Dirt Racing
Satterlee Succeeds in Lucas Oil Series at Port Royal; Hart Hustles in Limited Lates
PORT ROYAL, PA (April 10, 2022): Gregg Satterlee inherited the lead with a dozen laps remaining in the River Valley 40 for the Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series at Port Royal Speedway. After Earl Pearson, Jr. and Kyle Larson tangled while fighting for the top spot, Satterlee went on to dominate the remainder of the event on a blustery day. Devin Hart went wire to wire to claim the Limited Late Model undercard.
“Honestly, from the center of turn three, I couldn’t see anything,” Satterlee said when he was asked to comment on the unusual turn of events that put him in command of the race. Pearson and Larson made contact while battling for the lead, and Larson looped it in turn four. Pearson continued briefly under caution but retired from the race, handing the point to the Indiana, PA racer. “Fortunately, Kyle (Larson) was far enough out there that I could avoid him,” Satterlee added.
Satterlee confessed that he thought that he “messed up our night in the heat race” when he jumped the cushion in turn one on the initial start to trigger a caution. The resulting body damage did not affect the performance of his car, and he was able to salvage a second place finish to Larson. He commended crew chief Robby Allen for getting the car “pretty good” for the feature. “Everything came our way. I was right there,” running a close third behind Larson and Pearson when the unthinkable happened. “I had a shot,” he said but they served it up to him on a silver platter instead.
Pearson and Larson had the front row for the 40 lapper by virtue of their quick qualifying runs and heat race victories. Row two belonged to the other heat winners, Tim McCreadie and Brandon Sheppard. Then came Tyler Erb and Satterlee, and Ashton Winger and Rick Eckert. Row five belonged to Ross Robinson and Jimmy Owens. Kyle Lee and Colton Flinner made up row six.
Pearson and Larson battled side by side on the opening lap. Sheppard and McCreadie raced ahead of Satterlee, Erb, WInger, Eckert, Robinson, and Robinson. Larson assumed control coming off turn four to complete the first circuit and set a quick pace in the open air.
With Larson leading Pearson, the battle was raging for third between Sheppard and McCreadie. Sheppard took the spot, while Satterlee drew a bead on McCreadie. Satterlee climbed into fourth by lap five and then he set out after Sheppard.
Things got interesting when the leaders reached the back of the field. Larson deftly wove his way through the traffic, but he could not shake Pearson. Pearson was able to close in on the leader as the traffic got thicker, but he could not get by him.
Meanwhile, Satterlee chased down Sheppard and moved by him on the backstretch soon after the halfway signal was displayed.
As Larson and Pearson played cat and mouse while lapping slower cars, Satterlee was able to reel them in. Now, it was a three car battle for the lead.
Larson and Pearson got free of some traffic and they pulled away from Satterlee. Larson and Pearson went toe to toe for several laps. They made contact on lap 28 and that changed the complexion of the race. Larson pitted for a new rear tire and Pearson retired from the fray.
Satterlee led Sheppard to the green for the final twelve laps, which were run off without any additional conflicts. Sheppard was no match for Satterlee in the clean air. “I was holding on as best I could,” Sheppard observed. “I don’t know that I could have done anything with him,” he added.
Third place finisher McCreadie noted that the Longhorn Chassis cars were having a good day until Pearson and Larson tangled. “It was too bad for Earl and Kyle, but third is better (for me) than fifth,” he said wryly.
Owens climbed to fourth in the final analysis. He was critical of his qualification run and heat race performance, noting that he dug himself a hole. He explained that his crew went back to some old notes and made changes to the car for the feature. Whatever they did made the car much better, especially in the stretch run.
Erb was fifth, followed by Winger, Robinson, Flinner, Matt Cosner, and Max Blair.
Blair and Dylan Yoder split the honors in the B Mains. Series provisionals were awarded to Ricky Thornton, Jr., Garrett Alberson, and Daulton Wilson. The track provisional was given to Austin Berry who overcame a mechanical problem in hot laps. Thornton was the hard charger for the night after switching cars for the B Main due to heavy damage inflicted in his heat race. He was plus nine on the night. Pearson was the top qualifier overall, with a lap of 18.471 seconds. Larson topped Group B with a time of 18.538 seconds. There were 37 entries.
In the Limited Late Model feature, Matt Murphey and Devin Hart brought the field to the green flag ahead of Dillan Stake and Trent Brenneman. Taylor Farling and Andrew Yoder made up row three, with Jared Fulkroad and Shawn Shoemaker in row four.
Hart, Brenneman, Stake, Yoder and Stake blasted by Murphey on the opening lap and they ran ahead of the others for the entire distance.
Stake moved into third on lap six and he drew in on Brenneman as the race progressed. Meanwhile, Hart held control.
In the final nine lap run to the checkers, Stake finally passed Brenneman. He began to close in on Hart but he ran out of time.
Hart claimed the win, his first of the season. Stake was second, followed by Andrew Yoder, who passed Brenneman with just over two laps remaining. Todd Snook was fifth. Farling, Shoemaker, Ryan Zook, Kenny Yoder, and Daulton Bigler completed the top ten.
Heat winners were Fulkroad, Barry Miller, and Brenneman. There was no B Main for the 34 cars on hand.
Port Royal will host the 410 Sprints, Super Late Models, and Limted Late Models on Easter Eve. It will present the Seventh Annual Keith Kauffman Classic for the All Stars Sprint Cars on April 23, along with the USAC East Coast 360 non-wing Sprint Cars. It will close out the month of April with 410 Sprints, Super Late Models, and PASS/IMCA 305 Sprints on April 30.
Dirt Racing
Opportunistic Wagaman Wins at Williams Grove
MECHANICSBURG, PA (June 5, 2026): Troy Wagaman, Jr. cashed in on the opportunities given to him to win the Lynn Paxton Classic at Williams Grove Speedway. The second win of the season for the defending track champion and current points leader was his first ever with the All Stars Circuit of Champions, which celebrated fifty-five years of competition at the famed oval. Wagaman received $8,000 for his efforts, matching his payday from the Tommy Classic held earlier in the season.
Wagaman benefitted from two miscues by Danny Dietrich, who had led from the start of the non-stop thirty lapper. The first came on lap fifteen, when Dietrich narrowly avoided disaster coming off turn two. The other came ten laps later when Dietrich slid out of the groove between turns three and four.
“I don’t know if I would have gotten him,” Wagaman said modestly.
He was trailing Dietrich by nearly 1.6 seconds in the middle of the race, but Wagaman squeezed between Dietrich, a lapped car, and the backstretch guard rail to take the lead. Preston Lattomus nearly spun at the exit to turn two, Dietrich came up on him quickly, made slight contact, and almost spun as well, but there was just enough room for Wagaman to scoot by. “I thought he missed it, got too close to the lapped car,” Wagaman explained.
Wagaman then built up a slight lead of his own, which evaporated in traffic. Dietrich drove under both Wagaman and the lapped car between turns three and four on lap twenty-four, but Wagaman came storming back on the next lap to regain the lead. Dietrich slid off the bottom in the same area, and Wagaman pounced. “Danny showed me the bottom. I was struggling on the top and I got down to the bottom after that.”
Wagaman, from Hanover, dedicated the win to his ailing grandmother, adding that he will get to see her on Sunday afternoon.
The starting line-up had a last minute shuffle when Lance Dewease got a flat while the cars were getting into formation. Dewease pitted for a fresh tire, but forfeited his second starting position. He rejoined the field for the start, and put in on an impressive drive to fourteenth from the rear of the twenty-six car field.
Dietrich thus moved to the front row, joining the Dash winner, Cale Thomas. Wagaman and Brady Bacon made up the second row, followed by Doug Hammaker and Kasey Kahne. Brock Zearfoss and T.J. Stutts came next. Chase Dietz and Parker Price Miller were in row five, and Austin Bishop was paired with Ryan “Fig” Newton in row six.
Dietrich wasted no time blasting into the early lead up on the cushion in turns one and two. Wagaman used a more conservative line to reach second. Thomas fell into line in third, ahead of Hammaker, Bacon, Stutts, and Kahne.
Dietrich seemed to have the race under control through the first half of the event. However, things changed suddenly on lap fifteen. He avoided a crash, but lost the lead. Dietrich wasn’t done quite yet, though.
Wagaman was still running the top in turns three and four despite having trouble getting past a lapped car. That allowed Dietrich to flash by on the inside to take the lead away. However, Wagaman came back to lead lap twenty-five when Dietrich slid up the track in almost the same place on the track.
Wagaman changed lines for the remainder of the race, and he paced himself off of the lapped cars, figuring that Dietrich would have to drive around them all if he were to make another bid for the win. However, Wagaman took the checkers 1.120 seconds ahead of Dietrich, who was driving his back-up car after crashing at Selinsgrove Speedway the night before.
Bacon, Stutts, and Dietz completed the top five. Zearfoss, Hammaker, Kahne, Price Miller, and Newton were the next five finishers.
J.J. Loss was the hard charger, advancing seven spots to finish thirteenth.
Kalib Henry, the current All Stars points leader and defending series champion, was the highest finisher from the tour, at seventeenth.
Hammaker, Dewease, Dietrich, and Kahne were the heat winners. Freddie Rahmer, Jr. won the B Main. Stutts was the fastest qualifier, lapping in 17.112 seconds in Group A. Dietrich was the best in Group B. His lap was 17.290 seconds. Thirty-eight cars checked in, including ten All Stars points chasers.
Ageless Steve Wilbur added another Wingless Sportsman victory to his resume. He led Tony Jackson for all twenty laps. “Tony’s hard to beat wherever we go, and to hold him off all of those laps was something,” Wilbur said. “It just feels so good to beat Jackson. I didn’t come all the way from Mechanicsburg to get my a$$ kicked,” he added with a laugh.
Wilbur claimed to use an old right rear tire dating back to his days at Silver Spring Speedway, which closed in 2005.
Cliff Brian, Jr. was third, one spot ahead of the hard charger, Brett Perigo. Brandon Shearer, Derek Shaffer, Brian Nace, Scott Smith, Curt Stroup, and John Edkin were fifth through tenth in the non-stop affair.
Jackson and Wilbur split the heat race wins. There was no B Main necessary for the nineteen car field.
Next Friday, Williams Grove Speedway will present fan appreciation night. All in attendance will get to mingle with the 410 and 358 Sprint Car racers in the front pit area before the start of the action. There will be free potato chips and candy during the pit party. Fireworks will also be part of the fun.
Dirt Racing
Flick is Speedweek King
FRANKLIN, PA (May 31, 2026): A.J. Flick claimed his third championship in the Western Pennsylvania Speedweek. His first two titles came in 2023 and 2024.
“This whole week is so cool,” he said. He added, “I think consistency is important and I think that helped me.”
Flick started the week out very strongly, with wins at Michaels Mercer Raceway and Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Motor Speedway. He was fourth at Lernerville Speedway and fifth in the finale at Tr-City Raceway Park. His worst finish of the week was ninth at Sharon Speedway on Saturday night.
Flick was especially happy with his fifth place finish in the final round because he was not very comfortable in the car.
Other race winners during Speedweek were: Dale Blaney, at Lernerville, Logan Wagner, at Sharon, and Brandon Spithaler, at Tri-City.
Flick’s total earnings for the week were $14,750, which included the $3,000 championship stipend.
One other driver earned more than $10,000. That was Spithaler, who grossed $10.175.
Flick was one of sixteen drivers to enter all five events comprising Western Pennsylvania Speedweek. A total of sixty-one racers competed in at least one round of Speedweek.
The top ten drivers in the point standings shared the point fund, as follows:
- A.J. Flick, 452 points, $3,000
- Mark Smith, 412 points, $2,500
- Brandon Spithaler, 406 points, $2,000
- Jeremy Weaver, 393 points, $1,500
- Carl Bowser, 371 points, $1,000
- Michael Bauer, 368 points, $900
- Adam Kekich, 344 points, $800
- Brandon Matus, 338 points, $700
- Ricky Peterson, 320 points, $600
- Jacob Begenwald, 302 points, $500
Interestingly, one driver in the top ten in points missed a show along the way. Ricky Peterson was absent from Sharon because he had another commitment. He won the FAST on Dirt Sprint Car Series event at Skyline Speedway instead.
Dirt Racing
Spithaler Spectacular in Speedweek Finale
FRANKLIN, PA (May 31, 2026): Brandon Spithaler saved his best Speedweek performance for the final night of the five race series. The victory at Tri-City Raceway Park, his first of the season, netted the driver from Renfrew, PA a cool $6,000. He also finished third in Speedweek points, adding another $2,000 to his stash. Spithaler’s total winnings for the week amounted to $10,175, second only to the Speedweek champion, A.J. Flick.
Spithaler noted that “2026 hasn’t been very kind to us. We lost a motor, we trashed a car, we switched chassis. I think we’ve hit on something now.”
He added, “I felt like I was better than him, Ricky (Peterson, who finished a distant second). I was worried when he got by Logan (McCandless, the early leader), but I kept plugging away and I got by him (Peterson).”
Spithaler was especially good in traffic. He explained, “I am a fan of traffic. If we get a long run, I like picking my way through.”
Peterson, who held on for second place, had an opposite opinion about the traffic conditions. “I was really good early. I had issues with the lappers. I think I left a lane open for Brandon, and he got away from us.”
Mark Smith put on a strong charge in the second half of the race to grab the third position. He noted that it was a challenging night and that he changed some things around on his car between the heat and the feature. “We got it going, but it was a little too late. Maybe we needed 35 laps.”
The first ten positions in the starting line-up were reserved for the four heat winners and six of the fastest qualifiers.
Logan McCandless drew the pole position. He was joimed on the front row by the professor, Michael Bauer. Matt Farnham and A.J. Flick pulled the second row, followed by Peterson and Spithaler. Smith and Jeremy Weaver landed in row four. Then came Jared Zimbardi and D.J. Christie. Row six belonged to Tim Shaffer and John Jerich.
The initial start was waved off due to a crash between turns one and two, which claimed Jerich and Christie. Both cars tumbled, but neither driver was injured.
When the field was realigned for the start, Shaffer moved to the outside of row five and Bob Felmlee and Cody Bova became the new sixth row.
McCandless surged into the early lead, followed by Farnham, Bauer, Flick, Peterson, Spithaler, Weaver, Smith, Shaffer, Felmlee, and Zimbardi.
McCandless was exceptionally strong through the first half of the race. His lead grew to more than 1.8 seconds over Farnham through the first nine laps. Peterson moved into second position on lap ten. Gradually, he cut into McCandless’ advantage. On lap fifteen, the margin dwindled to just under a half a second.
Moving into the second half of the contest, McCandless began to have difficulty navigating through the traffic. Peterson narrowed the gap even further over the next few laps. On lap eighteen, Peterson drove by McCandless for the lead.
Meanwhile, Spithaler was closing in on both Peterson and McCandless. Spithaler moved ahead of McCandless on lap nineteen. Just one lap later, he passed Peterson in traffic.
In the final ten laps of the race, Spithaler was clearly superior to Peterson. The lead continued to grow with each lap. He was more than four seconds ahead of Peterson by lap twenty-six. The margin reached 5.338 seconds on the final lap.
Smith cracked the top five on lap sixteen. He held fourth from lap sixteen through lap twenty-nine. On the final trip around the big half mile, Smith moved into third.
McCandless held on for fourth, one spot ahead of Flick, who clinched the Speedweek championship with a steady performance. He was in or just outside the top five for the entire race.
Shaffer edged Farnham for sixth. Greg Wilson, Bauer, and Bova completed the top ten.
Flick, Weaver, Zimbardi, and Peterson won the heat races. Tyler Esh copped the B Main.
Brandon Matus was the night’s fastest qualifier. He topped Group A with a lap of 17.622. However, his night went downhill after that. While running in a transfer position on the last lap of his heat race, Matus flipped hard between turns three and four. His crew thrashed to get the car ready for the B Main with assistance from Spithaler and Weaver, among others. However, Matus finished fifth, with only four cars making the A Main.
Spithaler was the fastest member of Group B. His time was 17,796.
Blaze Myers took the lead on lap six of the RUSH Sprint Car feature and he cruised to an easy victory over Luke Mulichak. The early leader, Zach Morrow, finished in third. Brayden Blackshear and Samantha Priest were fourth and fifth. Lucas Roessner, Devon Deeter, Logen Lockhart, Grayson Bayle, and Ricky Tucker, III, rounded out the top ten. Myers and Roessner took the preliminaries.
The nightcap for the Mini Stock division went to Camden Franz. There was a constant three car battle for second throughout the fifteen lapper. Sheriff Tim Callahan prevailed, with Jordan Wheeler and Justin Forsyth following. Fifth went to Andy Thomson. Kevin Dotten, Michael Phillipson, Andrew Thompson, Ben Aley, and Jacob Wheeler were sixth through tenth.

