Coverage - ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ is the Tuner's Source for Modified Car Culture since 1999ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ Performance Auto & Sound - The Tuner's Source for Modified Car Culture since 1999/events/event-coverage2026-04-19T10:14:01+00:00ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ - since 1999 - Performance Auto & Sound The Tuner's Source for Modified Car CultureJoomla! - Open Source Content ManagementFormula DRIFT Opens 2026 Season in Long Beach with Shanahan Victory2026-04-15T19:19:54+00:002026-04-15T19:19:54+00:00/events/event-coverage/formula-drift-2026-round-1-long-beach-recapPAS Staff<p>Round 1 of the 2026 Formula DRIFT PRO Championship took place April 11 on the Streets of Long Beach, with Conor Shanahan taking the win in the Final against three-time champion Fredric Aasbo.</p>
<p>The victory marks Shanahan’s second career FD PRO win and his first with Jerry Yang Racing in the Red Bull / GT Radial Toyota GT86. It comes at the start of his third season in the series.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Richards_Lemaire.jpg" alt="Two drift cars battle through a smoke-filled corner in front of a packed crowd at Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Shanahan’s route to the Final included a dramatic Top 32 moment against Ken Gushi. Following a collision, Shanahan appeared to be eliminated when his team was unable to complete repairs in time. However, judges called for a One More Time, allowing the runs to be repeated. Shanahan advanced from the rerun and continued through the bracket to secure the win.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Conor_Shanahan.jpg" alt="Conor Shanahan being interviewed after his win at Formula DRIFT Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Aasbo, driving the Rockstar Energy Toyota GR Supra, delivered a clean weekend, advancing through the field without incident before finishing second.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/CShanahan_Gushi.jpg" alt="Conor Shanahan and Ken Gushi drift side-by-side near the wall during a close tandem battle." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Third place went to Jack Shanahan. His weekend ended before the Top 4 battle against Aasbo due to engine issues, preventing a potential matchup between the Shanahan brothers in the Final.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/JShanahan_Bakchis.jpg" alt="Jack Shanahan leads Aurimas Bakchis during a tandem drift run at Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Five-time champion James Deane, who qualified first, was eliminated in the Top 16 by Diego Higa. Returning after a year away from competition, Higa showed strong pace before exiting in the Top 8 against Conor Shanahan.</p>
<p>Cole Richards was named Top Rookie in Long Beach, finishing fourth overall after losing to Shanahan in the Top 4.</p>
<p>Elsewhere, Matt Field was eliminated in the Top 32 by Dylan Hughes. Adam LZ was also eliminated in the Top 32 by Ryan Litteral following contact during their One More Time battle.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Tuerck_Masuyama.jpg" alt="Overhead view of two drift cars running tandem on the Long Beach course." width="1728" height="1153" /></p>
<p>The event also saw the expanded use of the Universal Drift Scoring Method (UDSM) telemetry system from Race Data Labs. After its introduction during qualifying, it was used in a supporting role during Top 32 competition to assist judges with vehicle dynamics and incident evaluation, while also helping to accelerate the judging process.</p>
<p>Following Round 1, Shanahan leads the standings with 50 points, followed by Aasbo with 40 and Jack Shanahan with 32.</p>
<p>Toyota leads the 2026 Formula DRIFT Auto Cup standings, while Kenda leads the Tire Cup by one point.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Yoshihara_2026_HoF.jpg" alt="Formula DRIFT Hall of Fame moment with drivers posing for a commemorative photo." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Round 2 of the Formula DRIFT PRO Championship will take place May 7–9 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, alongside the opening round of the Link ECU PROSPEC Championship and the return of the GridLife series.<br /><br />Photography provided by Formula Drift</p><p>Round 1 of the 2026 Formula DRIFT PRO Championship took place April 11 on the Streets of Long Beach, with Conor Shanahan taking the win in the Final against three-time champion Fredric Aasbo.</p>
<p>The victory marks Shanahan’s second career FD PRO win and his first with Jerry Yang Racing in the Red Bull / GT Radial Toyota GT86. It comes at the start of his third season in the series.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Richards_Lemaire.jpg" alt="Two drift cars battle through a smoke-filled corner in front of a packed crowd at Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Shanahan’s route to the Final included a dramatic Top 32 moment against Ken Gushi. Following a collision, Shanahan appeared to be eliminated when his team was unable to complete repairs in time. However, judges called for a One More Time, allowing the runs to be repeated. Shanahan advanced from the rerun and continued through the bracket to secure the win.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Conor_Shanahan.jpg" alt="Conor Shanahan being interviewed after his win at Formula DRIFT Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Aasbo, driving the Rockstar Energy Toyota GR Supra, delivered a clean weekend, advancing through the field without incident before finishing second.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/CShanahan_Gushi.jpg" alt="Conor Shanahan and Ken Gushi drift side-by-side near the wall during a close tandem battle." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Third place went to Jack Shanahan. His weekend ended before the Top 4 battle against Aasbo due to engine issues, preventing a potential matchup between the Shanahan brothers in the Final.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/JShanahan_Bakchis.jpg" alt="Jack Shanahan leads Aurimas Bakchis during a tandem drift run at Long Beach." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Five-time champion James Deane, who qualified first, was eliminated in the Top 16 by Diego Higa. Returning after a year away from competition, Higa showed strong pace before exiting in the Top 8 against Conor Shanahan.</p>
<p>Cole Richards was named Top Rookie in Long Beach, finishing fourth overall after losing to Shanahan in the Top 4.</p>
<p>Elsewhere, Matt Field was eliminated in the Top 32 by Dylan Hughes. Adam LZ was also eliminated in the Top 32 by Ryan Litteral following contact during their One More Time battle.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Tuerck_Masuyama.jpg" alt="Overhead view of two drift cars running tandem on the Long Beach course." width="1728" height="1153" /></p>
<p>The event also saw the expanded use of the Universal Drift Scoring Method (UDSM) telemetry system from Race Data Labs. After its introduction during qualifying, it was used in a supporting role during Top 32 competition to assist judges with vehicle dynamics and incident evaluation, while also helping to accelerate the judging process.</p>
<p>Following Round 1, Shanahan leads the standings with 50 points, followed by Aasbo with 40 and Jack Shanahan with 32.</p>
<p>Toyota leads the 2026 Formula DRIFT Auto Cup standings, while Kenda leads the Tire Cup by one point.<img src="/images/2026/04/15/Yoshihara_2026_HoF.jpg" alt="Formula DRIFT Hall of Fame moment with drivers posing for a commemorative photo." width="1728" height="1152" /></p>
<p>Round 2 of the Formula DRIFT PRO Championship will take place May 7–9 at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, alongside the opening round of the Link ECU PROSPEC Championship and the return of the GridLife series.<br /><br />Photography provided by Formula Drift</p>King of the Hammers 2026: It’s Not the Machines. It’s the Culture2026-04-02T16:59:11+00:002026-04-02T16:59:11+00:00/events/event-coverage/king-of-the-hammers-culturePAS Staff<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/MAIN-IMAGE_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016410-2.jpg" /></p><p><a href="https://www.instagram.com/megapixelsniper/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Story and Photography by P.J. Miller (@megapixelsniper)</a><em></em><br /><br />There’s a moment at King of the Hammers where everything clicks. It doesn’t happen at the start line, and it doesn’t happen on the podium. It happens somewhere out in the desert, with dust hanging in the air, engines echoing off canyon walls, and helicopters circling overhead, when you realize this isn’t just a race.</p>
<p>Out here, the machines are epic. Purpose-built, tuned, and pushed to the absolute limit. You hear the sharp click of harnesses locking in as drivers sit staged, eyes forward, running routes in their heads one last time. The air is thick with high-octane fuel, hot metal, and desert dust baked into everything.</p>
<p>The desert feels alive. Waiting for mistakes. It’s a war of attrition as much as skill.</p>
<p>Loren Healy ripped the entire front end off his truck in pre-running. Not damaged. Gone. And somehow, that same truck staged, qualified, and lined up to race.</p>
<p><strong><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-2_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016344-2.jpg" alt="White off-road race truck lifting over rough desert terrain with dust trailing behind." /><em><br /><br /></em><strong>Two Worlds, One Desert</strong><em><br /></em></strong></p>
<p>But that’s only part of the story.</p>
<p>Within that precision chaos is something far less controlled, but just as significant. Campfires burn through the night. Generators hum. Broken parts get fixed under headlamps. Homemade buggies mix with side by sides that cost the same as a Porsche. People have driven across states not just to watch; they’re here because they belong to it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-3_IMG_6363.jpg" alt="Green Mazda race car parked in Hammertown surrounded by tents, trailers, and spectators." width="4284" height="3213" /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-4_IMG_6627.JPG" alt="Red Bull–liveried off-road race vehicle (#37) captured in motion with background blur." width="4000" height="2662" /><br />King of the Hammers is not just an event. It is a living, breathing culture.</p>
<p><strong>From Sideways to the Desert</strong></p>
<p>That same mindset is what led to RTR, born not from a traditional business plan, but from a desire to reshape what car culture could look like for a new generation. A different way of thinking about cars, about style, and about what cool actually is. Not following trends, but creating them.</p>
<p>So when Vaughn showed up to King of the Hammers, it was not as an off-road veteran. It was as someone who understands culture.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-5_911_rok_2025-3.jpg" alt="IMAGE 5 911 rok 2025 3" width="9520" height="6336" /><br />“I pulled in and it felt like Burning Man with race cars,” he says.</p>
<p>That reaction says everything. Not just about the scale of the event, but about what it represents—something built from the ground up by people who are fully invested in it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-6_IMG_1194.JPG" alt="Spectators gathered along canyon walls at night watching off-road vehicles navigate obstacles." width="4284" height="5712" /><br />Instead of treating it like unfamiliar territory, Vaughn approached it the same way he has approached everything in his career: by leaning into it. For him, the discipline may change, but the core does not.</p>
<p>“Automotive has been such an extension of my personality since I can remember,” he says.</p>
<p>That perspective is what makes the transition from drift to desert feel natural. Underneath the surface, it is not really a transition at all. It is still about feel, control, and operating right at the edge—just in a different environment.<br /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/08/SEMA_25_RTR.jpg" alt="Vaughn Gittin Jr. drifting a Ford Mustang alongside another car at SEMA, tires smoking on a closed course." width="4000" height="2662" /></p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/08/RTR_4400_1.jpg" alt="Vaughn Gittin Jr.’s RTR off-road race truck climbing a rocky hill at King of the Hammers, kicking up dust in the desert." width="4000" height="2662" /><br /><br />And that is where the bigger picture comes into focus. This is not about drifting crossing into off-road. It is about recognizing that the same mindset has always existed in both.</p>
<p><strong>From Dirt to Drift</strong></p>
<p>If Vaughn’s path into the desert came from the outside looking in, Darren Parsons represents the opposite.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-7_Darren_Parsons2026-02-09036-2.jpg" alt="Drift car and off-road truck parked outside a garage with an American flag backdrop." width="5979" height="3980" /><br />Dirt is where he was built.</p>
<p>Years of off-road racing, time on dirt bikes, and a deep understanding of the machines themselves—not just how to drive them, but how to build and evolve them—form the foundation. Not just competition, but craftsmanship.</p>
<p>“I’ve raced off-road my entire young adult life,” Darren says. “Fifteen years in trucks, and ten before that on dirt bikes.”</p>
<p>That kind of background produces instinct—a feel for terrain, for mechanical limits, and for how far something can be pushed before it pushes back.</p>
<p>Which makes where he ended up feel less like a departure and more like an extension. “I wanted to drift with my friends,” he says.</p>
<p>No strategy. No calculated pivot. Just curiosity.</p>
<p>What followed was not a polished transition, but a process of figuring out a completely different discipline from the ground up.</p>
<p>“I didn’t know how to build a drift car… I just built it.” Different surface. Different rules. Same mindset.</p>
<p>Because even with that experience, nothing carried over clean. “It’s been a learning curve for sure.”</p>
<p>But that is the point. Not mastery, but willingness—the willingness to step into something unfamiliar and build understanding through repetition, failure, and adjustment.</p>
<p>That is where the connection between dirt and drift becomes undeniable. Not in how they look, but in why people do them.</p>
<p>Because whether it starts in the desert or on asphalt, the drive is the same—to create, to push, and to find the edge, then learn how to stay there.</p>
<p><strong><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-8_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-071368-2-Edit.jpg" alt="Rock crawler navigating boulders at dusk overlooking the desert valley." width="7404" height="4928" /><br />One Culture, Different Terrain</strong></p>
<p>At first glance, drifting and off-road racing appear to exist in completely different worlds.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-9_L1020749.jpg" alt="Live music performance on stage during King of the Hammers nighttime festivities." width="1962" height="1306" /><br />One is defined by precision on asphalt—angle, style, and control at the very edge of traction—while the other unfolds in the desert, shaped by terrain that is unpredictable, unforgiving, and constantly changing.</p>
<p>But the longer you spend around both, the harder it becomes to see them as separate.</p>
<p>Because beneath the surface, the foundation is the same.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-10_Formula_drift_dsy2_edits-19-topaz-sharpen-upscale-2x-denoise.jpg" alt="Two drift cars battling side by side with tire smoke filling the track." width="8000" height="5324" /><br />It is the same obsession with machines. The same drive to build something better, refine it, and push it further than it was ever meant to go. It is the same willingness to commit fully—whether that means holding a car sideways at full lock or navigating rock and sand at the limit of control.</p>
<p>You see it in the way Vaughn approaches everything. The discipline may change, but the mindset does not. It is still rooted in expression, progression, and the pursuit of doing something differently.</p>
<p>“For me it’s always been about expressing myself through a car,” Vaughn says.</p>
<p>You see it in Darren as well—taking a deep background in off-road and applying it to a completely different environment, not because it was the logical next step, but because the same curiosity drove him there.</p>
<p>That is where the connection becomes clear.</p>
<p>Not in the surface-level differences between drift and dirt, but in the underlying mindset that connects them.</p>
<p>A mindset that has never been about staying in one lane, but about following the thing that keeps you building, learning, and pushing forward.</p>
<p><strong>Protecting the Culture</strong></p>
<p>King of the Hammers feels untouchable when you are in it. The scale, the energy, and the sense that this has been built over years by people who genuinely care about it create the impression that something like this could never disappear.</p>
<p>But the reality is, it can.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-11__h0_-aqs.jpg" alt="Off-road vehicle navigating rocky terrain at night with spectators nearby." width="4224" height="6336" /><br />Not because of the racing itself, but because of everything that surrounds it.</p>
<p>Out at Hammers this year, there was a noticeable shift. Not in the drivers or the machines, but in pockets of the culture around it—moments where the focus moved away from the craft, the engineering, and the experience, and toward something else entirely.</p>
<p>Attention. Spectacle. Being seen.</p>
<p>“It’s less than one percent of the people,” Darren says. “But they’re the ones doing it for the views.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-12_untitled_shoot-1170629.jpg" alt="Off-road race vehicle moving at speed at night with lights and dust trails." width="4000" height="2662" /><br />That is what makes it dangerous.</p>
<p>Because it does not take the majority to change the trajectory of something like this. It only takes a small group pushing in the wrong direction—prioritizing attention over respect, and momentary impact over long-term sustainability.</p>
<p>Vaughn sees the value of that culture clearly, and why it is worth protecting.</p>
<p>“Automotive has been such an extension of my personality since I can remember it,” he says. “It’s been so fulfilling. I met my wife through it, and tons of friends.”</p>
<p>But he is just as clear about where things start to go wrong.</p>
<p>“The takeover culture… shutting down public streets is just ignorant,” Vaughn says. “It really just makes everybody look bad.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-13_IMG_1208.JPG" alt="Crowd gathered tightly around night racing obstacle illuminated by colored lights." width="3024" height="4032" /><br />Events like King of the Hammers do not exist in isolation. They rely on access, on trust, and on the understanding that what is happening out here is worth preserving.</p>
<p>When that balance starts to shift, the consequences do not show up all at once.</p>
<p>They happen gradually.</p>
<p>Restrictions increase. Access tightens. Permits become harder to secure. And eventually, opportunities disappear.</p>
<p>That responsibility does not sit solely with organizers or sponsors. It sits with the people who are part of it.</p>
<p>“The 99% need to call out the 1%,” Darren explains. Not as a reaction, but as a standard.</p>
<p>Because this culture has never been sustained by rules alone.</p>
<p>It has been sustained by respect—for the machines, for the environment, and for the people who built it.</p>
<p>And if that respect fades, so does everything built around it.</p>
<p><strong>Close</strong></p>
<p>What keeps something like King of the Hammers alive is not just the racing—it is the connection people have to it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/FINAL-IMAGE_L1411692.jpg" alt="Aerial view of desert valley at night filled with lights from vehicles and camps." width="9520" height="6336" /><br />This has never been just about machines.</p>
<p>It is about what happens when engineering and emotion collide—when cold steel, precision, and horsepower are brought to life by the people who build and push them.</p>
<p>That is what draws people in. It is what keeps them here.</p>
<p>Whether it is drifting, off-road, or anything in between, the reason it matters does not change.</p>
<p>It is not about the platform.</p>
<p>It is about the pursuit.</p>
<p>If we hold onto that, this does not disappear.</p>
<p>It evolves.<br /><br /><strong>GALLERY<br /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-1_IMG_6316.jpeg" alt="ADD 1 IMG 6316" width="3024" height="4032" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-2_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-015912-2.jpg" alt="ADD 2 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 015912 2" width="4000" height="2662" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-3_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016036-2.jpg" alt="ADD 3 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 016036 2" width="9520" height="6336" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-4_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-015745-2.jpg" alt="ADD 4 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 015745 2" width="3495" height="5251" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-5_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-07109-2.jpg" alt="ADD 5 4400 Race of Kings2026 02 07109 2" width="4000" height="3200" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-6_EMC_Qual_2026-1250845-2.jpg" alt="ADD 6 EMC Qual 2026 1250845 2" width="3833" height="2551" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-7_EMC_Qual_2026-1280736-2.jpg" alt="ADD 7 EMC Qual 2026 1280736 2" width="5807" height="3865" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-8_L1122639.jpg" alt="ADD 8 L1122639" width="2560" height="1707" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-9_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-071352-2-Edit.jpg" alt="ADD 9 4400 Race of Kings2026 02 071352 2 Edit" width="4000" height="3201" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-10_untitled%20shoot-1040266.jpg" alt="ADD 10 untitled shoot 1040266" width="4000" height="2667" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-11_L1020749.jpg" alt="ADD 11 L1020749" width="1962" height="1306" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-FINAL_race_of_kings-18.jpg" alt="ADD FINAL race of kings 18" width="8780" height="5843" /><br /></strong></p><p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/MAIN-IMAGE_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016410-2.jpg" /></p><p><a href="https://www.instagram.com/megapixelsniper/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Story and Photography by P.J. Miller (@megapixelsniper)</a><em></em><br /><br />There’s a moment at King of the Hammers where everything clicks. It doesn’t happen at the start line, and it doesn’t happen on the podium. It happens somewhere out in the desert, with dust hanging in the air, engines echoing off canyon walls, and helicopters circling overhead, when you realize this isn’t just a race.</p>
<p>Out here, the machines are epic. Purpose-built, tuned, and pushed to the absolute limit. You hear the sharp click of harnesses locking in as drivers sit staged, eyes forward, running routes in their heads one last time. The air is thick with high-octane fuel, hot metal, and desert dust baked into everything.</p>
<p>The desert feels alive. Waiting for mistakes. It’s a war of attrition as much as skill.</p>
<p>Loren Healy ripped the entire front end off his truck in pre-running. Not damaged. Gone. And somehow, that same truck staged, qualified, and lined up to race.</p>
<p><strong><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-2_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016344-2.jpg" alt="White off-road race truck lifting over rough desert terrain with dust trailing behind." /><em><br /><br /></em><strong>Two Worlds, One Desert</strong><em><br /></em></strong></p>
<p>But that’s only part of the story.</p>
<p>Within that precision chaos is something far less controlled, but just as significant. Campfires burn through the night. Generators hum. Broken parts get fixed under headlamps. Homemade buggies mix with side by sides that cost the same as a Porsche. People have driven across states not just to watch; they’re here because they belong to it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-3_IMG_6363.jpg" alt="Green Mazda race car parked in Hammertown surrounded by tents, trailers, and spectators." width="4284" height="3213" /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-4_IMG_6627.JPG" alt="Red Bull–liveried off-road race vehicle (#37) captured in motion with background blur." width="4000" height="2662" /><br />King of the Hammers is not just an event. It is a living, breathing culture.</p>
<p><strong>From Sideways to the Desert</strong></p>
<p>That same mindset is what led to RTR, born not from a traditional business plan, but from a desire to reshape what car culture could look like for a new generation. A different way of thinking about cars, about style, and about what cool actually is. Not following trends, but creating them.</p>
<p>So when Vaughn showed up to King of the Hammers, it was not as an off-road veteran. It was as someone who understands culture.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-5_911_rok_2025-3.jpg" alt="IMAGE 5 911 rok 2025 3" width="9520" height="6336" /><br />“I pulled in and it felt like Burning Man with race cars,” he says.</p>
<p>That reaction says everything. Not just about the scale of the event, but about what it represents—something built from the ground up by people who are fully invested in it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-6_IMG_1194.JPG" alt="Spectators gathered along canyon walls at night watching off-road vehicles navigate obstacles." width="4284" height="5712" /><br />Instead of treating it like unfamiliar territory, Vaughn approached it the same way he has approached everything in his career: by leaning into it. For him, the discipline may change, but the core does not.</p>
<p>“Automotive has been such an extension of my personality since I can remember,” he says.</p>
<p>That perspective is what makes the transition from drift to desert feel natural. Underneath the surface, it is not really a transition at all. It is still about feel, control, and operating right at the edge—just in a different environment.<br /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/08/SEMA_25_RTR.jpg" alt="Vaughn Gittin Jr. drifting a Ford Mustang alongside another car at SEMA, tires smoking on a closed course." width="4000" height="2662" /></p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/08/RTR_4400_1.jpg" alt="Vaughn Gittin Jr.’s RTR off-road race truck climbing a rocky hill at King of the Hammers, kicking up dust in the desert." width="4000" height="2662" /><br /><br />And that is where the bigger picture comes into focus. This is not about drifting crossing into off-road. It is about recognizing that the same mindset has always existed in both.</p>
<p><strong>From Dirt to Drift</strong></p>
<p>If Vaughn’s path into the desert came from the outside looking in, Darren Parsons represents the opposite.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-7_Darren_Parsons2026-02-09036-2.jpg" alt="Drift car and off-road truck parked outside a garage with an American flag backdrop." width="5979" height="3980" /><br />Dirt is where he was built.</p>
<p>Years of off-road racing, time on dirt bikes, and a deep understanding of the machines themselves—not just how to drive them, but how to build and evolve them—form the foundation. Not just competition, but craftsmanship.</p>
<p>“I’ve raced off-road my entire young adult life,” Darren says. “Fifteen years in trucks, and ten before that on dirt bikes.”</p>
<p>That kind of background produces instinct—a feel for terrain, for mechanical limits, and for how far something can be pushed before it pushes back.</p>
<p>Which makes where he ended up feel less like a departure and more like an extension. “I wanted to drift with my friends,” he says.</p>
<p>No strategy. No calculated pivot. Just curiosity.</p>
<p>What followed was not a polished transition, but a process of figuring out a completely different discipline from the ground up.</p>
<p>“I didn’t know how to build a drift car… I just built it.” Different surface. Different rules. Same mindset.</p>
<p>Because even with that experience, nothing carried over clean. “It’s been a learning curve for sure.”</p>
<p>But that is the point. Not mastery, but willingness—the willingness to step into something unfamiliar and build understanding through repetition, failure, and adjustment.</p>
<p>That is where the connection between dirt and drift becomes undeniable. Not in how they look, but in why people do them.</p>
<p>Because whether it starts in the desert or on asphalt, the drive is the same—to create, to push, and to find the edge, then learn how to stay there.</p>
<p><strong><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-8_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-071368-2-Edit.jpg" alt="Rock crawler navigating boulders at dusk overlooking the desert valley." width="7404" height="4928" /><br />One Culture, Different Terrain</strong></p>
<p>At first glance, drifting and off-road racing appear to exist in completely different worlds.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-9_L1020749.jpg" alt="Live music performance on stage during King of the Hammers nighttime festivities." width="1962" height="1306" /><br />One is defined by precision on asphalt—angle, style, and control at the very edge of traction—while the other unfolds in the desert, shaped by terrain that is unpredictable, unforgiving, and constantly changing.</p>
<p>But the longer you spend around both, the harder it becomes to see them as separate.</p>
<p>Because beneath the surface, the foundation is the same.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-10_Formula_drift_dsy2_edits-19-topaz-sharpen-upscale-2x-denoise.jpg" alt="Two drift cars battling side by side with tire smoke filling the track." width="8000" height="5324" /><br />It is the same obsession with machines. The same drive to build something better, refine it, and push it further than it was ever meant to go. It is the same willingness to commit fully—whether that means holding a car sideways at full lock or navigating rock and sand at the limit of control.</p>
<p>You see it in the way Vaughn approaches everything. The discipline may change, but the mindset does not. It is still rooted in expression, progression, and the pursuit of doing something differently.</p>
<p>“For me it’s always been about expressing myself through a car,” Vaughn says.</p>
<p>You see it in Darren as well—taking a deep background in off-road and applying it to a completely different environment, not because it was the logical next step, but because the same curiosity drove him there.</p>
<p>That is where the connection becomes clear.</p>
<p>Not in the surface-level differences between drift and dirt, but in the underlying mindset that connects them.</p>
<p>A mindset that has never been about staying in one lane, but about following the thing that keeps you building, learning, and pushing forward.</p>
<p><strong>Protecting the Culture</strong></p>
<p>King of the Hammers feels untouchable when you are in it. The scale, the energy, and the sense that this has been built over years by people who genuinely care about it create the impression that something like this could never disappear.</p>
<p>But the reality is, it can.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-11__h0_-aqs.jpg" alt="Off-road vehicle navigating rocky terrain at night with spectators nearby." width="4224" height="6336" /><br />Not because of the racing itself, but because of everything that surrounds it.</p>
<p>Out at Hammers this year, there was a noticeable shift. Not in the drivers or the machines, but in pockets of the culture around it—moments where the focus moved away from the craft, the engineering, and the experience, and toward something else entirely.</p>
<p>Attention. Spectacle. Being seen.</p>
<p>“It’s less than one percent of the people,” Darren says. “But they’re the ones doing it for the views.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-12_untitled_shoot-1170629.jpg" alt="Off-road race vehicle moving at speed at night with lights and dust trails." width="4000" height="2662" /><br />That is what makes it dangerous.</p>
<p>Because it does not take the majority to change the trajectory of something like this. It only takes a small group pushing in the wrong direction—prioritizing attention over respect, and momentary impact over long-term sustainability.</p>
<p>Vaughn sees the value of that culture clearly, and why it is worth protecting.</p>
<p>“Automotive has been such an extension of my personality since I can remember it,” he says. “It’s been so fulfilling. I met my wife through it, and tons of friends.”</p>
<p>But he is just as clear about where things start to go wrong.</p>
<p>“The takeover culture… shutting down public streets is just ignorant,” Vaughn says. “It really just makes everybody look bad.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/IMAGE-13_IMG_1208.JPG" alt="Crowd gathered tightly around night racing obstacle illuminated by colored lights." width="3024" height="4032" /><br />Events like King of the Hammers do not exist in isolation. They rely on access, on trust, and on the understanding that what is happening out here is worth preserving.</p>
<p>When that balance starts to shift, the consequences do not show up all at once.</p>
<p>They happen gradually.</p>
<p>Restrictions increase. Access tightens. Permits become harder to secure. And eventually, opportunities disappear.</p>
<p>That responsibility does not sit solely with organizers or sponsors. It sits with the people who are part of it.</p>
<p>“The 99% need to call out the 1%,” Darren explains. Not as a reaction, but as a standard.</p>
<p>Because this culture has never been sustained by rules alone.</p>
<p>It has been sustained by respect—for the machines, for the environment, and for the people who built it.</p>
<p>And if that respect fades, so does everything built around it.</p>
<p><strong>Close</strong></p>
<p>What keeps something like King of the Hammers alive is not just the racing—it is the connection people have to it.</p>
<p><img src="/images/2026/04/02/FINAL-IMAGE_L1411692.jpg" alt="Aerial view of desert valley at night filled with lights from vehicles and camps." width="9520" height="6336" /><br />This has never been just about machines.</p>
<p>It is about what happens when engineering and emotion collide—when cold steel, precision, and horsepower are brought to life by the people who build and push them.</p>
<p>That is what draws people in. It is what keeps them here.</p>
<p>Whether it is drifting, off-road, or anything in between, the reason it matters does not change.</p>
<p>It is not about the platform.</p>
<p>It is about the pursuit.</p>
<p>If we hold onto that, this does not disappear.</p>
<p>It evolves.<br /><br /><strong>GALLERY<br /><br /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-1_IMG_6316.jpeg" alt="ADD 1 IMG 6316" width="3024" height="4032" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-2_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-015912-2.jpg" alt="ADD 2 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 015912 2" width="4000" height="2662" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-3_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-016036-2.jpg" alt="ADD 3 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 016036 2" width="9520" height="6336" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-4_Trophy_Truck_Raws_KOH2026-02-015745-2.jpg" alt="ADD 4 Trophy Truck Raws KOH2026 02 015745 2" width="3495" height="5251" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-5_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-07109-2.jpg" alt="ADD 5 4400 Race of Kings2026 02 07109 2" width="4000" height="3200" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-6_EMC_Qual_2026-1250845-2.jpg" alt="ADD 6 EMC Qual 2026 1250845 2" width="3833" height="2551" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-7_EMC_Qual_2026-1280736-2.jpg" alt="ADD 7 EMC Qual 2026 1280736 2" width="5807" height="3865" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-8_L1122639.jpg" alt="ADD 8 L1122639" width="2560" height="1707" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-9_4400_Race_of_Kings2026-02-071352-2-Edit.jpg" alt="ADD 9 4400 Race of Kings2026 02 071352 2 Edit" width="4000" height="3201" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-10_untitled%20shoot-1040266.jpg" alt="ADD 10 untitled shoot 1040266" width="4000" height="2667" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-11_L1020749.jpg" alt="ADD 11 L1020749" width="1962" height="1306" /><img src="/images/2026/04/02/ADD-FINAL_race_of_kings-18.jpg" alt="ADD FINAL race of kings 18" width="8780" height="5843" /><br /></strong></p>Lone Star Throwdown 2026 Delivers Huge Crowds and Incredible Builds2026-03-11T17:09:18+00:002026-03-11T17:09:18+00:00/events/event-coverage/one-star-throwdown-2026PAS Staff<p><img src="/images/LoneStarThrowdownCover.jpg" /></p><p>Lone Star Throwdown 2026 was an event not to miss. Coming off a very cold and rainy 2025 show—and with 2026 starting off snowy across much of the United States—anticipation was high for warmer, drier weather. Fortunately, this year delivered exactly that. Sunny skies and warm temperatures brought spectators out in huge numbers throughout the entire weekend.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2466.jpg" alt="Z63_2466.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><a href="https://www.instagram.com/photosbycg13/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><em>Photography and article supplied by Chris Gosda (@photosbyCG13)</em></a></p>
<p>With gates and ticket booths opening at 8 a.m. each day, lines were already forming by 7:30 a.m. on Saturday. By midday, the event grounds were packed with attendees capturing photos and videos as vehicles cruised through the show. As usual, the main arena featured American Force Wheels and their handpicked display of standout builds. Inside the pavilions, the C10 Truck Club filled one half while Relaxed Atmosphere club vehicles occupied the other.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2478.jpg" alt="Z63_2478.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>Nearby, displays from Plan B Fab and Nitto Tire added even more excitement to the indoor areas. Past the judging lanes, another indoor section showcased high-end builder displays complete with custom lighting, stanchions, and detailed flooring setups that highlighted the craftsmanship behind each build.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2681.jpg" alt="Z63_2681.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>Once outside, the full scale of the event became clear. Vehicles filled nearly every corner of the Lone Star Expo Center & Montgomery County Fairgrounds. While many people assume Lone Star Throwdown is strictly a truck show, this year proved it truly welcomes everything. Alongside lifted and lowered trucks and SUVs, spectators could also find restored classic cars, custom imports, SXS builds, off-road rigs, and even a unique tractor featuring the cab of a first-generation Ford Econoline.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2989.jpg" alt="Z63_2989.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>For builders working on projects at home, there were plenty of vendors on site offering wheels, tires, suspension components, billet parts, and fabrication services. Spectators could also browse a wide variety of apparel vendors selling shirts, hats, stickers, and other automotive lifestyle merchandise.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2537.jpg" alt="Z63_2537.jpg" width="1600" height="1119" /></p>
<p>After the rough weather in 2025, it’s safe to say Lone Star Throwdown 2026 was a massive success for the promoters, participants, vendors, and thousands of fans who attended throughout the weekend.</p>
<p>If you missed it this year, be sure to mark your calendar for the next event scheduled for February 26–28, 2027.<br /><br /><img src="/images/Z63_3510.jpg" alt="Z63_3510.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /> <br /><img src="/images/Z63_3763.jpg" alt="Z63_3763.jpg" width="1600" height="1729" /></p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Specialty Award Winners</strong></span><br /><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Memorial Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Pickle Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R247 — Dominic Cortez — San Antonio, TX — 2011 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>Greg Miller Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1598 — Luiz Vasquez — Tulare, CA — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Josh Coleman Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1476 — Carlos Zapata — Pearland, TX — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>NC Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1397 — John Vradenburg — Brooksville, FL — 1994 Nissan Hardbody</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Sponsor Choice Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Airlift Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2073 — Christerfer Pate (Mobile Toys Inc) — College Station, TX — 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe</p>
<p><strong>Allout Offroad Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2261 — Nate Scrivner (American Force) — Eldon, MO — 2024 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>American Force Choice</strong><br />Entry #R566 — Travis Hellewell — San Luis Obispo, CA — 1949 Chevrolet 3100</p>
<p><strong>Kicker Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2171 — Paul Rutledge (Complete Performance) — Jasper, TX — 1972 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>MTI Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1422 — Jason Watts — Liberty Hill, TX — 1996 GMC Sierra 1500</p>
<p><strong>PSE Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1495 — Charlie Morris — Brenham, TX — 1971 Ford F100</p>
<p><strong>Raceline Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2094 — Terrence Potter (Raceline Wheels) — Houston, TX — 1957 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Renegade Products Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2024 — Rikki Bell (Bodyguard Bumpers) — Paris, TX — 2024 Ford F250 Platinum</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Special Recognition</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Hard Luck Award</strong><br />Entry #R496 — Eddie Gordy Jr — Germanton, NC — 1991 Mazda B2200</p>
<p><strong>Longest Distance</strong><br />Entry #R1062 — Earnie Reddic — Marysville, WA — 2015 GMC Sierra 1500</p>
<p><strong>Kids Choice</strong><br />Entry #R447 — David Ginter — Katy, TX — 2018 Ford F-450</p>
<p><strong>Ladies Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2222 — Sirena Vecellio (Renegade) — Pueblo, CO — 1977 Ford F150</p>
<p><strong>Police Officers Choice</strong><br />Entry #R274 — Daniel Cumby — Santa Fe, TX — 2016 Ford F150</p>
<p><strong>Best Club</strong><br />Team Billet</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Category Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Best Undercarriage</strong><br />Entry #R2179 — Dwayne Manns (Plan B Fab) — Sorrento, FL — 1987 Chevrolet 3500</p>
<p><strong>Best Engine</strong><br />Entry #R1330 — Ken Tilton — Glendale, AZ — 1970 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Interior</strong><br />Entry #R2076 — Mike Lau (Mobile Toys Inc) — College Station, TX — 1970 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Paint</strong><br />Entry #R404 — Marlon Fuselier — Lake Charles, LA — 1955 Chevrolet 3100 Pickup</p>
<p><strong>Best Graphics</strong><br />Entry #R1069 — Patrick Reid — San Leon, TX — 2008 Ford Ranger</p>
<p><strong>Best Female Owned</strong><br />Entry #R1260 — Carolyn Sonnier — New Caney, TX — 1959 Chevrolet Apache</p>
<p><strong>Best 25 Years Old & Under</strong><br />Entry #R262 — Keegan Craighead — Salem, VA — 1988 Mitsubishi Mighty Max</p>
<p><strong>Best Under Construction</strong><br />Entry #R287 — Jason Danos — Raceland, LA — 1964 Ford F100</p>
<p><strong>Best Engineered</strong><br />Entry #R2204 — Dustin Sterling (MTI) — College Station, TX — 1968 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Bike</strong><br />Entry #R253 — Darin Cottrell — McAllen, TX — 2014 Harley-Davidson Street Glide</p>
<p><strong>Best Tow Pig</strong><br />Entry #R642 — Robert Jenkins — Blue Springs, MO — 1987 Freightliner Cor</p>
<p><strong>Best Lowrider</strong><br />Entry #R957 — Adam Ochoa — Spring, TX — 1968 Lincoln Continental</p>
<p><strong>Best Import Car</strong><br />Entry #R604 — Scott Hopkins — Hiram, GA — 1956 Volkswagen Beetle</p>
<p><strong>Elite 5 Lifted</strong></p>
<p>Bryan Summers (Plan B Fab) — 1965 Ford F100<br />Mike Hunt — 2024 Ford F250<br />Danny Derasmo (JTX) — 1951 Dodge Power Wagon<br />Rick Waychoff — 2024 Ford F350<br />Stephanie York (Plan B Fab) — 2024 Ford Bronco</p>
<p><strong>Top 10 Mini Truck</strong></p>
<p>John Vradenburg — 1994 Nissan Hardbody<br />Steven Bell — 1995 Chevrolet S10<br />Smiley Mikeska — 1991 Toyota Pickup<br />Keith Chandler — 1992 Mazda B2600i<br />John Juarez (Chassis Fab) — 2000 Chevrolet S10<br />Heather Montgomery — 1992 Nissan Hardbody<br />Deven Ramsey — 2004 Toyota Tacoma<br />Jonathon Verret — 1996 Toyota Tacoma<br />Shane Evans — 2003 Nissan Frontier<br />Daniel Brummett — 2013 Toyota Tacoma</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Additional Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Promoters Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1134 — Terry Rose — Mount Juliet, TN — 1959 Chevrolet Suburban</p>
<p><strong>Best Debut</strong><br />Entry #R2239 — Scott Luscombe (MTI) — Mont Belvieu, TX — 1985 Chevrolet K10</p>
<p><strong>Best SUV</strong><br />Entry #R2073 — Christerfer Pate — 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe</p>
<p><strong>Best American Car</strong><br />Entry #R2047 — Jake McKiddie — 1961 Cadillac Coupe De Ville</p>
<p><strong>Best Classic Car</strong><br />Entry #R1252 — Robert Smith — 1967 Chevrolet Nova</p>
<p><strong>Best Classic Truck</strong><br />Entry #R496 — Eddie Gordy Jr — 1991 Mazda B2200</p>
<p><strong>Best Full Size</strong><br />Entry #R2014 — Larry Gloria (Tre 5 Customs) — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Best of Show</strong></span></p>
<p>🏆 Entry #R411 — Ed Ganzinotti — Montgomery, TX — 1968 Dodge Charger<br /><br /><img src="/images/Z63_3073.jpg" alt="Z63_3073.jpg" width="1600" height="1029" /><img src="/images/Z63_3002.jpg" alt="Z63_3002.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><img src="/images/Z63_2411.jpg" alt="Z63_2411.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><img src="/images/Z63_2378.jpg" alt="Z63_2378.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p><p><img src="/images/LoneStarThrowdownCover.jpg" /></p><p>Lone Star Throwdown 2026 was an event not to miss. Coming off a very cold and rainy 2025 show—and with 2026 starting off snowy across much of the United States—anticipation was high for warmer, drier weather. Fortunately, this year delivered exactly that. Sunny skies and warm temperatures brought spectators out in huge numbers throughout the entire weekend.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2466.jpg" alt="Z63_2466.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><a href="https://www.instagram.com/photosbycg13/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><em>Photography and article supplied by Chris Gosda (@photosbyCG13)</em></a></p>
<p>With gates and ticket booths opening at 8 a.m. each day, lines were already forming by 7:30 a.m. on Saturday. By midday, the event grounds were packed with attendees capturing photos and videos as vehicles cruised through the show. As usual, the main arena featured American Force Wheels and their handpicked display of standout builds. Inside the pavilions, the C10 Truck Club filled one half while Relaxed Atmosphere club vehicles occupied the other.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2478.jpg" alt="Z63_2478.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>Nearby, displays from Plan B Fab and Nitto Tire added even more excitement to the indoor areas. Past the judging lanes, another indoor section showcased high-end builder displays complete with custom lighting, stanchions, and detailed flooring setups that highlighted the craftsmanship behind each build.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2681.jpg" alt="Z63_2681.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>Once outside, the full scale of the event became clear. Vehicles filled nearly every corner of the Lone Star Expo Center & Montgomery County Fairgrounds. While many people assume Lone Star Throwdown is strictly a truck show, this year proved it truly welcomes everything. Alongside lifted and lowered trucks and SUVs, spectators could also find restored classic cars, custom imports, SXS builds, off-road rigs, and even a unique tractor featuring the cab of a first-generation Ford Econoline.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2989.jpg" alt="Z63_2989.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>
<p>For builders working on projects at home, there were plenty of vendors on site offering wheels, tires, suspension components, billet parts, and fabrication services. Spectators could also browse a wide variety of apparel vendors selling shirts, hats, stickers, and other automotive lifestyle merchandise.</p>
<p><img src="/images/Z63_2537.jpg" alt="Z63_2537.jpg" width="1600" height="1119" /></p>
<p>After the rough weather in 2025, it’s safe to say Lone Star Throwdown 2026 was a massive success for the promoters, participants, vendors, and thousands of fans who attended throughout the weekend.</p>
<p>If you missed it this year, be sure to mark your calendar for the next event scheduled for February 26–28, 2027.<br /><br /><img src="/images/Z63_3510.jpg" alt="Z63_3510.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /> <br /><img src="/images/Z63_3763.jpg" alt="Z63_3763.jpg" width="1600" height="1729" /></p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Specialty Award Winners</strong></span><br /><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Memorial Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Pickle Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R247 — Dominic Cortez — San Antonio, TX — 2011 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>Greg Miller Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1598 — Luiz Vasquez — Tulare, CA — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Josh Coleman Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1476 — Carlos Zapata — Pearland, TX — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>NC Memorial Award</strong><br />Entry #R1397 — John Vradenburg — Brooksville, FL — 1994 Nissan Hardbody</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Sponsor Choice Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Airlift Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2073 — Christerfer Pate (Mobile Toys Inc) — College Station, TX — 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe</p>
<p><strong>Allout Offroad Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2261 — Nate Scrivner (American Force) — Eldon, MO — 2024 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>American Force Choice</strong><br />Entry #R566 — Travis Hellewell — San Luis Obispo, CA — 1949 Chevrolet 3100</p>
<p><strong>Kicker Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2171 — Paul Rutledge (Complete Performance) — Jasper, TX — 1972 Ford F350</p>
<p><strong>MTI Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1422 — Jason Watts — Liberty Hill, TX — 1996 GMC Sierra 1500</p>
<p><strong>PSE Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1495 — Charlie Morris — Brenham, TX — 1971 Ford F100</p>
<p><strong>Raceline Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2094 — Terrence Potter (Raceline Wheels) — Houston, TX — 1957 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Renegade Products Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2024 — Rikki Bell (Bodyguard Bumpers) — Paris, TX — 2024 Ford F250 Platinum</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Special Recognition</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Hard Luck Award</strong><br />Entry #R496 — Eddie Gordy Jr — Germanton, NC — 1991 Mazda B2200</p>
<p><strong>Longest Distance</strong><br />Entry #R1062 — Earnie Reddic — Marysville, WA — 2015 GMC Sierra 1500</p>
<p><strong>Kids Choice</strong><br />Entry #R447 — David Ginter — Katy, TX — 2018 Ford F-450</p>
<p><strong>Ladies Choice</strong><br />Entry #R2222 — Sirena Vecellio (Renegade) — Pueblo, CO — 1977 Ford F150</p>
<p><strong>Police Officers Choice</strong><br />Entry #R274 — Daniel Cumby — Santa Fe, TX — 2016 Ford F150</p>
<p><strong>Best Club</strong><br />Team Billet</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Category Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Best Undercarriage</strong><br />Entry #R2179 — Dwayne Manns (Plan B Fab) — Sorrento, FL — 1987 Chevrolet 3500</p>
<p><strong>Best Engine</strong><br />Entry #R1330 — Ken Tilton — Glendale, AZ — 1970 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Interior</strong><br />Entry #R2076 — Mike Lau (Mobile Toys Inc) — College Station, TX — 1970 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Paint</strong><br />Entry #R404 — Marlon Fuselier — Lake Charles, LA — 1955 Chevrolet 3100 Pickup</p>
<p><strong>Best Graphics</strong><br />Entry #R1069 — Patrick Reid — San Leon, TX — 2008 Ford Ranger</p>
<p><strong>Best Female Owned</strong><br />Entry #R1260 — Carolyn Sonnier — New Caney, TX — 1959 Chevrolet Apache</p>
<p><strong>Best 25 Years Old & Under</strong><br />Entry #R262 — Keegan Craighead — Salem, VA — 1988 Mitsubishi Mighty Max</p>
<p><strong>Best Under Construction</strong><br />Entry #R287 — Jason Danos — Raceland, LA — 1964 Ford F100</p>
<p><strong>Best Engineered</strong><br />Entry #R2204 — Dustin Sterling (MTI) — College Station, TX — 1968 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><strong>Best Bike</strong><br />Entry #R253 — Darin Cottrell — McAllen, TX — 2014 Harley-Davidson Street Glide</p>
<p><strong>Best Tow Pig</strong><br />Entry #R642 — Robert Jenkins — Blue Springs, MO — 1987 Freightliner Cor</p>
<p><strong>Best Lowrider</strong><br />Entry #R957 — Adam Ochoa — Spring, TX — 1968 Lincoln Continental</p>
<p><strong>Best Import Car</strong><br />Entry #R604 — Scott Hopkins — Hiram, GA — 1956 Volkswagen Beetle</p>
<p><strong>Elite 5 Lifted</strong></p>
<p>Bryan Summers (Plan B Fab) — 1965 Ford F100<br />Mike Hunt — 2024 Ford F250<br />Danny Derasmo (JTX) — 1951 Dodge Power Wagon<br />Rick Waychoff — 2024 Ford F350<br />Stephanie York (Plan B Fab) — 2024 Ford Bronco</p>
<p><strong>Top 10 Mini Truck</strong></p>
<p>John Vradenburg — 1994 Nissan Hardbody<br />Steven Bell — 1995 Chevrolet S10<br />Smiley Mikeska — 1991 Toyota Pickup<br />Keith Chandler — 1992 Mazda B2600i<br />John Juarez (Chassis Fab) — 2000 Chevrolet S10<br />Heather Montgomery — 1992 Nissan Hardbody<br />Deven Ramsey — 2004 Toyota Tacoma<br />Jonathon Verret — 1996 Toyota Tacoma<br />Shane Evans — 2003 Nissan Frontier<br />Daniel Brummett — 2013 Toyota Tacoma</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Additional Awards</strong></span></p>
<p><strong>Promoters Choice</strong><br />Entry #R1134 — Terry Rose — Mount Juliet, TN — 1959 Chevrolet Suburban</p>
<p><strong>Best Debut</strong><br />Entry #R2239 — Scott Luscombe (MTI) — Mont Belvieu, TX — 1985 Chevrolet K10</p>
<p><strong>Best SUV</strong><br />Entry #R2073 — Christerfer Pate — 1997 Chevrolet Tahoe</p>
<p><strong>Best American Car</strong><br />Entry #R2047 — Jake McKiddie — 1961 Cadillac Coupe De Ville</p>
<p><strong>Best Classic Car</strong><br />Entry #R1252 — Robert Smith — 1967 Chevrolet Nova</p>
<p><strong>Best Classic Truck</strong><br />Entry #R496 — Eddie Gordy Jr — 1991 Mazda B2200</p>
<p><strong>Best Full Size</strong><br />Entry #R2014 — Larry Gloria (Tre 5 Customs) — 1972 Chevrolet C10</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Best of Show</strong></span></p>
<p>🏆 Entry #R411 — Ed Ganzinotti — Montgomery, TX — 1968 Dodge Charger<br /><br /><img src="/images/Z63_3073.jpg" alt="Z63_3073.jpg" width="1600" height="1029" /><img src="/images/Z63_3002.jpg" alt="Z63_3002.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><img src="/images/Z63_2411.jpg" alt="Z63_2411.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /><img src="/images/Z63_2378.jpg" alt="Z63_2378.jpg" width="1600" height="1067" /></p>Slammedenuff Daytona Beach Car Show 20252025-12-04T16:10:00+00:002025-12-04T16:10:00+00:00/events/event-coverage/slammedenuff-daytona-beach-car-show-2025Harjaan Sivia<p><img src="/images/cover.jpg" /></p><p data-start="227" data-end="643">The 2025 Slammedenuff Daytona Beach Car Show — the 8th edition — took place at the Ocean Center in Daytona Beach, Florida. The event welcomed car-culture fans and enthusiasts to a single-day indoor showcase bringing together a broad range of custom, stanced, and carefully modified vehicles. <span class="" data-state="closed"><span class="ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]" data-testid="webpage-citation-pill"></span></span></p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402892.jpg" alt="A7402892.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402929.jpg" alt="A7402929.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="645" data-end="1231">From the moment attendees stepped through the doors, they were met with what many described as a “visual feast”: rows upon rows of custom cars — imports and domestics alike — each uniquely modified to emphasize stance, fitment, style, and personal expression. Cars ranged from sleek show builds to classics given new life — all showing meticulous detailing: lowered suspensions, wheels tucked just right under fenders, custom paintwork, finely tuned interiors, upgraded audio, polished engine bays, and more.</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402942.jpg" alt="A7402942.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402899.jpg" alt="A7402899.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="1233" data-end="1738">Owners and builders didn’t just showcase cars — many were on-site, ready to talk about their builds, share the inspiration behind them, and swap stories with fellow enthusiasts. This sense of community and shared passion gave the show a social vibe much more than a cold display. Several vendor booths and media presences were set up, allowing attendees not just to admire but also to connect, shop accessories or parts, and absorb the broader “custom car culture.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402937.jpg" alt="A7402937.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402952.jpg" alt="A7402952.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="1740" data-end="2169">For many in attendance, the show was more than just a list of cars — it was an experience. The energy was described as electric: excited chatter, cameras flashing, music laid down by live DJs, and people walking away inspired. The combination of finely built vehicles, lively crowd energy, and the Florida-coast backdrop made the event a highlight for custom-car lovers across the country.</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7403011.jpg" alt="A7403011.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402994.jpg" alt="A7402994.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="2171" data-end="2539">Although the broader brand behind the show has faced scrutiny lately (after disturbances at another event in Sevierville,TN), the Daytona Beach stop appears to have delivered mainly in the spirit of community, respect for the venue (with explicit rules against burnout, drifting, or racing), and genuine appreciation for automotive craftsmanship.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.instagram.com/nmr_media/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography supplied by Nicolas Russo (@nmr_media)</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402958.jpg" alt="A7402958.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402931.jpg" alt="A7402931.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402893.jpg" alt="A7402893.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402965.jpg" alt="A7402965.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403035.jpg" alt="A7403035.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403037.jpg" alt="A7403037.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402990.jpg" alt="A7402990.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402976.jpg" alt="A7402976.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403050.jpg" alt="A7403050.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403043.jpg" alt="A7403043.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p><p><img src="/images/cover.jpg" /></p><p data-start="227" data-end="643">The 2025 Slammedenuff Daytona Beach Car Show — the 8th edition — took place at the Ocean Center in Daytona Beach, Florida. The event welcomed car-culture fans and enthusiasts to a single-day indoor showcase bringing together a broad range of custom, stanced, and carefully modified vehicles. <span class="" data-state="closed"><span class="ms-1 inline-flex max-w-full items-center relative top-[-0.094rem] animate-[show_150ms_ease-in]" data-testid="webpage-citation-pill"></span></span></p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402892.jpg" alt="A7402892.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402929.jpg" alt="A7402929.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="645" data-end="1231">From the moment attendees stepped through the doors, they were met with what many described as a “visual feast”: rows upon rows of custom cars — imports and domestics alike — each uniquely modified to emphasize stance, fitment, style, and personal expression. Cars ranged from sleek show builds to classics given new life — all showing meticulous detailing: lowered suspensions, wheels tucked just right under fenders, custom paintwork, finely tuned interiors, upgraded audio, polished engine bays, and more.</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402942.jpg" alt="A7402942.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402899.jpg" alt="A7402899.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="1233" data-end="1738">Owners and builders didn’t just showcase cars — many were on-site, ready to talk about their builds, share the inspiration behind them, and swap stories with fellow enthusiasts. This sense of community and shared passion gave the show a social vibe much more than a cold display. Several vendor booths and media presences were set up, allowing attendees not just to admire but also to connect, shop accessories or parts, and absorb the broader “custom car culture.”</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402937.jpg" alt="A7402937.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402952.jpg" alt="A7402952.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="1740" data-end="2169">For many in attendance, the show was more than just a list of cars — it was an experience. The energy was described as electric: excited chatter, cameras flashing, music laid down by live DJs, and people walking away inspired. The combination of finely built vehicles, lively crowd energy, and the Florida-coast backdrop made the event a highlight for custom-car lovers across the country.</p>
<p><img src="/images/A7403011.jpg" alt="A7403011.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402994.jpg" alt="A7402994.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p data-start="2171" data-end="2539">Although the broader brand behind the show has faced scrutiny lately (after disturbances at another event in Sevierville,TN), the Daytona Beach stop appears to have delivered mainly in the spirit of community, respect for the venue (with explicit rules against burnout, drifting, or racing), and genuine appreciation for automotive craftsmanship.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://www.instagram.com/nmr_media/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography supplied by Nicolas Russo (@nmr_media)</a></strong></p>
<p><img src="/images/A7402958.jpg" alt="A7402958.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402931.jpg" alt="A7402931.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402893.jpg" alt="A7402893.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402965.jpg" alt="A7402965.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403035.jpg" alt="A7403035.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403037.jpg" alt="A7403037.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402990.jpg" alt="A7402990.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7402976.jpg" alt="A7402976.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403050.jpg" alt="A7403050.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/A7403043.jpg" alt="A7403043.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>Tuner Evo Dallas Delivers Big Energy Despite the Chill2025-12-03T18:10:44+00:002025-12-03T18:10:44+00:00/events/event-coverage/tuner-evo-dallas-delivers-big-energy-despite-the-chillPAS Staff<p><img src="/images/cover.JPG" /></p><p style="text-align: left;">Cold, wet weather set the tone early in Dallas, but it didn’t slow the turnout for this year’s Tuner<br />Evo. Builders and teams showed up ready, many of them making the trip from out of state, and<br />the variety on display reflected just how much effort went into being there.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3690.JPG" alt="_DSC3690.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3686.JPG" alt="_DSC3686.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />The event stayed active throughout the day thanks to solid crowd engagement. Judges, hosts,<br />and participants kept the flow moving, and the audience responded by circling builds, asking<br />questions, and staying involved despite the conditions.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3774.JPG" alt="_DSC3774.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3764.JPG" alt="_DSC3764.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />This stop wasn’t limited to cars, either. Alongside the show vehicles, BMX stunt performers<br />brought a steady rotation of runs that consistently drew people in. Quads were also added to the<br />lineup, and their quality stood out immediately with their clean, detailed bikes, and built with the<br />same level of care as the cars on display.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3820.JPG" alt="_DSC3820.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3817.JPG" alt="_DSC3817.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3809.JPG" alt="_DSC3809.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />We also brought Tuner Battlegrounds LIVE to Dallas, where the crowd packed in to watch us<br />award the latest winner, Bryan Miguel, with his 2021 Toyota Supra. Stay tuned for his full<br />feature!</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3777.JPG" alt="_DSC3777.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3832.JPG" alt="_DSC3832.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />All in all,even with the weather working against it, Tuner Evo Dallas delivered a focused, well-<br />rounded event that highlighted the range and dedication within the community. It was a<br />straightforward reminder that the scene shows up, rain or shine.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3898.jpg" alt="_DSC3898.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3896.JPG" alt="_DSC3896.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3722.JPG" alt="_DSC3722.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3713.JPG" alt="_DSC3713.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3676.JPG" alt="_DSC3676.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3890.JPG" alt="_DSC3890.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3766.JPG" alt="_DSC3766.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3712.JPG" alt="_DSC3712.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3748.JPG" alt="_DSC3748.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><br />Story by Jamie Lake<br /><a href="https://www.instagram.com/nerdy.m3dia/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography by RJ Lake (@nerdy.m3dia)</a></p><p><img src="/images/cover.JPG" /></p><p style="text-align: left;">Cold, wet weather set the tone early in Dallas, but it didn’t slow the turnout for this year’s Tuner<br />Evo. Builders and teams showed up ready, many of them making the trip from out of state, and<br />the variety on display reflected just how much effort went into being there.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3690.JPG" alt="_DSC3690.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3686.JPG" alt="_DSC3686.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />The event stayed active throughout the day thanks to solid crowd engagement. Judges, hosts,<br />and participants kept the flow moving, and the audience responded by circling builds, asking<br />questions, and staying involved despite the conditions.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3774.JPG" alt="_DSC3774.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3764.JPG" alt="_DSC3764.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />This stop wasn’t limited to cars, either. Alongside the show vehicles, BMX stunt performers<br />brought a steady rotation of runs that consistently drew people in. Quads were also added to the<br />lineup, and their quality stood out immediately with their clean, detailed bikes, and built with the<br />same level of care as the cars on display.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3820.JPG" alt="_DSC3820.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3817.JPG" alt="_DSC3817.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3809.JPG" alt="_DSC3809.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />We also brought Tuner Battlegrounds LIVE to Dallas, where the crowd packed in to watch us<br />award the latest winner, Bryan Miguel, with his 2021 Toyota Supra. Stay tuned for his full<br />feature!</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3777.JPG" alt="_DSC3777.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3832.JPG" alt="_DSC3832.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><br />All in all,even with the weather working against it, Tuner Evo Dallas delivered a focused, well-<br />rounded event that highlighted the range and dedication within the community. It was a<br />straightforward reminder that the scene shows up, rain or shine.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DSC3898.jpg" alt="_DSC3898.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3896.JPG" alt="_DSC3896.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3722.JPG" alt="_DSC3722.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3713.JPG" alt="_DSC3713.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3676.JPG" alt="_DSC3676.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3890.JPG" alt="_DSC3890.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3766.JPG" alt="_DSC3766.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3712.JPG" alt="_DSC3712.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DSC3748.JPG" alt="_DSC3748.JPG" width="1080" height="720" /><br />Story by Jamie Lake<br /><a href="https://www.instagram.com/nerdy.m3dia/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography by RJ Lake (@nerdy.m3dia)</a></p>Clean Culture SoFlo Showdown 2025 Recap2025-10-28T15:45:04+00:002025-10-28T15:45:04+00:00/events/event-coverage/clean-culture-soflo-showdown-2025-recapHarjaan Sivia<p data-start="94" data-end="138"> The Clean Culture SoFlo Showdown 2025 took over the South Florida Fairgrounds on September 27th, and it definitely delivered. From the moment gates opened at 2 PM until the lights went out at 10, the place was buzzing with energy. Hundreds of show cars, drifting, music, and good vibes filled the venue all day.</p>
<p data-start="467" data-end="790">If you’ve ever been to a Clean Culture event, you know it’s more than just a car show. The SoFlo Showdown felt like a mix between a massive meet, a drift festival, and a social hangout. People talked about how much action there was, from non-stop drift demos to the burnout pits and ride-alongs that kept the crowd hyped.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2856.jpg" alt="IMG_2856.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2863.jpg" alt="IMG_2863.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="792" data-end="1160">Attendees said the variety of cars was one of the highlights. You could find everything from clean, detailed show builds to wild track monsters. Many also mentioned how the event had a fun, festival-like atmosphere with vendors, food trucks, and music keeping things lively all afternoon. Families seemed to enjoy it too, especially since kids under ten got in free.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2778.jpg" alt="IMG_2778.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="1162" data-end="1481">The only real complaints came from the sheer size of the crowd and the Florida heat. With so much happening at once, it was easy to miss parts of the action unless you planned ahead. Some drivers also noted that the registration fees for competing or drifting were on the higher side, but most agreed it was worth it.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2776.jpg" alt="IMG_2776.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="1483" data-end="1841">Overall, the 2025 SoFlo Showdown was a big success. It blended the best parts of car culture — style, performance, and community — into one high-energy day. Whether you were there to admire builds, watch tire smoke fill the air, or just hang out with friends, it was the kind of event that reminded everyone why car culture in South Florida hits different.</p>
<p><img src="/images/IMG_2917.jpg" alt="IMG_2917.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2610.jpg" alt="IMG_2610.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2915.jpg" alt="IMG_2915.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2919_1.jpg" alt="IMG_2919_1.jpg" width="1152" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2593.jpg" alt="IMG_2593.jpg" width="1365" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2644.jpg" alt="IMG_2644.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2636.jpg" alt="IMG_2636.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p><p data-start="94" data-end="138"> The Clean Culture SoFlo Showdown 2025 took over the South Florida Fairgrounds on September 27th, and it definitely delivered. From the moment gates opened at 2 PM until the lights went out at 10, the place was buzzing with energy. Hundreds of show cars, drifting, music, and good vibes filled the venue all day.</p>
<p data-start="467" data-end="790">If you’ve ever been to a Clean Culture event, you know it’s more than just a car show. The SoFlo Showdown felt like a mix between a massive meet, a drift festival, and a social hangout. People talked about how much action there was, from non-stop drift demos to the burnout pits and ride-alongs that kept the crowd hyped.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2856.jpg" alt="IMG_2856.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2863.jpg" alt="IMG_2863.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="792" data-end="1160">Attendees said the variety of cars was one of the highlights. You could find everything from clean, detailed show builds to wild track monsters. Many also mentioned how the event had a fun, festival-like atmosphere with vendors, food trucks, and music keeping things lively all afternoon. Families seemed to enjoy it too, especially since kids under ten got in free.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2778.jpg" alt="IMG_2778.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="1162" data-end="1481">The only real complaints came from the sheer size of the crowd and the Florida heat. With so much happening at once, it was easy to miss parts of the action unless you planned ahead. Some drivers also noted that the registration fees for competing or drifting were on the higher side, but most agreed it was worth it.</p>
<p> <img src="/images/IMG_2776.jpg" alt="IMG_2776.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>
<p data-start="1483" data-end="1841">Overall, the 2025 SoFlo Showdown was a big success. It blended the best parts of car culture — style, performance, and community — into one high-energy day. Whether you were there to admire builds, watch tire smoke fill the air, or just hang out with friends, it was the kind of event that reminded everyone why car culture in South Florida hits different.</p>
<p><img src="/images/IMG_2917.jpg" alt="IMG_2917.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2610.jpg" alt="IMG_2610.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2915.jpg" alt="IMG_2915.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2919_1.jpg" alt="IMG_2919_1.jpg" width="1152" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2593.jpg" alt="IMG_2593.jpg" width="1365" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2644.jpg" alt="IMG_2644.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /><img src="/images/IMG_2636.jpg" alt="IMG_2636.jpg" width="1366" height="2048" /></p>Formula DRIFT Long Beach 2025 Round 8: Shoreline Showdown2025-10-20T19:13:21+00:002025-10-20T19:13:21+00:00/events/event-coverage/formula-drift-long-beach-2025-round-8-shoreline-showdownPAS Staff<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8334.jpg" /></p><p>Formula DRIFT closed out its 2025 season in true Long Beach style — on a brand-new course built specifically for the series. The Shoreline Showdown marked the debut of a more technical layout with seven outside zones, designed to test precision and reward commitment. While the PRO Championship had already been decided one round earlier in Utah, the finale delivered plenty of drama and a glimpse at the sport’s future.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8849-Enhanced-NR.jpg" alt="_DAZ8849-Enhanced-NR.jpg" width="6334" height="4225" /><br /><em><a href="https://www.instagram.com/cru_media/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography by Caden Underwood (@cru_media)</a></em></p>
<p>That future came into focus when Ireland’s Jack Shanahan captured his first career win and claimed Rookie of the Year honors in his Kumho Tires BMW 1 Series. His path to victory included eliminating heavy hitters like Adam LZ, Simen Olsen, and veteran Ryan Tuerck before advancing to a Final that never materialized — a mechanical failure sidelined Hiroya Minowa’s Toyota GT86, handing Shanahan the win. It was a fitting conclusion to a breakthrough season that saw the Irish rookie finish sixth overall with two podiums.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8128.jpg" alt="_DAZ8128.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p>Minowa’s runner-up finish capped another impressive campaign for the 16-year-old Japanese prodigy, who remains the youngest driver in Formula DRIFT history to earn a Round win. Meanwhile, five-time champion James Deane continued his dominance, securing his seventh podium of the year after an uncharacteristic mistake in the Final Four. The AutoZone Mustang RTR driver had already locked in his record-breaking fifth title — and a third consecutive championship for RTR Motorsports — marking one of the most successful runs in FD history.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8168.jpg" alt="_DAZ8168.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /></p>
<p>The season also concluded with Toyota securing its tenth Auto Cup title and GT Radial claiming the Tire Cup, each celebrating milestones that speak to the growth and consistency of modern drift competition.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8774.jpg" alt="_DAZ8774.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /></p>
<p>From rookies like Shanahan and Minowa to legends like Deane and Tuerck, Long Beach once again showcased the full spectrum of the sport — a reminder that Formula DRIFT’s blend of innovation, intensity, and community is still accelerating into new territory.</p>
<p class="Body"> <img src="/images/_DAZ8377.jpg" alt="_DAZ8377.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DAZ7953.jpg" alt="_DAZ7953.jpg" width="720" height="1079" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8303.jpg" alt="_DAZ8303.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8291.jpg" alt="_DAZ8291.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8194.jpg" alt="_DAZ8194.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8420.jpg" alt="_DAZ8420.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8440.jpg" alt="_DAZ8440.jpg" width="720" height="1079" /><img src="/images/_DAZ8520.jpg" alt="_DAZ8520.jpg" width="720" height="1079" /></p><p><img src="/images/_DAZ8334.jpg" /></p><p>Formula DRIFT closed out its 2025 season in true Long Beach style — on a brand-new course built specifically for the series. The Shoreline Showdown marked the debut of a more technical layout with seven outside zones, designed to test precision and reward commitment. While the PRO Championship had already been decided one round earlier in Utah, the finale delivered plenty of drama and a glimpse at the sport’s future.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8849-Enhanced-NR.jpg" alt="_DAZ8849-Enhanced-NR.jpg" width="6334" height="4225" /><br /><em><a href="https://www.instagram.com/cru_media/?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Photography by Caden Underwood (@cru_media)</a></em></p>
<p>That future came into focus when Ireland’s Jack Shanahan captured his first career win and claimed Rookie of the Year honors in his Kumho Tires BMW 1 Series. His path to victory included eliminating heavy hitters like Adam LZ, Simen Olsen, and veteran Ryan Tuerck before advancing to a Final that never materialized — a mechanical failure sidelined Hiroya Minowa’s Toyota GT86, handing Shanahan the win. It was a fitting conclusion to a breakthrough season that saw the Irish rookie finish sixth overall with two podiums.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8128.jpg" alt="_DAZ8128.jpg" width="1080" height="720" /></p>
<p>Minowa’s runner-up finish capped another impressive campaign for the 16-year-old Japanese prodigy, who remains the youngest driver in Formula DRIFT history to earn a Round win. Meanwhile, five-time champion James Deane continued his dominance, securing his seventh podium of the year after an uncharacteristic mistake in the Final Four. The AutoZone Mustang RTR driver had already locked in his record-breaking fifth title — and a third consecutive championship for RTR Motorsports — marking one of the most successful runs in FD history.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8168.jpg" alt="_DAZ8168.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /></p>
<p>The season also concluded with Toyota securing its tenth Auto Cup title and GT Radial claiming the Tire Cup, each celebrating milestones that speak to the growth and consistency of modern drift competition.</p>
<p><img src="/images/_DAZ8774.jpg" alt="_DAZ8774.jpg" width="1079" height="720" /></p>
<p>From rookies like Shanahan and Minowa to legends like Deane and Tuerck, Long Beach once again showcased the full spectrum of the sport — a reminder that Formula DRIFT’s blend of innovation, intensity, and community is still accelerating into new territory.</p>
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