The twenty seventh annual Master's at the Cedar Lake Speedway has run into more than it's share of weather difficulties in recent years. Last year the whole event got washed out and again in 2026, weather has played a factor in the running of the three night event.
Night one on Thursday was washed out by all day rains and while the sun shown for the majority of the day on Friday, by evening the track would be chasing the weather once again and surprise thunderstorms, not in the forecast until added in late afternoon, shut down the racing prematurely on Friday night. All heat races were completed, the last USMTS Modified while it was sprinkling lightly and then it quickly picked up in intensity. The Late Models had pulled on to the track for their first B Feature but were then quickly hustled to the pits and that constituted the Friday night portion of the weekend as series of storms then rolled through the New Richmond area over the course of the next few hours. Friday night's program, including B Features for the USMTS and Late Models, plus three feature races for those two classes plus USRA Late Models will be held on Saturday with another full program to follow. It promises to be a long night of racing on Saturday.
One post race note: The evening got off to a bad start as during hot laps rookie Late Model driver Onyx Johnson took a violent flip in turn one, totaling his Longhorn chassis in a violent wreck that saw his car slam into the top of the concrete wall while it was somersaulting through the air. He was taken to Regions Hospital in St. Paul where he was discovered to have four compression fractures to his back. He is currently hospitalized there, awaiting more tests to determine if surgery will be needed. Onyx is the son of long time racer, the "Millennial Farmer", Zach Johnson.
However, before the rains hit a total of one hundred and thirteen drivers signed in to race on Friday night. There were twenty seven USRA Late Models entered plus forty three of each the USMTS drivers and the Late Models, running under Cedar Lake Speedway rules.
The twenty seven USRA drivers is probably about as big a field in that class as will be seen at any track in the area this year even though they are only racing for six hundred dollars to win for the preliminary nights and a grand on Saturday night.
Their format includes drawing for starting positions and then using passing points to line up their main event. Their three heats went off seamlessly with not a yellow flag to be seen with Clayton Hofteig, Cam Panitzke and Cooper Sundby the winners. Steve O'Brien, who finished a strong second in heat two was disqualified post race for some sort of violation, otherwise their portion of the program went smoothly.
USMTS used their normal procedures to set up their races. Drivers drew for starting positions for qualifying with the forty three drivers split into two groups. And as they have been doing this year, after qualifying the drivers scramble up to the USMTS trailer to pick their starting positions for the heat races. Most folks by now know how that works and the total of passing points, finishing points in the heats plus qualifying points set the running order for the mains and also the B Features for those that don't make the top sixteen that move directly into the feature. To me the process seems much too convoluted but they are making it work and I guess if you want to run USMTS, then you get used to the format.
New this year, the local Modified racers that run WISSOTA and in previous years had to conform to USMTS rules in order to race, were allowed to run their cars as they were as long as they were legal for WISSOTA. No mixing and matching of rules was allowed and while the WISSOTA cars are still slightly under powered vs. the USMTS cars, they are closer than they used to be. Also, the WISSOTA drivers get to run their Hoosier tires which many feel helps them vs. the American Racers that USMTS uses. It seems to be a good thing that the WISSOTA drivers were allowed to race because otherwise the total field would be somewhere between twenty five and thirty drivers, not the plus forty that were on hand.
Cade Dillard and Tanner Mullens were the quick qualifiers in their groups with Dillard quickest overall at 14.056 seconds. The thinking among the drivers were very mixed as they set themselves for their heat races. Some, like Dillard and Jake Timm must have felt that passing in the heats was going to be hard as they both opted for front row starting spots while Brandon Davis and Jim Chisholm both opted to start from the tail in their heats and try to garner lots of passing points. It seems that the former were correct on this night as Dillard and Timm won heats while Davis and Chisholm were only able to pass a few cars and finished at best, mid pack in their heats.
Heat winners included Dillard, Timm and Gary Christian while A.J. Diemel inherited a heat race win when two drivers that finished in front of him were both disqualified. Four drivers were disqualified following the heat races including apparent heat winner Clayton Wagamon and second place finisher Kaden Blaeser. All four drivers that were disqualified were part of the WISSOTA delegation on hand. Hmmm.
Positively Racing's own Jeff Broeg was calling the action for the USMTS portion of the program on Friday and is expected to be on hand all weekend.
A strong field of local and regional Late Model drivers were on hand plus several interlopers from distant places and for five grand to win on Friday and twelve grand on Saturday night, this is not surprising. The weekly racers at Cedar Lake are for the vast majority running WISSOTA legal cars which means they utilize a spec engine much like the SLMR and PRO Series run. However, Cedar Lake does have a provision in their rules for open motor drivers but they must run a restrictor plate, much again like the other two Iowa and Nebraska series run.
However, a curve ball was thrown to the drivers in the week leading up to this race when an announcement was made that instead of utilizing the CLS rules, they would be using the Dirt Kings rules for the open motored cars and not coincidently, these rules allow a bigger opening in the plate which of course gives the motors more power. One might suspect that the open motor contingent must have been doing some lobbying this week, and if so, it was successful as they got what they wished for. One must wonder though, how the weekly drivers feel about this as for the racers that support the track all season, they now have been thrown a curve that makes it harder for them to be successful this weekend. And trust me, extra horsepower is always appreciated.
The Late Model drivers drew for starting positions in their heats(thankfully no time trials!) and passing points would set the rest of their lineups with the top sixteen moving directly to the main event. There is one ringer thrown into this though, as the top six in passing points will be inverted for the main event. Three of the five heats went to open motored cars, disproportionate given the number of them on hand with Terry Casey, Dillard and Timm in open motored cars while Sam Mars, believed to be driving his spec engined car and Kyle Peterlin, who hasn't raced here for a dozen years, winning a heat in his 525 crate car.
Track and series officials did a good job getting the Modified time trials completed so that the program could still begin at its advertised 7 pm start. However, by race time the dark clouds were building in the western sky and it didn't too long for them to motor on over our heads, thus producing a quick and unsatisfying conclusion to the racing. Plenty of seats remain in the spacious facility for those that might want to head to Wisco on Saturday and catch a double header of fine racing.