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Topic: Kubota High Limit Racing Formalizes 'High Roller Club' For Teams
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Page 2 of 2 of 30 replies
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November 16, 2025 at
11:44:36 PM
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Reply to:
Posted By: highspeeddirt on November 16 2025 at 05:21:57 PM
Is this that "next level" that I have heard about for the last 20 years? I will pass on that level and go back to the 70's and 80's level. When innovation wasn't neutered by rules and corporate America had no idea who we were.
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The extra money in the sport is appreciated . I personally would like to see the bottom tier teams get a fair share. Seems a little to complicated. The top teams usually arent the ones using used tires to be able to keep going.
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November 17, 2025 at
07:04:43 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: Murphy on November 16 2025 at 11:04:44 AM
Rather than trying to change the subject from a discussion among interested parties, why don't you just admit that you don't understand it either?
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one opinion to another Dont need to understand it, simple business process. money in, money out. "change the subject from a discussion among interested parties". whoa! all of a sudden there is finally a new Hosehead rule after the 20 years on this site. lets face it here. High Limit fans, WOO fans... the best racing we could ask for...
Ascot was the greatest of all time..
West Capital wasn't half bad either..
Life is good...
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November 17, 2025 at
08:06:14 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: highspeeddirt on November 16 2025 at 05:21:57 PM
Is this that "next level" that I have heard about for the last 20 years? I will pass on that level and go back to the 70's and 80's level. When innovation wasn't neutered by rules and corporate America had no idea who we were.
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I'm in the same boat as you but according to the smart people that post here our boat is old and sinking. I also notice some of these smart folks are now questioning the next nevel they yearned for so badly. The Next Level is costing the sport car/owner support, plain and simple. The Next Level is the nascar route. Me, I'll just stick to regular local shows and be entertained for 25-30 laps of non gimmick, no hype 410 sprint car racing. I'm sure the smart posters will keep us old dinosaurs in the know on how the next level is working to make the sport better.
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November 17, 2025 at
09:06:20 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: beezr2002 on November 17 2025 at 08:06:14 AM
I'm in the same boat as you but according to the smart people that post here our boat is old and sinking. I also notice some of these smart folks are now questioning the next nevel they yearned for so badly. The Next Level is costing the sport car/owner support, plain and simple. The Next Level is the nascar route. Me, I'll just stick to regular local shows and be entertained for 25-30 laps of non gimmick, no hype 410 sprint car racing. I'm sure the smart posters will keep us old dinosaurs in the know on how the next level is working to make the sport better.
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I don't have a problem with anyone yearning for the old days as long as I don't hear them complaining about purse sizes, lack of growth for their sport, or asking "how do we get people interested in racing again" questions. As long as someone is fine with the ship sinking as the times change, I have no issue with their opinion.
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November 17, 2025 at
09:37:10 AM
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This message was edited on
November 17, 2025 at
09:43:04 AM by RunWYB
Reply to:
Posted By: egras on November 17 2025 at 09:06:20 AM
I don't have a problem with anyone yearning for the old days as long as I don't hear them complaining about purse sizes, lack of growth for their sport, or asking "how do we get people interested in racing again" questions. As long as someone is fine with the ship sinking as the times change, I have no issue with their opinion.
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Egras - beezr and highspeed IMHO much like i have discussed miss the days of Run What Ya Brung.
The World of Outlaws were dominating everywhere when they first started except PA - i can assure you big block cast irons were deemed illegal not because of PA tracks or drivers.....it was a corporate decision than and all decisions/changes within in the WoO and High Limit as we have discussed ad nauseam and as we agree are done only for the benefit of that series and its drivers.
The rule changes of the 80's made cubic inches truly a discussion of cubic DOLLARS. The traveling series are at a breaking point; whereas local tracks are struggling with purse demands because of the costs of 410 engines and Hoosier tires. The razors edge is if tracks can no longer operate where are the series going to race/exist? I don't think either series cares about other tracks outside their schedule as it takes money from their potential pool....people only have so much money for racing attendance etc....less tracks is less demand on the limited resource pool....but if to many track go away where do they race?
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November 17, 2025 at
10:10:28 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: beezr2002 on November 17 2025 at 08:06:14 AM
I'm in the same boat as you but according to the smart people that post here our boat is old and sinking. I also notice some of these smart folks are now questioning the next nevel they yearned for so badly. The Next Level is costing the sport car/owner support, plain and simple. The Next Level is the nascar route. Me, I'll just stick to regular local shows and be entertained for 25-30 laps of non gimmick, no hype 410 sprint car racing. I'm sure the smart posters will keep us old dinosaurs in the know on how the next level is working to make the sport better.
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I've always believed there is no "next level" for sprint car racing. It's a niche sport and will always be exactly that. In the eighties people thought live TV was the answer for sprint car racing's "next level" and wondered why it didn't happen. It's because sprint car racing isn't cut out for live TV shows. It sucked with very little racing time and endless driver interviews. These days it's streaming that represents the "next level". Streaming is a different animal but has some of the same problems. HL may succeed in knocking WoO off the top of the hill, but there is no "next level" where HL can take things.
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November 17, 2025 at
10:58:41 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: Rodneyincanad on November 16 2025 at 02:57:50 PM
If they are paying out this year's prizes over the course of next season, that scares me. I hope it isn't because they need the next year's income to meet this year's bills. And if that's the case it's BS. Point money should be a single cheque at the end of the season it was earned in.
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I'm glad I'm not the only one getting the same feeling about this. This is starting to give me really weird vibes similar to XR. Come race for us now but we will pay you later...
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November 17, 2025 at
11:30:24 AM
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When 410 gets too expensive for the local tracks you get what California has. Now there's a lack of weekly 410 racing entirely due to excessive cost. Tracks can't pay enough for them. and neither can the regular teams that make up the bulk of racers. Consequently, groups such as NARC, which has been around for decades struggle to get full fields which was never the case before the $70,000 engines and a truck load of Hoosiers. Darned few teams have a $ tree in their back yard..HL and WoO are geared for the Pro touring guys and it's rare when a regional team can compete for a win with them.
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November 17, 2025 at
11:44:27 AM
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Reply to:
Posted By: RunWYB on November 17 2025 at 09:37:10 AM
Egras - beezr and highspeed IMHO much like i have discussed miss the days of Run What Ya Brung.
The World of Outlaws were dominating everywhere when they first started except PA - i can assure you big block cast irons were deemed illegal not because of PA tracks or drivers.....it was a corporate decision than and all decisions/changes within in the WoO and High Limit as we have discussed ad nauseam and as we agree are done only for the benefit of that series and its drivers.
The rule changes of the 80's made cubic inches truly a discussion of cubic DOLLARS. The traveling series are at a breaking point; whereas local tracks are struggling with purse demands because of the costs of 410 engines and Hoosier tires. The razors edge is if tracks can no longer operate where are the series going to race/exist? I don't think either series cares about other tracks outside their schedule as it takes money from their potential pool....people only have so much money for racing attendance etc....less tracks is less demand on the limited resource pool....but if to many track go away where do they race?
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Our local track that ran late models, mods, sportsmans, and bombers was essentially a "run what ya brung" rules package in every class, with no sanctioning body, and zero big sponsorship dollars coming in. The drivers in each class with the most money ruled the class, raised the costs for each class in order to compete, and essentially broke dozens of local men, women, and familes. I'm not really sure what would have changed if they had a national touring series come through once or twice per year.
I don't think cars running at a local level are required to keep up with cars running on a national touring series if they only race against those cars briefly each year. If one or 2 of the locals has the money to compete with the national guys when they come to town, I don't think that will change the fact that those locals will also spend the money if the national guys don't come to town. The lower budget racers have always, and will continue to get their asses kicked as long as racing exists. No one is putting a gun to the local's heads and forcing them to pump money into their cars to keep up with guys with national touring dollars. They'll move on after a race or 2 and you're back to local competition.
Just my two cents.
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November 17, 2025 at
03:01:13 PM
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Wow just listened to Jeremy Elliott's 90 at 9:00 titled "The Slow Death of the Weekly Show".
he said only 14 tracks across the country run a weekly 410 show got his data from sprint car ratings.com
in Pa he said Lincoln got the most shows in at 22 shows in while Port Royal, Williamsgrove, and Knoxville were the other top 4.
Butler, Lernerville and Husets tied for 5th at 16 shows.
in his opinion the special shows and increased admission cost has forced many on a budget to move their money around meaning instead of regular shows they will roll some of that money into the special or touring shows - as we discussed to see the "stars" of the sport.
another variable streaming and the all in for fans for pa speed weeks which is like special holiday for many in central pa.
it was a good listen....
so are we at the tipping point?
IMHO the additional weekly shows and Sunday shows have saturated this area and we have passed the tipping point.
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November 17, 2025 at
03:27:59 PM
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Reply to:
Posted By: RunWYB on November 17 2025 at 03:01:13 PM
Wow just listened to Jeremy Elliott's 90 at 9:00 titled "The Slow Death of the Weekly Show".
he said only 14 tracks across the country run a weekly 410 show got his data from sprint car ratings.com
in Pa he said Lincoln got the most shows in at 22 shows in while Port Royal, Williamsgrove, and Knoxville were the other top 4.
Butler, Lernerville and Husets tied for 5th at 16 shows.
in his opinion the special shows and increased admission cost has forced many on a budget to move their money around meaning instead of regular shows they will roll some of that money into the special or touring shows - as we discussed to see the "stars" of the sport.
another variable streaming and the all in for fans for pa speed weeks which is like special holiday for many in central pa.
it was a good listen....
so are we at the tipping point?
IMHO the additional weekly shows and Sunday shows have saturated this area and we have passed the tipping point.
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It was 12 a few years ago. It's been really low for decades now.
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