
Gary Mathers Review of Starfire Kids – Midnight Blue Express
Gary Mathers was the Polaris race director from 1971 through 1975, bringing the race team into the professional era of snowmobile racing. After his time
The Polaris racing blog and the ongoing chronicle of the amazing men and machines of the Polaris Professional Race Team from author Larry Preston.

Gary Mathers was the Polaris race director from 1971 through 1975, bringing the race team into the professional era of snowmobile racing. After his time

Love this shot. Bob Eastman laying on the ground, in the snow and the dirt working on a sled! Jerry Bunke on the right looking

Dorothy Mercer loved the grueling, multi-day event that was the Winnipeg, Manitoba to St. Paul race. She finished in the top 5 in 1973, behind

The racing bug hit Polaris in a big way when company president Alan Hetteen started to participate. 1965 would be the year that Alan won

The Bunke family just keeps on winning! Jerry’s son Gabe, Gabe’s son Taylor and Spencer Kadlec are kicking butt and taking names as Bunke Racing.

Just one of Brad Huling’s extraordinary talents was the ability to tune his clutches without driving the machine. As seen in this 1977 photo, Brad

1971 was the year of the alcohol burners. Shortly before 1971, Greg Grahn figured out the magic formula of how much to drill out the

1979: With the tragic accident that claimed Jerry Bunke, Polaris corporate threw in the towel and decided they were done with professional oval racing as

In 2008 at a vintage snowmobile show in Waconia, Minnesota, Starfire kids Greg Hedlund and Bob Eastman couldn’t help themselves and had to fire Jim

That’s just Brad Hulings, humming along on his 440 machine, on the way to winning that class in 1978 at Eagle River. Brad has been

Starfire Kids Midnight Blue Express is the unauthorized and previously untold true story of the people from Roseau, Minnesota and the machines they built to find fame and fortune in the brutal, challenging, and often very dangerous sport of snowmobile racing in the 1960s and 1970s.