DODGE CITY, Kan. — High Limit Racing wraps up its early-season swing Saturday night with a stop at Dodge City Raceway Park, closing out a red-hot start to the 2026 campaign before a brief break in the schedule.
The series will return to action April 17 at Lakeside Speedway, but not before one more night of high-horsepower chaos in the heart of Kansas.
And if the first stretch of the season is any indication, Saturday night should deliver on Flo Racing.
Through the opening races of 2026, High Limit Racing has showcased one of the most competitive fields in sprint car racing. Six races have produced six different winners, a testament to the depth of talent and parity that defines the series early in the year.
It’s not just unpredictable — it’s wide open.
From established stars to rising contenders, multiple drivers have shown race-winning speed on any given night. That level of competition has made High Limit must-watch racing, where no single driver has been able to separate from the pack.
Dodge City Raceway Park provides the perfect stage for that kind of battle.
The high-banked dirt oval is known for multi-groove racing and high speeds, giving drivers options to move around the track and search for grip. That typically leads to side-by-side action, late-race charges and finishes that can swing in a matter of laps.
In other words, exactly what this series has delivered all season.
Saturday’s race also marks a natural checkpoint.
With an off weekend ahead before the series resumes in mid-April, teams will be looking to carry momentum into the break — or build it. A win at Dodge City doesn’t just add to the early-season resume; it sets the tone for the next phase of the championship fight.
Because while the parity has been the headline, the standings are beginning to take shape.
Consistency will eventually matter. But for now, the door remains wide open.
And that’s part of the appeal.
High Limit Racing has quickly established itself as one of the most entertaining properties in dirt racing, combining elite talent with a format that emphasizes speed, efficiency and nonstop action. No long delays. No drawn-out programs. Just sprint cars doing what they do best.
Flat out.
Saturday night is the final look before a short pause — a last chance for someone to break through or for the parity to continue its early-season run.
Either way, expect another show.
Because so far in 2026, that’s been the standard.








