Encinitas, CA - #31
Make: Ford Model: Mason Engine: Dougans Engine Builder: Chassis: Mason Motorsports Transmission: None
As with any SCORE Baja race, it's ultimately anyone's to win. No matter how fast or conservative you are, it still takes luck, skill, and a vehicle that can survive the harsh course. In this class, some racers prefer to push their vehicles to the limits, risking everything for a win, while others lay back like predators, waiting for an opportunity for a competitor to make a mistake, and pounce ahead for the win. Read More
A peninsula run from Ensenada to La Paz, Mexico only happens every few years, and for many of the SCORE Trophy Truck racers, they had been waiting since 2017 for another. This year, teams took no chances and many partnered with some of the best racers in both 2WD and AWD vehicles, trying to stack the odds in their favor.. Read More
It was perhaps one of the most dramatic endings to a SCORE Baja 500 in recent history, when a joint decision from SCORE and the Competition Review Board (CRB) brought down the gauntlet on the first two finishers of the SCORE Trophy Truck class. The race started like all the others, with Bryce Menzies leading the field after his win at the SCORE San Felipe 250, but he was followed by two of the most skilled SCORE Trophy Truck racers in modern times, Luke McMillin and Andy McMillin. Read More
The record-setting field of 31 SCORE Trophy Trucks roared into the San Felipe desert at full-throttle to take on the 280.2-mile course. After qualifying, Bryce Menzies, Andy McMillin, Luke McMillin, Gus Vildosola and Alan Ampudia were the first to start the race for the field. The McMillin cousins continued a relentless pace chasing Menzies in the #7 AWD Red Bull truck, each trying to avoid any potentially time soaking mistake that would slow them down and cost them the win. Read More
While the world is focused on the COVID-19 outbreak, we checked in on Andy, Luke, and Dan McMillin, as well as Bryce Menzies, Kristen and Wayne Matlock, Santiago Creel, Ryan Arciero, and Rick Geiser to see how they are doing and how they are preparing for when life and SCORE racing returns to normal. Here are just a few of the responses Read More
Among the field of SCORE Trophy Truck racers, there was no doubt in their minds that delaying the race for 24-hours was a wise choice. The changes it caused on the course, however, was something they couldn’t have anticipated and it had a significant outcome for many of the top teams. Starting the field was Ryan Arciero who teamed up with Dan McMillin in the number 32 Herbst/ Smith Levi’s truck. They were first on a course where the conditions were much different than what they had previously pre-run weeks before. “The weather this year put the race on a completely different level,†said Arciero. “Some of that water was so deep and the mud was so bad. I have seen a lot of SCORE Baja 1000’s and I’ve never seen anything like this.†Read More
PCI, KMC, Baja Designs, Fox, Polaris RZR, Amsoil, Toyo Tires, Redbull,
#3 Overall and #3 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#8 Overall and #8 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#71 Overall and #16 in SCORE Trophy Truck
DNF in SCORE Trophy Truck
#2 Overall and #2 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#3 Overall and #3 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#42 Overall and #13 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#2 Overall and #2 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#1 Overall and #1 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#1 Overall and #1 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#3 Overall and #2 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#5 Overall and #5 in SCORE Trophy Truck
#4 Overall and #4 in SCORE Trophy Truck
DNF in SCORE Trophy Truck
#1 Overall and #1 in SCORE Trophy Truck