SOLD! Rocky Mountain Raceway's Final Season

Granger/Hunter began their love of racing at on of the 3 neighborhood Drag strips.

Bonneville Drag Strip 3350 West 2100 South

Copper Raceway 5000 W7800 S

SL Raceway 4900 W 2100 South. 

 

A few years later 50 acres of land became the community Drag strip. 

This 50 acres grew to feature ovals, motocross &drag racing.

After this season, the 50 acres will be developed into a 50 acre commercial development.

Here is their website address: http://rmrracing.com/

 

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Here is a release from the RMR website:

Rocky Mountain Raceways Announces Historic Final Racing Season

WEST VALLEY CITY, UT – The 2018 racing calendar will mark the historic final season at Rocky Mountain Raceways, Spencer Young Sr., CEO of the Young Automotive Group announced Thursday. The storied venue, located in West Valley City, Utah, operates an NHRA-sanctioned drag strip, 3/8-mile asphalt oval track, and a premier motocross facility.  Plans are underway during the track’s off season to create a memorable and eventful 2018 season across all three racing operations; the company will conduct more than 140 events in its celebratory campaign.

Just over 50 acres of property where the track resides was sold to Freeport West in 2014, and a five-year lease to continue racing operations was negotiated in order for RMR to continue serving racers and fans – not just in Utah but throughout the West.  That lease will expire at the end of the 2018 racing season without an option to renew, due to the direction of commercial development in West Valley City.

“We’ve invested a great deal in the racing community, and we aren’t walking away from that,” Spencer Young Sr. said.  “We will continue to sponsor racers and support racing.”

The Young Automotive Group extensively explored different avenues to extend the life of the track, first by looking into purchasing new property and building a new track – a venture that didn’t make economic business sense.  The company also reached out to the State of Utah and the Utah Sports Commission in hopes of turning the track into a public venture.  West Valley City was contacted, as many tracks are owned by the city in which they are housed.  Little interest was expressed, and the company ultimately made the decision to close the track.

In a statement released Thursday, General Manager Mike Eames said the venue has come to mean more than just a place to race cars and motorcycles.

“Since this venue opened, so many memories have been made here.  Life-long friendships have been created.  People have met here through racing, developed their own love story, and are now married with children.  If the Young Automotive Group didn’t create this incredible place, none of those memories would have been possible.  We look forward to creating as many new memories as possible during our 2018 season.” Eames said.

Dating back more than a century, racing has played a significant part in Utah’s sporting history.  The first race in Utah took

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