MARNE, Mich., July 24 — Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson qualified third, started sixth due to the invert, and charged back up to finish third Saturday night at Berlin Raceway in a 40-lap feature sanctioned by the 500 Sprint Car Tour Presented by Auto Value Bumper to Bumper Parts Stores.
Driving the Mission Foods/Glenn Farms No. 77 asphalt sprint car which is powered by a Binks Chevy engine, Swanson got right to work at the drop of the green flag. The Kingsburg, Calif., native who now lives in Indianapolis passed fellow row three starter Bobby Santos III for fifth on the first lap. He got around Jackson Macenko for fourth on lap two. In just one more lap Swanson, the defending series champion, passed Taylor Ferns for third on lap three.
Polesitter Derek Bischak led the first three laps, but his fellow front-row starter, Kyle O’Gara, got the lead from Bischak working lap four. Swanson passed Bischak for second place on lap six right before the event’s only caution flag waved with seven laps down, reportedly for debris on the track.
Swanson did his best to pass O’Gara on the restart, but O’Gara wouldn’t budge. Swanson was still only 0.322 of a second behind him on lap 10, but Tyler Roahrig, who was the fastest qualifier and started eighth, had made his way through the field too and was right on Swanson’s rear bumper.
Roahrig dipped under Swanson on the backstretch working lap 11 to relegate Swanson to third, and that’s where Swanson finished. Roahrig passed O’Gara for the lead on the following lap and then marched away from the field, taking the checkered flag 7.424 seconds ahead of O’Gara before a big crowd.
Swanson was 1.042 seconds behind O’Gara at the finish, and 0.436 ahead of the fourth-place finisher, Ferns. Dakoda Armstrong rounded out the top five.
Roahrig set the fastest lap of the race on lap 12 with a time of 15.894 seconds for the nearly circular and very challenging 0.4375-mile asphalt oval, which has 13-degree turns and 9-degree straightaways. Swanson set the second-fastest lap of the race on lap seven with a 16.022, while O’Gara was third-fastest with a 16.031 on lap five.
Roahrig topped the charts in qualifying with a lap in 15.507 followed by Armstrong with a 15.735 and Swanson with a 15.738. The top five qualifiers were within 0.340 of each other.
“Berlin is such a nice racetrack, but it is really quite unique and tricky too,” Swanson said. “Congrats to Tyler; he’s got a great handle on this place, and I just haven’t been able to get it figured out yet. I’m so thankful for this Doran Binks team; they’ve been working really hard to try to help us find what we need to make us better when we come here, so we’ll have to take the podium as a solid finish and get ready for Nashville this week. As always, I’m thankful for Mission Foods, Glenn Farms, and everyone who continues to support this team.”
The race was streamed live by MAVTV for Flo Racing.
Swanson led Roahrig by 11 points in the series’ standings going into Saturday’s race. Roahrig now leads Swanson by 13 points with four events remaining. O’Gara is currently third in points followed by Dakoda Armstrong and Santos.
The next 500 Sprint Car Tour race is in just a few days, as the series visits Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway in Nashville, Tenn., this Saturday, July 29. The series doesn’t have any races in August, but it has events at Lorain Raceway Park in Amherst, Ohio on Sept. 9; Anderson Speedway in Anderson, Ind., on Oct. 7, and Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in Brownsburg, Ind., on Oct. 14.
Doran Binks Racing also fields cars for Swanson in the USAC Silver Crown series, where the team and Swanson lead the current entrant and driver point standings. That series has three races in August: Toledo (Ohio) Speedway Aug. 5; Illinois State Fairgrounds Aug. 19, and World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill., near St. Louis on Aug. 27.
By: Richie Murray - USAC Media
Winchester, Indiana (July 20, 2023)………For Kody Swanson, on Thursday night, Winchester (Ind.) Speedway served as a place to go back-to-back in a myriad of manners.
The victory was his second consecutive in USAC Silver Crown competition after winning the most recent round at Wisconsin’s Madison International Speedway in June, marking the 13th occasion in which he’s won two-straight series main events in his career with the series.
Furthermore, the triumph was the second occasion in a row in which he performed a complete sweep by recording the fastest time in both Dirt Draft Practice and Honest Abe Roofing Qualifying before going on to lead all 100 laps en route to victory.
Finally, and perhaps most impressively, it was Swanson’s second straight win at the 31st running of the Rich Vogler Classic Presented by The Pallet Builder, backing up a similar dominant run from the pole position in 2022 in which he also completely swept the night.
Swanson’s performance culminated with the Kingsburg, Calif. native’s fourth career Rich Vogler Classic victory following previous triumphs in 2016, 2019 and 2022, which ranks second only to the six achieved by Tracy Hines.
On a night when both rain and stray cats interrupted the proceedings at one point or another, Swanson was a steady force in his Doran-Binks Racing/Mission Foods – Glenn Farms/Beast/Lanci Ford, strutting back into the series point lead in his pursuit for an eighth career USAC Silver Crown National Championship.
After earning his record-extending 44th career USAC Silver Crown pole position earlier in the evening, Swanson went forth and set the pace that all others would be chasing for the rest of the evening as point leader Logan Seavey slotted into second from his outside front row starting position.
Initially, C.J. Leary was the man on the move, taking Aaron Pierce for fourth on lap four and gunning underneath Caleb Armstrong for the third spot on lap 12 entering turn three. Armstrong was making his first series start since his Rookie of the Year season in 2014. On lap 19, Leary continued the charge as he dove low past Seavey in turn four for second place.
Problems plagued Seavey just prior to the halfway point as he began to drop dramatically through the field. In fact, during a span of three laps between 41-44, he dropped from seventh to 17th in the running order. The diagnosis was that the brake pads were knocked off on his ride about 40 laps into the race, requiring a stop for a new set during an unexpected red flag for rain just after the midpoint.
A brief shower doused the speedway under green flag conditions on the 55th lap, necessitating a half-hour red flag period until the rain stopped and the track drying process commenced. Nonetheless, that didn’t hinder Swanson a bit when action resumed as he opened his lead to a half-straight over Leary with another half-straight gap back to third running Armstrong.
Santos ran fourth on the restart, but quickly jumped to third on lap 55 when Armstrong experienced a Maalox moment in turn two after his ride got completely sideways, nearly spinning, but was able to save it and regain control. As a result, however, Armstrong dropped two spots to fifth while Santos and Davey Hamilton Jr. stormed on by for third and fourth, respectively.
Just a mere eight laps later, Santos thundered to second, cruising underneath Leary entering the third turn to take over the position on lap 63. Yet, Santos remained a full second behind Swanson with 37 to go.
Fourth running Hamilton Jr. became the next to find himself crossed up sideways and narrowly avoid disaster in turn two on lap 71 as Bischak took advantage and drove past to take over the fourth spot and quickly closed right to the tail of third running Leary.
The most major incident of the race came on lap 79 when series point leader Seavey’s right front wheel center broke, sending him straight into the outside turn two wall with the right front of the car before sliding to a stop on the inside of the racing surface while his right front wheel rolled all the way around to turn four. Seavey climbed out and walked away, but his 12th place result was his first outside the top-five all season long.
Starting with lap 88, Santos reeled off his five fastest laps of the race in rapid-fire succession, helping him to close within three car lengths of Swanson for the race lead. With that said, on lap 92, Swanson answered with his third fastest lap of the race and, thusly, kept Santos at bay and began to suddenly inch away to put the race on ice during the ensuing laps.
The race for third remained hotly contested on lap 93 as Bischak finally was able to muster the move to third after 20-plus laps of constantly working on Leary to take over the position. Bischak, a former college cross country star at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, dove low at the exit of turn four with seven laps to go to move into the final “podium” position.
Further up ahead, Swanson couldn’t be corralled or contained as he earned his 39th career USAC Silver Crown victory by a 2.858 second margin over Santos with Bischak third, Leary fourth and Hamilton Jr. fifth.
Late in the race, Swanson felt he was staggering a bit to the finish line while Santos was surging, which kept Swanson on needles, pins and toes until the music stopped.
“On those long runs, maybe they let us go a little bit,” Swanson said of the field’s pace. “Bobby was so strong at the end, I think he kind of proved to me anyway that he was still capable, and I got lucky to fend him off there at the end. You never know if he’s going to reload and make another charge on the restart. He’s just that good of a racer. I felt like I was floundering a little bit on that last restart, and I was glad to be able to hang on. I felt like we had a really good car early, and I hated to think that I could mess it up under one of those cautions.”
ANDERSON, Ind., July 10 — Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson spent a big portion of the CB Fabricating Gene Nolen Classic at Anderson Speedway Saturday night trying to find a way around Bobby Santos III. As it turned out he didn’t have to, as Santos dropped out of the race with seven laps remaining and Swanson went on to post his second consecutive victory in the event named in memory of one of his former car owners.
With his triumph in the Mission Foods/Glenn Farms No. 77 powered by a Binks Chevy V8 engine, Swanson took the lead in the point standings as he guns for his second consecutive championship in the 500 Sprint Car Tour Presented by Auto Value Bumper to Bumper Parts Stores.
After Santos dropped out reportedly due to a mechanical issue that caused his car to run out of fuel, Swanson beat Kyle O’Gara by 0.502 seconds at the checkered flag after 100 laps around the quarter-mile, high-banked oval. Fastest qualifier Tyler Roahrig finished third followed by Dakoda Armstrong and Jackson Macenko in the field of 22 asphalt sprint cars.
Swanson was the second-fastest qualifier, just 0.023 off Roahrig’s time of 11.097 seconds. The inversion was a six, so Swanson started fifth and the front row was shared by polesitter Santos and Chris Neuenschwander. Neuenschwander led initially until Santos took the point on lap 18.
Swanson dove under Dakoda Armstrong for fourth on the first lap. He passed Neuenschwander for third on lap 30, and he moved into second behind Santos on lap 54 by passing Caleb Armstrong.
Santos had over a 1-second lead on lap 56, but Swanson was able to cut that in half by lap 61. Two caution flags with 66 and 67 laps down moved the No. 77 right on the tail tank of Santos’s No. 22, and Swanson kept the pressure intense until Santos pulled away to a 0.5-second advantage with 10 laps to go.
Shawn Bonar hit the wall in Turn 4 with 92 laps down to bring out the final caution flag. He climbed out unhurt, but fluids leaked out of his car which caused the officials to throw a red flag and stop the field on the backstretch until the track crews could clean up the accident scene.
Santos led on the restart but then slowed and pulled into the infield, and Swanson inherited the lead. O’Gara, who had been third since lap 61, tried his best to get around Swanson at the end, but the Mission Foods No. 77 took the checkered in first place.
"This place has been tough lately, and with the inverts it's been difficult to pass good race cars and make your way back toward the front,” Swanson said. “So tonight I was really pretty happy that we were able to make passes when the right opportunities presented themselves, and make our way from fifth to second. There toward the end, maybe we just weren't quite fast enough. Santos was really strong tonight, and I was going to try my best to keep up and hope to find a way around. I hated to see his race end like that, but I'm still thankful for the chance to be in contention at the finish and the opportunity to come away with a win.
“The Doran Binks team has been working really hard to advance our sprint car program, and it’s great to see their hard work has helped us continue to improve,” he added. “I also want to thank our sponsors, Mission Foods, Glenn Farms, and everyone who makes this possible for us.”
After one false start there were a total of eight caution flags in the 100-lapper.
Roahrig set the fastest lap of the race followed by O’Gara and Swanson.
The race was streamed live by MAVTV on Flo Racing.
The next 500 Sprint Car Tour race is July 22 at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Mich. Prior to that the Doran Binks team will compete in a USAC Silver Crown race July 20 at Winchester (Ind.) Speedway.
By: Richie Murray – USAC Media
Oregon, Wisconsin (June 23, 2023)………Throughout the first three events of the 2023 USAC Silver Crown National Championship season, Kody Swanson had dominated the stat book in terms of total laps led.
The Kingsburg, Calif. native led all three races for a total of 163 out of a possible 246 laps – more than two-thirds of all the laps that had been run thus far this season.
Despite that fact, he had zero wins to show for his efforts.
Throughout Friday night’s Bytec Dairyland 100 at Wisconsin’s Madison International Speedway, the seven-time series champion put that odd little anomaly to bed with a dominant wire-to-wire performance, leading all 100 laps in his Doran-Binks Racing/Mission Foods – Glenn Farms/Beast/Lanci Ford.
The victory was Swanson’s first of the year in Silver Crown competition, and his record-extending 38th overall, as he captured his third career triumph with the series at Madison in four tries, having made the drive to winner’s circle in 2018-19-23.
In 2022, Swanson’s early season swoon left him winless throughout the first handful of rounds before finally finding his mojo in late June. In 2023, the timeline matches up once again with Swanson winning the first race held following the summer solstice.
For Swanson, this win came not a moment too soon.
“We’ve been trying all year,” Swanson related. “It just hasn’t quite fallen our way. We’ve been running well on the dirt too, but we just haven’t been strong enough to finish at the end. Logan (Seavey) was the class of the field last week at Port Royal. Bobby (Santos) was really good at IRP. Justin (Grant) and Brady (Bacon) were both great at Belleville. So, there’s a lot of top-caliber guys you’re trying to win against. That’s why each one of these races that you do win means a lot.”
Swanson’s perfect evening began by turning the fastest lap in Dirt Draft Practice, followed by his 43rd career Honest Abe Roofing Fast Qualifying time, which earned him the pole position where he proceeded to lead all 100 laps en route to victory.
As a matter of fact, Swanson is the second consecutive driver to achieve that exact same feat at Madison after C.J. Leary did just the same in 2022. However, on this particular night, Leary would not even have a chance to repeat his Dairyland 100 triumph, with his engine down two cylinders during practice and qualifying, which forced him and his Klatt Enterprises team to the sideline as a scratch for the main event.
With that said, the race went on, and from the word “go,” Swanson had a chokehold on the entirety of the 21-car starting field. Swanson stepped out in front of the line at the initial start ahead first-time Silver Crown front row starter Derek Bischak and began his 100-lap patrol of the field.
On lap seven, things went awry for eighth place running Taylor Ferns who came to a stop and turned around backwards in the middle of turn two. She’d rejoin the field at the tail, and ultimately, soldiered on to finish in the 13th position.
Thirteenth starting Bobby Santos shuffled the deck at the forefront of the field as he made a charge around the outside of Bischak on the back straightaway on lap 20. Tyler Roahrig followed suit as he too zipped past Bischak with an outside pass on the back straight to take over the third position a lap later on the 21st circuit.
Bischak, aiming to top his best career finish of fourth achieved in his most recent series start at IRP in May, came to an end on lap 33 when a shower of sparks emanated from the rear of his car, sending the fourth-place driver and car into a spin in turns three and four. The incident put a premature conclusion to the 2019 USAC Silver Crown Rookie of the Year’s night, stifling him to a 20th place result.
Swanson continued to hold serve up front as the race rifled through the middle stages, maintaining a near two second lead throughout, keeping Santos and Roahrig in check as they received a constant view of the No. 77 adorned tail tank of Swanson’s ride lap-after-lap around the half-mile paved oval.
However, the race once again was brought to a half on lap 61 for the 13th place car of Bryan Gossel who came to a stop sideways atop the banking in between turns one and two, ending the evening for the 2020 series Rookie of the Year.
When racing resumed, Mario Clouser made a forward surge, powering into the fourth position at the entrance of turn three underneath series point leader Logan Seavey on the 71st lap.
The yellow flag flew once more for the final time on lap 81 when 2020 series champion Justin Grant (7th) slowed with a flat right rear tire, while simultaneously, Billy Wease (10th) also stopped in turn one, ending his race with a 17th place result while Grant motored on to finish 16th, one lap down in the running order.
Kody Swanson's 1.1 second lead was erased due to the caution. However, the song remained the same for Swanson as the race resumed with the lap 86 restart, and remained the same for everyone who chased him on this night. Swanson was in total control throughout, and in the end, finished 2.392 seconds ahead of runner-up Bobby Santos while Tyler Roahrig collected a third with Mario Clouser fourth and Logan Seavey fifth.
Guided by the voice of spotter and wife Jordan Swanson in his ear, Swanson was seemingly at ease, but considering the aspect of how the first three events of the season shook out following superb performances, Swanson wasn’t going to allow himself to feel completely comfortable until he pulled into victory lane.
“My wife does a great job, and it makes a huge difference for me just having that peace of mind,” Swanson iterated. “But there’s no peace of mind to be had when you’ve got Bobby Santos and Tyler Roahrig coming, and you know whatever gap you have, most of the time, it’s by their choice. They always make me wonder if I’m going too hard, and maybe I was. I knew Bobby was there, especially with about 15 to go. Maybe he was preserving (his equipment) for a green-white-checkered there; he’s so good at that and he’s stolen them from others that way too. So, you never breathe a sigh of relief until the checkered flag falls.”
Bobby Santos brought home a second-place finish in his DJ Racing/Classic Corvettes – Brown & Miller Racing Solutions – Simpson/Beast/Speedway Chevy. In four career USAC Silver Crown starts at Madison, he's now finished as the runner-up three times. The Franklin, Mass. native has been a second-place finisher in 2018-22-23, and was fourth in the 2019 event, but feels his day is coming soon for a first Silver Crown victory in the state of Wisconsin.
“Silver Crown racing has really changed,” Santos revealed. “It’s a 100-lap sprint car race, honestly. We’re pushing as hard as we could. I’m getting sick of running second, but we’ve got to keep working to be better. This track is fun, but it’s a difficult racetrack. I’ve been second two years in a row here, but that’s the way it goes. We’ll get one.”
It certainly wasn’t a bad introduction to Madison International Speedway for first-time visitor Tyler Roahrig and his Legacy Autosport/Metalloid – Penske Shocks/Legacy/Stanton Chevy. The Plymouth, Ind. racer finished third in his first Dairyland 100 run. It’s a familiar spot for Roahrig who has finished 3rd, 3rd and 3rd in his past three pavement USAC Silver Crown starts. In fact, in four of his five career series starts, he came away with a podium result. Not too shabby for a first impression.
“Just getting your car to handle here is tough,” Roahrig acknowledged. “It’s got really tight corners and you’ve got to drag race down the straightaways. It’s not bad for my first time here, but we’ll take some notes and come back again.”
TOLEDO, Ohio, June 19 — Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson won the 40-lap feature sanctioned by the 500 Sprint Car Tour Presented by Auto Value Bumper to Bumper Parts Stores Sunday at Toledo Speedway. The asphalt sprint car action was part of the Father’s Day Special Presented by Monroe Asphalt.
Although he was the fastest qualifier in the Mission Foods No. 77 also sponsored by Glenn Farms, Swanson had to start seventh in the 16-car field due to the inversion and Tyler Roahrig starting at the rear because his team changed a tire before the race.
Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who now lives in Indianapolis, got straight to work. With Chevrolet power prepped by Dan Binks, the series’ defending champion passed Kyle O’Gara, Bobby Santos III and Taylor Ferns to rise from seventh to fourth by the end of the first lap of the half-mile asphalt oval.
He passed Jackson Macenko for third on lap two to trail only Dakoda Armstrong and Justin Harper when the first of three yellows waved. The caution was for Tommy Nichols, who stopped on the track due to a mechanical issue.
Swanson used the outside groove to pass Harper at the end of the frontstretch on lap three to move into second place, but then another yellow that extended to a red flag waved with three laps down when Nichols crashed into the Turn 1 wall. He emerged unhurt.
Swanson took the lead on the restart by passing Armstrong off Turn 2, and he led the rest of the way.
Santos passed Armstrong for second on lap seven, but Swanson already had over a 2-second lead. He stretched his advantage to over 3 seconds by lap 11. O’Gara passed Armstrong for third on lap 16, but four laps later the third and final yellow waved for Ferns, who stopped on the frontstretch while running in fifth place. Roahrig had been steadily marching through the field during the first half, and with Ferns’ departure he moved into fifth.
Roahrig passed Armstrong for fourth on lap 22 while Swanson worked on padding his lead over Santos. O’Gara dropped out of the top five on lap 27. With 10 laps to go Swanson had a 2.144-second lead over Santos, with Roahrig third, Armstrong fourth and Tony Main fifth. Roahrig passed Santos for second on lap 33, but Swanson was 2.976 seconds ahead. With no other cautions to close the gap, Swanson enjoyed a 1.839-second lead over Roahrig at the checkered. Santos finished third followed by Armstrong and Kaylee Bryson.
Swanson set the fastest lap of the race on lap seven with a time of 14.893 seconds. Santos ran the second-fastest lap of the race with a 15.156 on lap eight.
Swanson was the fastest qualifier with a 14.716, although the top six qualifiers were within 0.5 of a second of his time.
Swanson’s victory came during a grueling Father’s Day weekend. He placed fifth in the USAC Silver Crown race at Port Royal (Pa.) Speedway Saturday night, but that race ended at 12:26 a.m. The team had to load up, make the six-hour drive to Toledo, get set up at Toledo, and be on the track for Sunday’s first practice session at 11:30 a.m.
The 500 Sprint Car Tour does not permit spotters, and Swanson said afterward that it sounded like his rivals were right behind him the whole time despite his big lead. “I was definitely nervous through lapped traffic there at the end,” he said. "They were all racing each other hard to the finish, and I knew we were giving up time, but I was trying to not get ourselves in a bad position for anything to go wrong.
“Toledo is a neat place to race,” he added. “When Tyler had to start from the rear, maybe that played in our favor today, because I knew that he and Bobby would run well; they always do. I’m just thankful for the opportunity, and the hard work that the Doran Binks crew put in to make it happen. I’m also thankful for our sponsors, which include Mission Foods and Glenn Farms.”
Celebrating in victory lane was definitely a nice way to spend Father’s Day. Swanson was joined there by his wife, Jordan; their sons, Trevor and Adam; and the rest of the Doran Binks Racing crew.
The series’ races are streamed live by MAVTV for Flo Racing.
The next 500 Sprint Car Tour race is the Gene Nolen Classic on Saturday, July 8 at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway.
PORT ROYAL, Pa., June 18 — Top-five finishes are crucial when trying to defend a championship, and Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson recorded another one in pursuit of his unprecedented eighth USAC Silver Crown title when he finished fifth in the 50-lap USAC Silver Crown race Saturday night at Port Royal Speedway.
His Mission Foods No. 77, a Maxim chassis powered by a Hampshire Chevy engine that is also sponsored by Glenn Farms, started second in the 26-car field on the half-mile clay oval, but Swanson beat polesitter Mitchel Moles into the first turn and led the first 21 laps. Brady Bacon passed Moles for second on lap two and tried to get around Swanson both on the low side and the high side to no avail. By lap 10 Swanson had a 1.567-second lead over Bacon, who was followed by Moles, Chase Dietz and Logan Seavey.
The fight for second was intense, which allowed Swanson to increase his lead to over 2 seconds by lap 13. Seavey got around Bacon for second three laps later, and he was able to cut Swanson’s lead to 0.796 of a second by lap 20 when the second of three cautions waved.
Swanson fought Seavey off on the restart but Seavey took the lead in Turn 3 on lap 22, relegating Swanson to second. On lap 24 Swanson, Bacon and Dietz were three abreast flying down the frontstretch as they battled for second. That battle allowed Seavey to build up a 3-second lead over Swanson by lap 31.
Swanson held second until lap 37, when Dietz got by. Bacon passed him on the following lap to relegate him to fourth.
The third and final yellow flew with 46 laps down for an incident involving Trey Burke and Mario Clouser. Carmen Perigo slipped under Swanson for fourth on the restart, but Swanson was able to finish fifth by holding off Justin Grant until the checkered.
Seavey, who also won this race last year, took the checkered over Dietz, who had a stellar series debut. Bacon was third followed by Perigo and Swanson.
"It's tough to lead laps and not come away with a win, but it is nice to be disappointed with a top-five finish for me at a place like Port Royal," Swanson said afterwards.
"I'm thankful for the hard work from everyone involved with our dirt Silver Crown effort. We had a good run in qualifying and have been strong at different parts of the night, but just need to find something to keep our Mission Foods/Glenn Farms No. 77 a little better at the end of the feature. All considered, I think they're good problems for us to have this early in the [dirt] season, and I am grateful for all of us working together to keep our dirt program improving."
Swanson set the fastest lap of the race on lap 3 with a time of 22.273 seconds. He qualified second with a 20.918 to Moles’ new track record of 20.899.
The next USAC Silver Crown race is the Bytec Dairyland 100 this coming Friday, June 23, at Madison International Speedway in Oregon, Wis.
All of the USAC Silver Crown races are streamed live by Flo Racing.
MARNE, Mich., June 11 — Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson qualified third, started at the rear due to a tire change, and flew through the field to finish fourth Saturday night at Berlin Raceway in a 40-lap feature sanctioned by the 500 Sprint Car Tour Presented by Auto Value Bumper to Bumper Parts Stores.
Driving the Mission Foods/Glenn Farms No. 77 asphalt sprint car, Swanson was always among the top drivers in practice and qualifying, setting the fastest time in the second practice session and qualifying third, just 0.390 off fastest qualifier Tyler Roahrig’s 15.493.
But Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who now lives in Indianapolis, had to start at the rear of the 18-car field for the feature per the rules after the Doran Binks crew changed a tire prior to the start of the race. It was the right decision, as the handling of the car was immediately better after the switch.
His start was spectacular. Powered by a Binks Chevy engine, Swanson’s No. 77 was already in the top 10 by lap two. The defending series champ took ninth on lap four, eighth on lap eight, seventh on lap nine and sixth on lap 11 as the cars blazed around the nearly circular and very challenging 0.4375-mile asphalt oval, which has 13-degree turns and 9-degree straightaways.
He stayed in sixth place from lap 11 through lap 16, running between Dakoda Armstrong and Jake McElfresh. He moved into the top five on lap 17 when he got around Armstrong, and then he set his sights on the driver in fourth, Billy Wease.
Three laps after the halfway point, on lap 23, he passed Wease for fourth place, and that’s where he finished.
There was only one caution flag, which flew on lap 32 when Taylor Ferns stopped in Turn 4 while running tenth. She was able to restart. The caution was welcomed by most of the top runners, as it meant they didn’t have to deal with lapped traffic in the seven-lap run to the checkered.
There was some shuffling of positions right after the restart in the pack of cars Swanson was running with, although the positions remained the same at the start-finish line.
“On the restart I got a good run to the outside of Kyle [O’Gara] for third, but Billy [Wease] ended up being able to get past us both on the bottom, so that left us trying to race our way back to fourth," Swanson explained afterwards. “We never made any contact; it was just hard racing.”
Roahrig won handily over Bobby Santos III, Wease, Swanson and O’Gara. Armstrong, McElfresh, Shane Butler, Jackson Macenko and Justin Harper rounded out the top 10.
“All things considered, we had a decent night," Swanson said. “We chose to start in the back with the tire issue, but the car was pretty good during the race. That’s probably the best we’ve had the car at Berlin, so I feel like we at least made progress. I'm optimistic that we learned more about what we're missing, but I feel like we've all got a way to go to catch up to Roahrig at this track.”
He can take consolation in the fact that the team is very close. Roahrig set the fastest lap of the race on lap 37 with a time of 15.802. Swanson set the second-fastest lap of the race on lap 4 with a 15.997.
The race was streamed live by MAVTV for Flo Racing.
The next race on the 500 Sprint Car Tour schedule is coming right up June 18 at Toledo (Ohio) Speedway. The evening before that the team also plans to compete in the USAC Silver Crown race at Port Royal (Pa.) Speedway. Another event in the busy month of June is the USAC Silver Crown race June 23 at Madison Int’l Speedway in Oregon, Wis.
ANDERSON, Ind., May 29 — Doran Binks Racing’s Kody Swanson led more than half of the 75th running of the Lucas Oil Little 500 Presented by UAW Saturday night at Anderson Speedway, and he finished on the podium in third place in the team’s Mission Foods No. 77 in the most prestigious asphalt sprint car race in the world.
Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who now lives in Indianapolis, was never lower than fourth place during the 500-lap contest on Anderson’s quarter-mile, high-banked oval, which is famous for starting 33 sprint cars three abreast and being long enough to require two mandatory pit stops in each half of the race.
Swanson started on the pole after being the fastest qualifier in first-round qualifying last Thursday. He immediately took command, and led the first 194 laps with the No. 77, which is powered by a Binks Chevrolet V8.
He made his first pit stop working lap 195 under a caution flag, but didn’t lose a lap and only dropped to fourth place.
He moved from fourth to third on lap 280 when his brother, Tanner, dropped out while leading with an apparent motor issue.
He was running in third place behind defending winner Tyler Roahrig and Caleb Armstrong when he made his second pit stop under caution on lap 359, which dropped him back to fourth from laps 360 through 379.
He regained third on lap 380 when Armstrong had an issue in Turn 2 to bring out another yellow; second on lap 384 after Roahrig made a pit stop, and back into the lead on lap 385 when the eventual winner, rookie Jake Trainor, also pitted.
Swanson continued at the top of the scoreboard through lap 445. He dropped to second place on lap 446 when Trainor made what became the winning move.
Swanson remained in second place through lap 498, but he was dealing with some issues which allowed Caleb Armstong to get by him at the very end. Swanson was only 0.367 of a second behind Armstrong at the checkered.
“We started having steering issues about lap 180, and it just kept getting worse,” Swanson said afterwards. “With about 100 to go the power steering was pretty well gone, and it finally gave out with 10 laps to go. This is a tough race, and it’s all part of the battle!
“I’m grateful for everyone on the Doran Binks Racing team for all their hard work, and for the support of Mission Foods, Glenn Farms, and our other marketing partners.”
Trainor, Caleb Armstrong and Swanson were the only drivers to complete all 500 laps. Jacob Wilson finished fourth and Logan Seavey placed fifth; they were both three laps down. Dalton Armstrong, Derek Bischak and Roahrig were next, four laps down. Brady Bacon (six laps down) and Davey Hamilton Jr. (eight laps down) rounded out the top 10.
There was a yellow before the race started and unofficially 15 caution periods and one red flag during it.
Roahrig kept intense pressure on Swanson in the early going. It wasn’t until lap 88 that Swanson was able to build up a 1.842 second lead when Roahrig had some problems with lapped traffic, but it decreased again when Roahrig cleared them.
C .J. Leary ran second behind Swanson from lap 385 through lap 411 and he also kept the pressure up until he slowed with mechanical problems.
Swanson set his fastest lap of the race on lap 41 with a time of 11.445 seconds. It was the third-fastest lap run by anyone in the race.
In preliminary action Swanson won his fourth pole for this event on Thursday with a time of 43.614 seconds for four laps and the best one-lap time of 10.843 seconds. Roahrig qualified second, just 0.168 off Swanson’s time. Trainor, Emerson Axsom, Leary, Billy Wease, Shane Hollingsworth, Seavey, Kyle O’Gara and Bischak rounded out the top 10 in qualifying to set the 33-car field.
The Little 500 is part of the 500 Sprint Car Tour, but it’s a non-points-paying special event. The next race on that schedule is June 10 at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Mich., followed by a race June 18 at Toledo (Ohio) Speedway.
The USAC Silver Crown series also has two races in June: June 17 at Port Royal (Pa.) Speedway, and June 23 at Madison Int’l Speedway in Oregon, Wis.
BROWNSBURG, Ind., May 26 — Kody Swanson’s quest for a fifth victory in the Hoosier Hundred will have to wait until 2024, but he led 115 laps of the 146-lap USAC Silver Crown race Friday night at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in Doran Binks Racing’s Mission Foods No. 77.
After qualifying second, just 0.269 of a second off Bobby Santos III’s pole-winning effort, Swanson took the lead from Santos in Turn 2 on the initial lap and then led the first 115 laps of the race. At one point he had built up over a 3-second margin over Santos with the No. 77, which is also sponsored by Glenn Farms and is powered by a Lanci Ford V8.
However, working lap 116 the car rolled to a stop with mechanical difficulties, which later proved to be a broken cam drive that turns the fuel pump.
Swanson ended up 19th in the unofficial rundown for the race, which attracted the largest car count for a pavement USAC Silver Crown race in 18 years with 35 entries.
Swanson posted a two-lap qualifying time of 41.995 seconds on the 0.686-mile oval to Santos’s 41.726. Swanson set the fastest lap of anyone in the race when he took only 21.772 seconds to circle the track on lap 50.
He was able to march away from Santos not only at the start but also during four restarts, and he picked his way carefully through lapped traffic.
He had a 1.019-second lead by lap 39 before a yellow waved to erase his advantage, but he had built it up to over a second again by lap 60. By lap 70 he was nearly 2 seconds ahead of Santos, and by lap 77 he had a 2.259-second lead. He stretched that to 3.024 seconds on lap 79 and 3.792 seconds by lap 81. His advantage was 3.651 seconds when C.J. Leary brought out a yellow on lap 89 when he stopped in Turn 3.
Santos drew right behind Swanson for the restart on lap 102, but three laps later Swanson already had a 0.976-second lead. His advantage was 1.840 seconds on lap 114 until he slowed to a stop to bring out the fifth caution on lap 116.
Santos went on to win over Logan Seavey, Tyler Roahrig, Derek Bischak and Taylor Ferns.
“There was no warning; the power steering went out and then it shut off,” Swanson said afterwards. “I was being careful and the car was working well; we were just trying to be there at the end. I was trying to save my tires because I knew Bobby would have a big challenge near the end of the race. It’s a bummer we didn’t get to race it out at the finish for the fans, but we’ll try again next time.”
Next time is tomorrow night, Saturday, May 27 when Swanson will start on the pole for the Lucas Oil Little 500 Presented by UAW at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway. It is the biggest asphalt sprint car race in the world, and a non-points special event sanctioned by the 500 Sprint Car Tour.
Anderson Speedway - The 75th Annual Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW kicked off Wednesday afternoon in front of an eager crowd. With 39 non-wing sprint cars taking the track and setting an official time, Anderson Speedway’s ¼ mile oval was kept busy for the full practice session. Fans saw familiar faces and new news atop today’s scoring chart on what turned out to be a fast day for the field.
Speed was the name of the game on Wednesday with Kody Swanson clocking in a lap time of 11.016, only 0.217 off the official track record set by Tyler Roahrig in last year’s pole day qualifying. Swanson was not the only driver to show consistent speed as Jake Trainor, Tyler Roahrig, Kyle O’Gara, and Emerson Axsom were all within two-tenths of Swanson’s fast time. Times were tight across the board as the top 34 drivers in today’s practice session all clocked in within 1 second of each other. Some may argue that with the consistent speeds shown in today’s practice session that this may be the tightest field in Little 500 history.
Storyline from the first day of on track action for the Little 500 include the entry of Kyle O’Gara, the reigning Glen Niebel Champion, and the announcement of two-time Little 500 champion Jacob Wilson replacing Scott Hampton in the #51 United Services Group machine. O’Gara’s entry into the event came when the pit gates opened, causing an instant excitement for Little 500 race fans. After his impressive showing at Anderson lately, winning the 2022 and 2023 Glen Niebel Classic, O’Gara was pegged as an early favorite to compete for a front row spot and a victory. O’Gara started his week off strong, finishing fourth on the speed charts.
An eventful evening led into an eventful morning with the announcement that Scott Hampton had removed himself from the race and Jacob Wilson would be replacing him. Wilson, a two-time Little 500 champion, was the only person Hampton could think of to replace him. The car proved to be strong with Wilson behind the wheel as the team finished seventh in the official time sheets. Wilson will surely be a name to watch heading into CB Fabricating Pole Day.
The 75th Annual Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW is set to be run on Saturday, May 27th at 8:00pm. CB Fabricating Pole Day is scheduled for Thursday, May 25 from 11:30am – 3:30pm. Final practice and Bump Day is set for Friday, May 26 from 11:30am to 3:30pm. Grandstand admission is free for fans Thursday and Friday, and race day tickets are reserved seating only and are $45 each. Tickets for the 75th Annual Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW are on sale now and can be purchased by calling (765) 642-0206 ex. 121 or by stopping by the ticket office. Fans can also stream the event live via MAVTV on Floracing by clicking here to subscribe or stream.
BELLEVILLE, Kan., May 21 — Kody Swanson and Doran Binks Racing got the 2023 USAC Silver Crown season off to a great start Saturday at the Belleville High Banks by setting a new track record to win the pole, setting the fastest lap of the race, leading the most laps, and finishing second in the 50-lap main event with the No. 77 sponsored by Mission Foods and Glenn Farms.
It was an impressive performance on the unique, high-banked half-mile dirt track as Swanson began the pursuit of his eighth series title. He is the winningest driver in the history of USAC’s top series and the defending champion. After Saturday’s season opener he leads the point standings over Brady Bacon, 73 to 70.
The Lebanon, Ohio-based team brought a Maxim chassis that Swanson used to drive for DePalma Motorsports out of retirement, and the Indianapolis-based driver led the first 27 laps of the race with his old car, fitted with a Bob Hampshire Chevy engine. By lap 13 he had a whopping 4.018-second lead over the second-place runner at the time, Justin Grant.
That huge advantage dropped a bit when he had trouble threading his way around some cars he was lapping, but he still had nearly a 2-second lead over Grant when the first yellow waved on lap 21. That caution was needed after the sixth-place driver, Mario Clouser, had a flat right-rear tire and clipped the fourth-place driver, Wayne Johnson, causing Johnson to stop in Turn 3.
Yellow flag laps didn’t count, and Swanson got a good restart and started to rebuild his advantage. At the halfway point he was nearly a second ahead of Grant.
However, Grant was able to cut his deficit to 0.453 seconds two laps later, and Grant took the lead with a slider to the inside in Turn 4 on lap 28 that continued through Turn 2 with Grant on the outside.
Four laps later Bacon got under Swanson for second in Turn 2 on lap 32. Bacon then set his sights on Grant, while Swanson held off C.J. Leary to maintain third.
Grant led from laps 28 through 42, but Bacon got around him on lap 43 to become the race’s third leader.
Grant was able to stay close to Bacon. Grant was on the low side and Bacon was high on lap 46 while they were both navigating lapped traffic and doing sliders. Grant’s slider worked best for a few seconds and he took the lead. Grant came up the track a bit following his slider and Bacon was powering down the frontstretch after his when room ran out. They came together while they were side by side, with Grant flipping hard into the catch fence close to Turn 1 to bring out a red flag. Luckily he wasn’t hurt.
That elevated Swanson back into second place behind Bacon for the restart, but after only one lap the yellow came out again when Leary, who was fourth, and Mitchel Moles, who was fifth, tangled in Turn 2 and Leary stopped low on the track. Both were unable to continue.
Bacon was able to get a good restart and he remained in front for the last three laps to post a 3.250-second victory over Swanson. Swanson was 1.567 seconds ahead of the third-place finisher, Chase Stockon, who started 13th and was the hard charger. Shane Cottle finished fourth and Logan Seavey finished fifth in the 24-car field.
Swanson set the fastest lap of the race while he was leading on lap seven with a time of 18.152 seconds. Leary set the second-fastest lap of the race followed by Grant, Bacon and Johnson.
Earlier in the day Swanson set a new track record of 16.823 seconds in winning his 42nd career pole in this series, extending his record in that category.
“It was a monumental effort,” Swanson said afterwards. “We led early. The track slicked off, and at the end we didn’t have anything for him. Congrats to Brady and Sean Michael for their win. I’m just thankful to be part of this team and to be surrounded by all these great people, and for the support of Mission Foods and Glenn Farms.”
The race, which was the first USAC Silver Crown race at this particular track in eight years, was streamed live by Flo Racing.
Doran Binks Racing and Swanson now have a monumental week ahead of them, as they tackle the Hoosier Hundred USAC Silver Crown race at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in Brownsburg, Ind., on Friday, May 26 followed by the Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW 500 Sprint Car Tour race at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway the next day, Saturday, May 27.
From USAC Racing: The fastest lap ever turned by a USAC Silver Crown car at the Belleville High Banks!
You saw it tonight with Kody Swanson rocketing around the half-mile with a new track record lap of 16.823 during Honest Abe Roofing Qualifying.
That's the 42nd fast time of his USAC Silver Crown career.
Mission Foods #2Fast2Tasty #FueledByMission
By: Richie Murray – USAC Media
Belleville, Kansas (May 15, 2023)………Kody Swanson’s run with DePalma Motorsports between 2014-18 made them the most successful USAC Silver Crown pairing in the history of the sport.
In fact, Swanson and DePalma’s 21 wins and four championships together in a five-year span are second to none.
Five years ago, it seemed as if the days of the iconic white and red-lettered No. 63 were gone forever. The team had retired from the sport at the top of their game, and with that, USAC made an unprecedented decision in permanently retiring the No. 63 from use in Silver Crown competition.
While the number 63 itself won’t be returning anytime soon to the racetrack, as it turns out, a major part of the 63 team will play a starring role in the upcoming Silver Crown season for Swanson and the Doran-Binks Racing team he drives for.
Over the last two seasons in 2021-22, Swanson and Doran have teamed up to run solely on the pavement. This year, however, the team initiated plans to add a dirt car to the stable. But one major factor remained unresolved. They needed a dirt car.
That’s where the 63 comes in.
Some years ago, a friend of Swanson’s acquired the last DePalma Motorsports No. 63, which ran throughout the 2018 season. With it, his plans included taking it on the vintage racing circuit.
After a half-decade, however, the car remained set in place, just a phone call away. When the time came, Doran-Binks Racing reacquired the very same Maxim chassis and frame, bringing the car out of “retirement” to race again throughout 2023 for the first time since it left the track at Ohio’s Eldora Speedway in September of 2018.
In that time, much has changed all around us. But a few things have remained the same ever since. Swanson is still winning USAC Silver Crown races at a record clip and he’s still capturing championships. Also, his dirt car has not changed its features either, just its stripes, with Mission Foods sponsorship and a big and bold 77 adorning the tail tank and nose.
“There’s so much of it that’s the same,” Swanson explained. “It’s got a new look, a new number and new vinyl on it, but most everything else is exactly the same.”
Being the car he raced to his fourth career Silver Crown championship, Swanson retains a special fondness for the machine, which he recently got behind the wheel of for a test and tune at Eldora where the team got some laps in and made sure everything was in working order.
“The car ran in one my favorite dirt Silver Crown races ever at Terre Haute that year,” Swanson recalled of the 2018 dirt season opener. “We had engine troubles, missed qualifying, then changed an engine. We started from the tail of a 12-car field in the B-Main and got second. Then, we came from the tail and into the lead in the feature and got wrecked, then came back from the tail again and got second. That was the first race on that car, and in our next race with the car, we won our fourth Hoosier Hundred.”
Like a pair of worn-in shoes that just feels right, the situation brings an air of comfortability to Swanson, not only with the car itself but also with the people it brings along to the team when Swanson was on his mid-2010s roll.
“I’ve been talking to (National Sprint Car Hall of Famer) Bob Hampshire a good bit about it, and Clark Lamme, who was a longtime mechanic with Hampshire, and he’s been coming over and helping out at the Doran shop too,” Swanson said. “Having Clark helping oversee it makes me feel a lot better about venturing into a new discipline for the rest of the team and me getting back into it in that capacity.”
Lamme will go on the road with the team to all the dirt races this season while Hampshire has offered his extensive knowledge over the phone. Kent Wolters, a longtime racer himself and who Swanson raced for with great success in sprint cars, will also lend a hand during the season.
“It’s really nice to have those people in your corner as much as a familiar car,” Swanson related. “Having some good friends be a part of it really helps out too.”
RACE DETAILS:
Swanson starts up his USAC Silver Crown National Championship this Friday-Saturday, May 19-20, at the Belleville (Kan.) High Banks, where he previously won a 50-lapper in 2014 for the DePalma Motorsports team.
On Friday, it’s practice night for the USAC Silver Crown division at Belleville with three separate sessions throughout the night in conjunction with a full program for the USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship. The pits open at 3pm Central. Front gates open at 5:30pm. Hot laps start at 6:30pm, followed by qualifying and racing. General admission and reserved tickets are $25. General admission and reserved tickets for ages 12 and under are $15. A one-day pit pass is $35 and two-day pit passes are $60.
On Saturday, it’s a full race day for both the USAC Silver Crown and USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship divisions. The pits open at 3pm Central. Front gates open at 5:30pm. Hot laps start at 6:30pm, followed by qualifying and racing. General admission and reserved tickets are $30. General admission and reserved tickets for ages 12 and under are $20. A one-day pit pass is $40 and two-day pit passes are $60.
The entire events for both nights at Belleville, can be watched LIVE on FloRacing at https://flosports.link/3ZjeooQ.
By: Richie Murray – USAC Media
Speedway, Indiana (April 12, 2023)………USAC Silver Crown racing is back in a big way.
That could be said unequivocally in more ways than one with a record 16 full-time entries set to embark on the National Championship trail throughout the 2023 season.
This Sunday’s, April 16 season opening race on the dirt 1/2-mile of the Terre Haute (Ind.) Action Track brings us joy and it brings us questions that we’ll soon get to see answered during this year’s 13-race schedule – seven on pavement, six on dirt.
SWANSON IN-HOUSE WITH DORAN-BINKS
After scoring two championships during the last two USAC Silver Crown seasons, Kody Swanson had been in a situation in which he had to utilize multiple teams, multiple crew chiefs and multiple shop locations in order to reach his goal. The method worked, and from the outside vantage point, he made it seem almost seamless as he racked his record-extending seventh series title in 2022.
This year, however, Swanson (Kingsburg, Calif.) and Doran-Binks Racing will have the whole operation in house, in one location at Kevin Doran’s Lebanon, Ohio base with team co-owner Dan Binks coming aboard from the sports car racing world where both he and Doran have had immense success.
The team has been excellent on the pavement with the USAC Silver Crown series over the past two seasons with Swanson winning three apiece, all on the pavement, in both 2021 and 2022. Together, in 10 series starts, the team has won six times, and has never finished worse than fourth. It will be interesting to see how their pavement performance translates to the dirt in the coming year. (click here for full story)
OPENING RACE DETAILS:
The 20th running of the Sumar Classic features the USAC Silver Crown National Championship along with the UMP Modifieds this Sunday, April 16, at the Terre Haute Action Track 1/2-mile dirt track in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Pits open at 1pm Eastern, grandstands open at 3pm, drivers meeting at 4pm and practice at 5pm followed immediately by qualifications and racing.
General admission tickets are $30 for ages 11 & up and free for kids age 10 & under. Infield tickets are $20 for ages 11 & up and free for kids age 10 & under.
Check out these comfy everyday pieces for all of the tiniest race fans! Matching checkered sets, Easter tees, checkered socks & hats, and more! Shop now!
MISSION FOODS TO SPONSOR SWANSON
In Doran Binks Racing No. 77 in 2023
For USAC Silver Crown and 500 Sprint Car Tour Series
LEBANON, Ohio, March 29 — Mission Foods, the leading producer of tortillas in the United States and the manufacturer of a variety of authentic Mexican products, will be the primary sponsor of Kody Swanson this year in both the USAC Silver Crown and the 500 Sprint Car Tour series.
Swanson is the defending champion of both series.
Swanson’s cars will be fielded by Kevin Doran and Dan Binks working together as Doran Binks Racing, and they will be based at Doran Racing’s headquarters in Lebanon, Ohio. Glenn Farms will be the team’s associate sponsor. The race cars will all be No. 77.
Doran Racing fielded Swanson’s asphalt USAC Silver Crown car last year. This year Doran Binks Racing will field both the asphalt and dirt USAC Silver Crown cars for Swanson.
Doran Binks Racing plans to compete in all 14 USAC Silver Crown races in 2023. As a seven-time champion, Swanson’s 37 victories make him the winningest driver in the history of this series, the top class of USAC.
Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who now lives in Indianapolis, won three races enroute to last year’s USAC Silver Crown title. In August he beat his own world speed record for a traditional USAC Silver Crown car with a speed of 146.699 miles per hour during qualifying at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill.
The 500 Sprint Car Tour consists of 10 races this year. It includes the most prestigious asphalt sprint car race in the world, the 75th annual Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW on May 27 at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway. Swanson is a three-time winner of the Little 500.
Last year Doran Racing and Swanson posted two victories, six podium finishes and won the inaugural 500 Sprint Car Tour championship using engines prepared by Binks.
"I'm excited about this year and the season ahead,” said Swanson. “This is a tremendous opportunity to work together with some great friends and talented racers, and do it all out of the same building. I'm thankful for the chance to partner with the Mission brand, and hope to represent an iconic company well while competing for wins and championships."
While Swanson is a legend in USAC, Doran and Binks are both legends in endurance sports car racing.
Doran has won the Rolex 24 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway as a crew chief, a team member, a team manager, a car owner, and even as a car manufacturer. Prior to fielding cars under Doran Racing, he had many victories with the late Al Holbert, a five-time IMSA Camel GT champion; the MOMO Ferrari team, and Doran Lista Racing.
Binks, of Brighton, Mich., was the crew chief for Corvette Racing’s factory sports car team for nearly 20 years. Under his direction that team won the 24 Hours of Le Mans six times and numerous IMSA championships.
Prior to becoming one of the most recognizable faces of Corvette Racing, Binks won IMSA GTU races with a Mazda RX-7 with various drivers; enjoyed great success in Trans Am, and even was a crew chief for Roush Fenway Racing in NASCAR.
The 500 Sprint Car Tour season opens Saturday, April 8 at Anderson Speedway in Anderson, Ind.
The USAC Silver Crown series opens the following weekend with the 20th running of the Sumar Classic on Sunday, April 16 at the Terre Haute (Ind.) Action Track.
About Mission Foods:
The Gruma Corporation began in 1949 and is today the leading tortilla manufacturer worldwide. Mission Foods is a proud subsidiary of Gruma, and as the #1 tortilla company in the United States, manufactures a wide variety of authentic Mexican products. Five years ago it opened a state-of-the-art plant in Dallas, Texas, with the capacity to produce 30 million tortillas daily. Today Mission Foods is a global company, with special emphasis not only on the United States but also Mexico, Central America, Europe, China, Malaysia, and Australia. Its products include flour and corn tortillas; tostadas; low-carb, whole wheat, organic and gluten-free items; wraps; flatbreads such as naan, pita and roti; tortilla chips and organic chips; chicharrones; salsa, and dips. For more information see missionfoods.com.
SOUTHWICK, Mass., Dec. 7 — Tim Bertrand, owner of Bertrand Motorsports, is pleased to
announce he has signed Kody Swanson to drive for his team at four premier midget events in
2023.
Swanson will drive a Bertrand Motorsports Beast with a Stanton engine in the Carb Night
Classic at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park (IRP) in Brownsburg, Ind., on Friday, May 26; the
Boston Louie Seymour Memorial at Seekonk (Mass.) Speedway on Saturday, July 15; the Twin
25 midget races at IRP on Saturday, Aug. 12, and the Howard Companies Championship
Saturday at IRP on Oct. 21. All three of the events at IRP are marquee events of the United
States Auto Club (USAC) and part of the National Pavement Midget Championship, while the
Boston Louie Seymour Memorial is a cornerstone of the Northeastern Midget Association
(NEMA) schedule each year.
It will mark the second year of Swanson’s participation with the Southwick, Mass.-based team,
which has won 11 NEMA championships. The team finished first and second in the NEMA
championship this year with Avery Stoehr of Lakeville, Mass., and Randy Cabral of Plymouth,
Mass., respectively.
Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who resides in Indianapolis, is the winningest driver in
USAC Silver Crown history with seven championships. He and his brother, Tanner, are tied for
the most USAC Silver Crown victories ever at IRP with seven. Kody Swanson also sewed up the
inaugural championship of the 500 Sprint Car Tour in October at IRP.
Bertrand said he plans to field three cars, and possibly a fourth, in the events at IRP. Cole Carter
of Brownsburg, Ind., and Nathan Byrd of Goodyear, Ariz., will be Swanson’s teammates in those
races.
The team owns seven pavement midgets in all. It will continue to field two full-time in NEMA
events for Stoehr and Cabral. Cabral has won eight NEMA championships driving for Bertrand
Motorsports; Stoehr has won two for the team, and Todd Bertrand, Tim’s brother, was the
NEMA champion in 2020. The team is second on the all-time NEMA win list with 101 feature
victories.
Bertrand Motorsports has won the Boston Louie Seymour Memorial eight times, including this
year with Stoehr.
The team’s primary sponsor is project44, a software company based in Chicago which is the
world’s leading advanced visibility platform for shippers and third-party logistics firms. It helps
thousands of the world’s largest brands make their supply chains work.
Other sponsors include Esslinger, Bass Plating, Plas Tec Coatings, Eibach Springs, TJ Forged, ARS,
CSI, JRC Transportation and Stanton.
“There were many reasons we hired Kody,” Bertrand said. “He’s the all-time USAC Silver Crown
winner and a master at IRP, and winning a race at IRP is definitely on my bucket list. It’s
something I’ve been aiming to do my whole career. It would rank up there with any other
victory we’ve had in our team’s history.
“I would say that being involved with him this year has fast-forwarded our program about five
to 10 years,” Bertrand continued. “The knowledge he brings about the cars and the tracks and
open-wheel cars in general brings us to a new level. We were a threat for a win or a podium at
every race this year, but we had some mechanical issues that caused our results on paper to
not really match Kody and the car’s actual performances. We’re headed into the new year
much more aware of how to fix some of the issues we had, and we’re really excited about next
year.
“Another reason is that we really enjoy working with him and the Dorans and with the Swanson
family; they’re first-class individuals,” added Bertrand. (Swanson’s four Silver Crown victories
this year and the 500 Sprint Car Tour championship came driving Doran Racing-fielded cars.)
“Part of the reason I do this is to be with good people, and that’s something that he and his
team and his family bring to the table.”
“I’m excited to return to the Bertrand Motorsports team in 2023,” said Swanson. “It was great
to get to know them this year, and I’m thankful for the opportunity to have raced with them.
They have a great team atmosphere, and I enjoy working with everyone that is part of it. While
our final results weren’t what we hoped for, we made real progress throughout our first
season, and I felt like we were still in contention for a podium finish in each race. So I’m looking
forward to continue building on what we’ve learned so far, and giving it our best shot in the
upcoming season.
“I’m thankful for the chance to compete in the Boston Louie race,” Swanson continued. “The
Bertrands have such a long history of success in the NEMA series, and with winged midgets, so
I’m really looking forward to being able to try my hand at this new discipline with them.”
Towing halfway across the country to race adds to the challenge, and Bertrand said that his
team couldn’t make the IRP events without the help of his father, Gil. “He drove back and forth
from Connecticut to Indianapolis to support this operation,” he said. “Between testing; working
on the cars; going to Doran’s shop in Lebanon, Ohio, and towing to the races at IRP, we
wouldn’t be able to do this without my dad.”
Bertrand also singled out longtime TQ midget racer John Smith and veteran midget and TQ
racer Rich Tolerico for their help; Glen Cabral, longtime crew member; Nick Makrianis; Andy
Weeks; Brandon Igo, Kevin Park, and of course, his family: wife, Cara; daughter, Norah; brothers
Todd and Patrick; sister-in-law, Mariah, and niece and nephew, Ellie and Tucker.
“Kody brings a couple of great helpers too,” he added. “Ryan Roberts has been with Kody for a
long time, as has Clark Lamme. His wife, Jordan, is his spotter. We’ve put together a little crew
of people we’re both comfortable with to help build the best-possible crew that we could for
this effort, and we’re all looking forward to 2023.”
For more information on Bertrand Motorsports, follow it on Facebook, YouTube and Instagram
(BertrandMotorsports) and Twitter (BertrandMS). For more information on Swanson, see
kodyswansonracing.com and shopkodyswanson.com and follow him on Facebook
(KodySwansonRacin) and Twitter and Instagram (kodyswanson).
MISSION FOODS TO SPONSOR SWANSON
In Doran Binks Racing No. 77 in 2023
For USAC Silver Crown and 500 Sprint Car Tour Series
LEBANON, Ohio, March 29 — Mission Foods, the leading producer of tortillas in the United States and the manufacturer of a variety of authentic Mexican products, will be the primary sponsor of Kody Swanson this year in both the USAC Silver Crown and the 500 Sprint Car Tour series.
Swanson is the defending champion of both series.
Swanson’s cars will be fielded by Kevin Doran and Dan Binks working together as Doran Binks Racing, and they will be based at Doran Racing’s headquarters in Lebanon, Ohio. Glenn Farms will be the team’s associate sponsor. The race cars will all be No. 77.
Doran Racing fielded Swanson’s asphalt USAC Silver Crown car last year. This year Doran Binks Racing will field both the asphalt and dirt USAC Silver Crown cars for Swanson.
Doran Binks Racing plans to compete in all 14 USAC Silver Crown races in 2023. As a seven-time champion, Swanson’s 37 victories make him the winningest driver in the history of this series, the top class of USAC.
Swanson, a native of Kingsburg, Calif., who now lives in Indianapolis, won three races enroute to last year’s USAC Silver Crown title. In August he beat his own world speed record for a traditional USAC Silver Crown car with a speed of 146.699 miles per hour during qualifying at World Wide Technology Raceway in Madison, Ill.
The 500 Sprint Car Tour consists of 10 races this year. It includes the most prestigious asphalt sprint car race in the world, the 75th annual Lucas Oil Little 500 presented by UAW on May 27 at Anderson (Ind.) Speedway. Swanson is a three-time winner of the Little 500.
Last year Doran Racing and Swanson posted two victories, six podium finishes and won the inaugural 500 Sprint Car Tour championship using engines prepared by Binks.
"I'm excited about this year and the season ahead,” said Swanson. “This is a tremendous opportunity to work together with some great friends and talented racers, and do it all out of the same building. I'm thankful for the chance to partner with the Mission brand, and hope to represent an iconic company well while competing for wins and championships."
While Swanson is a legend in USAC, Doran and Binks are both legends in endurance sports car racing.
Doran has won the Rolex 24 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway as a crew chief, a team member, a team manager, a car owner, and even as a car manufacturer. Prior to fielding cars under Doran Racing, he had many victories with the late Al Holbert, a five-time IMSA Camel GT champion; the MOMO Ferrari team, and Doran Lista Racing.
Binks, of Brighton, Mich., was the crew chief for Corvette Racing’s factory sports car team for nearly 20 years. Under his direction that team won the 24 Hours of Le Mans six times and numerous IMSA championships.
Prior to becoming one of the most recognizable faces of Corvette Racing, Binks won IMSA GTU races with a Mazda RX-7 with various drivers; enjoyed great success in Trans Am, and even was a crew chief for Roush Fenway Racing in NASCAR.
The 500 Sprint Car Tour season opens Saturday, April 8 at Anderson Speedway in Anderson, Ind.
The USAC Silver Crown series opens the following weekend with the 20th running of the Sumar Classic on Sunday, April 16 at the Terre Haute (Ind.) Action Track.
About Mission Foods:
The Gruma Corporation began in 1949 and is today the leading tortilla manufacturer worldwide. Mission Foods is a proud subsidiary of Gruma, and as the #1 tortilla company in the United States, manufactures a wide variety of authentic Mexican products. Five years ago it opened a state-of-the-art plant in Dallas, Texas, with the capacity to produce 30 million tortillas daily. Today Mission Foods is a global company, with special emphasis not only on the United States but also Mexico, Central America, Europe, China, Malaysia, and Australia. Its products include flour and corn tortillas; tostadas; low-carb, whole wheat, organic and gluten-free items; wraps; flatbreads such as naan, pita and roti; tortilla chips and organic chips; chicharrones; salsa, and dips. For more information see missionfoods.com.
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