For all those years when the Turkey Bowl was run in forty degree temperatures with the wind howling and the skies spitting rain, ice and even a few snow flurries in our faces, 2025 will be remembered as the year when the Weather Man evened up the playing field here in Springfield. For the third straight day the weather was fantastic with sunny skies, no threat of rain and temperatures at or above eighty degrees. And certainly the great weather played a strong part in the fact that the pits were packed and on Saturday November 15th for the concluding night of the XIX edition of the Turkey Bowl, the grandstands were also packed with fans. This would certainly big the biggest day ever for the Turkey Bowl event and one that everyone will gauge against for success in upcoming years.
For on Saturday the concluding feature races would be held for three divisions that did their qualifying on Friday night as well as adding the last two divisions that would be doing their full show on Saturday. Once again we were looking at a tremendous amount of racing and if there is such a thing as too much of a good thing, I believe that Saturday would fit that definition.
But first we must soak in the sheer enormity that this year's race was. I have lost count of exactly how many race teams pulled into the pits for this year's event. My rigid guidelines don't allow for the counting of Legend Cars, just as I don't acknowledge Mod Lites, Dwarf Cars, Bat Wings and all the other such forms of motorized racing. Still, for the promoter and fans watching, they race just like all the other classes do and there must have been fifty or so of them, some coming all the way from North Dakota just to race this weekend. There were extra drivers that came just to start in the back of B Features for some reason that I lost count of and who could have predicted that there would be seventy Late Models that would sign in for six grand to win!!! That was just crazy stupid wild. We didn't have enough cars last year apparently so the Super Stocks were invited for a one night stand also and there were nearly thirty of them on hand. The number 529 was mentioned as the total car count for the weekend and I'll go along with that which is amazing. It is also a logistical nightmare that was handled just about as well as could be expected. Nevertheless, it made for a long final day of racing, one that quite a few spectators didn't stick it out to the end for.
Let's talk about those seventy Late Models for a second. Isn't that crazy? It is true that this area does have an abundance of Late Models compared to other parts of the country and quite a few different series with which to participate in. However, one would not expect that many to still be racing in mid November but there they were from all parts of Missouri and near by states and even a drivers that pulled all the way from South Dakota and Tennessee.
Despite having to deal with such huge fields of drivers and the logistics of organizing them when they were parked over many acres of land and no pa system for much of them, the show would again start right at the advertised time for the third straight night. With racing beginning at 5 pm, it took five hours just to get the qualifying and Last Chance events concluded. Everybody deserves one last chance to make the features but it felt like the qualifying events could have contained more cars and run a few less laps. In any event, the thirty seven qualifying races were done just after 10 pm and then it was time to start the main events.
Track watering was interspersed among all those races with a complete ripping of the track before the Modifieds made their appearance for the main event. This produced a track that despite all the laps was still racy and with no rubber although it was blindingly dirty for the fans for much of the main events. I guess we could call it the price of doing business.
In any event, the Midwest Modz A were the first ones out for their main event. Trenton Brookshire started on the outside pole and took the early lead. A good battle for second saw Andy Aust and Michael Maggard fighting for position while Mark Simon was on the move from the third row. James Lee then put on charge of his own, moving from the fourth row into second by the halfway point of the race.
Lee would fade back a bit near the end but no one had anything for Brookshire would crossed the line as the apparent winner. Simon, Aust, Caden Bolin and Lee finished off the top five.
Young Brookshire was thrilled to be the winner and did a nice interview in front of the crowd as the pa system wouldn't work in victory lane and all the winning drivers had to cross the track to be interviewed in front of the crowd, which actually was quite nice.
But reality slapped Brookshire hard across the face when he went for tech inspection and the result was that he was disqualified, along with fifth place finisher Lee which awarded the win to Simon and added Cory Johnson and Maggard to the official top five.
Thus, both Midwest Modz classes this weekend saw the apparent feature winner disqualified. That tells me that something is amiss somewhere either in the tech inspection this weekend or perhaps the lack of inspections throughout the racing season. Either way, Houston, we have a problem that clearly needs fixing.
While the track was "juiced up" for the Modified feature race, one of the announcers, the omnipresent Jerry Vansickle, who seems to show up at every special event in the Midwest when Marshalltown is not racing, held a contest for the Modified and Late Model drivers to determine who would start in the front rows, based on their skill level at throwing a football in a garbage can. I'm not sure how one talent equates to the other but while some will claim that race car drivers are indeed athletes, no one would claim that they are football quarterbacks from what they showed!
In any event, two of the younger drivers in Reese Solander and Jim Chisholm did the best at football tossing and that proved to be important as the track was blinding fast of the feature race due to the sped up surface. With twenty one very fast drivers in the main representing both USRA and UMP and a very fast surface to race on, passing would be hard.
Chisholm got the jump using the preferred outside line with Solander tucking in behind him. These two then set the pace for thirty very fast laps of racing and while it was spectacular, there was little in the way of passing.
Chisholm successfully negotiated the few lapped cars that he caught which was Solander's only hope, and the Iowa driver raced on for the win. Solander finished second with Tanner Mullens, Kyle Steffens and Chris Spaulding next in line.
Only four drivers were lapped in the nonstop race and only a single driver was not on the track at the finish.
The Late Models also saw a quick track for their thirty lapper and again the outside pole was the place to be. Sawyer Crigler got the jump on Shane DeMey to take the early lead and he pulled away to a comfortable lead in the early going. DeMay was receiving pressure from Eli Ross and Myles Moos as the laps clicked by.
Just past the halfway point, Tony Jackson Jr, who was making a nice charge to the front, spun in turn one and the lone yellow of the race flew. Ross had to pit at this time and lost his position with Moos up to third, Tennessee driver Matt Cooper and Dillon McCowan completing the top five.
Crigler took off again on the restart and built up a good sized lead again. Moos was making a run and he went for it but jumped the cushion in turn one and lost considerable time. The driver really moving up was Springfield's own Terry Phillips as while he wasn't in the top five with twelve laps to go, suddenly he was battling for third with Moos.
Crigler continued his excellent run, wasn't challenged and drove home for the win, his second Turkey Bowl trophy to collect. DeMey had a great run in his spec engine car, holding off Phillips for second while Moos and McCowan completed the top five. Only two drivers didn't finish the race.
With J.C. Morton starting on the outside pole, it seemed like he might be the one to beat in the B Mod feature race. And he did take the lead initially and hold the top spot for the first six laps. However, in a bit of a surprise, Waylon Dimmett, who started in the second row, got a good run going and was able to drive past Morton and take over the lead just before the lone yellow of the race flew for a spin in turn four.
Dimmett then pulled away from the the pack but on the move was defending winner of this race, Brayton Carter. The last thirteen laps ran off nonstop and slowly but surely, Carter started to cut into the lead of Dimmett. Dimmett was pushing the cushion while Carter was working the short way around the track and slowly creeping closer and closer.
The last few laps gave us the closest finish of the night. Carter may have had a chance for a late race pass but a lapped car loomed ahead that was running the low line which caused him to adjust his line to get past the slower car and that was all the edge that Dimmett needed as he crossed under the finish line with a few car lengths on the Iowa driver. Indeed, Dimmett was the only winner of the feature races staged on Saturday that didn't lead from start to finish.
There was a pounding duo that was closing on both the leaders but ran out of time as Kris Jackson, who started in the sixth row, was coming hard but settled for third with Morton and another hard charger in Ryan Gillmore next in line.
The last feature race of the very early morning(it was now Sunday), was the Super Stock main event. Big developments in this race happened even before the green flag flew when pole sitter John Coats, considered a favorite to win the race, had his car quit during the pace laps and he was pushed to the pits which shuffled the starting order.
This gave Donnie Miller the outside pole and he used it to his full advantage, leading from start to finish for twenty laps to get the win. This was a clean race that went green to checkers and with Miller having good momentum, he was impossible to catch.
Making a nice drive forward and using the low line was Oklahoma driver Michael Muskrat who started seventh and drove up to the second spot in the late going. Eighth to third was Aaron Poe with this class seemingly being able to move forward more but perhaps that was because the track had started to dry out some which made passing a bit easier. Bobby Ratterree and Kevin Brown completed the top five with the final checkers waving at just about 1 am.
This completed what was quite the colossal event. Now one of the biggest events in the country in terms of entries, it was three days of racing action and more. If this event continues to grow and that is always hard to predict as uncertain November weather can always put a damper on things, some adjustments might have to be made. It is almost to the point of being too big for the facility and having too many races to be manageable comfortably. But we will see what 2026 brings.
In the meantime, thanks go out to Jerry Hoffman and his staff. Hoffman is the "Energizer Bunny" for this event, seemingly with boundless energy as he races from one task to another. His hard working crew is not far behind as the number of hours all them put in this weekend was large indeed. Putting on such a show is a monumental task and for the most part, it went off seamlessly. Anyone who came all three nights and felt they didn't see enough races must have been sleeping! Speaking of that, I'm guessing the whole Springfield crew slept in on Sunday morning!