Dirt Racing
Macri Defends the Home Turf Against the Outlaws

MECHANICSBURG, PA (May 10, 2025): Anthony Macri remains undefeated at the Williams Grove Speedway in 2025. He led wire to wire in the World of Outlaws main event to retain the Morgan Cup for the Pennsylvania Posse. And, he added another cool $20,000 to his bank account for his first ever Outlaws triumph at the Grove.
Macri described the experience of defeating the Outlaws at the Grove as “surreal.”
He was challenged briefly in turn one by the ten-time Outlaws champion, Donny Schatz. However, Macri rode the high groove to fend off the attack. “I just figured we had the groove up top, and I had the wing back.”
David Gravel came on in the late stages of the contest to take second spot, but he was no match for Macri on this night. Gravel was fortunate to avoid a multi-car crash in turn four that claimed Carson Macedo and Logan Schuchart, who were contending for teh fourth spot at the time. Gravel explained “i said “aw shit” when I went into three and that lapped car spun. I went low and they all went high.” He added, “I felt good on the bottom, but (when I got to second) only the top was open and I wasn’t as good up there.”
Danny Dietrich was in contention for much of the race but he got shuffled back on the lap fourteen restart. He battled back though to give the Posse two of the three podium positions. “I wish it would have stayed green,” he said. “I was on the inside and that wasn’t the place to be. I got freight-trained and I had to fight back from there.”
Bill Balog was the unexpected pole sitter for the thirty lap affair. after his Dash win. Macri was to his right. Schuchart and Schatz made up the second row. Then came Gravel and Dietrich. Justin Whittall and Conner Morrel were the final cars from the Dash. Row five belonged to Buddy Kofoid and Carson Macedo. Row six consisted of Troy Wagaman, Jr. and Giovanni Scelzi.
Although Balog was first into turn one, he left the top groove open for Macri. Macri took advantage of the opportunity and he powered off turn two with the lead. Balog’s time among the leaders ended on the next trip around the historic half mile. He spun in turn two to bring out the first caution. Fortunately no other competitors were collected in the incident.
Macri had the inside line for the restart with Schatz on his flank and Dietrich on his rear nerf bar. Schuchart, Gravel and Macedo were next in the running order.
When the green flashed on again, Macri drove away from Schatz and Dietrich. There was good separation between them until Macri entered lapped traffic. Schatz closed in and he managed to pull up next to Macri in turn one on once occasion. However, he could not complete the pass. Macri continued to lead Schatz and Dietrich until the lap fourteen calamity which required a red flag. That melee was triggered by T.J. Stutts.
The departure of Macedo and Schuchart from the lead group moved Gravel into fourth, followed by Kofoid, Whittal, Scelzi, Freddie Rahmer, Jr., Morrel, and Shelcon Haudenschild for the final restart of the night.
While Macri and Schatz held the top two positions, Gravel moved into third, followed by Whittal. Dietrich slipped back to fifth and he was being challenged by Rahmer.
Gravel picked off Schatz in traffic on lap twenty-two, but he was nearly a full straight behind Macri when he took over second.
Macri maintained a safe margin the rest of the way. Schatz held third for several laps. However, Dietrich got rolling again and he chased him down in the final laps. Dietrich took third with twenty-eight complete.
Schatz held on for fourth, followed by Whittall, who logged his first top five against the touring pros. Kofoid, Rahmer, Haudenschild, Scelzi, and Wagaman completed the top ten.
The heats were evenly split between the two factions. Schuchart and Gravel took the checkers for the visitors, and Macri and Whittal prevailed for the home team. Daryn Pittman won the C Main and parlayed that into a transfer from the B Main. The B Main winner was Ashton Torgerson. The evening’s fastest time was logged by Schuchart, who topped Group A with a lap of 16.471 seconds. Macri was the best in Group B with a time of 16.515.
Williams Grove Speedway will be back in action on Friday, May 16 with the 410 and 358 Sprints. May 23 will offer the 410 and 305 Sprints. The month of May will conclude with another 410 and 358 Sprint program.
Dirt Racing
Snyder Surprises in Thrilling Speedweek Finale at Tri City

FRANKLIN, PA (June 1, 2025): In just his fifth winged 410 Sprint Car start ever, Steven Snyder, Jr. of Rising Sun, MD scored the big win at Tri City Raceway. The victory was his first in the class, and, most likely, his first top five finish as well. The highly successful driver of 600 Micros was the 100th 410 Sprint Car driver to grace victory lane at the Venango County oval. He earned $4,000 for the impressive effort and he secured second place in the points for the Western PA Speedweek series, which was abbreviated due to wet weather.
Blaze Myers and Jake Gomola won the support races for RUSH (Crate) Sprints and Allegheny Sprint Tour 305s, respectively.
“I didn’t expect to win,” Snyder said modestly. He explained that he had just finished some Midget racing in Illinois and it took him some time to get adjusted to the winged Sprint Car. The first night of Western PA Speedweek, at Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Motor Speedway, may well have been his first race of the year in a Winged Sprint.
Snyder came on strong in the closing laps, chasing down and then passing Jeremy Weaver in the final 50 feet, or less. “I hope that you (the fans) enjoyed that,” Snyder exclaimed. “He (Weaver) was kinda bound up front. I saw him enter high down there (gesturing toward turns three and four). We were good in three and four.” Snyder then won the dash to the scoring loop.
What is even more remarkable about Snyder’s win is that he survived a kamikaze attack by Ricky Peterson on lap nine. Snyder was leading at the time, with a lapped car separating him from Peterson, who was then racing in second. Peterson dove low entering turn three to get under the lapper, and his extreme momentum carried him well past the slower car and directly into Snyder. The two collided side to side very forcefully and, amazingly, they both maintained control of their cars. They bounced away from each other and kept on going. In the confusion, Weaver snuck by them both, grabbing the lead which he held until the stretch run on the last lap.
“I don’t know what that guy (Peterson) was thinking,” Snyder mused. “He about cleared us out.”
Weaver, who also ran second to Brandon Spithaler in the opening round of Speedweek, noted “I’m trying not to pout too bad. That’s two (races) that I gave away in traffic this week.” Weaver, who was running his old faithful mount this night, chalked it up to experience. His disappointment with the individual race results was assuaged by his achievement in the abbreviated series. His pair of second place finishes clinched the point championship by eight markers over Snyder. The adjusted point fund paid him $2,000.
Taking third was another unexpected competitor, Brock Hallett. His first outing at the track was a successful one for the Australian pilot. “That was different,” he said. Elaborating, he mentioned that the tracks in his homeland are much smaller than Tri City. He added, “I would have liked a few more laps. I like it in traffic.” He was able to reel in Snyder and Weaver in the closing laps as he negotiated the slower cars.
The luck of the draw placed Weaver and Snyder on the front row for the twenty-five lap finale. Behind them were Hallett and Peterson. In the third row were Brandon Spithaler and Adam Kekich. Then came Matt Farnham and Michael Bauer. Zane Devault and Brandon Matus were the last two racers eligible for the drawing. To be eligible, one had to finish first or second in the heat or be first or second in qualifying time.
Snyder used the middle of the track to race out to the early lead over Weaver. They were followed by Peterson, Hallett, Kekich, Spithaler, Bauer, Farnham, Devault, and Brandon Matus. Spithaler soon slowed to a stop, bringing out the only caution of the race on lap two. His misfortune eliminated him from any chance of taking the overall Speedweek title.
On the restart, Snyder resumed control, with Peterson holding second over a trio of cars numbered five: Weaver, Hallett, and Kekich. Farnham moved ahead of Bauer. Devault, Matus, and A.J. Flick closely followed.
Snyder maintained his lead despite encountering some lapped cars. However, on lap nine, he averted disaster. After being struck by Peterson, Snyder relinquished the lead to Weaver, who ducked low to avoid any involvement with them. In the aftermath of that incident, Hallett also advanced past Peterson. Kekich remained in fifth.
In the second half of the event, three racers moved forward. Farnham and Flick moved into the top five and Logan McCandless reached the top ten. Peterson faded, due in part to wing damage he sustained in his shunt with Snyder. Kekich also drifted out of the top ten.
Although Snyder’s car was leaking some oil, it continued to run smoothly. He chased down Weaver, who was having some difficulty with lapped traffic. Snyder made his dramatic move coming off turn four, nipping Weaver by just 0.079 seconds at the line.
Following Snyder, Weaver, and Hallett were Farnham and a fast closing Flick. Positions six through ten went to Devault, Peterson, McCandless, Bauer, and Brandon Matus.
Farnham, Devault, Bauer, and Hallett won their respective heats. Brent Matus prevailed in teh B Main. The evening’s fastest qualifier was Brandon Spithaler, with a lap of 15.104 seconds.
In the RUSH Sprint Car twenty lapper, Cooper Fritz used his front row starting spot to grab the early lead. However, eighth starting Blaze Myers zipped past him four laps into the fray. Gale Ruth, Jr. moved into second by the halfway mark.
Myers led the ramaining laps to earn his second victory of the season at Tri City. Ruth was second, followed by Fritz, Curt Emings, and Zach Morrow. Luke Mullichak, Arnie Kent, Ricky Tucker, III, Lucas Roessner, and Devon Deeter completed the top ten.
Ruth, Morrow, and Myers scored in the preliminaries. There was no B Main.
The Allegheny Sprint Tour closed out the night of open wheeled action. Jake Gomola, the founder of the AST, swept the heat and feature events. On the fifteen lap main, Gomola took the lead on the opening round. Although a caution wiped out his substantial lead, he was again able to build up a comfortable margin over Jim Pattock in the final six circuits.
Vivian Jones fought off Jeremy Kornbau in the second half of the race to earn the third position. Arnie Kent came on late for fifth. Roman Jones and Jazlyn Boyles were the final two finishers. Nolan Groves and Brandon McWilliams did not finish. Seth Harrelson did not start the contest.
Western PA Speedweek Round 2 Official Finish: Steven Snyder, Jr., Jeremy Weaver, Brock Hallett, Matt Farnham, A.J. Flick, Zane Devault, Rocky Peterson, Jr., Logan McCandless, Michael Bauer, Brandon Matus, Adam Kekich, Carl Bowser, Dalton Rumbaugh, Cody Bova, D.J. Christie, Jacob Begenwald, Dusty Larson, Todd Hoddick, Chase Metheny, Bodey McClintock, Andy Cavanaugh, Brent Matus, Brandon Spithaler, Michael Lutz, Jr. DNQ: Jimmy Morris, Jack Sodeman, Jr., Steve Bright, Louie Mattes, IV, Natalie Brannon, David Kalb, Jr., Davey Jones, Cale Thomas, Logen Lockhart.
RUSH Sprint Cars: Blaze Myers, Gale Ruth, Jr., Cooper Fritz, Curt Emings, Zach Morrow, Luke Mullichak, Aenie Kent, Ricky Rucker, III, Lucas Roessner, Devon Deeter, Grayson Bayle, Charlie Utsinger, T.J. Rosario, Cooper Macormac, Zach Wilson, John Mollick, Wyatt Long, Samantha Priest, Joe Buccola (DNS), Jesse Armstrong (DNS).
Allegheny Sprint Tour 305 Sprint Cars: Jake Gomola, Jimmy Pattock, Vivian Jones, Jeremy Kornbau, Arnie Kent, Roman Jones, Jazlyn Boyles, Nolan Groves, Brandon McWilliams, Seth Harrelson (DNS).
Dirt Racing
Christian Schneider Sweeps Two at PPMS
IMPERIAL, PA (May 31, 2025): Christian Schneider had a perfect night at Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Motor Speedway. He captured heat and feature wins in the top two divisions, RUSH (Crate) Late Models and Penn Ohio Pro Stocks. Also reaching victory lane were Leroy Brown in the Hobby Stocks and Cameron Hollister in the Open Four Cylinders.
After the RUSH Late Model win, Schneider said, “this thing has been a rocket ship since we got it. We’re still learning.”
Daryl Charlier and Clinton Hersh brought the RUSH Late Models to the green flag. They were followed by Brandon Burgoon and Kassidy Kamicker. In row three were Schneider and Brian Huchko. Timmy Shaffer and Jacob Billyk lined up in row four.
Hersh drove by Charlier in turns one and two to take the early lead, with Schneider up to third on the opening lap. Burgoon, Kamicker, and Huchko trailed. Charlier used the high line to take the lead away from Hersh on lap seven. Schneider soon followed into second.
Schneider also used the outside line in turn four to grab the lead on lap eleven. He pulled away from Charlier in the remaining nine laps.
Following Schneider and Charlier at the checkers were Hersh, Burgoon, and Tommy Schirnhofer, Jr. Kamicker, Huchko, Matthew Bernard, Billyk, and Michael Stephens completed the top ten.
Charlier and Schneider took the heat wins. There was no B Main.
In the Penn Ohio Pro Stock fifteen lapper, Stephen Shelpman blasted from the pole to the early lead. However, Christian Schneider claimed the second position on the opening lap, followed by Cody Koteles, Chris Schneider, and A.J. Poljak.
Christian Schneider grabbed the lead on lap four and Poljak took over second two laps later. Christian Schneider maintained a comfortable margin for the balance of the event.
At the checkers, it was Christian Schneider ahead of Poljak, Chris Schneider, Shelpman, and Cody Koteles. Daryl Charlier, Nick Cocuba, Logan Koteles, Jason Fosnaught, and Jackson Billyk were the next five finishers.
Poljak and Christian Schneider claimed the preliminaries. There was no B Main.
Leroy Brown went wire to wire for his win in the Hobby Stocks. Young Mark Corio was second, followed by Garrett O’Patchen, Joe Brown, Jr., and Kyle Janas. The next five to cross the scoring loop were Devan Jones, Tom Anton, Karlee Kovacs, Cole Cochran, and Sadie Snatchko.
O’Patchen and Kovacs were the heat winners. There was no B Main.
Cameron Hollister was the feature victor in the Open Four Cylinders, with Anthony Udderstrom, Mike Kelly, Jacob Wiser, and J.R. Matthess in the top five. Gavin Kokolis, Lucas Weaver, Nathan Olenik, Curtis Mohney, and Ray Tichnor were sixth through tenth. Heat wins belonged to Tyler Hollister and Mohney. There was no B Main.
On June 7, PPMS will present the 14th Annual Ed Laboon Memorial, one of the region’s biggest events for the Penn Ohio Pro Stocks. All of the top competitors are expected for the prestigious race. Joining the Pro Stocks will be the RUSH Late Models, Hobby Stocks, Open Four Cylinders, and Young Guns.
Dirt Racing
Spithaler Strikes First at PPMS Speedweek Show

IMPERIAL, PA (May 29, 2025): With the cancellation of Michaels Mercer Raceway’s event on Wednesday, Pittsburgh’s Pennsylvania Motor Speedway once again played host to the first night of Western Pennsylvania Speedweek. Taking the win in the twenty-five lapper was Brandon Spithaler. It was his career win first at the speedway, and he positioned himself at the top of the points heading into round two to be held at Lernerville Speedway. He cleared $3,500 for the race.
The luck of the draw set the starting line-up for the A Main. The racers eligible for the draw were the top three finishers in the heat races and the fastest car to qualify.
Mark Smith nabbed the pole, but his luck ended when the cars pushed off for the finale. He had a mechanical problem, which required him to stop on the track, relegating him to the final row for the green. Jeremy Weaver slipped to the inside of row one, with Brandon Spithaler taking over P2.
Steven Snyder, Jr. and Michael Bauer were the new occupants of row two. Brandon Matus and A.J. Flick claimed row three. Ryan Smith and Matt Farnham followed. Carmen Perigo, Jr. had row five with Dan Kuriger as his running mate in the realignment. The sixth was populated by Ricky Peterson, Jr. and Carl Bowser.
On the initial green, Flick aggressively rolled around the top in turns one and two, establishing the lead entering upon the back stretch. However, his effort went for naught, as Jimmy Morris came to a stop along the outside of turn one.
Spithaler took note of the dazzling move by A.J. Flick, racing from sixth to the lead on the initial start. However, when that was called back due to the caution for Morris, Spithaler and others moved to the outside. Spithaler was unable to get the immediate advantage, though, because the pole sitter, Weaver, slid up to take command.
Thus, Weaver held the early lead, followed by Spithaler, Bauer, Snyder, and Flick. With the top line unavailable to Flick, his momentum suffered. He did reach fourth in the early going, but he gradually fell back in the running order thereafter.
Several laps into the race, Weaver encountered lapped traffic, and that was his undoing. Spithaler chased him down and rolled around the top to take the lead. Spithaler maintained control through the rest of the non-stop affair, but Weaver began to close in the stretch run.
Farnham showed early speed and followed Spithaler and Weaver across the finish line. Bowser advanced to fourth, earning the hard charger award. Bauer held on for fifth. Flick, Snyder, Ryan Smith, Peterson, and Brandon Matus completed the top ten.
After the aborted start, Spithaler “knew that the top was available, but I knew that Weaver would try to slide me.” Weaver’s move did not affect the ultimate outcome because Spithaler was able to race by him in traffic. Nonetheless, Spithaler became concerned about the slower cars as the race progressed. “I thought that I was wasting time with (Mark) Smith and (Adam) Kekich.” However, Spithaler’s margin was big enough that Weaver could not completely close the gap in the final laps.
“I kinda kicked myself, there,” Weaver said. “That race was won on experience.” He explained, “when I got to the lapped traffic, I had trouble and he (Spithaler) got me.” Nonetheless, it was a strong outing for Weaver and car owner Bob McMillan, as they rolled out an entirely new car for the race.
Farnham, who was third, commented that “pretty much the redraw won that race. Hopefully, I can get a better number for the next race.”
Three heat races were staged for the twenty-seven car field. Wins went to Matt Farnham, Ryan Smith, and Brandon Spithaler. Mike Lutz, Jr. was unhurt in a spill during his heat race.
Jimmy Morris took the B Main.
The evening’s fastest qualifier was Ryan Smith, with a lap of 17.365 around Dirt’s Monster Half Mile.
Timmy Bittner and Jim Pattock paced the field for the fifteen lapper for the Allegheny Sprint Tour for IMCA 305 Sprint Cars. Jake Gomola and Kruz Kepner made up row two, followed by Jeremy Kornbau and Jarrett Cavalet. Robbie Bartchy tagged the tail.
Bittner jumped out to the early lead and completed the non-stop fifteen race without any challenge. Kepner ran second until the midpoint of the contest before surrendering the position to Jim Pattock. After Pattock and Kepner came Kornbau, Gomola, and Cavalet. Bartchy did not finish the race.
Jimmy Pattock and Jake Gomola won the heats for the AST 305s. There was no B Main.
Speedweek Round One Official finish: Brandon Spithaler, Jeremy Weaver, Matt Farnham, Carl Bowser, Michael Bauer, A.J. Flick, Steven Snyder, Jr., Ryan Smith, Ricky Peterson, Brandon Matus, Logan McCandless, Carmen Perigo, Jr., Danny Smith, Cody Bova, Jacob Begenwald, Adam Kekich, Mark Smith, John Mollick, Andrew Cavanaugh, Danny Kuriger, Brent Matus, Jack Sodeman, Jr., Bob Felmlee, Jimmy Morris. DNQ: Michael Lutz, Jr., Louie Mattes, IV, and Davey Jones.
AST Sprints Official Finish: Timmy Bittner, Jim Pattock, Kruz Kepner, Jeremy Kornbau, Jake Gomola, Jarrett Cavalet, Tobbie Bartchy.