Lucas Oil Speedway
Lucas Oil Speedway

Lucas Oil Speedway
Wheatland, MO

Lucas Oil Speedway Championship Spotlight: Jackson takes up-and-down ride to 5th B-Mod crown
291
12/3/2020

12/3/2020

Lucas Oil Speedway


Lucas Oil Speedway Championship Spotlight: Jackson takes up-and-down ride to 5th B-Mod crown

WHEATLAND, MO. (Dec. 3, 2020) - When comparing his fifth Lucas Oil Speedway track championship to the others, Kris Jackson does not hesitate to call his latest perhaps the hardest-earned.

“This year had some ups and downs,” Jackson said of the 2020 Ozark Golf Cars USRA B-Mod championship. The Lebanon driver also has Lucas Oil Speedway titles in 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2019.

“It seems like we were really good one week and really bad the next,” Jackson added. “But overall, it was good enough.”

Good enough, but just barely and not without drama. Jackson entered the final night of the regular season with a seemingly comfortable 42-point lead over JC Morton, needing only to finish 16th or better in the feature to clinch. But a broken distributor pin - about a 25-cent part - nearly proved disastrous.

“I thought we lost the championship right then,” Jackson said. “When we pulled off (with 10 laps remaining) I was in 17th and assumed we weren’t going to win the championship. But (Eric) Turner beat Morton, so it all worked out.”

“That’s pretty good,” Jackson added of Lucas Oil Speedway title No. 5. “Based on the caliber of cars there, that’s pretty exciting to be able to do that. I’m really proud of it.”

Jackson won four features and had 10 top-10 finishes in 13 regular-season races, also adding a postseason victory at the Ron Jenkins Memorial over Labor Day Weekend.

It also was another stellar year in the USRA B-Mod national standings where he captured 18 feature wins in 53 starts with 40 top-five finishes. But some of those bad weeks Jackson spoke of cost him a third straight USRA national crown. He finished a mere 23 points behind 17-year-old Jim Chisholm of Osage, Iowa.

“We gave it all we had,” Jackson said. “I think we traveled 5,000 miles in five weeks in one stretch, going different places and racing. Just lots of crashes and things. I don’t know if it was bad luck, bad timing, bad decision-making or what. It just wasn’t gonna happen this year.

“I had more (misfortune) this year than I probably had the last 3 years combined.”

One thing that has Jackson excited about 2021 is the move of the USRA Nationals to Lucas Oil Speedway next October. The multi-day racing festival, where the nation’s top USRA competitors in several divisions converge, has been held in Iowa the last couple of years.

“We’ve traveled for that race several times. I like to travel, but there’s nothing I like more than stay around home and race - and race for good money at that,” Jackson said. “I’m ecstatic about that coming to Wheatland. Plus, we might have a little home-field advantage.”

Wherever the 36-year-old Jackson goes, he will be the man to beat. It’s something he’s become accustomed to in recent years, but has begun to take a new approach. Jackson has started to offer advice to select drivers in setting up their cars, particularly 16-year-old Dillon McCowan of Urbana.

“Dillon McCowan beat us several times. Helping him has cost us, as we ran second to him a few times and that probably cost us a couple of wins,” Jackson said. “But, if there’s not competition in racing it’s not near as fun. The more competition, the better for me.

“It’s easy to get down in the dumps when you don’t win as often as you’d like, but it’s also fun to race very competitively and tight.”

Jackson plans to return in his 2020 Rage chassis that be debuted over the summer. The goals remain the same.

“We won’t race quite as much as we did. I think we raced 55-60 times this year,” he said. “I think we’ll probably back it down to where we race 45-50 times and run for some points and do everything we want to do.

“I don’t really set out to run for points, but it seems like I’m always in the thick of it and I get wrapped up in it. So might as well say I’m gonna run for points and not worry about it.”

Jackson’s sponsor list includes Ruble Racing Engines, Joe's Pharmacy, TJR Motorsports, VANS Motor Sales, East 32 Meat Processing, Rage Chassis, Starnes Excavating, 3 Link Innovations, Triple T Cleaning and Lent Prints (Concrete). He’s also added a new sponsor, Missouri District 129 Representative Jeff Knight.

Season passes, gift cards available: Season passes for the 2021 season are available now and those who had them in 2020 can renew at a $50 discount through the end of the year. Contact Admissions Director Nichole McMillan at (417) 282-5984 or email her at nichole@lucasoilspeedway.com for more information.

Meanwhile, Lucas Oil Speedway gift cards also are available, in any dollar amount. They can be redeemed in any department at the speedway or used toward tickets for any event on next year’s schedule.

The renewal rate with the $50 discount is available through Dec. 31, 2020.

Season Pass renewal by Dec. 31 will cost the following:
Dirt Track: Adults (ages 16-61) $450; Seniors (62 and over) $350.
All-Events: Adults (ages 16-61) $550; Seniors (62 and over) $450.

Beginning Jan. 1, 2021, Season Passes will cost the following:
Dirt Track: Adults (ages 16-61) $500; Seniors (62 and over) $400.
All-Events: Adults (ages 16-61) $600; Seniors (62 and over) $500.

Each season pass holder is entitled to one reserved stadium-style seat, complete with high backs and armrests located in the top six rows of the main grandstand of the dirt track.

CONTACT:
Danny Lorton
Lucas Oil Speedway General Manager
Office: (417) 282-5984
DLorton@lucasoilspeedway.com


Article Credit: By Lyndal Scranton, Lucas Oil Speedway

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