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Willow Springs hosted two NASCAR Grand National races in 1956 and 1957 on the original road course (then known simply as Willow Springs Speedway), won by Chuck Stevenson and Marvin Panch, respectively. [3] The track also hosted five NASCAR Winston West Series events, the first two in 1955 and 1956 and the other three between 1984 and 1986.
National stock car racing touring series (such as NASCAR Monster Energy Cup, ARCA, NASCAR Nationwide Series, and Craftsman Truck Series) race mainly on 4 tracks in Illinois: Chicagoland Speedway, near Chicago, Gateway International Speedway, Near St. Louis, and the mile dirt tracks at the Illinois State Fairgrounds, and the DuQuoin State Fairgrounds near DuQuoin, Illinois.
Willow Springs Raceway, Willow Springs: Chuck Stevenson: Carl Dane: 4: 12/11/1955 100 Palm Beach Speedway, West Palm Beach: Herb Thomas: H. Thomas: 5: 1/22/1956 150 Arizona State Fairgrounds, Phoenix: Buck Baker: Kiekhaefer: 6: 2/26/1956 154 Daytona Beach and Road Course, Daytona Beach: Tim Flock: Kiekhaefer: 7: 3/4/1956 100 Palm Beach Speedway ...
The 1957 season opened at the Willow Springs Speedway in Lancaster, California.Marvin Panch won the event, and followed that with a second consecutive win at the following event at the Concord Speedway late in 1956.
California Speedway: Fontana, California: 2002–2010: 9 Charlotte Motor Speedway: Concord, North Carolina: 1977, 1980, 1991–1993: 5 Circuit of the Americas Austin, Texas: 2015–2019, 2022–2024: 8 Daytona International Speedway (Included in the Supersport Championship Instead Of Superbike Championship) Daytona Beach, Florida: 1976–2014 ...
Motorsport in Illinois#Santa Fe Speedway, Willow Springs, Illinois To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
Built in 1956, it is the nation's third oldest continuously operating road racing venue, behind Road America (1955) and Willow Springs International Motorsports Park (1953). [2] The track was owned by Skip Barber from 1984 to April 2021, a former race car driver who started the Skip Barber Racing School in 1975.
California Speedway (formerly Auto Club Speedway) 2.000-mile (3.219 km) Paved D-Shaped Oval: Fontana, California: California Speedway oval: Pala Casino 400 Production Alliance Group 300 San Bernardino County 200: 1997–2023 (Cup) 1997–2023 (Xfinity) 1997–2009 (Truck) Closed after the 2023 event. Large parts of the superspeedway have ...