Oswego Speedway
The Steel Palace[1]
Location300 East Albany Street, Oswego, NY 13126
Time zoneEastern: UTC−5 / −4 (DST)
Coordinates43°27′25″N 76°29′04″W / 43.457054°N 76.4843453°W / 43.457054; -76.4843453
Opened1951
Websitewww.oswegospeedway.com
5/8 oval
Surfaceasphalt
Length0.625 miles (1 km)
Banking13°
Oswego supermodified in 1978
Oswego supermodified in 1979

The Oswego Speedway is a 5/8 mile race track in Oswego, New York. It was built in 1951 and was paved with asphalt since the 1952. The track has held dates on several national tours - the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, ASA National Tour, and USAC Silver Crown Series. Since 2016, it is temporarily covered with dirt at the end of the season in September to host Super DIRT Week, featuring the Syracuse 200 Super DIRTcar Series Big Block Modifieds. The track is the Labor Day Weekend home of the 200-lap, non-wing, big-block supermodified Budweiser Classic and Race of Champions (a modified touring series event).

History

Oswego Speedway began as a horse racing track.[2] The track was converted to a 3/8 mile dirt track in 1951.[2] The track was paved in 1952.[2] The track was lengthened to a 5/8 mile pavement track in 1962.[2]

Owned and operated for more than four decades by the Caruso family, the "Big O" is now owned and operated by Eric and John Torrese.[3]

In 2016 Oswego Speedway hosted the 45th edition of World Racing Group's Super DIRTcar Series Super DIRT Week. The track received the date on the schedule after construction of Central New York Raceway Park was delayed.[3] The speedway was covered by approximately 6,900 cubic feet of clay for DIRTcar modified drivers to compete in the NAPA 300, the richest dirt modified race in the world. The event took place on October 5 to 9, 2016.[3] It was the first time that the track had a dirt surface since 1952.[3] The state of New York spent $1.1 million in renovations to the speedway that year.[3] It received a new scoreboard and bleachers; the campgrounds got plumbing and electricity upgrades.[3] The 2020 season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

The speedway signed an online streaming agreement in 2021 for FloRacing to broadcast weekly Oswego Speedway races.[4]

Contact information

The track is located at 300 East Albany Street, Oswego, NY 13126, about 35 miles northwest of Syracuse near State Highway 481 just off Rt. 104; telephone 315-342-0646. The facility has covered and uncovered grandstands on the north side, as well as uncovered grandstands the south. Total seating is =/- 10,000.

Unpaved, open-field parking is available on both sides of Albany Street to the north and east of the "oval" track surface. (It is not truly an oval, but is more of a "four-corner" track. Banking is about thirteen degrees.)

Annual events

Greg Furlong has won the Labor Day Weekend Classic event six times since 1999, and has finished on the podium on two other occasions. Famed Indianapolis 500 drivers Davey Hamilton, Bentley Warren and Joe Gosek are all Budweiser Classic winners. Warren won the Budweiser Classic six times from 1969 through 1998, as well as winning the ISMA Supernationals winged supermodified event in 1994 and 2006 (at the age of 66).

Some Race of Champions winners have participated in NASCAR events. These include Brett Bodine, 1986 Daytona 500 winner Geoff Bodine, NASCAR Hall of Famer and modified legend Richie Evans, Brian Ross, Greg Sacks, Frankie Schneider, and Jimmy Spencer.

Racing vehicles

Oswego is the last track in the world to utilize supermodifieds in its weekly programs.[4] The modern supermodified car is a front-engine / rear-drive vehicle with a big block Chevrolet engine mounted on the left side of the chassis to maximize kinetic force for left turns on the 5/8-mile, asphalt track. The normally aspirated, fuel-injected engines make 900 or more horsepower, or one horsepower or more for each two pounds of weight (1800-lb. minimum). Up to and including the 2018 season, Oswego supermodifieds were unwinged, having wedge-shaped bodywork to provide downforce. The fastest non-wing supermodifieds were capable of circling the track in less than 16.5 seconds, averaging better than 136 miles per hour in the process. For the 2019 season, Oswego supermodifieds will utilize fixed rear-wings for downforce.

Oswego Speedway supermodified class track champions have included multi-time champs Otto Sitterly (nine times, 2006-2014, 2018, 2019),[1] Nolan Swift (eight times, 1953–71), Bentley Warren (seven times, 1983–93), Jim Shampine (seven times, 1967–79), Greg Furlong (four times, 2000–07), Eddie Bellinger, Sr. (three times, 1957–60), Doug Didero (three times, 1994–96) and Mike Muldoon (three times, 1997-1999).

Other classes running regularly at Oswego Speedway during the season that extends from April through September include the Oswego Speedway Small Block Supermodifieds and 350 Winged Supermodifieds.[4] It has featured DART Asphalt Modified Tour cars and Buckeye Super (winged asphalt) Sprint Cars. The track also hosts the International Supermodified Association (ISMA) and Midwest Supermodified Association (MSA) supermodifieds (both having air-strut adjustable top wings). Some Whelen Modified drivers occasionally race at Oswego including Matt Hirschman, his father Tony, Zane Zeiner, and Bryon Chew.

The fastest winged supermodifieds are capable of lapping the track in the low 15-second range at average speeds of 150 miles per hour, generating gravity forces of 4.0 and up.

Track records: Winged Supermodified 14.730 Mike Lichty 5/28/16. Non-wing supermodified 15.769 Brandon Bellinger 8/30/19

References

50th (2006) and 52nd (2008) Budweiser International Classic official programs.

  1. 1 2 3 "Otto Sitterly Chasing 10th Oswego Supermodified Championship". FloRacing. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Oswego Speedway". NASCAR Home Tracks. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Horning, Payne (September 22, 2016). "Oswego Speedway gets major uplift for SuperDIRT Week". WRVO. Retrieved May 9, 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 "FloRacing Signs On As Official Broadcast Partner of Oswego Speedway". www.floracing.com. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
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