TULSA, Okla. — Mack Leopard did not leave the Tulsa Expo Center with a Golden Driller on Saturday night, but he left with something nearly as lasting: a place in Chili Bowl lore.
Leopard’s run at the Chili Bowl Nationals ended in F Feature Race 1, cutting short his march toward Saturday night’s A-Main. Yet the box score fails to capture what dirt racing fans witnessed earlier in the day — a relentless, fearless climb through the alphabet that turned heads throughout the building and across the pit area.
From the moment the midget cars hit the track, Leopard was electric. He carved through traffic with precision and aggression, advancing deep into the field in multiple features and posting one of the most eye-opening cumulative runs of the entire event. In a race notorious for punishing impatience, Leopard found grip, rhythm and momentum on a surface that rewarded commitment.
Then came the variable every Chili Bowl racer knows too well.
A track rework following the G Features altered the racing surface just enough to take away the lane Leopard had mastered. The grip changed. The cushion moved. The window closed. His charge stalled before the Golden Driller could come into view.
Afterward, Leopard handled it like a veteran. Speaking with motorsports journalist Matt Weaver, he acknowledged the rework with a shrug and a smile — part of the deal at the Chili Bowl, where adaptability is often as important as speed. He walked away disappointed but proud, head high, fully aware he had put on a performance that won’t be forgotten.
That matters here. The Chili Bowl is not just about who wins. It’s about who moves the needle. Leopard did exactly that. Fans will remember the passes, the composure and the way he attacked one of the toughest events in motorsports without blinking.
No Driller this year. No A-Main intro music. But a drive for the ages — and another chapter added to a rapidly rising career.
73 positions gained, 9 mains raced, 4 mains won. Simply remarkable.
At the Chili Bowl, that still counts for plenty.
The 16 year-old emerging superstar will likely add plenty more rides to his future story arc.
What a drive, Mack. Take a bow.
To catch the rest of the 2026 Chili Bowl Nationals, the 40th running of this great event, subscribe to FloSports or follow their social media feeds.
A special shout out to motorsports reporter Matt Weaver and Toby Christie is also due, as the two NASCAR veteran journalists have crushed it on coverage all week!








