The thought is enough to give self-proclaimed “off-road racing purists” nightmares. A UTV defeating the rock crawlers to win the King of the Hammers’ Race of Kings? Preposterous!

… or is it?

Kyle Chaney had come close in 2024 but was nipped by JP Gomez in the closing run and was further dropped down the order by penalties. This time, he utterly dominated the competition. His Can-Am Maverick R was the only car with a sub-eight-hour time, finishing over half an hour ahead of Gomez and the rest of the 4400s.

After starting fourth, Chaney worked through the course before taking the lead on the third and final lap. He mostly avoided mechanical issues or getting stuck, hence being so far ahead of everyone else, but that didn’t mean he just sat in cruise control as he went through the rocks.

The third and final lap was particularly confusing and treacherous, all thanks to some fanciful course designing by King of the Hammers boss Dave Cole. Chaney also received a penalty for missing a checkpoint early in the day.

“We didn’t even know where we were going,” Chaney said about Lap 3. “There was just nothing there. We just had to pick where we were going. There’s definitely a lot of luck involved in this, but we picked some good lines, Terry (Madden) was an awesome navigator, the car stayed together, we just took care of the car all day. Guys were passing us and I’m like, ‘Just let him go. We got to keep this car together.’

“It just wouldn’t end. It just kept going and going and going and wouldn’t end. We didn’t know where we were going that Lap 3. It was so challenging, not pre-running, not knowing where you’re going, just following a GPS and there not being any trails. Dave was just like, made it from an airplane, just put a line through wherever we were. We just had to guess our best and get to the RCPs. It was crazy.”

Still, to reach the finish in such convincing fashion was obviously huge, let alone in a UTV. The Maverick R had been hyped as the most powerful UTV on the market since its release in 2023, and it’s lived up to those expectations so far with success in virtually every discipline. For the Race of Kings, the Maverick R was modified by CT Race Worx to meet 4400 regulation such as a reworked chassis to accommodate the 37-inch tires (the stock model uses 32″ tires), though the rest like the engine and body remained untouched.

While Polaris has been giving Can-Am a run for its money as of late, Chaney likely would have contended with current UTV juggernaut Brock Heger for the Can-Am UTV Hammers Championship earlier in the week if not for a broken differential.

“We are immensely proud of Kyle’s achievement and the effort our team put into this race,” Bombardier Recreational Products racing manager Jean-François Leclerc began. “King of the Hammers is unlike any other race with the mix of high-speed desert terrain and technical, rocky canyons. We knew it would be difficult, but we put some of our best racers in the pack to go for the win. To see the Maverick R prevail against vehicles from major automotive manufacturers with three times the horsepower is very gratifying to say the least.”

Among the “traditional” 4400s, Gomez battled with Josh Blyler early on before both of them suffered flats. The former also had a bolt come off one of the blocks holding his wiring. Despite being the fastest through Lap 2, he lost the lead to Chaney in the maze a lap later.

Even if UTVs aren’t typically built for rock crawling like the 4400s, Gomez found they have their perks that give them the upper hand. Ironically, the increased course difficulty for 2025 might have swung the race in the UTVs’ favor.

“The advantage of the Can-Am is they could sneak through the rocks straight up,” he stated. “Our cars are 88 inches wide or 72, that foot matters when you’re in those pinches. The IFS (independent front suspension) cars get all offset because they’re so wide. That’s the downside. But you have to drive. You have to know your vehicle. If my car was probably 1000 pounds lighter, I’d probably break it because I like the strength, but I’m seeing these guys just zigzagging out and they’re gone. It’s like, ‘Shit, I’m giving it my all, this guy drove by like I’m standing still.’”

Brian Caprara finished third after taking advantage of three time penalties handed out to the #77 of Max and Robby Gordon. Max started in last but weaved through the order into the top 40 by the end of Lap 1; his dad then took over the car midway through Lap 2. The Gordons initially finished third physically before being penalized twice for missing waypoints and again for driving over a fence in Lasernut Alley; the infractions cost them 45 minutes and the podium.

Further attesting to Cole’s track design, only 27 of the 100 entrants reached the finish. The rather funky Porsche 911 of Kevin Taylor was one of them, the second to last car to make it home.

While Chaney had a field day, his teammates weren’t as fortunate. Cody Miller ran as high as second before his Maverick R literally broke in two along the front end. His brother Hunter Miller also bowed out with a mechanical failure.

Paul Wolff traded in the Maverick R he raced in UTV Hammers for his usual 4400 and was the fastest qualifier, but retired after losing the exhaust sensor in the engine. This caused him to stop in the rocks, where he inadvertently caused the sPOD power distribution system to reset while winching before the winch broke off entirely.

Loren Healy capped off a dismal 2025 KOH with his third retirement in as many races when he lost both fuel pumps and the front locker in two laps. He had crashed out of UTV Hammers with his son followed by suffering a rear axle failure on his Ford Bronco in the Every Man Challenge. Vaughn Gittin Jr., who split time in Healy’s Bronco at the EMC, lost his brakes on Lap 1 then rolled in a canyon a lap later and was unable to winch it out; Gittin and Healy, along with the rest of RTR Vehicles Off-Road Team, returned on Sunday to recover it.

Race of Kings results

FinishStartNumberDriver of RecordLapsTotal TimeMargin
14191Kyle Chaney37:53:45.051Leader
21082JP Gomez38:24:06.708+ 30:21.658
3579901Brian Caprara310:24:57.416+ 2:31:12.36
410077Robby Gordon310:46:36.447+ 2:52:51.39
542888Cody Addington310:58:35.060+ 3:04:50.00
628456Chad Hundt311:00:19.347+ 3:06:34.29
774046Chris Branton311:00:47.733+ 3:07:02.68
849792Justin Wicks311:27:53.039+ 3:34:07.98
9664570Joe Gatlin311:38:55.668+ 3:45:10.61
10564417Jonathan Dawes311:54:43.295+ 4:00:58.24
111483Raul Gomez311:58:35.227+ 4:04:50.17
1295248Ryan Blount312:01:3.369+ 4:07:48.31
135260Chad Owens312:02:53.198+ 4:09:08.14
144078Pip Justice312:02:56.322+ 4:09:11.27
151841Josh Blyler312:17:45.753+ 4:24:00.70
1659726Dennis Sterndahl312:20:52.157+ 4:27:07.10
17847Phillip McGilton312:24:52.999+ 4:31:07.94
184850Jeremy Brown312:42:46.595+ 4:49:01.54
193448Dan Fresh312:45:12.293+ 4:51:27.24
20994413Tom Pendergrast313:12:45.315+ 5:19:00.26
21444Chip Maclaughlin312:30:49.988+ 5:37:04.93
229015Mike Slawson313:44:38.344+ 5:50:53.29
23734333Rich Goldman314:14:19.956+ 6:20:34.90
2487777Harold Fijman314:14:51.644+ 6:21:06.59
252121Erik Miller314:23:51.303+ 6:30:06.25+ 6:37:14.81
2671911Kevin Taylor314:30:59.870+ 6:37:22.43
2765416Brian Reid314:31:07.486+ 1 lap
281114Casey Currie24:28:38.543*+ 1 lap
298253Jeff Waggoner25:04:49.573*+ 1 lap
3045321Tom Wayes25:08:19.035*+ 1 lap
31201481Chayse Caprara25:43:01.207*+ 1 lap
323746Rusty Blyler26:17:29.660*+ 1 lap
3372178Aaron Smith26:31:05.157*+ 1 lap
34584401Kirk Jensen27:44:07.219*+ 1 lap
35325Vaughn Gittin Jr.28:07:12.253*+ 1 lap
3664750Oracle Lynn27:23:08.020*+ 1 lap
37694475Edwin Abd28:13:28.083*+ 1 lap
38461997Mitch Hoover29:14:43.469*+ 1 lap
3993Wayland Campbell24:38:21.636*+ 1 lap
409476Jason Scherer24:05:37.858*+ 1 lap
4115221Cody Miller29:09:09.507*+ 1 lap
4292136Josh Heeger29:59:30.304*+ 1 lap
43844453Billy Karras210:19:30.538*+ 1 lap
44384089Ak Whatley212:43:15.462*+ 1 lap
45267Loren Healy11:05:03.656*+ 2 laps
4611018Paul Wolff11:05:08.461*+ 2 laps
47244456Brett Harrell11:11:35.763*+ 2 laps
4854190Hunter Miller11:17:08.601*+ 2 laps
49195Shannon Campbell11:16:29.476*+ 2 laps
50254464Guy Miller11:21:49.413*+ 2 laps
5122311Dustin Robbins11:22:05.053*+ 2 laps
523186Marcos Gomez11:18:24.930*+ 2 laps
535461Bill McGibbon11:18:55.607*+ 2 laps
549119Paul Horschel11:23:25.540*+ 2 laps
55135150Brendon Thompson11:19:54.653*+ 2 laps
56471982Tom Gilpin11:17:30.686*+ 2 laps
574113Bailey Cole11:22:59.315*+ 2 laps
58434493Andrew Mclaughlin11:32:03.728*+ 2 laps
59704480Kris Hicks11:34:15.447*+ 2 laps
6012240Cole Clark11:40:33..393*+ 2 laps
6161464Glenny Page11:38:52.367*+ 2 laps
6274867Tim Rogers11:38:35.503*+ 2 laps
63514468John Webb11:48:21.701*+ 2 laps
64621776Jeff Watson11:50:17.444*+ 2 laps
653635Bailey Campbell12:04:30.966*+ 2 laps
66834497Mike Spindler11:55:19.852*+ 2 laps
677897Jeremy Hammer11:55:50.740*+ 2 laps
68681Levi Shirley12:37:01.586*+ 2 laps
69764434Kevin Yoder12:35:57.157*+ 2 laps
70934412Eric Foster13:04:30.273*+ 2 laps
71882404Blake Holland13:35:19.985*+ 2 laps
7280553Darrell Krebsbach12:28:30.883*+ 2 laps
73894775Jake Hallenbeck11:52:37.618*+ 2 laps
7455833Kevin Condon16:17:42.041*+ 2 laps
75794447Patrick Peterson18:20:08.311*+ 2 laps
765016Cameron Steele12:33:05.638*+ 2 laps
7786906Tad Dowker11:17:56.935*+ 2 laps
78174448Randy Slawson11:29:30.951*+ 2 laps
79334482Cole Johnson11:30:21.473*+ 2 laps
80754400Zach Savage11:39:20.954*+ 2 laps
81984487Matt Nieman11:48:49.074*+ 2 laps
82671504Josh Sowell11:49:19.578*+ 2 laps
83304409Matthew McCowan12:00:46.448*+ 2 laps
842911Kevin Stearns12:10:30.358*+ 2 laps
85771444Ignacio Arana12:11:21.778*+ 2 laps
86274426Kevin Porterfield13:55:14.108*+ 2 laps
8753710Tommy Dykstra17:22:48.764*+ 2 laps
883290Darian Gomez0DNF+ 3 laps
8939595Craig Allen0DNF+ 3 laps
90684403Pat Beckwith0DNF+ 3 laps
91267779Kenneth Goodall0DNF+ 3 laps
9281124Roger King0DNF+ 3 laps
9316618Casey Gilbert0DNF+ 3 laps
9423308James Mahoney0DNF+ 3 laps
953569Anthony Yount0DNF+ 3 laps
96604449Rick Lavezzo0DNF+ 3 laps
9763100Jeff Bergemann0DNF+ 3 laps
98851177Mark NicholsonDNSDNSN/A
99964445Garry EasleyDNSDNSN/A
10097406Corey JohnsonDNSDNSN/A
* – Did not finish

Leave a comment