


For the top Pro classes, there are complete programs each night. With seating indoors and out, coverage on countless TVs throughout the facility and a history that runs deep in the snocross world, Canterbury draws the masses. Canterbury Park in the Minneapolis suburb of Shakopee, Minnesota, will host the Pirtek Snocross National, January 7-8. It’ll start with a subtle copy of NASCAR racing by having its historically best attended, highest profile event first. The ACS series, which historically opened its season on Thanksgiving weekend in Duluth, Minnesota, will for the second year in a row run a more condensed calendar, squeezing 17 rounds of racing into eight weekends of racing in January, February and March. Here’s a preview of the season as it’ll happen The First Three Stops
#SNOMOBILE DRAG RACING DRIVERS#
The high profile Pro and Pro Lite classes are bound to be hyper competitive this year, as some top drivers changed teams while others spent the entire summer preparing to up their game. The ISOC Amsoil Championship Snocross series draws the best high-flying riders from across North American as well as Scandinavia to compete on bumpy courses on Arctic Cat, Polaris and Ski-Doo 600-class sleds. The largest snowmobile snocross tour in the world has announced its schedule for the coming winter, and it includes a combination of historic sites and the return to some key locations scattered between the Dakotas and the East Coast.
