TEMECULA, CA – The 21st season of the ProKart Challenge concluded this past October, completing the five events with six rounds of competition for the Superkarts! USA regional program. Eleven different class champions were crowned following the action at the K1 Circuit finale event.
The 2025 ProKart Challenge was a best five of six championship format, visiting three facilities over five weekends. K1 Circuit hosted the opening two rounds in the first weekend of March before travelling to the new Spring Mountain Karting Complex in April for its debut on the PKC schedule. The series returned to K1 Circuit in June for Round Four before making a trip north to Sonoma Raceway in late August – for the first time in Superkarts! USA history since 2017. K1 Circuit hosted the series finale in October, helping to decide this year’s ProKart Challenge champions.

Keagan Kaminski was able to win for a second straight year in the Formula Works KA100 Senior championship. The 2024 title came without a victory, while Kaminski won five straight to clinch the 2025 crown prior to the series finale. The advantage was 187 points, with four-time podium finisher Jackson Menchu ending up second in the standings. Round Six winner Shea Aldrich completed the season third in the championship.

The SuperSpeed Bearings KA100 Junior championship was also won for a second straight year by one driver, as Matthew Cagle claimed the title once again. Similar to Kaminski, Cagle won in 2024 without a victory; however, he came through for victory twice in 2025, standing on the podium five straight races to defend his championship. Sebastian Hauser, a winner at Round Two, was second in the final standings, trailing Cagle by 130 points. Canadian Nathan Dupuis earned three podium finishes on the season, including a win in Round Five, to finish third in title chase.

Luis Martinez added his name to the list of champions in the HRT Driver Development Mini Swift category. A string of five podium finishes, including three wins in total, helped Martinez to claim the championship by 169 points after finishing last year’s standings in seventh. Nathan Ramirez also improved on his finishing position from 2024, moving up from fifth to second to close out 2025. Ramirez had three podium finishes to his credit over the six rounds of racing. 2024 PKC Micro Swift champion Hudson Hidalgo finished inside the top three a total of three times in his five starts to claim the third step of the championship podium in his first year in the Mini Swift category.

Aidan Go brought his win total to three at the end of the year in the Sanner Racing Micro Swift class to help him earn the 2025 championship. Go, who finished second in last year’s standings, claimed victory in the final two rounds of 2025 to earn the championship by just 40 points over Matthew Paciulli. Two wins with a total of five podium results helped to put Paciulli second in the standings for his first full season at PKC. Lyon McPhail drove to two podium results over the six rounds to end up third in his first season.

Five podium finishes, including two wins, put Billy Musgrave at the top of the class in the Precision Works Racing Engines Pro Shifter championship. Musgrave, a multi-time PKC champion and now a six-time SKUSA SuperNationals winner, continues to add to his impressive career. Keawn Tandon had three podium results on the year to finish second, with NorCal driver Anthony Freese finishing third in the final standings with one podium result on the season.

Volodymyr Borodavchenko claimed the championship in the Mega Power Engines Master Shifter class. Michael Guasch was a close second, only 37 points back, with Slava Prikhodko winning twice and finishing third in the standings. The Mike Manning Karting KA100 Master championship was earned by Tim Meyer. A string of four podiums, including two wins, helped to propel Meyer to the title, winning by 315 points. Robert Switzler finished the standings in second, with Scott Nealon placing third in the championship chase.

The debut of the P1 Engines Spec 125 class at ProKart Challenge saw the championship go down to the wire. Dane Idelson used two wins in the final three rounds to claim the inaugural title, beating out three-time winner Truly Adams by a mere 45 points. Matthew McCoy ended up finishing third in the championship standings. The FZ Master inaugural championship was earned by Tony Rossetti. The Round Three winner beat out Round One victor Jeff Krogstad by 103 points, with Larry Hernandez ending up third in the standings.

Six straight wins in the inaugural season of the Nash Motorsportz Junior Shifter division put Erik Doan at the top of the championship standings. Doan took the championship ahead of Canadian Nathan Dupuis by 270 points, with Betty Schmidt finishing third in the title chase. Dante Rodrigues claimed the inaugural title in the Precision Karting Mini Shifter division. Two wins in the final two rounds helped Rodrigues to earn the championship ahead of two-time winner Troy Ferguson and Round Three winner Brandon Ng.

Superkarts! USA has confirmed all three facilities will return for the 22nd edition of the ProKart Challenge. The 2026 schedule will be a bit different from this past season, beginning in April with a double round weekend at K1 Circuit, visiting Sonoma Raceway twice and returning once again to Spring Mountain Karting Complex before wrapping up at K1 Circuit the first weekend of October.

2026 ProKart Challenge Schedule
April 24-26: K1 Circuit – Winchester, California
May 23-24: Sonoma Raceway – Sonoma, California
August 15-16: Sonoma Raceway – Sonoma, California
September 12-13: Spring Mountain Karting Complex – Pahrump, Nevada
October 3-4: K1 Circuit – Winchester, California
For more information on anything related to Superkarts! USA, please visit the website – www.superkartsusa.com and be sure to follow the Superkarts! USA Facebook page, Twitter and Instagram accounts.