dietrich sailed into turn three with the lead.
However, his time out front was brief. Dietz was on the move, and he closed in on Dietrich in just a lap or two. Dietz made his bid for the lead on lap eighteen, dropping to the rough inside line to take the lead by passing Dietrich and two lapped cars coming through turn four.
Dietrich remained close, but could not mount a counterattack at the opposite end of the track.
Hayden Miller flipped in turn one on lap nineteen to cause the final stoppage of the event. He was not hurt.
Dietrich began plotting a different strategy for the remaining eleven laps. However, Dietz had a clear track and a better car.
Dietz got to some lapped traffic in the final circuits, but he was able to pick off the slower cars with ease. He took the checkers just over three seconds ahead of Danny Dietrich. After the leaders took the final flag, Bitty Dietrich spun in turn four, and the rest of the field completed the race under yellow.
The split lap scoring had Freddie Rahmer, Jr. in third, followed by Rumsey and Smith. Troy Wagaman, Jr. passed his teammate, Snyder, in the closing laps to get the sixth spot. Sabo was seventh, with Campbell and Trout rounding out the top ten.
The three heat victories went to Dewease, Dietz, and Danny Dietrich. There was no B Main.
After the crowd dispersed, Speedway officials announced that Sunday’s conclusion to the Icebreaker weekend was cancelled due to forecasts of colder temperatures and rainy conditions. Racing will resume with a pair of afternoon shows next Saturday and Sunday, with 3 p.m. starts each day.
Dirt Racing
Alphabet Soup
TULSA, OK (January 17, 2026): One of the exciting parts about championship Saturday at the Chili Bowl is the myriad of elimination races that are staged throughout the day. Starting in the early morning and stretching through the mid-afternoon, racers try to climb one of two ladders which may lead to the coveted A Main.
Some of the competitors had hard luck on their qualifying night, whether caused by an on-track skirmish or a mechanical failure. For them, alphabet soup is a chance at redemption.
Some of them are young drivers making their first or second try at the Chili Bowl. They may be driving obsolete or underfunded equipment owned by friends or family members. Some may be in rent-a-rides. Either way, for them it is a chance at validation.
Some are aged veterans in cars that are also well past their prime. For them, it is a chance at capturing the magic once again.
The fans who turn out early are always hoping that, regardless of the particular circumstances, some racer gets on a hot streak and moves ahead several rounds.
In 2026, we were fortunate to have a couple of racers make significant progress during the day. Two of them raced nine times each. While neither one reached the higher rungs of the ladder, they still captured the hearts of the diehard fans who watched them make their marks on Chili Bowl history.
Two of the competitors with nine races on their resumes were on the same ladder. Previously, the most races that any one driver ran in was seven. That was done by Chris Carroll.
One, Darren Naida, started in an O feature, which turned out to be the second race of the day when the Q Mains were eliminated due to an insufficient number of cars that staged for those events. Naida, who is a Sprint Car driver from Michigan, spent most of the 2025 season racing with the revived All Star Circuit of Champions. He was driving an unusual car for Danny Bates. The car was equipped with a handmade three-cylinder motor that Bates and his father crafted in the span of twenty-four months. Naida’s progress stopped in the first G feature.
While Naida was making his progress, a teenager from Ohio, Mack Leopard, was also gaining attention and fan support. His trek started in the N Main and ended in the first F feature. Leopard won four of the nine races that he entered. His worst finish of the day was in the F that ended his run. He was ninth in that race. In all but one race, Leopard started outside the top ten. For his efforts, Leopard was the recipient of a special award and a bonus of more than $3,000.
A driver on the other bracket raced six times. Jace Park, a young shoe from Kansas, started in the second K Main and he made it to the second F. Along the way, he piled up two wins. His best starting spot was ninth in the K.
Unfortunately, none of the drivers who transferred into the A had to climb more than one run on the ladder.
The pair of B Mains were hard fought affairs.
In the first one, Cannon McIntosh held off Ryan Bernal for the win. Surprisingly, McIntosh was for first driver for Keith Kunz Motorsports to make to the A Main. Corbin Rueschenberg came from row five to transfer, and Tim Buckwalter quietly drove a Seymour car from row seven to get the A Main start. Daryn Pittman, Kyle Cummins, and Gavan Boschele also advanced.
In the second, a Chili Bowl darling, fourteen-year-old Jett Barnes, handily defeated Coleny Copeland and Shane Golobic. Barnes was driving for Kevin and Jordan Swindell. Also making the big show were Kevin Thomas, Jr., Spencer Bayston, Tanner Thorson, and Wout Hoffmans from the Netherlands.
Jaceb Boxell went wire to wire in the first C Main in a race that was botton dominant. Jacob Denney was second, followed by Ronnie Gardner, J.J. Yeley, and Austin Wood.
The second C Main was similar. Chelby Hilton drove an old Beast to victory. He was followed by Late Model star Nick Hoffman, Kyle Jones, Hayden Wise, and Ryan Timms.
Joel Myers captured the first D Main, ahead of Kale Drake. Mason Hannagan, Gunnar Setser, and Steven Shebester also transferred. Steven Snyder, Jr. missed the transfer by one spot after starting in row nine with a car that was patched together after a devastating crash late in Friday’s A Main.
Caleb Stelzig won the second D Main. Dillon Welch, Brecken Reese, Chase Randall, and Jake Newman also moved ahead.
In the first E Main, Ryan Padgett held off fast-closing Steven Snyder, Jr. for the win. Aiden Price, Noah Harris, and Brandon Carr made the transfers.
K.J. Snow prevailed in the second E Main. Justin Zimmerman, Nick Drake, T.J. Smith, and Brant Woods earned another chance to race.
Cap Henry, from Western OH won the first F Main, but he crashed out in the next round. Casey Shuman, driving a throwback car to his father’s days in the Ofixco 21x, was second. Daniel Adler, John Barnard, and Cole Wakim also advanced. Mack Leopard was ninth, ending his day.
Jesse Schlotfeldt, Paul White, Wesley Smith, Cooper Miller, and Jeffrey Newell moved ahead from the second F Main.
Garrett Benson, Leopard, Adyn Schmidt, Kaleb Johnson, and Garet Williamson raced successfully in the first G Main. Naida’s spectacular run ended with a sixth place finish in this one.
The second G Main had Sam Hinds taking the checkers ahead of Rees Moran, Jace Park, Cale Coons, and Braxton Cummings.
Logan Prickett led Jeb Sessums, Kaylee Bryson, Leopard, Naida, and Jacob Dykstra to the line in the first H Main.
Moran, Park, Emilio Hoover, Tyler Edwards, Tyler Robbins, and Preston Norbury prevailed in the second H Main.
Leopard, Ethan Mitchell, Naida, Justin Bates, Connor Lundy, and Nathan Crane were the top six runners in the first I Main.
Park, Logan Julien, Cadan Sarale, Shawn Jackson, Austin Nigh, and Santino Ferrucci were the frontrunners in the second I Main.
Leopard was the winner in the first J Main. T.J. Stark, Naida, Ayden Gatewood, Nathan Crane, and Casey Friedrichsen also came from that race.
Roger Crockett crossed ahead of Ferrucci, Julien, Park, Tyler Hewitt, and Will Gerrits in the second J Main.
Rylan Gray held off Leopard, Fredrichsen, Naida, Brenham Crouch, and Joshua Tyre in the first K Main.
Park, Julien, Cody Brewer, Kade Taylor, Gerrist, and Cole Vanderheiden moved from the second K Main.
In the first L Main, the race was shirtened to eight laps due to the number of cautions during the event. The last one was for Glenn Styres, whose flip in turn four eliminated his chance of advancement. P.J. Gargiulo was declared the winner, with Jim Vanzant, Leopard, Crouch, Naida, and Jon Hughes also transferring.
The second L Main went the full ten lap distance, with Joe Walker getting the win. Grant Schaadt, Gerrits, Brewer, Dayton Shelton, and Corey Mullins making the grade.
Leopard took the first M feature, followed by Shon Deskins, Josh Hawkins, Naida, Kyle Hawse, and Sye Lynch.
Earl McDoulett, Jr., Shelton, Brewer, Hawkins, Pierce Urbanosky, and Matt Johnson came from the second M feature.
Leopard started his record-setting run in the first N feature. Naida, Hawkins, Tommy Colburn, John Hartzman, and Kevin Studley moved along.
Bill Johnson, Urbanosky, Tadd Holliman, Brewer, Ben Covich, and Matt Johnson went forward from the second N feature.
Naida won the first O feature. Colburn, Hawkins, Seth Shebester, Matt Carr, and Chris Hartman advanced.
Ryan Bowers, Holliman, Matt Johnson, Cody Beard, Brewer, and Covich advanced from the second O feature.
Shebester, Chris Hartman, Eric Webber, Kevin Mahoney, and Carr started the day in the first P feature.
In the second P feature, Noah Madler, Jordan Knoght, Sammy Swindell, Henry Chambers, Donovan Peterson, and Mike Sullivan advanced. Swindell crashed out of his O feature.
Dirt Racing
A-OK for Axsom in Chili Bowl Finale
TULSA, OK (January 17, 2026) – At the ripe old age of twenty-one, Emerson Axsom is a Chili Bowl Champion. “This is like a dream, it’s the best day of my life,” he said after scoring his first national-level win. “I won’t believe this until next year, or until I see my name on the trophy or T-shirt with everyone else that’s won this race.”
The talented driver from Franklin, IN almost missed this year’s event. He found out during the summer that his ride in the Keith Kunz Motorsports stable was in jeopardy. “Last year, I drove Keith’s personal car, and he said that he wasn’t bringing it back. He said that I could still have a seat in one of the other cars, but I wouldn’t have had him as my chief mechanic.” Instead, Axsom would have been in the hands of one of KKM’s army of crew members. Axsom was not pleased with that development, but he stayed calm, hoping that something better would fall into place.
It did. Later in the summer, he got a text message from Kevin Swindell inquiring whether he would be interested in joining his team. That was followed by a telephone call, during which Swindell informed him that he “was going to do this right” by bringing four cars. All would be equipped the same as Logan Seavey’s two-time championship ride for Swindell Speedlab. Axsom jumped at the chance.
Axsom did not get much of an opportunity to talk with Swindell about the car before they arrived in Tulsa. He did talk briefly with him during the Tulsa Shootout, which is THE EVENT for Micros. “He was busy with his Micro stuff,” Axsom explained. They did go out for dinner in the break between the Shootout and the Chili Bowl and they were able to compare some notes at that time.
Swindell has figured out how to make cars fast at the Chili Bowl. In addition to Axsom’s winning car, the team fielded cars for Seavey (fourth), Kyle Cummins (nineteenth), and rookie of the race Jett Barnes (twenty-first). Fourteen-year-old Barnes was also feted as the rookie of the race. No other team had as many cars make the exclusive A Main line-up in 2026.
Axsom’s strategy for the race was simple. He was going to pass Kyle Larson, the pole-sitter, as early as he could and he was going to set his own pace. That way, he figured, Larson would have to press to regain the lead and, maybe, just maybe, he would make a mistake. The plan could not have been better conceived, or better executed.
Axson followed Larson for the first few laps of the race. He got the opportunity to take the lead coming off turn two on lap four. Axsom began to separate himself from the rest of the field. Larson was still in second place when misfortune struck. He came upon a slower car coming off turn two on lap sixteen. He checked up, but another competitor turned him. Larson nosed into the wall and turned over midway down the back stretch. Axsom’s biggest threat was gone.
Not that he had smooth sailing for the rest of the way, mind you. Axsom had a good string of laps in the middle portion of the race. For most of that time, Seavey was lurking in second, looking for an opportunity to pass. But, nothing appeared. Around lap thirty, Justin Grant began to assert himself. He was batting hard with Seavey for second place, and everybody in attendance knew that, if Grant got into second, he would press Axsom much harder that Seavey was doing. Well, Grant did manage to reach second and he did slide Axsom for the lead on lap forty-eight. But, fate intervened. Cummins came to a stop before the lap was completed, so the pass was nullified.
When the race resumed, Axsom darted out to the lead. The battle raged for second place. Seavey regained the position but Grant was persistent. On lap fifty-four, Grant went four wheels above the cushion in a desperate attempt to pass Seavey. There was contact, and Grant tumbled.
That set up a green-white checkered finish, with Swindell’s cars first and second.
The gravity of the situation came to Axsom with eleven laps remaining in regulation. “I looked up (at the scoreboard) it was lap fourty-four. I was like ‘Holy crap, there’s elevent to go. This could be real.’” Axsom concentrated on getting good restarts. “I needed to protect to keep myself from getting slid.”
Axsom was feeling some jitters as the laps clicked off. He was starting to struggle with the big curb that developed coming off turns two and four. He explained that the track was slick up to the berm. “I had to slide up to it,” he said, adding “it’s not my forte to enter above the cushion” like Larson and Daison Pursley were apt to do. He admitted that he made some mistakes, but he was always able to recover.
“Every time I saw a guy’s nose, I just defended.” That accounted for a little rub with teammate Seavey who tried to turn under him when Axsom bobbled coming off turn two.
On the final laps, Kevin Thomas, Jr. got a good run on Seavey to take over second. He made an attempt to pass Axsom coming off turn four on the final round, but he came up a bit short. “I saw KTJ on the bottom. I didn’t know what to do. I didn’t want to slide myself, so I just stayed on the bottom.”
Thomas noted that the rash of late cautions was a big benefit to him. “I stuffed a piece of mud under my throttle pedal. I got to the bottom by mistake, and the mud went away. It was an old man’s game down there. The long run was not my play. The caution every four laps was good.”
Thomas joked that he may have taught his protege, Axsom, a few too many tricks of the trade. “He stayed on the bottom. He’s smarter than I thought,” he said as he nudged Axsom in jest.
Local favorite, Hank Davis, charged into third at the end of the race. He was aboard the Seymour car once again, a car that he rode to a preliminary night victory in a previous Chili Bowl attempt. “I fell back to twelfth or thirteenth, and I got pissed off,” he said. He added that he started trying to make adjustments on the car. Whatever he did worked, as the long runs helped him to regain lost position.
The pole shuffle set the starting order for the A Main, which was scheduled to go fifty-five laps. Larson and Axsom earned the front row, followed by Blake Hahn and Seavey. Christopher Bell and Daison Pursley were in row three, with Briggs Danner and Davis next in line. Grant and C.J. Leary were the last of the preferred starters. Then came Cannon McIntosh, the lone KKM driver in the field, and Barnes. Three of the next four cars were from the Wood stable, Ryan Bernal, Colby Copeland, and Shane Golobic. Nestled in that bunch was Corbin Reuschenberg. Tim Buckwalter and Thomas made up row nine. Daryn Pittman, Spencer Bayston, Kyle Cummins, Tanner Thorson, Gavan Boschele, and Wout Hoffmans completed the field.
It took two attempts to get the race started. The original effort was washed out by Copeland’s miscue in turn one.
On the second try, Larson took the lead, with Axsom, Hahn, Seavey, and Bell in tow. Axsom made his move on lap four to grab the lead. Larson remained in second, followed by Seavey, Hahn, and Bell. Grant joined the top five by lap ten, nudging Bell off the scoreboard.
A pivotal moment occurred on lap sixteen, when Larson got jammed up in traffic and tipped over midway down the back stretch.
Axsom maintained the lead over Seavey in the middle of the race despite several cautions for minor incidents. The hometown crowd was disappointed during the lap twenty-six caution when Hahn’s car suddenly stopped on the track, ending his bid for Chili Bowl glory.
Following that caution, a spirited duel developed between Seavey and Grant for second position. That continued through lap fifty-four, when Grant went all in to try to regain second from Seavey.
On that restart, Pursley was penalized for jumping the start. He was sent back two positions, which moved Thomas into contention in third. He took over second immediately and showed his nose to Axsom.
Axsom applied the lessons learned from his mentor, Thomas, and remained steady in the bottom groove to preserve his victory.
Following Axsom, Thomas, and Davis on the bonus lap were Seavey and Briggs Danner, who ran a quiet but steady race. Pursley, McIntosh, Bell, Bayston, and Thorson rounded out the top ten.
The 2026 Chili Bowl Rookie of the Year is Jett Barnes, who was the only event rookie to make the 24-car field.
The 2027 Chili Bowl Nationals powered by NOS Energy Drink will take place January 11-16, 2027, inside the SageNet Center at Expo Square. Fans unable to attend the Chili Bowl Nationals can watch every lap live at http://www.floracing.com.
For continued updates on the Chili Bowl Nationals, fans can follow along on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram with @CBNationals.
RACE RESULTS:
40th Chili Bowl Nationals powered by NOS Energy Drink
Tulsa Expo Raceway (Tulsa, Okla.)
Driller Day presented by QuikTrip
Saturday, January 17, 2026
Event Count: 387
JST Motorsports A-Feature:
A Feature 1 (55 Laps): 1. 39A-Emerson Axsom[2]; 2. 14K-Kevin Thomas Jr[18]; 3. 29S-Hank Davis[8]; 4. 39-Logan Seavey[4]; 5. 55I-Briggs Danner[7]; 6. 86-Daison Pursley[6]; 7. 71K-Cannon McIntosh[11]; 8. 21CB-Christopher Bell[5]; 9. 1S-Spencer Bayston[20]; 10. 88-Tanner Thorson[22]; 11. 21-Daryn Pittman[19]; 12. 52-Blake Hahn[3]; 13. 55X-CJ Leary[10]; 14. 51-Gavan Boschele[23]; 15. 27W-Colby Copeland[14]; 16. 26-Corbin Rueschenberg[15]; 17. (DNF) 87-Justin Grant[9]; 18. (DNF) 87W-Ryan Bernal[13]; 19. (DNF) 39G-Kyle Cummins[21]; 20. (DNF) 17W-Shane Golobic[16]; 21. (DNF) 1A-Jett Barnes[12]; 22. (DNF) 29-Tim Buckwalter[17]; 23. (DNF) 1K-Kyle Larson[1]; 24. (DNF) 14J-Wout Hoffmans[24]

