You can edit almost every page by Creating an account. Otherwise, see the FAQ.

Short track motor racing

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki

Slinger Super Speedway, typical 1/4 mile layout

In North American auto racing, a short track is a oval racetrack of less than one mile (1.6 km) in length. Short track racing, often associated with fairgrounds and similar venues, is where stock car racing and American open-wheel racing first got off the back roads and into organized and regulated competition.

Many traditional fans and purists still see short track racing as the "real" NASCAR, because the lower speeds make "paint swapping," where the bodies of the cars actually rub against one another, practical without a very high likelihood of serious accidents. In fact, NASCAR sanctions such "club" racing, offering the Whelen All-American Series as a national championship for the drivers, and an invitational race for club racers. In 2007, NASCAR is increasing marketing of the short tracks with the "NASCAR Home Tracks" campaign, with Greg Biffle, Elliott Sadler, and Carl Edwards featured in advertising to market short track racing. In some cases a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series star or two will race in a weekly short-track event held usually on a short track near that week's race, or in a midweek special, such as the Slinger Nationals at Wisconsin's Slinger Super Speedway, a quarter-mile track (but is not NASCAR-sanctioned).

Ken Schrader, Tony Stewart, Dave Blaney, Scott Wimmer, and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. all own short tracks, most of them being dirt. Stewart owns the Eldora Speedway, which features Sprint Cup stars and other nationally recognised drivers in the "Prelude to the Dream" dirt late model race, and began hosting a points-paying Camping World Truck Series race in 2013. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. is a partner in the Paducah (Kentucky) International Speedway.

In recent years, there has been a gradual push away from short track venues for the NASCAR Cup (the highest level of NASCAR) in favor of longer tracks. This is due to larger venues having accommodations for more fans (although the short track in Bristol, Tennessee, Bristol Motor Speedway, now has over 160,000 seats) and higher speeds.

The west coast has been home to some of the most competitive short track racing in America. Venues such as Placerville Speedway, in the foothills of Northern California, have been racing dirt track stock cars since 1965. Many west coast communities surrounding short tracks are deeply invested in auto racing. As a result of traveling distance, a number of west coast specific racing series have developed over the years.

List of paved short tracks[edit]

Australia[edit]

Track Name Location Length Shape/Banking Classes
Adelaide International Raceway South Australia
Virginia
0.500 miles (0.805 km) low banked oval NASCAR, AUSCAR, Sportsmans, HQ's, Super Sedans, Speedcars, Sprintcars
Liverpool City Raceway New South Wales
Green Valley
33°54′25″S 150°52′2″E / 33.90694°S 150.86722°E / -33.90694; 150.86722
⧼validator-fatal-error⧽


0.273 miles (0.439 km) low banked D shaped oval Closed in 1989
Dirt track: 1967-1974 and 1984-1989.
Asphalt: 1974-1984
Grand National sedans, Super Sedans, Speedcars, Sprintcars, GP Midgets
Tralee Speedway New South Wales
Jerrabomberra
35°23′22″S 149°10′47″E / 35.38944°S 149.17972°E / -35.38944; 149.17972
⧼validator-fatal-error⧽


0.254 miles (0.409 km) low banked D shaped oval Closed in 1997
Dirt track:- 1970-1974 and 1978-1997.
Asphalt: 1974-1978
Grand National sedans, Super Sedans, Speedcars

Canada[edit]

Europe[edit]

Track Name Location Length Shape/Surface Classes
Raceway Venray Netherlands
Venray
0.547 miles (0.880 km) & 0.25 miles (0.40 km) asphalt Oval NASCAR Whelen Euro Series
Tours Speedway France
Tours
0.45 miles (0.72 km) temporary asphalt Oval NASCAR Whelen Euro Series

Mexico[edit]

USA[edit]

List of dirt short tracks[edit]

Australia[edit]

Canada[edit]

South Africa[edit]

United Kingdom[edit]

United States of America[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]


External links[edit]


This article "Short track motor racing" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Short track motor racing. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.