Boston Louie Memorial
Northeastern Midget Association | |
---|---|
Venue | Seekonk Speedway (1997-2001, 2005-Present) Waterford Speedbowl (2002-2004) |
Location | Seekonk, Massachusetts, United States (1997-2001, 2005-Present) Waterford, Connecticut, United States (2002-2004) |
First race | 1997 |
Distance | 10 mi (16 km) |
Laps | 29 |
Most wins (driver) | Randy Cabral (3) Jeff Abold (3) PJ Stergios (3) |
Circuit information | |
Surface | Asphalt |
Length | .333 mi (0.536 km) |
Turns | 4 |
The Boston Louie Memorial is a NEMA Light and Midget race held annually at Seekonk Speedway's Open Wheel Wednesday. The event headlines as two races, both 29 laps long in memorial of Louie's chosen car number as an owner. "Boston" Louie Seymour died on September 13, 1996.[1]
2002-2004 location change
The 2002-2004 Boston Louie Memorial races were all held at the Waterford Speedbowl, not Seekonk Speedway.[1] This happened after the 2001 racing season for NEMA, when the series was determining its schedule. Seekonk Speedway had just finished its racing season, and was in the process of shutting down the track for the Winter months. Seekonk officials generally decide their schedules the year of the racing season, not at the close of the season. When NEMA contacted Seekonk officials to get an early commitment for a 2002 race date, the Seekonk officials did not want to confirm a date yet, due to the racing season still months away for them. Despite open communications, NEMA eventually moved the race to Waterford. NEMA and Seekonk officials still wanted to give a race date due to the history NEMA has with Seekonk, but Seekonk officials felt that they needed addition sponsorship for the race, along with the sponsorship NEMA would be bringing for the race.[2][3] The Boston Louie Memorial would later return to Seekonk Speedway in 2005, and has stayed at Seekonk from then on.[4]
Race winners
Year | Name | M/L | Track |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Russ Stoehr | Midget | Seekonk Speedway |
1998 | Drew Fornoro | ||
1999 | Bobby Seymour | ||
2000 | Randy Cabral | ||
2001 | Jeff Horn | ||
2002 | Bobby Santos | Waterford Speedbowl | |
2003 | Joey Payne | ||
2004 | Ben Seitz | ||
2005 | Joey Payne | Seekonk Speedway | |
2006 | Nokie Fornoro | ||
2007 | Ben Seitz | ||
2008 | Shaun Gosselin | Light | |
2008 | Randy Cabral | Midget | |
2009 | Anthony Marvuglio | Light | |
2009 | Jeff Abold | Midget | |
2010 | Anthony Nocella | Light | |
2010 | Jeff Abold | Midget | |
2011 | David Moniz | Light | |
2011 | Jeff Abold | Midget | |
2012 | Canceled due to weather | ||
2013 | PJ Stergios | Light | |
2013 | Doug Coby | Midget | |
2014 | PJ Stergios | Light | |
2014 | Randy Cabral | Midget | |
2015 | PJ Stergios | Light | |
2015 | Todd Bertrand | Midget | |
2016 | Jim Chambers | Light | |
2016 | Doug Coby | Midget | |
2017 | Dylan Duhaime | Light | |
2017 | John Zych | Midget | |
2018 | Dan Cugini | Light | |
2018 | Randy Cabral | Midget | |
2019 | Ryan Locke | Light | |
2019 | Avery Stoehr | Midget | |
2020 | Not ran due to COVID-19 | ||
Sources[1][5][6] |
References
- ^ a b c "Boston Louie Seymour Memorial Webpage". Retrieved 10 March 2017.
- ^ Ring, Thomas. "RING: NEMA makes tracks". The Sun Chronicle. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
- ^ Courchesne, Shawn. "A Louie Phenomenon". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
- ^ ""Boston Louie" Memorial Classic Returning To Seekonk in '05". Northeastern Midget Association. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
- ^ "Official NEMA Results 2002-2019". Retrieved 26 April 2020.
- ^ "2020 NEMA Schedule". Retrieved 9 November 2020.