Paul Delaney's weekly Spokane Motorsports Column
By Paul Delaney
April 13th 2007 Spokane, WA:
Friday the
13th. Hopefully the new debut date for this racing column is not an omen.
As the 2007
season begins there are significant parts cautious optimism mixed with a dash
here and there of potential
gloom
surrounding what the future holds for the area's racing future.
Bright
spots include:
• New
management at Spokane Raceway Park.
• A rebirth
of the old Northwest Tour.
• An
off-season infusion of new management and the subsequent growth of the winged
sprint car class.
• Another
season for the region’s oldest racing class, the Northwest Modifieds, who trace
their roots back to the mid-1960s.
Troubled
areas are:
• Numerous
court proceedings have Spokane Raceway Park operating a bit tentatively, but at
least on a full 2007 schedule.
• Homes
continue to march ever closer to Stateline Speedway’s Rathdrum Prairie property.
Here’s a
brief look at key news from our two area race tracks.
Spokane
Raceway Park:
Operating
under new management with J.R. Tice at the helm, the SRP schedule has a fresh
new look. That will hopefully re-energize fan and racer interest and keep it a
race track past this season.
Tice is a
long-time drag racing fixture since his days as an official with the old
American Hot Rod Association. He’s had nearly a full year on the job after
taking over management duties last June 1st after the court-ordered ouster of
SRP founder Orville Moe.
Schedules
are slightly scaled back on both the drag strip and stock car track. There's
also a move to make the half-mile oval the special events track for which it is
designed. Tice has also streamlined the road course schedule, making it less
intrusive on events it shares with the drag strip.
Tice said
he was "planning at the present time of having one week a month off on the drag
side. Give the families and wives a break."
"We plan to
run the first three weekends in May and close the fourth," Tice said. While the
drag and stock car tracks may be shuttered, the road course is booked, Tice
reminded. “Every time we're closing the drag strip we have a road course event.”
"Last year
we started with 25-45 cars on the drag strip. By the end of year we were up
right at 200," Tice said. "When we had those carry-over road course events we
did not have room for drag cars."
One other
notable date has been scratched from the schedule. The Sunday that had
traditionally been part of SRP’s old World Finals race.
That once
mighty race that used to pack the stands to watch major leaguers like John
Force, Don Garlits and Don Prudhomme, has been scaled back to a two-day race,
August 3-4.
Tice said
he's concentrating on scheduling this race at night when crowds have been
robust. He's eliminating the Sunday segment, that for the past decade or more,
has been a sparsely attended money-loser.
"Fans do
not want to sit out in hot grandstands on an August afternoon. They want to be
at the lake," Tice said in defending his decision.
A new
Nostalgia Fuel Dragster event is set for September 14-15.
Everything
else is just weekly racing, according to Tice. The once-popular Friday street
racing will run twice a month, every other week and the high school series will
be integrated into weekly bracket events.
The oval
track is once again under the direction of Rick Rice. "The oval will feature
special events schedule. We have 13 confirmed now and probably another four,"
Rice said.
"The
half-mile is a special events track. It's too hard to run a local weekly show.
It's too fast and (too) hard on cars," Rice explained.
The season
kicks off with "test 'n tune" sessions from noon to 5 p.m. on stock car side. A
single drag testing day will take place April 21. There will be no racing on
April 28. The regular season begins the first weekend in May.
The
Northwest Modifieds open the oval on May 5th, one of five appearances for the
open-wheel class. The NSRA winged sprints will stop in Spokane on July 7th.
The Inland
Northwest Superstocks, a class that has run only at Stateline in the past, will
have four races at SRP, the first May 19th. The Late Model Challenge series
appears July 14 and the Big Sky Late Models, Sept. 15.
The cloud
that still hangs over the Airway Heights motorsports complex is the legal one.
SRP
Stockholders are awaiting who will be successful in a bid to buy the facility so
they can hopefully receive some long-overdue dividends. Racers hope that the
likes of the Kalispell Tribe and Spokane County, two groups who recently
surfaced as having either made offers or who are interested in making an offer
to buy the 600 plus acres of property.
Spokane has
been deemed to small of a market to be home of Washington’s NASCAR speedway. But
it might not be bad insurance for that national sanctioning organization to step
up and plop down $30 million or so to have a back-up plan. A quick survey shows
commercial acreage in the Bremerton area, NASCAR’s last best hope, in the
$250,000 and up range.
SRP’s new
website can be accessed at:
www.spokaneraceway.net/
Stateline Speedway:
Stateline Stadium/Speedway in Post Falls, Idaho have released a schedule of some
56 events in the 17th year of operation by brothers Joe and Walt Doellefeld.
“Were very pleased with the lineup of events we have for fans and racers this
year,” said Stateline Stadium/Speedway Promoter, Joe Doellefeld. “With Wednesday
Night Fever, unique special events, and the variety of cars and talent of
drivers at the Saturday night shows, there’s something every fan will enjoy.”
The
track started two weeks later than in the past, hoping the weather will
cooperate. It
runs each week until October 3.
Thirty weekend races are scheduled, primarily on Saturday night’s. Hobby Cars,
Street Stocks, Early Stocks and the return of Late Model 4s offer local drivers
a chance to show off with many touring classes and series.
Among those groups visiting the quarter-mile oval are a host of open-wheel
classes. They include the Northwest Modifieds (April 21, May 19, June 2,
July 14, Sept. 15),
Winged Sprints (May 12 & 26, July 28, Sept. 1, 29) and WMRA
Midgets (May 5)
The new Northwest Tour makes two appearances (June 9, Aug. 25), while the
Inland NW Superstocks (April 28, June 16, July 7, Aug. 3, 24, Sept. 22) and
Late Model Challenge (Aug. 5) are other late models on the schedule.
Special events include the International Drift Championship on May 6. Stateline
will present its annual Demolition Derby and Fireworks Extravaganza Tuesday,
July 3. The 2007 Idaho 200 takes place August 3-5 with over $35,000 in cash and
winnings up for grabs for the region’s top stock car teams.
Stateline’s website is: www.raceidaho.com
or contact the event hotline at 208-773-5019.