For days, years and decades to come, sprint car followers in central Pennsylvania and beyond will talk about the mesmerizing onslaught set foot by Kyle Larson this year’s nine-day, nine-race Pennsylvania Speedweek grind
Every once in a while, specifically on long, cross-country road trips or a late race night that bled into early morning, Katelyn Larson would peek over her husband’s shoulder, wanting to know what’s keeping him so occupied on his phone.
If there was any sort of notion that Kyle Larson would stumble and lose grip of the Pennsylvania Speedweek title, he took it and shoved it into yesteryear on Thursday night at Hagerstown Speedway
Aaron Reutzel is among the national leaders in 410 winged sprint car wins this year with seven, so when he rolled into Pennsylvania Speedweek on Monday at Lincoln Speedway, the expectation was that he’d add to that total.
On Wednesday night at Port Royal Speedway, Kyle Larson and Paul Silva moved one step closer to becoming the first team without in-state lineage to win the Pennsylvania Speedweek title.
Anthony Macri had high hopes rolling into Pennsylvania Speedweek, having won three races in a row and feeling as confident as ever ahead of the nine-race, nine-day swing.
Kyle Larson flung his No. 57 into turn one Tuesday night at Grandview Speedway and pulled alongside race-leader Freddie Rahmer, but without much surprise, it didn’t stick
For the first time since last December, Christopher Bell raced in a winged sprint car on Monday night in round four of Pennsylvania Speedweek at Lincoln Speedway.