Jamestown Speedway draw strong local field for June 20 races
Local drivers Travis Edinger and Billy Carow finished behind Bismarck's Kelly Hoerner as Jamestown Speedway's June 20 card drew 28 Bombers/Hobby Stocks entries.

Bismarck's Kelly Hoerner won the Bombers/Hobby Stocks main at Jamestown Speedway, but the bigger local story was how strongly Stutsman County racers stacked up behind him. Jamestown drivers Travis Edinger and Billy Carow followed Hoerner in the finish order, giving the home crowd a front-row look at how much local speed was on the track that night.
The June 20 program was built as more than a routine weekly show. Jamestown Speedway paired the Mary Vetter Challenge with the INEX Legends Tour and Retro Night, turning the card into a special-event evening that blended touring talent, local competition and a throwback theme. For local fans, that meant a fuller field and a chance to measure hometown drivers against outside competition without leaving Jamestown.
The turnout backed up that sense of scale. The entries page listed 28 Bombers/Hobby Stocks entries, 20 Gerdau Recycling WISSOTA Midwest Mods entries and 10 Jr. Slingshot entries, a healthy spread across divisions for a dirt-track night in Stutsman County. Drivers from Jamestown, Buchanan, Spiritwood, Hazelton, Montpelier, Mandan and Wishek were among those connected to the card, underscoring how far Jamestown Speedway’s reach extends across the region.

Lane Stoppleworth of Buchanan also appeared in the Bombers/Hobby Stocks results, adding another nearby name to a finish list led by Hoerner and followed by two Jamestown drivers. That mattered on a night built around special-event racing, because it showed the local field was not just present but competitive, even with a touring Legends tour on the schedule.
The combination of a recurring challenge race, a themed Retro Night and a strong turnout gave the Speedway a card that felt bigger than a single results sheet. For Stutsman County racers and fans, the takeaway was simple: Jamestown Speedway remained a place where local drivers could race close to home, measure themselves against outside entries and leave with momentum from a well-attended summer program.
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