100 Laps to Go: Hangtown 100 Presents Challenge For USAC Midgets
100 Laps to Go: Hangtown 100 Presents Challenge For USAC Midgets
A look at six of the many storylines to watch at the 2023 edition of the Hangtown 100, the only 100-lap USAC Midget race on the series schedule.
One hundred laps. It’s a daunting task in a midget, any way you slice it.
For one, it’s imperative to ensure you can make it the distance, not only mechanically, but physically and mentally, as well.
It’s challenging, but this is why racers do what they do. To face off against tasks most ordinary individuals wouldn’t dare take on and to defeat their peers in competition.
That’s what we’ll be witnessing for two straight nights with the fourth running of the Hangtown 100 at California’s Placerville Speedway, featuring the USAC NOS Energy Drink Midget National Championship on Nov. 17-18.
Here’s six of the many storylines we’re watching at this year’s edition of the only 100-lap USAC Midget race on the series schedule.
Kyle Larson Returns To Hangtown
Placerville Speedway is the home of some of Kyle Larson’s most cherished racing moments.
It’s the place he made his first sprint car start. It’s the place he won his first sprint car race. It’s the place he describes as his “home track.”
Now, for the first time in 2023, Larson (Elk Grove, California) will be making an appearance with the USAC National Midgets during the running of the Hangtown 100.
He forever will be known as the first winner of the Hangtown 100, capturing the inaugural running of the event in 2019 after starting 10th, then won a Hangtown prelim in 2021, charging from the seventh spot.
Larson, the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series champion, is a frequent hard-charger at the Hangtown 100, driving from 23rd to fourth on Night 1 in 2019 and 12th to sixth in the 2021 opener.
Kofoid Eying Rare Back-To-Back Feat Of 100-Lap Wins
No driver has won consecutive 100-lap USAC National Midget features since Sam Isenhower on the indoor concrete, coke syrup-infused surface of Fort Wayne’s Memorial Coliseum in 1988.
No driver has won consecutive 100-lap USAC National Midget features on dirt since Ron Shuman in 1982 at the Terre Haute Action Track’s Hut 100 and Ascot Park’s Turkey Night Grand Prix.
Buddy Kofoid (Penngrove, California) intends to change that at Placerville in 2023, where he comes in as the defending Hangtown 100 winner. In fact, he’s won his past two USAC Midget starts at Placerville, scoring the Night 2 prelim and the finale in 2022.
Kofoid, the 2021-2022 USAC National Midget champion, also will try to maintain Keith Kunz/Curb-Agajanian Motorsports’ stranglehold of the Hangtown 100 after having swept all three nights of the event in 2022, with driver Tanner Carrick taking the opener.
Already a winner at Placerville this season, Kofoid grabbed a World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car triumph there during September’s 49er Gold Rush Classic.
Winning A Piece Of The Placerville Pie
Speaking of drivers who’ve already achieved winning performances at Placerville this year in other disciplines, there’s actually quite an array of drivers in that category.
Carrick (Lincoln, California) gave Keith Kunz Motorsports its 134th USAC National Midget victory during last year’s Hangtown 100 opening night prelim, a triumph that made KKM the winningest team in series history.
Carrick has been a regular in winged 360 Sprint Car competition this year at Placerville, scoring a feature win in July, while finishing eighth in the standings.
The two-time USAC National Midget winner will be aboard the No. 98 midget for KKM at Placerville and also for two nights at Merced (California) Speedway on Nov. 21-22.
Shane Golobic (Fremont, California) will drive for car owner and Hangtown 100 promoter Matt Wood in the event.
Golobic won the World of Outlaws stop at Placerville in 2019 and scored a 360 win of his own this past August.
The 2017 USAC Indiana Midget Week champion will be vying for his first USAC National Midget feature win since 2016.
Furthermore, Michael Faccinto (Hanford, California) is the 360 Sprint Car track champ at Placerville for 2023, while also tallying a main event victory.
The two-time USAC Western States Midget titlist, who will pilot a midget out of the Graunstadt Enterprises/Matt Streeter Racing stable, bagged a USAC WSM victory at Placerville in 2022.
Jake Andreotti (Castro Valley, California) and newly crowned USAC WSM champ Brody Fuson (Bakersfield, California) have been victorious with the USAC WSM series at Placerville, with Andreotti scoring in 2022 and Fuson this past July.
Hanging 10 At The Hangtown 100
The Hangtown 100 of 2021 was a banner weekend for Justin Grant and Ryan Timms, and between the two drivers, they own five USAC National Midget victories in 2023 and reside inside the top 4 of the series standings.
Grant (Ione, California) raced past Buddy Kofoid with 14 laps to go to win the Hangtown 100 finale that year at the place he later said is “where I grew up; this is where I fell in love with racing; this is the place where I decided I wanted to be a racecar driver.”
Timms (Oklahoma City), at 15 years, 3 months and 12 days old, made history on Night 1 of the Hangtown 100 to become the youngest feature winner in the history of USAC National Midget racing, a record that still stands.
Grant’s been on a hot streak of late, having won two of the last three after going winless with the series until late September.
Timms, meanwhile, wants to finish strong driving for the same team and car number that has won each of the past two Hangtown 100 features, with Kofoid in the seat in 2021.
Straight To The Point
The Hangtown 100 format is a bit different than the norm, with the accumulation of points playing a role throughout the two nights of the event.
Points will be earned via finishing position and number of positions advanced throughout each night, which not only will seed the starting lineups, it also will pay off in the end.
The driver accruing the most points throughout the Hangtown 100 will receive a $12,500 reward at the end of the weekend.
Friday’s 30-lap, $5,000-to-win feature will pay 50 appearance points only toward the USAC National Midget standings.
Saturday’s 100-lap, $8,000-to-win finale will pay feature points only toward the USAC National Midget season-long tally for all licensed series drivers and entrants.
100 Laps & 100 Reasons to be There! 👊
— USAC Racing (@USACNation) November 13, 2023
The #Hangtown100 presents a mechanical, mental & physical challenge for all USAC @NosEnergyDrink National Midget competitors.
And it’s coming to @pvillespeedway on November 17-18!
🎟️ https://t.co/7uT77u4gr4 pic.twitter.com/tmOAVeIDoS
The Lone 100-Lap USAC Midget Race Of The Year
Furthermore, the event is the one and only 100-lap event on the USAC National Midget calendar this season.
Once a regular feature on the schedule in the early years of the series, these days, a race of its distance is as rare a sight as a white squirrel in the wilderness.
In fact, this year’s Hangtown 100 will be the 398th 100-lap feature run in the series’ history – since the dawn of USAC’s formation in 1956 – and the 117th in the state of California.
Four drivers in this year’s Hangtown 100 field have experienced the feat of winning 100-lap USAC Midget races: Kyle Larson, Justin Grant, Cannon McIntosh and Buddy Kofoid.
Larson captured the Hangtown 100 at Placerville in 2019, as did Grant in 2021 and Kofoid in 2022.
McIntosh’s 100-lap victory came in 2022 at South Dakota’s Huset’s Speedway. He has yet to win at Placerville, twice finishing second in 30-lap prelim features (2021 and 2022).
The Details
The front gates will open at 3 p.m. each night at the Hangtown 100.
Reserved and general admission ticket packages for the Hangtown 100, along with single night tickets, are available at hangtown100.com. Tickets also will be available at the gate on race day.
Both nights of racing at the Hangtown 100 can be watched LIVE on FloRacing. Click here to watch.