
By Frank Buhrman
YORK HAVEN, Pa. (May 18, 2025) — It wasn’t an easy climb, but Sunday night at BAPS Motor Speedway, Landon Price reached the top of the mountain again and enjoyed the view.
Four years and nine months after he last visited victory lane in a River Valley Builders PA Sprint Series feature, Price returned Sunday, after an electrifying charge through the field from 11th starting position. That performance also earned the Fleetwood driver the hard charger award.
After advancing from seventh to third in his heat race, the Price team’s pill-draw skills didn’t improve, and he picked 11th out of the 12 redraw starting spots, but when the race started, it quickly became obvious that something special was happening with the no. 69P team.
Within five laps, Price had raced his way into the top five. From there, each pass came quickly as he sliced through the field. He caught leader Dustin Young on lap 17 and, after a brief side-by-side battle, took over the top spot with two laps remaining. He went on to win by a margin of 1.896 seconds.
The victory marked Price’s fourth career PASS win. He joined the series in 2018 and captured two victories the following season, including one at BAPS. His third win came at Path Valley in August 2020. After that, he explored other opportunities in sprint car racing before stepping away for a time, eventually returning to PASS last season.
This year, with a new car, the results have begun to recapture the success of the past.
One other important change—Price is now a father, and the victory lane photos included an infant.
Dustin Young, in search of his second career PASS victory, led most of the feature but fell just short in the closing laps. The runner-up finish marked his second top-five of the season and added to a memorable year that has also seen him support his daughter’s debut in micro sprint racing.
Kruz Kepner came home third and earned the night’s top monetary bonus, taking the BrokersRealty.com SpeedWeekend points title and the $750 award for that championship. Kepner had been a close third in a tight battle for the award with Kenny Heffner and Ken Duke Jr., but Heffner experienced mechanical difficulties and did not make the feature, and Duke came home eighth.