WATCH – Spectator crashes his daily driver as Colorado National Speedway opens its 2026 season
May 4, 2026, 4:05 PM
Colorado National Speedway’s season opener Saturday night (May 2) delivered exactly what new ownership had hoped for: a packed house, a compelling feature race and national attention.
The national attention part, however, didn’t come from the main event.
A spectator race — a short-track tradition in which fans bring their own street-legal vehicles to race on the oval — ended in a violent crash that has since been viewed millions of times across social media, turning a small-town Saturday night into a viral sensation.
Video posted by FloRacing on X shortly after the incident Saturday showed a driver losing control on the 3/8-mile paved oval, going sideways and slamming hard into the wall. The impact knocked the car’s spare tire loose and appeared to total the vehicle.
The clip had amassed more than 8,600 likes and 400 retweets on X by Monday, with additional viral spread on TikTok and Instagram. OutKick featured the crash in its national NASCAR weekend roundup.
No serious injuries were publicly reported. Colorado National Speedway and the Weld County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The driver’s identity was not released.
The internet, predictably, had notes.
“Imagine explaining to the wife you totaled her car at amateur night,” one X user wrote in a reply that drew more than 1,200 likes.
“If you’re that sideways just let it spin,” another wrote.
“Had he lifted, instead of holding the boot in it, he would have been fine,” offered another commenter, diagnosing the error from the comfort of a keyboard.
One viewer who watched the FloRacing broadcast live offered soberer advice: “If you’re gonna enter a spectator race, buy a $500 jalopy that passes inspection and race that. Don’t mess with the family vehicle or a nice car.”
Spectator races are a staple at short tracks across the country. Drivers pay a small entry fee, sign a waiver and race their own cars — minivans, sedans, pickup trucks, whatever rolls through the gate — for a few laps. They are part entertainment, part audience participation, and crashes, while not uncommon, rarely generate this level of attention.
The spectacle overshadowed what was otherwise a milestone night at the Dacono facility, located about 35 miles north of Denver along Interstate 25.
⚠️ Spectator race gone wrong at Colorado National pic.twitter.com/MWpPzF8dQ4
— FloRacing (@FloRacing) May 3, 2026
