Women's Motorsports Network Podcast

Melinda Russell

Women's Motorsports Network Podcast shares the stories of women involved in motorsports from around the world. The first episode was in 2018 and new episodes are added each week. Feel free to suggest potential guests to Melinda at melinda@wmnnation.com. https://www.facebook.com/womensmotorsportsnetworkandpodcastMelinda Russell

  1. 3H AGO

    Kelly Coss: What If Confidence Is The Real Finish Line

    Send us Fan Mail You can love racing your whole life and still believe you “missed your chance” to drive. That’s why our conversation with 20-year-old A-class micro sprint driver Kelly Coss hits so hard. Kelly grew up around speed, spent years as a Friday-night fan at Red Cedar Speedway, then made the leap from the grandstands to the cockpit after discovering micro sprint racing at Thunder Hill Speedway. Her story is proof that dirt track racing has room for late starters who are willing to learn, work, and show up consistently. We talk about the real learning curve of sprint-style racing: how confidence becomes the hardest skill, why comparing yourself to veteran drivers can crush progress, and how she and her husband set goals that keep the sport fun even when things break. Kelly shares a proud breakthrough moment from private track practice, where she finally trusted the fast line near the wall, and explains how reviewing GoPro footage turns rough nights into lessons instead of regrets. We also get into what makes grassroots motorsports possible behind the scenes, including racing sponsorship, marketing partners, and the weeknight grind in the shop. Kelly gives a thoughtful take on safety equipment and why investing in reliable tools like Freedom Racelifts matters when you’re working under race cars. If you care about women in motorsports, micro sprint racing, sprint car racing, or simply chasing a dream that feels “too late,” this one will stick with you. Subscribe for more stories from the pits, share this with a racer or future racer, and leave a review with the moment that motivated you most. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    43 min
  2. Brina Seng: How A Dirt Track Meteorologist Turned Haters Into Fans

    3D AGO

    Brina Seng: How A Dirt Track Meteorologist Turned Haters Into Fans

    Send us Fan Mail A weekly weather report filmed in the rain probably should not be a turning point in racing culture, but that is exactly what happens at River Cities Speedway. We talk with Brina Sang, a Grand Forks, North Dakota native who grew up at the track, took over its social media, and found a bold voice that fans now recognize instantly. From marketing and sponsorship support to viral-style videos, she shares what actually works for grassroots racing promotion when budgets are tight and opinions are loud. Brina also walks us through the leap from selling 50-50 tickets to becoming a dirt track announcer, including the shaky first night, the pressure of calling races in front of thousands, and the craft of keeping the crowd engaged during cautions and red flags. We get into what makes a great Friday night program, how driver stories and infield interviews change the feel of the show, and why the best racing experience is built like an amusement park, not a lecture. The conversation goes deeper into women in motorsports and why representation matters at every level of track operations. Brina highlights women in key roles, reflects on a scary crash that reshaped her perspective on safety and family, and explains how theme nights like school bus races, agriculture night, first responders night, and a suicide prevention “Never Alone” night can bring new people into the stands and make them feel welcome. If you care about dirt track racing, motorsports marketing, fan engagement, and the next generation of women leading the sport, this one is for you. Subscribe, share this with a racing friend, and leave a review telling us what part of the track experience keeps you coming back. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    41 min
  3. Abby Maurer’s Fast Track To A Points Champion in Mini Wedge

    APR 24

    Abby Maurer’s Fast Track To A Points Champion in Mini Wedge

    Send us Fan Mail A lot of racing careers start with a “real plan.” Abby Maurer’s starts with a dusty car at her dad’s shop and a deal for gas-station ice cream if she’d sit in it for a photo. Abby is 14 now, a mini wedge racer with big trophies behind her and even bigger confidence on track, and she joins us to tell the full story from that first moment to chasing points championships at places like Owosso and Kalamazoo.  We talk about what youth racing really looks like week to week: balancing school, sports, and family time while still showing up ready to learn. Abby breaks down the support system that makes grassroots motorsports work, including how she and her family approach local racing sponsors, why it’s easier when you know people, and what it takes to earn that backing over time. If you’re searching for practical advice on how to start mini wedge racing or how to build confidence in youth motorsports, her perspective is refreshingly direct.  Then we get honest about the part many people tiptoe around: being a girl racing in a male-dominated sport. Abby explains how some boys race her differently once she’s beating them, how she protects herself, and why standing her ground matters. We also dig into race craft and mindset, from thinking ahead and avoiding costly mistakes to why she sometimes prefers starting in the back because it’s more challenging and more fun.  You’ll also hear the details that make local short track racing so addictive: favorite tracks, working on the car, the crowd reactions when kids realize the driver is a girl, and even the lucky socks she associates with a big win. Abby closes out by sharing what’s next, including adding flat kart racing to keep building skill and seat time. Subscribe for more women’s motorsports stories, share this with a young racer who needs a push, and leave a review with your answer: what’s the best lesson racing has taught you? Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    24 min
  4. How A 10-Year-Old Builds Speed And Confidence In Mini Wedge Racing with Kate Maurer

    APR 24

    How A 10-Year-Old Builds Speed And Confidence In Mini Wedge Racing with Kate Maurer

    Send us Fan Mail A lot of people say they love racing. Kate Maurer is 10 years old and proves it by showing up, learning fast, and winning in a mini wedge. I sit down with Kate to hear how she got started after watching her sister race, what it’s like running youth oval track events across Michigan, and why her home tracks at Owosso Speedway and Owosso Motorsports Park mean so much. We talk about what a mini wedge car teaches you early: you can’t stay full throttle everywhere, you have to lift in the corners, hold your lane, and respect what the track is giving you that night. Kate also shares the personal story behind her #311, chosen to honor her family’s racing history. We dig into the real rhythm of grassroots motorsports: changing tires, swapping gears, checking fuel, running quick heats and features, and leaning on a whole family pit crew. Kate breaks down how she landed sponsors through community relationships and by walking into businesses with her sister and asking. She also opens up about a hard crash at Berlin Raceway, how she calms down after something goes wrong, and the small routines that help, including lucky socks and a simple message from her dad: have fun first. Looking ahead, Kate has big goals, like stepping into a super late model someday, and she names Chase Elliott as her favorite driver. If you’re searching for stories about women in motorsports, youth racing, mini wedge racing, and the future of short track racing, this conversation delivers heart, detail, and a clear reminder that the next generation is already here. Subscribe, share this with a racing family, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    25 min
  5. Racing, College, and Life: How Chelsea Martin Balances It All

    APR 21

    Racing, College, and Life: How Chelsea Martin Balances It All

    Send us Fan Mail Race nights look effortless from the grandstands, but the real story is what it takes to keep showing up week after week. I’m joined by Chelsea Martin, a 19-year-old Sport Compact racer from Shepherd, Michigan, and she brings the kind of grounded honesty that makes grassroots motorsports so relatable. We talk about the family thread that pulled her into racing, starting with her grandpa’s time in Street Stock and her earliest memories of being at the track at two years old, completely hooked on the noise and the speed. Chelsea also shares what life looks like off the track. She works part-time at a local library, stays fully enrolled in college, and studies mortuary science with the goal of becoming a funeral director while also helping with removals for a local funeral home. That mix of responsibility and ambition is a big part of women in motorsports today, especially in local racing where you build your program with grit, family support, and long nights in the shop. We get into the practical racing decisions that fans don’t always see: Crystal Motor Speedway changing its classes, the impact of losing a four-cylinder option, and why Chelsea is switching her season to I-96 Speedway in Ionia. She explains the learning curve of a bigger track, and the travel reality of hauling an hour and a half or more when your biggest pit crew is your dad. If you love Michigan dirt track racing, Sport Compact racing, or stories about how drivers adapt to keep chasing speed, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more women-led racing stories, share this with a friend who lives for Saturday nights, and leave a review so more fans can find the show. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    36 min
  6. Jasmine Salinas: She Didn’t Start Racing Young… Now She’s Driving 300+ MPH

    APR 17

    Jasmine Salinas: She Didn’t Start Racing Young… Now She’s Driving 300+ MPH

    Send us Fan Mail A lot of people picture an NHRA Top Fuel driver as someone who grew up with unlimited passes and a polished pipeline to the pros. Our conversation with Jasmine Salinas tells a different story, one built on work boots, family pressure, and a scrap business in San Jose, California that taught her how to grind long before she ever went 334 miles an hour. We talk about what it really feels like to enter drag racing later than most, then have to “fast track” your learning in front of fans, sponsors, and competitors.  Jasmine walks us through the moments that changed everything: discovering Top Fuel for the first time at an NHRA national event, realizing women were already winning at the highest level, and deciding to climb the ladder the right way. We get into the unglamorous but essential steps, from licensing and Top Alcohol Dragster seat time to learning how a race team functions day to day. She also shares why she turned down an early Top Fuel opportunity, and how patience can be a competitive advantage when you’re building confidence, consistency, and control.  We also go deep on the business reality of motorsports funding. Jasmine explains how Scrappers Racing mixes NHRA and IHRA events, why eighth-mile racing can be a smart strategy for part-time teams, and what fans often miss about the cost of putting on a show. If you care about women in motorsports, drag racing sponsorship, or the mindset behind elite performance, this one delivers. Subscribe, share with a racing friend, and leave us a review with the biggest risk you’ve taken for your dream. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    1h 30m
  7. I Learn More From Bad Nights Than Trophies with Memarie Ashcraft

    APR 13

    I Learn More From Bad Nights Than Trophies with Memarie Ashcraft

    Send us Fan Mail Dirt racing doesn’t reward the same lap twice, and that’s exactly why this conversation with 15-year-old micro sprint racer Memarie “Mem” Ashcraft is so gripping. She walks us through what it really takes to move up classes, stay calm when the weekend gets messy, and keep learning even when the results don’t show it yet. We talk about how she got started in racing after growing up just minutes from a track, and how her program became a true family effort. Mem shares how their two-driver setup works with teammate Peyton, why having two dads “tag teaming” the car can make the difference when time is tight, and how she balances racing with a hybrid school schedule that leaves room for real car prep at home. Then we dig into the details that most fans never hear: why dirt is a constant puzzle, how ruts and moisture change your options, and why micro sprint control can be more about pedals than steering. Mem also recaps a tough but instructive weekend at Texas Motor Speedway and explains why the Tulsa Shootout feels like the most nerve-wracking micro sprint race of the year, even though it’s still the best time of her season. If you care about women in motorsports, youth racing, dirt track strategy, or 600cc micro sprint racing, you’ll leave with a clearer picture of what “seat time” really builds. Subscribe, share this with a racing friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway from Mem’s approach to learning under pressure. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    39 min
  8. Fallon Tucker Constantino:  What An IMSA Safety Dispatcher Really Does

    APR 9

    Fallon Tucker Constantino: What An IMSA Safety Dispatcher Really Does

    Send us Fan Mail You can love racing and still have no idea how it actually works. That’s why we sat down with Fallon Constantino, an IMSA race control safety dispatcher who lives in the space most fans never see: the radios, the response plan, and the split-second coordination that turns a crash into a safe, controlled reset. We talk through Fallon’s unconventional path into motorsports, from early motorcycle club racing jobs and manual scoring to the moment she finally observed IMSA race control in 2019 and instantly recognized the complexity and precision. Fallon breaks down how race control is organized, how decisions flow, and what her role looks like when debris hits the track or a car stops in a dangerous place. If you’ve ever wondered who talks to fire, medical, wreckers, and recovery trucks, this conversation makes it real. The bigger takeaway is career-focused: motorsports is an ecosystem with opportunities far beyond driving, and women in motorsports belong in every corner of it. Fallon shares blunt, practical advice on getting started through flagging and corner marshaling, building relationships, finding mentors, and using LinkedIn and personal branding wisely. We also dig into the mindset it takes to “have the audacity” to introduce yourself to leaders and create your own openings. Subscribe for more stories from women shaping racing, share this with a friend who wants a motorsports career, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Support the show FACEBOOK: INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/womensmotorsportsnetwork/ LINKEDIN: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ TIKTOK: https://www.linkedin.com/in/melindarussell/ https://www.patreon.com/posts/womens-network-144773298 X: https://x.com/IWMANation FACEBOOK Personal Page: https://www.facebook.com/melinda.ann.russell

    47 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Women's Motorsports Network Podcast shares the stories of women involved in motorsports from around the world. The first episode was in 2018 and new episodes are added each week. Feel free to suggest potential guests to Melinda at melinda@wmnnation.com. https://www.facebook.com/womensmotorsportsnetworkandpodcastMelinda Russell