BY CHRIS MARTIN
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TIM LESTER
& KRISTEN LASSEN
B
y virtue of equal parts passion
and investment, Roof Systems
of Dallas, Al Lamb's Dallas
Honda and Mission Foods, have
granted the Dallas-Fort Worth area
an undeniable gravitational pull on
the Progressive American Flat Track
world despite lacking any real prior
claim as a hotbed of the sport.
ROUND 4 / APRIL 27, 2024
TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY / FORT WORTH, TEXAS
FLAT TRACK I PROGRESSIVE AMERICAN FLAT TRACK, SANCTIONED BY AMA PRO RACING
P90
Brandon Robinson
extended his
SuperTwins points
lead with his
second victory
of the season.
ROBINSON
TACKLES TEXAS
its chances of getting it in, with the
weather threatening to shut the
whole thing down.
That frantic, hurried vibe flowed
right into the early parts of the race,
which saw expected title fighters,
Jared Mees—he of nine Grand Na
-
tional Championships—and Dallas
Daniels—the widely acknowledged
heir apparent—make a quick
break at the front.
BRANDON ROBINSON EKES OUT
TEXAS HALF-MILE WIN
Jerry Stinchfield, CEO of Roof Sys-
tems of Dallas, Texas, team owner
of the Mission Roof Systems team,
and sponsor of countless riders, is a
pivotal figure in this transformation.
Yet, his primary team has yet to taste
victory on home soil.
And by virtue of equal parts de
-
termination and daring, that finally
changed in 2024, even if the Dallas-
Fort Worth area was largely unco-
operative in that pursuit, presenting
40-plus mph winds and intermittent
rain showers on the night.
In fact, the Mission SuperTwins
main event was pushed forward on
the schedule in order to improve