Dirt Racing
Satterlee Speedweek Star at Port Royal; Wagner Sprints to Victory
PORT ROYAL, PA (June 7, 2025): Gregg Satterlee, the reigning Appalachian Mountain Late Model Speedweek Champion, opened his title defense with a win at Port Royal Speedway. Joining him in victory lane at the Speed Palace was five-time track champion, Logan Wagner, in the nightcap for the 410 Sprint Cars.
It was an impressive run for Gregg Satterlee, coming from sixth on the starting grid, to earn $5,000. It was his twenty-second career victory and second of the season at the track.
“It’s a lot of fun when you can get your car to perform well,” Satterlee noted. “I could get some speed on the top, but it was kinda treacherous. Fortunately for Satterlee, his car was maneuverable. He did have some problems in traffic, however, but none of the difficulties were insurmountable.
Satterlee’s most troubling moment in the race came when he passed the early leader, Trever Feathers, in turn one. Satterlee entered turn one aggressively on the inside and he leaned on Feathers. There was some contact, and Feathers slid up out of the groove. Feathers recovered, and continued in second until the final laps. “I had some contact with (Feathers), which I didn’t mean to do,” Satterlee acknowledged.
Jared Miley came on strong in the final stages of the race to take second away from Feathers. However, he did not have enough laps to challenge Satterlee for the win. “I could put the car anywhere,” Miley commented. “But, Gregg Satterlee is pretty damn good around here.”
Despite losing second in the closing laps, Feathers was pleased with his run. “Second and third really don’t matter much if you’re not winning.” Feathers is aware that he has some big shoes to fill in his new ride, and he is looking forward to improvement as Speedweek moves forward. “We’re putting some things together with me in this car. It’s a real honor to drive this car,” he added.
Feathers started on the pole for the thirty-five lapper which became the opening round of Speedweek after the cancellation of Friday’s race at Clinton County Speedway. He was flanked by Trevor Collins. Jason Covert and Hayes Mattern lined up behind them. Coleby Frye and Alex Ferree were slated to go in row three, but Ferree had a mechanical problem and he opted to start at the rear of the field.
That moved Satterlee up to sixth for the start. Jeff Rine and Dillan Stake manned row four, followed by Kyle Hardy and Bryan Bernheisel. Colton Flinner and Jared Miley paired up in row six.
Feathers led Collins, Mattern, Covert, Frye, and Satterlee on the opening lap. Covert and Mattern were swapping third in the early laps before Covert assumed third. His time among the leaders was limited, though. On lap six, Covert’s car abruptly veered into the wall between turns three and four, ending his night early.
On the restart, Feathers led Collins, Satterlee, Mattern, Stone, Frye, Rine, and Flinner. By lap ten, Satterlee took second from Collins.
He immediately started to whittle away at Feathers’ advantage. Within five laps, Satterlee was within a car length or two. He made an inside move in turns three and four, but could not pull off the pass. Feathers scooted away, by Satterlee tried a slider in turn one on lap nineteen, which also failed.
Flinner stopped in turn two on lap twenty to bunch the field again. Satterlee renewed his attack on Feathers when the green flag was displayed again. On lap twenty-two, Satterlee charged into turn one, and the leaders got together. Satterlee held his line, but Feathers slid up the track, losing the lead.
Satterlee began to pull away from Feathers. However, the final caution, on lap twenty-nine for Dale Hollidge, gave Feathers another shot at him. Feathers could not capitalize on the opportunity. He maintained second for a few more laps, but Miley was closing on him. Miley went low in turn one on lap thirty-three to overtake Feathers.
While Miley and Feathers were fighting for second, Satterlee added to his lead. He took the checkers 1.249 seconds ahead of Miley. Feathers held on for third, followed by Frye, and Collins. Mattern faded to sixth. Stake, Rine, Stone, and Bernheisel completed the top ten.
Rine, Hardy, Satterlee, and Stake were the heat winners. Hollidge and Justin Weaver prevailed in the twin B Mains. Feathers was the night’s fastest qualifier, with a time of 17.912 seconds. He also paced the dash to earn the pole. Mattern was best in Group B with a lap of 18.245 seconds, but he could not maintain his advantage in the dash.
Wagner’s Win
Logan Wagner romped to his first win of the season aboard the car fielded by his father, former track champion, Mike Wagner. The twenty-second win of Logan’s career paid $5,000, but, perhaps more importantly, it was a reward for all the hard work put in by the team.
“We were struggling,” Wagner said. He gave props to his father and the rest of the crew for the extra effort to get the bugs sorted out. “This hard work does not go unnoticed.” And, considering the improvements in the car, Wagner explained, “I knew that I had to get up on the wheel.”
Second place finisher, Lance Dewease knew that this day was coming. He has friends who work on Wagner’s car and he felt that it was only a matter of time until they got the car working the way that Wagner likes. “Nobody runs the wall like he does,” Dewease explained. “When he got out front he took off like a bat outta hell.” Dewease, who has been on his own improvement curve as well, was pleased with the distant second place finish. “I feel really good with second, especially with the way this place is tonight. I could carry some speed around the top, but the cushion was really narrow up there.” He added that he tried to bring the car down off berm, which was good enough to cover the rest of the field other than Wagner’s potent mount.
Justin Whittall, the point leader entering the event, had a creditable third place run. “I thought that we could have been a little bit better. We toasted the tire early. Then, I found out we broke a W link.”
Jake Karklin and Derek Hauck brought the field to the green flag for the twenty-five lap finale. Kyle Keen and Austin Bishop were in the second row. Then came Mike Walter. Jr. and Gerard McIntyre. Wagner shared row four with Dewease. Whittal and T.J. Stutts had dibs on row five. Brock Zearfoss and Jeff Halligan were perched on row six.
Karklin led the pack into turn one, but Mcintyre made some impressive moves to take over second. Hauck rode along in third, followed by Bishop, Walter, and Wagner. McIntyre passed Karklin for the lead moments before teh first caution was displayed, on lap three, for Dan Shetler.
When the race got going again, McIntyre still held control over Karklin, but Wagner was advancing quickly. He was into third by lap five and he moved into second by lap seven.Dewease was keeping pace with Wagner at this stage of the race, taking the third spot on the same lap.
Wagner chased down McIntyre and he followed him for a lap to size up the competition. Wagner found his opening, executing a perfect slider in turn one to take the lead away. A few laps later, Dewease repeated the maneuver to take second away from McIntyre.
By that time, however, Wagner was way out in front, and he continued to stretch his advantage over Dewease.
Meanwhile, Whittall moved into third, but he was unable to reel in Dewease in the final laps.
Zearfoss followed Wagner, Dewease, and Whittal across the finish line. Walter was fifth. McIntyre faded to sixth, one spot ahead of Doug Hammaker, who came from eighteenth on teh grid. Bishop, Stutts, and Halligan completed the top ten.
There were three heats for the twenty-eight cars on hand. The wins went to Whittall, Karklin, and Walter. Mike Thompson dominated the B Main.
Coming Events
Port Royal will host the Ron Zimmerman Limited Late Model Championship next week, paying a hefty $6,000 to the winner. The 410 Sprints will also be on hand. Then, on June 21, the United States Auto Club will visit the Speed Palace with the Silver Crown and National Sprint Car Series. Again, the 410 Sprints will be an integral part of the show. On June 28, the 410 Sprints will be off in conjunction with the PA Speedweek event at Lincoln Speedway. Taking center stage on that night will be the 303 PASS IMCA Sprint Cars for teh 14th Annual Blue Collar Classic. The Limited Lates and Wingless Sportsmen will complete the show.
Dirt Racing
Macri Romps At Hagerstown
HAGERSTOWN, MD (July 2, 2026): Anthony Macri drove away from his competition at the Hagerstown Speedway. The Thirty-sixth Pennsylvania Sprint Car Speedweek tour made its southern-most stop on a hot and steamy night.
Anthony Macri proved that he is definitely a better race car driver than a prognosticator. Just one night after he counted himself out of contention for a fourth consecutive Speedweek title, the driver from Dilsburg, PA found himself atop the standings heading into round eight at the Williams Grove Speedway. Macri’s cause was aided by the failure of Chase Dietz to qualify for a second time in seven days.
“Points aside, I knew I had a job to do, and that was to win the race,” Macri said.
Macri explained that the team made the proper adjustments for the thirty-lap feature event. “Obviously, we made the right call before the race. We were able to get through lapped traffic pretty good.” Although he moved around on the speedway, Macri made an effort to stay on the top side as much as possible.
Second place went to Aussie Ryan “Fig” Newton, who is quietly compiling a string of good finishes. Through the first seven rounds of Speedweek, Newton has a pair of top fives and four top tens to his credit.
Third place finisher, Troy Wagaman, Jr., improved one position over his Port Royal showing. “Third was pretty good here. We were just a tick off, we were better in the second half of the race.”
Wagaman and Macri shared the front row for the start of the event. Justin Whittall and Newton were in row two, with Preston Lattomus and Mike Wagner in the third. Dylan Cisney and Ryan Smith drew the final two preferred starting spots. Cameron Smith, Freddie Rahmer, Jr., Danny Dietrich, and Logan Rumsey earned the next four positions on the grid based upon their heat race finishes.
Macri rolled into turn one with the lead after the first attempt to start the race failed due to a flat tire on Cisney’s machine. Wagaman, Newton, Whittall, Wagner, Rumsey, Ryan Smith, Lattomus, Rather, and Chad Trout comprised the rest of the top ten. Newton slipped past Wagaman on lap three for second place. Meanwhile, the racers in positions six through ten were mixing things up in the first several laps.
Buddy Schweibinz slowed the pace with his spin in turn one on the sixth trip around the speedway. That turned out to be the only caution of the race.
When the action resumed, Macri easily pulled away from Newton, Wagaman, and Whittall. Rahmer cracked into the top five by lap ten, and he hovered there as the field strung out during the long green flag run.
Rumsey, Ryan Smith, and Zearfoss were the next three finishers. Wagner slipped back to ninth in the final tally, one spot ahead of Brady Bacon.
Macri, Wagner, Ryan Smith, and Lattomus scored in the heat races. James McFadden won the B Main after failing to fire for his heat race. McFadden set the quickest time during Group Aqualifications. His time was 15.499 seconds. Newton topped Group B with a time of 15.664 seconds.
Chase Dietz sustained front end damage while the field was shaping up for the start of his heat. His throttle stuck and he rammed into the rear of Wagner’s mount. Wagner’s car was unharmed, and he went on to get the win. Dietz’s woes continued in the B Main. He raced from eleventh to fifth, missing the transfer by one position.
Dirt Racing
Dietz and Shultz Get Dramatic Wins at Port Royal
PORT ROYAL, PA (July 1, 2026) There was plenty of late race drama at the Speed Palace during the Wednesday portion of the Thirty-sixth Pennsylvania Sprint Car Speedweek. Chase Dietz caught a break when Anthony Macri checked up for a lapped car that got out of shape ahead of him, and that allowed the nation’s winningest driver to get an unexpected victory. Then, in the nightcap for the URC Sprint Cars, Jason Shultz recovered from athree-wide, late race incident that could have had disasterous results.
Dietz Does It Again
Chase Dietz, of York, picked up his fourth win of Speedweek in an unexpected fashion. He was chasing the leader, Anthony Macri, with just a couple of laps remaining in the thirty lapper. Dietz was closing in when something unexpected happened. The lapped car of Buddy Schweibinz got out of shape in turn four and Macri had to take evasive action. Dietz was committed to the low line and he safely drove by for the lead.
“That was an intense one,” Dietz shared. “The track was gripped up. I don’t think anybody in the pits expected that. I didn’t.” Dietz added that the track developed some ruts in turns three and four in the new clay that was laid down recently. That added character in an area that usually gets smooth and slick come feature time.
Dietz gave all the credit to his team for the win, sayingthat their efforts “give() me the chance to do whatI need to do.”
Macri was downhearted after the race. “I think it’s obvious that the lapped car got in my way there.” He was so dejected that he almost conceded the Speedweek championship to Dietz. “I think that may have mathematically eliminated my chance.”
James McFadden made a rare start at Port Royal. The Australian racer who now runs a part-time schedule for a California team remarked, “it’s a hard place to come for the first time with this car.” He added, with his usual flair, “I’m getting thirsty. I haven’t had a shoey for a while.” He was referring, of course to the gulp of beer that winning drivers down under take from their shoe in victory lane.
McFadden and Macri shared the front row for round six of Speedweek. Troy Wagaman, Jr. and Dietz made up the second row, with Logan Wagner and Parker Price-Miller paired up in the third. The final preferred starting spots went to Ryan Smith and Tanner Holmes. Brock Zearfoss and Billy Dietrich came next based on their heat race finishes, as did Doug Hammaker and last year’s Port Royal champion, Justin Whittall.
Macri sailed into turn one ahead of McFadden and he claimed the high line as his exclusive territory for the early going. Dietz, Wagaman, Price-Miller, Holmes, Ryan Smith, Wagner, Zearfoss, and Whittall followed.
Lap four was eventful. Freddie Rahmer, Jr. spun in turn four to set-up a restart that included a flip by Brady Bacon in turn one.
In the middle stage of the race, Macri was forced up over the cushion by a slower car between turns one and two. He gathered it up again and retained his considerable lead. A couple of laps later, McFadden got into Billy Dietrich causing Dietz to slow unexpectedly. Dietz recovered though, and he took second from McFadden on lap fourteen. Then, just one lap later, Brent Shearer lost his right front wheel just ahead of the leader, Macri.
But, the excitement wasn’t quite over yet. After the race resumed, Macri began to drive away from Dietz and the rest of the field. However, when Macri encountered lapped traffic again, Dietz began to close in on him. Fans were expecting to see a shoot-out between the two hottest drivers in the region, but it did not materialize. Instead, Macri had to check up for an errant lapper and that gave Dietz the opening that he needed to race past them both.
Dietz completed the journey without incident. Macri was second. McFadden. Wagaman, and Price-Miller completed the top five.Holmes, Zearfoss, Whittall, Wagner, and Ryan Smith were the next five finishers.
Wagaman, McFadden, Price-Miller, and Ryan Smith split the four heat wins. Logan Rumsey and Kody Lehman picked up the twin B Mains. Macri was the fastest of the forty-four cars that checked in. His lap of 15.531 seconds was the best in Group B. Dietz topped Group A with a time of 15.584.
Shultz Comes Back
It was a night of come backs for Jason Shultz, of Carlisle. First, he left his family vacation in Virginia to return to the Port Royal Speedway for the annual visit by the United Racing Club during the Thirty-Sixth Pennsylvania Sprint Car Speedweek. Then, after he got shuffled out of the lead on a wild, late race restart, he came charging back to claim the victory, and the $2,000 that came with it.
Shultz talked about the late race drama. “I’m getting older and older, and these things don’t come very easily, you know. If this were a couple of years ago, I don’t think they would have had achance to throw anything at me, but they did, and it kind of ruffled my feathers a little bit. So, it got me on the wheel a little bit.”
Adam Carberry, who was right in the middle of things at the end of the race, noted, “that restart was a lot of fun. I did’t really have a chance at one point. We were either going for a ride or somebody’s ending up in front. It was me for a little while, but that’s about all the speed our 358’s got.”
Michael Walter was the third man in that exciting restart despite a mechanical problem. “They gave me a good car. But, it’s too bad the nose wing flipped back. Maybe I’d have had a shot at second.”
Shultz surprised himself by starting from the pole for the twenty-five lap finale. Carberry was beside him. Behind them were Josh Spicer and Michael Walter. Josh Weller and P.J. Reutimann were assigned to row three, with Cole Young and Bryn Gohn in row four. Brayden Mickley and Tyler Ulrich held row five, followed by Brock Hammaker and Tyler Ross.
Shultz swept into the lead, followed by Carberry, Walter, Spicer, Weller, Reutimann, Ross, and Gohn. Weller gained several positions in the early going, but Shultz was so dominant in the clean air that he opened a commanding lead over Carberry. When Weller reached third, he was a considerable distance behind the leaders.
There was contact while Weller and Walter were battling for position, and Walter’s nose wing became loose and it flipped backward. Nonetheless, he soldiered on. Indeed, it seemed that his car actually picked up speed as the race progressed.
The only caution appeared on lap seventeen, when Dylan Smith coasted to a stop coming off turn four.
That set up a double file restart, with Shultz on the pole, Carberry in second, Walter in third, and Weller in fourth.
There was a mad scramble in the first turn when the race resumed. Walter was on the inside, Carberry in the middle, and Shultz on the outside, which should have been the preferred place to be. However, he got crowded out, and Carberry went into turn two with the lead. Shultz rallied for second, and Walter fell into third.
Shultz stayed close to Carberry for a couple of laps as he was looking for a place to make a pass. He got the opportunity entering turn one on lap twenty. Shultz executed a perfect slider to regain the lead.
In the final five laps, Shultz was able to drive away from Carberry with ease. He had a margin of victory of 3.267 seconds at the checkers.
Walter held on for third, followed by Ross and Weller. Young, Reutimann, Austin Reed, Cody Feltcher, and Gohn completed the top ten.
Gohn, Walter, and Weller captured the three heat wins. No B Main was needed for the twenty-two cars on hand.
Coming Events
Port Royal Speedway will host its second Speedweek show on Saturday evening, July 4, for the Greg Hodnett Classic. The Super Late Models will be on the holiday card, along with fireworks, music, and more. July 11 will feature the 410 and 305 Sprints, with the Limited Late Models for good measure. Then July 18 will be a Sprint Car triple header, as the 410, 358, and 305 winged warriors will be in action.
All of that will be a build up for the return of the High Limit Series for the Bob Weikert Memorial. The event was moved from its traditional Memorial Day weekend due to inclement weather.
Dirt Racing
Macri and Pauch Get Grandview Glory
BECHTELSVILLE, PA (June 30, 2026): The 410 Sprint Cars and 358 Modifieds provided thrilling non-stop action at the Grandview Speedway on a hot and sticky Tuesday night. Getting the wins were Anthony Macri and Billy Pauch, Jr.
Macri’s Rebound
Just like Chase Dietz did days before, Anthony Macri shook off the disappointment of failing to qualify for a Speedweek event by registering a dominating win at the next stop on the ten-day journey. It was a milestone event for Macri, though, as he claimed his first ever win at the third-mile Grandview Speedway.
“This was a bucket list win, for sure.” Macri said.
“I finally got it done here. I love coming here. It is my favorite track in PA. It’s a shame we only get to come here twice a year,” he added.
Macri explained that his car was a little tight at the beginning of the race, which was according to plan. After several laps were completed, though, he was able to move around the speedway with ease. He found the inside and middle grooves to his liking for much of the race.
Macri patiently worked his way past Brady Bacon and Parker Price-Miller. Then, he drove by the leader, Logan Rumsey, on the backstretch on lap thirteen.
After that, it was a simple matter of picking his way through the lapped cars. Once he realized that he wasn’t gaining on the slower traffic, he got into the rubber and stayed there, figuring that it was unlikely that any other drivers would be able to mount a charge on the high side of the track.
“I got into the rubber and I wasn’t going to leave it,” Macri explained. I lost one here getting off the rubber. Once I got the lead, I wasn’t giving it up.”
Macri picked up $10,000 for his win and he got his name etched on the Hodnett Cup. The trophy being named for the late Greg Hodnett, who was magical at the speedway.
Bacon finished second, his best finish so far in the Thirty-sixth Annual Pennsylvania Sprint Car Speedweek. He and Macri were battling for third, for a time, as they wove their way through some slower cars. “He (Macri) kinda snookered us. I got by him once, but I hit the wall,” Bacon noted. “Once he got by us, it started taking rubber.”
Price-Miller finished third in the non-stop affair that lasted only nine minutes and twenty-eight seconds. “I think it kinda suits the younger guys,” he noted about the pace. Like Macri, he said, “we were a little tight in the beginning. When it slicked off, we were better.” Price-Miller was happy with his run, considering that neither he nor his crew chief, Bernie Steubgen, have much experience at Grandview.
Price-Miller and Logan Rumsey drew into the front row. Dylan Norris and Bacon were right behind. James McFadden and Macri received the final two preferred starting positions under the Speedweek format. Danny Dietrich and Chase Dietz earned row four starts based on their heat race finsihes. Then came Ryan Smith and Brock Zearfoss. Ronald Helmick and Preston Lattomus were in row six.
Rumsey bolted out to the early lead, followed by Price-Miller, Bacon, and Macri. That quartet got some separation quickly from Norris, McFadden, Dietz, Dietrich, Smith and Zearfoss.
The pair of 71 cars were setting a brisk pace in the early going. The first battle for positions on the track turned out to be Bacon and Macri wrestling for third. Macri slipped under the former USAC champion on lap nine. Bacon came right back, though, briefly passing Macri before brushigthe outer wall heading toward turn one.
Macri had his running shoes on at that stage of the race. He tracked down Price-Miller on lap twelve, and he swooped past Rumsey on lap thirteen.
Macri controlled the balance of the race, with his lead stretching and shrinking depending on the flow of the lapped traffic. In the final few laps, though, the lead grew to over three seconds.
Bacon cruised to second, followed by Price-Miller, Dietz, and Rumsey. Dietrich, Smith, McFadden, Zearfoss, and Freddie Rahmer, Jr. rounded out the top ten.
Only three heats were needed to set the field for the A Main. Norris, Macri, and Bacon scored those wins. There was no B Main. McFadden turned in the quickest lap in qualifications. He stopped the clock at 12.662 seconds.
Pauch Prevails
Billy Pauch, Jr. recorded the win in the nightcap for the 358 Modifieds at Grandview Speedway’s final Thunder on the Hill program for 2026. The thirty lapper went non-stop and it, too, featured constant action on the tight third mile.
Pauch held off the early leader, Eddie Strada, while struggling to get by some lapped cars that were racing side-by-side for positions. “Eddie’s an awesome racer, we’ve been battling for fifteen years,” Pauch said. “The lapped cars were difficult. They were battling side-by-side and I couldn’t get by. He (Strada) went rolling by me on the outside. I thought, ‘if he turns down what do I do?’ But, he kinda stayed in the middle.” Pauch was able to get back under Strada, and, within a few laps, he was able to get his nose under one of the lapped cars to set a pick to get some needed breathing room.
Pauch and Strada manned the front row for the start of the event. Anthony Perrego and Duane Howard were next in line. Then came Dylan Swinehart and Craig Whitmoyer.
Strada dashed into the lead on the first lap, but Pauch soon rallied to regain the lead. Howard, Perrego, Whitmoyer, and Swinehart followed in the early going.
It wasn’t long before Pauch caught the backmarkers. He was able to pick his way through several of them while maintaining asafe advantage over Strada.
However, within several laps, Pauch came upon a pack of lapped cars that were fighting for positions amongst themselves. That presented a problem, as there was nowhere Pauch could go to put any of them a lap down.
With Pauch bottled up behind this group of cars, Strada chipped away at the lead. Soon, the leaders were racing side-by-side behind the pack of lapped cars. At one point, Strada moved past Pauch, but he, too, was confronted with the problem of having nowhere to go.
Strada remained in the middle groove, and Pauch was able to get back under him to regain the lead. Soon thereafter, a crack started in the wall of slower cars ahead of him. Pauch was able to get his nose under the straggler, and he used that car as a pick to keep Strada at bay.
Meanwhile, Perrego worked his way past Howard and closed in on Pauch and Strada. He was not able to make it a three-car contest for the lead, though.
Jeff Strunk followed Pauch, Strada, and Perrego across the line. Howard held on for fifth. Jax Yohn, Whitmoyer, Swinehart, Brett Kressley, and Colin Cox completed the top ten.
Pauch, Whitmoyer, Cox, and Perrego won their respective heat races. Logan Watt and Louden Reimert copped the B Mains. Forty-two 358 Modifieds signed in for this event.

