The Jeep Wrangler 392 is a special version of the Jeep Wrangler that has a strong V8 engine. This makes it faster and better for tough driving conditions, like off-roading.
The Jeep Gladiator is a truck made by Jeep that is great for off-roading. It has a strong build and can handle tough terrains, making it a favorite for outdoor adventures.
The Jeep Grand Cherokee is a type of SUV that can handle rough roads and off-road adventures while also being comfortable for everyday driving. It has a lot of space inside for passengers and cargo, which makes it great for families or trips.
Jeep Performance parts are upgrades you can buy for Jeep vehicles to make them better for off-roading or improve how they drive. They help make the Jeep stronger and more capable.
When a vehicle is 'lifted', it means it's been raised higher off the ground. This is usually done to help it drive better on rough terrain or to make it look more rugged.
Pro-4 race trucks are special vehicles built for racing on rough surfaces. They have four-wheel drive, which helps them grip the ground better and go faster over bumps and obstacles.
The front differential is a part of the car that helps the front wheels turn at different speeds when going around corners. It helps the car handle better and can be designed in different ways to improve performance.
A limited-slip differential is a part that helps both wheels on an axle get power from the engine while allowing them to turn at different speeds. This is important for better grip and control when driving, especially on slippery roads.
Differentiation means that the wheels can turn at different speeds. This is important when a car is turning, as the outside wheels need to go faster than the inside wheels to make the turn smoothly.
A spec chassis is a type of race car frame that all drivers must use, so everyone is on equal footing. It helps make racing more about the driver's skill than the car's performance.
A tube chassis is a car frame made from metal tubes, which makes it strong yet light. It's often used in racing vehicles to help them handle tough conditions.
A trophy truck is a special kind of race truck made for driving fast over rough ground. They are built to survive tough races like the Baja 1000, where the roads are very bumpy and uneven.
Rear shocks are parts of a car that help smooth out the ride by absorbing bumps and impacts. They keep the tires on the ground, which is important for good handling, especially when driving off-road.
HDRA is another group that used to organize off-road races, focusing on desert racing events. They were known for their competitive races in tough terrains.
Short course championships are races that take place on smaller tracks with lots of jumps and turns. They are usually more exciting because the cars race closely together.
The Baja 500 is a famous off-road race in Mexico where drivers compete on rough terrain. It's a big event for people who love racing and off-road vehicles.
The Ford F100 is a well-known pickup truck that many people used for work and everyday tasks. The 1974 version is part of a series of trucks that Ford made for several years.
Class 8 is a type of truck used in off-road racing. These trucks are built to handle tough environments and are often larger and more powerful than regular trucks.
The Honda Element is a unique SUV with a square shape that makes it easy to load and unload things. It has special doors that open wide, so you can fit in bikes or other gear easily, which is why people who love outdoor activities often like it.
LIVE
Welcome back to the Podshed.
I'm Holman, your host of the Truck Show podcast,
and I feel like I've been on the road forever.
I'm sure you probably do too.
I am excited to get back
and start knocking out some new podcasts for you.
And as you know, I was on the road
to pick up my new Wrangler 392 from Michigan
and bring it back home to California.
But what you might not have known
is the same day I left for Detroit,
I actually spent the day,
I took the red eye out of LAX,
spent the day in San Bernardino.
I was actually hanging out with our friends at Amsoil
where I was invited to attend with VIP access, might add.
The last Amsoil championship off-road race
weekend of the season.
So I hadn't been to short course racing in a while
and man, I forgot how much I loved it.
It was so much fun.
I wish I could have stayed there all weekend
if I didn't have to travel and taken in all the races
because the action was so good.
And since I got all access,
I was able to connect with a couple of Amsoil drivers.
An off-roading legend.
You guys, if you know off-road,
you're gonna dig that interview.
And then even the president
of the championship off-road racing series.
So I'll bring all that to you in this episode.
And one takeaway from the weekend
is that short course racing is not only alive and well,
but there's huge enthusiasm behind it.
And I can't wait to get out to another race.
So anyway, thank you Amsoil for the invite.
And you guys know how I feel about Amsoil products.
They're the best.
And if you want the best, head over to amsoil.com.
And of course, if you wanna know more
about championship off-road,
you can visit their website at champoffroad.com
and see when they'll be coming through
to a town nearby you for some awesome racing action.
And otherwise, just digging out from being gone,
I've been playing around with a 25 Jeep Gladiator,
which came courtesy of the Jeep brand,
Mopar and Jeep Performance parts.
So more to come on that one,
but it arrived with a two inch lift and 35s.
I'm gonna be bolting on a bunch of different products
on it, reviewing them for OVR and the podcast
and kind of going through their catalog
and so we'll talk about that.
And it'll also take you along for a ride
in the upcoming episode and let you know what it's like
living with a lifted Gladiator as a daily driver.
So that truck review is in our future as well.
But before we get into it,
we have to thank our awesome sponsors.
The Truck Show podcast is brought to you
by the following sponsors.
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Use the promotional code at Truck Show podcast.
And of course the Truck Show podcast
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The Truck Show
we're gonna show you what we know.
We're gonna answer what the truck
cause truck rides with ****.
The Truck Show
we have the lifted
we have the lowered
and everything in between
we'll talk about trucks that run on diesel
electricity in our gasoline
The Truck Show
the Truck Show
the Truck Show
It's the Truck Show with your host, Holman.
Man, I gotta tell you, I miss the studio.
It's fun to be back in it and making the show again.
And I've been just been on the road so much
and with SEMA coming up, man, we got lots more to come
and a lot more travel.
So I'm gonna try and keep a pretty regular cadence
but keep in mind there's a bunch of stuff happening
but we will get caught up on episodes.
So let's get into this episode of my day at Amsoil
at the racetrack with Champ Off Road.
Just soak it in for a second.
The sound of a pro-4 racetrack.
Where am I?
Well, I'm at the Glendale Off Road National here in San Bernardino, California
the Glendale Raceway
that's part of the Amsoil Championship Off Road series
and the truck you hear behind me is Colt Maver, number 35
try and get an interview with him in a little bit
and we'll check in with some more President Amsoil
and appreciate being able to come out to the race course
and soak in a day of racing.
So it should be pretty fun but for now
we'll just listen to the soothing sounds
and pull a Maver's race truck.
Who doesn't love that?
Alright, I'm gonna go walk around. Let's see if we can fight.
So I'm standing in the pits with racer Colt Maver
and number 35 in front of this pro-4 race truck
and I love pro-4 because I've always been a four-wheel drive guy
and to see people be successful on the track and four-wheel drive
I just think it's like way more fun
and tell me about your race truck.
Yeah, I love it.
So this is one of our chassis that we built in the shop ourselves
it's actually the first ever truck chassis
I've fully built, 100% in-house.
So it's got an RY45 motor platform
makes about 900 horsepower, a six-speed X-track sequential gearbox
all on air paddle shifts.
Oh, that's sick.
And it's racked because then you're not gonna reach up
and grab the shift or keep your hands on the wheel.
X-track makes a great box.
Oh, it's insane.
So and then we have a X-track front differential as well.
So same thing that they run in like the trophy trucks
they ain't there's three of us out here
they're running that style front diff package as well.
Is it open or is there any like limited slip or anything in the front?
So as soon as you let off the gas it disengages the front
as soon as it fills the acceleration it engages both front wheels.
Got it.
So each wheel is on a different gear
so they do spin slightly at some different speeds
so that you do have some differentiation for turning and things like that.
Yeah, so like if a tire gets light right
obviously it's gonna spike up that a little bit faster
but we try to monitor them to make sure that they're both the same door
the truck's trying to draw them off the corners as hard as it possibly can.
So and then the cool part about like Pro 4
it's hard with like a Pro 2, right?
What I judge is you have a spec chassis.
You can only do so much.
You have frame rails.
Pro 4, it's bring what you've rung and hope you brought it up.
Like it's full tube chassis.
That was like the trophy truck equivalent from Baja.
100%
100% and what's rad is we use the same parts
the trophy truck guys just
we make them lighter, lower and strong
and try to make them just as strong
and we're hitting jumps
you know 200, 250 feet some places
four-storeys high
It's so awesome to watch these things air out
and just land like they're on marshmallows.
100%
So even like here at Glen Helen
we have a sand section that's pretty rowdy, right?
Like so we're getting the occasional whoop kick
and stuff we're not used to.
It's good to be back, right?
So that's what's cool is all the
chassis is 100% in-house with us.
I do all the welding, all the fabrication
all the tube notching, all the drawing
is 100% done by me.
So you're not busy at all?
Yeah, no, no, no.
In the driving
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Plus organizing the circus.
We can only blame yourself if you're like
something you don't like about chassis.
That is 90% the problem.
It's always my fault.
So that and then we have a bunch of other stuff too
with all our client's trucks.
But yeah, Pro4 is rad.
Well, I like to call Pro4 the F1 of off-road.
Nice.
Because we're constantly trying to evolve
of changing air flow.
Trying to make sure how the air funnel
is throughout the cab.
Trying to get pressure to the read
or trying to pressure the water system.
There's so much that involves
and a Pro4 that I think it makes it
the closest off-road vehicle to F1, in my opinion.
So what's up with the lack of body work on it right now?
So we went through race yesterday
with Ruffin Kill Switch
and I wasn't happy with some of the rear shock stuff.
So we called John Hoffman in
and threw a whole new spring
valve package at the rear shocks
to try to get it through there.
Like within the last five hours.
I noticed you run Bilstein, good friends of ours,
and this truck has what,
16 inches of travel in the front?
Yep, 16 in the front, 20 in the rear.
The rule book allows this thing right now
is about 15 and 18.
So yeah, Bilstein's been a long time
partners for us.
We've been with them for quite 19 years now.
And good friends of mine
and they make a great product,
both racing and on-road as well.
So how about the engine you're running
a 430 cubic inch right now?
V8?
So it's a RY45.
It's Ford's old NASCAR base.
Oh, got it.
It's rad.
So we originally had like a D3 motor in it
and then we hurt that at the beginning of the year.
So we switched over to an RY package
because we were able to accumulate two of them
to possibly run for championship next year.
So we would need to have two motors.
So this motor will actually come out after this weekend
and it'll go back to Roush
and get the power band and everything that we want
because we just had Jack Rath's
junior on the podcast a few weeks ago.
So that's going to all go back there.
My boys are going to start handling business
on that side of it.
And it'll be good.
I'm super excited.
We have awesome partners that are making this thing
all function right.
I guess I'm kind of the young guy in the group
out of the Pro 4 class that's doing it all himself.
And I like to think of the old great Kyle Leduc
that did it all himself as well.
And hopefully we could be half as good as he is
or a quarter.
Yeah.
Or even Scott Douglas,
what he's growing up in.
Another legend.
It's hoping I can create our own legacy
and go do what they've done.
Right on it.
So you are SoCal native.
So you grew up SoCal Deserts and Glamis
and all the stuff that I got to grow up doing.
But short course racing takes you to the Midwest a lot,
Wisconsin, other places.
What do you like about the Glen Helen track
versus some of the Midwest tracks?
Or is there one that's your favorite
or something unique about this one that's kind of gnarly?
What's cool about Glen Helen is it's home, right?
I started out with the Old West Coast series racing
and we left here for about five or six years
and I never got to bring the Pro 4 here.
So we went to Pro 4 whenever we were racing
in the Midwest a lot and it feels good to be home.
I live in Wisconsin for five months out of the year.
It's six months out of the year at times
and it feels good to always come home
and I have family here that hasn't been able
to see me race in five or six years.
That's awesome.
They haven't been able to see the whole operation.
Whenever we left California to go race in the Midwest,
we had an enclosed trailer with a little awning off it.
We didn't have an 18-wheeler or a racer.
This is like a legit pit that you would see
at any race or any major team.
There's another truck sitting here next to us.
That's not yours because you also do service
for other racers as well.
Yeah, so we help and maintain about three to four trucks
on the regular outside of my own.
So it's cool, right?
My family that hasn't been able to see this
in five or six years has got to come here
this weekend and see what we've grown, right?
See what I'm doing in Wisconsin.
It feels good, right?
The whole family is super proud
and without their support we wouldn't be
where we are at at all.
So it's rad to see
and short course racing and SoCal is so back.
Friday was supposed to be a dead night.
Those grandstands were absolutely packed.
So I'm excited to see where that is going.
Tonight is already record sales,
free-sell tickets compared to what last night was.
Be even better.
I'm excited to be back in front of the hometown
and go put it on the show for these guys.
I love it.
So one of your sponsors is Amsoil who invited us here.
So maybe you should talk about Amsoil product
in your vehicle and then you also use it.
The family business is in agriculture
and you actually use Amsoil in those machinery
or in that machinery as well.
I mean, hey, before we even partnered with Amsoil
I was buying it.
I asked my engine builders
what do you guys prefer?
Because I'm a big person, right?
If I'm going to go build a motor with somebody,
I'm going to go build a platform with somebody,
I want to use what they suggest.
Well, I've had two or three different engine builders
in the last three years and they all tell me Amsoil.
They see that it's the best.
So I'm like, okay, obviously that's what we're going to run.
We run companies extract.
They're saying Amsoil, run it and it's the best.
So we want to translate what we use in our race cars
because obviously we want the best for our race cars
but we need the machines back at home to make money too.
So you've got to spend the money on the Amsoil.
So we do a lot of that with all of our farm tractors,
all of our equipment, the 18-wheeler, the semi,
all of our four dually trucks.
Everything's on Amsoil.
Anything from the brake cleaner to the glass cleaner,
it's used in here 24-7.
Mud slinger like it.
Mud slinger is awesome and the glass cleaner is awesome
with the foam.
I use that all the time.
Well, it's night race, right?
So it's dirt, heavy sticks, sand.
But the mud slinger, the guys had minimal cleaning today.
It was pretty simple.
So I'm glad to be finally a part of the Amsoil family.
And do you put mud slinger on your helmet visor?
No, I haven't tried that one yet.
I might have to try that later.
I hope we don't really get too much rust.
It gets you right to the front.
Oh, you're going to be in front of it.
We should be flinging at you anyway.
Exactly.
But no, we've used it for years now.
And excited that this partnership has finally come about.
I mean, heck, I've been a wholesale dealer for a long time.
And just getting it really for the race cars.
Yeah.
So we've used it in so many different aspects
from that side to the shop.
We have five race trucks in the shop almost at all times,
plus all of our side-by-side work and everything that we do.
So they just deliver like 55-gallon drums to you, right?
Yeah, yeah.
We get a pallet.
So that's cool.
I mean, even all of our clients side-by-sides,
because we can do a lot of work for the guys that go down
to Mexico and pre-running stuff.
And they have all suggested it as well.
So it's been a good deal as a whole for the shop.
And I don't have to worry about a quality standard,
because their quality standards weigh higher than anybody else's.
Oh, dude, it's crazy.
I've been to the factory.
It's nuts what they go through.
So what are you feeling about for today's race?
Are you stoked?
Your truck feels good?
You feel good?
Yeah, I'm feeling good.
I'm excited to get out for practice here in a minute
and go see what these changes did to these rebuilt-in trucks
and go see what we can do.
So it should be a good deal all the way around.
I'm excited to go racing in front of my hometown
on the biggest night, the biggest weekend.
So hopefully in the season on a high note,
if not a win-or-wad situation.
So we'll see what we can do.
And we already have the new one in the works.
So this is this one's last race.
Can we just drop a little bit of a news bomb for next year?
I think there might be a news bomb for next year.
I think we're going to have to connect with you for next season then.
Yep.
All right, brother, we'll appreciate your time
and thanks for inviting us into the pits.
Awesome, thank you guys.
Here we are on the side of the race course
in the Amzo VIP area.
And this is just practice right now,
but I just wanted you guys to hear
the awesomeness of the vehicles go by.
I
mean, who doesn't love this?
So we're standing right past the finish line,
the start finish line.
And there's a shark.
Love that turn, a couple of jumps,
another couple of jumps and then another tight turn.
So they're coming off the throttle,
sliding sideways, powering through the jumps.
It's so awesome.
All right, so now I'm with President Carl Shabitsky.
And so you own this racing series.
Yeah, yeah, that's correct.
I figured you were important because you had like
a secret service like microphones in your ear.
That's the guy we got to talk to.
Yeah, yeah, no.
I just like to keep communication here,
what's going on out there and stuff like that.
But yeah, I mean, obviously I've been working
for the company for 16 years and I just recently
acquired it for about a year now.
Wow, yeah, so it's wild.
That's a pretty awesome trajectory, right?
Did you ever think you'd be the owner someday?
No, not at all.
And I have honestly no intention to,
but the previous owner, John Daniels,
is like a father to me.
Like he's just been amazing all through,
while I've worked for him,
he's been just a mentor and everything like that.
So at the end of the day,
he's just like, well, you know,
exit strategy and stuff like that.
And he still comes arraised.
Honestly, he's here this weekend.
Excited and we drove home last night
and just talked like two just fan boys,
talking about the racing.
Like we both obviously huge racing fans
and talked about what happened
and everything like that.
So I have all the credit to him.
So short course racing
has kind of had a
interesting history because
it started out sort of as a Midwest
thing or regional thing.
Kind of grew into a couple pretty big series
over the years. A couple big
race organizations came out of that.
Then there was some contraction as some of
those bigger race organizations
folded. Some people came in,
some people came out and I feel like we're
at a point now where short course started
to take off again. So I feel like
you're poised, you're kind of like right in the right spot
to be, to take advantage of
the re-emergence
of short course. Yeah, I mean, I hope so.
I hope you're right because obviously that's
our intention and
like you said, when we first stepped into it
we were very, very nervous.
It's no secret. It's been like 28 years
and 10 different owners. I mean, the longevity
of an ownership was
maybe max three years and
now we're going into our sixth year. But the biggest thing
that I did was
I just wanted to do is try to
stabilize it, you know, be
consistency, consistency
and then also don't overextend.
I know a lot of the previous owners
they wanted to jump in the deep end
and sometimes it works.
Obviously it's very
lucrative to be in big markets,
big expansions, big footprints,
big television packages and things like that
and hope that sponsors and partners come.
But we've kind of like just slowly
built so
started with a good foundation, slowly built it
and again, I'm very excited
because like you alluded to, I feel
the same way
like I feel like we're just kind of getting
going and things are going really
good and positive. And you guys are sold
out for today's race, right? Yeah. And last night
we were standing remotely when people thought, oh, it's just
the Friday night.
But no, it was packed here. Yeah, even
I thought Friday night's going to be a little
bit weaker but way better than expected
and that's the same for tonight.
So again, the move, like obviously
you're nervous about the new event,
new market but at the same time
the reason why we're here
is because the sport grew up here.
You know, a lot of our racers grew up racing
out here and I love the Midwest
I'm obviously from the Midwest, I'm a Midwest boy
but at the same time, like
it needs, short course needs to be out here
just that's the reality of it
because there's a lot of families and a lot of
like obviously a lot of fans and just
the environment out here, it's cool.
The motocross is huge and when you
take and combine the elements of motocross
and the elements of desert racing
into one thing that kind of honors
both of them, you know you're going to have a fan base
for that because people love to see
that kind of stuff. Yeah, for sure and I honestly
last night the track was great so it was really
action packed and again
of course it took a lot of work
and a lot of time to get up to this point and I'm just
happy to see it come to fruition and
see people happy and excited and
you know like a lot of the teams and the
racers and the fans are happy
it's back and so I'm happy as well.
So what's the
next step, I mean, when you
look at your schedule, are you looking
to expand to more
regions, are you looking to expand more
races, how
where do you go from here? No, for sure
I mean you're always like looking
long term picture, what options
are available and quite honestly the last
like month I've looked at a few different
venues across the United States
but also again back to the consistency
and back to doing the right
way, you know
with expansion you got to make sure the
racers can handle it as well.
You don't want to go away from the people
who are participating. Yeah, we're all in this
boat together so I mean from a partner
standpoint, from the racer standpoint, from the
team standpoint, from our standpoint
you just got to take all those things
that will come so like do I see us
expanding in the future? Absolutely but at the
same time, is it maybe going to happen
next year? I mean when we first started we had
five events, they were all like
within a small area and now we're
up to eight, you know, California
and Missouri were big
additions so
yeah, I mean we are looking and
exploring but at the same time, I don't want
to just hurt the racers
too, it costs them a lot of money to come on here.
It's not like a baseball team when you put in an airplane
and you show up, there's tractor
trailers and there's mechanics and
there's marketing and there's racers
and there's fabric, I mean it's all the
parts, all the fuel, tires
it's a pretty big
logistical lift to get people to
locations. Correct, so I feel like, okay
well, fortunately
for us, we had one in California
and everybody made the trek for the most part
a lot of great racers out here so
you know, it's too much at this
point in time but then again, back to
we are in a new market and things
are going really well, if we can get
some more partners and help out the racers
you know, that all plays
into a factor, so yeah, I mean
we're always, like I said, just two weeks
ago I was at a location looking at it
for maybe 2026, maybe
2027, so I mean that's the
plan is to keep
riding this and keep building it
and you know, helping not only
us but the racers as well. How hard is it
to get corporate sponsors
for a racing series at this size
and level because I know
you're probably grinding
you know you have a great product, you have
some great names, great fan base
but like
media and entertainment
you have to get the eyeballs and you have to grow
and to attract that and obviously
I'm here because Anzoil is
you know, your title but
talk about like, what's that like
it's always interesting for me from a business standpoint
it's not, being a
race promoter or a series owner is a really
hard job.
I think
it's extremely difficult
and anybody who tells you that is lying
or has never done it, especially
in this, the world and the landscape
you know, like there was a big buzz
with influencers and things like that and
there still is a big part of that but
again, like I'm just seeing in
traditional speaking motorsports
from the 80s, 90s
to 2000s is far different than even now
and getting corporate dollars and things
like that because there's just so many things that are available
so many different
and I'm not talking just even
motorsports just, okay how do
I capture an audience attendance
or kids attention
you know, today compared to
even 10 years ago so
it is hard but at the same time
you know, like we have
an agency of record
and called the family
they've been a huge addition for us
but at the same time, like at the end of the day
you just try to create a good product
and for the most part what I've seen is
yeah, you can reach out to
a million different Fortune 500 companies
but if you're creating something
then they reach out to you and they're the ones that are involved
it's a hard sell
to open up somebody's mind
in marketing that's never been to an event
or never, you know, like oh this is the coolest thing ever
but if you get them out to an event
or even, you know, some of the
just keep putting good product out there
you know, hopefully they catch wind
or catch attention and you just keep growing that way
and they want to be part of it
nobody can self-profess cool, right?
but if your fans say you're cool
then the marketers and advertisers
they want to be cool too and they want to be a part of it
so they come along on the journey
and fortunately for us in 15 years
with both our series, I mean
we work for the likes of, of course, AMSO
US Air Force, Ram Trucks, Polaris
Can-Am, Yokohama
just a bunch of big corporate
corporate companies
and again, like it's all that balancing act
of like, okay well, what are their needs
can we accomplish their needs
what are the needs of the racers and what are the needs of the fans too
so again, like, back to your point
it's extremely difficult
like, I mean, again
it's not an easy job
it's not an easy sell
but at the same time, it's really cool
that the relationships that you do build from them
like in AMSO that's been with us for so long
they're like family
so again, like, it all pays off
in the end, it's just, it's hard
it's not an easy, not an easy job
you said something and I brought this up
on the podcast before, AMSO
was one of our sponsors, but Scott Bird's
all a friend of mine, Brad Lovell's a friend of mine
we talked to Cole Maymer, we talked to
everybody says the same thing, family
AMSO is about family, like, we all know they make a great product
but it's so refreshing to
have a corporate partner that
also treats you like a person
and actually cares about what you're doing
isn't just writing a check to get their name out there
but there's actually invested in the process
for sure, and I think that stems from why
I love racing from the very beginning
because I grew up with
my family racing every single weekend
and that's what you see across
all platforms with most series
is like, it might seem big from the outside
but at the end of the day, if you get within the circle
it is family
and like, one of the
one of the greatest, you know
very wise man, very wealthy
very thing, he's like, well I can go
racing with my kid and my kid thinks I'm cool
he's like, you know, like, if I go play
basketball or do something else with them
it's just a different
type of connection that he has
and so he's grateful for racing and you do
you see it day in and day out
just walk through the pits, it's all family
so it's cool. So if people want to find out more
how to go see a race, how to watch a race
or just follow your content
like, where do they go?
Champoproad.com is the best
it's obviously our website
but of course we air on
FS1 or FS2
we live stream with Flow Sports
and, you know, the events are on
the website, the calendar will be
announcing I think November 1st
the 2026 schedule
so obviously we want people to come out and enjoy
the events but that's the best
place to go check out everything
and learn more about, you know, what we do
and what we provide. If there's somebody out there
who thinks that they can
get into racing
and they're like, I'm all in, I don't know how to
start, how would you start the process
of becoming a driver?
So we do it really
I feel at school, obviously I'm biased
because we created it but
if you've never raced before
everything's free the first year
memberships, entry fees, everything
so you can come, try it out
see if it's for you
obviously it catches, hope you get addicted
and you love it and stay for
many, many years. The first hit's free
but after that!
But honestly it's done extremely well
like this year
I think we got 30 plus
people
to take part in that program
but then of course
on the website
we try to make it as simplistic as possible
okay this is what you need to do
this is the first step, this is the next step
and again it seems overwhelming
at the beginning but it's very
very simplistic and at the end of the day
if you want to try it you got to get a membership
and you got to get an entry and then you come here
sign the waiver, get the insurance
but you're racing
and we'll guide you, obviously our staff
is on site to help with any tech questions
any race director questions and things like that
but it is fun and if you've never
been to an event
I feel like it's so much better
a person as we saw last night
like it's just electric, the crowd
the sound, the smell
I feel like there's not that many things
football stadium might have 100,000
people, so this is much more intimate
than that type of sport and I feel like
the crowd is, you're so
in tune with everybody next
to you and it's sort of, I don't know
it just, going back to it feels electric
yeah, yeah, yeah, it's closed, it's loud
it's exciting and I mean
for the most part it's always action packed
so yeah it is, it's a cool experience
like it's different and
we try to do a bunch of different
other things to appeal to family
you know like 12 and under is free
and activities on site because again
it's, you know, our focus is that pro show
three and a half hours but we want families to come
and enjoy it so like today we have
autograph sessions, freestyle shows, things like that
that are always appealing
again just trying to get people
to see what Sherpas Off-Road is
well I hear that
if you're a new person and you're getting into
it everybody's super nice to you
until you get on the course
well until you start meeting them
that's where it ends
and the best thing you can do is just
don't race that individual through a different class
because yeah like obviously
it's all fair game
until your competition, you know, yeah for sure
well awesome, well thanks for walking us through
and spending some time with us Carl
and get out to the course and watch some trucks jump
no I appreciate it and of course
like if you haven't checked it out
champoffroad.com
we're always open arms and I hope
you know I hope your listeners do come
check it out because we'd love to have them
and we just want to be involved
well hopefully we can do some more stuff with you in the future
for sure
okay so I'm wandering around
the pits came across the amzoil booth
so I'm looking at
tons and tons of product
actually there's so much stuff here
and I can't fit into my truck for the way home
so now I'm trying to figure out
what I can take here
oh I got some amzoil
some amzoil chapstick
got some severe gear
one of my favorites I use that on everything
lots of racing oil here
oh man I could go crazy in here
but the man standing in front of me
won't let me and that's a legendary
off-road racer Scott Douglas
and if you know off-road racing
you know Scott and I actually pulled up
his highlights because
I can't remember everything that you've done
but almost a hundred career victories
eight desert championships
in SCORE, HDRA, best in the desert
mini-metal, two short course championships
two time board order cup champion
2010 inaugural winner
of the amzoil cup
3 Baja 1000 class wins
1993 SCORE San Felipe
250 overall winner
with a class 7
Herzog ranger was
a beast back in his day and I was a class 7
7s ranger guy as a kid
so I used to watch all you guys
and that was my favorite so way ahead of its time
anyway that was a really long
intro to say hi to Scott
yeah well thanks a lot
that's flattering and
you forgot the Hall of Fame part
but that's one of my
that's one of my favorite ones as well
but you know I've had a blessed
career and I've worked for a lot of great people
I mean I started racing
in the 70s on motorcycles
and then my brother... you were a two-wheel guy
earlier on and then you went into
regular two-wheel drive
racetracks but you also race four-wheel drive
racetracks as well right? oh yeah yeah
but the first thing I did is the Baja
580 my brother and I
my brother was... I was 19
he was five years older than I was
he bought this truck off a used car a lot of racetrack
and financed it on top of that
which I do not recommend for anybody
financing a racetrack that's new
yeah so we ran the Baja
500 and we both shared the driving
we were pitting for Jim Connors
before that and for the Goodyear team
and there was a lot we did and so then we
took in and we decided we're going to race
so he got this truck
it was an F100
it was a 1974
yeah 74 F100
twin I-beam truck pretty much stock
had a little 33's on it
and had like a stock 302
with some headers on it
that would have been a dent side truck
and one of my favorite body styles
as a matter of fact
and anyway the way the cage was built
at that time they thought that the frames
needed to flex because they were made out of certain material
so they tried to make
some people made the cages rigid
some people made the cages
with a suspension piece in there
that the actual cage in the rear would slide
well make a long story short halfway through the race
the frame broken out
so I go well I've never been a quitter in my life
and I wasn't going to start at 19
I haven't finished now
age I'm at now so anyway
but the bottom line is we cut the spare tire
amount apart I got a stick welder
we got it all back together and we finished the race
and we got 5th out of
in class 8 out of like 28 trucks
and we were on top of the world because we thought
we're racing against Walker Evans
and Scoop Vessels
and Ivan Stewart at the time
those are legends but
did you ever think at 19
racing against those guys that you would ever be
up in that echelon of racer because you are there
well I really appreciate that
and I wasn't sure at that point
I knew that how I was taught
how I was raised is if you
if you put your all into something
go all in or don't do it at all
and my dad told me
when we decided to go full time racing
or not full time but when we decided to go racing
I still had construction jobs so did my brother
after this one race
we broke the frame we decided to build another truck
well we're just doing it on our own budget
no sponsors at the time
and he says hey both of you guys can move back home
free of charge the whole thing
but you're going to go in
and you're going to do this
100% in
and if you're not 100% in
if you go out and you're going to party
or you're going to go do this
if you're going to have other hobbies I'm out
you're going to kick you both out
but if you want to do this and you want to make it
you better make it 100%
and so with my brother's help I was able to
I was able to get my career going pretty good
was that the best advice you could have gotten
at that age
when you look back do you think
if he hadn't said that to me
maybe it would have been a different path
or it wouldn't have been as committed
absolutely you know but my dad
I grew up in the back of a jeep
and when friends of mine
when I was 13, 14 years old
some friends of mine would go hey let's go over to someone's house
we're going to have a pool party over here
this weekend or whatever
I go no my dad's going jeep and he's part of a jeep club
and I was the guy who packed the
we had a little tent trailer and I was the little guy
that went in there and packed it perfectly because we only had so much room
so at an early age
I got to witness
and be part of off-roading
in general not just racing but the off-road world
the kids that grow up in the off-road world
nobody has any idea
they go out to the desert for Thanksgiving
and have the big dinners and everything
everybody thinks it's a big party out there
well some of it is a big party
but a lot of it isn't a lot of it is families
and they're growing together
and you learn that family bond
with your siblings
and your parents
and it was the coolest thing ever
in the jeep run
we'd go out jeeping or whatever
and my dad had a
he had a 74 cj5 at the time
had a 304 v8
and my dad was the coolest guy ever
in the jeep club
well we'd get there we'd set up camp
and he'd throw me the
he'd take the mufflers off and had open type cutouts
he'd throw me the wrenches in the cutouts
he says okay son go ahead and put these on
and I was like king of the world
I'm taking to putting these open exhausts
we're going to have this loud open exhaust
for when we're out on the trails and everything
and he taught me a lot
about learning and focusing
and we would go on these jeep runs
and we were at Johnson Valley before
Johnson Valley was a big thing
and so we'd be on some of these trails
with these jeeps that had
33s and some of these rock trails
and there would be 30 people in these rooms
like horses and wheel travel
so they'd all try and make it up these
these hills and everything and some of them
would roll over and some of them wouldn't make it
and my dad would wait till the very last
and then he'd tell my brother he said get in boys
because he had studied every one of them
and nine times out of ten he'd go up it
like it was nothing and I learned
that knowledge is power
especially off-roading I mean even whether it's
racing or trail riding
understanding how to reach terrain in the line
is probably the most important thing next to
maybe you know throttle application
and steering but you have to know
what the trail is going to allow
you to do or what the race course is going to allow
you to do so that you can stay on four wheels
and get through it absolutely and you
got to have that focus and
I was fortunate enough that early
on my career you know we went into 7S
and that's where I started having some real
good success winning some races
winning a couple championships
all of a sudden I get recognized by Walker Evans
he gives me a call and I'm a shy
legend yes I'm a shy kid
I don't talk to anybody at this point right now
I talk to everybody you know I love
telling stories and everything but back then
I'm a shy kid Walker was one of my heroes
it was actually my mom's favorite
driver which is crazy he calls
my parents house looking for me
and on Christmas
you know it was like two days before Christmas
it wasn't quite Christmas Eve and says hey
I need to talk to Scott my mom's
like you know and I happen to be there
she goes Walker Evans is on the phone
and anyway
so I took the call
and my dad listened in
and he offered me a job
for 1990 to drive one of his trucks
he says you and Rob McCackeren
are
winning all the races and you are
you are just dog and Rob all the time
and so
you know the best thing to do is to hire
you to get you off Rob's butt
and to put you in a truck
on our team
and I was like well it didn't quite go that way
but I was like I was just flattered
and this is my dream this is what I wanted
and my parents knew this this is my dream
we have been working hard for about seven years
in construction
and racing to try and build to this
well
anyway he says well what do you think
he laid it all out and I said well
I think I'm going to have to turn you down
Walker and he
was shocked I think there's not too many people
that turn you down absolutely
and he goes why do you think you got to do that
and I says well I have an obligation
I had a small
at that time I had some small sponsorships
I had a little small one from Ford
and B.F. Goodrich was being good to me
started giving me tires then started giving me a little budget
and I had a deal that I just signed
with B.F. Goodrich
and so
he goes okay well he says why don't you think about it
and call me back and I says I'll do that
so I hang up the phone
my parents were eavesdropping obviously
and my dad goes well what was that all about
and he says
and I said and he knew
but I said well Walker offered to hire me
for a job and he goes well
isn't that what you want to do isn't that your dream
I said absolutely that's my dream
he says that's what I dreamt
back when I raced motorcycles
is to race for a living is to be competitive
and he goes well what did you tell him
and he knew that I told him no
and he says well I told him no and he says
well why did you do that son
and he says well he said
I told him I said you know dad
I says you told me
that your word is the only thing you got in life
and I said I gave B.F. Goodrich
my word that I would race
for them next year and I signed a contract
and I said I don't want to go about my back
against my word and my dad looked up at me
and he goes maybe I left something out
and he says I tell
you what son he says you call
Walker back up and he says
and you go and set up face to face meeting
and you
if you're going to turn him down you turn him down to his
face you don't turn him down over the phone
and you do what's best for you that's all I've got
to say about this so I went there I brought
my brother and
Walker I and at that point I had a week
before the meeting so now I'm starting
to think I get in this little big big head
I'm going okay I want this I want and I'm thinking
maybe not to get greedy but I want to be
well they start laying out what I'm going to
get I'm going to you know I'm going to go down
to Dodge and pick out any kind of car you want
or three driving through three helmets
I mean I was like you have to be kidding me
this is a dream come true and that was
back in the time when Dodge was competitive
absolutely they were
they were in Dodge and Jeep
and so then he goes well he goes
why exactly did you turn me down I says well
I had a contract with B.F. Goodrich and he says
well Frank D'Angelo and I said yeah
I said you're a good guy
I says how do you know Frank he goes
oh no we all know each other and he says
he says I tell you what Scott he says
just to ease your mind and everything
he says why don't we call Frank up
and this is before cell phones
and everything I says well he's not going
to be in the office this is a Saturday he
saw I got his home number he calls up
Frank got his home number I go I don't even have
Frank's home number and here you're with a
good year guy but he's Walker Evans so
anyhow he calls him up puts him on
speakerphone and he goes I got
Scott here whatever Frank goes you know
what this is a career opportunity
for you Scott I'd be more than happy
to let you out of your contract and that's
how Frank is yep absolutely amazing
amazing guy so that's how my professional
careers I took a two-year leave of absence
for my construction job figuring out
I'll do this for two years and I'll be back
and I've never had to look back
and here I am in the Amzo booth
still supporting Amzo and still supporting
the sport and loving every minute of
it alright so you're here at the race
you do actually kind of a lot of different
things for Amzo you wear the Amzo shirt
so explain that to me I show up in the
Amzo booth legend
Scott Douglas is sitting right in front of me
well thank you yeah well I mean obviously
I raced for Amzo
the Amzo Pro 4 for about
16 years and we had great
success won a lot of races a lot of big
races a lot you know and so
when I was
time for me to retire because father
time catches up to you and you're just not as
marketable as you used to be
you know they were really gracious they came to me
and they said hey you've been with us
a long time we want you a part
of our brand because you know our brand
you believe in our brand which I did
I totally
engulfed and believe in everything Amzo
does from the engineering department
to the marketing department if you've
never been to Amzo I suggest
you go to it's the largest under
roof building in all of the state of Wisconsin
we did a walkthrough two part series
talking about how Amzo is made
we did everything from the trains that
come in and to where they mix
everything to the marketing side to the
bottling I mean I saw it firsthand and
you know there's some other Amzo
athletes that are good friends of mine
Scott Bertzol and
just
you know
from our standpoint
as I talk to people I know that are in the
Amzo sphere and everybody says the exact same
thing and that's Amzo
is a great company that makes great product
but it treats you like family and that's been
our experience as well and
it's been a great relationship
and my takeaway is when I walk into that
building and I see those big vats and those
big tanks I not only
see professionalism I see everybody
in that building that has pride in what
they do and you cannot
you can't you can't buy that
you have to you have to have it
and everybody in that building from like
said the marketing department down to the
mixers to the engineers have it
so that's why I'm so prideful
to be a part of Amzo well they told me
they go well we want you to be an Amzo
ambassador and I said well what does that
actually entail and they go well we want you
to do events and be at events and I
was doing a display program before we want
you to continue that and I said okay well
I'm kind of a glorified Cardi then right
and they go no no you're
a lot more than that obviously
and so I've really enjoyed it the last
four or five years I've been doing just
the display program but look at me I get
to do what I'm I get to come to these off-road
races or now I'm into the car show
network too and we do a lot of car shows
I've got four hot rods I get to bring my hot
rods put them on display drive them around
all arena when we do hot August nights
I get to go to just
all kinds of different events Jeep Beach
and I've got a big Jeep that's all done up
you know and so I get to do
all the different pair of pants right
absolutely today you know I'm the luckiest
guy in the world because I get to do all the things I love to
do with all the people that I grew up
with yeah and was around all my life
and I get paid to do it so
Amzo treats me wonderful let me ask you
this how many younger
racers know that you're here
come by for advice and races
there's quite a few of them and just walking
especially in California here because I'm
a California native walking around
I can't go down one of these roads without
two or three people talking
you know they either one advice or they want to
hear one of my stories and sometimes I think
my stories get a little long and they get a little much
but for some reason they never get tired
well it's wonderful but
I was really proud because
Jimmy Hendricks is one of the people that Amzo
supports he won pro four last night
and I go over there and he'll just
ask me off the wall questions and I know
he's fishing for different things he has questions
in his head but I let him ask and I tell
him my opinion which things have changed
as I got out of a pro four
some things have changed but some things stay the same
your mindset your focus
you know how the track changes
all that stuff stays the same the cars
have changed drastically sometimes
the speed has changed how you throw
them in sometimes but
he picks my brain for different things
and it's an honor to be able to do that
and then to see the success he had last night
so let's talk about the course that we're at right now
which is Glen Helen and this is kind of a
famous SoCal course
or motocross and short track and things
like that and as all these
race courses have been you know
closed all around Glen Helen still has some
staying power what's unique about this
particular venue well
what is really unique
about Glen Helen is they take some of the motocross
heritage which is deep here
like you said it's been here since I was a
kid which is a long time ago
and they transfer it over into the off-road
track and what I mean by that
is this track is busy
even the front straightaway has four jumps
on it the back straightaway has a rhythm
section that's bigger than any other section
they have a sand section and
the track here is not
all clay it's sandy
loomy so it ruts up and so
it's true off-road racing
that's on a short course so the two
things I love most is I love short
tracks because everybody can run wide
open down a straightaway and
focus into these big wide corners that some
of these tracks have but not everybody
can run jump after jump where
your mindset is
constant you're thinking of if you mess
a jump up you'll mess
up like three more or you'll
mess up a couple corners it's almost like they took
desert racing and distilled it into a short course
absolutely and the racing
last night was phenomenal they made the
track a little more aggressive which I love that
because there again you have to use your head
you have to figure out like
even Jimmy said last night he goes I figured out
you can over jump those rhythms
and he says it was all I had a moment
you know and I go
yeah and he says but that's good because now
everybody's having to think how far
can we push it or how far we can't so
sometimes some guys push it a little farther
get some ahead it creates great
competition and the fans love it
they don't want to see off-road trucks
go around a track that look like rally
cars they want them flying through the air
they want to look like their truck that they drove in on
right they want to be able to see themselves
in it or have it relatable
and they love that
and we listen I love
NASCAR as much as NASCAR but when you
add NASCAR type experience
and then dirt and jumping and flying
fender to fender rubbing and all the stuff
that short course off-road racing adds
it's such a different level that is
so awesome to watch absolutely
and and and champ off-road
does such a good job of what they do
and they've taken they what this
is is this is this is outdoor
motocross for trucks yeah and
anybody that knows outdoor motocross knows
that you get a lot of the same excitement you do
with a stadium motocross it's obviously
out in open environment but you get
speed you get different
train you get ruts you get all these things
and you get endurance I mean
these guys are they're only running out here for
about 20 minutes on one of
these races but I tell you what if you if
you're not in shape you don't have your breathing
right you I tell everybody when when
they're new I say they go hey what you know
guy goes out there for the first time what can
you teach me what's the biggest thing you can teach me all these
tracks I go don't forget to breathe
I says put a note on the dash even because
I said a lot of these guys I've seen them when they're young
and I'm an older guy back when I
raced I was you know when I quit I was still
pretty old guy I get out the truck and yeah I'm
sweating but I'm just breathing normal
and they're about passed out and here they're
they're nineteen twenty years old and
they're just I says well because once you
forget to breathe you use you know you
just your focus you kind of along for the
rather than driving the the bus right
like you're just along and letting it out
yeah letting the race kind of act on you
rather than you yeah you have to have your
body function
you have to be athlete absolutely
and even though I'm maybe you know don't
look like I mean I can't go run a marathon
but my body is tuned for off-road
racing if it's desert racing or short
course racing and and you have to have
your your mindset to where your body
will take and you are breathing
characteristics and those things will come naturally
so your entire hundred percent focus
can be what's a hundred yards in front
of you awesome the track dude so
they this is amazing I love the
storytelling thank you Scott for spending the time
with us and walking us through and throwing
in a little bit of your history that's
been awesome absolutely anytime I'd love to
get back together with you to appreciate it
okay so wandering around the pits
came across the amsoil booth so I'm
looking at
tons and tons of product actually
there's so much stuff here and I can't
fit into my truck for the way home so
now I'm trying to figure out if
what I can take here
I got some amsoil
some amsoil chapstick
got some severe gear one of my favorites
I use that on everything lots of racing
oil here in mud slinger
oh man I can go crazy in here but
the man standing in front of me won't let me
and that's a legendary off-road racer
Scott Douglas and if you
know off-road racing
you know Scott and I actually pulled up his
highlights because I can't remember
everything that you've done but
almost a hundred career victories
eight desert championships in score, HDRA
best in the desert, mini-metal
two short course championships
two time board order cup champion
2010 inaugural winner
of the amsoil cup
three Baja 1000 class wins
1993
score San Felipe
250 overall winner
with a class 7 which
Herzog Ranger was
a beast back in his day and I was a
class 7S ranger guy
as a kid so I used to watch all you guys
and that was my favorite so way ahead of
his time anyway that was a really
long intro to say hi to Scott
well thanks a lot that's flattering
and you forgot the Hall of Fame
part
Hall of Famer
that's one of my favorite
ones as well
but you know I've had a blessed career
and I've worked for a lot of great people
I mean I started racing in the 70s
on motorcycles and then my brother
you were a two wheel guy earlier on
and then you went into
regular two wheel drive racetracks
but you also raced four wheel drive racetracks as well right
oh yeah yeah but the first thing I did
is the Baja 51980
my brother and I
my brother was I was 19
he was five years older and I was
he bought this truck off a used car a lot
and financed it on top of that
which I do not recommend for anybody
financing a racetrack that's new
so we ran the Baja 500
and we both shared the
driving we were pitting for Jim Connors
before that and for the Goodyear team
and there was a lot we did and so then
we took and we decided
we were going to race so he got this truck
what was it? it was an F100
it was a 1974
yeah, 74 F100
twin I-beam truck pretty
pretty much stock had little 33's
on it and had like a stock 302
with some headers on it
that would have been a dent side truck
and one of my favorite body styles
as a matter of fact
and anyway the way the cage
was built at that time
they thought that the frames needed to flex
because they were made out of certain material
so they tried to make some people made the cages
rigid some people made the cages
with a suspension piece
in there that the actual cage and the rear
would slide well make a long story short
halfway through the race the frame broken out
oh no! yeah so I go well
I've never been a quitter in my life
and I wasn't going to start at 19
I haven't finished now
so anyway but the bottom line
is we cut the spare tire mount apart
I got a stick welder we got it all back together
and we finished the race and we got fifth out of
in class 8 out of like 28
trucks and we were on top of the world
because we thought well here
we're racing against Walker Evans
and Scoop Vessels and Ivan Stewart at the time
and to get fifth place
those are legends but did you ever think
at 19 racing against those guys
that you would ever be up in that echelon
of racer because you are there
well I really appreciate that
and I wasn't sure at that point
I knew that how I was taught
how I was raised is if you
put your all into something
go all in or don't do it at all
and my dad told me
when we decided to go full time racing
or not full time but when we decided to go racing
I still had construction jobs so did my brother
he after this one race
we broke the frame we decided to build another truck
well we're just doing it on our own budget
no sponsors at the time
and he says hey both of you guys can move back home
free of charge the whole thing
but you're going to go in
and you're going to do this
100% in
and if you're not 100% in
if you go out and you're going to party
or you're going to go do this
if you're going to have other hobbies I'm out
you're going to kick you both out
but if you want to do this and you want to make it
you better make it 100%
so with my brother's help I was able to
get my career going pretty good
was that the best advice you could have gotten
at that age
when you look back do you think
if he hadn't said that to me
maybe it would have been a different path
or it wouldn't have been as committed
absolutely you know but my dad
I grew up in the back of a jeep
and when friends of mine
when I was 13, 14 years old
some friends of mine would go hey let's go over to
we're going to have a pool party over here
this weekend or whatever
I go no my dad's going jeep and he's part of a jeep club
and I was the guy who packed
we had a little tent trailer and I was the little guy
that went in there and packed it perfectly
because we only had so much room so
at an early age I got to witness
and be part of off-roading
in general not just racing but the off-road world
the kids that grow up in the off-road world
nobody has any idea
they go out to the desert for Thanksgiving
and have the big dinners and everything
everybody thinks it's a big party out there
well some of it is a big party
but a lot of it isn't a lot of it is families
and they're growing together
and you learn that family bond
with your siblings
and your parents
it was the coolest thing ever
in the jeep run
we'd go out jeeping or whatever
and my dad had a
he had a 74 cj5 at the time
had a 304 v8
and my dad was the coolest guy ever
in the jeep club
well we'd get there we'd set up camp
and he'd throw me the
he'd take the mufflers off and had open type cutouts
he'd throw me the wrenches in the cutouts
he says okay son go ahead and put these on
and I was like king of the world
I'm taking to putting these open exhausts
because we're going to have this loud open exhaust
for when we're out on the trails and everything
and he was
he taught me a lot about
learning and focusing
and we would go on these jeep runs
and we were at Johnson Valley before Johnson Valley
was a big thing
and so we'd be on some of these trails
with these jeeps that had 33's
and some of these rock trails
and there would be 30 people in these rooms
like horses and wheel travel
absolutely so they'd all try and make it up
these hills and everything
and some of them would roll over and some of them wouldn't make it
and my dad would wait till the very last
and then he'd tell my brother he said get in boys
because he had studied every one of them
and 9 times out of 10
he'd go up it like it was nothing
and I learned that knowledge is power
especially off-roading
even whether it's racing or trail riding
understanding how to reach terrain in the line
is probably the most important thing
next to maybe throttle application
and steering but you have to know
what the trail is going to allow you to do
or what the race course is going to allow you to do
so that you can stay on four wheels
and get through it
absolutely and you've got to have that focus
and I was fortunate enough
that early on my career
we went into 7S and that's where I started
having some real good success
winning some races
winning a couple championships
all of a sudden I get recognized by Walker Evans
he gives me a call and I'm a shy kid
and I'm a shy kid
I don't talk to anybody at this point
now I talk to everybody
I love telling stories and everything
but back then I'm a shy kid
Walker was one of my heroes
it was actually my mom's favorite driver
which was crazy
he calls my parents house
looking for me
and on Christmas
it was like two days before Christmas
it wasn't quite Christmas Eve
and says hey
I need to talk to Scott
my mom's like
and I happen to be there
she goes Walker Evans is on the phone
anyway
so I took the call
and my dad listened in
and he offered me a job for 1990
to drive one of his trucks
he says you and Rob McCackeren
are winning all the races
and you are
you are just dog and rob all the time
and so
best thing to do is to hire you
to get you off Rob's butt
and to put you in a truck
on our team
and I was like
well it didn't quite go that way
but I was just flattered
and this is my dream
this is what I wanted
and my parents knew this
this is my dream
we've been working hard
for about seven years
in construction
and racing
to try and build to this
well
anyway
he says well what do you think
he laid it all out
and I said well
I think I'm going to have to turn you down Walker
oh wow
and he was shocked
I think there's not too many people
that turn you down
absolutely
and he goes why do you think
you've got to do that
and I says well I have an obligation
I had a small
and at that time
I had some small sponsorships
I had a little small one from Ford
and BF Goodrich was being good to me
started giving me tires
then started giving me a little budget
and I had a deal that I just signed
with BF Goodrich
and so
he goes
he goes okay well
he says why don't you think about it
and call me back
and I says I'll do that
so I hang up the phone
my parents were
eavesdropping obviously
and my dad goes
well what was that all about
and he says
and I said
and he knew
but I said well
Walker offered to hire me
you know for a job
and he goes well
isn't that what you want to do
isn't that your dream
I said absolutely
that's my dream
he says that's
I said that's what I've dreamt
you know back when I race motorcycles
is to race for a living
is to be competitive
and he goes well what'd you tell him
and he knew that I told him no
and I says well I told him no
and he says well why did you do that son
and he says
he says well
he said
I told him
I says you know dad
I says
you told me that
your word is the only thing
you've got in life
and I said
I gave BF Goodrich my word
that I would race for them next year
and I signed a contract
and I says
I don't want to go about my
back against my word
and my dad looked up at me
and he goes
maybe I left something out
and he says
I tell you what son
he says
you call Walker back up
and he says
and you go and set up
face to face meeting
and you
if you're going to turn him down
you turn him down to his face
you don't turn him down
over the phone
and you do what's best for you
that's all I've got to say about this
so I went there
I brought my brother
and we
Walker
and at that point
I had a week before the meeting
so now I'm starting to think
I get in this little big
big head
I'm going okay
I want this
I'm thinking maybe
not to get greedy
but I want to be
well they start laying out
what I'm going to get
I'm going to go down to Dodge
and pick out any kind of car
you want
we'll order
three driving
there's three helmets
I was like
you have to be kidding me
this is a dream come true
and that was
back in the time
when Dodge was competitive
absolutely
they were in it
Dodge and Jeep
and so then he goes
well he goes
he goes
why exactly did you turn me down
I said well I had a contract
with B.F. Goodrich
and he says
well Frank D'Angelo
and I said yeah
you're a good guy
you're a good year guy
I says how do you know Frank
he goes oh no
we all know each other
and he says
I tell you what Scott
he says just ease your mind
and everything
he says
why don't we call Frank up
and this is before cell phones
and everything
I says well
he's not going to be in the office
this is a Saturday
he saw I got his home number
he calls up Frank
got his home number
I go I don't even have Frank's home number
and here you're with a good year guy
but he's Walker Evans
of course
anyhow
he calls him up
puts him on speakerphone
and he goes
I got Scott here
whatever
and Frank goes
you know what
this is a career opportunity
for you Scott
I'd be more than happy
to let you out of your contract
and that's how Frank is
yep absolutely
I mean
amazing
amazing guy
so that's how my professional career is
I took a two year leave of absence
for my construction job
figuring out
I'll do this for two years
and I'll be back
and I've never had to look back since
and here I am
in the Amzol booth
still supporting Amzol
and still supporting the sport
and loving every minute of it
alright so
you're here at the race
you do
actually kind of a lot of different things
for Amzol
you're wearing the Amzol shirt
so explain that to me
I show up in the Amzol booth
legend
Scott Douglass is sitting here right in front of me
well thank you
yeah well I mean
obviously I raced for Amzol
the Amzol Pro 4
for about 16 years
and we had great success
won a lot of races
a lot of big races
yeah
you know
and so
when I
it was time for me to retire
because father time
catches up to you
and you're just not as marketable
as you used to be
you know
they were really gracious
they came to me
and they said
hey
you've been with us a long time
we want you a part of our brand
because you know our brand
you believe in our brand
which I did
I totally
engulfed
and believe in everything
Amzol does
from the engineering department
to the marketing department
if you've never been to Amzol
I suggest you go to
it's the largest
under roof building
in all of the state of Wisconsin
we did a
walkthrough
two part series
talking about how Amzol
is made
we did everything from
the trains that come in
and to
where they mix everything
to the marketing side
to the bottling
I mean I saw it firsthand
and you know
there's some other
Amzol athletes
that are good friends of mine
Scott Bertzol
and
just
you know
from our standpoint
is I talk to people
I know that are in the
Amzol sphere
and everybody says
the exact same thing
and that's Amzol
is a great company
that makes great product
but it treats you like family
and that's been
our experience as well
and it's
been a great
relationship
and my take away
is when I walk into
that big building
and I see those big
vats and those big tanks
I not only see
professionalism
I see everybody
in that building
that has pride
in what they do
and you cannot
you can't
you can't buy that
you have to
you have to have it
get to earn it
and everybody in that building
from like said
the marketing department
down to the mixers
to the engineers
have it
so that's why I
so prideful
to be a part of Amzol
well they told me
they go
well we want you to be
an Amzol ambassador
and I said
well what does that
actually entail
and they go
we want you to do
events
and be at events
and I was doing
a display program
before
we want you to continue
that
and I said okay
well
I'm kind of a glorified
Cardi then right
and they go
no no
you're a lot more than that
obviously
and so I've really
enjoyed it
the last four or five years
I've been doing
just the display program
but look at me
I get to do
what I'm
I get to come to these
off-road races
or now I'm into the
car show network too
and we do a lot of
car shows
I've got four hot rods
I get to bring my hot rods
put them on display
drive them around
all arena
when we do hot
August nights
I get to go to
to
just all kinds of
different events
Jeep Beach
and I've got a big Jeep
that's all done up
and so
I get to do
all the fun side of
different pair of fans
absolutely
I'm the luckiest guy
in the world
because I get to do
all the things
I love to do
with all the people
that I grew up with
and was around
all my life
and I get paid
to do it
so
Amso treats me wonderful
let me ask you this
how many younger
racers
know that you're here
and come by for advice
and races
there's quite a few
of them
and just walking
especially in California
here
because I'm a California native
walking around
I can't go down
one of these rows
without two or three
people talking
you know
they either
want advice
or they want to hear
one of my stories
and sometimes
I think
my stories
get a little long
and they get a little much
but for some reason
they never get tired
well
it's wonderful
but I was really proud
because
Jimmy Hendricks
is one of the people
that Amso supports
he won pro 4
last night
and I go over there
and he'll just ask me
off the wall
questions
and I know he's fishing
for different things
he has questions in his head
but I let him ask
and I tell him my opinion
which things have changed
since I got out of a pro 4
some things have changed
but some things stay the same
your mindset
your focus
you know
how the track changes
all that stuff
stays the same
the cars have changed
drastically
sometimes the speed
has changed
how you throw them in
sometimes
but
he picks my brain
for different things
and it's an honor
to be able to do that
and then to see the success
he had last night
so let's talk about
the course that we're at right now
which is Glen Helen
and this is kind of a famous
SoCal course
or motocross
and short track
and things like that
and as all these race courses
have been
you know
closed all around
Glen Helen
still has some staying power
what's unique about
this particular venue
well
what is really unique
about Glen Helen
is they take some
of the motocross heritage
which is deep here
like you said
it's been here
since I was a kid
which is a long time ago
and they transferred over
into the off-road track
and what I mean by that
is this track is busy
even the front straightaway
has four jumps on it
the back straightaway
has a rhythm section
that's bigger than any other
section
they have a sand section
and the track here
is not all clay
it's sandy loomy
so it ruts up
and so it's true
off-road racing
that's on a short course
so the two things I love most
is I love short tracks
because everybody can run
wide open down a straightaway
and focus into these big
wide corners
that some of these tracks have
but not everybody can run
jump after jump
where your mindset
is constant
you're thinking of
if you mess a jump up
you'll mess up like
three more
or you'll mess up
a couple corners
it's almost like they took
desert racing
and distilled it into a
short course
absolutely
and the racing last night
was phenomenal
they made the track
a little more aggressive
which I love that
because there again
you have to use your head
you have to figure out
like even Jimmy said last night
he goes I figured out
you can over jump those rhythms
and he says it was all
I had a moment
and I go yeah
and he says but that's good
because now
everybody's having to think
how far can we push it
or how far we can't
so sometimes
some guys push it a little farther
it gets them ahead
it creates great competition
and the fans love it
they don't want to see
off-road trucks
go around a track
that look like rally cars
they want them flying through the air
they want to look like
their truck that they drove in on
they want to be able
to see themselves in it
or have it relatable
and they love that
and we listen
I love NASCAR
as much as NASCAR
but when you add
NASCAR type experience
and then dirt
and jumping and flying
fender to fender rubbing
and all the stuff
that short course
off-road racing adds
it's such a different level
that is so awesome to watch
absolutely
and champ off-road
does such a good job
of what they do
and they've taken
what this is
is this is
this is outdoor motocross
for trucks
and anybody
that knows outdoor motocross
knows that
you get a lot of the same
excitement you do
with a stadium motocross
it's obviously
out in an open environment
but you get speed
you get different train
you get ruts
you get all these things
and you get endurance
I mean these guys
they're only running out here
for about 20 minutes
on one of these races
but I tell you what
if you're not in shape
you don't have your breathing
right
I tell everybody
when they're new
they go
hey what you know
guy goes out there
for the first time
what can you teach me
what's the biggest thing
you can teach me
about these tracks
I go
don't forget to breathe
I says put a note
on the dash even
because I said
a lot of these guys
I've seen them when they're young
and I'm an older guy
back when I raced
I was
you know
when I quit
I was still
pretty old guy
I get out of the truck
and yeah
I'm sweating
but I'm just breathing
the normal air
and they're about passed out
and here they're
they're 19, 20 years old
and they're just
I says well because
once you forget to breathe
you just
you know you just
your focus
you're kind of a lung for the rocker
rather than driving
the bus right
absolutely
letting it
letting the race kind of
act on you rather than you
yeah
you have to have
your body functions
come naturally
you have to be an athlete
absolutely
and even though
I'm maybe
don't look like
I mean I can't go
run a marathon
but my body is tuned
for off-road racing
if it's desert racing
or short course racing
and
and you have to have
your mindset
to where
your body will take
and your breathing characteristics
and those things
will come naturally
so your entire
100% focus
can be what's 100
yards in front of you
it's awesome
the track
dude so
this is amazing
I love the storytelling
thank you Scott
for spending the time
with us
and
and throwing in
a little
bit of your history
that's been awesome
absolutely any time
I'd love to get back together
with you too
I appreciate it
okay so I've been
invited into the pits
of number 44
driver
Amsoil
champ driver
Jimmy Henderson
and I was just watching
your practice lapse
out there
dude you were rushing it
on the course
yeah
yeah
we weren't even
going to practice today
and
woke up this morning
started
driving to the track
and
the crew chief was like
hey I got an ideal
shot
so I had a few little
complaints during the race
yeah
you mean the race
that you won last night
the race we won last night
yeah
I had minor complaints
he takes that stuff
to heart
and I was like
you know yeah
it's great
but this was happening
this was happening
literally walking
the trailer
and he's like
get your suit on
he's like
I made a change
and it's a big one
you gotta check it out
how do you feel about it
it's great
I mean
me and him
have a thing
where we like sit down
we talk about
so we made that change
but he like
literally showed me
what we were doing
and we talked about it
yeah
I think that's the right move
and
we went out there
we ran one lap
and that was the plan
because the truck
was fully race prepped
so we were like
okay I'm going to
do a little hot lap
and then I'm going to
burn one lap
and then we're going to come in
and
man the truck was dialed
dude I watched it
so I was sitting
at the end of the track
by the start
finish line
where you go around the big corner
and have the two sets of doubles
and then the big
the next big sweeper
dude
you were
you're clearing the first jump
or you're doing the jump
clearing the first second
landing perfectly
and then clearing the second double
on the next one
then setting yourself up
right for that sweeper
yeah
I mean it's just like
it was like
if
if trucks could be like music
man I was just watching
an orchestra right there
and it's so funny on these trucks
I mean
you're watching
the pro fours
with four wheel drive
like they just stick to the ground
there
you're coming in after that big
jump after the start finish
and I'm watching
kind of those little
saw
seesaw movements of the wheel
as you're
steering around the corner
and unlike a pro two
where it's all rear
you know
swing
you're just kind of sliding through
and it's a lot more graceful
I just love that about
the four wheel drive stuff
yeah
and it's a lot about the confidence
in the truck
I mean
you really have to back them in
and you have to commit
but in that
you have to commit to the throttle
and your steering
has to be on point
which means your brakes
you know
your braking point
sets the nose
right
and then the throttle
has to go with that
because if you set the nose
you get rotation
you got to pick the throttle up
pick up too much
you're going to go too far
and you're going to be
looking at the banners
on the inside
you don't pick it up enough
you're going to hook a rut
or the cushion
and go over
so it's just like
this confidence
and all the things
going on inside the truck
actually
my pastor
from Atlanta
is here
this weekend
so he made the trip from
California
nice
just see us race
and I was telling him last night
he's like
yeah he's like
I see you turn
and I was like
okay this is really how it goes
100 feet
before you actually
see the truck turn
the mechanics inside
you know inside
you are
setting the brakes
flicking the truck
setting the throttle
and then
you visually
see the truck turn
like all this happens
before that
and
you know
I've only been in it
five years
and it's been a
huge learning curve
coming from asphalt
and
so much respect
for the guys
that have raced
these things
asphalt's a lot of foam
but there's a whole other
level and element
to truck racing
short course
and especially this track
right because
this isn't just clay
this is like
somebody took the desert
and put it on a short course
because you got
all sorts of different surfaces
you've got the way
that they broom this track
the way that they put in the jumps
it's the melting
like motocross
and
desert racing together
so you're busy
the whole time
there's no
like chilling out
during this race
yeah there's
so
you know there's
14 jumps
and there's five turns
it's very busy inside
how long's the course?
just over
five eighths of a month
okay
so it is a
lot of jumps
that's a lot of stuff
and it's like that rhythm
you know just like
doing a super
cross track
or a good
motocross
tight motocross track
just rhythm
and if you
get out of that rhythm
so it's more important
to hit your rhythm
than to try to
push in full speed
yeah
it's just be smooth
be smooth
and let the speed
come to you
you know
every time like
qualifying your style
try to push
just that last lap
like oh we can get
a little bit more
and it just blew
the lap to pieces
it's almost like
if you can stay within
your rhythm
and you know you're fast
you'll kind of get ahead
through attrition
right because people can
over drive their cars
and you're going to be
able to
drive your race
and stay out in front
and
I mean
what I saw out there
at practice with
how much faster
you were
that was
I mean that was
pretty awesome to see
Chuck's quick
Chuck's quick
and I feel good in it
and we
you know
we have a really
good mechanical
machine
like the parts
are really good
we know we have a good
machine
and we just had to
make it do
what I wanted to do
you know we needed
it predictable
needs to turn
when I want to turn
the brakes need that
the way I wanted it to
I need the throttle
to come in
the way I want it to
and once we got
that
like my chemistry
with the truck
with Trad
and with Luke
Luke's our tuner
right over there
with the king hat
once we got us all
like in the same
chemistry
where we're talking
the same language
and they trust me
you know because
I say weird stuff
like that
you know I want
the truck to like
rotate better
right here
and they're like
well nobody's rotating good
and I'm like
that's my point
yeah
I want
I want mine to do this
yes if we
change this
that's two tenths
yeah
and that's
just that trust
and that
yeah
relationship where
you know that's
we need two tenths
right there
this one spot
will do it
do you enjoy
a track like this
more than like
a clay track
like a Crandon
is this
more fun for you
or is it
a challenge that
you know
you have to meet
the challenge
it's a challenge
it's my first time
on a track like this
I've done rally cars
but the jumps
were so mild
they were kind of bumps
not jumps
so
first time like this
I'm loving it
and I enjoy it
but
some of the tracks
like the high speed tracks
like there's
there's
great about that too
yeah
everybody's like
oh you're just
wide open
yeah no you're not
you know
like I mean
we go through Oregon
you're like
40% throttle
and you're doing like
maybe what
80 85
and on this track
you're probably
what low 70
something like that
108
wow
turn one
jeez
um
bark river
we're in the 90s
somewhere going into
the graveyard
so
here
we might be
doing 75
80
haven't actually
looked at
GPS yet
but
you know
it's just
that different
it's just something different
yeah
it's hard to
it's hard to say I love this
more than that
because I love both of them
you know
I don't like tracks where
they're choked up
and not flowy
yeah
so there are some
you know
tracks where it's just like
man if we could just
get out here
and like
just change some flow
yeah
do better
and give you passing lanes
like this is a very hard
track to pass on
I will say that
it's tight
um
it's tight
um
but
we also have tracks that
don't really like
super flow
but then you got
tracks like
ERA
TRAN
and you know
Barker
they're just
everything
we're very well laid out
like this
you know
the artist did a good job
laying the dirt out right
sure
and they've done a good
job here
this track
when we first came here
and tested
I was like
this is a mess
this place is a mess
but they
modified it
modified it
even last night
there were complaints
about the track
and the lighting
like not enough light towers
complaints about things
on the track
and they took it to heart
and they fixed it
and they
didn't give us
you know everybody wants
an easy track
they didn't give us
what we wanted
but they gave us
hey you don't like that
we'll give you something else
so it takes that
the series
and the drivers
have to all
listen to each other
but yeah
I love this track
it's pretty awesome
so far
can you tell us a little bit
about your truck
how it's set up
shocks
engine
trans
all that kind of stuff
I could
but I'd have to kill you
oh
right Jerry
I don't know
I mean you know
obviously you have
the winning formula so
really
the 30,000 foot view
yeah so it's a Toyota
power plant
and it's built by
Golden Shamrock
one of the
subcontractors
of TRD racing
and
so we got
Toyota power plant
we have an
extract transmission
and it's actually
not sequential
it's a paddle shift
oh interesting
so we have an
Indycar style
steering wheel
that was made by
Beyond Redline
fully custom
and it's got
paddle shift in it
we ran the
sequential shifter
for a while
and it's fine
but I like the
paddle shift
and we were able to do it
they made it legal
so
we tried
decided to try it
and we've had
the hiccups with it
but we've been able to
work through them
as the year went on
and stuff
so we have a front diff
which is also made
by extract
and it kind of
unlocks and locks
like a C cell
it unlocks
and then when you're
on the accelerator
it locks back
and then just
standard
locker rear end
solid rear end
is there
anything
you know
how much payload
does this truck
haul more than ass
or is it just
haul ass
and that's it
it just hauls that
she's a heavy girl though
she's 4300 pounds
oh they're that heavy
wow
yeah with me in it
it's about 4300
so
she's big
you can get them down
to 4100
but you don't take you out
that's like me
yeah
so
you're getting ready
for the race tonight
it sounds like
you feel really confident
in the truck
you're ready to go
I'd love to
get you back on the podcast
after the race
when you're not as busy
and I know you guys
have you and your wife
have a business
and tell me
can you talk about
Amso a little bit
because I know you use it
in your construction
or your JV steel business
right
yeah cranes
and you kind of found it
on your own
this wasn't like
oh I'm going to use
Amso to race
this was like
this keeps my machinery
alive right
it's like
a necessity
for you
for your
livelihood
yeah it really is
so we kind of
found Amso
we were burning up
race car motors
and burning the
piston rings
and the rings out of it
and bearings
so
we were trying to
find something
that worked
and
we ended up with Amso
we tried it
we ran the motor
our standard
and the
you know the engine builder
pulled the motor
apart and was like
man this thing looks brand new
we were like perfect
so we had the same issues
on welding machines
we run gasoline
welding machines
we leave them out
on job site
all day
just running
same thing cranes
on job sites
they don't get
serviced when they need to
and that's just how
construction
sometimes you can't take
a piece of equipment
out of service right
yeah that part is
is they cost the fortune
yeah
every one of them
big small
they seem to cost
more than what you think
they would
but then you can never
service them properly
so when we had the issue
with the race car
and we were like
oh man
you know
now
we're going way
farther with the motors
than we used to be able to
just by changing
oil
well that concept
rolled right over
we're never changing
the oil in the crane
when we need to
well let's stop
buying this cheap
oil
let's put good
oil in it
because the
welder costs
10 grand
the crane costs
a million dollars
why are we worried
about
you know
$3 difference
in a quart of
oil
like I know
that you have to sit down
and do the math
but the machine
costs a lot more
than all
changes you're
putting in it
certainly when now
our machines
are going to
8000 hours
you know as far as
machines are not
having issues
with the motors
and we're not
having issues
with hydraulics
we've actually changed
all our hydraulic fluids
and then in our
machine shop
which is actually
a big
industrial fab shop
we have big
saws and stuff
so we're like
trying to change
everything over to it
just because
you know
we're able to send
these analysis
on two
amps
and amps
will analyze the oil
well
the very first time
we did it
we're pulling old
oil out
we're seeing like
breakdown
and they're seeing
metal and stuff in there
we change the oil
we do it
you know go through
about two cycles
and they're like yeah
it looks great
it's the exact same motor
we didn't go in
and rebuild the motor
we just changed the
oil and once it
cycled through
now we're seeing
better results
well that's proof
so I'm like
well if I can keep
this crane
five more years
that's a lot of money
in my return right
so yeah
it's
and those been
a huge part of our success
on the track
off the track
in our company
you know to the point
to where now it's
not even a question
well that's awesome
I'd love to
get you back on
and post-race
and maybe talk about
you know your weekend
and what it was like
in the driver's seat
and all that
and like to
dig down on your
on the family business
a little bit too
and obviously
you probably have a lot of
trucks in your fleet
and you probably have
a pretty good idea
of what lasts
and what doesn't
so I think that'd be
a pretty cool conversation
to have too
42 diesel trucks
yeah
35 years
that run around
we'll add that to our
conversation
after the race
but I would love to
pick your brain on that
awesome
appreciate your time
good luck today
thank you
congratulations
to racer Jimmy Henderson
who once again
took the top spot
on the podium
shortly after our interview
sweeping the weekend's
races
and of course
we'll take all the credit
for that
since truck show podcast
is nothing
if not good luck
for anyone who
appears on it
oh man
I hope you guys
enjoyed our day
at the raceway
with amsoil
and champ off-road
and I just want to say
thank you to our friends
over there
for inviting us out
giving us the VIP treatment
I seriously cannot
wait to do it again
and I'm glad to
have been able to share
it with you
alright
I am
I'm not
I'm not too ashamed
to beg
if you haven't
done it yet
please follow us
on social
at truck show
podcast
or at
Sean P. Holman
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Going Zons
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I'm not going to
plant that flag
at the ground
that going zons
is actually a
correct wording
or a phrase
but I said it anyway
alright
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anyway
that'll do it for this episode
thanks for joining me
let's do it again soon
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About this episode
Holman shares his thrilling experience at the AMSOIL Championship Off-Road Nationals, where he enjoyed VIP access to the races and interviewed notable figures, including off-road legend Colt Maver and championship series president Carl Shabitsky. The episode highlights the excitement of short course racing, the camaraderie among racers, and the evolution of the sport. Holman also discusses his new Jeep Gladiator project and the importance of quality products like AMSOIL in both racing and everyday vehicle maintenance.
Join Holman as he wanders around storied Glen Helen Raceway in Southern California, taking in the final race weekend of the AMSOIL Championship Off-Road season. Hear interviews with racers Scott Douglas, Jimmy Henderson, and Cole Mamer. Also check in with Champ Off-Road owner and president Carl Schubitzke and experience the Glen Helen Off-Road Nationals from the inside. The Truck Show Podcast is produced in partnership with AMSOIL, Kershaw Knives, and OVR Mag.