Drivers and their teams pull into the dusty pit at the Heart O’ Texas Speedway on a warm spring Friday evening.
In a couple hours they’ll be racing at blistering speeds around the quarter-mile banked clay oval for a chance to win and go on to Super Nationals.
The track just east of I-35 in Elm Mott celebrates its 60th anniversary this year as the longest running dirt track in Texas. Generations of its drivers have competed in local, state, and national championships.

Friday night’s IMCA Sprint Car race commemorated the 10th anniversary of the death of Gene Adamcik, who devoted 32 years of his life developing it.
According to the Heart O’ Texas Speedway site, Adamcik began working there in the early ‘60s as a parking attendant and began racing a few years later. The track was on the brink when he and Richard Rogers began operating it in 1981. At the time it struggled to draw two dozen racers and 300 spectators on a typical night.

By 1985, race nights were drawing an average of 85 cars and 2,500 spectators. Adamcik passed away in 2016 due to complications from diabetes, but his legacy can be felt rumbling through drivers and fans alike to this day.

By the time the first round of cars lined up for their practice rounds on Friday, 94 drivers, as young as 16, descended on the patch of clay in Elm Mott from all over the Heart of Texas.
For $20, fans get four hours of heart-pounding entertainment watching drivers as young as 16 clear the quarter-mile oval in under 15 seconds.
The winged sprint cars competing in Gene’s memorial race blast through the curves at speeds up to 95 mph, spraying clay and rubber through the air, and hitting 110 mph on the straights.




Friday’s grand prize went to Chris Morris, 31, of Taylor. Morris, who is paraplegic, operates his IMCA Modified class car using hand controls with unflinching precision while barreling through turns sideways, almost making it look easy.



















