Tag Archives: AMA Pro MX

Moto News | Sanders talks Dakar | AMX Open | Lawrence bros

Daniel Sanders features in GasGas Dirt Episode 7

27-year-old Daniel Sanders sat down in front of the GASGAS Dirt cameras to share what makes the him tick, with the 2022 Dakar Rally fast approaching after an impressive fourth place finish in the 2021 event, alongside third overall in the FIM Cross Country Rallies World Championship this year.

Check it out:


2022 Australian Motocross Invitational set for Feb 19-20

The Australian Motocross Invitational and Monster Truck Madness weekend will place at Nowra Speedway February 19-20, 2022. Featuring Australia’s first MotoX Skins event with a purpose built motocross track. This special event is made possible by the NSW REAF Funding program to generate events in regional NSW.

Stay tuned for more details as they are released.


Historic weekend at Queensland Speedway title

History has been made, with Queensland Speedway recording the first ever brother and sister combination, as well as the first ever female rider to take top step in a Speedway title meet in Queensland in best pairs. Welldone Jordy and Anika Loftus have worked hard for this result and with their dreams now having come true. Second place went to the dueo of Jetzen Lyons and Jai Bainbridge, while third was Viv Muddle and Ky Mitchell. Congratulations!


Jack Fewster claims WA Senior Sidecar Championship title at Pinjar

Jack Fewster has beaten off all comers to claim the Western Australian Senior Sidecar Championship at Pinjar Park Motorcycle Speedway Circuit, including former champs Jeff and Daniel Bishop as well as defending champs Darren Nash and Ash Shield.

Jack and passenger Jonah Sita won four qualifying heats, before winning the A Final in convincing style.

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Webster, Budd and McCutcheon top MX Open

The 2021 running of the AMX MX Open has been a resounding success, with the two days of racing crowning Kyle Webster, Rhys Budd and Taylah McCutcheon in their respective classes, with plans already underway for an even bigger 2022 event.

Kyle Webster

 Chris Townsend – Dandenong Motorcycle Club President

“Yarrive and his crew did a fantastic job promoting the event and our club, committee, canteen personal, track crew worked selflessly to make it a great event for the riders and fans. We think we can improve the experience for everyone next year and we will start planning early in the new year.”

Factory Honda’s Kyle Webster dominated the MX1 class winning all three races and qualifying first. CDR Yamaha’s Monster Energy newly signed Aaron Tanti took second and Factory Honda’s Brett Metcalfe finished third.

Kyle Webster topped the MX1 from Tanti and Metcalfe

Webster was confident going into the weekend but didn’t know what to expect as this was his first hit out in 450 class against his rivals.

Kyle Webster – P1

“Wow, what a weekend, the 2022 CRF450R is amazing, seriously amazing. I didn’t expect this. We got some new SHOWA suspension a week ago and bolted it in and it was great. The whole team lifted this last week, and everyone was excited to go racing. This is what our sport and team needed, it was great to be racing again.”

Kyle Webster

Brett Metcalfe – P3

“I am glad I came over to race, I still feel competitive, and I love racing. I haven’t decided what I am doing next year but I want to race and hopefully I can make that happen.”

Brett Metcalfe

Yamaha proved to strong in the MX2 class. Yamaha lube Yamaha Racing’s Rhys Budd raced away with two race wins and a second to take the overall ahead of Factory Kawasaki’s Empire rider Jai Constantinou. Newly signed Honda Genuine RIDE RED rider Liam Andrews finished third.

Rhys Budd
Rhys Budd wins the overall Jai Constantinou, Liam Andrews

Rhys Budd

“I am glad I made the trek from New South Wales. It was a great event and it was good to go racing again.”

Rhys Budd

The Bass Coast Shire Women’s Open show cased some of Australia’s best talent and young Queenslander Taylah McCutcheon proved to strong for her competitors. Taylah swept all five races. Honda’s Maddy Brown and Maddy Healy were second and third respectively.

Taylah McCutcheon
Taylah McCutcheon won from Maddy Brown and Maddy Healy

Taylah McCutcheon

“I am really happy with the way I rode, and the other girls did great as well. This track is hard so I am glad we made the drive down from Queensland to compete as we will be racing here next year. It was a great weekend, and I am looking forward to seeing Philip Island over the next two days. It really is confidence inspiring being given the same recognition and prize money as the men. All of the girls train hard and to be rewarded with the same prize money was appreciated.”

Taylah McCutcheon

AMX and the Bass Coast Shire moved fast to ensure the event ran, with 4 weeks’ notice the promoter, organisers, club, sponsors, and Bass Coast Shire came together to make the event happen and event promoter and coordinator Yarrive Konsky was proud of everyone’s efforts.

Yarrive Konsky

“We had 264 entries, the factory teams turned up to support the event, sponsors came together, and the Bass Coast Shire were amazing to deal with. Riders came from all over Australia and fans flocked to the track to witness some amazing battles. This event had dual purposes. We needed to stimulate competition again following some trying times in Australia and we wanted people to get out and about to socialise with their peers, friends, and rivals. Racing is a community of people with the same interests, so it was terrific to see everyone out and enjoying what they love.”

AMX Open MX1 Results

Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 Kyle Webster 75 25 25 25
2 Aaron Tanti 64 22 22 20
3 Brett Metcalfe 58 20 20 18
4 Luke Clout 49 11 16 22
5 Dean Ferris 49 18 15 16
6 Connor Tierney 44 15 14 15
7 George Knight 40 13 13 14
8 Bryce Ognenis 39 14 12 13
9 Rory McKercher 35 12 11 12
10 Hayden Mellross 34 16 18
11 Shane Mason 31 10 10 11

AMX Open MX2 Results

TBA

AMX Open Women’s Results

Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3 R4 R5
1 Taylah McCutcheon 125 25 25 25 25 25
2 Madison Brown 104 20 20 20 22 22
3 Madison Healey 102 18 22 22 20 20
4 Ebony Harris 88 16 18 18 18 18
5 Charlotte Berrill 78 15 15 16 16 16
6 Taylor Thompson 53 22 16 15

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Lawrence brothers feature in Team Honda HRC 2022 AMA line-up

American Honda have revealed their 2022 Team Honda HRC roster – comprising Ken Roczen, Chase Sexton, Aussie brothers Hunter Lawrence and Jett Lawrence – as well as team management and crew.

Team Honda HRC’s 2022 line-up: Ken Roczen, Chase Sexton, Hunter Lawrence, Jett Lawrence, Lars Lindstrom – Team Manager, Shane Drew – 450 Crew Chief, Grant Hutcheson – 250 Crew Chief, Brandon Zimmerman as Sexton’s new mechanic.

The veteran of the team, Roczen enters his sixth year as a Honda rider, and he’s coming off his most successful season with the brand – second in AMA Supercross and third in AMA Pro Motocross. The German, who has a 250 MXGP crown and two AMA Pro Motocross Championships to his name, is paired with fellow CRF450R rider Chase Sexton, the Illinois native who joined Honda’s factory team midway through 2020. A two-time AMA Supercross 250SX East Region Champion, Sexton scored three indoor podium finishes in 2021 (his freshman year as an AMA Supercross premier-class rider), six in AMA Pro Motocross.

Australian brothers Hunter and Jett Lawrence are embarking on their second season with Team Honda HRC, and both are armed with the all-new CRF250R.

Hunter Lawrence – Team Honda HRC 2022

Last season saw Hunter win one AMA Supercross 250SX West round and finish second in points, while Jett topped three East Region races and was third in the final standings.

In AMA Pro Motocross, Jett took home the title, with Hunter finishing third, making the Lawrences the only siblings in the series’ history to both finish in the top three in the same year. This season, the Lawrences will trade AMA Supercross Regions, with Jett campaigning West and Hunter East.

Jett Lawrence – Team Honda HRC 2022

While the rider roster is the same as 2021, Team Honda HRC has undergone several personnel changes. As previously announced, Lars Lindstrom takes over as Team Manager. Shane Drew fills Lindstrom’s old position as 450 Crew Chief (while retaining his previous duties in Chassis R&D), and Grant Hutcheson has been brought in as 250 Crew Chief. In addition, Sexton has a new mechanic in Brandon Zimmerman.

The 17-round 2022 AMA Supercross season commences on January 8 in Anaheim, California.

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ShopYamaha Off Road Racing introduce four-rider line-up

Josh Green, Michael Driscoll, Kyron Bacon and Blake Hollis will form the ShopYamaha Off Road Racing team for 2022, showcasing Yamaha’s dedication to off-road racing in Australia and their high performance products.

2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing - Josh Green
2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing – Josh Green

The four-rider team will again be under the guidance of former AORC champ, AJ Roberts, and have two Yamaha trucks on site at each of the Australian Off-Road Championships, The Australian Four Day Enduro as well as Hattah.

AJ Roberts

“Yamaha will continue to have a huge presence in off-road racing for 2022 and our consistent investment is another form of Yamaha’s passion not just for racing but also product development and the Australian market. From contesting these events, we constantly give feedback to Japan and as a result, the quality of the production bike improves. The WR250F and WR450F are better than they have ever been, and racing plays a huge part of that. Having a four-rider team will make it an extremely busy year but that’s what we love doing. I feel we have great opportunities with our riders in both E1 and E2 as all four are determined to have a successful season. We are also looking forward to getting a normal season back under way. The last two years have been tough with limited national events but for 2022 we are looking at a full calendar with AORC, A4DE and Hattah and I know everyone can’t wait to get stuck into it and get back to racing.”

2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing - Blake Hollis
2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing – Blake Hollis

Green and Driscoll will spearhead the charge in the E2 (450cc) category for 2022. Green, the veteran of over 10 years of professional off-road racing, shows no signs of slowing down and his passion for racing is as strong as ever.

2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing - Michael Driscoll
2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing – Michael Driscoll

Michael Driscoll continues to improve and now sees himself as a legitimate outright contender at every round. He now has the strength and experience to muscle the powerful 450cc machine around and is set on a successful 2022 season where he breaks through for major success.

In the E1 (250cc) division, the Yamaha flag will be in the hands of Kyron Bacon and Blake Hollis. Bacon, based in Tasmania, has been the man turning heads as he impresses at every outing. With an aggressive riding style and bulldog determination, Bacon will be a leading contender in the E1 championship in 2022.

2022 ShopYamaha Off Road Racing – Kyron Bacon

Blake Hollis makes the step up from EJ and ready to make his mark in professional racing. Hollis moved to Queensland during 2021 to be closer to the team base and work on his riding. He went back to his motocross roots recently to pick up his intensity and now has his sights set on 2022.

Tara-Lea Albury – Yamaha’s Parts and Accessories Division

“Yamaha continue to expand our on-line presence and our association with the Yamaha’s off-road team gives us a direct line to our customer base. We saw in increase in traffic in 2021 through ShopYamaha and that tied in well with our first year with the team. ShopYamaha is now a one stop online retail space that allows you to view thousands of accessories and Yamalube products for your Yamaha and it will continue to grow as we invest more in the future. We look forward to another strong season with AJ and his team with some fun promotions and activations to be rolled out during the year.”


Motorcycling Australia Women’s Committee Receive FIM Trophy

Motorcycling Australia Women’s Committee has been recognised internationally after winning the FIM Women in Motorcycling Trophy during the recent FIM Awards in Monte Carlo, Monaco.

Jemma Wilson
Jemma Wilson is part of the MA Women’s Committee

With its Women in Motorcycling Trophy, the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) recognises and acknowledges those who have significantly:

  • Contributed to improving and developing the presence of women in all motorcycling-related areas.
  • Encouraged greater awareness of women in motorcycling.

This award recognises the hard working effort of women in motorcycle sport around the world throughout the 115 national federation of the FIM. The FIM Women in Motorcycling Award nominees highlight the many projects occurring worldwide to grow women’s participation in the sport.

The MA Women’s Committee award winning projects completed in 2021 included –

  • Development Club Guideline
  • Mentoring Program
  • International Women’s Day Moto Festival Event Plan
  • Ladies Garage Nights Event Plan
  • Women In Motorcycling TV
  • Women In Motorcycling Website

Alana Baratto – MA Women’s Committee Chairperson

“I accept this award on behalf of the Australian Women’s Committee who are terribly disappointed not to be able to travel to accept the award in person. We take this opportunity to thank the FIM and FIM Oceania for their support, we are proud of the initiatives created throughout COVID period. Our hope is that these initiatives are widely adopted nationally and even worldwide, and to see more women experience and enjoy our great sport.”

Alana Baratto

The MA Women’s Committee consists of Alana Baratto (Chairperson), Rikki Dryden, Jemma Wilson, Caity Hynes and Kate Peck.

MA Women’s Committee will have a strong focus in 2022 on projects to increase the number of women participating in road racing and to inspire women volunteers in the sport.

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2022 FIM ISDE set for Le Puy en Velay in France

The 96th edition of the FIM International Six Days of Enduro (ISDE) will take place at Puy en Velay – France, the capital of the Haute-Loire department in the heart of the Auvergne region – Rhône–Alpes, from Monday 29 August to Saturday 3 September 2022.

The Organising Committee (COISDE–2022) is made up of three motorcycle clubs specialising in the discipline, the Moto Club du Puy en Velay, the Moto Club de Saugues and the Moto Club Moto Verte Haute Lozère, which will benefit from the full support of the FFM and the Regional stakeholders.

Rider's setting of for the final Cross Test of the 2021 ISDE
The ISDE heads to France for 2022

The COISDE–2022 has been working for more than six months on the creation of the course by being focused on two main points: to propose a course as the riders like them, varied with breath–taking landscapes and a certain technical level specific to the DNA of the ISDE.

The route will be organised around three completely different loops each of around two hundred kilometres, which will take the competitors on a journey to the heart of the region and beyond, with no less than thirteen different special tests and five timed tests per day, five service time checks per day, including two double ones, so only three separate spots in order to limit the logistics for the teams:

  • Days 1 & 2 – Loop 1: Haute Loire – Haut Allier – Gévaudan.
  • Days 3 & 4 – Loop 2: Haute Loire – Lozère – Langogne.
  • Day 5 – Loop 3: Haute Loire – Puy en Velay – Emblavez.
  • Day 6 – Final Cross Test: Haute Loire – Puy en Velay, in the immediate vicinity of the Paddock.

Always with the aim to reduce costs for all the teams, pro and amateur alike, the FIM wanted to reduce the length of stay by one day by eliminating the day between the last day of checks and the first day of racing. So, the timing of the event will be as follows:

  • Tuesday 23 August: Opening of the Paddock.
  • Friday 16 August to Sunday 28 August late morning: Administrative and technical controls.
  • Saturday 27 August – Evening: Opening ceremony at Puy en Velay, ten kilometres from the paddock.
  • From Monday 29 August to Saturday 3 September: The race.
  • Sunday 4 September: Closure of the Paddock.

The pre-registrations opening is scheduled for January 2022.

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AFT announces 2022 Production Twins Challenge rules ahead of 2023 merger

Progressive American Flat Track have revealed the technical rules for the 2022 Mission Production Twins Challenge. These developments lay the groundwork for merging the Mission SuperTwins and AFT Production Twins classes in 2023.

Production Twins - Peoria TT
The Production Twins will see new rules to help merging with the SuperTwins in 2023 – Image by Scott Hunter

To combine the two existing twin-cylinder classes into a dynamic premier class in 2023, Progressive AFT has implemented a set of technical adjustments in Mission SuperTwins and AFT Production Twins for 2022 that will align the performance envelopes of production-based and race-only machines.

While the technical changes serve as the first step to a single twin-cylinder championship, the Mission Production Twins Challenge will act as a bridge between the classes in 2022. Following the AFT Production Twins Main at each event, the top four finishers will be granted provisional starting positions for the Mission SuperTwins Main Event on a dedicated Mission Production Twins Challenge row.

The inclusion of the top AFT Production Twins entries in the premier-class Main will allow for repeated head-to-head comparisons between the Mission SuperTwins contenders and the most competitive AFT Production Twins machines, providing critical data to guide the future evolution of the technical rules.

AFT Production Twins
AFT Production Twins – Image by Scott Hunter

Along with acting as an ongoing evaluation program, the Mission Production Twins Challenge will aid in the development efforts of AFT Production Twins teams by providing an opportunity to earn over $100,000 throughout the season. The top Mission Production Twins Challenge riders at each round will be eligible to earn $72,000 in potential Mission SuperTwins purse payouts plus $28,800 in race bonus awards from Mission Foods.

In addition, the top three riders in the Mission Production Twins Challenge point standings at the conclusion of the season will also be eligible for a $26,000 year-end points fund from Mission Foods. To qualify for the year-end bonus, Mission Production Twins Challenge riders must compete in every Mission SuperTwins Main Event for which they are eligible.

Progressive AFT will kick off the 2022 season with a Daytona Bike Week doubleheader on March 10-11 at Volusia Speedway Park.

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Carmichael designed 2022 Daytona Supercross course revealed

If Eli Tomac wants to stand alone as the all-time winner in DAYTONA Supercross, he will have to conquer the grueling and demanding course designed by the man he currently shares the Daytona record with – GOAT Ricky Carmichael.

Daytona International Speedway unveiled the course design for the 52nd annual DAYTONA Supercross on March 5, and for the 15th consecutive year, the unique and difficult course layout was created by Carmichael, the five-time Daytona Supercross champion. It will be the toughest of the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship season and the only AMA Supercross event in the state of Florida in 2022.

The Ricky Carmichael designed Daytona Supercross circuit
The Ricky Carmichael designed Daytona Supercross circuit for 2022

The Daytona Supercross at the World Center of Racing is the longest continuous Supercross race in America dating back to 1971 and will feature the best riders in the world. Tomac, who has won the last three (2019, ‘20, ‘21) and five out of the last six (2016, ‘17) Daytona Supercross events, will go for a record sixth victory that would take him out of a tie with Carmichael.

Carmichael’s signature design will sport tremendous obstacles – 57 in fact – on a 3,300-foot (.625 miles) layout that features a multitude of turns and vaulted jumps. The start gate will originate from pit road with the riders launching full throttle towards fans across from the NASCAR start/finish line to kick off the action before taking a hard left in a counter-clockwise direction. After that sweeping first turn, riders will have 400 feet and 13 obstacles to sort things out before entering the first, tight 180-degree turn.

Returning is the exciting “over-under bridge” with riders racing across the bridge while other riders battle for position beneath them. One item of change, however, is that it will be located closer to the tri-oval and fans in the stands. The beach sand section will be back and will cause havoc for the riders with two 150-foot-long legs attached to a 180-degree turn. And, of course, the high-rising finish line will be parallel with the NASCAR finish line.

Ricky Carmichael

“I can’t believe it’s been 15 years that I have been designing the Daytona Supercross track. Every year we try to make it better for both the fans and riders, and for 2022, I believe we did just that with some new twists. First off, I’m glad we were able to get the over-under bridge back because it opens up the options on the course. That and the split lane are what I am looking most forward to seeing along with the famous sand section that the fans always love to see! The Daytona Supercross in March is going to be the only one in my home State of Florida so I am very excited about that as well. It’s going to be a great track and I can’t wait to watch and see how it all unfolds this year!”

Also returning in 2022 will be the 12th annual Ricky Carmichael Amateur Supercross on Sunday, March 6 and Monday, March 7. Amateur supercross racers have an opportunity to test their skills on a slightly modified version of the same course used in the DAYTONA Supercross. Following the Ricky Carmichael Amateur Supercross will be the Daytona Vintage Supercross (DVSX) and ATV Supercross, both of which take place on Tuesday, March 8. For more information, visit https://racedaytona.com.

Daytona Supercross 2022 will be a part of 81st annual Bike Week, which will culminate with the March 12 Daytona 200 hosted by MotoAmerica.

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Ben Watson joins Febvre in Kawasaki Racing Team MXGP efforts in 2022

Kawasaki will bring in Ben Watson as the new teammate of Romain Febvre in 2022, joining the Frenchman in the Kawasaki Racing Team assault on the FIM MXGP Motocross World Championship.

Considered one of the most-promising British youngsters of recent years Ben Watson had a solid MXGP rookie season this summer, gaining in experience as the year went on in this highly-competitive class to culminate his season with the MXGP gold medal at the Motocross of Nations.

Ben eventually just missed the top-ten in the final MXGP series rankings by a couple of points but he finished top-ten at no less than ten rounds with a fifth overall as his best result at the Dutch round of the series.

Ben Watson
Ben Watson

The twenty-four-year-old native of Nottinghamshire, England, first appeared on the international stage when he contested the European series as a ten-year-old, winning his very first race in the 65cc class. He progressed through the classes and has impressed throughout his adult career, starting with a fifth place in EMX250 and victory at the world-famous Enduro du Touquet in the Junior class.

Ranked top five in the MX2 World Championship in both 2018 and 2020, he proved his ability on all surfaces in the closing stages of the latter season with GP victories on the vastly-different tracks of Lommel in Belgium and Pietramurata in Italy before switching to the premier MXGP class in 2021.

Ben now has a little over two months to prepare for the opening round of the 2022 World Championship which will start in his native UK on February 20th at Matterley Basin.

Ben Watson

“I’m really looking forward to this fresh start. I’ve been with another couple of brands almost all my life and Kawasaki is one I’ve never ridden before, so to have this fresh start with new colours is definitely something I need at this stage of my career. I’ve had some ups-and-downs during my MXGP rookie season this year but I think I proved on numerous occasions like the Nations and several other GPs that I have what it takes to race up front. I was just missing a few things but I’m joining a group of guys and a bike I really believe will help me. I’m really excited to put my leg over the KX450-SR. The plan is to get used to the bike before Christmas; to get a feeling for the handling, the power delivery and sort out a few small things like seat height, position of the bars and so on. I’m looking forward to working with Romain and all the team and I think this is exactly what I need as a package to make the next step. It’s going to be a tough couple of months leading up to the opening GP at Matterley in February but wow, what a start to my Kawasaki career at the home GP with all the British fans cheering me on!“

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Four-man Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team ready for AMA SX 2022

A solid four-rider Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team is set to enter the 2022 AMA Supercross Championship aboard the new KTM 450 SX-F Factory Edition and KTM 250 SX-F Factory Edition models.

The 2022 Red Bull KTM Factory Racing Team

Cooper Webb, Marvin Musquin and Aaron Plessinger will officially debut the all-new KTM 450 SX-F Factory Edition at the Anaheim SX opener on January 8, 2022, while Max Vohland is set to race the KTM 250 SX-F Factory Edition in the 250SX class.

Webb, the reigning 450SX Champion, will proudly display the #1 plate aboard his new bike as he sets out to defend his title for the second time.

Cooper Webb

“I’m really excited for the upcoming series. It’ll be great defending the number one plate again, we worked hard last year to get the championship. We have a brand new bike this year and that is great. We’ve also been having fun with the new team dynamic and having Aaron [Plessinger] on the team. I’ve been teammates with him before, so it’s been great to reunite and have a three-man team on the 450, with Max on the 250. I’m looking forward to it.”

Cooper Webb

Returning for his 12th season with Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, Musquin will be among Webb’s toughest competitors as the French rider looks to earn a title of his own with a supercross-only focus in 2022.

Marvin Musquin

“It’s always exciting to go for a new season, especially this year with a new bike. It is something that I was looking forward to – we have made progress and we’re still learning to be even better, so it’s super exciting. We are going into my 12th year with Red Bull KTM here in America. It’s very special and I’m always super honored to be a part of the Red Bull KTM family and to go for one more year and achieve great things. It’s going to be a very strong team for this new season!”

Marvin Musquin

Joining Webb and Musquin on-track for the first time is Red Bull KTM newcomer, Aaron Plessinger, aboard the #7 machine. Like his teammates, Plessinger has been hard at work in his pre-season training in high anticipation for his debut with the team at Anaheim.

Aaron Plessinger

“It’s an amazing accomplishment for me to have joined the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team. My dad used to race for KTM in GNCC, and won a couple championships, so it’s pretty special for me to get to be a part of this team. My goal is to get as many race-wins as I can and try to win these guys some more championships. My time is due and I feel like this year is going to be a really good year with two great teammates – Cooper and Marvin – I think we can really do some damage out there. The new bike is awesome. I love this thing. It’s so nimble and light, I can put it where I want it and the suspension works great on it. I think it’s going to be a really good year and I’m looking forward to it.”

Aaron Plessinger

Maximus Vohland continues with the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team for his second season in the 250SX division. The 18-year-old missed the majority of his rookie Supercross season due to an injury sustained early on, but he came back strong for the AMA Pro Motocross Championship with a top-10 result in the 250 category.

Max Vohland

“It’s been a really great off-season and I’m looking forward to 2022 with the new teammates and the new bike. It feels fresh and I’m looking forward to it. The new FACTORY EDITION has been awesome, the whole package has been great from suspension to chassis and motor-wise – we’re making steps forward every day. I only have three SX races under my belt, so I have a little bit of experience, but I think this extra time I’ve had on the bike during the off-season has really helped and I feel like a completely different rider than last year, I feel way ahead of where I was last year for this new season coming up.”

Max Vohland

Ian Harrison added his thought about the line-up for season 2022.

Ian Harrison – Red Bull KTM Factory Racing Team Manager

“The team has expanded this year with three 450 guys and Max on for his second year as a 250 rider, plus we have new bikes across the board. We’re excited about that. There’s been a lot of work and testing hours being put into the bikes here and in Austria, and we’ve made good progress with it on both sides. We’re looking forward to going racing in early January. We’ve got a good platform and the guys are happy to start the season. The team dynamic is great right now. I think Aaron brings that real ‘loving-life’ style to the team, which is good. Cooper is looking happy with his new bike, he’s making good progress and I’m excited to see what he can do. I think Marvin is going to surprise us all. He’s had a good off-season and he did really well when he went to Europe to race the SX, so I think he’s going to be really good. With Max, we’re looking forward to seeing what he can do on the new bike with a clean bill of health this season. We’re excited to get things rolling here in a month.”

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Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team reveal AMA SX/MX riders

With the opening round of the AMA Supercross Championship just around the corner, the Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team announced its rider lineup for the 2022 race season, which includes returning riders Dean Wilson, RJ Hampshire, Jalek Swoll and Stilez Robertson – along with newcomer Malcolm Stewart – all piloting the new FC Rockstar Editions.

Since the exciting announcement over the summer, fans across the globe have anticipated Malcolm Stewart’s debut aboard the FC 450 Rockstar Edition and the time is finally upon us. Coming off a successful supercross season in 2021, Stewart has proven himself as a contender in the premier 450 class with a podium finish and four top-five finishes last season.

Malcolm Stewart

“I feel really good. We’ve been doing a lot of training and we’ve got the bike really dialed in, so we’re looking forward to going into A1 and the 2022 season. It’s going to be a good year for me. I know I ended really good last year for the last couple rounds but now obviously we’re on a new team and feeling better, I like the whole vibe here. All we can do is go out there, have fun and do what we can do!”

Malcolm Stewart

Wilson, who first came to Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing in 2017, will enter his sixth season with the team in 2022. Battling through an ongoing illness in 2021, Wilson missed quite a few races but he still managed to stay consistent and finish just outside the top-10 in the AMA Supercross Championship and he looks to build upon that foundation as he heads into 2022 healthy and ready to go.

Dean Wilson

“I’m really excited for the new season. I have another great opportunity with the team and I’m feeling really good. I’m looking for some good finishes, everything is kind of falling into place so it should be good.”

Dean Wilson

The Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team boasts a lineup of seasoned 250 cc riders aboard the new generation FC 250 Rockstar Edition for 2022 too. At the helm for his third year with the team is multi-time race winner, RJ Hampshire. With an endless amount of speed and determination, Hampshire is a fierce competitor on the race track and he looks to refine his skills this season and finally land on top of the box with a number one plate.

RJ Hampshire

“I’m feeling good heading into the new season. We’ve had a good off-season so far and the bike is awesome, so we have a lot of things to look forward to. We’re starting fresh and just excited to be with the team for another year and build on what we’ve started the last couple years.”

RJ Hampshire

Jalek Swoll, who began his professional supercross career with Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing in 2020, now enters his third season in the class. The 21-year-old had a break-out season in 2021, claiming a strong second-place at Arlington SX before rounding out the series with a top-five overall in the championship standings. He also showed flashes of brilliance outdoors, securing his first-career overall win with 1-3 moto finishes at the High Point National. For 2022, Swoll will line up in the 250SX Western division where he looks forward to a new set of challenges on the west coast.

Jalek Swoll

“I’m excited to race, going to be on a different coast than usual so that will be a different and fun learning experience. I’m looking forward to that. I think we’re in for a pretty good year. I’m just going to do what I did last year and have fun all the way through and let the results come to me.”

Jalek Swoll

With one full year of professional racing under his belt, Stilez Robertson will return for his sophomore season with the team. Despite an up-and-down rookie season due to injury and illness, the 19-year-old came away with a few highlights in 2021, including an impressive second-place finish at Daytona SX.

He missed three of the last five rounds but still managed a respectable 13th overall in the standings. Hoping for a strong push outdoors, Robertson got off to a decent start but illness prevented him from finishing out the season. Fully recovered heading into 2022, Robertson is confident that he will stack up when the gate drops in January.

Stilez Robertson

“It was a tough off-season with the sickness but I got over it and I’m really looking forward to going racing. I’ve been putting in the work and now I’m ready to go and show everybody what we’ve been working for. I’m excited to have a good season, be up front and try to put together some good results in both supercross and outdoors.”

Stilez Robertson

Stephen Westfall – Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team Manager

“I feel really good heading into the 2022 season. The team is solid and we have an all-new bike for both the 450 and 250. We have a really solid base and I think we will continue to get better throughout the year. The team is working hard, we’ve got a good group down in Florida all training together and pushing each and every day. We’ll continue to improve and we’re looking forward to the results this year.”

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Tomac joins Ferrandis at Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing for 2022

Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis and Eli Tomac are ready for thestart of the 2022 Monster Energy AMA Supercross season having been hard at work at their new facility in Cairo, Georgia, looking to build on this year’s successful premier class debut.

Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis and Eli Tomac

Ferrandis is fresh off a stellar rookie year on the YZ450F, securing his first premier class title at the penultimate Pro Motocross round in Pala, California. The Frenchman also enjoyed a great start to his 450SX debut earlier in the year, scoring his first podium at the second Supercross round in Houston, Texas. He looks to keep that momentum rolling into the New Year and fight for another number-one plate.

Dylan Ferrandis – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

“Our off-season has been going great. We have been working really hard on and off the bike. We still have one month left to prepare for the 2022 Supercross season, but I’m pretty excited for my second season on the 450 and can’t wait for A1!”

Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis

In addition to Ferrandis securing the title a weekend early, Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. earned Manufacturer of the Year honors, and the Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing Team was named Team of the Year. The series also awarded Jeremy Coker Team Manager of the Year and the 450 Mechanic of the Year went to Ferrandis’ mechanic, Alex Campbell.

Jeremy Coker – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing 450 Team Manager

“This off-season has been one that I will never forget. We moved the team across the country and have a new addition with Eli, so it’s been a lot of long hours to prepare for the season, but it’s very exciting. Dylan and Eli have been working very hard and look amazing. Hard work pays off, and we saw that last year. I think 2022 looks to be even better!”

Joining the team for 2022, Tomac is eager for that first gate drop aboard the Yamaha YF450F at the series opener at the Angel Stadium of Anaheim. The Coloradan is a proven title contender, adding the 2020 Monster Energy AMA Supercross 450SX Championship to his resume after his impressive three-peat (2017-2019) in the Pro Motocross 450MX Championship. He is also the winningest rider currently active in the premier class and aims to reclaim the throne in 2022.

Eli Tomac – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

“December riding at the Star Racing facility in Florida alongside my teammates has been great preparation. We’ve all been pushing for the next level and are ready to go for the 2022 Supercross season!”

Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing’s Eli Tomac

The Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing team also heads into 2022 looking to reign supreme in the 250 class divisional championships, with a six-rider line-up boasting a blend of youth and experience with the reigning 250SX West Champion Justin Cooper, 250SX East Champion Colt Nichols, two-time 250MX Champion Jeremy Martin, Christian Craig and two of the sports up-and-coming riders – Nate Thrasher and Levi Kitchen. Jensen Hendler comes on board as the team manager for the 250 team.

The Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing team’s 250 line-up

Jensen Hendler – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing 250 Team Manager

“We are very excited to get the season kicked off, as our riders are looking very good and ready to compete for the championship on both coasts. We have put a lot of work into our championship-winning program to make sure our riders and staff are ready to win!”

Cooper enters his fifth year with the team and is coming off an impressive 2021 season. After taking the 250SX West crown in Supercross, the New Yorker backed it up with a great outdoor season. He came just shy of the title in the end, but lead the way in qualifying, holeshots and scored seven moto wins and never missed the overall podium. Cooper now has his eyes set on 2022 and adding more number-one plates to his resume.

Justin Cooper – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

“I’m very excited for the 2022 season. I’ve been working really hard with the team to be my best self come race time. We’ve made the transition to Florida this year so it is nice to get on some new dirt and see where we can be better.”

Justin Cooper – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

Nichols also heads into the new year with a number-one plate. The Oklahoman took the title in the Eastern regional division to make it a Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing sweep in the 250 class, becoming the first team to do so in nearly a decade. Unfortunately, an injury sidelined him with five rounds remaining in the Pro Motocross season, but Nichols is ready to return to action for year six with the team and make another championship run.

Colt Nichols – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

“I’m excited for the season to get underway. It’s been a very productive off-season so far, and I’ve been trying to work on my weaknesses to be a better rider and translate that into the weekends. I’m looking forward to getting the ‘22 season going!”

Colt Nichols – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

Last year, Martin returned to the team where he won his back-to-back Pro Motocross 250MX titles (2014-2015). Although injuries sidelined him for the supercross season and a few rounds of motocross, the Minnesotan showed a lot of grit and determination. Despite not being 100%, he scored six moto wins and three overall 250MX victories. With some time to return to full fitness, Martin is eager to lineup on the gate in 2022 and fight for the championship.

Craig kicked off his debut season with the team with a bang, winning the 2021 250SX East season opener in Houston. He battled for top honors with his teammate all season until a crash at the penultimate round ended his title hopes prematurely. The Californian moved over to the 450 team for the outdoor season, where he enjoyed some solid results to end the year sixth. He now shifts gears back to the Yamaha YZ250F to try and claim the coveted 250SX crown, and will return to the premier class for the 2022 Pro Motocross season.

Thrasher turned a lot of heads during his first full season in the pro ranks, taking two 250SX wins at a very physically demanding track at the Atlanta Motor Speedway tripleheader, and ended the season seventh in the points standings. Unfortunately, he too was sidelined during the outdoor season, but the young Tennessee rider is ready to return and looks to build on his impressive rookie year.

Kitchen capped off his amateur career with a pair of titles at the 2021 AMA Amateur National Motocross Championship at Loretta Lynn’s and was named the Nicky Hayden AMA Motocross Horizon Award Winner. He made his pro debut at the Pro Motocross RedBud National and showed speed straight away, scoring some solid results inside the top 10. The Washington State native is now eager to start his first full season in the pro ranks and to make his debut in the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.

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Gabriel Marcelli joins Toni Bou with Repsol Honda Trial Team for 2022

Repsol Honda Team presents new faces for the forthcoming season: Toni Bou will have Gabriel Marcelli as team-mate while Takahisa Fujinami takes over as Team Manager to battle for the TrialGP and X-Trial World Championships.

Gabriel Marcelli joins Toni Bou with Repsol Honda Trial Team for 2022
Repsol Honda Team 2022: Gabriel Marcelli, Toni Bou and Team Manager Takahisa Fujinami

Toni Bou, who has reigned for fifteen years, needs little introduction: the most successful ever sportsman, the trial legend and the point of reference for everyone, will go all out to defend his number one status that has remained intact for a decade-and-a-half. Bou will start as both the firm favourite and the man to beat in his sixteenth season with the Repsol Honda Team.

Toni Bou

“This forthcoming season will be very interesting for all of us. As always, our objectives are the titles and we are continuously preparing for it, as our rivals always want to take the world championship number one position away from us. We will continue the line of work that we have been taking over these years. I would like to welcome Gabriel Marcelli to the team. He is a very good rider and he rode some great trials this year. I’m sure that he will do really well and it will be good for the team. I also wish to congratulate Takahisa Fujinami as the new Team Manager. I’m sure his racing experience will be positive for us.”

Toni Bou
Toni Bou returns in 2022

And alongside Toni Bou, young Galician rider Gabriel Marcelli (04/02/2000) will make his debut in the team this year. The rider joins the team after a successful Trial2 career where he was proclaimed world champion in 2019, followed by two solid seasons in TrialGP.

Gabriel Marcelli

“I am more than happy to join the best trial team in the world. First of all I want to thank all my sponsors who have supported me over the years, especially this last season. From now on maybe there will be more pressure. The fact of joining the Repsol Honda Team gives you more responsibilities, you are in the eyes of everyone… being Toni’s team-mate, having such a good team, I think it will bring many great moments and I hope it will be a relationship that lasts for many years. I take over from Takahisa Fujinami, who has set the bar very high all these years. I will try to do my best and show that I am up to it and I trust in the work to get to the top and hopefully be at the top with Toni Bou.”

Repsol Honda Team have also reshuffled part of its staff with the incorporation of former rider Takahisa Fujinami as the new team manager. After 26 active seasons in the trial world championship, Fujinami will take up a new role within a structure he knows so well. His competitive experience will be a key factor in this new challenge for the 2004 Trial World Champion.

Takahisa Fujinami – Team Manager

“For me it is a great honour to be able to defend, from this point on, the colours of the Repsol Honda Trial Team as Team Manager. It is a great challenge for me, no doubt whatsoever. The team has achieved great success and my intention will be to continue this long streak of titles and to collaborate in making the brand even bigger. In 2022 we are adding a new rider to the team: Gabriel Marcelli. He is a young rider with a promising future. In 2020 he achieved his first podium and in 2021 he finished the season clearly on the rise. With his entry into the Repsol Honda Team we are sure that he will make a great leap forward in his career. He will be the team-mate of our great champion Toni Bou. Toni has won 30 world championship titles and … what else can you say about someone who has achieved so much? As always, he will be looking to win the TrialGP and X-Trial world championships once again next season, and the whole team will be working to make it possible for another year!”

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Four-rider Monster Energy Honda Rally Team for 2022

The Official Honda HRC Cross-Country Rally Team has broken cover and the Monster Energy Honda Team is all set to face the new challenges ahead, the toughest of which will be the 2022 Dakar Rally kicking off the new year.

2022 Monster Energy Honda Rally Team

The current Dakar Rally championship-winning team were in attendance for the gala presentation of the official Honda HRC teams for the new 2022 season. The revamped Monster Energy Honda Team will be aiming to replicate last season’s win in the world’s toughest race, the Dakar Rally.

Indeed, if anything is tougher than conquering such a mighty goal, it is repeating it. And after last year’s Dakar, it has become abundantly clear that Monster Energy Honda Team are determined to pull off the triumph as many times as they possibly can. For this very reason the team will line up a mix of both youth and experience, making a formidable squad with a high chance of achieving their aim.

2022 Monster Energy Honda Rally Team

In the 2021 Dakar, Monster Energy Honda Team proved themselves to be a resilient outfit, not only winning stages and leading much of the race, but having several riders constantly vying for the top spot.

Ricky Brabec, American, champion in 2020 and runner-up in 2021, will adorn the #2 plate on his Honda CRF450 RALLY. With four stage wins last year, going from strength to strength throughout the campaign and in the final fray for the overall victory… who could ask for anything more?

Ricky Brabec

“2021 has been a lot of training so far. Unfortunately we are still in the Covid crisis, so not much racing going on. I don’t mind training more than racing. It’s always good to race and stay competitive, but also doing a lot of training is also good. I can train really close to my house so it makes it super easy and super beneficial to train for Dakar 2022. We were very close to achieving another win in 2021. Unfortunately two major setbacks haunted us the whole rally in doing so. Like we said – we know how to train and know exactly where to start off, just learning from 2019 to 2020 to 2021. This year, in preparation for 2022, we know where to start training and we know how to progressively train. I’m looking forward to seeing how it has helped us. Obviously, the main goal is the Dakar for any Honda rider. We have four really good, strong, confident riders. Unfortunately I want to win, but so do the other three. If one Honda wins, or two, or three, or, just one gets on the podium -it’s a team effort and a team win. So as a whole, that’s our main goal, to win the Dakar again.”

Ricky Brabec

José Ignacio ‘Nacho’ Cornejo, the young 27-year-old Chilean promise will return to Saudi Arabia hoping to improve on last year’s bittersweet edition, although nobody will be able to take away his stage win or the fact that he led the race for three whole days.

José Ignacio Cornejo

“The real pressure was when I was a privateer. I had to try to make it to be a professional. I didn’t have the resources. I’m having fun. I’m living the dream. Racing professionally for HRC. Fighting to win the Dakar Rally – the most important rally in the world. I just don’t feel the pressure. The Atacama was really good training for what was coming. Good conditions and good routes. I had a lot of fun. The pandemic? We thought that we would have more races, but some of them were cancelled or postponed, so it’s still not a normal year. It was better than last year. I’ve been able to do some testing and some normal training and some races with the team. Last year we just did one before the Dakar. It was better than last year for sure.”

José Ignacio Cornejo

Joan Barreda is currently the active rider with the highest number of stage wins in the motorcycle category. The #88 never-say-die needs little introduction. But who would dare to rule out Bang Bang from the list of contenders for the overall victory?

Joan Barreda

“I tried to do a good job throughout the whole season. We started the year with the Andalucian Rally and we did a good job. We were also racing close to my house in Baja, Spain. It was a great rally and I showed some good speed. It was good training to do all that work. This year we worked a lot especially on the second week of the Dakar. It’s a long race – different from the other rallies. I think we work well. We are trying to be in good physical and mental condition. We are trying to take care of all the small details. With all this together, with a really good bike and a great team, we are sure we can do a good job.”

Joan Barreda

Pablo Quintanilla is the latest addition to the Monster Energy Honda Team! Welcome aboard! The rider has already been on the final Dakar podium on no less than two occasions and also holds two world championship titles. The latest signing to the squad will be more visible than ever this year.

Pablo Quintanilla

“I feel really happy and excited to be part of the team. For me it is an honor to be part of the team that already won the Dakar in the last edition. For me it’s something that I have been searching for all these years. The atmosphere in the team is really nice. The relationship between the riders, the mechanics and all the people who work here is really nice. It is an honor to be part of the team. I think that all the riders want to win the Dakar. We come every year with the ambition to win the race. For me it’s a special feeling. I’ve already finished second and third in the race. For sure I want to win. But the important thing is to improve my skills and pace to have the chance to be able to win. For me it is important to have a big team behind you. Some things you can prepare for yourself before the race, but the other thing is that you have the correct team, with the correct people and the right bike to make it happen. I want to win. I will prepare for the victory. I will do my best as always. I will give it 100% every day and every stage. I hope and I wish this dream comes true.”

Pablo Quintanilla

The 2022 Dakar Rally will start on January 1 in Ha’il, Saudi Arabia, and, after 12 stages and a rest day, will end in Jeddah on January 14. The Dakar 2022 will also be the first round of the new Cross-Country Rallies World Championship.

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Yamaha reveals 2022 EMX125 & EMX250 line-ups

Yamaha Motor Europe have revealed that EMX250 bronze medalist Rick Elzinga will join fellow EMX250 title challengers Andrea Bonacorsi and Dave Kooiker at the Hutten Metaal Yamaha Official EMX250 team for the 2022 EMX250 European Championship campaign. Meanwhile, the MJC Yamaha Official EMX125 team has retained its current crop of young stars, Ivano van Erp, Karlis Reisulis and Ferruccio Zanchi, for the 2022 EMX125 season.

Rick Elzinga joins Yamaha in 2022

Thorsten Lentink – Yamaha Motor Europe MX Racing Coordinator

“We are already looking forward to the 2022 European Motocross Championship after securing a strong 2022 line up for both of our Official EMX250 and EMX125 teams. In EMX250, after an incredible rookie season with Andrea Bonacorsi finishing fourth in the EMX250 Championship, we are excited to keep Andrea onboard for another season where we hope to regularly challenge the podium. In addition, we have also retained Dave Kooiker. He has just turned 16 and is a young talent on the rise, he started the year strong and solid but ended up facing some struggles later in the season, he has shown that he is a fighter and will keep pushing forward. And finally, we are super happy to re-sign Rick Elzinga. Rick is a rider who we started a relationship with inside the MJC Yamaha Official EMX125 team a few years ago, and despite a couple of challenging seasons that were spoiled by injury, he bounced back strong in 2021 and has proven that he is a title challenger in the EMX250 class. Rick is a true talent and a real asset to the Hutten Metaal Yamaha Official EMX250 team, especially as he comes from the same area as the title sponsor, Hutten Metaal. We are really looking forward to working with these three riders and helping them reach their full potential. In the 125cc category, I am very happy that we can continue in 2022 with the exact same team. We have made a big step forward, and we have proven that we can fight for race and round wins. This year, we landed on the podium with all three of the MJC Yamaha riders, Ivano van Erp, Karlis Reisulis and Ferruccio Zanchi, and many times we had the fastest lap times. We are definitely podium contenders and very competitive, so I look forward to continuing in this direction with all three riders and the GYTR kitted YZ125.”

Spearheading the effort in the MX2 feeder class, EMX250, Elzinga makes his return to the Yamaha Family after a two-year hiatus. The Dutchman demonstrated his capabilities in the 2021 EMX250 Championship with an emphatic overall victory at his home round, the first of his career. The 19-year-old went on to score another three podiums, before securing the EMX250 bronze medal with a third-place finish at the final round in Mantova, Italy.

After winning the EMX125 Championship in 2020, Bonacorsi moved up to the highly competitive EMX250 class in 2021, joining the Hutten Metaal Yamaha Official EMX250 team. Raising the bar for the next crop of up-and-coming talents, the 18-year-old Italian completed his first full term in the 250cc category in fourth overall after proving his true potential with a pair of back-to-back race wins at two of the three rounds in Pietramurata, Italy. The rookie sensation also raced his GYTR kitted YZ250F to the podium on three further occasions and will look to add to that tally to mount a title challenge next year.

Remaining with the Hutten Metaal set-up for a third full-season, 16-year-old Kooiker hopes to line up fit and strong in 2022, eager to inch closer to the front runners.

Wim Hutten – Hutten Metaal Yamaha Official EMX250 Team Owner

“I am happy and proud to run Yamaha’s Official EMX250 Team for a third year in a row. For this upcoming season, we add Rick Elzinga to the team, which is exciting because we are a Dutch-based team and he is a Dutch rider, and is also close to the Hutten Metaal area. It is also nice to keep Andrea, after an excellent rookie season, and Dave who will continue with us for another year as well. We see a lot of potential in this line-up, and our team will do all we can to give them the best opportunity to show what they are able to achieve.”

In the EMX125 series, the MJC Yamaha Official EMX125 team is thrilled to continue with its trio of proven title challengers, Van Erp, Reisulis and Zanchi.

Ivano van Erp

All three MJC Yamaha riders celebrated podium silverware in 2021. Van Erp emerged as one of the major title contenders with three race and round wins at EMX125 events in Germany, Spain, and Italy. After starting the 2021 season with an injury, Reisulis bounced back with a vengeance.

The 16-year-old Latvian rounded out his season with two overall podiums at the final two rounds in Italy, finishing second on both occasions. Zanchi was classified second overall at the first round in Matterley Basin, while the Italian’s first full season in the series also included an impressive race victory in France.

All three riders are confident and eager to continue racing the highly competitive GYTR kitted YZ125 inside the EMX125 Championship in 2022.

Loic LeFoll – MJC Yamaha Official EMX125 Team Owner

“I am so happy to continue working with these young riders. All three riders are very talented, which is exciting for our team, and in addition to that, they are very hard working and have great attitudes on and off the bike. I really enjoy working with riders like this, and we are already looking forward to the new season. The team is motivated, the riders are motivated, the YZ125 is a fantastic bike and we are excited for the 2022 season.”

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Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence wins AMA Pro Motocross 250MX Championship

Jett Lawrence

2021 AMA Pro Motocross 250 Champion

Jett Lawrence – 2021 AMA Pro Motocross 250 Champion

18-year-old Jett Lawrence today became the first Australian to ever win the 2021 AMA Pro Motocross 250MX Championship. Older brother and team-mate Hunter Lawrence finished third in the title chase, having taken two moto wins and one overall victory, making the Lawrences the only brothers to both finish an AMA Pro Motocross Championship in the top three.

Jett (#18) and brother Hunter (#41) celebrate together

After Frenchman Dylan Ferrandis wrapped up the 450 Title last week this also marks the first time in history that both of the premier American Motocross Championships were won by foreigners in the same year.

Jett Lawrence

Jett kicked off the series with an overall win at the opener in May, then notched podium overall results at the next three rounds. The middle part of the season brought a comparative dip, though he was never worse than sixth overall, and round eight saw him back on top of the overall podium in New Berlin, New York. A second-overall result at round nine continued his late-season surge, with flawless 1-1 overall victories in Crawfordsville, Indiana, and at the second Pala round. Jett overcame poor starts and inopportune falls during today’s finale at Prairie City SVRA, a half-hour east of Sacramento, to secure the Gary Jones Motocross Cup.

18-year-old Australian Jett Lawrence

Oh my goodness, it’s a good day in the end,” Jett Lawrence said. “I think that’s the worst I’ve ridden in a while, but I still got the title. It feels so great, as we’ve been working quite a while to get this. I’ve got to thank the whole crew for getting me here—my brother, my whole family, my manager and all of Honda and HRC. It’s awesome and we’re going to enjoy it for a little while, but then it will be back to the drawing board for next season to hopefully back it up.”

Jett Lawrence

Natives of Landsborough, in Queensland, Australia, Jett and Hunter earned amateur success Down Under as youngsters. After dabbling in international racing (Jett earned the 2014 65cc World Championship in Belgium, at age 11), the Lawrence family moved to Europe fulltime to pursue the brothers’ motocross dreams, with Jett getting his feet wet in the 2016 German ADAC series and 85 European Motocross Championship. Two years later, he made the jump to the highly competitive 250 European Motocross Championship at age 14.

Jett Lawrence

In 2019 the Lawrence family relocated to the U.S., where the brothers raced for the Honda-backed Factory Connection squad (Hunter as a pro and Jett initially as an amateur before turning 16 and making his pro debut midway through the AMA Pro Motocross series). Last season saw him net his first overall victory at the final round and take the Marty Smith Rookie of the Year Award, before he and Hunter advanced to the factory Team Honda HRC program for 2021. In his short time as a pro, Jett has already amassed a huge following of dedicated fans.

Jett Lawrence

While this is Jett’s first AMA crown, he joins an elite list of Honda riders who have notched a total of 13 AMA Motocross National Championships in the 250MX division (previously for 125cc two-strokes); others include Marty Smith, Johnny O’Mara (now the Lawrence brothers’ trainer), Ron Lechien, Micky Dymond, George Holland, Mike Kiedrowski, Doug Henry, Steve Lamson, Trey Canard (now the Team Honda HRC test rider) and Eli Tomac. That said, the title is Honda’s first in the class since 2013.

I’m so proud of Jett and the entire Honda team for this accomplishment,” said Brandon Wilson, Manager of Sports & Experiential at American Honda. “Working with Jett and his family has been an absolute pleasure—obviously for his on-the-bike accomplishments, but also because they’re just good people. On behalf of everyone at American Honda and HRC, thank you Jett, for putting Honda back on top in AMA Pro Motocross. We can’t wait to see what the future holds for you.

After a short break, Jett and Team Honda HRC will turn their attention to developing the 2022 CRF250R in preparation for next year’s AMA Supercross series, which is scheduled to kick off January 8 in Anaheim, California.

2021 AMA Pro Motocross 250MX Final Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Jett Lawrence 497
2 Justin Cooper 491
3 Hunter Lawrence 381
4 RJ Hampshire 364
5 Jo Shimoda 340
6 Jeremy Martin 307
7 Austin Forkner 256
8 Michael Mosiman 252
9 Maximus Vohland 236
10 Dilan Schwartz 209
11 Jalek  Swoll 195
12 Jarrett Frye 184
13 Carson Mumford 183
14 Colt Nichols 172
15 Ty Masterpool 166
16 Garrett Marchbanks 146
17 Joshua Varize 139
18 Pierce Brown 126
19 Levi Kitchen 104
20 Stilez Robertson 90
21 Preston Kilroy 77
22 Nathanael Thrasher 52
23 Derek Kelley 48
24 Ramyller Alves 31
25 Brandon Scharer 29
26 Seth Hammaker 26
27 Christopher Prebula 22
28 Alex Martin 19
29 Jerry Robin 16
30 Xylian Ramella 13
31 Kailub Russell 11
32 Tommy Rios 11
33 Austin Black 10
34 Derek  Drake 9
35 Rick Elzinga 9
36 Brayden Lessler 9
37 Zack Williams 9
38 Devin Simonson 8
39 Kaeden Amerine 8
40 James Harrington 7
41 Cameron Mcadoo 6
42 Grant Harlan 6
43 Jace Kessler 5
44 Garrett Hoffman 4
45 TJ Uselman 4
46 Jesse Flock 3
47 Max Miller 3
48 Tyson Johnson 2
49 Jake Pinhancos 2
50 Tanner Ward 2
Jett Lawrence

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence to take 23-point lead into championship finale

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 11 – Fox Raceway II

Images by Jeff Kardas


Jett Lawrence leads 250 by 23-points

Another dominant 1-1 performance by Jett Lawrence in 250 has seen the Aussie teenager extend his advantage over Justin Cooper out to 23-points with only a single round and two races left in the championship.

Jett is on a roll of four wins in succession, has won five races out of the last nine and in that last nine contests has not finished any lower than second.

Jett Lawrence

If Jett wraps up the championship next weekend he will be the first Australian to win an American 250 Motocross Championship.  It would also mark the first time in history that both of the premier American Motocross Championships were won by foreigners in the same year.’

Jett Lawrence has 464-points to Justin Cooper’s 441. Hunter Lawrence is third in the championship on 349-points ahead of RJ Hampshire on 327-points.

The 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will conclude next Saturday, September 11, with the sport’s oldest event in Northern California, the legendary Hangtown Motocross Classic.


2021  AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


250 Moto 1

Thousands of die-hard race fans braved brutal temperatures and with tensions high, the first 250 Class moto got underway with Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Max Vohland at the head of the pack with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, but he was soon passed by Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS Factory Racing’s Michael Mosiman. Behind them, the title contenders of Lawrence and Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper both got underway with top-10 starts.

With his first opportunity to pace the field this summer Mosiman quickly built a lead over Vohland, Lawrence, and the rest of the field. Lawrence bided his time in the early laps and patiently waited for his opportunity to make a pass on Vohland, which he did successfully several minutes into the moto. As Lawrence made the move, Cooper remained mired in seventh.

Jett Lawrence

As the moto approached its halfway point Lawrence had chipped away at Mosiman’s lead and closed to within striking distance of the lead. Mosiman then lost traction of his front tire and went down, which handed the lead to Lawrence, second to Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire, and third to Vohland. As this unfolded, Cooper dropped to eighth as Team Honda HRC’s Hunter Lawrence made the pass for seventh. Mosiman remounted in fifth, but went back to work and clawed his way back up to third. He didn’t stop there and kept his head down to close in on Hampshire and make the pass for second with relative ease.

Jett Lawrence

Out front, Jett Lawrence was on cruise control and easily rode to his seventh moto win of the season. The Australian crossed the line 9.2 seconds ahead of Mosiman, followed by Hampshire in third and Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Jo Shimoda in fourth. Cooper dug deep and made a late charge to battle his way into the top five.

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 16 Laps
2 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +09.206
3 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +11.848
4 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +15.833
5 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +21.005
6 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +22.873
7 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +39.200
8 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +40.196
9 Joshua Varize HQV 2015 – 2019 FC250 +48.682
10 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +58.483
11 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m03.058
12 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m07.685
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m28.155
14 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F +2m05.177
15 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +2m12.840
16 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +2m16.166
17 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 15 Laps
18 Brayden Lessler KTM 250 SX-F +24.075
19 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F +29.943
20 Austin Black GAS MC250F +35.958
21 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F +1m05.975
22 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +1m15.567
23 Slade Smith YAM YZ 250F +1m25.813
24 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +1m27.481
25 Tyson Johnson KTM 250 SX-F +1m35.201
26 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 +1m53.898
27 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +2m13.893
28 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +2m26.381
29 Rick Elzinga KTM 250 SX-F 14 Laps
30 Hunter Calle YAM YZ 250F +3m10.109
31 Chad Saultz KTM 250 SX-F FE +4m36.115
32 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
33 Derek  Drake SUZ RMZ 250 11 Laps
34 Cole Bailey KTM 250 SX-F 10 Laps
35 Brandon Sussman YAM YZ 250F 9 Laps
36 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 7 Laps
37 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F 5 Laps
38 Tyler Ducray KTM 250 SX-F 4 Laps
39 Eugenio Barbaglia KTM 250 SX-F 3 Laps
40 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F DNF

250 Moto 2

Lawrence scored a holeshot in the second moto

Lawrence picked up where he left off to begin Moto 2, as he emerged with the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Mosiman and Cooper. The clear track proved to be advantageous to the Australian, as he sprinted on the opening lap and established a multi-second lead over the field. Behind him, Mosiman and Cooper began a spirited battle for second.

Jett Lawrence

Cooper appeared to be faster than Mosiman, but found difficulty in finding a way around, which allowed Mosiman to inch away. Soon, Mosiman asserted his control of the position as the top three settled into their running order. As the moto approached its final 10 minutes, Cooper was able to pick up the pace, which allowed him to catch Mosiman and make the pass for second, from which Cooper quickly pulled away.

Michael Mosiman

The battle for the podium didn’t end there, as Shimoda came on strong in the waning moments of the moto. The Japanese rider caught Mosiman, applied pressure, and made an impressive pass to take over third.

Justin Cooper

Out front, Lawrence was in a class of his own yet again and enjoyed a dominant wire-to-wire victory to wrap up the moto sweep. He took the checkered flag 14.2 seconds ahead of Cooper, with Shimoda a distant third.

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 16 Laps
2 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +14.255
3 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +20.239
4 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +28.651
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +40.303
6 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +43.834
7 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m03.744
8 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1m09.958
9 Joshua Varize HQV 2015 – 2019 FC250 +1m14.483
10 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m19.887
11 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m22.753
12 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +1m31.159
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m37.799
14 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +2m00.140
15 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +2m04.970
16 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 15 Laps
17 Brayden Lessler KTM 250 SX-F +14.777
18 Austin Black GAS MC250F +28.806
19 Tyson Johnson KTM 250 SX-F +35.336
20 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +38.217
21 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 +1m50.783
22 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 14 Laps
23 Cole Bailey KTM 250 SX-F +02.483
24 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +12.226
25 Hunter Calle YAM YZ 250F +1m07.429
26 Mason Olson GAS MC250F +1m14.548
27 Konnor  Visger HON CRF250R +2m16.168
28 Chad Saultz KTM 250 SX-F FE 13 Laps
29 Brandon Sussman YAM YZ 250F +2m43.669
30 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 8 Laps
31 Rick Elzinga KTM 250 SX-F 7 Laps
32 Slade Smith YAM YZ 250F +20.794
33 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +2m07.164
34 Jorge Rubalcava HQV FC250 5 Laps
35 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F 4 Laps
36 Tyler Ducray KTM 250 SX-F +59.557
37 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F 3 Laps
38 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +12.322
39 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 2 Laps
40 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F DNS

250 Overall

Another dominant 1-1 performance by Jett Lawrence in 250 has seen the Aussie teenager extend his advantage over Justin Cooper out to 23-points with only a single round and two races left in the championship.

Jett is on a roll of four wins in succession, has won five races out of the last nine and in that last nine contests has not finished any lower than second.

If Jett wraps up the championship next weekend he will be the first Australian to win an American 250 Title.  It would also mark the first time in history that both of the premier American Motocross Championships were won by foreigners in the same year.

Jett Lawrence

I think everything just fell into place (today),” said Lawrence. “It was just a hard day, it’s really hot. It’s been one of the toughest days we’ve had in a while. It feels great to get three in a row here (at Fox Raceway).”

Jett Lawrence

Mosiman equaled a career-best result with his second ever runner-up effort (2-4), while Cooper’s strong effort in the second moto helped maintain his overall podium streak in third (5-2).

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
Jett Lawrence, Australia, Honda (1-1)
Michael Mosiman, Sebastopol, Calif., GASGAS (2-4)
Justin Cooper, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., Yamaha (5-2)

Jett Lawrence has 464-points to Justin Cooper’s 441.

Justin Cooper scored an overall podium but it was a trying round for the Yamaha rider

Hunter Lawrence is third in the championship on 349-points ahead of RJ Hampshire on 327-points.

Hunter Lawrence

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider Bike M1 M2 Points
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 1 1 50
2 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F 2 4 40
3 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 5 2 38
4 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 4 3 38
5 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R 6 6 30
6 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 3 14 27
7 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 10 8 24
8 Joshua Varize HQV 2015 9 9 24
9 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F 12 7 23
10 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 15 5 22
11 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F 8 12 22
12 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F 11 10 21
13 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F  7 15 20
14 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R 13 13 16
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 16 11 15
16 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 17 16 9
17 Brayden Lessler KTM 250 SX-F 18 17 7
18 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F 14 37 7
19 Austin Black GAS MC250F 20 18 4
20 Tyson Johnson KTM 250 SX-F 25 19 2
21 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 19 30 2
22 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F 22 20 1
23 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 21 22 0
24 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 26 21 0
25 Hunter Calle YAM YZ 250F 30 25 0
26 Slade Smith YAM YZ 250F 23 32 0
27 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F 32 24 0
28 Cole Bailey KTM 250 SX-F 34 23 0
29 Chad Saultz KTM 250 SX-F 31 28 0
30 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F 24 35 0
31 Rick Elzinga KTM 250 SX-F 29 31 0
32 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F 27 33 0
33 Brandon Sussman YAM YZ 250F 35 29 0
34 Tyler Ducray KTM 250 SX-F 38 36 0
35 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 36 38 0
36 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F 37 40 0
37 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 40 39 0
38 Mason Olson GAS MC250F 26 0
39 Konnor  Visger HON CRF250R 27 0
40 Levi Newby HQV FC250 28 0
41 Derek  Drake / 33 0
42 Jorge Rubalcava HQV FC250 34 0
43 Eugenio Barbaglia KTM 250 SX-F 39 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 11 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Jett Lawrence 464
2 Justin Cooper 441
3 Hunter Lawrence 349
4 RJ Hampshire 327
5 Jeremy Martin 307
6 Jo Shimoda 300
7 Austin Forkner 240
8 Michael Mosiman 229
9 Maximus Vohland 202
10 Jalek  Swoll 195
11 Dilan Schwartz 184
12 Colt Nichols 172
13 Carson Mumford 169
14 Jarrett Frye 161
15 Ty Masterpool 160
16 Garrett Marchbanks 146
17 Pierce Brown 126
18 Joshua Varize 115
19 Stilez Robertson 90
20 Levi Kitchen 80
21 Preston Kilroy 62
22 Nathanael Thrasher 52
23 Derek Kelley 32
24 Ramyller Alves 31
25 Brandon Scharer 29
26 Seth Hammaker 26
27 Christopher Prebula 22
28 Alex Martin 19
29 Kailub Russell 11
30 Jerry Robin 11
31 Tommy Rios 10
32 Derek  Drake 9
33 Zack Williams 9
34 Xylian Ramella 8
35 Devin Simonson 8
36 Kaeden Amerine 8
37 Brayden Lessler 7
38 James Harrington 7
39 Cameron Mcadoo 6
40 Grant Harlan 6
41 Jace Kessler 5
42 Austin Black 4
43 Garrett Hoffman 4
44 TJ Uselman 4
45 Jesse Flock 3
46 Max Miller 3
47 Tyson Johnson 2
48 Jake Pinhancos 2
49 Dominique Thury 2
50 Vincent Luhovey 1
51 Gared Steinke 1
52 Luke Renzland 1
53 Joseph Tait 0


450 Moto 1

The opening 450 Class moto of the afternoon started with Team Honda HRC’s Ken Roczen leading the way with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb and Ferrandis. The German looked to take advantage of the clear track and sprint away from the field, but both Webb and Ferrandis kept him within reach and even applied pressure for the lead.

Roczen scored the hole-shot

Roczen responded and quickly built a three-second advantage over his rivals, which forced Ferrandis to pick up the pace and make the move on Webb for second a little more than 10 minutes into the moto. Ferrandis continued to push and eliminated a three-second deficit to Roczen to challenge for the lead at the halfway point of the moto. Once he closed onto the rear fender of the Honda, Ferrandis made quick work to take over the lead and seize control of the moto.

Dylan Ferrandis

With first place in hand, Ferrandis continued to sustain the pace and ran the fastest laps of the moto to move out more than five seconds clear of Roczen. Behind them, a long, tense battle for third played out between Webb and Tomac. The pair traded fast laps and momentum surges for several laps, as Webb fended off numerous pass attempts by Tomac. As the moto closed in on its final five minutes, lapped riders gave Tomac the opening he needed to take advantage of Webb being slowed, which provided an unchallenged pass for the position and moved Tomac into third.

Dylan Ferrandis

With Webb no longer an issue, Tomac was able to pick up his pace and dramatically lowered his lap times, including the fastest lap of the moto, to close in on Roczen and make the pass for second. Roczen’s pace dropped off dramatically and caused him to lose ground to Webb, which led to a last-lap battle for third.

Cooper Webb

Back out front, Ferrandis carried on to his seventh moto win of the season by 3.9 seconds over Tomac, while Roczen held on for third. Webb finished fourth, followed by Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Christian Craig in fifth.

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 16 Laps
2 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +03.939
3 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +15.853
4 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +18.492
5 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +55.312
6 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m00.721
7 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m12.159
8 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m21.541
9 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m55.469
10 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +2m09.257
11 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F 15 Laps
12 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +24.499
13 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +36.119
14 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +43.121
15 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +47.366
16 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F +50.308
17 Robbie Wageman YAM YZ 450F +1m13.089
18 Kevin Moranz KTM 450 SX-F +1m19.476
19 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m20.088
20 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +1m21.232
21 Jake Mohnike YAM YZ 450F +1m40.075
22 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R +1m44.563
23 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m48.786
24 Wyatt Lyonsmith KAW KX450 +2m21.562
25 RJ Wageman YAM YZ 450F 14 Laps
26 Clayton Tucker YAM YZ 450F +17.313
27 Justin Jones HON CRF450R +19.918
28 Joshua Philbrick KAW KX450 +55.744
29 Dominic DeSimone HON CRF450R +1m11.042
30 Kolton Dean YAM YZ 450F +2m40.006
31 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F 13 Laps
32 Connor Olson KTM 450 SX-F +40.164
33 Deven Raper KAW KX450 9 Laps
34 Dylan Merriam YAM YZ 450F 8 Laps
35 Ezra Lewis KTM 450 SX-F +1m06.518
36 Dennis Stapleton KTM 450 SX-F 5 Laps
37 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 3 Laps
38 Nicholas Jones YAM YZ 450F 2 Laps
39 Tanner  Myers KAW KX450 1 Laps
40 Colby Copp GAS MC450F DNF

450 Moto 2

Webb got away best

The final 450 Class moto stormed out the gate with Webb leading the way for the MotoSport.com Holeshot, closely followed by Roczen and Ferrandis. Roczen went on the attack on the opening lap and muscled his way by Webb to take control of the top spot, while Ferrandis followed through into second. The Frenchman kept the momentum rolling and looked to make his way around Roczen, which he did before the completion of the opening lap.

Eli Tomac

As the leaders settled in up front, Tomac was on the charge forward. After starting fifth, Tomac got into a groove and began to pick off riders at will. He first passed Craig for fourth, then made quick work of Webb to move into third. Not long after that the Kawasaki rider closed in on Roczen and took over second.

Dylan Ferrandis

Tomac faced a small deficit to Ferrandis, but made quick work of erasing that. Just over 10 minutes into the moto the battle for the lead was on. Once they were side by side, Ferrandis didn’t put up a challenge and let Tomac surge ahead. As the change for the lead unfolded, Webb made the pass on Roczen for third. As the moto wore on, Roczen lost more positions and eventually dropped out of the top five.

Dylan Ferrandis

Tomac ran away from the field over the second half of the moto and established a lead that surpassed 30 seconds. He took his fifth moto win of the season by 45.8 seconds over Ferrandis, with Webb nearly a minute behind in third.

Cooper Webb was a distant third

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 16 Laps
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +45.805
3 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +58.357
4 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +1m07.562
5 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m14.467
6 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +1m21.286
7 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m37.398
8 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +2m09.991
9 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE 15 Laps
10 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F +10.368
11 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +19.271
12 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +28.744
13 Robbie Wageman YAM YZ 450F +51.939
14 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +1m15.843
15 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F +1m21.539
16 Kevin Moranz KTM 450 SX-F +1m24.716
17 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m25.698
18 Jake Mohnike YAM YZ 450F +1m36.625
19 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +1m49.577
20 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R +2m02.358
21 Wyatt Lyonsmith KAW KX450 14 Laps
22 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +05.933
23 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F +14.232
24 Dominic DeSimone HON CRF450R +20.253
25 Colby Copp GAS MC450F +24.217
26 Justin Jones HON CRF450R +32.232
27 Ezra Lewis KTM 450 SX-F +1m04.350
28 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F +1m38.079
29 Clayton Tucker YAM YZ 450F +2m44.961
30 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F +2m51.835
31 Devon Bates KTM 450 SX-F 13 Laps
32 Tanner  Myers KAW KX450 +1m25.410
33 RJ Wageman YAM YZ 450F 9 Laps
34 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE 8 Laps
35 Deven Raper KAW KX450 5 Laps
36 Nicholas Jones YAM YZ 450F 3 Laps
37 Dennis Stapleton KTM 450 SX-F 2 Laps
38 Joshua Philbrick KAW KX450 +29.734
39 Connor Olson KTM 450 SX-F 1 Laps
40 Dylan Merriam YAM YZ 450F DNF

450 Overall

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

With 1-2 results in the 450 Motos overnight at Fox Raceway’s penultimate round of the 2021 AMA Pro Motocross Championship Dylan Ferrandis has extended his championship lead over fellow European Ken Roczen out to a now insurmountable 62-points.

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

Ferrandis won the 2019 250 West Supercross Championship and then took out the 250 Motocross Championship and 250 West Supercross Championship double last year (2020), before stepping up to the 450 class this year.

In 2021 Ferrandis finished seventh in the 450 Supercross Championship before going on to wrap up the 450 Motocross Championship at his first attempt.

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion
Dylan Ferrandis – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing

It was another tough day, and I had to dig really deep to get this result. The weather was really hard on us, hard on the body, but I had this championship in mind, and I really wanted it. I tried the best that I could, and it looked like it was enough to grab it. It’s just unreal to be the champion in my first year on the 450. When I was young, I dreamed of being a 250 champion, but I never really dreamed of being a 450 champion. So, it’s not even a dream come true; it’s more than that. It’s just the best thing that I have ever done in my life. Today I’m really out of emotions. It was just such an awesome year for me, and it’s so awesome to win with this Yamaha bike and with this team. I’m really happy for everybody involved in winning this championship.”

Ferrandis is the eighth rider in history to earn the title in his first season in the AMA’s premier category, while also giving Yamaha its first 450 Class championship since 2007 with Grant Langston.

Jeremy Coker – Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing 450 Team Manager

Today was a day I’ll never forget in my life. Even though I’ve been involved in a lot of championships on the 250 side as an engine builder and crew chief, this is really special. To do this as the team manager on this team and to orchestrate things from this side; it brings tears to my eyes. The crew was incredible! There was not one person on this team that didn’t have the same goal, and we all worked hard to achieve it. It’s something none of us will ever forget. I’m proud of what Dylan did today. He rode amazing. It was a really tough day and very hot outside, but he pulled off the championship a weekend early. As for Christian, we didn’t even know if he’d be able to race, and he came out here and did what he did; it was just an awesome ride. We’ve still got one more to go, and we’ll be out there to win at Hangtown.

Ken Roczen is also now in danger of losing second place in the championship after Eli Tomac closed to within nine-points of the German off the back of his 2-1 results at this penultimate round ahead of the Hangtown finale next weekend.

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Kawasaki (2-1)
Dylan Ferrandis, France, Yamaha (1-2)
Cooper Webb, Newport, N.C., KTM (4-3)

27-year-old Ferrandis is the second Frenchman to win the premier category in the American Motocross Championship after countryman Jean Michel Bayle did the 500 and 250 (two-stroke) championship double in 1991. The 22-year-old French phenom that was Bayle also won the Supercross championship in 1991 to become the first rider in history to win the three major American series in the same year. A backlash from many American fans at a Frenchman winning all their titles was part of the reason Bayle left the dirt and went road racing instead from 1992 onwards.


450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider Bike M1 M2 Points
1 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 2 1 47
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 1 2 47
3 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE 4 3 38
4 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 3 6 35
5 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 5 4 34
6 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 6 5 31
7 Coty Schock HON CRF450R 7 7 28
8 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 10 8 24
9 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE 9 9 24
10 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F 11 10 21
11 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 12 11 19
12 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 15 12 15
13 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 13 14 15
14 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE 8 34 13
15 Robbie Wageman YAM YZ 450F 17 13 12
16 Kevin Moranz KTM 450 SX-F 18 16 8
17 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 14 7
18 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 37 15 6
19 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 19 17 6
20 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F 16 23 5
21 Jake Mohnike YAM YZ 450F 21 18 3
22 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F 20 19 3
23 Wyatt Lyonsmith KAW KX450 24 21 0
24 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R 22 20 1
25 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 23 22 0
26 Dominic DeSimone HON CRF450R 29 24 0
27 Justin Jones HON CRF450R 27 26 0
28 Clayton Tucker YAM YZ 450F 26 29 0
29 RJ Wageman YAM YZ 450F 25 33 0
30 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F 31 28 0
31 Ezra Lewis KTM 450 SX-F 35 27 0
32 Colby Copp GAS MC450F 40 25 0
33 Joshua Philbrick KAW KX450 28 38 0
34 Deven Raper KAW KX450 33 35 0
35 Tanner  Myers KAW KX450 39 32 0
36 Connor Olson KTM 450 SX-F 32 39 0
37 Dennis Stapleton KTM 450 SX-F 36 37 0
38 Nicholas Jones YAM YZ 450F 38 36 0
39 Dylan Merriam YAM YZ 450F 34 40 0
40 Kolton Dean YAM YZ 450F 30 0
41 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F 30 0
42 Devon Bates KTM 450 SX-F 31 0

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 11 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 486
2 Ken Roczen 424
3 Eli Tomac 415
4 Chase Sexton 342
5 Cooper Webb 316
6 Christian Craig 258
7 Marvin Musquin 240
8 Joseph Savatgy 240
9 Justin Barcia 239
10 Aaron Plessinger 232
11 Max Anstie 180
12 Brandon Hartranft 159
13 Coty Schock 158
14 Justin Bogle 156
15 Adam Cianciarulo 147
16 Dean Wilson 146
17 Justin  Rodbell 86
18 Fredrik Noren 79
19 Ryan Surratt 72
20 Ben LaMay 69
21 Chris Canning 48
22 Kyle Chisholm 41
23 Jeremy Hand 34
24 Zachary Osborne 33
25 Jacob Runkles 30
26 Jason Anderson 29
27 Tyler Stepek 27
28 Scott Meshey 24
29 Jace Kessler 22
30 William Clason 13
31 Grant Harlan 12
32 Robbie Wageman 12
33 Kevin Moranz 12
34 Phillip Nicoletti 9
35 Alessandro  Lupino 8
36 Ryan Sipes 8
37 Matthew Hubert 6
38 Tyler Medaglia 6
39 Hunter Schlosser 5
40 Curren Thurman 4
41 Alex Ray 4
42 Cody Groves 4
43 Carson Brown 3
44 Jake Mohnike 3
45 Mitchell Falk 3
46 Robert Piazza 3
47 Bryce Backaus 3
48 Jeremy Smith 2
49 Jacob Hayes 2
50 Bryce Hansen 1
51 Bryson Gardner 1
52 Nicolas Rolando 0
53 Wyatt Lyonsmith 0

The 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will conclude next Saturday, September 11, with the sport’s oldest event in Northern California, the legendary Hangtown Motocross Classic.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dylan Ferrandis crowned American Motocross Champion

Dylan Ferrandis
2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

With 1-2 results in the 450 Motos overnight at Fox Raceway’s penultimate round of the 2021 AMA Pro Motocross Championship Dylan Ferrandis has extended his championship lead over fellow European Ken Roczen out to a now insurmountable 62-points.

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

Ferrandis won the 2019 250 West Supercross Championship and then took out the 250 Motocross Championship and 250 West Supercross Championship double last year (2020), before stepping up to the 450 class this year.

Ferrandis finished seventh in the 450 Supercross Championship this year before going on to wrap up the 450 Motocross Championship at his first attempt.

Dylan Ferrandis – 2021 AMA Pro MX 450 Champion

27-year-old Ferrandis is the second Frenchman to win the premier category in the American Motocross Championship after countryman Jean Michel Bayle did the 500 and 250 (two-stroke) championship double in 1991. The 22-year-old French phenom that was Bayle also won the Supercross championship that year to become the first rider in history to win the three major American series in the same year. A backlash from many American fans at a Frenchman winning all their titles was part of the reason Bayle left the dirt and went road racing instead from 1992 onwards.

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 11 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 486
2 Ken Roczen 424
3 Eli Tomac 415
4 Chase Sexton 342
5 Cooper Webb 316
6 Christian Craig 258
7 Marvin Musquin 240
8 Joseph Savatgy 240
9 Justin Barcia 239
10 Aaron Plessinger 232
11 Max Anstie 180
12 Brandon Hartranft 159
13 Coty Schock 158
14 Justin Bogle 156
15 Adam Cianciarulo 147
16 Dean Wilson 146
17 Justin  Rodbell 86
18 Fredrik Noren 79
19 Ryan Surratt 72
20 Ben LaMay 69
21 Chris Canning 48
22 Kyle Chisholm 41
23 Jeremy Hand 34
24 Zachary Osborne 33
25 Jacob Runkles 30
26 Jason Anderson 29
27 Tyler Stepek 27
28 Scott Meshey 24
29 Jace Kessler 22
30 William Clason 13
31 Grant Harlan 12
32 Robbie Wageman 12
33 Kevin Moranz 12
34 Phillip Nicoletti 9
35 Alessandro  Lupino 8
36 Ryan Sipes 8
37 Matthew Hubert 6
38 Tyler Medaglia 6
39 Hunter Schlosser 5
40 Curren Thurman 4
41 Alex Ray 4
42 Cody Groves 4
43 Carson Brown 3
44 Jake Mohnike 3
45 Mitchell Falk 3
46 Robert Piazza 3
47 Bryce Backaus 3
48 Jeremy Smith 2
49 Jacob Hayes 2
50 Bryce Hansen 1
51 Bryson Gardner 1
52 Nicolas Rolando 0
53 Wyatt Lyonsmith 0

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence takes charge with Ironman domination, leads series by 11 pts

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 10 – Ironman

Images by Jeff Kardas


The Guaranteed Rate Ironman National signified the 10th stop of the 12-round season and featured arguably the toughest weather conditions of the summer thus far with both high temperatures and high humidity.

Eli Tomac took the 450 round win thanks to victory in the second Moto but championship leader Dylan Ferrandis took an identical 47-points from the round. Cooper Webb rounded out the overall podium.

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
1. Eli Tomac, Cortez, Kawasaki (2-1)
2. Dylan Ferrandis, Yamaha (1-2)
3. Cooper Webb, KTM (4-3)

With Roczen scoring 36-points from the round that means that Ferrandis now enjoys a 50-point lead with only two rounds remaining in the championship. The 27-year-old Frenchman certainly looks odds-on to back up the 250 Championship he won in 2020 with the 450 Championship in 2021.

In the 250 Class, the points lead changed hands for the third time this season following a dominant sweep of the motos by Team Honda HRC’s Jett Lawrence.

Jett Lawrence

Jeremy Martin’s failure to score also allowed Hunter Lawrence to move up to third place in the championship standings and pull 12-points clear from the Yamaha man. Hunter had been battling illness all weekend but the points he claimed have made a mighty difference to his championship standing.

With two rounds remaining, Fox Raceway II and the Hangtown finale, Europeans currently rank 1-2 in the 450 championship chase, while Australians currently hold down first and third place ranks in the race for the 250 Title. Never before have both the 450 and 250 Championship been won by foreign riders in the same year.


2021  AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto 1

As the gate dropped on the first 450 Class moto and the field emerged from the first turn it was Rocky Mountain ATV/MC-KTM-WPS’ Joey Savatgy who grabbed the MotoSport.com Holeshot as Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis and Tomac gave chase. A wild opening lap saw several riders engaged in battle at the head of the pack, as Ferrandis went on the attack and got by Savatgy for the lead. However, Savatgy battled back and brought along a hard-charging Ken Roczen aboard his Team Honda HRC machine. Soon Roczen was in the lead, but Ferrandis battled back to reclaim the position.

Savatgy got the holeshot

After a torrid opening phase of the moto Ferrandis, Rozen and Tomac settled into the top three and started to put some distance over the rest of the field. All three riders remained within a couple seconds of one another as the momentum ebbed and flowed.

Dylan Ferrandis

Roczen showed a wheel on Ferrandis a few times, but the championship leader never flinched. As the moto passed the halfway mark, Tomac pulled the trigger on a move on Roczen and successfully made the pass for second. The Kawasaki rider then looked to track down Ferrandis for the lead.

Ken Roczen

The pressure on Ferrandis persisted throughout the moto, but he remained focused on hitting his lines and logged consistent laps to keep Tomac at bay. Ferrandis was also efficient in navigating through lapped riders, which allowed him to put some distance on Tomac in the late stages.

Dylan Ferrandis

The Frenchman finished strong to capture his sixth moto win of the season, finishing 4.1 seconds ahead of Tomac, followed by Roczen in third. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb posted his best moto finish of the season in fourth, followed by Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton in fifth.

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 17 Laps
2 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +04.137
3 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +09.971
4 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +16.598
5 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +23.276
6 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F +29.540
7 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +51.742
8 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m13.504
9 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m26.356
10 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m43.458
11 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F +1m53.349
12 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +1m57.700
13 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F +2m06.496
14 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 16 Laps
15 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +02.056
16 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +06.993
17 William Clason KAW KX450 +10.639
18 Grant Harlan HON CRF450R +11.426
19 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +18.351
20 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +20.122
21 Kevin Moranz KTM 450 SX-F +26.460
22 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +40.591
23 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +43.415
24 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +47.731
25 Curren Thurman GAS MC450F +52.559
26 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +59.838
27 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m00.813
28 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m02.791
29 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m05.548
30 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +1m47.910
31 Clayton Tucker YAM YZ 450F +2m07.954
32 Nathen LaPorte KTM 450 SX-F +2m09.447
33 Tylor Skodras KTM 450 SX-F +2m20.713
34 Michael Hicks KTM 450 SX-F 15 Laps
35 Rody Schroyer HON CRF450R +33.542
36 Nicholas Tomasunas Newaygo, MI YAM YZ 450F +54.041
37 Joshua Philbrick KAW KX450 14 Laps
38 Cheyenne Harmon HON CRF450R 12 Laps
39 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F 10 Laps
40 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m08.114

450 Moto 2

The second and deciding moto got underway with Ferrandis leading the way with the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Webb. With the clear track things appeared to be advantageous for the Yamaha rider, but Webb came on strong before the conclusion of the opening lap and surged into the top spot. On the following lap Ferrandis found himself under attack from Tomac, and while the Frenchman initially held off the Kawasaki rider, Tomac made the pass happen and dropped Ferrandis to third.

Dylan Ferrandis

With second place in hand Tomac set his sights on the lead and put the pressure on Webb. Ferrandis gave chase from third, while Roczen lurked in fourth. Despite Tomac’s best efforts, Webb’s crafty defensive riding allowed him to prevent the initial pass attempts. Tomac regrouped and mounted another attack, this time with success about 10 minutes into the moto. Tomac built a lead of nearly two seconds as soon as he had control of the moto, while Webb and Ferrandis began a battle for second.

Eli Tomac

Ferrandis wasted no time in attempting a pass on Webb and made the move as soon as the opportunity presented itself, which resulted in contact between the two. Webb got the worse end of the moment, briefly checking his balance, which allowed Ferrandis to slip by for second. Behind this battle, Honda team-mates Roczen and Sexton engaged in a brief battle for fourth, from which Sexton came away with the position.

Cooper Webb

The top five continued unchanged through the remainder of the moto as Tomac went unchallenged en route to his fourth moto win of the season, all of which have come in the second moto. He took the checkered flag 4.7 seconds ahead of Ferrandis, who was closely pursued by Webb for the rest of the race as the KTM rider captured his first moto podium since the 2019 season.

Eli Tomac

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 17 Laps
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +04.763
3 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +07.510
4 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +27.452
5 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +36.959
6 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +55.037
7 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m12.639
8 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m18.025
9 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m18.962
10 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F +1m49.967
11 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +1m55.080
12 Grant Harlan HON CRF450R +2m01.220
13 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 16 Laps
14 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +02.002
15 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +07.715
16 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +17.544
17 Kevin Moranz KTM 450 SX-F +21.732
18 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +25.896
19 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +30.173
20 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +44.687
21 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +52.621
22 Curren Thurman GAS MC450F +1m00.628
23 Michael Hicks KTM 450 SX-F +1m20.335
24 Cheyenne Harmon HON CRF450R +1m26.348
25 Nathen LaPorte KTM 450 SX-F +1m30.558
26 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +1m33.097
27 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m33.936
28 Clayton Tucker YAM YZ 450F +2m00.121
29 Tylor Skodras KTM 450 SX-F +2m12.910
30 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +2m16.385
31 Travis Delnicki YAM YZ 450F 15 Laps
32 Joshua Philbrick KAW KX450 +20.150
33 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m02.390
34 Nicholas Tomasunas YAM YZ 450F +1m13.364
35 William Clason KAW KX450 13 Laps
36 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 11 Laps
37 Spencer Winter KTM 450 SX-F 8 Laps
38 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE 7 Laps
39 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +04.712
40 Rody Schroyer HON CRF450R 2 Laps

450 Overall

Tomac’s 2-1 finishes put him into a tie with Ferrandis in the overall classification, but by virtue of Tomac’s second moto win the tiebreaker went to the Kawasaki rider. The win is his first since the eighth round of the abbreviated nine-round 2020 season and ends a 10-race winless drought, which is the longest gap between victories of Tomac’s decorated career. It also signified his 26th win in the 450 Class, where he sits fourth all-time.

All I can say is it’s better late than never (to get a win),” expressed Tomac. “I finally had the day I’ve been wanting to have. I kind of felt like there’s been two sides to me from one moto to the next all season. Today, I finally felt good in both. I got good starts, was able to make the pass (for the lead) happen in the second moto, and ride the race I wanted.”

Eli Tomac

Ferrandis secured his 10th podium finish of the season in the runner-up spot (1-2), while Webb landed on the overall podium for just the second time in the premier division in third (4-3).

By virtue of his second-place finish, combined with a fourth-place finish by Roczen (3-5), Ferrandis extended his lead in the 450 Class standings to 50 points, which puts him into a position to clinch the Edison Dye Cup one round early should he tie or finish ahead of Roczen at the next round.

“(My success) has been from hard work that I’ve put in for years. It’s finally paying off,” explained Ferrandis. “I do everything for my sport and to be on top. Today was just one of those days where I suffered on the bike. I don’t know why. I just didn’t have the strength. Eli (Tomac) was riding awesome, so credit to him. We had another good day in the championship, so I’m happy with the result.

Dylan Ferrandis

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Eli Tomac 2 1 47
2 Dylan Ferrandis 1 2 47
3 Cooper Webb 4 3 38
4 Ken Roczen 3 5 36
5 Chase Sexton 5 4 34
6 Coty Schock 8 6 28
7 Joseph Savatgy 7 8 27
8 Justin Bogle 10 7 25
9 Brandon Hartranft 9 9 24
10 Kyle Chisholm 11 10 21
11 Ben LaMay 12 11 19
12 Ryan Surratt 14 13 15
13 Aaron Plessinger 6 36 15
14 Grant Harlan 18 12 12
15 Jeremy Hand 16 14 12
16 Justin  Rodbell 15 16 11
17 Jace Kessler 13 8
18 Tyler Stepek 23 15 6
19 Kevin Moranz 21 17 4
20 Jacob Runkles 20 18 4
21 William Clason 17 35 4
22 Bryce Backaus 28 19 2
23 Chris Canning 19 38 2
24 Curren Thurman 25 22 0
25 Bryce Hansen 26 20 1

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 439
2 Ken Roczen 389
3 Eli Tomac 368
4 Chase Sexton 342
5 Cooper Webb 278
6 Marvin Musquin 240
7 Justin Barcia 239
8 Aaron Plessinger 232
9 Christian Craig 224
10 Joseph Savatgy 216
11 Max Anstie 149
12 Adam Cianciarulo 147
13 Dean Wilson 146
14 Justin Bogle 143
15 Brandon Hartranft 135
16 Coty Schock 130
17 Justin  Rodbell 67
18 Fredrik Noren 58
19 Ryan Surratt 57
20 Ben LaMay 54
21 Chris Canning 48
22 Kyle Chisholm 41
23 Jeremy Hand 34
24 Zachary Osborne 33
25 Jason Anderson 29
26 Jacob Runkles 27
27 Tyler Stepek 27
28 Scott Meshey 17
29 Jace Kessler 16
30 William Clason 13

250 Moto 1

The first 250 Class moto of the afternoon began with the points leader, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper, earning the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Lawrence, his title rival, and Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Max Vohland. As Cooper looked to establish a lead on the opening lap, Lawrence and Vohland traded second place before Lawrence asserted himself in the position and set his sights on Cooper.

250 gets underway

A few bike lengths separated the lead pair for several laps as Lawrence applied persistent pressure and looked at alternative lines to mount an attack on Cooper. The Australian dropped the hammer and made an easy pass on Cooper to seize control of the moto. Once out front, Lawrence quickly sprinted out to a mult-second lead as Cooper was then forced to fend off his teammate, Jeremy Martin, from third. The Star Racing riders battled for a couple laps before Martin got the upper hand and moved into second.

Jett Lawrence

Four seconds separated Lawrence from Martin as the moto reached its halfway point, but all eyes were on the Yamaha rider, who was the fastest on the track. The former division champion took chunks out of Lawrence’s lead and was all over the Honda with 10 minutes remaining in the moto. Behind them, Cooper continued to lose ground and fell out of the top three, giving up third to Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Jo Shimoda.

Jett Lawrence withstood the pressure from Martin

Back out front, Martin’s attack brought him bar-to-bar with Lawrence for the lead, which the Honda rider fended off. About a lap later Martin crashed while in pursuit of Lawrence, which ended the Yamaha rider’s day. Martin’s misfortune moved Shimoda into second and Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS Factory Racing’s Michael Mosiman into third, with Cooper trailing in fourth.

Jeremy Martin scored no points

With no pressure from behind, Lawrence cruised to an emphatic moto win, crossing the finish line 8.3 seconds ahead of Shimoda, who earned the best moto finish of his career in second. Mosiman finished third, followed by Cooper in fourth and Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Austin Forkner in fifth.

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 17 Laps
2 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +08.320
3 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +14.332
4 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +25.017
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +27.346
6 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +27.559
7 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +40.850
8 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +44.228
9 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +50.120
10 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +52.916
11 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +55.530
12 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +57.846
13 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +1m05.823
14 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F +1m10.003
15 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m23.069
16 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m27.382
17 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +2m03.230
18 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +2m08.585
19 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +2m12.592
20 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 16 Laps
21 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F +00.879
22 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +21.471
23 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +34.936
24 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +50.165
25 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +1m12.464
26 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F +1m12.464
27 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +1m18.395
28 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 +1m24.482
29 Evan Haimowitz YAM YZ 250F +1m38.113
30 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F +1m41.583
31 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +1m44.322
32 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m46.899
33 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m49.651
34 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F +1m52.795
35 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +2m16.662
36 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 15 Laps
37 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 10 Laps
38 Conner Burger KTM 250 SX-F 7 Laps
39 Slade Smith YAM YZ 250F DNS
40 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F DNS

250 Moto 2

The second moto began with Shimoda charging to the MotoSport.com Holeshot and the early lead ahead of Lawrence and Cooper. The Japanese rider’s first opportunity at the head of the pack was met with a stiff challenge from his former teammate and close friend. Lawrence started to look for a way past Shimoda, and while the Kawasaki rider responded initially, Lawrence eventually made the pass to once again secure control of the moto.

Jett Lawrence

Lawrence quickly built a multi-second advantage over Shimoda as Cooper gave pursuit from third. The Australian continued to extend his advantage on the field, which shifted the focus to Shimoda and Cooper and their battle for second. Cooper closed on the Kawasaki rider briefly, but then started to lose touch. Before long, Cooper was battling just to keep hold of his spot in the top three as Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire closed in from fourth. Hampshire made quick work of Cooper and took over third.

Hunter Lawrence moved up to third in the championship despite after bagging some points despite being crook on the day

Hampshire’s forward push continued as he set his sights on Shimoda for second. The Husqvarna rider closed the gap and was patient in looking for his opportunity to try and make a pass. When he finally made his run it came on the track’s longest stretch of jumps, which carried Hampshire around Shimoda and into second. However, the battle persisted as Shimoda fought back. They traded fast laps and Shimoda was able to show a wheel in several areas, but Hampshire held on as they navigated lapped traffic.

Back out front, Lawrence capped off the most impressive outing of his young career and the most dominant performance of the 2021 season with his first ever moto sweep. He took the checkered flag nine seconds ahead of Hampshire, who fended off Shimoda in third. Cooper finished a distant fourth.

A no points day for Jeremy Martin saw him lose third place in the championship to Hunter Lawrence

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 17 Laps
2 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +09.030
3 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +13.526
4 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +27.714
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +40.737
6 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +44.456
7 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +49.934
8 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +51.671
9 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +56.612
10 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m06.583
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m35.091
12 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F +1m50.209
13 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +2m00.987
14 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +2m04.888
15 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F 16 Laps
16 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +03.176
17 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F +03.987
18 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +05.546
19 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +07.317
20 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +09.797
21 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m04.767
22 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F +1m10.044
23 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +1m22.398
24 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +1m22.760
25 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F +1m29.902
26 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +1m47.179
27 Blaze Cremaldi YAM YZ 250F +1m57.654
28 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +2m01.448
29 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE 15 Laps
30 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +3m51.126
31 Evan Haimowitz YAM YZ 250F +4m05.627
32 Chad Saultz KTM 250 SX-F +4m13.687
33 Brett Greenley YAM YZ 250F +4m37.694
34 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F +4m45.476
35 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F 11 Laps
36 Matthew Klann HON CRF250R 10 Laps
37 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 8 Laps
38 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F 6 Laps
39 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +35.997
40 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F DNF

250 Overall

Jett Lawrence’s triumph (1-1) signifies the third overall victory of the season for the 18 year old and the fourth win of his career. Shimoda followed in the runner-up spot (2-3) to equal his career-best result, while Cooper secured his 10th podium finish of the season in third (4-4), despite failing to finish in the top three in either moto for the first time this summer.

“It’s a great feeling (to go 1-1),” said Lawrence. “It shows I’m not giving up. I’ve been needing this for a while now. It feels good and I hope I can continue this through the rest of the season.

Jett Lawrence

Lawrence’s return to the top of the 250 Class standings came via a 14-point swing between he and Cooper, who entered the Ironman National with a three-point lead. Lawrence now holds an 11-point advantage over Cooper with four motos remaining.

I just have to keep fighting,” said Cooper. “It’s not going to be easy. Jett (Lawrence) was riding awesome today and I had nothing for him. I got the best I could out of myself and I have to be happy with that. I just need to keep digging. It’s not over til it’s over.

Justin Cooper

Jeremy Martin’s failure to score also allowed Hunter Lawrence to move up to third place in the championship standings and pull 12-points clear from the Yamaha man. Hunter had not carded great results as he was very much under the weather throughout the weekend.


250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Jett Lawrence 1 1 50
2 Jo Shimoda 2 3 42
3 Justin Cooper 4 4 36
4 Michael Mosiman 3 6 35
5 Austin Forkner 5 5 32
6 RJ Hampshire 13 2 30
7 Ty Masterpool 6 7 29
8 Carson Mumford 8 8 26
9 Hunter Lawrence 12 9 21
10 Dilan Schwartz 9 13 20
11 Preston Kilroy 10 14 18
12 Jarrett Frye 15 10 17
13 Brandon Scharer 14 12 16
14 Joshua Varize 16 11 15
15 Maximus Vohland 7 29 14
16 Levi Kitchen 11 35 10
17 Tommy Rios 18 15 9
18 Christopher Prebula 20 16 6
19 Devin Simonson 21 17 4
20 Jerry Robin 17 26 4
21 Zack Williams 22 18 3
22 TJ Uselman 24 19 2
23 Kaeden Amerine 19 40 2
24 Vincent Luhovey 23 20 1
25 Noah Willbrandt 27 24 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Jett Lawrence 414
2 Justin Cooper 403
3 Hunter Lawrence 319
4 Jeremy Martin 307
5 RJ Hampshire 300
6 Jo Shimoda 262
7 Austin Forkner 218
8 Jalek  Swoll 195
9 Michael Mosiman 189
10 Maximus Vohland 182
11 Colt Nichols 172
12 Dilan Schwartz 160
13 Carson Mumford 153
14 Garrett Marchbanks 146
15 Jarrett Frye 140
16 Ty Masterpool 138
17 Pierce Brown 126
18 Joshua Varize 91
19 Stilez Robertson 90
20 Levi Kitchen 57
21 Nathanael Thrasher 52
22 Preston Kilroy 47
23 Ramyller Alves 31
24 Brandon Scharer 29
25 Seth Hammaker 26
26 Derek Kelley 25
27 Alex Martin 19
28 Christopher Prebula 13
29 Kailub Russell 11
30 Jerry Robin 11

The 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will make its return to the West Coast for the penultimate round of the season next Saturday, September 4, for a second visit to Pala, California’s Fox Raceway on Labor Day weekend.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence closes to within three-points of championship lead

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 9 – Budds Creek

Images by Jeff Kardas


Nestled in the shadow of the nation’s capital of Washington D.C., Southern Maryland’s Budds Creek Motocross Park served as the site of the ninth round of the 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing.

Intermittent cloud cover was complemented by humid conditions for the Circle K Budds Creek National, as a fierce battle for victory unfolded in the 450 Class and required a tie-breaker to determine a winner. In the end, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis prevailed over Team Honda HRC’s Ken Roczen for the Frenchman’s fifth win of the summer.

Dylan Ferrandis maintained his 39-point lead over Roczen with three rounds remaining

In the 250 Class, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Jeremy Martin relied on an emphatic win in the final moto to capture his class-leading third victory of the season by a single point over Jett Lawrence. The Aussie youngster closed to within three-points of championship leader Justin Cooper.


2021  AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto 1

The first 450 Class moto got underway with Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb at the head of the pack with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, with Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac and Roczen in hot pursuit. Known as one of the best opening-lap riders in the world, Roczen put the hammer down immediately and made a quick pass on Tomac for second and then fought his way into the lead around Webb a short time later. By the completion of the first circuit, Roczen was already more than a second clear of the field.

Ken Roczen

As Roczen continued to inch away, Webb and Tomac battled it out for second, which allowed Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton and Ferrandis, the championship leader, to join the mix. A determined Tomac saw several pass attempts thwarted by Webb, but he eventually made the move. However, a hard charge by Sexton saw the Honda rider get by both Webb and Tomac on the same lap to vault from fourth to second and put Honda 1-2 in the running order.

Marvin Musquin

The Honda duo continued to put distance over the rest of the field as Tomac started to lose ground to Ferrandis in fourth. The Frenchman got into a rhythm and soon found himself within a few bike lengths of the Kawasaki, at which point he went on the attack and made an impressive pass to take control of third. Back out front, Sexton started to chip away at his deficit to Roczen and closed to within a few seconds of the lead, while Ferrandis continued to log the fastest laps on the track.

With less than five minutes remaining in the moto, the top three ran within five seconds of one another, with Ferrandis consistently the fastest of the trio. As the race clock ticked to under a minute remaining, Ferrandis closed in on Sexton for third and took advantage of a lapped rider to make the pass happen with relative ease. With two laps to go, four seconds separated the championship rivals. Ferrandis took huge chunks out of his deficit and closed to within striking distance on the final lap, and even had a shot at stealing the win as they navigated the final section, but Roczen held on to take the moto win by three tenths of a second. Sexton finished a distant third, with Tomac fourth and Webb fifth. The torrid pace by Roczen and Ferrandis saw them lap through 11th place.

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos RIDER BIKE Time/Gap
1 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 19 Laps
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +00.384
3 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +10.199
4 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +34.270
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +51.467
6 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +58.364
7 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1:01.959
8 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1:08.416
9 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1:09.375
10 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:22.941
11 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 18 Laps
12 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +06.485
13 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +18.643
14 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +25.797
15 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +29.709
16 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +42.656
17 William Clason KAW KX450 +44.955
18 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +49.718
19 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +52.709
20 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +1m05.589
21 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F +1m15.992
22 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +1m23.182
23 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m24.377
24 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m29.834
25 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m36.940
26 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 +1m49.305
27 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m53.994
28 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE 17 Laps
29 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +22.821
30 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 +50.482
31 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F +1m03.412
32 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +1m07.692
33 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F +1m55.096
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F 16 Laps
35 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 12 Laps
36 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 11 Laps
37 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 10 Laps
38 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE +01.912
39 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 6 Laps
40 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 5 Laps

450 Moto 2

The German picked up where he left off to start the second moto by racing to the MotoSport.com Holeshot over Webb, Ferrandis, and Sexton.

Ken Roczen

With no one ahead of him Roczen put his head down and sprinted away on the opening lap to a lead of just under two seconds. Behind him, Sexton aided his teammate with a pass on Ferrandis, which dropped the Yamaha rider to fourth.

Cooper Webb

Sexton wasn’t done and he kept the charge going on Webb, easily moving into second to put the Honda riders once again at the head of the pack. Ferrandis responded as well and made the pass on Webb for third, while Tomac dropped Webb to fifth a short time later.

Chase Sexton

The top four riders on the track ran within a handful of seconds of one another 10 minutes into the moto and things only got tighter from there. As the race reached the halfway point the gap closed to just over two seconds. A bobble by Sexton allowed Ferrandis to move into second and put Sexton into the clutches of Tomac. The Kawasaki rider bided his time but eventually made his move to take over third.

Dylan Ferrandis

Up front, Ferrandis had Roczen in his sights. They traded fast laps to keep the gap at about a second as they approached the final 10 minutes of the moto, while Tomac lurked in third. A battle for the lead ensued as Ferrandis looked for a way around. After several attempts Ferrandis made the pass happen and seized control of the moto with seven minutes to go.

Dylan Ferrandis

Once out front, the Frenchman gapped the German and appeared to have the moto in hand. Roczen was able to put in a late charge in the closing laps and got within a few bike lengths of Ferrandis, but the points leader responded, was more efficient navigating lapped traffic, and brought home the moto win by 4.8 seconds at the end.

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 18 Laps
2 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +04.847
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +08.743
4 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +32.708
5 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +37.000
6 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +38.944
7 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m07.858
8 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +1m13.075
9 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m28.956
10 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m35.942
11 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m42.677
12 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m59.582
13 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 17 Laps
14 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +10.642
15 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +16.085
16 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +18.489
17 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +22.229
18 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +26.350
19 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +32.551
20 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +39.314
21 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +57.691
22 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +1m02.276
23 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +1m20.701
24 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m23.637
25 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m29.015
26 William Clason KAW KX450 +1m30.348
27 James Harrington KTM 450 SX-F +1m30.678
28 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m44.527
29 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 16 Laps
30 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +24.870
31 Dustin Jensen YAM YZ 450F +30.307
32 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +45.626
33 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 +49.802
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F +1m30.329
35 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 12 Laps
36 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 8 Laps
37 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 5 Laps
38 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F +04.303
39 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE 1 Laps
40 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F DNF

450 Overall

With identical moto scores, Ferrandis (2-1) and Roczen (1-2) ended the day tied atop the overall classification. However, by virtue of his better result in the second moto Ferrandis earned the tiebreaker to earn his fifth win of the season. Tomac completed the overall podium in third (4-3).

Dylan Ferrandis

Last weekend I got beat so bad, so we made some changes this week and came back better (today),” said Ferrandis. “The bike was so good, I could do whatever I wanted. I was glad to get my pace back and in the second moto I was able to catch Kenny (Roczen) and battle for the win. It was fun, but it’s always the most fun when you win.”

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
1. Dylan Ferrandis, France, Yamaha (2-1)
2. Ken Roczen, Germany, Honda (1-2)
3. Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Kawasaki (4-3)

With equal points for the afternoon, Ferrandis’ lead over Roczen in the 450 Class standings remains at 39 points with three rounds remaining. Tomac remains third, 71 out of the lead.


450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider Bike M1 M2 POINTS
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 2 1 47
2 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 1 2 47
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 4 3 38
4 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE 3 4 38
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE 5 6 31
6 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE 6 7 29
7 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE 10 5 27
8 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE 8 9 25
9 Coty Schock HON CRF450R 7 11 24
10 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 9 10 23
11 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 11 13 18
12 Justin  Rodbell  KAW KX450 12 14 16
13 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 15 12 15
14 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 40 8 13
15 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F 13 16 13
16 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE 14 17 11
17 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE 23 15 6
18 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 16 35 5
19 William Clason KAW KX450 17 26 4
20 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 35 18 3
21 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 20 19 3
22 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R 18 22 3
23 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 19 36 2
24 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F 22 20 1
25 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE 24 21 0
26 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F 27 24 0
27 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 29 23 0
28 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE 28 25 0
29 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 25 28 0
30 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 26 29 0
31 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F 21 40 0
32 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 30 33 0
33 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F 32 32 0
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F 34 34 0
35 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 39 30 0
36 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F 31 38 0
37 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 33 37 0
38 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE 38 39 0
39 James Harrington KTM 450 SX-F 27 0
40 Dustin Jensen YAM YZ 450F 31 0
41 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 36 0
42 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 37 0

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider` Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 392
2 Ken Roczen 353
3 Eli Tomac 321
4 Chase Sexton 308
5 Marvin Musquin 240
6 Cooper Webb 240
7 Justin Barcia 239
8 Christian Craig 224
9 Aaron Plessinger 217
10 Joseph Savatgy 189
11 Max Anstie 149
12 Adam Cianciarulo 147
13 Dean Wilson 146
14 Justin Bogle 118
15 Brandon Hartranft 111
16 Coty Schock 102
17 Fredrik Noren 58
18 Justin  Rodbell 56
19 Chris Canning 46
20 Ryan Surratt 42
21 Ben LaMay 35
22 Zachary Osborne 33
23 Jason Anderson 29
24 Jacob Runkles 23
25 Jeremy Hand 22
26 Tyler Stepek 21
27 Kyle Chisholm 20
28 Scott Meshey 17
29 Phillip Nicoletti 9
30 William Clason 9
31 Jace Kessler 8
32 Alessandro  Lupino 8
33 Ryan Sipes 8
34 Tyler Medaglia 6
35 Curren Thurman 4
36 Alex Ray 4
37 Cody Groves 4
38 Carson Brown 3
39 Mitchell Falk 3
40 Robert Piazza 3
41 Jeremy Smith 2
42 Jacob Hayes 2
43 Bryce Backaus 1
44 Hunter Schlosser 0
45 Nicolas Rolando 0
46 Dawson Ryker 0
47 Bryce Hansen 0
48 Cole Thompson 0
49 Nathan Augustin 0
50 Matthew Hubert 0
51 Brian Borghesani 0
52 Ricci Randanella 0
53 Bryson Gardner 0

250 Moto 1

The first gate drop of the 250 Class saw the 40-rider field funnel into the first turn, from which Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper, the championship leader, emerged with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Jalek Swoll and Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Austin Forkner. The clear track paid big dividends for Cooper as he was able to sprint out to an early lead while Swoll and Forkner duked it out for second. Cooper completed the opening lap with a three-second advantage, while Forkner made the pass and settled into second.

Justin Cooper scored the holeshot

As Cooper and Forkner continued to lead the way, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire was on a march forward. After starting fifth, Hampshire made a pass for fourth and then worked his way around teammate Swoll to take control of third. Hampshire then set his sights on Forkner. As he gave pursuit, Hampshire encountered misfortune and lost several positions, which moved Swoll back up to third, but under heavy pressure from Team Honda HRC’s Jett Lawrence. The Australian rider was patient and made the pass for third.

Jeremy Martin

With 10 minutes left in the moto the battle for second heated up between Forkner and Lawrence, who was the fastest rider on the track at this stage of the race. As they navigated through lapped traffic Lawrence benefitted from a rider who crashed right in front of Forkner and forced the Kawasaki rider off-line, which allowed Lawreance to take over the position unchallenged. Cooper and Lawrence, the top two riders in the championship, were then separated by 5.4 seconds with six minutes to go.

Cooper responded to Lawrence’s charge from second and picked up the pace in the closing stages of the moto to maintain his advantage. He easily finished off a wire-to-wire victory and secured his fifth moto win of the season by 5.3 seconds over Lawrence while Martin followed with a quiet third-place effort, with Forkner fourth and Swoll fifth.

Hunter Lawrence was sixth

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 18 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +05.335
3 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F +14.094
4 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +21.164
5 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 +26.758
6 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +27.415
7 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +28.201
8 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +41.170
9 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +47.282
10 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +49.129
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +51.789
12 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m02.364
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m04.686
14 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m08.456
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m14.544
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m21.152
17 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 +1m26.079
18 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +1m50.690
19 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +1m52.993
20 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +1m57.508
21 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 17 Laps
22 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +03.596
23 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +23.080
24 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +24.879
25 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +30.003
26 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F +34.064
27 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +55.218
28 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F +1m00.574
29 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m25.218
30 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F 16 Laps
31 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 +09.851
32 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +36.108
33 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +50.388
34 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
35 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 11 Laps
36 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 10 Laps
37 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m33.713
38 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F 8 Laps
39 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 7 Laps
40 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 6 Laps

250 Moto 2

The second moto roared out the gate with Martin leading the way with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Lawrence in second, as Cooper navigated his way into the top five.

Jeremy Martin

With no one in front of them, Martin and Lawrence quickly moved out to a lead of more than four seconds on the rest of the field, with about two seconds separating the top two.

Budds Creek 250

As the lead pair settled in, the attention shifted to Cooper as he looked to move up the running order. He gave chase to Team Honda HRC’s Hunter Lawrence from fifth, as both riders looked to track down AEO GASGAS’ Ty Masterpool in third. Masterpool then went down, which allowed Lawrence to assume third and Cooper fourth. That was ultimately the last change for position amongst the top five.

Hunter Lawrence

Martin was dominant en route to his sixth moto win of the season with a wire-to-wire effort. He took the checkered flag 8.8 seconds ahead of Jett Lawrence in second with Hunter Lawrence third, followed by Cooper in fourth.

Jett Lawrence closes to within three-points of championship lead

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 18 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +08.846
3 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +28.539
4 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +45.142
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +48.889
6 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +51.551
7 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +53.348
8 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1m04.984
9 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +1m14.772
10 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m22.105
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m24.895
12 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m28.969
13 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m37.754
14 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m42.907
15 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 17 Laps
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +01.269
17 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +13.279
18 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +27.658
19 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F +34.926
20 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +37.603
21 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +55.357
22 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +1m04.835
23 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m33.546
24 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F +1m41.631
25 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m43.707
26 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +1m48.246
27 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F +1m54.343
28 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 16 Laps
29 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +00.657
30 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F +24.791
31 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F +36.461
32 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +43.947
33 Dennis Gritzmacher KTM 250 SX-F +56.854
34 Lawrence Fortin III KTM 250 SX-F +1m04.799
35 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +1m06.596
36 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F 15 Laps
37 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
38 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 9 Laps
39 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 8 Laps
40 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 7 Laps

250 Overall

By virtue of his second-moto win, Martin surged to the top of the overall classification with 3-1 moto finishes. It signified the 20th victory of his career, which moves him into a tie with Steve Lamson for fourth on the all-time wins list.

It was a hot one today,” said Martin. “I think I’m able to dig deep because as a kid I had to do chores on my parent’s track (Spring Creek MX Park), so I think I’m used to the heat. My team had the bike dialed in, it was just on rails out there. I haven’t been that comfortable on the bike in a while and it just feels so good when everything is working perfectly like that.

Jeremy Martin

Jett Lawrence just missed out on the overall win by a single point but settled for the runner-up spot (2-2) and his sixth podium finish of the season. Cooper was one additional point behind in third (1-4) to keep his unblemished podium streak this season intact at nine rounds.

Jett Lawrence closed to within three-points of championship lead

Lawrence gained a single-point on Cooper in the 250 Class standings, where three-points now separate the championship rivals with three rounds remaining. Martin’s victory moved him up to third, 60 points out of the lead.

Justin Cooper leads the series by three-points with three rounds remaining

I’m coming off a sickness a few days ago, so I’m just happy to be here to be honest,” said Cooper. “I didn’t have the energy to keep up with those guys today, so I’m pretty satisfied to come away with a podium. We only lost a point in the championship and have three rounds to go, so we need to be ready to fight to the finish.”

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
1. Jeremy Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha (3-1)
2. Jett Lawrence, Australia, Honda (2-2)
3. Justin Cooper, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., Yamaha (1-4)

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos RIDER BIKE M1 M2 Points
1 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 3 1 45
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 2 2 44
3 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 1 4 43
4 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R 6 3 35
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 4 5 34
6 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 7 7 28
7 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 9 6 27
8 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F 8 9 25
9 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 10 8 24
10 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 5 15 22
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F 11 11 20
12 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F 14 10 18
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R 13 12 17
14 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE 12 13 17
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 15 14 13
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F 16 16 10
17 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F 19 17 6
18 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 17 4
19 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F 27 18 3
20 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 18 28 3
21 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 40 19 2
22 Zack Williams GAS MC250F 24 20 1
23 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F 20 21 1
24 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F 25 22 0
25 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R 29 23 0
26 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F 28 27 0
27 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F 26 31 0
28 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F 22 36 0
29 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 21 37 0
30 Levi Newby HQV FC250 33 26 0
31 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 36 24 0
32 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F 30 30 0
33 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 23 38 0
34 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F 37 25 0
35 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F 32 32 0
36 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F 38 29 0
37 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 31 39 0
38 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 34 40 0
39 Dennis Gritzmacher KTM 250 SX-F 33 0
40 Lawrence Fortin III KTM 250 SX-F 34 0
41 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 35 0
42 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F 35 0
43 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 39 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Justin Cooper 367
2 Jett Lawrence 364
3 Jeremy Martin 307
4 Hunter Lawrence 298
5 RJ Hampshire 270
6 Jo Shimoda 220
7 Jalek  Swoll 195
8 Austin Forkner 186
9 Colt Nichols 172
10 Maximus Vohland 168
11 Michael Mosiman 154
12 Garrett Marchbanks 146
13 Dilan Schwartz 140
14 Carson Mumford 127
15 Pierce Brown 126
16 Jarrett Frye 123
17 Ty Masterpool 109
18 Stilez Robertson 90
19 Joshua Varize 76
20 Nathanael Thrasher 52
21 Levi Kitchen 47
22 Ramyller Alves 31
23 Preston Kilroy 29
24 Seth Hammaker 26
25 Derek Kelley 25
26 Alex Martin 19
27 Brandon Scharer 13
28 Kailub Russell 11
29 Derek  Drake 9
30 Xylian Ramella 8
31 Christopher Prebula 7
32 Jerry Robin 7
33 James Harrington 7
34 Cameron Mcadoo 6
35 Kaeden Amerine 6
36 Grant Harlan 6
37 Zack Williams 6
38 Jace Kessler 5
39 Garrett Hoffman 4
40 Jesse Flock 3
41 Max Miller 3
42 Jake Pinhancos 2
43 Devin Simonson 2
44 Dominique Thury 2
45 Tommy Rios 1
46 Gared Steinke 1
47 TJ Uselman 1
48 Luke Renzland 1
49 Joseph Tait 0
50 Gabe Gutierres 0
51 Vincent Luhovey 0
52 Levi Newby 0
53 Tre Fierro 0

Just three rounds remain in the 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, which will travel to the motorsports mecca of the greater Indianapolis area next Saturday, August 28, for the 10th round of the season and the Guaranteed Rate Ironman National from Crawfordsville, Indiana’s Ironman Raceway.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett closes in on championship lead with Unadilla victory

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 8 – Unadilla

Images by Jeff Kardas


The final, five-round run to crown a pair of champions kicked off with Round 8 and the Circle K Unadilla National, which signified the anticipated return of the Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship to Central New York’s iconic Unadilla MX. The world’s best racers were challenged all afternoon long on the legendary circuit, which was regarded as the toughest track of the 2021 season thus far. In the end, Team Honda HRC left the field seeing red as they swept the overall victories across both the 450 Class and 250 Class.

After a bit of a rough stretch to open the second half of the summer season, Ken Roczen bounced back in a big way with perhaps the most dominant outing of 2021 thus far. The German rider was in a class of his own in both 450 Class motos and cruised to a 1-1 sweep for his second win of the season, which also helped him gain valuable points in the ongoing title fight.

In the 250 Class, Jett Lawrence rose to the occasion in Moto 2 with one of the best rides of his young career, where an overdue moto win allowed him to prevail with his second victory of the season. The triumphant effort also paid dividends in the championship standings, as Lawrence closed to within just a handful of points of recapturing the red plate.


2021  AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto 1

As the gate dropped on the opening 450 Class moto it was Roczen clear ahead of the field exiting the first turn to easily capture the MotoSport.com Holeshot. As the rest of the field jockeyed for position behind him, it was the Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing duo of Aaron Plessinger and Dylan Ferrandis who slotted into second and third. Roczen was able to drop the hammer on the opening lap and took full advantage of the clear track to establish a multi-second lead over Plessinger and Ferrandis, as the lead trio surged out to a significant margin over the remainder of the 40-rider field.

450

Soon the race became a two-rider affair as both Roczen and Plessinger continued to pull away from Ferrandis. Roczen was comfortable in control of the moto, but Plessinger continually kept him honest by mirroring the lap times. No more than two seconds separated the lead pair through the first half of the moto. Plessinger looked to be faster than Roczen in some places and even showed a wheel a couple times, but the Honda kept him at bay and put a few bike lengths between them.

Plessinger went down

With 10 minutes remaining in the moto, as he gave chase to Roczen, Plessinger suffered a frightening crash that saw his Yamaha loop out and resulted in heavy impact with the ground. Fortunately, Plessinger was able to get up and walk away under his own power, but it brought what began as a strong start to the afternoon to an abrupt and heartbreaking conclusion.

Hard!

With the pressure no longer a factor, Roczen rode alone out front and managed a double-digit lead through the remainder of the moto to earn an impressive wire-to-wire win. He took the checkered flag 10.6 seconds ahead of Ferrandis, while Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac followed in a distant third. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Marvin Musquin was fourth, with his teammate Cooper Webb fifth.

Ken Roczen

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Gap
1 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 15 Laps
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +10.653
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +27.755
4 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +43.307
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +48.171
6 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +52.340
7 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +1m05.802
8 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m12.099
9 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m20.902
10 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m24.494
11 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +1m25.081
12 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m27.604
13 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F +1m45.929
14 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +1m50.598
15 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m53.644
16 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +2m15.754
17 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +2m26.575
18 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +2m31.024
19 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +2m31.955
20 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +2m41.159
21 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 14 Laps
22 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +17.690
23 William Clason KAW KX450 +29.706
24 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +54.815
25 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +1m00.213
26 Nathen LaPorte KTM 450 SX-F +1m05.346
27 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 +1m06.897
28 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m08.459
29 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m10.444
30 Dominique Thury YAM YZ 450F +1m28.674
31 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +1m42.001
32 Trevor Schmidt KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m44.320
33 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F +1m57.356
34 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +2m01.727
35 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 13 Laps
36 Brandon Gregoire YAM YZ 450F +1m20.843
37 Rody Schroyer HON CRF450R +2m09.990
38 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 8 Laps
39 Brock Papi KAW KX450 4 Laps
40 Felix Lopez KAW KX450 2 Laps

450 Moto 2

The second and deciding moto began with Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton out front with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Webb, Ferrandis and Roczen. As Sexton looked to take advantage of his position at the front of the field Roczen was incredibly aggressive and made passes on both Ferrandis and Webb to surge up into second behind his teammate. Shortly thereafter Ferrandis put the pressure on Webb for third and successfully moved into podium position.

Ken Roczen

As the points leader took over control of third, the Hondas out front had built a lead of more than five seconds. Sexton showed impressive pace to maintain a lead of about a second over Roczen, but the German bided his time and waited for the race to come to him. As the moto reached its opening 10 minutes Roczen pulled the trigger and went on the attack. An impressive outside move allowed Roczen to make quick, easy work of his teammate. From there he cemented his control of the moto with one of his fastest laps of the race.

Sexton kept Roczen honest and was within reach as the moto reached its halfway point, but Roczen responded to open up his biggest lead of the moto. The German never looked back and put the finishing touches on one of the most dominant outings of his career. He wrapped up a sweep of the motos by six seconds over Sexton, while Ferrandis withstood a persistent threat from his fellow Frenchman Musquin to finish third.

Ken Roczen

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Gap
1 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 15 Laps
2 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +06.063
3 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +26.121
4 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +35.498
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +44.653
6 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +50.795
7 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +1m03.934
8 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m23.157
9 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m33.668
10 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m42.458
11 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +2m11.718
12 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +2m24.302
13 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +2m29.310
14 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +2m31.721
15 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 14 Laps
16 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +04.247
17 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +08.083
18 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +11.036
19 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +16.336
20 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +31.085
21 William Clason KAW KX450 +35.747
22 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F +37.752
23 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m21.045
24 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 +1m37.011
25 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +1m54.031
26 Nathen LaPorte KTM 450 SX-F +1m54.178
27 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1m57.160
28 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +2m09.374
29 Brandon Gregoire YAM YZ 450F +2m16.660
30 Felix Lopez KAW KX450 13 Laps
31 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 +2m20.516
32 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +2m52.343
33 Jonah Geistler KTM 450 SX-F +3m01.117
34 Thomas Lanphear HQV FC450 +4m46.134
35 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F 6 Laps
36 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F 3 Laps
37 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 2 Laps
38 Trevor Schmidt KTM 450 SX-F FE +33.027
39 Brock Papi KAW KX450 +1m12.750
40 Rody Schroyer HON CRF450R DNF

450 Overall

It’s the second 1-1 effort for Roczen this season and signifies the 20th victory of his career, which moves him into a tie with James Stewart for sixth on the all-time wins list. It’s also the second straight victory for Roczen at Unadilla, where he won the last time the championship visited during the 2019 season.

“This was unreal,” exclaimed Roczen, who won earlier this season at Thunder Valley. “I just felt like I got into the zone today. The track was brutal, and it was easy to make a mistake, but I was able to find great lines and ride really consistent. The crowd was awesome today. They were so passionate and really kept me going. I just want to thank everyone for their support and my team for all the hard work.”

Ferrandis finished in the runner-up spot (2-3) for his eighth podium result this season, which effectively minimized the damage done in the championship standings. Musquin captured his first podium result of the season in third (4-4) to complete an overall podium composed entirely of international competitors.

“I came here to win, but Ken (Roczen) was way too strong today,” said Ferrandis. “It’s fine. Second overall is still good. I lost some points in the championship, but there’s four rounds to go. We’ll see. I think we got the maximum today out of myself and the bike. Ken was just better. We’ll come back and try to be on the top step (of the podium).”

Roczen gained eight points on Ferrandis in the 450 Class standings, and now 39 points sit between them with four rounds remaining. Tomac, who finished fourth (3-7), is third, 62 points out of the lead.

Ken Roczen

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Ken Roczen 1 1 50
2 Dylan Ferrandis 2 3 42
3 Marvin Musquin 4 4 36
4 Eli Tomac 3 7 34
5 Chase Sexton 11 2 32
6 Cooper Webb 5 5 32
7 Christian Craig 7 6 29
8 Max Anstie 8 9 25
9 Justin Bogle 9 12 21
10 Coty Schock 12 10 20
11 Dean Wilson 15 8 19
12 Ryan Surratt 14 11 17
13 Joseph Savatgy 6 20 16
14 Chris Canning 17 13 12
15 Brandon Hartranft 10 37 11
16 Jeremy Hand 16 16 10
17 Jace Kessler 13 22 8
18 Tyler Stepek 21 14 7
19 Justin  Rodbell 18 17 7
20 Ben LaMay 22 15 6
21 Jacob Runkles 19 18 5
22 Jeremy Smith 24 19 2
23 Scott Meshey 20 25 1
24 William Clason 23 21 0
25 Ricci Randanella 27 24 0
26 Bryce Backaus 29 23 0
27 Nathen LaPorte 26 26 0
28 Matthew Hubert 28 27 0
29 Cody Groves 25 35 0
30 Nicolas Rolando 34 28 0
31 Bryce Hansen 31 32 0
32 Brandon Gregoire 36 29 0
33 Bryton Carroll 33 36 0
34 Felix Lopez 40 30 0
35 Trevor Schmidt 32 38 0
36 Rody Schroyer 37 40 0
37 Brock Papi 39 39 0
38 Dominique Thury 30 0
39 Cory Carsten 31 0
40 Jonah Geistler 33 0
41 Thomas Lanphear 34 0
42 Robert Piazza 35 0
43 Aaron Plessinger 38 0

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 8 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 345
2 Ken Roczen 306
3 Eli Tomac 283
4 Chase Sexton 270
5 Justin Barcia 239
6 Aaron Plessinger 217
7 Marvin Musquin 213
8 Christian Craig 211
9 Cooper Webb 209
10 Joseph Savatgy 160
11 Adam Cianciarulo 147
12 Max Anstie 126
13 Dean Wilson 121
14 Justin Bogle 107
15 Brandon Hartranft 96
16 Coty Schock 78
17 Fredrik Noren 58
18 Chris Canning 40
19 Justin  Rodbell 40
20 Ryan Surratt 39
21 Zachary Osborne 33
22 Ben LaMay 33
23 Jason Anderson 29
24 Jeremy Hand 19
25 Tyler Stepek 18
26 Scott Meshey 12
27 Jacob Runkles 10
28 Phillip Nicoletti 9
29 Jace Kessler 8
30 Alessandro  Lupino 8
31 Ryan Sipes 8
32 Tyler Medaglia 6
33 William Clason 5
34 Curren Thurman 4
35 Alex Ray 4
36 Carson Brown 3
37 Mitchell Falk 3
38 Cody Groves 3
39 Robert Piazza 3
40 Kyle Chisholm 2
41 Jeremy Smith 2
42 Jacob Hayes 2
43 Bryce Backaus 1
44 Hunter Schlosser 0
45 Bryce Hansen 0
46 Cole Thompson 0
47 Nathan Augustin 0
48 Matthew Hubert 0
49 Brian Borghesani 0
50 Ricci Randanella 0
51 Nicolas Rolando 0
52 Bryson Gardner 0
53 Bryton Carroll 0

250 Moto 1

The opening 250 Class moto saw championship point leader Justin Cooper emerge with the MotoSport.com Holeshot aboard his Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing machine just ahead of Lawrence, Cooper’s championship rival, and Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Jeremy Martin, who brought a two-race win streak into Unadilla. Lawrence applied heavy pressure on Cooper on the opening lap and looked for a way around, but to no avail. Instead, Cooper withstood the challenge and put a few bike lengths on the field, as Martin looked to close in from third.

Jett Lawrence

The field stabilized about 10 minutes into the moto, but the lead trio were closer than ever with less than two seconds between them. Lawrence appeared to be the fastest of the leaders and once again went on the attack. The top two riders in the championship put on a show as they went to battle for control of the race, which allowed them to drop Martin in third, but Cooper was able to respond to the challenge again. As they reached the halfway point of the moto the leaders settled into their positions, where Cooper managed a multi-second advantage over Lawrence as Martin continued to give chase from third.

Jeremy Martin

Cooper was able to pick up the pace over the second half of the moto and pulled away from Lawrence to establish a lead of more than five seconds. He continued to charge through to the finish and capped off a wire-to-wire victory by 3.3 seconds over Lawrence, with Martin third, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire fourth, and Team Honda HRC’s Hunter Lawrence fifth.

Hunter Lawrence

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 15 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +03.306
3 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F +11.756
4 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +34.549
5 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +37.176
6 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +44.201
7 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +44.345
8 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 +59.693
9 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 +1m00.787
10 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m06.769
11 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +1m16.027
12 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m17.672
13 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m25.761
14 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m29.489
15 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1m30.068
16 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m54.320
17 Stilez Robertson HQV FC250 +2m05.210
18 Alex Martin YAM YZ 250F +2m17.726
19 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +2m41.673
20 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F 14 Laps
21 James Harrington YAM YZ 250F +07.026
22 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +21.969
23 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +26.100
24 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F +29.911
25 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +37.653
26 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +38.034
27 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +59.334
28 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 +1m00.988
29 Pierce Brown GAS MC250F +1m05.658
30 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +1m19.490
31 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m26.123
32 Joseph Tait YAM YZ 250F +2m30.863
33 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R 13 Laps
34 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +12.298
35 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +37.562
36 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F 10 Laps
37 Ramyller Alves GAS MC250F 8 Laps
38 Hunter Calle YAM YZ 250F +5m12.687
39 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 3 Laps
40 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F +21.938

250 Moto 2

As they field charged through the first turn to start Moto 2 it was Cooper who wrapped up each of the day’s MotoSport.com Holeshots, with Martin in tow. Behind them, Jett Lawrence and Hampshire duked it out for third. Martin didn’t waste any time trying to put the pressure on his teammate as the Yamaha-mounted riders went bar-to-bar on multiple occasions on the opening lap. Cooper held him off as Lawrence closed in to make it a three-way fight.

Jett Lawrence

Martin’s persistence paid off five minutes into the moto when he took advantage of a slight bobble by Cooper to take over the lead. Lawrence then proceeded to follow his way into second, but only briefly, as Cooper responded and reclaimed second. Meanwhile, Martin moved out to a lead of nearly two seconds. A lap later Lawrence found his way back onto Cooper’s rear fender and seized the moment to make the pass once again for second. The Australian then set his sights on Martin for the lead.

As Lawrence continued his pursuit of Martin out front, Cooper was facing additional pressure from behind, this time from Hampshire. The Husqvarna rider needed a couple tries, but soon dropped Cooper outside the top three. Not long after that, Lawrence’s path to the front was complete with a decisive pass on Martin just before the halfway point of the moto.

Jett Lawrence

Once out front, Lawrence was able to sprint away from his rivals and quickly built a lead of more than five seconds. He maintained that advantage through to the finish to earn his first moto win since RedBud, taking the checkered flag 3.6 seconds ahead of Martin, with Hampshire in third and Cooper a distant fourth.

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 15 Laps
2 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F +03.607
3 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +49.005
4 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +1m11.190
5 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m19.107
6 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +1m23.931
7 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m26.681
8 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m35.334
9 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 +1m47.001
10 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m47.336
11 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +2m00.583
12 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +2m10.123
13 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +2m15.491
14 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +2m23.075
15 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +2m23.722
16 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F +2m38.266
17 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 14 Laps
18 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +02.305
19 James Harrington YAM YZ 250F +02.549
20 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 +16.751
21 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 +19.565
22 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +41.225
23 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +43.759
24 Gabe Gutierres YAM YZ 250F +50.178
25 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m25.102
26 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +1m33.666
27 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m44.894
28 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +1m52.814
29 Blaze Cremaldi YAM YZ 250F +2m08.791
30 Joseph Tait YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
31 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +17.039
32 Hunter Calle YAM YZ 250F +35.590
33 Dennis Gritzmacher KTM 250 SX-F +51.398
34 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +1m03.348
35 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +1m34.325
36 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 11 Laps
37 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 8 Laps
38 Alex Martin YAM YZ 250F 5 Laps
39 Zack Williams GAS MC250F 3 Laps
40 Pierce Brown GAS MC250F 1 Laps

250 Overall

The triumph in the second moto vaulted Lawrence to the overall win (2-1), the third of his young career. It ended a three-race drought from the podium and follows up his season-opening victory at Fox Raceway in May.

“I finally got my starts sorted and that helps a lot,” said Lawrence. “The boys (fellow competitors) were hooking, but I got some lines, and they were working. I just felt really good there. It felt like home. I got into a groove and felt so fast. It’s just awesome. My mentality isn’t going to change (for the rest of the season). I’m going to come into these last four rounds trying to do everything I can, because Justin (Cooper) is riding well.”

Cooper finished in the runner-up spot (1-4) to miss out on a win in his home state but has still finished on the overall podium in all eight rounds this season. Martin rounded out the podium in third (3-2).

“I just felt really good in the first moto, but I think we needed to make a bike change for the second moto,” explained Cooper. “The track was a lot rougher than I expected. I just lost my rhythm out there. It was still a positive day. We’ll come out swinging (for the final four rounds) and try to wrap up this championship.”

After eight rounds, just four points separate Cooper and Lawrence in the 250 Class standings. Hunter Lawrence, who finished sixth (5-11), is third, 61 points out of the lead, while Martin sits an additional point back in fourth.


250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Jett Lawrence 2 1 47
2 Justin Cooper 1 4 43
3 Jeremy Martin 3 2 42
4 RJ Hampshire 4 3 38
5 Maximus Vohland 6 5 31
6 Hunter Lawrence 5 11 26
7 Jalek  Swoll 8 9 25
8 Levi Kitchen 12 7 23
9 Jarrett Frye 13 8 21
10 Ty Masterpool 11 14 17
11 Carson Mumford 10 15 17
12 Preston Kilroy 16 10 16
13 Austin Forkner 39 6 15
14 Dilan Schwartz 15 12 15
15 Joshua Varize 14 13 15
16 Jo Shimoda 7 36 14
17 Seth Hammaker 9 21 12
18 Garrett Marchbanks 40 16 5
19 Stilez Robertson 17 4
20 Xylian Ramella 24 17 4
21 Christopher Prebula 22 18 3
22 Alex Martin 18 38 3
23 James Harrington 21 19 2
24 Jerry Robin 19 37 2
25 Luke Renzland 28 20 1
26 Vincent Luhovey 23 22 0
27 TJ Uselman 20 26 1
28 Garrett Hoffman 26 23 0
29 Tommy Rios 27 28 0
30 Maxwell Sanford 33 25 0
31 Jared Lesher 31 27 0
32 Joseph Tait 32 30 0
33 Blake Ashley 30 34 0
34 Zack Williams 25 39 0
35 Noah Willbrandt 34 31 0
36 Pierce Brown 29 40 0
37 Hunter Calle 38 32 0
38 Stephen  Hooker 35 35 0
39 Gabe Gutierres 24 0
40 Blaze Cremaldi 29 0
41 Dennis Gritzmacher 33 0
42 Derek Kelley 36 0
43 Ramyller Alves 37 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 8 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Justin Cooper 324
2 Jett Lawrence 320
3 Hunter Lawrence 263
4 Jeremy Martin 262
5 RJ Hampshire 243
6 Jo Shimoda 192
7 Jalek  Swoll 173
8 Colt Nichols 172
9 Michael Mosiman 154
10 Austin Forkner 152
11 Maximus Vohland 151
12 Garrett Marchbanks 146
13 Pierce Brown 126
14 Dilan Schwartz 116
15 Carson Mumford 110
16 Jarrett Frye 105
17 Stilez Robertson 90
18 Ty Masterpool 84
19 Joshua Varize 56
20 Nathanael Thrasher 52
21 Levi Kitchen 37
22 Ramyller Alves 31
23 Derek Kelley 25
24 Seth Hammaker 22
25 Alex Martin 19
26 Preston Kilroy 16
27 Brandon Scharer 13
28 Kailub Russell 11
29 Derek  Drake 9
30 Xylian Ramella 8
31 Christopher Prebula 7
32 James Harrington 7
33 Cameron Mcadoo 6
34 Grant Harlan 6
35 Zack Williams 5
36 Jace Kessler 5
37 Jerry Robin 4
38 Jesse Flock 3
39 Max Miller 3
40 Jake Pinhancos 2
41 Dominique Thury 2
42 Gared Steinke 1
43 TJ Uselman 1
44 Garrett Hoffman 1
45 Luke Renzland 1
46 Joseph Tait 0
47 Gabe Gutierres 0
48 Vincent Luhovey 0
49 Levi Newby 0
50 Tre Fierro 0
51 Kaeden Amerine 0
52 Ryder Floyd 0
53 Kyle Greeson 0

The Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will continue next weekend with a visit to Southern Maryland, in the shadow of the nation’s capital of Washington D.C., where Mechanicsville’s famed Budds Creek Motocross Park will host Round 9 of the championship and the Circle K Budds Creek National.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Sexton wins Washougal | Martin tops 250

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 7 – Washougal MX Park, Washington

Images by Jeff Kardas


The Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing, kicked off its second half of the 2021 season with a visit to the Pacific Northwest and legendary Washougal MX Park. The seventh round of the season featured abundant sunshine and a massive crowd welcoming the return of the world’s fastest racers for the MotoSport.com Washougal National.

In the 450 Class, a highly competitive afternoon saw Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton emerge victorious to become the division’s fourth different winner.

Chase Sexton became the fourth different round winner from the opening seven rounds of the series

Dylan Ferrandis extended his championship lead over Ken Roczen to 47-points while Eli Tomac moves to within seven-points of Roczen.

In the 250 Class, the historic streak of six different winners came to an end as Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Jeremy Martin prevailed for the second straight race to take his first Washougal victory.

Jeremy Martin won Washougal and ranks fourth on points

Jett Lawrence now trails Justin Cooper by eight-points in the championship chase while Hunter Lawrence remains third, 44-points behind championship leader Cooper.


2021  Washougal AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto 1

The opening 450 Class moto got underway with Sexton leading the field with the MotoSport.com Holeshot while teammate Ken Roczen slotted into second. The Honda duo dropped the hammer on the opening lap to try and open a gap over Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb, in third, and the rest of the field, while points leader Dylan Ferrandis had to fight his way from ninth aboard his Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing machine.

Sexton leads

Sexton and Roczen continued to pace the field and moved out several seconds ahead of Webb, who came under fire from his Red Bull KTM teammate Marvin Musquin and Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac 10 minutes into the moto. Musquin made a successful pass on Webb to move into podium position and Tomac soon followed into fourth.

Eli Tomac

Back out front, Sexton started to pull away from Roczen and built a lead of more than five seconds as Roczen proceeded to lose ground to Musquin. The Frenchman continued to pressure the German and after several laps Musquin made the pass to take over second. Tomac was next in line and the old rivals battled briefly until lapped traffic worked in Tomac’s favor and allowed him to drop Roczen off the podium. The Honda rider continued to lose positions and eventually was passed by his championship rival Ferrandis.

Chase Sexton

For Sexton it was the most dominant outing of his career as he went wire-to-wire to bring home his first moto win of the season. A late moment of misfortune by Musquin allowed Tomac to move into second and finish 3.4 seconds behind Sexton, while Musquin recovered to earn his best moto result of the season in third. Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS Factory Racing’s Justin Barcia finished fourth, with Ferrandis fifth and Roczen sixth.

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike……………………………… Interval/Gap
1 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE 16 Laps
2 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +03.461
3 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +14.275
4 Justin Barcia GAS MC450F +16.166
5 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +18.081
6 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +32.419
7 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +33.440
8 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +39.139
9 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +44.080
10 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +51.597
11 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m15.993
12 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F +1m22.208
13 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m44.525
14 Ryan Sipes GAS MC450F +1m48.333
15 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +1m55.396
16 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m59.934
17 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +2m03.623
18 Carson Brown HQV TC250 +2m39.690
19 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R 1 Laps
20 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +11.354
21 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F +22.301
22 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +24.820
23 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +57.485
24 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R +1m17.451
25 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F +1m28.244
26 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +1m32.710
27 Collin Jurin KAW KX450 +1m35.191
28 Morgan Burger KTM 450 SX-F +1m37.066
29 Wyatt Lyonsmith KAW KX450 +1m43.279
30 Connor Olson KTM 450 SX-F +1m46.311
31 Kolton Dean YAM YZ 450F +1m47.562
32 Alex Ray KAW KX450 +2m26.313
33 Chris Howell KAW KX450 14 Laps
34 Chance Blackburn YAM YZ 450F +04.752
35 Devon Bates KTM 450 SX-F +25.893
36 Zachery Redding YAM YZ 450F 13 Laps
37 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 12 Laps
38 Deven Raper KAW KX450 8 Laps
39 Colby Copp GAS MC450F 5 Laps
40 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F DNS

450 Moto 2

As the 450 Class field stormed out the gate to begin Moto 2 it was Webb who edged out Ferrandis and his Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing teammate Aaron Plessinger to secure the MotoSport.com Holeshot. Webb assumed the lead briefly, but Ferrandis put in a charge to make a quick pass and seize control of the moto, leaving Webb to fend off Sexton in third.

Cooper Webb led them away

Sexton made his way around Webb and then looked to track down Ferrandis for the lead. Webb’s battle wasn’t over as Plessinger pressued from fourth. Webb held him off briefly but the Yamaha rider was able to make the pass and move into the top three. As the moto approached the 10-minute mark less than two seconds separated the lead trio while Tomac lurked in fourth.

Eli Tomac

The top four settled into their positions through the middle portion of the moto and paced one another with consistent lap times. Sensing an opportunity, Tomac went on the attack and made quick work of Plessinger to move into third. The intensity from the top three increased dramatically during the final 10 minutes of the moto as a strong push from Tomac pushed Sexton closer to Ferrandis. The Frenchman responded with some of his fastest laps of the race and it allowed him to put a little distance over his contenders. After an extended battle Tomac finally got around Sexton for second and had just over two laps to try and erase a near three-second deficit to Ferrandis.

Chase Sexton

As they came to the while flag Tomac posted the fastest lap of the afternoon to close to within mere bike lengths of the points leader. Ferrandis dug deep and withstood the challenge to pull out the moto win, 4.5 seconds ahead of Tomac as Sexton followed in a distant third.

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike…………………………… Interval/Gap
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 16 Laps
2 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +04.512
3 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +20.175
4 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F +38.023
5 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +42.387
6 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +44.460
7 Justin Barcia GAS MC450F +49.165
8 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +1m00.948
9 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m06.507
10 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +1m08.718
11 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m13.464
12 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m22.083
13 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m28.471
14 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m30.870
15 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +2m11.637
16 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +2m29.838
17 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 15 Laps
18 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +17.053
19 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +26.898
20 Ryan Sipes GAS MC450F +32.034
21 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F +48.719
22 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +52.743
23 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +1m12.030
24 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +1m25.061
25 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R +1m28.974
26 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F +1m33.530
27 Morgan Burger KTM 450 SX-F +1m44.351
28 Kolton Dean YAM YZ 450F +1m48.234
29 Colby Copp GAS MC450F +2m39.440
30 Chris Howell KAW KX450 14 Laps
31 Dominic DeSimone HON CRF450R +09.882
32 Wyatt Lyonsmith KAW KX450 +1m04.181
33 Devon Bates KTM 450 SX-F +1m21.481
34 Collin Jurin KAW KX450 13 Laps
35 Zachery Redding YAM YZ 450F +41.662
36 Connor Olson KTM 450 SX-F 10 Laps
37 Alex Ray KAW KX450 5 Laps
38 Chance Blackburn YAM YZ 450F +14.486
39 Deven Raper KAW KX450 DNF
40 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F DNF

450 Overall

Sexton’s strong 1-3 effort landed him atop the podium for the second time in his career. It also signified his first podium result of the season. Tomac settled for the runner-up spot (2-2) and missed out on his first win of the year by a single point. Ferrandis rounded out the overall podium in third (5-1).

I got two pretty good starts today and that was the difference,” said Sexton. “It feels so good to win after such a rough start to the season. I’ve been grinding at home in Florida, just trying to get better, and it finally paid off. We’ll head into this break with confidence, ready to come out even better.

Chase Sexton

Ferrandis’ seventh podium result, combined with a ninth-place finish by Roczen (6-10), allowed the Frenchman to establish a significant lead in the 450 Class standings. Ferrandis now sits 47 points ahead of Roczen, with Tomac just a few points behind in third, 54 points out of the lead.

I think the holeshot helped me get that (second moto) win,” said Ferrandis. “I was able to manage the pace and save energy. I didn’t know if it was Eli (Tomac) or Chase (Sexton) at the end, but I had enough to make a push. It feels good to come out on top of that battle with Eli. He’s such a tough competitor and a great rider. I’m really happy with the day.

Dylan Ferrandis

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Chase Sexton 1 3 45
2 Eli Tomac 2 2 44
3 Dylan Ferrandis 5 1 41
4 Marvin Musquin 3 5 36
5 Justin Barcia 4 7 32
6 Cooper Webb 7 6 29
7 Aaron Plessinger 12 4 27
8 Christian Craig 8 8 26
9 Ken Roczen 6 10 26
10 Joseph Savatgy 10 9 23
11 Max Anstie 9 12 21
12 Dean Wilson 11 11 20
13 Brandon Hartranft 13 15 14
14 Justin Bogle 16 13 13
15 Coty Schock 17 14 11
16 Ben LaMay 15 16 11
17 Ryan Sipes 14 20 8
18 Jeremy Hand 19 18 5
19 Ryan Surratt 22 17 4
20 Carson Brown 18 3
21 Scott Meshey 23 19 2
22 Hunter Schlosser 21 21 0
23 Tyler Stepek 20 23 1
24 Bryson Gardner 24 25 0
25 Justin  Rodbell 26 24 0
26 Layton  Smail 25 26 0
27 Morgan Burger 28 27 0
28 Matthew Hubert 37 22 0
29 Kolton Dean 31 28 0
30 Wyatt Lyonsmith 29 32 0
31 Collin Jurin 27 34 0
32 Chris Howell 33 30 0
33 Connor Olson 30 36 0
34 Colby Copp 39 29 0
35 Devon Bates 35 33 0
36 Alex Ray 32 37 0
37 Zachery Redding 36 35 0
38 Chance Blackburn 34 38 0
39 Deven Raper 38 39 0
40 Fredrik Noren 40 40 0
41 Dominic DeSimone 31 0

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 7 of 12)

Pos Rider Bike……………………….. Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 303
2 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 256
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 249
4 Justin Barcia GAS MC450F 239
5 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE 238
6 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 217
7 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 182
8 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE 177
9 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE 177
10 Adam Cianciarulo KAW KX450 147
11 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE 144
12 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE 102
13 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 101
14 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE 86
15 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 85
16 Fredrik Noren KTM 450 SX-F 58
17 Coty Schock HON CRF450R 58
18 Zachary Osborne HQV FC450 RE 33
19 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 33
20 Jason Anderson HQV FC450 RE 29
21 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE 28
22 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 27
23 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 22
24 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 11
25 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 11
26 Phillip Nicoletti YAM YZ 450F 9
27 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R 9
28 Alessandro  Lupino KTM 450 SX-F 8
29 Ryan Sipes GAS MC450F 8
30 Tyler Medaglia GAS MC450F 6
31 William Clason KAW KX450 5
32 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F 5
33 Curren Thurman GAS MC450F 4
34 Alex Ray KAW KX450 4
35 Carson Brown HQV TC250 3
36 Mitchell Falk GAS MC450F 3
37 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F 3
38 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 3
39 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 2
40 Jacob Hayes KTM 450 SX-F 2
41 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F 1
42 Hunter Schlosser YAM YZ 450F 0
43 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 0
44 Cole Thompson KTM 450 SX-F 0
45 Nathan Augustin KTM 450 SX-F 0
46 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 0
47 Brian Borghesani GAS MC450F 0
48 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE 0
49 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 0
50 Bryson Gardner HON CRF450R 0
51 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F 0
52 Layton  Smail KTM 350 SX-F 0
53 Trevor Schmidt KTM 450 SX-F FE 0

250 Moto 1

The first 250 Class moto of the afternoon saw FXR/Chaparral Honda Racing’s Carson Mumford storm to the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper in second. As Mumford sought to take advantage of his opportunity to be out front, Cooper applied heavy pressure and looked to seize control of the moto on the opening lap. However, Mumford successfully fended off the attack from the points leader and asserted himself in the lead. Behind them, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire slotted into third.

Justin Cooper and Jeremy Martin

Mumford controlled the pace through the opening minutes, but Cooper started to inch closer and soon mounted another challenge eight minutes into the moto. The Yamaha rider was successful the second time around and worked his way past Mumford to grab the lead. The ensuing laps saw Mumford lose more positions as Hampshire took over second and Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS Factory Racing’s Pierce Brown moved into third. Martin entered the picture from fourth and set his sights on the top three.

Jeremy Martin

Out front, Cooper and Hampshire traded fast lap times as the distance between them fluctuated throughout the middle portion of the moto. Hampshire persisted and as they reached 10 minutes remaining in the moto he had closed to within less than a second. However, lapped riders worked in Cooper’s favor and briefly allowed him to extend his lead. Hampshire never let up and continued his charge to keep Cooper honest, but as time expired on the 30-minutes-plus-two-lap moto Cooper dug deep to find some late pace and left Hampshire behind. The championship leader charged to his first Moto 1 win of the season, 2.8 seconds ahead of Hampshire, followed by Martin in third, Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS Factory Racing’s Michael Mosiman in fourth and Team Honda HRC’s Hunter Lawrence in fifth. Team Honda HRC’s Jett Lawrence, who sits second in the championship, finished a distant seventh.

Jett Lawrence was seventh

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike……………………… Interval/Gap
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 16 Laps
2 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +02.824
3 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F +05.032
4 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +11.609
5 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +15.476
6 Pierce Brown GAS MC250F +18.905
7 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +26.345
8 Colt Nichols YAM YZ 250F +28.025
9 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +51.759
10 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F +57.533
11 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m06.089
12 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +1m14.261
13 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1m17.337
14 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F +1m19.301
15 Alex Martin YAM YZ 250F +1m33.683
16 Ramyller Alves GAS MC250F +1m40.924
17 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m42.234
18 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m57.623
19 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +2m03.310
20 Gared Steinke KAW KX 250 +2m11.926
21 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F +2m16.078
22 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +2m20.093
23 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +2m22.502
24 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 15 Laps
25 Gabe Gutierres YAM YZ 250F +13.976
26 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +19.432
27 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F +27.055
28 James Harrington YAM YZ 250F +31.384
29 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +49.774
30 Brian Marty HQV FC250 +1m16.979
31 Bailey Kroone YAM YZ 250F +1m32.037
32 Jorge Rubalcava HQV FC250 +1m33.258
33 Devin Harriman KTM 250 SX-F +1m42.956
34 Mason Olson GAS MC250F +1m47.998
35 Konnor  Visger HON CRF250R +2m06.590
36 Jordan Jarvis KAW KX 250 14 Laps
37 Tyler Ducray KTM 250 SX-F +20.676
38 Levi Newby HQV FC250 11 Laps
39 Braden Spangle HON CRF250R 3 Laps
40 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 DNS

250 Moto 2

When the gate dropped on the second 250 Class moto it was Cooper who put himself back up front with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Martin and Lawrence, who made slight contact as they jockeyed for position, which caused Lawrence to lose a couple spots. Martin then went on the attack and looked to make a pass on his teammate for the lead as Hampshire emerged in third.

Justin Cooper leading Jeremy Martin

The top five riders sat within five seconds of one another 10 minutes into the moto, with Martin applying constant pressure on Cooper as Hampshire patiently let things play out from third. Just before the halfway point of the moto Martin pulled the trigger with an inside pass entering the track’s whoop section. Cooper looked to counter but Martin made it stick. Shortly thereafter, Hampshire attempted to make a move for second, but briefly stalled his motorcycle and gave up third to Brown before continuing from fourth, just ahead of Lawrence.

RJ Hampshire

Once he moved into the lead Martin was able to build a gap over Cooper, but in the waning minutes of the moto Cooper picked up the pace and closed back in. Martin responded and with two laps to go Cooper suffered a costly crash going up Horsepower Hill. He eventually remounted and reentered the race, but lost several positions.

Jett Lawrence scored second

Unaware of his teammate’s misfortune, Martin carried on to the moto win and crossed the finish line 11.8 seconds ahead of Lawrence, who inherited second, with Hampshire third. Cooper soldiered home to finish eighth.

Jeremy Martin

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike…………………… Interval/Gap
1 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 16 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +11.837
3 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +18.207
4 Pierce Brown GAS MC250F +20.379
5 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +26.566
6 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +30.902
7 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F +38.970
8 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +47.189
9 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +51.889
10 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +57.364
11 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m05.510
12 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m13.821
13 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m29.143
14 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F +1m38.251
15 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F +1m59.739
16 Ramyller Alves GAS MC250F +2m07.849
17 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +2m11.329
18 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +2m19.102
19 Alex Martin YAM YZ 250F 15 Laps
20 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +25.074
21 Gabe Gutierres YAM YZ 250F +38.318
22 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +1m16.855
23 Gared Steinke KAW KX 250 +1m19.631
24 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F +1m20.487
25 James Harrington YAM YZ 250F +1m30.994
26 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +1m34.010
27 Mason Olson GAS MC250F +2m07.836
28 Brian Marty HQV FC250 +2m16.680
29 Bailey Kroone YAM YZ 250F +2m23.336
30 Jordan Jarvis KAW KX 250 +2m40.277
31 Konnor  Visger HON CRF250R 14 Laps
32 Zac Maley YAM YZ 250F +10.974
33 Colt Nichols YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
34 Devin Harriman KTM 250 SX-F 11 Laps
35 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F 8 Laps
36 Jorge Rubalcava HQV FC250 4 Laps
37 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 3 Laps
38 Tyler Ducray KTM 250 SX-F +39.076
39 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m16.481
40 Braden Spangle HON CRF250R DNS

250 Overall

With his 3-1 moto finishes Martin prevailed with an unexpected overall win. His back-to-back victories made him the first repeat winner of the season in the 250 Class and gave him his 19th career win, which moves him into a tie with Ryan Villopoto for fifth all time.

Jeremy Martin

Coming into today (team owner) Bobby Reagan told me he didn’t know if I had what it takes at Washougal and that’s all the motivation I needed,” said Martin. “I know I got a little bit of a gift. It’s a bummer that Justin (Cooper) went down, you hate to see anyone go down like that. I’m just so happy to be up here. I’ve always kind of struggled here so it feels so good to get it done at Washougal.”

Jeremy Martin won Washougal and ranks fourth on points

Hampshire finished in the runner-up spot (2-3), while Cooper hung on to a podium result in third (1-8).

Despite his adversity, Cooper added to his lead over Lawrence in the 250 Class standings. Eight points now separate the top two riders in the championship. Hunter Lawrence is third, 44 points out of the lead.

With two laps to go I was trying to make a push on Jeremy (Martin),” explained Cooper. “I was going up the hill and got a weird kick. I’m not really sure what happened. It was in the shadows so it was hard to see. I ended up in a tough spot on the hill so it was hard to get going again. Obviously things can change quickly (in the championship). We’ll take this break, regroup, and come back strong to finish the season.”

Justin Cooper

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Jeremy Martin 3 1 45
2 RJ Hampshire 2 3 42
3 Justin Cooper 1 8 38
4 Jett Lawrence 7 2 36
5 Pierce Brown 6 4 33
6 Michael Mosiman 4 7 32
7 Hunter Lawrence 5 10 27
8 Dilan Schwartz 13 6 23
9 Austin Forkner 12 9 21
10 Maximus Vohland 9 12 21
11 Carson Mumford 11 11 20
12 Garrett Marchbanks 10 15 17
13 Jo Shimoda 24 5 16
14 Derek Kelley 14 14 14
15 Colt Nichols 8 33 13
16 Jarrett Frye 18 13 11
17 Ramyller Alves 16 16 10
18 Alex Martin 15 19 8
19 Christopher Prebula 22 17 4
20 Joshua Varize 17 39 4
21 Zack Williams 23 18 3
22 Jerry Robin 19 37 2
23 Garrett Hoffman 26 20 1
24 Gared Steinke 20 23 1
25 Xylian Ramella 21 24 0
26 Gabe Gutierres 25 21 0
27 James Harrington 28 25 0
28 Wade Brommel 29 26 0
29 Brian Marty 30 28 0
30 Levi Newby 38 22 0
31 Bailey Kroone 31 29 0
32 Mason Olson 34 27 0
33 Kyle Greeson 27 35 0
34 Jordan Jarvis 36 30 0
35 Konnor  Visger 35 31 0
36 Devin Harriman 33 34 0
37 Jorge Rubalcava 32 36 0
38 Tyler Ducray 37 38 0
39 Braden Spangle 39 40 0
40 Zac Maley 32 0
41 Jalek  Swoll 40 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 7 of 12)

Pos Rider Bike……………………. Points
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 281
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 273
3 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R 237
4 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 220
5 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 205
6 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 178
7 Colt Nichols YAM YZ 250F 172
8 Michael Mosiman GAS MC250F 154
9 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 148
10 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 141
11 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 137
12 Pierce Brown GAS MC250F 126
13 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE 120
14 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 101
15 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R 93
16 Stilez Robertson HQV FC250 86
17 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F 84
18 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F 67
19 Nathanael Thrasher YAM YZ 250F 52
20 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F 41
21 Ramyller Alves GAS MC250F 31
22 Derek Kelley GAS MC250F 25
23 Alex Martin YAM YZ 250F 16
24 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F 14
25 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 13
26 Kailub Russell KTM 250 SX-F 11
27 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 10
28 Derek  Drake SUZ RMZ 250 9
29 Cameron Mcadoo KAW KX 250 6
30 Grant Harlan HON CRF250R 6
31 Zack Williams GAS MC250F 5
32 James Harrington YAM YZ 250F 5
33 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 250F 5
34 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 4
35 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 4
36 Jesse Flock HQV FC250 3
37 Max Miller KTM 250 SX-F 3
38 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 2
39 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F 2
40 Dominique Thury YAM YZ 250F 2
41 Gared Steinke KAW KX 250 1
42 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F 1
43 Joseph Tait YAM YZ 250F 0
44 Gabe Gutierres YAM YZ 250F 0
45 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F 0
46 Levi Newby HQV FC250 0
47 Tre Fierro KTM 250 SX-F 0
48 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 0
49 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F 0
50 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F 0
51 Ryder Floyd YAM YZ 250F 0
52 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F 0
53 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 0

The Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will observe the season’s final break in action with a pair of off weekends before returning for its stretch run on August 14 with the Circle K Unadilla National.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence wins opening Moto at Red Bud | Video Highlights

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 4 – Twisted Tea RedBud National

Images by Jeff Kardas


Following its second break of the 2021 season the Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing, returned to action for its Fourth of July tradition with the annual Twisted Tea RedBud National.

The fourth round of the season saw a massive crowd line the fences in their red, white, and blue for America’s Independence Day holiday and were treated to an afternoon of perfect weather.

Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis continued his impressive season by leading the way in the 450 Class for his third victory of the season.

In the 250 Class, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire demonstrated incredible speed all day en route to his third career win.

Red Bud AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto1

As the gate dropped on the opening 450 Class moto, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Aaron Plessinger prevailed with the Motosport.com Holeshot ahead of Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb and Team Honda HRC’s Ken Roczen. A quick pass by Webb in the second turn allowed him to steal the lead from Plessinger who retaliated to retake the lead just turns later. It was Plessinger, Roczen, and Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Adam Cianciarulo at the completion of the opening lap. Championship point leader Ferrandis was sixth at the start.

Red Bud AMA Pro Motocross

As the moto surpassed the 10-minute mark, Roczen started to close on Plessinger for the lead, eventually making the pass stick as Plessinger slid back to second. As Cianciarulo continued his charge in third, he would soon find himself under pressure from Ferrandis who was turning the fastest lap times of the race.

Adam Cianciarulo

Ferrandis was relentless in his push to the front and made the move on Cianciarulo just before the halfway point of the moto. The battle for the lead began to tighten up as Plessinger closed in on Roczen while his teammate Ferrandis closed in on them both with 10-minutes remaining. The Star Racing Yamaha teammates pulled alongside each other several times before Ferrandis took possession of second with a pass on Plessinger through the sand rollers.

Ferrandis

Ferrandis’ charge to the front could not be stopped as he struck on his championship rival Roczen to take the lead with just three laps remaining. The Frenchman would hold on to claim his second moto win of the season with 2.9 seconds to spare on Roczen. After leading early, Plessinger would finish third.

Ferrandis takes victory

450 Moto 2

The deciding 450 Class moto kicked off with Plessinger launching out of the gate to sweep the Motosport.com Holeshots by edging out the Monster Energy Kawasaki duo of Eli Tomac and Cianciarulo, followed by Roczen and Ferrandis. Cianciarulo would lose the front end coming downhill on the opening lap and be forced to rejoin near the tail end of the field as Plessinger, Tomac, Roczen, and Ferrandis led the way on the opening lap.

Red Bud AMA Pro Motocross

The battle immediately intensified up front as Tomac made quick work of Plessinger to take the number one position from Plessinger. Just behind the leaders, Roczen and Ferrandis matched one another’s pace in an effort for valuable championship points and to keep the leaders in sight. Roczen made a costly mistake that saw him go down hard, but he was able to dust himself off and remount in sixth.

Ken Roczen

Up front, Tomac and Plessinger were separated by no more than two seconds for the majority of the race as they took turns on clocking the better lap times.

Eli Tomac

With the race winding down, the battle for second began to heat up as Ferrandis closed in on his teammate Plessinger. He would use an excellent drive through the sand rollers to take second and set his sights on the race leader Tomac. As the crowd cheered them on, Tomac held on to take his second moto win of the season by just 1.5 seconds over Ferrandis. A distant third would go to Plessinger, while Roczen recovered for sixth.

Eli Tomac

450 Overall

It was Ferrandis who’s hard charging and consistency would give him the overall victory (1-2). Tomac earned his second consecutive podium of the season in season (4-1), while Plessinger completed the podium with an impressive 3-3 moto scores on the day. Roczen’s 6-2 was good enough for fourth. A jump during the red cross flag in Moto 1 resulted in Ferrandis being docked a single point and Roczen two points, however, the overall finishes remained the same.

Ferrandis

“I gave it everything and it was a big fight today,” said Ferrandis. “I charged really hard at the end of the motos. I wanted to win the second moto, but Eli [Tomac] was riding really good. I dreamed of winning here at RedBud and thanks to the fans for cheering loud for us all day. It’s been a good start to the season and I’m really looking forward to keep working hard so we can stay up front the rest of the season.”

Ferrandis passes Plessinger

With the win Ferrandis was able to extend his lead in the championship standings to 14-points over Roczen who lost crucial points in the second moto. Plessinger sits third, 36-points out of the lead.

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

  1. Dylan Ferrandis, Yamaha (1-2)
  2. Eli Tomac, Cortez, Kawasaki (4-1)
  3. Aaron Plessinger, Yamaha (2-2)
  4. Ken Roczen, Honda (2-6)
  5. Christian Craig, Yamaha (5-5)
  6. Chase Sexton, Honda (8-4)
  7. Cooper Webb, KTM (7-9)
  8. Justin Barcia, GASGAS (8-4)
  9. Joey Savatgy, KTM (10-10)
  10. Brandon Hartranft, Suzuki (11-13)

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 4 of 12)

  1. Dylan Ferrandis, Yamaha – 179
  2. Ken Roczen, Honda – 165
  3. Aaron Plessinger, Yamaha – 143
  4. Chase Sexton, Honda – 132
  5. Eli Tomac, Kawasaki – 129
  6. Justin Barcia, GASGAS – 121
  7. Adam Cianciarulo, Kawasaki – 116
  8. Christian Craig, Yamaha – 104
  9. Cooper Webb, KTM – 102
  10. Marvin Musquin, KTM – 90

250 Moto 1

When the gate dropped for the first 250 Class moto of the day it was Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper who emerged with the Motosport.com holeshot just ahead of the Team Honda HRC duo of Jett and Hunter Lawrence, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Jeremy Martin and Hampshire. As they crossed the finish on the opening lap, Cooper lost traction going up the face of the finish line and crashed out of the lead. Cooper’s mistake allowed a hard charging Hampshire to inherit the lead over the Lawrence brothers and Martin. Cooper would remount in 10th.

Justin Cooper

Hampshire pushed the pace out front with Jett Lawrence in tow and the duo began to slowly distance themselves from the train of riders behind them. As Jett Lawrence applied the pressure, Hampshire crashed out of the lead, but was able to restart quickly in second. Hunter Lawrence remained a distant third.

Jett Lawrence

With the race closing in on the halfway point of the 30-minute-plus-two-lap moto, Hampshire started to inch back onto the rear wheel of Jett Lawrence and searched for a way around. Hampshire would once again lose the front end of his motorcycle and find himself on the ground while contending for the race lead. Hunter Lawrence took full advantage of Hampshire’s mistake to move into second, while Hampshire remounted in third.

Hunter Lawrence

As Jett Lawrence continued to control the race out front, Hunter Lawrence and Hampshire started to gain momentum and slowly reduce the gap to the race leader. With three laps to go, Hampshire muscled his way around Hunter Lawrence for second and began to set his sights on the race leader Jett Lawrence but Jett held on to take the checkered flag for his third moto win of the season by 2.2 seconds over Hampshire. Hunter Lawrence finished third, just ahead of Cooper who recovered for fourth.

Hunter Lawrence

250 Moto 2

The final 250 Class moto of the afternoon saw Cooper capture his second Motosport.com Holeshot of the day, just ahead of his teammate Martin and first moto runner-up finisher Hampshire. The Lawrence brothers found themselves mired deep in the pack as Hunter was scored 11th and Jett 18th at the completion of the opening lap.

Justin Cooper

As the lead trio went to work with a clear track out front, Jett Lawrence put his head down in an attempt to do damage control, however, a costly mistake would see him make contact with another rider and go down, losing valuable time as he remounted outside the top-30.

Jett Lawrence

Out front, Hampshire began to find his momentum as he moved Cooper to within striking distance for the race lead, using every inch of the track to find a way past. At the 15-minute mark, Hampshire would get a drive and out drag race Cooper to become the new race leader.

Justin Cooper

Just as Hampshire looked to have the race under control he would yet again find himself picking himself up off the ground as he surrendered the lead to Cooper in the late stages of the moto. Cooper emerged with his second moto win of the season by 12.9 seconds over Hampshire. Martin finished third in an impressive return from injury, followed by Hunter Lawrence in fourth. An inspiring ride by Jett Lawrence netted him sixth.

Hunter Lawrence

250 Overall

By virtue of 2-2 finishes Hampshire prevailed for his first win of the season and won the RedBud National for the second consecutive year. Cooper’s second moto win earned him second overall (4-1) as Jett Lawrence completed the podium in third (1-6), followed by his brother Hunter in fourth (3-4).

Jett Lawrence on the podium but saw his series lead trimmed by three points

“This win just feels so good after everything I’ve gone through lately,” said Hampshire. “As you can hear, I’ve been super sick all week, so to be up here today is a bit emotional. I give it my all everytime I’m on the track, and it would have been great to get those moto wins today, but to win here at RedBud for the second year in a row is an amazing feeling. The speed has been really good lately and I’m looking forward to some of my favorite tracks coming up on the schedule.”

RJ Hampshire

Jett Lawrence maintains his hold of the championship point lead by eight over Cooper who reduced the gap by three on the day. Hunter Lawrence remains third, 44-points out of the championship lead.

Jett Lawrence

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

  1. RJ Hampshire, Husqvarna (2-2)
  2. Justin Cooper, Yamaha (4-1)
  3. Jett Lawrence, Honda (1-6)
  4. Hunter Lawrence, Honda (3-4)
  5. Jeremy Martin, Yamaha (5-3)
  6. Jo Shimoda, Kawasaki (6-5)
  7. Pierce Brown, GASGAS (7-7)
  8. Stilez Robertson, Husqvarna (12-8)
  9. Max Vohland, KTM (10-11)
  10. Jalek Swoll, Husqvarna (8-14)

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 4 of 12)

  1. Jett Lawrence, Honda – 172
  2. Justin Cooper, Yamaha – 164
  3. Hunter Lawrence, Honda – 128
  4. RJ Hampshire, Husqvarna – 111
  5. Jeremy Martin, Yamaha – 108
  6. Jalek Swoll, Husqvarna – 108
  7. Garrett Marchbanks, Yamaha – 103
  8. Jo Shimoda, Kawasaki – 99
  9. Colt Nichols, Yamaha – 97
  10. Austin Forkner, Kawasaki – 87

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto News | Ruprecht tops EnduroGP D2 | Whale wins OKC Mile II

Team Australia now taking MXoN applications

In 2021 Montova, Italy will play host to the year’s edition of the Monster Energy FIM Motocross of Nations (MXoN). Commencing on 26th September, Motorcycling Australia (MA) has called for all interested competitors to submit their applications to join Team Australia.

MXoN Multiple Kyle Webster JB MXON
Kyle Webster – Team Australia – 2019 MXoN

There are three classes available for riders to nominate for: MX1, MX2 and Open. Riders are advised that they can nominate for more than one class. Applications must be submitted by no later than COB Friday 16th July.

If you’re interested in being selected as part of the team grab the application form here (link).

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Zach Osborne out till 2022 for extended recovery

The Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team have confirmed that reigning 450MX Champion Zach Osborne will miss the remainder of the 2021 AMA Pro Motocross Championship in order to fully recover from an ongoing back injury.

Zach Osborne will now be out of action until 2022

Osborne, who sustained the back injury mid-way through the 2021 AMA Supercross Championship, worked hard to get himself ready for the opening round of the outdoor season but he unfortunately re-injured himself at the second round in Colorado. Upon further review with the team, Osborne made the tough decision to sit out the rest of the season to fully recover for 2022.

Zach Osborne

“I’m bummed to say the least. This injury has been a big setback with no clear path to 100% but I feel I’m on a good path now and I just need to give my body the time to heal itself. Myself, along with the team, made the decision to pull the plug and be ready for 2022. It was a tough decision in an already-trying year but I believe I can be back to 2020 form with this time away to heal up. Thanks to my team and fans for the support through this!”

The Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing Team will return to racing this Saturday, June 19 in Mt. Morris, Pennsylvania.


Jonte Reynders dominates Bakers Beach Tasmanian Enduro

Sherco hotshot Jonte Reynders has completed an ideal build-up for the 2021 Hattah Desert Race by dominating the latest round of the Tasmanian enduro series at Bakers Beach, north-east of Launceston, on July 19.

The 24-year-old was a class above on his Pirelli Motul Sherco Racing Team 300 SE Factory two-stroke, easily winning the three-hour event ahead of great rivals Kyron Bacon and Seton Broomhall – even after an extra fuel stop!

Jonte Reynders

“I’m rapt with the result on a circuit that was quite difficult, but I made it a little hard for myself – just when I had a decent lead I made a silly mistake of refuelling when I didn’t need to. So I topped up the 300 Factory three times instead of two, which obviously cost me a fair bit of time. But I was able to regroup and take a strong win to extend my lead in the series.”

Jonte Reynders

Five rounds remain in the state title, but Reynders’ focus will now switch to the mainland for the Hattah Desert from July 2-4 where he will be one of the favourites in the open two-stroke class.

He’ll have some exalted guest company in the Pirelli Motul Sherco Racing Team: Ben Grabham – fresh from his two-stroke-winning heroics at the 2021 Finke Desert Race – on a 450 SEF Factory and Justin Carafa on a 500 SEF Factory.

Nathan Trigg, who lives just up the road from the Hattah epicentre at Ouyen, will also be looking to bounce back from his knee-twisting prologue crash at Finke, which put him out of the main game. Trigg rides a Mallee Motorcycles-backed 450 SEF Factory.

The circuit is 37km long, with the senior riders to complete eight laps.

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Daniel Sanders and GasGas ready for Silk Way Rally 2021

The 11th edition of the Silk Way Rally will get underway in less than one month. Setting off from Omsk (Russia), the second town of the Urals, on 1 July, the race will feature 10 varied and technical stages. Crossing Siberia before traversing Mongolia from West to East, the event passes through the famous Gobi Desert before reaching Ulaanbaatar on 11 July.

Silk Way Rally Stage barreda
Silk Way Rally 2019

A total of 5250 km, of which more than 2850 are against the clock, offering the perfect mix of technical difficulty, variety and scenic beauty. From the Altai Mountains to the capital of Mongolia via the Gobi Desert and the endless Mongolian steppes, the 2021 edition of the Silk Way Rally will be quite simply exceptional.

Two years after Sam Sunderland (KTM) in the bikes, who will be the new white tigers to go down in the Silk Way Rally history books at the end of this incredible journey in the land of Genghis Khan?

For its second edition with a bike category, the Silk Way Rally 2021 has once again attracted the major factory teams on what is one of the highlights of the FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship. This second round will benefit from a 1.5 coefficient thanks to its status as a marathon event with over six days of racing.

Silk Way Rally Stage Sam Sunderland
Sam Sunderland – Silk Way Rally 2019

The titleholder, the British rider Sam Sunderland, Dakar winner in 2017, will defend the colours of Red Bull Ktm Factory Racing alongside his Austrian teammate Matthias Walkner.

Their sister team Rockstar Husqvarna Factory Racing will enter the Argentinian Luciano Benavides and their latest recruit, the American Skyler Howes, one of the revelations of the last Dakar.

Another rider to make a splash in Saudi Arabia with his fourth place, the Australian Daniel Sanders will have the honour of flying the flag for GasGas Factory Racing.

Daniel Sanders

Over at the Monster Yamaha Rallye Team, the Frenchman Adrien Van Beveren will be accompanied by another recent revelation, the Botswanan Ross Branch and ex-Supercross Champion, the American Andrew Short.

The Hero Motorsports team will be pinning their hopes on an eclectic trio of Portuguese rider Joaquim Rodriguez, the Argentinian Franco Caimi and the young German Sebastian Bühler.

The quad category is also back on this 11th Silk Way Rally and promises us a splendid duel between the ever young, five times world champion and ex-Dakar winner, the Pole Rafal Sonic and the Russian Alexander Maksimov, both riding Yamaha Raptor 700s.

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Herlings on form at Arnhem International

Jeffrey Herlings took the two moto wins over the weekend at the Arnhem International in Holland to claim the overall from Brian Bogers and Max Nagle, with Cyril Genot finishing fourth overall, just over the podium.

The event served as training for Herlings, between GP events, who admits he’s still working on his starts, with an aim to do better than in Russia.

Jeffrey Herlings

“I really enjoyed myself and it was a good training for the GP. Starts have to be better, but I can get a podium, and I will try and do better than I did in Russia.”

Herlings brought home 40-championship points in the MXGP opener last weekend, after finishing 4-2, and sits second overall in the standings, behind Tim Gajser, who won both races.


Dylan Ferrandis tops High Point ProMX

Images by Jeff Kardas

Following its first break of the 2021 season the Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship returned to action with its East Coast debut from legendary High Point Raceway. The third round of the summer campaign marked the sport’s return to the famed Pennsylvania venue for the first time since 2019 with the GEICO Motorcycle High Point National, where the threat of rain loomed over the afternoon but never really materialised.

High Point 2021

In the 450 Class a hard-fought, consistent afternoon was enough to put Dylan Ferrandis atop the podium for the second time this season. In the 250 Class, Jalek Swoll extended the parity in the division and broke through with his first professional victory as Jett Lawrence increased his lead in the 250 Championship.

450 Moto1

Light precipitation was present when the gate dropped on the opening 450 Class moto, where Adam Cianciarulo prevailed with the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Chase Sexton and Christian Craig, who soon gave up the position to Ken Roczen, the championship leader. As Cianciarulo sprinted out to an early lead the Honda teammates engaged in a battle for second place.

450 Start

As the moto surpassed the 10-minute mark, the lead trio solidified their hold on those positions as Ferrandis gave chase from fourth. As the minutes continued to tick away the distance between the top three continued to shrink. Sexton soon closed in to within a couple bike lengths of Cianciarulo, but a mistake by Sexton not only caused the Honda rider to lose some ground, it forced Roczen into a mistake when he briefly went down and gave up third to Ferrandis.

Ferrandis and Roczen

With the threat defended, Cianciarulo gradually built a multi-second advantage over Sexton, who in turn built a comfortable margin over Ferrandis. As time ran out on the moto clock with just over three laps to go, Sexton tucked the front of his Honda and went down. As he looked to remount, both Ferrandis and Roczen were able to get by, which placed Sexton in fourth when he resumed.

Out front, Cianciarulo looked to close out his first moto win of the season with ease but was dealt with one last obstacle as a slower rider went down exiting the final corner. With nowhere to go, Cianciarulo ran over the downed motorcycle and fell over.

Adam Cianciarulo

He kept his Kawasaki running, got up, and pushed his bike across the finish line to win in unconventional fashion. Ferrandis followed five seconds behind in second as Roczen rounded out the podium in third. Sexton recovered to finish fourth as Aaron Plessinger completed the top five.

450 Moto 2

The deciding 450 Class moto kicked off as Justin Barcia emerged with the MotoSport.com Holeshot out of a gaggle of bikes. He was quickly passed by Plessinger for the early lead, while Eli Tomac and Cianciarulo followed through.

450 Start

Cianciarulo put the hammer down and made an aggressive push that carried him all the way around Plessinger and into the lead. He continued to ramp up the pace and established a multi-second advantage after just two laps. Behind him, Tomac’s first opportunity to run at the front of the field in 2021 saw him surge around Plessinger into second to put the Kawasaki riders at the top of the running order.

As the battle up front took shape the class’ title contenders made moves as well, as Ferrandis worked his way from fourth and Roczen from sixth. Both riders were urgent in their push and successfully moved into third and fourth, respectively. By the time they finished their early charge, the Kawasaki teammates were more than five seconds ahead. From there, Ferrandis and Roczen went head-to-head for third and traded the position before Ferrandis got the upper hand and asserted control of the spot.

Ken Roczen

Up front, Tomac closed onto Cianciarulo’s rear fender and a battle for the lead ensued. Tomac was able to get by, but Cianciarulo fought back and reclaimed the position. However, Tomac didn’t give up and kept the pressure on. The two came together, which pushed Cianciarulo out of a rut and allowed Tomac to move into the lead for the first time this season.

Once out front Tomac started to build an advantage over his teammate and was soon in control of the moto. As the moto surpassed the 20-minute mark Cianciarulo found himself under pressure from Ferrandis and Roczen in third and fourth. All three riders then duked it out for second and used every inch of the track in search of an advantage.

Dylan Ferrandis

As the crowd cheered them on, both Ferrandis and Roczen bullied their way around Cianciarulo, who dropped from second to fourth. That thrilling sequence also changed the battle in the overall classification, as Ferrandis moved into control of the afternoon.

For Tomac it was a dominant ride indicative of his three-year championship run. He stormed to his first moto win of the season by 3.2 seconds over Ferrandis, who was able to fend off Roczen for the entirety of the moto.

Although he missed out on a moto win, Ferrandis’ consistency was enough to vault him to the second overall victory of the season and his career via 2-2 moto finishes. Cianciarulo’s drop off the podium in the final moto relegated him to the runner-up spot by a single point (1-4), while Tomac made his first appearance on the podium this summer in third (6-1), which bumped Roczen (3-3) off the podium via tie-breaker.

Dylan Ferrandis – P1

What a race. I don’t know (what to say), I got a good start and was able to get by Ken (Roczen), which was good because he was so fast today. It was a war (after that). Ken kept pushing me and we were able to come to Adam (Cianciarulo). It was crazy how competitive it was with them. We were going so fast and the track was so difficult. It’s just amazing to get a win here today and get a hold of the red plate again.”

Dylan Ferrandis

Adam Cianciarulo – P2

“It sure feels good to get that first moto win under my belt. I thought I had a decent sized gap in the second moto, but Eli was flying and caught me a bit off-guard. Fair play to him and the others, they rode amazing. I’m stoked with how awesome my bike has been feeling lately. I honestly believe with a little more endurance, I can be a regular winner this season. Thanks to everyone at Monster Energy Kawasaki for giving me a great bike to ride and always supporting me. We have another break coming up, but I’m ready to build off of this and get back to racing.”

Adam Cianciarulo

Eli Tomac – P3

“This was a big one for us. I’ve been in a bit of slump these last two races, so to get a win and feel like myself on the bike again is huge. After I got off the gate in Moto 2 and saw I had a good jump, I knew it was going to be a good moto. I was able to catch Adam rather quickly and once I was in the clean air, I rode my own race and started pulling away. This was an exciting race, and I can’t wait to keep this momentum rolling into RedBud. Thanks again to the entire Monster Energy Kawasaki squad for all the hard work this weekend.”

Eli Tomac

Ken Roczen – P4

“Today started off really good. I felt comfortable on the track, but we had a slightly different bike setup so in the first moto it really beat me up. I wasn’t that comfortable out there so I really couldn’t do that much. I still rode okay, but it wasn’t the best and I ended up third. In the second moto I was pinched off and had a really bad start. We did some adjustments to the bike that helped me out and I charged forward hard in the first half of the race and ended up having a good battle with Dylan [Ferrandis]. I ended up with another third place for fourth overall, which is kind of weird, but in the end, I’m okay with it because we rode really well and charged hard. That’s all we can do.”

Aaron Plessinger – P6

“This weekend had some ups and downs. I was really happy with my riding in the first moto. I got a really bad start but had a really good flow going and came back to fifth place. I went into the second moto really confident and got an awesome start, but I couldn’t really find that flow that I had in the first moto, and I dropped back to eighth. The track was really tough. There were some spots that were dry and some spots that were soft. So it was definitely weird, but we have a weekend off and will get back to work and get ready for RedBud!”

Justin Barcia – P7

“It was a little bit of a tough day. I just didn’t jive with the track that much and I never felt super comfortable. I think we’ll go back to California and work on a few things and try to be a lot better for RedBud in two weeks. All we can do is keep level-headed and be better for the next race.”

Justin Barcia

Marvin Musquin – P8

“In the first moto, the start was decent but the riding was not good enough and the feeling was not good enough so we decided to go back to some old settings on the shock and it shows, it was definitely better in the second moto. I didn’t get a good start but I was able to fight back, attack and race hard to come back to seventh place, so that was a lot better. Overall, I’m obviously not happy because we’ve been working hard and it didn’t pay off for this weekend, so we need to keep going.”

Cooper Webb – P10

“It was a bit of a struggle today. I felt like I put up a good fight in the first moto and ended up seventh. In the second moto, I got tangled on the start and I ended up crashing three times coming through the pack, so that was pretty unfortunate. Now we’ve got a weekend off and all we can do is try to improve.”

Cooper Webb

Christian Craig – P11

“I didn’t have the best day at High Point. I seemed to struggle to find good lines and had a couple of crashes, but I was able to get through with some points. We’re going to go back to work and look forward to a better RedBud.”

With the win Ferrandis also reclaimed control of the red plate as 450 Class point leader for the second time this season. He currently has a slim three-point advantage over Roczen, while Plessinger, who finished sixth on the afternoon (5-8) maintained his hold on third, 30 points out of the lead.

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450 Results & Championship Standings

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Source: MCNews.com.au