La Crosse Fairgrounds Speedway
The La Crosse Fairgrounds Speedway is a semi-banked asphalt oval racetrack in West Salem, Wisconsin. The outer track is 5/8 mile and the inner track is a 1/4 mile. The speedway has progressive banking in the corners, from 5 degrees on the bottom to 11 degrees on the top. The track was built at the fairgrounds for La Crosse County. It used to host an event on the American Speed Association and the ASA Late Model Series before the demise of the series. It currently hosts annual touring events on the ARCA Midwest Tour and Mid American Stock Car Series. It hosts weekly stock car races which are sanctioned by the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series. It was the first NASCAR-sanctioned race track in Wisconsin.
Track history
The track opened as a half mile dirt track in 1957 in West Salem, Wisconsin as part of the relocation of the La Crosse Interstate Fairgrounds from the site of Veterans' Memorial Stadium on the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse campus. It originally ran a single annual International Motor Contest Association event and it was known as the La Crosse Inter-State Fairgrounds. The event featured IMCA "Big Car", midgets, and "New Model" stock cars. The event ran until 1966, and numerous notable drivers competed in these events, including Johnny Beauchamp, Jim Hurtubise, Dick Hutcherson, Ramo Stott, Parnelli Jones, Johnny Rutherford, and Tom Bigelow.The track was paved in 1970 as a half mile, with the track's current banked grandstand being built at the same time. Robert Morris and Larry Wehrs were the promoters for the first two seasons before Wehrs became the sole promoter in 1972. Racing alternated between Friday and Wednesday nights for the first five seasons before permanently running on Wednesday nights in 1975. The Central Wisconsin Racing Association Late Models were the featured division at La Crosse from 1970 until 1991. Following the 1986 season the La Crosse County Agricultural Society, the owners of the racetrack, decided to make a change with the promoter. Instead of renewing with Wehrs, the La Crosse County Ag Society went with Midwest Motorsports Management as the new promoter. Longtime ARTGO Challenge Series president John McKarns and Rockford Speedway president Jody Deery headed up the new promoter group, with Deery's youngest son Chuck named the track manager. In 1989 La Crosse became the first track in Wisconsin to become a part of the NASCAR Winston Racing Series, NASCAR's national weekly short track program. The track would run the NASCAR shows on Saturday nights, which would become the main race night starting in 1992. Five drivers would go on to claim either a regional, divisional or state championship. Carlson would capture the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series national championship in 2007, the first for a driver from the state of Wisconsin. Nuttleman would become the first driver in NASCAR Whelen All-American Series history to claim a championship under all three formats, and is one of the 25 greatest drivers in NASCAR Whelen All-American Series history.
Weekly racing
LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway hosts weekly stock car races on Saturday nights which are sanctioned by NASCAR.The headline division at the track is the NASCAR late models. Other classes include Sportsman, Hobby Stocks, Hornets, Street Stocks, Mini-Vans, plus several novelty events are scheduled throughout the season. Starting in 2008, the track featured Friday Night Street Drags the second Friday of the month from May to September. Starting in 2009, the Street Drags concluded with the 300' Bracket Nationals the Saturday following the Oktoberfest Race Weekend.
Special events
Eve of Destruction
The track hosts an annual "Eve of Destruction" event the first Saturday after Labor Day. It features a trailer race where the last car with a trailer left wins, along with Doug Rose's Green Mamba Jet Car, hornets, skidders, monster trucks, and motorcycle stunt riders. A similar event called the "Smash-O-Rama" takes place the third Saturday night in June.Oktoberfest Race Weekend
Since 1970 the track has featured the annual Oktoberfest Race Weekend as its season finale, usually the weekend after La Crosse's Oktoberfest celebration concludes. It began as a two-day event, then expanded to three days in 1975 and expanded to its current four-day format in 1998. Touring series that race at the event include the Mid American Stock Car Series, the Big 8 Late Model Series, the Midwest Truck Tour and the ARCA Midwest Tour.Dick Trickle 99
The Friday night headliner in the Dick Trickle 99, a 99 lap super late model event, patterned after the Vermont Milk Bowl at Thunder Road International SpeedBowl, with three 33 lap segments. Each driver scores one point for first, two for second, three for third, and so forth based on the finish of each race, and the winner of the meet is the driver with the lowest total score after the three 33-lap races. The length is taken from Trickle's #99 that he had raced in Wisconsin before moving to NASCAR. Past winners include:- 2019 Nick Murgic
- 2018 Johnny Sauter
- 2017 Rained out
- 2016 Dan Fredrickson
- 2015 Ty Majeski
- 2014 Dan Fredrickson
- 2013 Erik Darnell
- 2012 Skylar Holzhausen
- 2011 Neil Knoblock
- 2010 Dan Fredrickson
- 2009 Chris Weinkauf
- 2008 Nathan Haseleu
- 2007 Steve Holzhausen
Main event
Joe Shear is the only driver to have five main event wins; Travis Sauter and Dan Fredrickson are second with four victories.
- 2019 Ty Majeski ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2018 Andrew Morrissey ARCA Midwest Tour Morrissey actually finished 4th, but due to the disqualifications of winner Ty Majeski, second place finisher Johnny Sauter and third place finisher Jacob Goede, Morrissey was declared the winner.
- 2017 Johnny Sauter ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2016 Ty Majeski ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2015 Dan Fredrickson ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2014 Travis Sauter ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2013 Nathan Haseleu ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2012 Travis Sauter ARCA Midwest Tour
- 2011 Travis Sauter ASA Midwest Tour
- 2010 Dan Fredrickson ASA Midwest Tour
- 2009 Travis Sauter ASA Midwest Tour
- 2008 Dan Fredrickson ASA Midwest Tour
- 2007 Dan Fredrickson ASA Midwest Tour
- 2006 Steve Holzhausen
- 2005 Tim Schendel
- 2004 Brian Hoppe
- 2003 Tim Schendel
- 2002 Brian Hoppe
- 2001 Eddie Hoffman
- 2000 Steve Carlson
- 1999 Eddie Hoffman
- 1998 Eddie Hoffman
- 1997 Terry Baldry
- 1996 Joe Shear
- 1995 Joe Shear
- 1994 Joe Shear
- 1993 Matt Kenseth
- 1992 Tom Carlson
- 1991 Tom Carlson
- 1990 Scott Hansen
- 1989 Joe Shear
- 1988 Ted Musgrave
- 1987 Dick Trickle
- 1986 Rich Bickle
- 1985 John Ziegler
- 1984 Bryan Reffner
- 1983 Tom Reffner
- 1982 Jim Back
- 1981 Junior Hanley
- 1980 Mark Martin
- 1979 Butch Miller
- 1978 Dave Watson
- 1977 Larry Detjens
- 1976 Larry Detjens
- 1975 Tom Reffner
- 1974 Jerry Makara
- 1973 Marv Marzofka
- 1972 Joe Shear
- 1971 Dick Trickle
- 1970 Tom Reffner
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