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Rahmer Gets First Win of the Season at Williams Grove, Inches Closer to Wagaman in Points Race

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Williams Grove Speedway

MECHANICSBURG, PA (September 19, 2025):  It is hard to believe that Freddie Rahmer, Jr. was winless at Williams Grove Speedway midway through the month of September. That changed with his dramatic victory over Lance Dewease and Daryn Pittman in the Kevin Gobrecht Challenge. Rahmer collected $6,000 in prize money and he earned a guaranteed starting position in the Kevin Gobrecht Classic to be held September 20 at the BAPS Motor Speedway. If Rahmer can double up with a win in that event, he will pad his winnings by $13,000 (the first place money of $10,000 plus a $3,000 bonus for sweeping the weekend).

Rahmer’s first win since the recent birth of his daughter was his nineteenth in his career at Williams Grove. It moved him into a tie on the all-time wins list with two legends of Sprint Car racing, Jan Opperman and Tommy Hinnershitz.

Rahmer’s victory, coupled with the fourth place finish of Troy Wagaman, Jr., cut the latter’s point lead to 205 with just three races remaining in the 2025 season. “We just want to be in contention the last few races,” Rahmer noted. He is seeking his third straight championship and fourth overall.

Rahmer chased down the leader, Kody Hartlaub, early in the second half of the race. But catching him and passing him were entirely different matters. Rahmer explained that he had some difficulty getting by Hartlaub, who was gunning for his second victory of the season at the Grove.

Moreover, while he was battling with Hartlaub for the lead, Rahmer could tell that the pace of the race had slowed significantly, and he was concerned about Lance Dewease closing the gap on him. Rahmer’s concerns were justified, as Dewease put forth a strong stretch run, as did Pittman.

The Speedweek format was used for this event. So, the three heat winners–T.J. Stutts, Hartlaub, and Wagaman–and the three fastest cars to transfer drew for the front six starting positions. The balance of the field lined up based upon their heat race finishes. There was no B Main.

Thus, Hartlaub and Rahmer were partners in row one, with Wagaman and Stutts in row two. Pittman and Dewease made up row three. Cameron Smith and Justin Whittall came next, followed by Tyler Ross and last week’s winner, Brock Zearfoss. Then, in row six, Chad Trout and Danny Dietrich started the race.

The initial start was called back because Dylan Norris looped it in turn one. He was able to resume the race after a quick pit stop to get his car checked over.

When the race did get going officially, Hartlaub was the leader, followed by Rahmer, Wagaman, Stutts, Dewease, Pittman, Smith, and Ross. The top five remained unchanged through the first five laps. Dewease moved up a position by lap ten, and Pittman joined the top five by the midway mark.

Hartlaub continued in the lead for a few more laps before giving way to Rahmer. Dewease closed in on the lead duo, and had the second spot by lap twenty.

Rahmer was into heavy lapped traffic in the final five laps. That allowed Dewease to chop away at his advantage. After passing Hartlaub, Pittman also became a factor as the race drew to a close.

Rahmer led Dewease by a car length or two when the white flag came out. Pittman was closing fast as well. There were a couple of lapped cars ahead of the leaders and Rahmer got to them first. He was able to duck to the inside coming through turn four for the final time and the lapped cars prevented a desperation lunge by Dewease for the win. Pittman likewise had no room to make a move heading for the checkers.

Rahmer’s margin of victory was 0.250 seconds over Dewease. Pittman was third, 0.385 back from the leader. Wagaman was fourth and Hartlaub fifth. Zearfoss, Smith, Dietrich, Whittall, and Ross completed the top ten.

In the companion feature for the 358 Sprint Cars, Dylan Norris earned his fourth win of the season. He came from twelfth on the starting grid and he took the lead with a powerful inside move in turns three and four on lap thirteen of twenty.

“I didn’t expect to pass him (Andy Best) when and where I did,” Norris noted.

Although Norris’ drive to the front seemed quite easy, he had to withstand restarts on laps seventeen and eighteen to preserve the win. “That was a scary one, we were having problems on the restarts,” Norris added.

Nash Ely was second, but he could not challenge Norris for the win in the final two laps. Best held on for third, ahead of James Roselli and Ayden Hare. Seth Schnoke, Eli Tuckey, Steve Wilbur, Hunter Fulton, Cand Cody Fletcher were sixth through tenth.

The heat wins went to Chad Criswell, Best, and Roselli. There was no B Main.

Dirt Racing

Dietz Does It, Leads Posse Sweep

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Photo by Paul Arch

MECHANICSBURG, PA (October 3, 2025) – Chase Dietz, of York, PA, led a Posse sweep of four of the top five positions on night number one of the National Open Weekend at Williams Grove Speedway. Joining Dietz on the front stretch were second place finisher, Lance Dewease, and the third place runner, Danny Dietrich. Justin Whittall was fifth in the race. The only card carrying Outlaw was Carson Macedo, who led the first twenty-one laps before fading to fourth at the finish.

“I just want to soak it in,” Dietz said as he tried to catch his beath following the exhilarating victory, his first ever against the travelling band. Although Dietz noted that he had speed all year at the Grove, his team assembled a new car this week and, in doing so, they made a lot of changes. “The car was very maneuverable.”

Although Dietz ran most of the race in the top groove, he admitted, “I knew that the bottom was going to come in. I knew that I had to get down there before Lance (Dewease) did. I saw his nose.” As it turned out, Dietz barely got to the bottom ahead of Dewease, forcing the cagy veteran to move to the middle in the closing laps.

“We’re just extremely grateful to be here, this sport can be very humbling,” Dietz added. Even last year, when he was running his own cars, Dietz explained that they fought hard to be competitive with the Outlaws. Although they were winless, they showed good speed and had a podium finish against the Outlaws in the 2024 National Open. “I looked back at the nights when we didn’t win, and I tried to figure out what we needed to do to bet better.”

Dewease, who followed Dietz into second on lap twenty-two and wh briefly challenged him for the lead, commented, “the last three or four laps I wasn’t very good. The lapped cars made it interesting.”

Dietrich, who completed the podium for the Posse, felt that he may have had the fastest car in the final laps but, he added, “things didn’t go my way.” He explained that, when he did pass Dewease, he did not get enough of a gap on him, and that let him (Dewease) get back in.”

Macedo drew the pole for the Dash and his win in that event placed him on the pole for the twenty-five lap preliminary, which paid $12,000 to the winner. Dietrich lined up on his right, Dewease and Dietz made up row two, followed by David Gravel and Buddy Kofoid. Diason Pursley and Justin Whittall stacked our row four. Then came Daryn Pittman and Bill Balog. Row six paired Kody Hartlaub with Justin Peck.

The back of the field was almost as impressive as the first six rows. Back there were racers such as Kerry Madsen (fourteenth), Giovanni Scelzi (sixteenth), Brock Zearfoss (seventeenth), Brent Marks (eighteenth), Ryan Timms (nineteenth), Freddie Rahmer, Jr. (twentieth), Sheldon Haudenschild (twenty-first), Logan Schuchart (twenty-first), and Troy Wagaman (twenty-sixth).

Macedo held off Dietrich in turn one to assume control of the race. Dietz ran in third on the opening lap, but he drove under Dietrich in turn four to take over second one lap later. Dewease ran along in fourth, followed by Kofoid, Gravel, Whittall, Pittman, Pursley, and Balog in the early going.

The running order was pretty static through the first five or six laps. The top ten had a major shake-up on lap seven, though. Something broke on Pittman’s car in turn three, and he spun wildly toward the outside wall. In the process, he collected Pursley, Balog, and Hartlaub. Pittman and Pursely retired from the race due to the damage incurred, but Balog and Hartlaub were able to rejoin the field for the restart after pitting for repairs.

That fracas was the only caution of the race.

Macedo and Dietz resumed the battle for the lead on the restart. However, one lap later, Dewease moved into third, ahead of Dietrich, Kofoid, and Gravel. Whittall, Peck, Scelzi, and Rahmer made up the balance of the top ten. At that juncture, Wagaman was about six positions behind Rahmer in their race within the race for the point championship.

Through the middle stage of the race, Dietz began to close in on Macedo. Dewease continued in third, several car lengths behind the leaders. Dietrich was about the same distance back in fourth.

Dietz caught up to Macedo with about five or six laps remaining in the contest. He managed to pass Macedo on the inside of turn three on lap twenty-one, but Macedo countered in turn four to regain the lead.

Macedo dove to the inside heading into turn one, but he scrubbed off spme speed. Dietz was able to get some momentum coming through turn two and that propelled hin down the backstretch. He slid Macedo for the lead coming through turns three and four, and Dewease followed in his tire tracks to take over second coming off turn four.

Dietz missed the bottom entering turn one, and Dewease poked his nose under him going through the turn, Dietz recovered, and he got a good run off turn two to preserve his lead. Dietz then committed to the low line for the final laps, requiring Dewease to move more toward the middle of the track.

Dietrich dispatched Macedo and he got a run on Dewease near the end of the race. However, Dewease was able to reclaim second soon thereafter.

At the finish, it was Dietz by a tad under eight tenths of a second over Dewease. Dietrich was third, followed by Macedo and Whittall. Kofoid, Gravel, Scelzi,Peck, and Marks completed the top ten.

Rahmer was eleventh, and Wagaman sixteenth. Although Wagaman was the hard charger at plus ten, he lost valuable points to Rahmer. The two racers will be separated by 125 points, unofficially, heading into Saturday’s season finale.

Heat wins were scored by Gravel, Kofoid, Dewease, and Pursley. Ryan Newton won the non-qualifiers race. Kyle Spence recovered from a tipover in his heat race to capture the C Main. The B Main went to Haudenschild. Gravel was the evening’s fastest qualifier, with a lap of 16.409 seconds topping Group A. Dewease timed the best in Group B, with a lap of 16.760 seconds. Fifty-six cars participated in the event.

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Dirt Racing

Dale Blaney Wins World Of Outlaws At Sharon Speedway

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Photo by Paul Arch

HARTFORD, OH (September 27, 2025) – Dale Blaney had the hometown crowd on their feet and screaming after winning the World of Outlaws feature Saturday Night at Sharon Speedway, the track owned for years by the Blaney family.

Blaney started fifth and passed Cole Macedo on lap 11 for the lead then held off a furious last lap charge by Buddy Kofoid to win by just 0.136 seconds for the $12,000 payday!

The victory was Blaney’s first World of Outlaws victory in 10-years, becoming the oldest winner in Series history at 61 years 7 months and 28 days. Blaney broke the previous record set by his older brother Dave when he won at 58 years of age in 2021 at Sharon.

“There’re so many good young race car drivers out here, but to win a race at 61 (years old) is awesome,” said Blaney. ““I had the feeling that I was never going to win an Outlaw race ever again.  I don’t race much. This is our sixth race this year. I haven’t run in seven weeks. The car was awesome. We just got it back together this week. I don’t know what to say. It’s great and cool to win this at Sharon Speedway- it’s the only place I’ve run this year. This is a special freaking night. I know that.”

“I wanted traffic,” said Kofoid. “My car is usually amazing in traffic. He slipped up, and then I kind of got in his air and got me slipped up. And then I hit the wall coming to the checkered, and it shot me down the track. I tried to send it and was close. I’m just happy for Dale and Dave.”

Sheldon Haudenschild finished third follow by WoO points leader David Gravel in fourth.  Logan Schuchart rounded out the Top 5.

The night however belonged to the Blaney family, who fittingly closed out the the first year of the new ownership group of Dave Blaney, Ryan Blaney, and Will Thomas III in Victory Lane.

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Dirt Racing

Rain Halts Fallen Heroes Memorial at Lincoln Speedway

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File Photo

ABBOTTSTOWN, PA (September 27, 2025):  A persistent, localized drizzle forced a stoppage of the Fallen Heroes Memorial at the Lincoln Speedway. The event, which was originally dubbed the Fallen Firefighters Memorial, was expanded to give tribute to the three York County police officers recently slain while serving a subpoena.

Brett and Jordan Strickler, policemen in the area, honored the fallen officers on the wings of their 410 Sprint Cars.

The 410 Sprint Cars were ready to take to the track for their feature event when the rain set in for the second time of the night. A brief shower interrupted the heat races for the 358 Sprint Cars. However, after the rain stopped, the track crew and push truck operators quickly prepared the surface so that all qualifications could be completed.

The line-ups for both feature races are set, and the events will be completed on October 18, along with the full program for both divisions in the Final 50. So, fans will be treated to four features that evening.

The point races in both divisions will conclude on October 18.

Dallas Schott, Kyle Moody, and Billy Dietrich won the heat races for the 410 Sprinters. Ryan “Fig” Newton prevailed in the B Main. Troy Wagaman, Jr. was the fastest qualifier of the twenty-nine cars on hand. His time was an astonishing 12.855 seconds. He was one of four racers to turn sub-thirteen second laps.

In the 358 Sprint Car preliminaries, the checkers waved for Cameron Merriman, Logan Spahr, and Cody Fletcher. There were twenty-one 358 Sprints checked in for the contest.

On October 4, Lincoln Speedway will present AMA Flat Track Motorcycles and Quads. There will be no auto races in consideration of the National Open to be held at Williams Grove Speedway. The World of Outlaws will take on the Pennsylvania Posse on October 11. The Lincoln season will conclude with the blockbuster event, the Final 50 plus the held over features.

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