Utica-Rome Speedway
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| Location | Vernon, New York |
|---|---|
| Owner | Jason Broedel |
| Opened | 1961 |
| Former names | New Venture International Speedway |
| Website | www |
| Oval | |
| Surface | Clay |
| Length | .8 km (0.50 mi) |
| Turns | 4 |
Utica-Rome Speedway is a half-mile dirt oval raceway in Vernon, New York. It is known as the “Home of Heroes” and has been the home track of several NASCAR national champions.[1]
The Utica-Rome Speedway was built in 1961 by Joe Lesik as a flat quarter-mile asphalt track.[2] The asphalt was torn up in 1979 when the track was enlarged to five-eighths of a mile before settling at its current length in the late 1980s.[3] Over the years since, the facility has featured several other smaller track configurations, the most used of which being an inner oval for kart racing. This configuration existed between 2000 and 2002, but it has also returned in recent years.[4] Since promoter Brett Deyo and his company, BD Motorsports Media LLC, took over promotion of the track in 2021, the inner oval has made a return, hosting kart races on a biweekly basis throughout the season.[5] The track's nickname changed as well as a result of this. Before Deyo, the track was often colloquially and promotionally referred to as "The Fast Track of the East" or “The Action Track of the East” but has since dropped both monikers.[6][7] As of the 2025 race season, Jason Broedel has assumed ownership and done multiple improvements to the facility.[8]
National Champions
The inaugural 1961 as well as the 1962 track championships were claimed by Rene Charland, who went on to become the only driver to win four consecutive NASCAR Sportsman Division championships (predecessor of the Xfinity Series). Two-time national Sportsman Division champion Bill Wimble claimed track championships in 1966 and 1967.[9][10]
NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee and 6 time NASCAR national modified champion Jerry Cook was the 1969 track champion, while fellow inductee and 9-time national champion Richie Evans won the track championships in 1972, 1973, 1974, and 1978.[1][10]
Geoff Bodine, the 1986 Daytona 500 winner, was a 1977 track champion. Perennial NASCAR Truck Series contender Stewart Friesen won the track championships in 2004, 2007 and then 5 consecutive times from 2010 to 2014.[10]