In dominating fashion, Preston Peltier won his Super Late Models feature race Friday at the 2022 Chilly Willy at Arizona’s Tucson Speedway. Some wondered whether it was a sign of things to come even though he did not start Saturday’s feature.

Sure enough, Peltier won Sunday’s main event, the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150, after starting from the pole.

The Brighton, Colorado, native became the first driver to win two Chilly Willy titles in the event’s nine-year history; he also took the victory at Tucson in 2020.

RELATED: Watch grassroots racing all year on FloRacing

“I wanted to put on a good show,” Peltier said after the race. “I knew we had a good car. It’s all about saving tires. We saved just enough. These guys were beating on me pretty hard, and I was just trying to save.”

Peltier lost the lead on Lap 20 but gained it back for good on Lap 76. He was able to hold the lead despite a pair or restarts with six and five laps to go, respectively.

Asked about the exciting brand of racing he and others produced at Tucson on Sunday, Peltier credited the venue.

“This is an awesome track to race on,” he said. “You can run top, bottom, middle, three-wide. It’s the only place in the country I feel comfortable running three wide with locals. We can’t wait to come back next year.”

Kody Vanderwal, Edward Vecchiarelli and Ron Norman finished second through fourth, respectively, in the Chilly Willy 150. Defending Tucson Speedway track champion Brett Yackey finished fifth as the last car on the lead lap.

Local driver Brice Bonnett won Sunday’s Modifieds division feature at the Chilly Willy ahead of Dominick Adams in second, Brian Harrington Jr. in third, Nick O’Neil in fourth and Paul French Jr. in fifth.

In the Legends division, Sean Hingorani won the Sunday feature over Cody Brown, Chasen Groff, Cody Milan and Ethan Nascimento in second through fifth, respectively.

Jaron Giannini took the checkered flag in the Legends / Pro & Masters feature event Sunday at the Chilly Willy. Jake Bohlman, Levie Jones, Tyler Hicks and Josh Gross rounded out the top five.

A full replay of Sunday’s Chilly Willy action is available on FloRacing.

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock

Tuesday, Jan. 25
4 p.m., NASCAR Presents Beyond the Wheel, FS2

Saturday, Jan. 29
11 a.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Round 1 IMSA Prototype Challenge (tape delay), USA/NBC Sports App
1:30 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Rolex 24 at Daytona, NBC/NBC Sports App
1:30 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Rolex 24 at Daytona, Peacock (will air full 24 hours of event)*
4 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Rolex 24 at Daytona, USA/NBC Sports App
10 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing: Rolex 24 at Daytona, USA/NBC Sports App

Sunday, Jan. 30
6 a.m., IMSA SportsCar Championship: Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway, USA/NBC Sports App
Noon, IMSA SportsCar Championship: Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway, NBC/NBC Sports App

Saturday brought another action-packed day and evening of racing in the 2022 Chilly Willy at Arizona’s Tucson Speedway. Only Sunday’s finale remains on the schedule.

Four classes of cars — Super Late Models, Pro Stocks, Legends and Legends / Pro & Masters — took to the 0.375-mile oval Saturday.

RELATED: Watch the 2022 Chilly Willy live on FloRacing

All Chilly Willy action, including Sunday’s main event, the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150, can be viewed live on FloRacing.

Below are the takeaways from Saturday’s racing.

  • Brett Yackey of Greeley, Colorado, and Blaine Rocha of Oakdale, California, emerged as the two feature winners in the Super Late Models division Saturday night. Yackey’s win came in stunning fashion, as he drove from fifth to first in 50 laps after qualifying ninth. Rocha started second in his feature after qualifying eighth.
  • Ron Norman, Dustin Ash, Edward Vecchiarelli and Buddy Sheppard rounded out the top five in the Super Late Models A Feature 1. Ross Strmiska, Rudy Vanderwal, Tyler Tanner and Bruce Yackey completed the top five in the Super Late Models A Feature 2.
  • Ron Searle Jr. and Don Geary qualified first and second, respectively, in the Pro Stocks division Saturday. But that order flipped in the feature, as Geary was able to pass Searle for the win. Barry Levitt, Brian O’Brien and Richard Dorman rounded out the top five in the Pro Stocks feature race.
  • Ethan Nascimento of Manteca, California, had himself a day in the Legends division Saturday. He qualified first and went on to win the feature race. Sean Hingorani, Cody Brown, Bryceton Meyer and Chasen Groff completed the top five in the Legends feature.
  • Like Nascimento did in the Legends division, Jake Bohlman of Huntington Beach, California, swept the day in the Legends / Pro & Masters division Saturday. He both qualified first and won the feature race. Jaron Giannini, Jordan Holloway, Brandon Giannini and Levie Jones rounded out the top five in that division’s feature.

The 2022 Chilly Willy comes to a close Sunday. Racing starts at 3 p.m. ET / 1 p.m. MT and can be viewed live on FloRacing.

The Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum is getting even more star power for its Los Angeles debut — NASCAR Hall of Famer Tony Stewart will join Mike Joy and Clint Bowyer in the broadcast booth for the Feb. 6 spectacle, FOX announced Saturday night.

RELATED: Buy Clash tickets

The Stewart-Haas Racing co-owner will also offer his analysis for the Daytona 500 on Feb. 20 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“To call the very first Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum AND the Daytona 500 is an opportunity you don’t pass up,” Stewart said in a FOX Sports release. “The size and scope of both these races is massive, and it’s an honor to be a part of them with FOX. Anytime you get to talk racing with Clint and Mike, you’re going to have a good time.”

The season-opening Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum exhibition race marks a historic first visit to the tradition-rich Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which will add NASCAR Cup Series racing to its 98-year-old portfolio. The event is to be contested around a quarter-mile asphalt oval that has been built on the facility’s football field.

The Los Angeles event (6 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) will mark the first time the preseason Clash will be held outside of Daytona International Speedway since its inception in 1979, and it will give the sport its first competitive look at the Next Gen car in the non-points event.

MORE: Behind-the-scenes track pics

There’s plenty more in store for fans in attendance or watching on FOX as well, including a Pitbull pre-race concert presented by Coca-Cola along with a race break performance by Ice Cube.

FOX also announced that two-time Daytona 500-winning crew chief Larry McReynolds will return as the FOX NASCAR technical analyst, with Jamie Little and Regan Smith reporting from the pits at the Clash and Vince Welch joining the team in Daytona.

The first evening of the 2022 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway is in the books.

Three classes — Super Late Models, Legends and Legends / Pro & Masters — took to the 0.375-mile oval Friday night, with the evening culminating in the A Features for the Super Late Models.

RELATED: Watch the 2022 Chilly Willy live on FloRacing

All of the action at the Chilly Willy is building up to Sunday’s main event, the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150.

Below are the takeaways from Friday’s action.

  • Preston Peltier of Brighton, Colorado, proved to be the Super Late Model driver to beat Friday night at Tucson. He topped the division’s qualifying run by 0.2 seconds over second-place Tyler Tanner, putting Peltier on the pole for the A Feature 1. Peltier won that feature from the pole.
  • Blaine Rocha, Edward Vecchiarelli, Kody Vanderwal and Rudy Vanderwal rounded out the top five of the Super Late Models A Feature 1. Vecchiarelli was able to pass Kody Vanderwal after starting fourth.
  • Tanner finished second in the Super Late Models A Feature 2 after getting passed by Dustin Ash, who had finished third in the qualifier before winning his feature. Brett Yackey, Ross Strmiska and Dylan Jones rounded out the top five in the Super Late Models A Feature 2.
  • Sean Hingorani of Newport Coast, California, put together a perfect night in the Legends division at Tucson on Friday. He topped the qualifying chart before starting and finishing first in Heat 1. He then won the feature race after starting on the pole.
  • Bryceton Meyer, Ethan Nascimento, Chasen Groff and Nathan Quella rounded out the top five in the Legends A Feature race.
  • In the Legends / Pro & Masters division, Jake Bohlman and Jaron Giannini finished first and second, respectively, in qualifying. And they finished the same in Heat 1. Then Giannini flipped the script on Bohlman to win the feature race. Levie Jones, Jordan Holloway and Andy Hulcy rounded out the top five.

The 2022 Chilly Willy action continues Saturday beginning at 3 p.m. ET / 1 p.m. MT on FloRacing.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – AJ Foyt could win a race in a wheel barrel. Tony Stewart could win in anything that has a steering wheel. At least that is Red Farmer’s reasoning behind why he considers Foyt and Stewart to be two of the best racers he has ever seen. And Farmer is 89 years old, racing for at least 75 of those trips around the sun.

RELATED: Class of 2021 inducted into NASCAR Hall of Fame | Photos from festivities

After being inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame Friday night and reminiscing on his still-active career, Farmer’s status and experience make him worthy of the question: Who is the best race-car driver – ever?

“I’d put Tony Stewart and AJ Foyt up there,” Farmer said Friday at the Charlotte Convention Center. “Now you’ve got this kid, Kyle Larson, coming up who looks like he’s in the same class. He can drive anything and win races in it. Road course. Dirt. Superspeedway. Asphalt. Mile-and-a-half.”

RELATED: Red Farmer shares some of his racing stories in Hall speech

Not an exaggeration. Last season alone in the NASCAR Cup Series, Larson won 10 races, including at road courses, superspeedways, asphalt and mile-and-a-halves as well as the title race at Phoenix. He didn’t win a dirt race on the NASCAR schedule – there was only one – but he did win in multiple other dirt-specific circuits, including the oh-so-popular Chili Bowl.

“That’s kind of a hard decision, you know, to pick one that’s the best driver,” Farmer said. “I think you got to pick a driver that can drive anything on any type of track.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. had a self-described lottery-winning moment before he ever hit NASCAR’s big time. He had become a regular competitor on the weekly and touring Late Model circuit, and Dale Earnhardt Inc. was looking for a full-time replacement for Steve Park in its Xfinity Series ride for 1998.

Earnhardt Jr. recalled that his brief, nine-race Xfinity career to that point was middling at best, and that his Late Model record was a modest four wins in 159 starts. Yet when Dale Earnhardt approached crew chief Tony Eury Sr. to discuss the team’s direction, his suggestion hit close to home.

“Dale came to me and said, ‘what do you think about Dale Jr.? Do you think he’ll ever make a driver?’ ” Eury recalled. “And I said, ‘I don’t know. I haven’t been to Myrtle Beach (Speedway) to watch him race and I don’t have time to go to Myrtle Beach, but I see you spending a lot of money on some other people, why don’t you spend it on your own kids? Try it and see. That’s all we can do is see.’

“So we tried it, and it worked.”

From those modest beginnings sprang a NASCAR Hall of Fame career. Tony Eury Sr. and Jr., both of whom played pivotal roles in Earnhardt Jr.’s early years in racing, sat front and center Friday night at the Charlotte Convention Center to watch their former pupil’s induction.

RELATED: Photos: NASCAR Hall induction | Dale Jr. through the years

Earnhardt Jr. eventually made Eury Sr.’s suggestion look prophetic. The two combined for 13 wins and a pair of Xfinity Series championships in consecutive years, launching him onto the national scene.

Rusty Jarrett | Getty Images
Rusty Jarrett | Getty Images

“I always thought he would be one of the greats,” said Eury Jr., who was atop the pit box for two of his Cup Series wins and one of his Xfinity triumphs. “I’d seen the talent that he had early, when we started the Xfinity stuff. Luckily we were in a position as a company where we were kind of finishing in the top five in points … so I told him, ‘look, just don’t hit nothing and you’ll have this championship in the bag. We’ll do what we gotta do and you’ll learn how to drive these cars and we’ll go.’

“He wasn’t really successful in his Late Model career, but he was consistent. He’d run top five all the time so you knew he could take care of his equipment. That’s what he did. It’s kind of like he says in his videos, in ’98, it was like, ‘wow, we did it.’ We weren’t supposed to do it, but we did it. That was cool, but in ’99 it was more like, let’s get serious about this. We’ve got to repeat. We’re supposed to do this.”

That combination and confidence carried into the Cup Series in 2000, with Earnhardt bringing the Eurys along for the ride. And Eury Sr. drew special mention during Earnhardt’s speech as one of the role models who held him accountable in the early stages of his career. “I think about you all the time, and every day I live my life to please people like you,” Earnhardt said, noting how the elder Eury grounded him as the sometimes chaotic career began to skyrocket.

The Hall of Fame stage gave Earnhardt a chance to thank his longtime crew chief, but it also presented the opportunity to mend a heartache from more than 15 years ago.

“For a long time there, I spent day after day with that man, racing in the Xfinity Series and then the Cup Series with the Bud car,” Earnhardt said after the ceremonies. “One of my biggest regrets, and I’ve said this before, one of the biggest regrets in my professional career was thinking that making a change in his position as a crew chief was what we needed to do. Me supporting that decision is without question my biggest regret in my racing career because I was not only coming off a successful year in 2004, but I needed his leadership and so did the team.

“So it was so nice to be able to look him in the eye and tell him that I think about him every day and the decisions I make in my life are influenced by him, and that he matters, at least to me. I’m glad that I got to share that with him.”

WATCH: Dale Jr.’s Hall of Fame speech

It was one of a multitude of stories on a welcoming, snowy night, from Julie Stefanik’s heartfelt speech honoring her late husband, Mike, a true Modified Tour ace. And Red Farmer stoked the racing hot-stove season with vivid tales pulled from his decades as a pioneer of the sport.

The Eurys had their own stories, either shared themselves or from the recollections of others. Those yarns included the contract negotiations that Earnhardt first had with team owner Rick Hendrick and the almost comically trivial write-in request – that his car’s side skirts always be painted to match the body color.

But the Eurys were also able to share their perspective on Earnhardt Jr.’s growth into his multi-faceted life as a husband, father, team owner and an insightful broadcaster. That public-facing role with NBC Sports marks a long-haul departure from the bashful young driver that they had first urged the Intimidator to promote.

“The media couldn’t get him to talk to them, and just gave short answers to everything. Real shy, didn’t want to talk, wouldn’t look at the cameras,” Eury Sr. said. “Then for him to turn into the TV guy that he is now, it’s really kind of amazing how he’s changed. I tell you, I’m really, really proud of him as a race car driver, but I’m really proud of him the way he’s doing his TV stuff and his Download (podcast). I couldn’t be any happier.”

Earnhardt Jr. has long been a steward of stock-car racing history. Now it’s a role he’s further able to embrace as a NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee.

“I think he’s always been kind of timid to be that guy, but I told him tonight when I saw him that one of the greatest things he can do is be an ambassador in this sport,” Eury Jr. said, noting his show of support for the Stefanik family before the Hall of Fame proceedings. “… Stuff like that goes further than you can ever imagine with people. Wins are great, titles are great, but the kind of person you are means more than anything.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — At first glance — aside from sharing the profession of “race car driver” — Dale Earnhardt Jr., Mike Stefanik and Red Farmer couldn’t be more different from one another.

A perennial Most Popular Driver at NASCAR’s highest level of competition, Earnhardt holds two Daytona 500 wins among his 26 career victories.

More than that, as a driver, team owner and television analyst, Earnhardt has transcended both the sport of stock car racing and his own legacy as the son of seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Dale Earnhardt.

RELATED: Photos: Hall of Fame induction | NASCAR Hall of Fame members

Stefanik, a hard-nosed New Englander, drove modifieds with a relentless tenacity that carried him to seven Whelen Modified Tour titles. Stefanik, who died in 2019 at age 61 from injuries sustained in the crash of a private plane, also collected two championships in what was then the Busch North Series.

The patriarch of the Alabama Gang, Farmer accumulated innumerable victories — estimated between 700 and 900 — at short tracks located primarily in the Deep South. At age 89, he still competes on the one-third-mile dirt oval at the Talladega Short Track across the highway from NASCAR’s biggest superspeedway.

Despite their varying backgrounds and diverse racing pursuits, Earnhardt, Stefanik and Farmer now share one monumental achievement in common — after all three entered the NASCAR Hall of Fame during an induction ceremony at the Charlotte Convention Center on Friday night.

The climax of the ceremony was the induction of Earnhardt, who has made an indelible mark on a sport he was born into. Earnhardt joined his father, a member of the inaugural class of 2010 in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

MORE: Dale Jr. savors moment | Red Farmer’s racing journey | Magical memories of Mike Stefanik

Earnhardt’s wife Amy performed the induction of her husband.

“My eyes are already watering,” Earnhardt said at the start to his acceptance speech. “…To join Dad in the Hall of Fame is probably as good as it’s going to get…

“I was a mechanic at a dealership. That was my destiny, or so I thought. I changed the oil in thousands of cars.”

From those inauspicious beginnings, however, Earnhardt followed his father into the NASCAR Xfinity Series, where he won back-to-back championships in 1998 and 1999, and then into NASCAR’s premier division, where he drove first for family-owned Dale Earnhardt Inc. and then for Hendrick Motorsports.

Earnhardt acknowledged the importance of uncle Tony Eury Sr., his crew chief; his sister Kelley Earnhardt Miller, who spurred the growth of JR Motorsports and Earnhardt’s broadcasting career; team owner Rick Hendrick; and Steve Letarte, his crew chief at that organization.

Key to his personal life, Earnhardt said, was wife Amy. “How do you explain someone who makes every day of your life better?” he said.

RELATED: Dale Jr. recognizes family in speech | Red Farmer reminisces in speech 

NASCAR Hall of Fame crew chief Ray Evernham opened the inductions by ushering Stefanik into the Hall. Stefanik’s wife Julie, who served as her husband’s spotter throughout his career, accepted the induction.

“This is a huge honor, and I know Michael would have been very humbled,” Julie Stefanik said of her husband, who set Whelen Modified Tour records for victories (74) and poles (48).

“He was more than just a racer to us. He was a beloved husband, father, brother and friend. And in his honor, I’ll have a Jack and diet (Stefanik’s favorite drink).”

Stefanik and fellow modified driver and mentor Richie Evans are the only drivers to win nine NASCAR championships. All of Evans’ titles came on the Modified Tour.

RELATED: Mike Stefanik’s wife recalls his attention to detail

Three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Tony Stewart inducted his close friend and hunting and fishing buddy Charles “Red” Farmer.

“He doesn’t know how to be quiet in a deer stand — I can tell you that,” Stewart said. “But his stats speak for themselves. He’s a racer’s racer and he deserves to be in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.”

Born in Nashville and starting his racing career in Florida, Farmer nevertheless considers Hueytown, Alabama his hometown, in part because of his association with fellow Alabama Gang members Bobby and Donnie Allison. Farmer has been racing for 75 of his 89 years.

“It’s something that gets in your blood, and you can’t get it out,” Farmer said in a “fireside chat” at the induction dinner before the official ceremony.

Though Farmer raced 36 times in the Cup Series over a 23-year span, with a best finish of fourth (twice) at Middle Georgia Raceway in Macon and Talladega Superspeedway, he routinely turned down full-time Cup offers in less-than-competitive equipment.

“I was not going to be an also-ran,” said Farmer, who preferred to win races and championships on the short tracks. That didn’t prevent him, however, from winning the Modified title in 1956.

The NASCAR Hall is the 10th hall of fame to honor Farmer.

“If these Hall of Fames were a Christmas tree with all the ornaments around it, this NASCAR award would be the gold star on top of that Christmas tree,” Farmer said during his induction speech.

RELATED: Squier-Hall Award recognizes Bob Jenkins | Landmark Award goes to Ralph Seagraves

As part of the Friday night program, the late Bob Jenkins was recognized with the Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence for his pioneering work in television and radio broadcasting.

The late Ralph Seagraves was honored with the 2021 Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR. As an executive with R.J. Reynolds, Seagraves was instrumental in bring the Winston sponsorship to NASCAR’s foremost series, as well as to the grassroots racing NASCAR supported.

The 2022 edition of the Chilly Willy at Arizona’s Tucson Speedway arrives this weekend with a hefty entry list.

Announced on Jan. 16 were more than 30 Super Late Model entries and 42 Legends entries for this year’s event, which kicks off a long season of short-track racing on the 0.375-mile NASCAR Home Track in the desert.

RELATED: Watch the 2022 Chilly Willy live on FloRacing

Not including Thursday’s practice day, racing action at the 2022 Chilly Willy begins Friday, Jan. 21 and runs through the main event — the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150 — on Sunday, Jan. 23.

All of the action can be viewed live on FloRacing, the new streaming home of all NASCAR Roots properties.

Below is the entry list for the 2022 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway.

RELATED: Complete racing schedule for 2022 Chilly Willy

2022 Chilly Willy entry list

  • Super Late Model entries
Car No. Driver Hometown
0 Kenny Bumbera Sealy, TX
2 Michael Egurola Tucson, AZ
3 Ricky Bogart Phoenix, AZ
5 David Smith Sidney, B.C.
7 Zach Riehl Troutdale, OR
8 Mariah McGriff ONeil Vail, AZ
9 Ron Norman Tucson, AZ
11 Dustin Ash Las Vegas, NV
11r Darren Robertson Westminster, CO
12 Bruce Yackey Greeley, CO
14 Vanessa Robinson Las Cruces, NM
22 Buddy Sheppard Bakersfield, CA
25 Kami York Crystal Lake, IL
26 John Newhouse Twin Falls, ID
26j Dylan Jones Vail, AZ
32 Brett Yackey Greeley, CO
34 Rudy Vanderval LaSalle CO
43 Kody Vanderwal LaSalle, CO
47 Stephen Blankenship Tenino, WA
55 John Lashley Tucson, AZ
57 Jennifer Hall Tucson, AZ
63 Joe Paladenic Sierra Vista, AZ
65 Tyler Tanner Mooresville, NC
81 Darrell Midgley Sidney. B.C.
81c Brandon Carlson Victoria, B.C.
89 Zach Morris Greenwood Village, CO
90 Ross Stirimska Stockton, CA
98 Blaine Rocha Stockton, CA
100 Aaron Marthaler Glenwood, MN
100s Tristian Swanson Elko New Market, MN
  • Legends entries
Car No. Driver Hometown
09 Cole Alton Port Angeles, WA
6 Tyler Hicks Encinitas, CA
6f Ken Frickey Nampa, ID
7 Bryceton Meyer Brisbee, CA
10 Don Rogers Puyallup, WA
12 Chase Eisenzimer Kalispell, MT
12c Cody Winchel Cebastopol, CA
12h Jordan Hollaway Henderson, NV
12j TBA TBA
12b Bryanna Bruce Cheyenne, WY
13 Andy Hulcy Piano, TX
13h Sean Hingorina Irvine, CA
13b Tanner Bennett Irvine, CA
14g Madelyn Gjerness Chandler,AZ
21n Eathan Nascimento Manteca, CA
22r TJ Roberts Queen Creek, AZ
23 Lonnie Hochstetler Chandler, AZ
25 Branden Giannini Henderson, NV
27 Travis Bliven Stanwood, WA
32 Cody Milan Pierce, CO
33 Kyle Lang Snohomish, WA
35 Landon Gresser Henderson, NV
39 Zeke Hanger Ft. Lupton, CO
41 Tristian Meyer Bisbee, AZ
42 Josh Gross Las Vegas, NV
43 Tristian Bezan Saugus, CA
44 Alfred Matthews Arvada, CO
45 Byrson Brown Las Vegas NV
47 Michael Vanderlip Carlsbad, CA
48 Nathan Quella Yorba Linda, CA
50 Chloe Lynch Las Vegas, NV
50j Jerry Davis Emmett, ID
51 Brendan Ruzbarsky Tracey, CA
71 Jake Bollman Huntington Beach, CA
79 Jeff Miller Arlington, WA
81 Jeff Mueller Lake Stevens, WA
84 Mike Webber Tonopah, AZ
89 Zack Morris Greenwood Village, CO
90 Chasen Groff Denver, CO
91 Martin Gatzulis Wichita, KS
92 Levie Jones Puyallup, WA
TBA Payton Saxton Las Vegas, NV
TBA Jaron Giannini Henderson, NV

In Arizona, a season of short-track racing does not begin until the annual Chilly Willy is contested at Tucson Speedway, a NASCAR Home Track.

This year brings the ninth Chilly Willy, an event in which Super Late Models, Modifieds, Pro Stocks and Legends compete on the 0.375-mile paved oval over a three-day span each January or February.

RELATED: Watch the Chilly Willy live on FloRacing

The main event is the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150, which caps the weekend with its Sunday evening running. But a full weekend schedule of racing, including practice and qualifying runs, will precede the 150-lap feature.

All of the Chilly Willy racing action can be seen live on FloRacing. Below is the schedule and entry list for this year’s kickoff to the short-track racing season at Tucson Speedway.

What TV channel is the Chilly Willy on in 2022?

All racing action from the 2022 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the new streaming home of all NASCAR Roots properties.

The Chilly Willy will not be shown on a television network.

Below is the complete schedule for Chilly Willy coverage on FloRacing.

Date Start time End time How to watch
Friday, Jan. 21 8 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. MT 9:30 p.m. ET / 7:30 MT FloRacing
Saturday, Jan. 22 3 p.m. ET / 1 p.m. MT 7 p.m. ET / 5 p.m. MT FloRacing
Sunday, Jan. 23 2:55 p.m. ET / 12:55 p.m. MT 6 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. MT FloRacing

Tucson Speedway

Chilly Willy 2022 schedule

Not including Thursday’s practice day, the Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway features three days and nights of racing involving four divisions: Super Late Models, Modifieds, Pro Stocks and Legends.

The first on-track activity Friday is practice at 11 a.m. MT, and the action continues through the main event — the Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150 — on Sunday evening.

Below is the complete track schedule (subject to change) for the 2022 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway.

  • Friday, Jan. 21
Time Event
8 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open (SLM NASCAR Driver Membership Required)
8:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. Tech Open
8:30 a.m. – close Tire Barn Open
10 a.m. Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
11 a.m. – 3 p.m. Scheduled Practice
4 p.m. Qualifying – Super Late Models / Legends (Front Gate opens)
5:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
6 p.m. 50 Lap Super Late Feature(s) / 25 Lap Legend Feature(s)

(All times MT)

  • Saturday, Jan. 22
Time Event
8 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open
8:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Tech Open
8:30 a.m. – close Tire Barn Open
9 a.m. Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
10 a.m. – noon Scheduled Practice
1 p.m. Qualifying – Super Late Models: Top 3 qualifiers -$250 / $150 / $100 … Top 2 Super Late Models are locked into Chilly Willy 150 … Qualifying – Pro Stocks & Legends … (Front gate opens)
1:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
2 p.m. Heat Races & Main Events – Pro Stocks & Legends … SLM Qualifying Duals (50 Laps): $1200 to Win / $250 to start … Top 10 from each qualifying main will advance to Chilly Willy 150 … (Bon Fire & Chilly feed after racing concludes)

(All times MT)

  • Sunday, Jan. 23
Time Event
8:30 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open
9:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Tech Open
9:30 a.m. – close Tire Barn Open
10:30 a.m. Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Scheduled Practice (All classes for the event) … (Front gate opens at noon)
12:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
1 p.m. Qualifying – Modifieds … Super Late Model Last Chance Qualifier: Top 6 from Last Chance Qualifier Advance to Chilly Willy 150 … Legends Main Event (50 Laps) … Modifieds Main Event (75 Laps) … Intermission … Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150

(All times MT)

Tucson Speedway
Tucson Speedway (Meg Oliphant/NASCAR)

Chilly Willy 2022 entry list

More than 30 Super Late Model entries and 42 Legends entries for the 2022 Chilly Willy were announced Jan. 16.

Below is the list of drivers entered for this year’s event.

  • Super Late Model entries
Car No. Driver Hometown
0 Kenny Bumbera Sealy, TX
2 Michael Egurola Tucson, AZ
3 Ricky Bogart Phoenix, AZ
5 David Smith Sidney, B.C.
7 Zach Riehl Troutdale, OR
8 Mariah McGriff ONeil Vail, AZ
9 Ron Norman Tucson, AZ
11 Dustin Ash Las Vegas, NV
11r Darren Robertson Westminster, CO
12 Bruce Yackey Greeley, CO
14 Vanessa Robinson Las Cruces, NM
22 Buddy Sheppard Bakersfield, CA
25 Kami York Crystal Lake, IL
26 John Newhouse Twin Falls, ID
26j Dylan Jones Vail, AZ
32 Brett Yackey Greeley, CO
34 Rudy Vanderval LaSalle CO
43 Kody Vanderwal LaSalle, CO
47 Stephen Blankenship Tenino, WA
55 John Lashley Tucson, AZ
57 Jennifer Hall Tucson, AZ
63 Joe Paladenic Sierra Vista, AZ
65 Tyler Tanner Mooresville, NC
81 Darrell Midgley Sidney. B.C.
81c Brandon Carlson Victoria, B.C.
89 Zach Morris Greenwood Village, CO
90 Ross Stirimska Stockton, CA
98 Blaine Rocha Stockton, CA
100 Aaron Marthaler Glenwood, MN
100s Tristian Swanson Elko New Market, MN
  • Legends entries
Car No. Driver Hometown
09 Cole Alton Port Angeles, WA
6 Tyler Hicks Encinitas, CA
6f Ken Frickey Nampa, ID
7 Bryceton Meyer Brisbee, CA
10 Don Rogers Puyallup, WA
12 Chase Eisenzimer Kalispell, MT
12c Cody Winchel Cebastopol, CA
12h Jordan Hollaway Henderson, NV
12j TBA TBA
12b Bryanna Bruce Cheyenne, WY
13 Andy Hulcy Piano, TX
13h Sean Hingorina Irvine, CA
13b Tanner Bennett Irvine, CA
14g Madelyn Gjerness Chandler,AZ
21n Eathan Nascimento Manteca, CA
22r TJ Roberts Queen Creek, AZ
23 Lonnie Hochstetler Chandler, AZ
25 Branden Giannini Henderson, NV
27 Travis Bliven Stanwood, WA
32 Cody Milan Pierce, CO
33 Kyle Lang Snohomish, WA
35 Landon Gresser Henderson, NV
39 Zeke Hanger Ft. Lupton, CO
41 Tristian Meyer Bisbee, AZ
42 Josh Gross Las Vegas, NV
43 Tristian Bezan Saugus, CA
44 Alfred Matthews Arvada, CO
45 Byrson Brown Las Vegas NV
47 Michael Vanderlip Carlsbad, CA
48 Nathan Quella Yorba Linda, CA
50 Chloe Lynch Las Vegas, NV
50j Jerry Davis Emmett, ID
51 Brendan Ruzbarsky Tracey, CA
71 Jake Bollman Huntington Beach, CA
79 Jeff Miller Arlington, WA
81 Jeff Mueller Lake Stevens, WA
84 Mike Webber Tonopah, AZ
89 Zack Morris Greenwood Village, CO
90 Chasen Groff Denver, CO
91 Martin Gatzulis Wichita, KS
92 Levie Jones Puyallup, WA
TBA Payton Saxton Las Vegas, NV
TBA Jaron Giannini Henderson, NV