In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip
| "Pomona Raceway" | |
|---|---|
Auto Club Raceway, 2008 | |
| Location | Pomona, California, United States |
| Coordinates | 34°05′42.32″N 117°46′11.15″W / 34.0950889°N 117.7697639°W |
| Capacity | 40,000 |
| Operator | NHRA |
| Address | 2780 Fairplex Drive |
| Opened | 1951[1] |
| Former names |
|
| Major events | NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals In-N-Out Burger NHRA Finals |
| Drag Strip | |
| Surface | Concrete |
| Length | 0.250 mi (0.402 km) |
The Pomona Raceway (currently named the In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip, previously named the Auto Club Raceway at Pomona)[2] is a racing facility located in Pomona, California that features a quarter-mile dragstrip. Since its opening in 1961, the dragstrip has hosted the NHRA's Winternationals event – the traditional season opener – and since 2021, the season's last race, the NHRA Finals. These two events have contributed to its becoming perhaps one of the most famous dragstrips in North America. The facility has a seating capacity of 40,000 spectators and is one of the few dragstrips in the USA operated directly by the NHRA. The dragstrip has also gone by the nickname of The Fairplex, in reference to its location at the Fairplex, formerly called the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds.
History
Drag Racing
In 1952, a car club known as the "Choppers of Pomona" aided by a young police officer, Sergeant Bud Coons, advocated that a safe place should be provided for local area drag racers. Coons, along with fellow hot rod enthusiast Pomona Police Chief Ralph Parker and the city government of Pomona, asked to lease the parking lot of the LA County Fairgrounds. Coons and Parker were instrumental in convincing the county to allow the use of the fairgrounds for the race by citing statistics showing that deaths among kids declined sharply when they were given a supervised place to race. The county finally agreed, as long as the hot rodders provided their own insurance, which they could cover with gate receipts.[3]
At the time the county made the agreement, the parking lot was nothing but a gravel lot. The coalition of hot rodders, police, and community leaders raised funds through donations and paved the lot. This was the birth of the dragstrip in Pomona.
Though it was not considered a national event by today's standards, the very first NHRA event, the Southern California Championships, was held at the dragstrip on an April weekend in 1953. On Saturday, attendance was 2,000 to 3,000; on Sunday, it was reported as 15,000. Compared to the 3.9-second numbers (at 333 yd 1 ft (304.80 m) the pros are putting on the board presently, the best ET of that day was a respectable 10.93.[4]
NHRA Winternationals
In 1961, NHRA held its first-ever Winternationals at the Pomona Raceway. It became NHRA's second national event. The first NHRA national event was the U.S. Nationals, which was nicknamed the "Big-Go". Thus, the Winternationals got nicknamed the "Big-Go West". It has remained at this location ever since. For many years, this event was sponsored by Chief Auto Parts and later its successor AutoZone, then by CSK Automotive, and now by its current successor, O'Reilly Auto Parts.
2008 saw Top Fuel & Funny Car races be reduced to the present 1000 feet.
From 2021 to present, the race has been held in late March or early April, after the Gainesville round. The 2021 race was later postponed to July-August in order to allow spectators.
NHRA Finals
The season closer, the NHRA Finals, was brought to the facility in 1984 from the now-defunct Orange County International Raceway. When the event was first brought to Pomona, it was sponsored by Winston (after NHRA's main title sponsor at the time, RJ Reynolds' "Winston" cigarette brand). From 2010 to 2019, and again from 2021 to 2022, the event was sponsored by the Automobile Club of Southern California, which is affiliated with AAA. The 2020 event was sponsored by Stellantis and Royal Dutch Shell when it was held at Las Vegas Motor Speedway because Clark County, Nevada, allowed spectators when California still banned mass gatherings because of the global pandemic. Beginning in 2023, In-N-Out Burger became the naming rights sponsor for both the circuit and the NHRA Finals.[5]
In November 2025, due to adverse weather, NHRA canceled the race, and only the lower-level Sportsman classes were held. The two Top Alcohol classes were abandoned after the first round, and no professional categories were held.[6][7]
Other racing
From 1934 to 1937 a 1⁄2 mile dirt oval was located at the facility.[1] The dirt oval was once again opened in the 1950s but closed in 1959. Pomona was also home to a 1.7-mile paved road course, which operated in 1998 and 1999. From 1956 to 1961, a 2-mile temporary road course was located in the parking lot.[1]
Winners
NHRA Winternationals
NHRA Finals
| Year | Venue | Top Fuel | Funny Car | Pro Stock | Pro Stock Motorcycle |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1965 | Tulsa | Maynard Rupp | |||
| 1966 | Tulsa | Pete Robinson | |||
| 1967 | Tulsa | Connie Kalitta | Don Nicholson | ||
| 1968 | Tulsa | Don Prudhomme | Ed Schartman | ||
| 1969 | Lewisville | L. Goldstein | Dick Harrell | ||
| 1970 | Lewisville | Ron Martin | Gene Snow | ||
| 1971 | Amarillo | Gerry Glenn | P. Castronovo | ||
| 1972 | Amarillo | Jim Walther | L. Fullerton | ||
| 1973 | Amarillo | Jerry Ruth | Frank Hall | ||
| 1974 | Ontario | Don Garlits | Dave Condit | ||
| 1975 | Ontario | Don Garlits | Don Prudhomme | ||
| 1976 | Ontario | Shirley Muldowney | Don Prudhomme | ||
| 1977 | Ontario | Dennis Baca | Gordie Bonin | ||
| 1978 | Ontario | Rob Bruins | Raymond Beadle | ||
| 1979 | Ontario | Don Garlits | Gordie Bonin | ||
| 1980 | Ontario | Shirley Muldowney | Ron Colson | ||
| 1981 | East Irvine | Gary Beck | Jim Dunn | ||
| 1982 | East Irvine | Jim Barnard | Tripp Shumake | ||
| 1983 | East Irvine | Shirley Muldowney | John Lombardo | ||
| 1984 | Pomona | Don Garlits | Sherm Gunn | Bob Glidden | |
| 1985 | Pomona | Gary Beck | Kenny Bernstein | Joe Lepone | |
| 1986 | Pomona | Darrell Gwynn | Kenny Bernstein | Bob Glidden | |
| 1987 | Pomona | Darrell Gwynn | Billy Meyer | Bob Glidden | |
| 1988 | Pomona | Darrell Gwynn | John Force | Warren Johnson | |
| 1989 | Pomona | Gary Ormsby | Bruce Larson | Bob Glidden | |
| 1990 | Pomona | Joe Amato | Ed McCulloch | Bob Glidden | John Myers |
| 1991 | Pomona | Pat Austin | Al Hofmann | Darrell Alderman | Dave Schultz |
| 1992 | Pomona | Cory McClenathan | Chuck Etchells | Warren Johnson | Dave Schultz |
| 1993 | Pomona | Rance McDaniel | Jim Epler | Warren Johnson | Dave Schultz |
| 1994 | Pomona | Kenny Bernstein | John Force | Darrell Alderman | Dave Schultz |
| 1995 | Pomona | Blaine Johnson | Al Hofmann | Warren Johnson | John Myers |
| 1996 | Pomona | Joe Amato | John Force | Mike Edwards | John Smith |
| 1997 | Pomona | Joe Amato | Tony Pedregon | Kurt Johnson | Matt Hines |
| 1998 | Pomona | Kenny Bernstein | Chuck Etchells | Richie Stevens | Matt Hines |
| 1999 | Pomona | Mike Dunn | Jerry Toliver | Jeg Coughlin Jr | Antron Brown |
| 2000 | Pomona | Gary Scelzi | John Force | Kurt Johnson | Tony Mullen |
| 2001 | Pomona | Kenny Bernstein | Del Worsham | Bruce Allen | Angelle Sampey |
| 2002 | Pomona | Cory McClenathan | John Force | Kurt Johnson | Matt Hines |
| 2003 | Pomona | Kenny Bernstein | Del Worsham | Greg Anderson | Craig Treble |
| 2004 | Pomona | Tony Schumacher | John Force | Greg Anderson | Angelle Sampey |
| 2005 | Pomona | Tony Schumacher | Tony Pedregon | Jeg Coughlin Jr | Ryan Schnitz |
| 2006 | Pomona | Tony Schumacher | John Force | Greg Anderson | Craig Treble |
| 2007 | Pomona | Tony Schumacher | Robert Hight | Jeg Coughlin Jr | Matt Smith |
| 2008 | Pomona | Larry Dixon | Cruz Pedregon | Greg Anderson | Chris Rivas |
| 2009 | Pomona | Antron Brown | Mike Neff | Greg Anderson | Eddie Krawiec |
| 2010 | Pomona | Antron Brown | John Force | Shane Gray | Eddie Krawiec |
| 2011 | Pomona | Del Worsham | Matt Hagan | Greg Stanfield | Andrew Hines |
| 2012 | Pomona | Brandon Bernstein | Cruz Pedregon | Allen Johnson | Andrew Hines |
| 2013 | Pomona | Shawn Langdon | Matt Hagan | Rickie Jones | Eddie Krawiec |
| 2014 | Pomona | Morgan Lucas | Matt Hagan | Erica Enders-Stevens | Hector Arana Jr |
| 2015 | Pomona | Shawn Langdon | Del Worsham | Allen Johnson | Eddie Krawiec |
| 2016 | Pomona | Doug Kalitta | Tommy Johnson Jr. | Greg Anderson | Matt Smith |
| 2017 | Pomona | Brittany Force | Tommy Johnson Jr. | Bo Butner | Andrew Hines |
| 2018 | Pomona | Steve Torrence | J.R. Todd | Tanner Gray | Matt Smith |
| 2019 | Pomona | Doug Kalitta | Jack Beckman | Jeg Coughlin Jr | Jianna Everisto |
| 2020 | Las Vegas | Antron Brown | Matt Hagan | Erica Enders | Angie Smith |
| 2021 | Pomona | Steve Torrence | Bob Tasca III | Greg Anderson | Matt Smith |
| 2022 | Pomona | Austin Prock | Cruz Pedregon | Greg Anderson | Angie Smith |
| 2023 | Pomona | Doug Kalitta | Chad Green | Aaron Stanfield | Gaige Herrera |
| 2024 | Pomona | Antron Brown | Jack Beckman | Greg Anderson | Matt Smith |
| Rainout in 2025, Only Sportsman Classes Held[8] | |||||
| Year | Venue | Comp Elim | Super Comp (8.90) | Super Gas (9.90) | |
| 2025 | Pomona | Jason Grima | Chad Webber | Ed De Staute | |
NOTE: The Finals has been held in the Southwest area from 1965 to 1973, the Los Angeles metropolitan area from 1974 to 2019, and again since 2021, and Las Vegas in 2020.
Current track records
| Category | E.T. | Speed | Driver | Event | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Top Fuel | 3.628 | Clay Millican | 2018 Winternationals | [9] | |
| 338.94 mph (545.47 km/h) | Brittany Force | 2022 NHRA Finals | |||
| Funny Car | 3.804 | Austin Prock | 2024 NHRA Finals | ||
| 341.68 mph (549.88 km/h) | Austin Prock | 2024 NHRA Finals | |||
| Pro Stock | 6.480 | Erica Enders | 2014 NHRA Finals | ||
| 213.84 mph (344.14 km/h) | Drew Skillman | 2015 NHRA Finals |
References
- ^ a b c "Na-Motorsports Track Entry". NA Motorsports. Retrieved May 5, 2010.
- ^ Festival tickets for In-N-Out's 75th anniversary event sold out, 2023, archived from the original on October 17, 2023, retrieved October 20, 2023
- ^ "Need for a safe place to speed: Pomona's hot rod history began with police". Inland Valley Daily Bulletin. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved December 3, 2008.
- ^ Post, Robert C. (1996). High Performance: The Culture and Technology of Drag Racing 1950-1990. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-4654-0.
- ^ "In-N-Out Burger named title sponsor of In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip and In-N-Out Burger NHRA Finals". NHRA.com. NHRA. Retrieved November 1, 2022.
- ^ "NHRA cancels In-N-Out Burger NHRA Finals; remaining world champions Prock, Glenn, Gadson crowned on current points".
- ^ "Racing Canceled on Saturday at In-N-Out Burger NHRA Finals; Sunday Eliminations Set Based on Points Standings | Drag Illustrated". November 16, 2025.
- ^ "Pomona 2 Results". NHRA.COM. NHRA. Retrieved November 17, 2025.
- ^ Burgess, Phil (March 30, 2025). "Lucas Oil NHRA Winternationals Sunday preview". NHRA. Retrieved December 31, 2025.