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CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF RACING EXCITEMENT AND AFFORDABLE FAMILY FUN

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It's hard to believe but drivers from across the nation have been turning left at South Boston Speedway for 50 years. South Boston Speedway is steeped in tradition, serving as the training ground for many of today's top NASCAR drivers. That's why South Boston Speedway has earned a reputation as the home of the best NASCAR sanctioned short track racing in the country.

South Boston Speedway, affectionately known as SoBo by fans, has recently undergone tremendous renovations making South Boston Speedway one of the nations premiere short tracks. South Boston Speedway provides fans, sponsors and competitors with the same level of professionalism that is now the norm at America's Super Speedways, but in the warm and hospitable setting of a 4/10-mile oval. Now race fans can enjoy incredible short track action, combined with modern facilities and wholesome family fun and excitement, for less than the cost of taking the family to a movie.

We invite you to be part of our racing traditions in 2007 for our 50th season at South Boston Speedway. We have developed at-track hospitality programs, group ticket programs and sponsorship packages that can accommodate everyone from local businesses to regional and national operations.

South Boston Speedway is dedicated to becoming your "Hometown Track" and we will continue to work hard everyday to achieve that. If you have not been to South Boston Speedway lately, stop by and let us give you a personal tour.

Warmest Regards,

Cathy Rice 

General Manager 

South Boston Speedway

Track Statistics

Corner banking - 12 degrees
Straights banking - 10 degrees
Frontstretch length - 360 feet
Backstretch length - 360 feet
Track Width - 45 feet (all the way around)
Track record - Mike Ewanitsko (14.409 / 99.938 mph) NASCAR Featherlite Modified
Race record - Todd Bodine, 70.785 mph NASCAR Busch Series

Track Rental Information:

South Boston Speedway is available for rental for Monday through Friday.  Call South Boston Speedway for track rental availability 1-434-572-4947.

Directions:

From 58 West, take 360 East toward Richmond. Go approximately two miles and track is on the right.  From 501 North, take 58 East, then 360 East. Track is approximately two miles on the right.

Track History:

Drivers from across Virginia and nation have been turning left at South Boston Speedway for what will now be 48 years.  As the track approaches the half-century mark, the history of  South Boston Speedway has proven just as legendary as the legions of drivers who have raced there.

South Boston Speedway opened in August 1957 as a quarter-mile dirt track by its original co-owners, the late Buck Wilkins and the late Dave Blount. When the track held its first race on August 10, 1957, there were bleacher seats for 1,000 fans, a far cry from today’s estimated capacity at well over 8,000. The track was lighted by banks of lights perched atop 16 poles that were erected at various points around the track. A Halifax County resident, Jimmy Holland of Republican Grove, won the track's first Sportsman Division race in a car owned by Buddy Ferrell, Harvey Alderson and Paul Tingen.

South Boston became NASCAR sanctioned in 1960, with the track holding its first NASCAR sanctioned race, a 50-lap Modified show, on April 16, 1960. Johnny Roberts of Baltimore, Md., won that race, collecting  $500 for his effort. Eddie Crouse of Richmond, Va., went on to win the track's NASCAR Modified Division title that year, becoming the track's first NASCAR champion.

The 1960 season also brought the track's first ever NASCAR Grand National (now NASCAR Nextel Cup) race. Junior Johnson won that race held on July 8, 1960, after surviving a hard-fought side-by-side battle with Ned Jarrett that lasted for 108 laps before Jarrett's engine blew.

After five years of promoting dirt track races, Wilkins and Blount expanded the racing surface to  .357 mile, paved the Speedway, and constructed a concrete retaining wall around the facility. During one brief period in the track's story, Wilkins and Blount stepped aside from promoting races at the Speedway and leased the facility to South Boston native the late C.C. “Clem” Chandler.

After the 1972 season, South Boston dropped out of the NASCAR fold, and in 1973 began to run NASCAR-type Late Model Sportsman races utilizing NASCAR rules. While the track ran as an independent through the 1976 season, many of the nation's top NASCAR drivers continued to come to South Boston to compete in special events.

Wilkins and Blount returned to the helm of South Boston in 1977, the same year the track rejoined NASCAR. The Late Model Stock Car division emerged as the feature racing division in 1983, replacing the NASCAR Late Model Sportsman cars, which were placed on a touring circuit similar to that of the NASCAR Nextel Cup.

Local businessman Mason C. Day Sr., and his son Mike Day, purchased the track prior to the 1985 season. The Day family continued to operate the facility throughout the 1990s. In that time, the track saw many changes, including a change in configuration.

After being enlarged to a four-tenths mile oval in 1994, speeds at South Boston have continued to get faster. In March 2001, Mike Ewanitsko set the current track record of 99.938 mph (14.409 sec.) in his NASCAR Featherlite Modified.

In April 2000, Joe Mattioli III purchased the track. Racing is in Mattioli’s lineage, as his family founded and owns the Pocono Raceway in Pennsylvania. Modeling the success of minor league baseball, Mattioli committed himself to transforming South Boston into one of the nation’s premier short tracks. Upon his taking possession of the track, facility upgrades including restroom renovations, the placement of closed circuit televisions in concession stands and suites and the addition of children’s attractions including an arcade, playground and swimming pool became the order of the day. The always-innovative Mattioli and his dedicated staff are constantly working to make South Boston Speedway the fans’ and sponsors’ choice when it comes to spending their motorsports dollar.

It is largely because of the competitors that South Boston Speedway has become the success it has. The list of drivers who have competed at South Boston make up a veritable motorsports honor roll.

Richard Petty, the heralded king of NASCAR Nextel Cup racing, has five trophies from the South Boston Speedway tucked away in his trophy cases. The late Bobby Isaac also was victorious at South Boston.

Many other NASCAR racing legends including Joe Weatherly, Jack Smith, Rex White, Jim Paschal, Possum Jones, David Pearson, Buck and Buddy Baker, Charlie Glotzbach, Pete Hamilton, Tiny Lund, Darrell Waltrip, Bobby Allison, Cale Yarborough, Dale Earnhardt and Benny Parsons all have competed at South Boston. Parsons captured his first career Grand National (now Nextel Cup) victory in 1971 in South Boston’s final Grand National race.

Danville, Va., driver Wendell Scott, the first African-American driver to compete at South Boston regularly, also raced in Modified Division events here.

Several drivers that are now stars in NASCAR’s top divisions including Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth, Casey Atwood, Kevin Harvick, Jeff Green, Denny Hamlin and Terry Labonte have also competed here.

While those drivers have carved their names deep into the record scrolls of  South Boston Speedway and the NASCAR record books, perhaps there is no name that is more familiar to South Boston fans than that of the late Ray Hendrick.

Hendrick, a legendary driver known for his hard-charging driving style, recorded hundreds of wins at South Boston during his storied career, many of them coming when he was piloting the famous winged No. 11 Modified coupe fielded by Jack Tant and Clayton Mitchell. The Richmond star won five track championships at South Boston, four of them while competing in the NASCAR Modified division and one in the NASCAR Late Model Sportsman division.

South Boston Speedway has been the stomping ground for many of NASCAR's top racers, as well as the breeding ground for some of the most talented NASCAR racing stars.

South Boston natives Jeff and Ward Burton both cut their racing teeth in the Late Model Stock Car Division here before advancing into the NASCAR Busch Series Grand National Division, then finding huge success in NASCAR Nextel Cup Series racing. Even in the early days of their racing career, the duo proved popular among fans, thus becoming the only set of brothers to win the Most Popular Driver title at South Boston.

And there are brothers Hermie and Elliott Sadler of Emporia, Va., who, like the Burtons, rose from competing in the Late Model Stock Car Division ranks at South Boston to being top-notch competitors in the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. Elliott followed older brother Hermie into the Late Model cars, capturing the 1995 track championship at only 20 years of age.

South Boston’s 1994 track champion Stacy Compton also finds himself on the Speedway’s list of distinguished graduates. After proving himself a force at South Boston, Compton soon became successful in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and now competes in the NASCAR Busch Series.

The 2002 Daytona 500 also proved a shining moment in South Boston history, as South Boston Speedway graduates swept the top-three finishing positions. Hometown favorite Ward Burton raised the Harley J. Earl trophy high in victory lane, becoming the first Virginian to win the “Great American Race.” South Boston’s 1995 champion Elliott Sadler finished a close second, while 1981 champion Geoffrey Bodine finished third.

Bodine left the Northern NASCAR Modified tour in 1981 to drive for Richmond, Va., car builder Emanuel Zervakis. The pair proved an instant success, as Bodine collected nine of 11 NASCAR Late Model Sportsman wins along with the season championship.

Despite being only 60 miles east of the Martinsville Speedway, South Boston Speedway is not overshadowed by its Nextel Cup brethren by any means. Instead, it shines in the Nextel Cup glory, as its challenging configuration has also attracted the likes of Tony Stewart and Ken Schrader even during their Nextel Cup careers.

Throughout its history, South Boston Speedway has maintained a pattern of growth and positive change. With its ties to a storied past and the eyes of the track owners and managers cast toward the future, South Boston Speedway's future looks brighter with each passing year. Make your plans today to see South Boston Speedway.

 

Want to get in touch with SBS?
Call
Track # 1-434-572-4947

Toll Free # 1-877-440-1540
Fax # 1-434-575-8992

E-Mail: info@southbostonspeedway.com