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Moto News Weekly Wrap
October 6, 2020

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Jaimon Lidsey FIM Speedway Under-21 World Champion
2020 Torun SGP Round Seven

Almost four years to the day after he won the Under 21 Speedway World Championship, Mansfield’s Max Fricke admits he has realised “a childhood dream” after roaring to his first-ever FIM Speedway Grand Prix victory at FST Grupa Brokerska Torun SGP round seven on Friday.

Another Aussie also achieved a childhood dream overnight with Jaimon Lidsey being crowned FIM Speedway Under-21 World Champion.

Lidsey, 21-years-old from Red Cliffs, has had a sensational European season and was calculated in his heat races during the Under 21 World Championship event last night scoring 3,3,3,2,3,3,3 on his run to the final.

Jaimon Lidsey – 2020 FIM World Under 21 Speedway Champion

While expectations were high for other riders to take the title, the young Victorian with plenty of Aussie grit held the best for last dominating the Final from the drop of the gate to now join a long list of Australian World Speedway Champions.

In Poland Fricke topped the FIM Speedway GP podium ahead of title-chasing trio Maciej Janowski, Tai Woffinden and series leader Bartosz Zmarzlik.  With the victory Fricke, 24, became the seventh Australian who can boast winning the elite SGP joining Jason Crump, Leigh Adams, Jason Doyle, Chris Holder, Ryan Sullivan and Darcy Ward.

Fricke topped the podium ahead of title-chasing trio Maciej Janowski, Tai Woffinden

Zmarzlik overcame a crash in heat five to reach the semi-finals. He now just needs to reach the final of the title-deciding round eight on Saturday night to become Poland’s first double world champion after registering 14 points, giving him an eight-point cushion over nearest rival Woffinden in second spot.

But the night belonged to Fricke, who raced to 10 points in his heats, before delivering one of the rides on the season to pass Janowski and Fredrik Lindgren in semi-final one. He then made a world-class start in the final to leave three of the sport’s finest trailing and crown the greatest victory of his career so far.

The Wroclaw racer says he realised a boyhood dream as he enjoyed the Australian national anthem atop the Torun podium.

Max Fricke

It’s unbelievable. I think it will take a while for it to sink in. I have been to Torun before and watched GPs. To win a GP has been a childhood dream for almost as long as I can remember – since I started racing. To actually be here and get a Grand Prix win is great. I have had a tough start to this year, so to have a win is unbelievable. I was doing everything I could to stay in front. I could hear Magic behind me. I just picked up a little too much right at the end. But I managed to bring it across the line. It was great to be on the podium with Tai and Magic. They are both great friends and we obviously ride together in Wroclaw. It was a really cool podium and great to be up there with some good friends.”

Fricke, 24, became the seventh Australian who can boast winning the elite SGP joining Jason Crump, Leigh Adams, Jason Doyle, Chris Holder, Ryan Sullivan and Darcy Ward.

Fricke nearly threw victory away when he lifted dramatically on the run to the line. He was delighted to lead a Wroclaw one-two-three on the rostrum.

Fricke wasn’t the only Aussie star to claim a huge international victory tonight. His former Belle Vue team mate Jaimon Lidsey was crowned FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship winner at Czech track Pardubice.

Runner-up Janowski was delighted to be back on the SGP rostrum for the third time this season. Third-placed Woffinden raced to his third podium finish on the bounce.

FIM Speedway Grand Prix Torun – Round 7 Results
Pos Rider Points
1 Max Fricke 20
2 Maciej Janowski 18
3 Tai Woffinden 16
4 Bartosz Zmarzlik 14
5 Emil Sayfutdinov 12
6 Fredrik Lindgren 11
7 Martin Vaculik 10
8 Leon Madsen 9
9 Artem Laguta 8
10 Jason Doyle 7
11 Matej Zagar 6
12 Jack Holder 5
13 Patryk Dudek 4
14 Mikkel Michelsen 3
15 Antonio Lindback 2
16 Niels-Kristian Iversen 1
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2020 Torun SGP Round Eight

Polish hero Bartosz Zmarzlik was elated to join the FIM Speedway Grand Prix series’ elite club of back-to-back world champions after winning the FST Grupa Brokerska Torun SGP round eight on Saturday.

Bartosz Zmarzlik
Bartosz Zmarzlik

Zmarzlik was crowned Poland’s first-ever double world champion when he finished second in semi-final one – reaching the final he needed to put the sport’s biggest prize beyond Great Britain icon Tai Woffinden and Swedish star Fredrik Lindgren.

Woffinden won a run-off with Lindgren for the silver medal after the pair tied on 117-points, but the season belongs to Zmarzlik, who topped the standings on 133, winning four of this year’s eight rounds along the way.

He crowned an epic season with victory in Torun, seeing off fellow countryman Maciej Janowski, Artem Laguta and Lindgren in the final. Zmarzlik is only the third rider to retain the world title in the SGP era, following in the footsteps of SGP greats.

Bartosz Zmarzlik

“Now I have followed some big heroes in speedway in winning back-to-back titles – Tony Rickardsson and Nicki Pedersen. It’s a great feeling and I don’t know what to say now. I don’t believe it at this moment. Wow! For me it is an unbelievable night. For the second year, I am number one in the world, and that’s really nice. It was a really hard day for me mentally. After yesterday and the crash in my second race, I wasn’t feeling so good in my body. But what an amazing race I had in the semi-final! I am happy I am a two-time world champion. Last season I could not have dreamed of this result. But again I am number one and for me it is unbelievable. Wow! What a night for me and the Polish fans! It’s unbelievable. I won the final again and that’s so nice. I don’t know what to say now. I can’t believe it at this moment, but maybe soon I will take in what I have done today.”

Bartosz Zmarzlik
Bartosz Zmarzlik

World Championship runner-up Woffinden admitted 2020 has not been his year, but he was heartened to reach the SGP rostrum for the sixth time in eight seasons since he rejoined the series in 2013.

Tai Woffinden

“I am not on form. I have not been on form all year. It’s super frustrating. But on the flip side, when Tai Woffinden is out of form, I am still in the top three in the world. You have seen that over the years. When I am on form, I am world champion. I want to say a massive thanks to everyone at home for watching and supporting me. The fire is burning for next year – massively. You learn more by losing. When you win, you win. You don’t know how you did it. Many world champions can say the same thing. I have learned a lot – physically, mentally, nutritionally and with stuff on my bikes.”

Lindgren would have sealed the silver medal with a top-three finish on the night, but he suffered a mechanical failure at the start line in the final, forcing him into a run-off with Woffinden, which the Brit won.

The Orebro-born ace revealed a curburettor issue halted him at the cruellest of moments. But he takes heart from matching the bronze medal he achieved in 2018 and was pleased to mount a strong title challenge throughout 2020.

2020 Torun SGP Podium
2020 Torun SGP Podium

2020 Speedway of Nations heads to Lublin

While SGP 2020 has concluded, world championship racing returns in less than two weeks when the Monster Energy FIM Speedway of Nations Final takes place in Lublin on October 16 and 17. Hosts Poland face world champions Russia, Australia, Denmark, Sweden, Great Britain and the Czech Republic in the ultimate test of team riding.

The Final was switched from Manchester’s National Speedway Stadium due to increased Covid-19 control measures across the UK, with the venue now staging the 2021 Monster Energy FIM Speedway of Nations Final.

This year’s title-decider is set to take place at one of the sport’s fastest-growing clubs. Motor Lublin staged Polish Second Division action as recently as 2017, before back-to-back promotions saw them join the PGE Ekstraliga for the first time in 2019.

FIM Speedway Grand Prix Torun – Round 8 Results
Pos Rider Points
1 Bartosz Zmarzlik  20
2 Maciej Janowski  18
3 Artem Laguta  16
4 Fredrik Lindgren  14
5 Tai Woffinden  12
6 Jason Doyle  11
7 Leon Madsen  10
8 Emil Sayfutdinov  9
9 Antonio Lindback  8
10 Jack Holder  7
11 Patryk Dudek  6
12 Martin Vaculik  5
13 Max Fricke  4
14 Matej Zagar  3
15 Mikkel Michelsen  2
16 Niels-Kristian Iversen 1
17 Viktor Trofymov  0
18 Igor Kopec-Sobczynski DNR.
FIM Speedway Grand Prix Championship Standings
Pos Rider Points
1 Bartosz Zmarzlik  133
2 Tai Woffinden  117+3
3 Fredrik Lindgren  117+2
4 Maciej Janowski  107
5 Leon Madsen  89
6 Jason Doyle  87
7 Artem Laguta  84
8 Emil Sayfutdinov  81
9 Martin Vaculik  78
10 Max Fricke  64
11 Matej Zagar  46
12 Patryk Dudek  39
13 Niels-Kristian Iversen  32
14 Mikkel Michelsen  32
15 Antonio Lindback  22
16 Gleb Chugunov  16
17 Jack Holder  12
18 Anders Thomsen  10
19 Vaclav Milik  1
20 Eduard Krcmar  1

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2020 Speedway GP Wild Cards Announced

FIM Speedway Grand Prix quartet Artem Laguta, Emil Sayfutdinov, Martin Vaculik and Max Fricke all return for SGP 2021, while Denmark’s Anders Thomsen joins the sport’s elite after next season’s permanent wild cards were revealed.

The 2021 Speedway GP rider line-up
The 2021 Speedway GP rider line-up

Thomsen takes his place in the full World Championship field for the first time after enjoying a stellar 2020 campaign, which culminated in him winning his first Danish Championship at Vojens last Wednesday.

Russia’s double Monster Energy FIM Speedway of Nations winner Laguta has also enjoyed a season to remember after topping the podium at the SGP opener in Wroclaw, before finishing third in last night’s FST Grupa Brokerska Torun SGP round eight to claim seventh spot in the final standings.

His international team mate Sayfutdinov finished eighth in this year’s championship, as well as topping the PGE Ekstraliga averages in Poland on 2.557 points per race – just ahead of Laguta in second, who recorded 2.479.

Slovakian star Vaculik secures a return after claiming ninth spot overall, reaching six out of eight semi-finals as well as enjoying a strong season for Zielona Gora.

Double Australian champion Fricke returns for his second full SGP season on the back of a sensational victory in Friday’s FST Grupa Brokerska Torun SGP round seven – the first win of his World Championship career in only his second final. He finished 10th in this season’s standings.

The wild-card selections are joined by this year’s top six – Poland’s first double world champion Bartosz Zmarzlik, Great Britain’s triple world champion Tai Woffinden, Swedish star Fredrik Lindgren, Polish ace Maciej Janowski, Danish racer Leon Madsen and Australia’s 2017 world champion Jason Doyle.

Great Britain shooting star Robert Lambert also earned automatic qualification after winning this year’s Speedway European Championship.

The line-up is completed by the top three from this year’s GP Challenge in Gorican – five-time SGP winner Matej Zagar, Swedish debutant Oliver Berntzon and former world No.2 Krzysztof Kasprzak. The list of SGP 2021 substitute riders will be revealed soon.

2021 FIM Speedway Grand Prix Line-Up
(in FIM ranking order – rider numbers to be confirmed):
  1. Bartosz Zmarzlik (Poland)
  2. Tai Woffinden (Great Britain)
  3. Fredrik Lindgren (Sweden)
  4. Maciej Janowski (Poland)
  5. Leon Madsen (Denmark)
  6. Jason Doyle (Australia)
  7. Artem Laguta (Russia)
  8. Emil Sayfutdinov (Russia)
  9. Martin Vaculik (Slovakia)
  10. Max Fricke (Australia)
  11. Matej Zagar (Slovenia)
  12. Anders Thomsen (Denmark)
  13. Oliver Berntzon (Sweden)
  14. Krzysztof Kasprzak (Poland)
  15. Robert Lambert (Great Britain)

Jaimon Lidsey nabs 2021 SGP reserve spot

Aleksandr Loktaev could become the first Ukrainian to appear in the FIM Speedway Grand Prix series as he heads the list of SGP 2021 substitute stars.

The Lodz rider, currently seventh in the Polish First Division average charts on 2.111 points per race, stormed agonisingly close to SGP qualification at the GP Challenge in Gorican, Croatia on August 22.

Australian shooting star Jaimon Lidsey is next in line as the second substitute rider. He was crowned FIM Speedway Under-21 World Championship winner in Pardubice on Friday night.

Jaimon Lidsey
Jaimon Lidsey

Polish young gun Dominik Kubera finished second in that meeting and is named as third substitute, while Latvia’s Olegs Mihailovs took third place and is named as fourth SGP reserve.

Great Britain racer Dan Bewley is named as SGP fifth substitute, with World Longtrack champion Lukas Fienhage of Germany sixth reserve and the Czech Republic’s Jan Kvech rounding off the list at No.7.

2020 SGP Substitutes
  • S1. Aleksandr Loktaev (Ukraine)
  • S2. Jaimon Lidsey (Australia)
  • S3. Dominik Kubera (Poland)
  • S4. Olegs Mihailovs (Latvia)
  • S5. Dan Bewley (Great Britain)
  • S6. Lukas Fienhage (Germany)
  • S7. Jan Kvech (Czech Republic)

Toby Price & Daniel Sanders all set for 2020 Andalucia Rally

The Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team of Toby Price, Sam Sunderland and Matthias Walkner are ready to take on the 2020 Andalucia Rally. In their first competitive rally since the Dakar back in January, the team will be joined in Spain by KTM Factory Racing’s newest signing Daniel Sanders, who will be making his debut rally appearance.

Daniel Sanders joins Toby Price, Sam Sunderland and Matthias Walkner with Red Bull KTM for the 2020 Andalucia Rally
Daniel Sanders joins Toby Price, Sam Sunderland and Matthias Walkner with Red Bull KTM for the 2020 Andalucia Rally

Held in the south of Spain from October 6 to 10, the Andalucia Rally will challenge riders over five demanding days of racing. A short Super Special Stage will decide the start order for the first full day of rallying, with the four main legs made up of looped stages based around the bivouac town of Villamartin. With the event covering a total of over 1,300 kilometers, competitors will face 1,030 km of timed specials, the longest of which being on stage three – a demanding 300-kilometre route covering the dry, rocky tracks to the east of Sevilla.

Following his podium result at the 2020 Dakar Rally, Toby Price returned home to Australia where he kept himself busy riding and working on bikes whenever possible. Now with racing starting up again with the Andalucia Rally, Price is keen to make the best use of the time on his KTM 450 RALLY and prepare for the 2021 Dakar Rally.

Toby Price

“It’s certainly been a tough time for everyone since January – the whole world has been turned upside down, but we’re doing the best we can considering. I’m really thankful that the organizers have managed to arrange this rally in Spain, and we get to go racing again. After all, it’s what we love to do! It’s been good to get back out on the bike with the team and now we just need to do our best in Andalucia and learn what we can before the big one next January.”

Toby Price
Toby Price

Making his first rally appearance for the KTM Factory Racing team, enduro star and outright ISDE winner Daniel Sanders is confident, yet fully aware of the challenge ahead of him. Undoubtedly fast offroad, as seen in his Australian desert racing successes, the 26-year-old will use the event to gain invaluable experience with the navigation required for top-level rally competition. Sanders travelled to Europe in September to spend time with KTM Rally Team Manager Jordi Viladoms and get up to speed with both his KTM 450 RALLY and essential road book techniques – he now has a chance to put that newly-found knowledge into practice.

Daniel Sanders

“I’m only a few weeks into my rally career and it’s a really different experience. It’s exciting though, I’m learning every day and I’ve been working on my road book skills a lot. Learning the bike is new for me as well, and I have to thank my team manager Jordi Viladoms for helping me fast-track my skills. It’s a new discipline and I’m taking it step-by-step and learning as safely as possible. We have a few days to go before the Andalucia Rally and I’m excited for it. Prior to that it’ll be some more roadbook work, and then race time! Hopefully it will go well, and I’ll qualify for the 2021 Dakar.”

Daniel Sanders
Daniel Sanders

2019 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Champion Sam Sunderland was forced to abandon his 2020 Dakar Rally campaign following a crash on stage five. After a short period of rehabilitation at his home in France, Sunderland quickly returned to full fitness and restarted his training. Now, with a couple of recent weeks testing under his belt, the 2017 Dakar winner is fully motivated to get back to competition.

Following his excellent fifth-place performance at the 2020 Dakar Rally, Matthias Walkner returned to Austria for the Covid-19 lockdown period. Maintaining a solid fitness regime, the 34-year-old was also able to get some invaluable riding time in the woods near his home. Now fully fit and eager to get racing again, the former motocross star is hoping for a strong race in Andalucia.

The Monster Energy Honda Team is back in action is also back in action, with current Dakar champion Ricky Brabec lining up alongside the current holder of the most Dakar stage wins, Joan Barreda. Both have reinforced their relationship with Honda this year and will join Kevin Benavides and Nacho Cornejo, the team that displayed such strength in the previous season.

Ricky Brabec

“It feels really good to be back and hanging out with the team and also to be with the rest of the rally racers. I’ve actually done a couple of races this year since the Dakar but it is really nice to be back riding a road book that will be Dakar spec against Dakar competitors to see where we line up. I don’t think anyone knows how it is going to be here but we’re just excited to be back together.”

The full Monster Energy Yamaha Rally Official Team is also set for the Andalucia Rally 2020, with two new riders – American Andrew Short and Botswana’s Ross Branch, joining Adrien Van Beveren, Franco Caimi and Jamie McCanney.

The Monster Energy Honda Team is really for the Andalucia Rally 2020
The Monster Energy Honda Team is really for the Andalucia Rally 2020

The Andalucia Rally commences with the Super Special Stage on Tuesday October 6, followed by four days of racing with the stages covering a total of 1,354 kilometers, 1,030 of which are timed specials.

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2020 Atlanta Short Track

Images by Scott Hunter

AFT SuperTwins

Jared Mees stood triumphant at the conclusion of the Atlanta Short Track in Woodstock, Georgia. The AFT SuperTwins Main Event got off to an appropriately hot start with Jeffrey Carver Jr. somehow storming into the lead from the second row. Carver’s turn at the front lasted just over a lap before he relinquished the position to Sammy Halbert.

2020 Atlanta ST - SuperTwins
2020 Atlanta ST – SuperTwins

After a few hectic laps, Halbert was joined at the front by Mees, and the two promptly teased a repeat of their epic 2017 shootout at the venue. At one point, Halbert’s line pushed Mees up into the hay bales as they traded haymakers for first and set the stage for more fireworks to come.

However, before the two could reserve the spotlight for themselves exclusively, reigning champion Briar Bauman inched his way up to join the party in third.

With seven minutes remaining, Mees sailed past Halbert to grab the lead, only to see Bauman dive under them both in the very next corner. Bauman then threatened to clear off for a fifth consecutive race as Mees and Halbert continued their melee for second.

With five minutes to go, Mees finally shook free of Halbert and chased his championship rival back down at the front. The two then engaged in a bar-to-bar war for the win, crossing lines and pulling off slidejobs with abandon.

The race came down to the final corner; Mees held on to the high line while Bauman attempted to square him up at the line. Mees won out by 0.308 seconds to snap Bauman’s four-race win streak.

2020 Atlanta ST - SuperTwins - Jared Mees
2020 Atlanta ST – SuperTwins – Jared Mees

Even after losing touch with the leaders, Halbert remained in fight mode, attempting to defend third from up-and-comers Brandon Price and Bronson Bauman.

In the end, the younger Bauman handed the Indian Wrecking Crew its first podium sweep of the season, finishing in third by 0.193 seconds over Halbert. Price rounded out the top five another second back.

POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 Jared Mees Indian FTR750 34 Laps
2 Briar Bauman Indian FTR750 +0.308
3 Bronson Bauman Indian FTR750 +5.141
4 Sammy Halbert Indian FTR750 +5.334
5 Brandon Price Indian FTR750 +6.357
6 Jake Johnson Indian FTR750 +8.663
7 Brandon Robinson Indian FTR750 +9.772
8 Robert Pearson Indian FTR750 +9.875
9 Jarod Vanderkooi HD XG750R +9.931
10 Davis Fisher Indian FTR750 +10.346
11 Dalton Gauthier HD XG750R +11.489
12 Jeffrey Carver Jr. Indian FTR750 +12.035
13 Bryan Smith HD XG750R +12.381
14 Larry Pegram Indian FTR750 +14.038
15 JD Beach Yamaha MT-07 +14.496
16 Kolby Carlile Yamaha MT-07 +14.63
17 Jay Maloney Indian FTR750 +33 Laps
18 Dan Bromley Indian FTR750 +6.44

2020 Atlanta Short Track – AFT Singles

The rolling Dallas Daniels racked up his fourth consecutive AFT Singles victory following an extremely entertaining duel with polesitter Morgen Mischler. Mischler ripped into the lead at the green light with only Daniels able to match his pace. Early in their showdown, Mischler took to his preferred high line, while Daniels went low, and the two practically rode side-by-side for several laps.

2020 Atlanta ST - Singles - Dallas Daniels
2020 Atlanta ST – Singles – Dallas Daniels

Their battle escalated from there, with several more laps of high-low maneuvers that saw them trade the lead back and forth repeatedly.

The third and final stage of their showdown saw Daniels at last grasp control. Mischler sought out a variety of lines in hopes of tracking Daniels back down but came up 0.482 short at the checkered flag.

Second-ranked Henry Wiles ran alone in third deep into the Main. However, he saw even more (increasingly crucial) points slip away when eventual third-place finisher Brandon Kitchen overhauled him with a minute remaining, and fourth-place finisher Trent Lowedid the same on the race’s final lap. Aussie Max Whale was just outside the top five in sixth.

2020 Atlanta ST - Singles - Dallas Daniels
2020 Atlanta ST – Singles – 1) Dallas Daniels, 2) Morgen Mischler, 3) Brandon Kitchen
POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 Dallas Daniels Yamaha YZ450F 21 Laps
2 Morgen Mischler KTM 450 SX-F +0.482
3 Brandon Kitchen KTM 450 SX-F +3.679
4 Trent Lowe Honda CRF450R +4.705
5 Henry Wiles Honda CRF450R +4.966
6 Max Whale Kawasaki KX450F +5.717
7 Tanner Dean Honda CRF450R +5.876
8 James Ott KTM 450 SX-F +6.06
9 Kevin Stollings Honda CRF450R +6.454
10 Michael Inderbitzin Honda CRF450R +6.464
11 Cameron Smith Honda CRF450R +7.422
12 Michael Rush Yamaha YZ450F +7.77
13 Aidan RoosEvans KTM 450 SX-F +7.91
14 Trevor Brunner Honda CRF450R +9.305
15 Cole Zabala Honda CRF450R +9.855
16 Tyler Raggio Honda CRF450R +11.566
17 Chad Cose Suzuki RMZ 450 +12.586
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2020 Atlanta Short Track – AFT Production Twins

At long last, defending AFT Production Twins champion Cory Texter brought the win streak of runaway title leader James Rispoli to a halt at five. Texter, who hadn’t won a race since the season’s opening weekend and had subsequently finished as runner-up to Rispoli on four occasions, was justifiably starving to return to the top of the box. It showed. Brilliant from the start, Texter accelerated into the lead from pole and pulled several bike lengths on the opening lap.

2020 Atlanta ST - Production Twins - Corey Texter
2020 Atlanta ST – Production Twins – Corey Texter

Once a second free out front, he switched his focus to simply maintaining that advantage. On rails and incredibly precise, Texter appeared comfortable weathering a late-race charge from Rispoli when a monkey wrench was thrown into his plans of cruising to a relatively easy victory.

Despite the potential setback of a late-race red flag, Texter simply powered off the line (again) and stretched out a one-second-plus advantage (again) to claim the checkered flag.

Rispoli, meanwhile, continued his march to the 2020 crown with his tenth top-two finish in eleven starts. Ryan Varnes and Ben Lowe finished third and fourth after running locked in that order for the entire affair. Danny Eslick rounded out the top five.

2020 Atlanta ST - Production Twins - Corey Texter
2020 Atlanta ST – Production Twins – 1) Corey Texter, 2) James Rispoli, 3) Ryan Varnes
POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 Cory Texter Yamaha MT-07 21 Laps
2 James Rispoli HD XG750R +1.571
3 Ryan Varnes Kawasaki Ninja 650 +2.343
4 Ben Lowe Yamaha MT-07 +3.482
5 Danny Eslick Kawasaki Ninja 650 +4.035
6 Chad Cose HD XG750R +4.767
7 Cody Johncox Yamaha MT-07 +4.781
8 Mitch Harvat Kawasaki Ninja 650 +5.8
9 Michael Inderbitzin Kawasaki Ninja 650 +6.193
10 Brock Schwarzenbacher Kawasaki Ninja 650 +6.922
11 Garret Wilson Kawasaki Ninja 650 +8.666
12 Patrick Buchanan Kawasaki Ninja 650 +14 Laps
13 Jeremiah Duffy Kawasaki Ninja 650 DNS
14 Nick Armstrong Yamaha MT-07 DNS
15 Jimmy McAllister Kawasaki Ninja 650 DNS

2020 Atlanta Short Track II – Super Twins

Jared Mees doubled up at Dixie Speedway with a second barn-burning American Flat Track victory in Saturday night’s Atlanta Short Track. While Mees was forced to overcome his great rival, defending Grand National Champion Briar Bauman, to win on Friday night in Woodstock, Georgia, Saturday’s challenge came from a more unexpected source: young rising star Brandon Price.

Jared Mees & Brandon Price
Jared Mees & Brandon Price

Despite their contrasting résumé, that test proved no less stiff; the up-and-comer gave the masterful Mees all he could handle.

Price actually led the bulk of the race, deftly corralling a racey Mees behind him despite the multi-time series king’s repeated attempts to fight his way through. At one point, Mees’ overtaking maneuver sent him up into the wall, jamming the factory Indian rider’s footpeg into his own brake.

At that moment, it seemed like Price might power away to an easy win, but Mees regrouped, adjusted and mounted another assault. Their vast difference in experience didn’t factor in until after the countdown clocks hit zero, at which point Mees executed a tough-but-fair pass to lead the final two laps and win by 0.339 seconds.

Jared Mees

“Early on, I thought I could just settle in and get by, but I don’t know…(Price) was probably getting a little tense at the end because I was throwing everything I could at him. I threw him some bait in Turn 1 where I was acting like I was coming real high and just sliced across the middle and threw in a little block pass. It was a great race. I can’t say enough for my team. We’re going to just keep plugging one race at a time. We’re not out of this yet. We’re going to fight back as best we can and what the points are at the end is what they are.”

Jared Mees
Jared Mees

Meanwhile, title leader Bauman slashed his way forward from an early seventh to finish a lonely third some two-and-a-half seconds back. Sammy Halbert finished in fourth another second in arrears, with an injured Brandon Robinson registering a gritty ride to round out the top five.

Mees’ Atlanta double provided his title hopes a major boost; he now trails Bauman by just 12 points (256-244) with four races remaining to decide the 2020 AFT SuperTwins presented by Vance & Hines Championship.

Altanta ST II AFT SuperTwins Podium – 1) Jared Mees, 2) Brandon Price, 3) Briar Bauman
POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 Jared Mees Indian FTR750 35 Laps
2 Brandon Price Indian FTR750 +0.339
3 Briar Bauman Indian FTR750 +2.774
4 Sammy Halbert Indian FTR750 +3.727
5 Brandon Robinson Indian FTR750 +4.473
6 Jarod Vanderkooi HD XG750R +6.775
7 Jeffrey Carver Jr. Indian FTR750 +8.564
8 Robert Pearson Indian FTR750 +9.39
9 Bryan Smith HD XG750R +10.186
10 Bronson Bauman Indian FTR750 +10.271
11 Dan Bromley Indian FTR750 +11.123
12 Jake Johnson Indian FTR750 +11.208
13 Davis Fisher Indian FTR750 +13.077
14 Dalton Gauthier HD XG750R +15.655
15 JD Beach Yamaha MT-07 +16.435
16 Larry Pegram Indian FTR750 +17.375
17 Jay Maloney Indian FTR750 +18.349
18 Kolby Carlile Yamaha MT-07 34 Laps
2020 AFT SuperTwins Standings
Pos Rider Points
1 Briar Bauman 256
2 Jared Mees 244
3 Sammy Halbert 193
4 Bronson Bauman 153
5 Brandon Price 148
6 Brandon Robinson 143
7 Jeffrey Carver Jr. 131
8 Davis Fisher 119
9 Jarod Vanderkooi 108
10 Bryan Smith 94
11 Dan Bromley 93
12 Robert Pearson 91
13 Dalton Gauthier 90
14 JD Beach 68
15 Jake Johnson 62
16 Kolby Carlile 50
17 Larry Pegram 48
18 Jay Maloney 43
19 Andrew Luker 22
20 Ryan Varnes 16
21 Morgen Mischler 6
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2020 Atlanta Short Track II – AFT Singles

AFT Singles title favorite Dallas Daniels out-dueled Morgen Mischler in an Atlanta Short Track rematch that may have been even more spectacular than their Friday epic.

Dallas Daniels
Dallas Daniels

Mischler and Daniels shook free from the pack in the early stages of the race and then set about resuming last night’s dogfight. In contrast to the previous round, however, Mischler maintained a slight advantage for almost the entire race, with Daniels trying out his lines and (apparently) biding his time just behind.

He finally struck with only a half lap remaining. The two actually made contact on the back straight with Daniels then forcing his way underneath as they dove into Turn 3 for the final time. Mischler attempted to square the corner back up and take advantage of a small slip on Daniels’ part, but came up just 0.090 seconds short at the flag.

Dallas Daniels

“I wasn’t holding back, I wasn’t trying to not show him what I was doing. That was literally all I had. It was kind of making me nervous; I was pretty much tapped out and I needed a mistake from him, which is what happened. Coming off of (Turn) 2, he spun up a little bit and we got together. I took that thing off into 3 harder than I did all day, just hoping it would stick and it did. It’s awesome.”

Max Whale
Max Whale

Aussie Max Whale won out in a similar shootout with super sophomore Brandon Kitchen to earn the final spot on the podium. Class legend Shayna Texter bounced back from a disappointing outing on Friday to complete the top five.

As a result of Daniels’ seventh win of the season, the 17-year-old prodigy now leads the championship by 70 points (233-163) over Wiles and Whale, while Rush has dropped to fourth with 151 points. Should Daniels up his current win streak to six next Friday night, he’ll be crowned the 2020 AFT Singles champion three races early.

Max Whale

“Stocked to be back on the podium again. Had a solid weekend at Atlanta double header. Friday ran P6 and Saturday P3. Had some great battles and pumped to. Come out equal second in the Championship. Once again I can’t thank my weekend worriers enough. I would be lost with out them @mattguenther61 , Keith Singleton and @bjbcrewdad. And a shout out to all my awesome sponsors.”

Altanta ST II AFT Singles Podium - 1) Dallas Daniels
Altanta ST II AFT Singles Podium – 1) Dallas Daniels, 2) Morgen Mischler, 3) Max Whale
POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 Dallas Daniels Yamaha YZ450F 21 Laps
2 Morgen Mischler KTM 450 SX-F +0.09
3 Max Whale Kawasaki KX450F +1.962
4 Brandon Kitchen KTM 450 SX-F +1.99
5 Shayna Texter KTM 450 SX-F +4.177
6 Chad Cose Suzuki RMZ 450 +4.656
7 Trent Lowe Honda CRF450R +5.065
8 Trevor Brunner Honda CRF450R +6.012
9 Aidan RoosEvans KTM 450 SX-F +6.229
10 Cole Zabala Honda CRF450R +7.111
11 Tanner Dean Honda CRF450R +7.444
12 Cameron Smith Honda CRF450R +8.301
13 James Ott KTM 450 SX-F +8.437
14 Kevin Stollings Honda CRF450R +8.849
15 Tyler Raggio Honda CRF450R +9.634
16 Michael Rush Yamaha YZ450F +10.806
17 Andrew Luker Yamaha YZ450F +10.985
2020 AFT Singles Standings
Pos Rider Points
1 Dallas Daniels 233
2 Henry Wiles 163
3 Max Whale 163
4 Michael Rush 151
5 Morgen Mischler 139
6 Trent Lowe 139
7 Brandon Kitchen 138
8 Tanner Dean 124
9 Chad Cose 104
10 Trevor Brunner 103
11 Michael Inderbitzin 97
12 Shayna Texter 89
13 Cameron Smith 73
14 Kevin Stollings 71
15 Cole Zabala 65
16 Ryan Wells 58
17 James Ott 57
18 Andrew Luker 52
19 Aidan RoosEvans 48
20 Jesse Janisch 39

2020 Atlanta Short Track II – AFT Production Twins

Saturday’s AFT Production Twins Main saw 2020 championship leader James Rispoli outlast defending class champion Cory Texter in a race-long straight fight.

Corey Texter
Corey Texter

The two quickly separated from the field and raced side-by-side for virtually the entire six-minute plus two lap affair. Rispoli ran the high line while Texter controlled the low line, and rarely did either rider demonstrate a clear advantage in their battle.

Rispoli turned it on late, sliding just out in front as the clock showed 0:00, and that’s where he’d remain to the checkered flag.

The victory placed Rispoli right back up on top of the box just one day after Texter brought his five-race win streak to a conclusion.

James Rispoli

“Cory has been riding out of his shoes this weekend – just so well. I don’t know how you can’t love that racing, me and Cory just going back and forth the entire race. He committed to the low and I committed to the high every lap. He’d just give me a skosh of space. At the end of the day, we got just a little bit of breathing room and I hit the low line and brought it home.”

Corey Texter & James Rispoli
Corey Texter & James Rispoli

Once Ryan Varnes dropped from third due to a mechanical, Chad Cose assumed the position and spent the remainder of the race with his head down in pursuit of the Rispoli-Texter duel.

Clawing his way back from approximately two seconds back, Cose arrived right on their rear wheels just in time to see the two cross the stripe a few tenths ahead of him.

Danny Eslick won out in a multi-rider scrap for fourth, taking the checkered flag just ahead of Michael Inderbitzin and Ben Lowe.

Rispoli now leads by 48 points (269-221). That means if he gains just two more points on Texter next weekend, he’ll accomplish his stated goal of locking up the class championship ahead of the DAYTONA finale.

Altanta ST II AFT Production Twins Podium - 1)
2020 Altanta ST II AFT Production Twins Podium – 1) James Rispoli, 2) Corey Texter, 3) Chad Cose
POS RIDER BIKE INTERVAL
1 James Rispoli HD XG750R 21 Laps
2 Cory Texter Yamaha MT-07 +0.412
3 Chad Cose HD XG750R +0.612
4 Danny Eslick Kawasaki Ninja 650 +4.803
5 Michael Inderbitzin Kawasaki Ninja 650 +5.001
6 Ben Lowe Yamaha MT-07 +5.789
7 Patrick Buchanan Kawasaki Ninja 650 +6.958
8 Jeremiah Duffy Kawasaki Ninja 650 +11.945
9 Cody Johncox Yamaha MT-07 +13.153
10 Brock Schwarzenbacher Kawasaki Ninja 650 +13.734
11 Mitch Harvat Kawasaki Ninja 650 +15.608
12 Garret Wilson Kawasaki Ninja 650 +19.819
13 Jimmy McAllister Kawasaki Ninja 650 +12 Laps
14 Ryan Varnes Kawasaki Ninja 650 +6 Laps
2020 AFT Production Twins Standings
Pos Rider Points
1 James Rispoli 269
2 Cory Texter 221
3 Ben Lowe 188
4 Ryan Varnes 185
5 Danny Eslick 164
6 Chad Cose 154
7 Jeremiah Duffy 129
8 Nick Armstrong 101
9 Cody Johncox 96
10 Jimmy McAllister 59
11 Michael Inderbitzin 58
12 Dylan Bell 53
13 Brock Schwarzenbacher 52
14 Mitch Harvat 51
15 Patrick Buchanan 50
16 Hayden Gillim 45
17 Garret Wilson 40
18 Johnny Lewis 29
19 Morgen Mischler 26
20 Scott Barrett 26
21 Jacob Lehmann 25
22 Ryan Wells 22
23 Gary Ketchum 13
24 Jeremiah Alexander 12
25 Kevin Stollings 9
26 Max Whale 9

2020 AFT Next Stop: Charlotte Half-Mile I & II

All three Progressive American Flat Track classes approach a critical juncture in their evolving championship battles as the series arrives at the Dirt Track at Charlotte Motor Speedway for this weekend’s Progressive Charlotte Half-Mile I & II on October 9-10.

The atmosphere for the season’s penultimate doubleheader is destined to be electric as Progressive AFT shares the spotlight with the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series, which will continue its playoff run at the venue in Charlotte, North Carolina, the following day.

Even if third-ranked Sammy Halbert retains a mathematical shot at the 2020 AFT SuperTwins crown, the season has proven to be a heavyweight title fight featuring reigning champ Briar Bauman and the record-breaking Jared Mees.

Sammy Halbert & Jared Mees
Sammy Halbert & Jared Mees – Image by Scott Hunter

A mid-season string of wins put Bauman in the driver’s seat to retain the #1 plate, but Mees’ clutch double this past weekend in Atlanta has provided the former class king a clear path to reclaiming the throne. 12 points now separate the two at the top of the order, which means Mees would need to sweep the final four races to guarantee himself this year’s Grand National Championship.

Of course, if any riders in a field full of potential spoilers were able to get between Mees and Bauman, that could provide considerably more wiggle room. Among those most likely to do so are the aforementioned Halbert, who’s been fast all year long, Bryan Smith, who’s won two of the last three races in Charlotte, and Brandon Price, who narrowly missed out on claiming his maiden premier-class victory on a similar clay surface in the season’s most recent Main Event.

Meanwhile on the undercard, the dominant Dallas Daniels and James Rispoli are poised to lock up their respective AFT Singles and AFT Production Twins championships as early as this weekend.

Springfield ST - Main Event 1 - Dallas Daniels
Dallas Daniels – Image by Scott Hunter

Daniels has been unstoppable in a class that typically features a wide variety of winners and unpredictable outcomes. While the results from race to race have shuffled around behind him, the 17-year-old superstar has proven his superiority with seven wins in 12 races, including the last five in succession.

As a result, he’s assembled a massive 70-point margin over his nearest challengers, Henry Wiles and Max Whale. A win on Friday night would increase that margin to at least 75 points with three races remaining, clinching him the ‘20 AFT Singles championship.

Rispoli’s position is not quite that commanding, but he’s still well positioned to end the AFT Productions Twins championship ahead of the season finale. With a 48-point lead on defending class champion Cory Texter, Rispoli simply needs to outscore his rival by two points in Charlotte to bring their title fight to an early conclusion.

James Rispoli
James Rispoli

Considering that Rispoli has ripped off seven wins, four runner-ups, and one fifth-place in the season’s 12 races, it’s not too difficult to imagine that scenario playing out.

As always, spectator safety has been placed at a premium and Progressive AFT has worked closely with local health and government officials toward those ends. For more on the specific precautions being undertaken, please consult the Progressive AFT Events Health & Safety FAQ. Just 980 tickets have been made available for each night and are selling quickly as fans are eager to witness the final rounds of this knockout Progressive AFT Championship season.


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2020 MXGP
Round 11 – MXGP of Europe – Mantova

The MXGP of Europe concludes the 11th round of the FIM Motocross World Championship, marking the second of the three Italian triple-headers this season, as three rounds have been held at Mantova across a 10-day period.

Tim Gajser
Tim Gajser

The MXGP of Europe saw Team HRC’s Tim Gajser make his return to the top step of the podium, as he took the overall win in MXGP for the first time this season.

Gajsers 1-2 result was enough to finish the round six-points ahead of Tony Cairoli, who went 5-1, with Glenn Coldenhoff third for the GP with a 2-5 result. Aussie Mitch Evans had a strong weekend, with a fourth place finish in the first race, with eighth in race 2, leaving him fifth overall.

The MXGP standings see Gajser in the lead from Cairoli, 399 to 388, with Jeremy Seewer third overall on 369-points. Mitchell Evans sits just outside the top 10, in eleventh, 14-points off Desalle.

Mitch Evans

“Today was a good day and a bit of a disappointing day too. In the first moto I got a good start, made a few passes and was in third for most of the race. I ended up fourth but it was still a good moto and I enjoyed running with the top guys. In moto two I didn’t get the best jump which made things difficult because it was still hard to pass, but I got back to eighth for fifth overall. This was the same as in Matterley Basin at the first GP of the year, so I’m pleased with that. I did really want that podium today but it didn’t quite happen but there are still seven more rounds to get it done and that’s what I’m focusing on when we head to Spain.”

Mitch Evans
Mitch Evans

2020 MXGP of Europe Results

Pos Rider Nat. Bike R1 R2 Total
1 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 25 22 47
2 Cairoli, Antonio ITA KTM 16 25 41
3 Coldenhoff, Glenn NED GAS 22 16 38
4 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 15 20 35
5 Evans, Mitchell AUS HON 18 13 31
6 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 11 18 29
7 Paulin, Gautier FRA YAM 14 14 28
8 Desalle, Clement BEL KAW 9 15 24
9 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 20 4 24
10 Bogers, Brian NED KTM 12 11 23
11 Monticelli, Ivo ITA GAS 13 10 23
12 Vlaanderen, Calvin NED YAM 10 12 22
13 Jacobi, Henry GER YAM 8 9 17
14 Leok, Tanel EST HUS 4 8 12
15 Butron, Jose ESP KTM 3 7 10
16 Lapucci, Nicholas ITA KTM 6 3 9
17 Petrov, Petar BUL KTM 2 5 7
18 Van Horebeek, Jeremy BEL HON 7 0 7
19 Walsh, Dylan GBR HON 0 6 6
20 Guillod, Valentin SUI HON 5 1 6
21 Sterry, Adam GBR KTM 1 2 3
22 Guryev, Artem RUS HON 0 0 0
23 Bernardini, Samuele ITA YAM 0 0 0

MXGP Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 399
2 Cairoli, A. ITA KTM 388
3 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 369
4 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 341
5 Coldenhoff, G. NED GAS 341
6 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 304
7 Paulin, G. FRA YAM 285
8 Herlings, J. NED KTM 263
9 Desalle, C. BEL KAW 262
10 Jasikonis, A. LTU HUS 248
11 Evans, M. AUS HON 228
12 Van Horebeek, J. BEL HON 197
13 Vlaanderen, C. NED YAM 137
14 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM 127
15 Jacobi, Henry GER YAM 118
16 Bogers, Brian NED KTM 116
17 Monticelli, I. ITA GAS 105
18 Lupino, A. ITA YAM 82
19 Cervellin, M. ITA YAM 73
20 Tonus, Arnaud SUI YAM 71
21 Paturel, B. FRA HON 45
22 Walsh, Dylan GBR HON 41
23 Leok, Tanel EST HUS 41
24 Bobryshev, E. RUS HUS 33
25 Simpson, Shaun GBR KTM 31

MX2

Meanwhile in MX2, Jago Geerts also made a comeback to the top, as a second and a race win was enough to put him first on the podium, marking his fourth overall victory of the season.

Tom Vialle narrowly missed the round overall, also finishing the round on 47-points, which each rider taking a win and a second place each. Thomas Kjer Olsen was third overall, with Australian Jed Beaton sixth overall after two consistent fifth place finishes.

Vialle retains a sizeable lead in the MX2 standings, with Jago Geerts 46-points in arrears, while Beaton is third overall, with a seven-point lead over Maxime Renaux, while Olsen is a more distant fifth.

Jed Beaton

“Today wasn’t quite what I was looking for. I know I had the speed but just wasn’t able to get among the top guys. It certainly wasn’t the worst day but wasn’t the best either. I’m now back in third in the standings so I just need to work on starts, get up front early and try to get some more wins to finish the season off strong.”

Jed Beaton
Jed Beaton

2020 MXGP of Europe MX2 Results

Pos Rider Nat. Bike R1 R2 Total
1 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 22 25 47
2 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 25 22 47
3 Olsen, Thomas Kjer DEN HUS 18 18 36
4 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 15 20 35
5 Mewse, Conrad GBR KTM 20 15 35
6 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 16 16 32
7 Forato, Alberto ITA HUS 13 11 24
8 Fernandez, Ruben ESP YAM 12 10 22
9 Horgmo, Kevin NOR KTM 7 13 20
10 Boisrame, Mathys FRA KAW 10 9 19
11 Malkiewicz, Bailey AUS HON 9 7 16
12 Van De Moosdijk, Roan NED KAW 0 14 14
13 Gifting, Isak SWE GAS 14 0 14
14 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 0 12 12
15 Sandner, Michael AUT GAS 6 6 12
16 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM 11 0 11
17 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 0 8 8
18 Lesiardo, Morgan ITA KTM 8 0 8
19 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 2 5 7
20 Toriani, Enzo FRA HUS 3 4 7
21 Sikyna, Richard SVK KTM 4 2 6
22 Meier, Glen DEN YAM 5 0 5
23 Zonta, Filippo ITA KTM 0 3 3
24 Dickinson, Ashton GBR KTM 1 1 2

MX2 Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 478
2 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 432
3 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 348
4 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 341
5 Olsen, T. DEN HUS 311
6 Van De Moosdijk, R. NED KAW 293
7 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 287
8 Mewse, Conrad GBR KTM 252
9 Boisrame, M. FRA KAW 234
10 Fernandez, R. ESP YAM 208
11 Rubini, S. FRA HON 150
12 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 141
13 Forato, A. ITA HUS 119
14 Haarup, Mikkel DEN KAW 118
15 Crawford, N. AUS HON 91
16 Malkiewicz, B. AUS HON 86
17 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 74
18 Hofer, Rene AUT KTM 73
19 Gilbert, Josh GBR HUS 73
20 Horgmo, Kevin NOR KTM 70
21 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM 65
22 Guadagnini, M. ITA HUS 62
23 Gifting, Isak SWE GAS 61
24 Lesiardo, M. ITA KTM 60
25 Laengenfelder, S. GER GAS 59

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EMX250

In the opening EMX250 race, it was Marcel Conijn who led the way, with Guadagnini second and Tom Guyon of Team VRT Nordpesca Holland in third.

Guadagnini wasted no time to get around Conijn, as he passed him on the second lap of the race. It then didn’t take long for Guadagnini to get ahead and lead the race by 5.642 seconds. Meanwhile Hakon Fredriksen of Yamaha SM Action MC Migliori J1 Racing was looking to pass Guyon for fourth in the race.

EMX250 Start
EMX250 Start

Championship leader Thibault Benistant of the Hutten Metaal Yamaha Racing squad had a tough start to the race as he was forced to make his way back up from the back of the pack. He managed to get up to 14th and still had plenty of time to keep climbing up the field.

On lap 5 of the race, Pierre Goupillon of BUD Racing Kawasaki caught and passed Emil Weckman, the rider of Honda Racing Assomotor for 6th in the race.

Meanwhile Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Kay De Wolf crashed out twice in the first half of the race, eventually dropping down to 15th.

On lap 6, after several attempts, Fredriksen was finally able to pass Guyon and get up into 4th. While Talviku was battling with Conijn for 2nd place.

With 5 minutes and 2 laps to go the top 10 was comfortably led by Guadagnini, who was followed by Conijn, Talviku, Fredriksen, Guyon, Goupillon, Weckman, Tomass Sileika, Lorenzo Corti and Tim Edberg.

Talviku then moved into P2 past Conijn, though not long after crashed which allowed Conijn and Fredriksen back through. Fredriksen than crashed himself, though only losing one position to Talviku.

Guadagnini
Mattia Guadagnini

In the end it was Mattia Guadagnini who won the race by an impressive 17.882 margin, with Marcel Conijn and Hakon Fredriksen behind in P2 and P3.

In EMX250 race two, it was Talviku and BUD Racing Kawasaki’s Lorenzo Locurcio who led the way, meanwhile Guadagnini and Benistant were down in 4th and 5th.

Talviku was then getting caught by Locurcio, while Gianluca Facchetti of Hutten Metaal Yamaha Racing was sitting in 3rd place.

Guadagnini then made a mistake, which allowed Benistant through. Benistant was then the fastest rider on track as he went after his teammate to move into the top 3. Locurcio and Facchetti then crashed out of 2nd and 3rd, as Guadagnini forced his way past the championship leader, Benistant, to move into 2nd.

Keen to get another win, Guadagnini then went on to set the fastest lap of the race – a 1:59.301, which was immediately bettered by Benistant as he clocked a 1:58.597 as he put the hammer down to catch the Italian and go for the lead.

Guadagnini then became the new race leader, pushing Talviku to 2nd, with Benistant pushing the Estonian another position as he went through as well.

As the race progressed Guadagnini continued to lead the way with Benistant 2nd. Though the rider in P3, Talviku, started to come under pressure from Locurcio, with the BUD Racing Kawasaki rider eventually passing him for 3rd.

Jorgen Matthias Talviku
Jorgen Matthias Talviku

In the end it was Mattia Guadagnini who won the race, with Thibault Benistant in P2 and Locurcio in P3. On the podium it was Guadagnini who occupied the top step of the podium for the second time in a row, with Talviku 2nd overall and Fredriksen 3rd.

With three rounds left, Thibault Benistant leads the championship with 286 points, with Guadagnini 28 points down in second and De Wolf third.

EMX250 Results

Pos Rider Nat. Bike R1 R2 Total
1 Guadagnini, Mattia ITA HUS 25 25 50
2 Talviku, Jorgen-Matthias EST HUS 18 18 36
3 Fredriksen, Hakon NOR YAM 20 16 36
4 Benistant, Thibault FRA YAM 13 22 35
5 Conijn, Marcel NED KTM 22 11 33
6 Guyon, Tom FRA KTM 16 15 31
7 Locurcio, Lorenzo VEN KAW 7 20 27
8 Edberg, Tim SWE YAM 12 10 22
9 Corti, Lorenzo ITA KTM 11 9 20
10 Boegh Damm, Bastian DEN KTM 6 13 19
11 de Wolf, Kay NED HUS 5 12 17
12 Goupillon, Pierre FRA KAW 15 0 15
13 Facchetti, Gianluca ITA YAM 0 14 14
14 Weckman, Emil FIN HON 14 0 14
15 Mc Lellan, Camden RSA HUS 9 2 11
16 Sileika, Tomass LAT KTM 10 0 10
17 Tuani, Federico ITA HUS 0 8 8
18 Lugana, Paolo ITA KTM 8 0 8
19 Gerhardsson, Albin SWE HUS 0 7 7
20 Lucas, Mario ESP KTM 0 6 6
21 Oliver, Oriol ESP KTM 0 5 5
22 Del Coco, Matteo ITA KTM 1 4 5
23 Van Essen, Twan NED KTM 2 3 5
24 Vesterinen, Matias FIN KTM 4 0 4
25 Louis, Axel FRA HON 3 0 3
26 Martinez, Yago ESP YAM 0 1 1

EMX250 Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Benistant, T. FRA YAM 286
2 Guadagnini, M. ITA HUS 258
3 de Wolf, Kay NED HUS 198
4 Fredriksen, H. NOR YAM 188
5 Talviku, J. EST HUS 180
6 Edberg, Tim SWE YAM 174
7 Locurcio, L. VEN KAW 141
8 Guyon, Tom FRA KTM 137
9 Vettik, Meico EST KTM 137
10 Gifting, Isak SWE KTM 128
11 Boegh Damm, B. DEN KTM 110
12 Facchetti, G. ITA YAM 98
13 Conijn, Marcel NED KTM 94
14 Florian, Lion GER KTM 93
15 Everts, Liam BEL KTM 87
16 Spies, M. GER HUS 84
17 Sileika, T. LAT KTM 81
18 Mc Lellan, C. RSA HUS 72
19 Meier, Glen DEN YAM 54
20 Oliver, Oriol ESP KTM 49

EMX125

The first race of the EMX125 Presented by FMF Racing class, saw Raul Sanchez of Team Yamaha Ausio, who grabbed the holeshot. Meanwhile series leader, Andrea Bonacorsi of Fantic Racing was caught out in the first corner and have to fight through from the very back of the field.

Early on in the race, Pietro Razzini passed Karlis Alberts Reisulis for second, with Valerio Lata from Marchetti Racing Team KTM and ASA United Husqvarna Team’s Bobby Bruce, closely behind in fourth and fifth.

Razzini then got caught out by Reisulis, who fought back to move back into second, while also going after the race leader, Sanchez, straight away.

Bonacorsi then charged through from the back of the field as he got into the top 20. With 15 minutes plus 2 laps on the clock, Bonacorsi was up in 15th, though still with a long way to go.

EMX125 Start
EMX125 Start

There was drama at the front of the field, which Sanchez and Reisulis down, which allowed Bruce into the lead, as he was followed by Lata, Meico Vettik, Razzini and Cas Valk of TBS Conversions Racing Team.

Bruce then extended his lead to 4.576 seconds, as Vettik passed Lata for second. At the same time, Reisulis set the fastest lap of the race and was down in 7th.

It looked like Vettik stepped it up a gear, as the gap between him and the race leader, Bruce, came down to 2.7 seconds. Vettik then continued to charge after Bruce for the race win as less than a second separated the two.

Bruce then managed to pull the gap back to 1.777 seconds. Though that didn’t stop Vettik, who with 2 laps to go moved into the lead. Bruce then crashed out of P2, to eventually finish the race in 6th.

Meico Vettik was the race 1 winner, with Valerio Lata second and Max Palsson of WZ Racing having a strong ride to finish third.

In the second EMX125 race it was Valk with the holeshot, while Bonacorsi had another unlucky start to the race and was down in 35th.

Valk then led Lata, Palsson and Andrea Roncoli, though Lata was able to find a way through into the lead, and Palsson followed the Marchetti Racing KTM rider too, pushing Valk down to 3rd within a few corners.

Valk then lost another spot to Palsson and was down in P4. At the same time, Bonacorsi was making his way through the field to move into 25th, as Bruce fell out of 10th.

Valerio Lata
Valerio Lata

With 10 minutes plus 2 laps on the clock, Lata continued to lead, though Roncoli was the rider in 2nd place, 5.621 seconds down. Meanwhile Vettik was pushing to pass David Braceras of RFME GasGas MX Junior Team for 6th in the race.

Valk then rode into the pits with a bike issue, which forced the Dutch rider out of race two.

Further down the field Bonacorsi got himself back into points in 19th and he picked up a few more positions towards the end of the race to eventually finish in 10th.

With just a few laps to go, Palsson and Roncoli were locked in a battle for 2nd, with Roncoli going through into P2 towards the end.

Valerio Lata went on to take his first race win of the season, with Roncoli crossing the line 2nd and Palsson 3rd.

In terms of the overall, Lata took to the top step of the podium, with Vettik finishing 2nd and Palsson occupying the 3rd step of the podium. As it stands, Bonacrosi leads the championship by 33 points, with Razzini second and Vettik third. There are still four rounds of the championship left to go.

EMX125 Podium -
EMX125 Podium – 1) Valerio Lata, 2) Meico Vettik, 3) Max Palsson

EMX125 Results

Pos Rider Nat. Bike R1 R2 Total
1 Lata, Valerio ITA KTM 22 25 47
2 Vettik, Meico EST KTM 25 18 43
3 Palsson, Max SWE KTM 20 20 40
4 Roncoli, Andrea ITA HUS 12 22 34
5 Razzini, Pietro ITA HUS 16 13 29
6 Braceras, David ESP GAS 13 15 28
7 Reisulis, Karlis Alberts LAT KTM 14 14 28
8 Prugnieres, Quentin Marc FRA KTM 11 12 23
9 Bruce, Bobby GBR HUS 15 8 23
10 Bonacorsi, Andrea ITA FAN 9 11 20
11 Valk, Cas NED KTM 18 0 18
12 Soulimani, Saad FRA HUS 0 16 16
13 Brumann, Kevin SUI YAM 8 7 15
14 Viano, Andrea ITA HUS 3 10 13
15 Osterhagen, Haakon NOR KTM 6 5 11
16 Sanchez, Raul ESP YAM 10 0 10
17 Zampino, Davide ITA KTM 0 9 9
18 Kucherov, Nikita RUS KTM 2 6 8
19 Smulders, Scott NED HUS 5 2 7
20 Cazal, Xavier FRA KTM 7 0 7
21 Rossi, Andrea ITA KTM 0 4 4
22 Sella, Suff ISR KTM 1 3 4
23 Congost, Gerard ESP GAS 4 0 4
24 Zanchi, Ferruccio ITA HUS 0 1 1

EMX125 Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Bonacorsi, A. ITA FAN 186
2 Razzini, P. ITA HUS 153
3 Vettik, Meico EST KTM 147
4 Braceras, D. ESP GAS 137
5 Farres, G. ESP GAS 132
6 Lata, Valerio ITA KTM 120
7 Brumann, Kevin SUI YAM 117
8 Palsson, Max SWE KTM 116
9 Roncoli, A. ITA HUS 109
10 Prugnieres, Q. FRA KTM 95
11 Soulimani, S. FRA HUS 90
12 Everts, Liam BEL KTM 66
13 Piller, C. GER KTM 64
14 Congost, G. ESP GAS 62
15 Rossi, Andrea ITA KTM 51
16 Miot, Florian FRA KTM 44
17 Osterhagen, H. NOR KTM 43
18 Smulders, S. NED HUS 42
19 Cazal, Xavier FRA KTM 36
20 Russi, M. ITA KTM 34

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2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship
Round Eight – Thunder Valley National
Lakewood, CO, October 3rd, 2020

Images Jeff Kardas

As expected, the eighth and penultimate round of the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship was brimming with intensity as the title fights in both the 450 Class and 250 Class move one step closer to completion. Perfect conditions and the high altitude of Thunder Valley Motocross Park made for an action-packed afternoon of racing at the WPS/FLY Racing Thunder Valley National.

Thunder Valley AMA Pro Motocross

While his quest for a fourth consecutive 450 Class title has been filled with challenges, reigning three-time champion Eli Tomac always brings his best whenever he has the chance to race in front of the home Colorado crowd. The Monster Energy Kawasaki rider entered the day on the verge of being mathematically eliminated from title contention, but he kept his hopes alive with a motivated performance that saw Tomac break a tie for the overall win with team-mate Adam Cianciarulo by capturing a second-moto victory that put him atop the results sheet.

Eli Tomac kept his championship hopes alive, albeit they are very slim

In the 250 Class it was a long overdue triumph for Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper, who outlasted both championship contenders, teammate Dylan Ferrandis and GEICO Honda’s Jeremy Martin, to prevail with his first win of the season and the second win of his career.  Aussie siblings Hunter and Jett Lawrence finished fifth and sixth respectively.

Thunder Valley Video Highlights

The Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will close out the 2020 season with its ninth and final round next weekend from Southern California’s Fox Raceway in Pala, just outside of San Diego.

450MX Moto 1

As the gate dropped on the first 450 Class moto of the afternoon it was Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Adam Cianciarulo who emerged with his fifth MotoSport.com Holeshot with Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton right behind him as Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Zach Osborne slotted into third. With a clear track Cianciarulo was able to quickly build a multi-second advantage that he then managed through the middle portion of the moto. Meanwhile, Sexton shed himself of Osborne to assert his hold of second.

Adam Cianciarulo scored the holeshot

As the second half of the moto wore on, Sexton was able to gain some ground on Cianciarulo and got to within less than two seconds of the lead. However, Cianciarulo responded and was able to restabilize the lead. With less than five minutes remaining Cianciarulo narrowly avoided a crash when he briefly lost control of his Kawasaki, which allowed Sexton to close within just a second-and-a-half. Once again Cianciarulo dug deep in response and was able to rebuild his lead to its largest margin. Behind the see-saw battle up front Tomac, who started sixth, was able to track down Osborne and make the pass for third.

Cianciarulo went wire-to-wire for his fourth moto win of the season, crossing the finish line 2.6 seconds ahead of Sexton with a hard-charging Tomac in third. Osborne followed in fourth, with Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing’s Justin Barcia completing the top five.

450MX Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Adam Cianciarulo KAW KX450 16 Laps
2 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +02.620
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +11.332
4 Zachary Osborne HQV FC450 RE +38.499
5 Justin Barcia YAM YZ 450F +42.680
6 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +58.919
7 Christian Craig HON CRF450R +1:00.293
8 Blake Baggett KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:02.708
9 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1:06.140
10 Broc Tickle YAM YZ 450F +1:17.397
11 Fredrik Noren SUZ RMZ 450 +1:19.575
12 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:20.829
13 Jake Masterpool HQV FC450 +1:55.328
14 Benny Bloss HQV FC450 +2:10.110
15 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 15 Laps
16 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX 450F +11.521
17 John Short HON CRF450R +12.262
18 Isaac Teasdale SUZ RMZ 450 +26.397
19 Tyler Bowers KAW KX 450F +27.999
20 Grant Harlan HON CRF450R WE +30.647
21 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +55.674
22 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +56.973
23 Richard Taylor YAM YZ 450F +1:00.280
24 William Clason KAW KX 450F +1:16.872
25 McClellan Hile KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:24.526
26 Dalton Dyer KAW KX 450F +1:37.285
27 Connor Olson HQV FC450 RE +1:42.079
28 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1:43.211
29 Adam Enticknap SUZ RMZ 450 +1:52.256
30 Jerry Lorenz III YAM YZ 450F +2:03.949
31 Cole Shondeck HON CRF450R +2:05.759
32 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F +2:09.240
33 Nathen LaPorte HON CRF450R +2:10.498
34 Austin Root HQV FC450 +2:29.080
35 Matthew Toth HON CRF450R 14 Laps
36 Nick Schmidt HQV FC450 +45.492
37 Carter Stephenson YAM YZ 450F 13 Laps
38 Joseph Savatgy SUZ RMZ 450 11 Laps
39 Alex Ray KAW KX450 8 Laps
40 Felix Lopez KTM 450 SX-F DNS

450MX Moto 2

450

The 450 Class field made uphill charge once more to begin the final moto of the day and as the riders exited the first turn it was Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Marvin Musquin who secured the MotoSport.com Holeshot over Cianciarulo, who quickly applied pressure and jumped into the lead, followed by Osborne into second.

Musquin and Sexton

Musquin continued to lose ground as Twisted Tea/H.E.P. Suzuki’s Max Anstie took over third and left Musquin to deal with Tomac in a battle for fourth. Tomac pounced and stormed past both Musquin and Anstie to go from fifth to third.

450

After a busy opening lap Cianciarulo was able to sprint away to a second-and-a-half advantage over Osborne, while Tomac gave chase from third. The top three ran within a couple seconds of one another and after several laps of trading momentum Tomac began to apply pressure on Osborne, successfully taking control of second a little more than 10 minutes into the moto. From there Tomac kept looking ahead and started to make the move on his teammate for the lead. With the home crowd cheering him on, Tomac made the pass happen and took control of the moto.

Once out front Tomac dropped the hammer and quickly gapped the rest of the field. Together, the Kawasaki tandem then pulled away from Osborne. The pace of the top three was so impressive that the leaders enjoyed more than a 10-second advantage over fourth halfway through the moto. With a handful of time left on the clock it appeared as though Tomac had the win in hand, but his place slowed as he appeared to deal with something on his motorcycle, which allowed Cianciarulo to close back in. Tomac’s slowing was brief and he regrouped to rebuild his advantage.

Eli Tomac and Adam Cianciarulo

With Tomac back up to speed, managing a lead of about five seconds, Cianciarulo was forced to deal with some pressure from a late charge by Osborne from third. The championship rivals were within a few bike lengths of one another when Cianciarulo nearly crashed after his bike took off awkwardly on a jump. He kept his Kawasaki on two wheels, but it allowed Osborne to assume second. Just a few laps later Cianciarulo put in one final charge to catch and pass Osborne. Cianciarulo came to the inside on one of the track’s downhill sections but couldn’t get the bike slowed enough, causing slight contact between the two that sent Cianciarulo off the track momentarily. Out front Tomac finished strong to take his second moto win of the season by 8.9 seconds over Osborne, with Cianciarulo in third.

450MX Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 16 Laps
2 Zachary Osborne HQV FC450 RE +08.983
3 Adam Cianciarulo KAW KX450 +11.557
4 Christian Craig HON CRF450R +41.064
5 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +48.632
6 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +56.261
7 Benny Bloss HQV FC450 +1:27.126
8 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:30.932
9 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:41.325
10 Jake Masterpool HQV FC450 +1:55.970
11 Grant Harlan HON CRF450R WE +2:11.417
12 John Short HON CRF450R 15 Laps
13 Fredrik Noren SUZ RMZ 450 +23.154
14 Isaac Teasdale SUZ RMZ 450 +32.247
15 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX 450F +42.187
16 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +46.487
17 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +53.472
18 Tyler Bowers KAW KX 450F +57.712
19 Richard Taylor YAM YZ 450F +1:06.907
20 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +1:15.476
21 Austin Root HQV FC450 +1:27.968
22 McClellan Hile KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:33.929
23 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F +1:36.545
24 Adam Enticknap SUZ RMZ 450 +1:43.775
25 Jerry Lorenz III YAM YZ 450F +1:51.747
26 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +2:00.632
27 William Clason KAW KX 450F +2:12.927
28 Dalton Dyer KAW KX 450F +2:16.459
29 Connor Olson HQV FC450 RE +2:22.668
30 Jorge Rubalcava HQV FC450 FE +2:23.642
31 Nathen LaPorte HON CRF450R +2:39.957
32 Jeffrey Walker KTM 450 SX-F FE +2:44.658
33 Carter Stephenson YAM YZ 450F 14 Laps
34 Dominic DeSimone HON CRF450R +10.538
35 Matthew Toth HON CRF450R +1:28.345
36 Cole Shondeck HON CRF450R +1:43.258
37 Justin Barcia YAM YZ 450F 10 Laps
38 Nick Schmidt HQV FC450 9 Laps
39 Broc Tickle YAM YZ 450F 2 Laps
40 Alex Ray KAW KX450 +18.206

450MX Overall

Tomac (3-1) and Cianciarulo (1-3) finished with identical moto scores, leaving them tied atop the overall classification. However, by virtue of his win in the final moto Tomac earned the tiebreaker to give him his second victory of the season and the 25th win of his career. It also signified the first 1-2 sweep for the Monster Energy Kawasaki duo. Osborne rounded out the overall podium in third (4-2).

Such a cool day here in Colorado. So glad we were able to get back here this season,” expressed Tomac. “I finally had a race where I felt like myself. In the first moto I was out of touch (from the leaders) early on, but in the second moto I was much closer to the front. I had a bit of a clutch hang up, but it fixed itself. We really needed this. I’ve kind of been searching lately, so it feels good to have a day like this and get back on top.”

Osborne lost five points to Cianciarulo in the championship and will now enter the final round with a 24-point lead in the standings, looking to secure his first premier class title.

In the first moto I got slammed by another rider in the second turn and my foot got jammed really bad. The more I went the more I could feel it,” explained Osborne. “I got it massaged before the second moto and then adrenaline carried me from there. I had a mid-race lull there in the second moto, but was able to finish strong and get a good result. I wasn’t in my comfort zone today so I did a little bit of point racing. We’ll look forward to next week.”

450MX Overall Results

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Eli Tomac 3 1 45
2 Adam Cianciarulo 1 3 45
3 Zachary Osborne 4 2 40
4 Chase Sexton 2 5 38
5 Christian Craig 7 4 32
6 Marvin Musquin 6 8 28
7 Max Anstie 9 6 27
8 Benny Bloss 14 7 21
9 Justin Bogle 12 9 21
10 Jake Masterpool 13 10 19
11 Fredrik Noren 11 13 18
12 Justin Barcia 5 37 16
13 Blake Baggett 8 13
14 John Short 17 12 13
15 Grant Harlan 20 11 11
16 Justin  Rodbell 16 15 11
17 Ben LaMay 15 16 11
18 Broc Tickle 10 39 11
19 Isaac Teasdale 18 14 10
20 Tyler Bowers 19 18 5
21 Jeremy Smith 21 17 4
22 Richard Taylor 23 19 2
23 Matthew Hubert 28 20 1
24 McClellan Hile 25 22 0
25 Scott Meshey 22 26 0
26 William Clason 24 27 0
27 Adam Enticknap 29 24 0
28 Dalton Dyer 26 28 0
29 Austin Root 34 21 0
30 Tristan Lane 32 23 0
31 Jerry Lorenz III 30 25 0
32 Connor Olson 27 29 0
33 Nathen LaPorte 33 31 0
34 Cole Shondeck 31 36 0
35 Carter Stephenson 37 33 0
36 Matthew Toth 35 35 0
37 Nick Schmidt 36 38 0
38 Alex Ray 39 40 0
39 Jorge Rubalcava 30 0
40 Jeffrey Walker 32 0
41 Dominic DeSimone 34 0
42 Joseph Savatgy 38 0
43 Felix Lopez 40 0

450MX Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Zachary Osborne 325
2 Adam Cianciarulo 301
3 Marvin Musquin 283
4 Eli Tomac 278
5 Chase Sexton 245
6 Justin Barcia 234
7 Blake Baggett 232
8 Christian Craig 195
9 Max Anstie 166
10 Joseph Savatgy 147
11 Broc Tickle 145
12 Fredrik Noren 125
13 Dean Wilson 97
14 Justin Bogle 93
15 Jake Masterpool 82
16 Justin  Rodbell 69
17 Benny Bloss 68
18 Henry Miller 59
19 Jason Anderson 58
20 John Short 34
21 Ben LaMay 32
22 Coty Schock 31
23 Cooper Webb 29
24 Grant Harlan 29
25 Isaac Teasdale 29
26 Tyler Bowers 28
27 Jeremy Smith 22
28 Justin Hoeft 17
29 Kyle Chisholm 15
30 Luke Renzland 11
31 Matthew Hubert 11
32 Chase Felong 8
33 Alex Ray 7
34 Tristan Lane 5
35 Felix Lopez 5
36 Robbie Wageman 4
37 Jeffrey Walker 4
38 McClellan Hile 3
39 Cory Carsten 3
40 Jared Lesher 3
41 Bryce Backaus 2
42 Richard Taylor 2
43 Dalton Dyer 0
44 Austin Root 0
45 Scott Meshey 0
46 Christopher Prebula 0
47 Tristan Lewis 0
48 Jerry Lorenz III 0
49 Carson Tickle 0
50 Bryce Hansen 0
51 Adam Enticknap 0
52 Vann Martin 0
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250MX Moto 1

The opening moto of the 250 Class began with Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Mitchell Harrison prevailing with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, but he quickly gave way to the Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing teammates of Shane McElrath and Dylan Ferrandis. As the lead duo quickly built a gap over the field, the race soon turned into a breakaway for the Star Yamaha squad as Cooper moved into third.

With Cooper closing in, Ferrandis picked up the pace and put the pressure on McElrath for the lead, successfully making the pass about 10 minutes into the moto. Once out front the Frenchman was able to sprint away to a multi-second advantage. As Ferrandis continued to build on his lead the battle for second intensified between McElrath and Cooper just past the halfway point of the moto. Cooper soon made his way around his teammate and looked to chip away at the deficit to Ferrandis.

Dylan Ferrandis

Out front Ferrandis was able to maintain a comfortable margin over Cooper the rest of the way to secure his eighth moto win of the season and his fifth consecutive checkered flag by 5.3 seconds over Cooper, with McElrath securing a 1-2-3 sweep for Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing. GEICO Honda’s Jeremy Martin followed in fourth, while his team-mate Hunter Lawrence rounded out the top five ahead of younger sibling Jett.

Hunter Lawrence 5th in the opening moto

250MX Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 250F 16 Laps
2 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +05.390
3 Shane McElrath YAM YZ 250F +11.527
4 Jeremy Martin HON CRF250R +14.150
5 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +20.856
6 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +31.921
7 Jo Shimoda HON CRF250R +32.542
8 Mitchell Harrison KAW KX 250 +41.938
9 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +41.985
10 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1:07.589
11 Nathanael Thrasher YAM YZ 250F +1:14.023
12 Alex Martin SUZ RMZ 250 +1:15.346
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1:15.500
14 Mitchell Falk YAM YZ 250F +1:27.657
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1:29.160
16 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +1:29.845
17 Nick Gaines YAM YZ 250F +1:34.515
18 Derek Kelley HQV FC250 +1:46.972
19 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1:49.725
20 Derek  Drake KTM 250 SX-F FE +1:53.364
21 Jesse Flock HQV FC250 +1:56.676
22 Brandon Hartranft KTM 250 SX-F FE +2:00.813
23 Gared Steinke KAW KX 250 15 Laps
24 Kevin Moranz KTM 250 SX-F +02.423
25 Gage Schehr HQV FC250 +20.266
26 Curren Thurman KTM 250 SX-F +24.403
27 Zack Williams KTM 250 SX-F +40.008
28 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 +49.110
29 Ezra Hastings HQV FC250 +1:03.781
30 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +1:04.517
31 Gerhard Matamoros YAM YZ 250F +1:08.912
32 Maxwell Sanford YAM YZ 250F +1:17.157
33 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +2:04.870
34 Robert Fitch, Jr. YAM YZ 250 +2:09.237
35 Cameron Mcadoo KAW KX 250 14 Laps
36 Lane Shaw KTM 250 SX-F +3:46.806
37 Colton Eigenmann SUZ RMZ 250 13 Laps
38 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 12 Laps
39 Mason Gonzales YAM YZ 250F 8 Laps
40 Joseph Crown YAM YZ 250F +00.697

250MX Moto 2

As the field roared out the gate to start Moto 2 it was Cooper who came away with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by his teammates Jarrett Frye and McElrath, with McElrath getting by Frye for second. Ferrandis started outside the top 10 while his primary championship rival, Martin, got by Frye for third. Martin didn’t stop there. He kept his push to the front going and made the pass on McElrath for second before attacking Cooper for the lead. As the battle for first took shape Ferrandis had worked his way to just outside the top five.

Cooper responded to the pressure and maintained his hold of the lead. Behind them Ferrandis encountered some misfortune when two riders ahead of him came together and forced the Yamaha off track and onto the ground. The point leader got back on his bike and reentered quickly, but had to make up a few lost positions from 10th place. Back up front, Martin closed back in on Cooper just past the halfway point of the moto. The lead duo again engaged in a spirited fight, where Cooper fended off virtually every one of Martin’s moves and successfully rebuilt his advantage after several laps of tight racing.

As time ran out on the moto the focus shifted to the battle for third, which turned into a three-rider fight between McElrath, Hunter Lawrence and Ferrandis, who successfully battled back from his early incident. Hunter Lawrence was aggressive in trying to keep Ferrandis at bay and it carried him by McElrath for third. Ferrandis followed through into fourth and then made an impressive pass on Hunter Lawrence to take control of third. Out front Cooper pulled out to a margin of more than five seconds and carried on to his first moto win of the season, followed by Martin in second and Ferrandis in third after a resilient ride.

Jett Lawrence finished the second moto in sixth place which gave him sixth for the round while older brother Hunter was fifth for the round.

Jett Lawrence

250MX Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 16 Laps
2 Jeremy Martin HON CRF250R +03.166
3 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 250F +12.795
4 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +14.978
5 Shane McElrath YAM YZ 250F +17.331
6 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +39.731
7 Brandon Hartranft KTM 250 SX-F FE +51.384
8 Jo Shimoda HON CRF250R +54.471
9 Mitchell Harrison KAW KX 250 +57.325
10 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1:00.384
11 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1:00.944
12 Alex Martin SUZ RMZ 250 +1:25.882
13 Joseph Crown YAM YZ 250F +1:34.994
14 Mitchell Falk YAM YZ 250F +1:43.012
15 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1:45.414
16 Nathanael Thrasher YAM YZ 250F +1:48.808
17 Jesse Flock HQV FC250 +2:03.602
18 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +2:10.642
19 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 15 Laps
20 Derek Kelley HQV FC250 +11.434
21 Gared Steinke KAW KX 250 +23.324
22 Gage Schehr HQV FC250 +27.007
23 Zack Williams KTM 250 SX-F +27.728
24 Kai Aiello HQV FC250 +41.802
25 Curren Thurman KTM 250 SX-F +45.667
26 Wade Brommel KAW KX 250 +48.222
27 Ezra Hastings HQV FC250 +54.630
28 Robert Fitch, Jr. YAM YZ 250 +1:12.177
29 Maxwell Sanford YAM YZ 250F +1:27.879
30 Gerhard Matamoros YAM YZ 250F +1:36.260
31 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F +1:55.462
32 Lane Shaw KTM 250 SX-F 14 Laps
33 Otto Berton KTM 250 SX-F +17.809
34 Kevin Moranz KTM 250 SX-F 8 Laps
35 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F 7 Laps
36 Tyler Lowe KTM 250 SX-F +24.453
37 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 5 Laps
38 Jacob Bork YAM YZ 250F 2 Laps
39 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F DNF
40 Nick Gaines YAM YZ 250F DNS

250MX Overall

The second moto win was enough to put Cooper atop the overall classification (2-1) for his second career victory, where he became the fourth different 250 Class winner this season. Ferrandis’ spirited effort in Moto 2 allowed him to secure the runner-up spot (1-3), while Martin ended up third (4-2).

A lot of pressure was on my shoulders, but I’m glad it’s off,” exclaimed Cooper. “There were only two rounds left (entering today) so it’s a good time to do it. Now I can go into next weekend feeling a lot more confident and look to finish out the season strong. I really enjoy this place. I get good vibes here. It just feels good to pull off a win.”

Justin Cooper

The come-from-behind effort by Ferrandis paid dividends in the 250 Class standings where he gained five points on Martin to carry a 18-point lead into the final round.

I was in a bad position (in the second moto). I wanted to get as many points as possible, so I rode as hard as I could,” said Ferrandis. “I got a bad start and then I got caught up in an incident. There was nothing I could do. I just put my head down and gave it my all. We still were able to get on the podium so that’s good for the championship.”

250MX Overall Results

Pos Rider M1 M2 Points
1 Justin Cooper 2 1 47
2 Dylan Ferrandis 1 3 45
3 Jeremy Martin 4 2 40
4 Shane McElrath 3 5 36
5 Hunter Lawrence 5 4 34
6 Jett Lawrence 6 6 30
7 Jo Shimoda 7 8 27
8 Mitchell Harrison 8 9 25
9 Jarrett Frye 9 10 23
10 Carson Mumford 13 11 18
11 Alex Martin 12 12 18
12 Dilan Schwartz 10 15 17
13 Nathanael Thrasher 11 16 15
14 Brandon Hartranft 22 7 14
15 Mitchell Falk 14 14 14
16 Joseph Crown 40 13 8
17 Preston Kilroy 15 19 8
18 Joshua Varize 19 18 5
19 Jerry Robin 16 37 5
20 Jesse Flock 21 17 4
21 Derek Kelley 18 20 4
22 Nick Gaines 17 40 4
23 Gared Steinke 23 21 0
24 Derek  Drake 20 1
25 Gage Schehr 25 22 0
26 Zack Williams 27 23 0
27 Curren Thurman 26 25 0
28 Kai Aiello 28 24 0
29 Ezra Hastings 29 27 0
30 Kevin Moranz 24 34 0
31 Wade Brommel 33 26 0
32 Maxwell Sanford 32 29 0
33 Gerhard Matamoros 31 30 0
34 Robert Fitch, Jr. 34 28 0
35 Lane Shaw 36 32 0
36 Blake Ashley 30 39 0
37 Jake Pinhancos 31 0
38 Otto Berton 33 0
39 Cameron Mcadoo 35 0
40 Kyle Greeson 35 0
41 Tyler Lowe 36 0
42 Colton Eigenmann 37 0
43 RJ Hampshire 38 0
44 Jacob Bork 38 0
45 Mason Gonzales 39 0

250MX Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 352
2 Jeremy Martin 334
3 Shane McElrath 254
4 Justin Cooper 251
5 Alex Martin 242
6 Jett Lawrence 230
7 RJ Hampshire 217
8 Cameron Mcadoo 165
9 Mitchell Harrison 163
10 Brandon Hartranft 148
11 Jo Shimoda 141
12 Carson Mumford 134
13 Hunter Lawrence 122
14 Derek  Drake 107
15 Mason Gonzales 75
16 Stilez Robertson 70
17 Nick Gaines 62
18 Jarrett Frye 55
19 Ty Masterpool 54
20 Pierce Brown 36
21 Hardy Munoz 33
22 Jerry Robin 33
23 Joseph Crown 32
24 Darian Sanayei 24
25 Dilan Schwartz 22
26 Jalek  Swoll 19
27 Derek Kelley 19
28 Lance Kobusch 18
29 Nathanael Thrasher 15
30 Ezra Hastings 14
31 Mitchell Falk 14
32 Joshua Varize 12
33 Jesse Flock 12
34 Gared Steinke 11
35 Austin Root 9
36 Preston Kilroy 8
37 Kevin Moranz 7
38 Zack Williams 6
39 Jordan Bailey 6
40 Maxwell Sanford 4
41 Mathias Jorgensen 4
42 Curren Thurman 2
43 Ryder Floyd 0
44 Colton Eigenmann 0
45 Chase Lorenz 0
46 Jace Kessler 0
47 Vincent Luhovey 0
48 Gage Schehr 0
49 Gerhard Matamoros 0
50 Carson Brown 0
51 Lane Shaw 0
52 Christopher Williams 0

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Australian Motocross Championship

Motorcycling Australia have officially announced that the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship will not run, as continuing border restrictions related to COVID-19 create ongoing uncertainty, with the decision reached after consultations with teams, riders, clubs and stakeholders. See the full statement below:

Due to the ongoing uncertainty around State Government COVID-19 border restrictions, Motorcycling Australia (MA) after consultation with key stakeholders, have been forced to make the difficult decision to abandon any further attempts to conduct the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship.

MA reviewed the championship operations including the format and potential event dates, in consultation with industry, teams, riders and clubs to see if it was possible to run the championship during this COVID-19 period.

Despite significant work by MA over recent months in exploring all possible options to hold the Championship, the uncertainly around State Government COVID-19 border restrictions, has meant it is not possible to run the Championship in 2020.

MA sincerely thank all stakeholders, clubs, teams and riders for their support and patience, but this late in the year has proven too difficult to start the Championship without clear plans from State Government’s around State borders being reopened.

MA is now focusing all its efforts on delivering a successful 2021 Australian Motocross Championship.

Peter Doyle – MA CEO

“While the cancellation is disappointing for riders, teams, industry and fans, MA is already working hard to ensure that we have the best possible championship in 2021. The Australian Motocross Championship is the breeding ground of future superstars and will continue to showcase the best motocross action in the country.”


Mitchell Evans & Tim Gajser renew with HRC

Mitch Evans & Tim Gajser
Mitch Evans & Tim Gajser

Honda Racing Corporation (HRC) have announced that it has renewed its contracts with Tim Gajser (24-years-old, Slovenia) and Mitchell Evans (21-years-old, Australia), for multiple years. Both riders are currently competing for Team HRC in the FIM Motocross World Championship Premier MXGP Class.

After becoming the FIM Motocross World Championship MX2 world champion in 2015, Tim Gajser joined Honda’s Team HRC factory team to compete in, and win the premier MXGP class. He won his second MXGP title in 2019, and is currently leading the 2020 championship, aiming for his second consecutive, and third total, title in the premier class.

Tim Gajser

“I’m super happy to extend my contract with Honda and Team HRC. I’ve been here for the past seven years and to me this team feels like a family so I’m really happy to stay. We will keep giving our best and we are all excited and ready to fight for the title every year and I believe this is the best place for me to be, especially on board the Honda CRF450RW. It is great to confirm this and continue our partnership that has already seen us become multi-time world champions.”

Tim Gajser & Mitch Evans
Tim Gajser & Mitch Evans

Mitchell Evans entered the FIM Motocross World Championship MX2 class in 2019, to finish an impressive 11th in his debut year. In 2020 he joined Team HRC to race in the MXGP class, and is currently ranked 11th.

Mitchell Evans

“I’m very happy to have the deal done and in place. It now allows me to focus on the rest of the season and putting in the best results possible. It also gives me a platform to build upon for the future, and I feel like we’ve built a good relationship already and I’m excited for that to continue. I want to keep improving and working with this team and riding the Honda CRF450RW and I feel Team HRC has proven itself as the best team for me to achieve my dreams of challenging for a world title.”


FIM & Eurosport Events partner to promote Speedway globally

The Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) and Eurosport Events has agreed a long-term partnership which will see the Discovery-owned event management company promote FIM Speedway events including FIM Speedway Grand Prix, Speedway of Nations, Speedway U21 and Speedway Youth World Championships globally for the next 10 years. The new agreement will begin in 2022 and builds on the existing partnership between the organisations for the promotion of the FIM Endurance World Championship (EWC) since 2015.

In an expanded role following a competitive tender to select the new global promoter of the sport, Eurosport Events will leverage its long-standing motorsport promotion expertise and the international scale of Discovery to develop the sport and grow Speedway around the world.

The partnership will seek to expand Speedway GP’s international calendar, extend the distribution of the sport on TV and digital platforms, launch Speedway into new territories and increase its audiences around the world.

Jorge Viegas, FIM President & François Ribeiro, Head of Eurosport Events
Jorge Viegas, FIM President & François Ribeiro, Head of Eurosport Events

Eurosport Events will oversee the full operational and commercial aspects of the sport including multi-platform rights management and distribution, broadcast production, sponsorship rights strategy and the full suite of marketing, brand and promotional activity. It will also work with local organisers on local promotion and maximising ticketing, hospitality and fan engagement activities.

Jorge Viegas – FIM President

“The FIM launched the tender process back in 2019 for the promotion of the FIM Speedway World Championships 2022-2031. Discovery and Eurosport Events has won the vote of the Board of Directors for its innovative proposal in terms of sport promotion and television coverage. The FIM is delighted to expand its collaboration with Discovery and Eurosport Events, who has been the promoter of the FIM Endurance World Championship since 2015. This new collaboration will provide increased media visibility of the FIM Speedway Grand Prix World Championship through Eurosport platforms and key third-party broadcasters. The FIM would like to thank BSI and OneSport who have made a significant contribution to the development of the Speedway over the past twenty years and to wish them every success in 2021 and for the remainder of this season.”


YME confirm Jago Geerts & Maxime Renaux till 2022

Yamaha Motor Europe has confirmed that Jago Geerts will remain with the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 team through 2022, and that the young Belgian will be joined on the gate of the 2021 and 2022 MX2 World Championships by young Frenchman Maxime Renaux.

Yamaha Motor Europe confirm Jago Geerts and Maxime Renaux through 2022

Geerts made his MX2 debut with the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 team back in 2018. The combination of the young Belgian and the Yamaha YZ250F has been fruitful with the ‘193’ scoring his first-ever Grand Prix podium on his way to eighth overall in his rookie season. After one-year of learning and improvement at an elite level, Geerts was able secure the MX2 bronze medal with six more podium finishes in his second season.

Starting 2020 strong, the 19-year-old won his first ever Grand Prix at the opening round of the MX2 series in Matterley Basin, Great Britain. He has since turned 20-years-old and has gone on to win two more rounds, in Kegums, Latvia, and has extended his career podium count to 13.

As a long-time Yamaha rider, Renaux has already raced on the Hans Corvers led ‘Kemea Yamaha’ team in the past. It was back in 2015 where he celebrated three EMX125 wins onboard a GYTR kitted YZ125 and was crowned Junior 125cc World Champion in that same year. Since then, the team has taken on Factory status as the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Team and is solely focused on the FIM MX2 World Championship.

Renaux, now 20-years-old, has shown great promise since his MX2 debut in 2018 where he raced five rounds of the FIM MX2 World Championship as a wildcard rider. He completed his first full-term in MX2 in 2019 where he managed to steer his YZ250F to a maiden podium finish on his way to seventh overall in the final classification.

Nine rounds into the 2020 series, the ‘959’ has quickly established himself as a title threat. He is currently third in the MX2 World Championship standings and has already celebrated his first ever Grand Prix race and overall win, at the MXGP of Italy in Faenza one month ago.

Producing many notable performances since his MX2 debut, which includes four podium celebrations and eight top-three race finishes, Renaux shows signs of great promise and will be a strong challenger for the 2021 and 2022 MX2 crowns.

Jago Geerts – Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 Rider

“I’m really happy to sign with Yamaha for another two years. The last three years were really nice, and it’s really cool I have extended my contract. Everything works nicely within our team and we have had some really good races this year. I’m really happy with my bike, the Yamaha YZ250FM, so it’s good for me to stay with Yamaha for another two-years.”

Maxime Renaux – Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 Rider

“I’m really looking forward to moving up to the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory team for 2021 and 2022. It will be a new beginning for me and I’m ready to fight for the title during those next years. The team looks really motivated and so am I. I am already really looking forward to starting our winter program and to start testing and training ahead of 2021.”

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Holcombe moves into Italian Enduro Championship lead

Beta Factory Racing’s Steve Holcombe has fought his way through an incredibly wet and wild penultimate stop of the Italian Enduro Championship to take control of the series’ overall points lead.

Steve Holcombe
Steve Holcombe – Image by Future7Media

After two busy weekends of Enduro World Championship racing, Steve returned to Italian Enduro Championship duty in Darfo Boario for rounds five and six. Blighted by exceptionally heavy rain, riders faced a wet and wild opening day of competition before conditions thankfully dried a little for day two.

Opting not to take any unnecessary risks in the conditions, Steve maintained a comfortable pace on his Beta RR Racing 4T 350, finishing a strong second overall on day one. Greeted with drier weather on day two he opened his account with the fastest time in the day’s first special test. Losing some ground on the enduro test, he fought back in the latter stages of the day to secure third overall.

Steve Holcombe - Image by Future7Media
Steve Holcombe – Image by Future7Media

With a double podium result, Steve now moves into the overall championship lead with just the final two days of competition remaining, in Arma di Taggia at the end of October.

Steve Holcombe

“That was a tough weekend on the bike for sure. The weather was crazy on Saturday and I think that was the wettest I’ve ever been. Honestly, all credit to the organisers for keeping the racing going. The rain made it so challenging and it was very easy to make a mistake out there. I tried to play it a little safe and took second, then in drier conditions for Sunday I finished third. Beating Thomas Oldrati both times has helped me take the championship lead, which was always the end goal here. After three hectic weekends in a row I’m going to take a little bit of time to recover and then regroup for the final rounds of the Italian Championships and EnduroGP.”

Steve Holcombe - Image by Future7Media
Steve Holcombe – Image by Future7Media
Results – Italian Enduro Championship – Round 5
  1. Brad Freeman (Beta) 35:50.37
  2. Steve Holcombe (Beta) 36:31.48
  3. Joe Wootton (Husqvarna) 36:36.63
  4. Thomas Oldrati (Honda) 36:49.11
  5. Matteo Cavallo (Sherco) 37:08.83
Results – Italian Enduro Championship – Round 6
  1. Brad Freeman (Beta) 36:51.61
  2. Andrea Verona (TM) 37:15.68
  3. Steve Holcombe (Beta) 37:23.88
  4. Joe Wootton (Husqvarna) 37:25.42
  5. Thomas Oldrati (Honda) 37:35.79
Championship Standings (After Round 6)
  1. Steve Holcombe (Beta) 94
  2. Thomas Oldrati (Honda) 87
  3. Brad Freeman (Beta) 75
  4. Andrea Verona (TM) 69
  5. Matteo Cavallo (Sherco) 61

Arminas Jasikonis wakes from medically induced coma

Husqvarna Motorcycles have reported positive news regarding Arminas Jasikonis’ condition following his crash at the MXGP of Lombardia.

Admitted to hospital in Cremona, Italy, on Sunday, September 27, Arminas woke from his medically induced coma on Wednesday, September 30 and was quickly able to recognise and talk with his family and the exceptional medical staff around him, both in Lithuanian and English. AJ can also move his body unaided, is in no pain and despite being understandably tired is thankfully over the worst of his injury and can soon start his rehabilitation.

Arminas Jasikonis
Arminas Jasikonis has just awakened from a medically induced coma

Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing extended their thanks to all of the medical staff that have cared for AJ, and to those from around the world that expressed overwhelming support for him during the last few days.

Antti Pyrhönen – Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing MXGP Team Manager

“Honestly, I have never been so happy to comment on one of my riders. To be able to say that AJ is ok, that he is going to be ok, it’s a kind of miracle. These last few days since his accident have been so, so emotionally draining for everyone close to AJ, and just the worst of times. When he woke, when we realised that he could talk, that he could move all of his arms and legs, that he was in no pain and had no other injuries, it’s still almost impossible to put into words how incredible that feeling was. Of course, AJ still has some way to go before he is fully recovered, and understandably he is still very tired, but the worst is now behind him and he can soon start his recovery. Again, I want to say a sincere thank you to every single person who had AJ in their thoughts during the last few days, to the overwhelming support and positivity we received from the MXGP paddock and the global motocross community. But especially I want to thank everyone at Husqvarna Motorcycles in Austria and the entire motorsports family there, to Robert Jonas and Heinz Kinigadner and also to our team owner Kimi, who immediately started organising many things behind the scenes. Everyone in the team is hugely thankful for this positive outcome and so, so relieved that AJ will be ok.”

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Waters Wins Inaugural King of Capricorn

Todd Waters has been crowned the 2020 King of Capricorn after an impressive display of racing at the Six Mile circuit at Rockhampton. Waters, the current Australian Motocross champion, claimed the crown and the hefty prize money to go along with it, after a full weekend of on track action that saw Waters not only win the King of Capricorn feature event but also the MX1 (450cc) and MX2 (250cc) pro divisions as well.

The feature race saw the top 40 riders from the MX1 and MX2 classes race their way through a series of sprint races that saw the last seven riders from each race eliminated until the final 15 lined up and ready to unleash in a three lap frenzy.

The star studded field included Yamaha’s Kirk Gibbs, Aaron Tanti and Jay Wilson as well as young guns Jai Walker and Noah Ferguson, with all riders already under plenty of physical duress from racing all weekend.

From the drop of the gate, it was Walker who led the field and built a small gap on the stars behind him but he made a mistake at the half way point and that was all Waters needed to get to the front and take a popular victory in front of an enthusiastic crowded gathered at the Rockhampton track.

Todd Waters

“What an awesome event. Its so good to see so many riders turn up for a race like this and for me its special because it was a track I raced a lot as a kid growing up and to come back here now as a pro and not just win but also get to talk to the younger riders and spend time with them is something I hope they remember, just like I did as a kid. This is something our sport has not seen for a long time and I’m glad it proved to be so successful at the first attempt. I’m extremely proud to have won here and hopefully this is the start of plenty more events like this in the future. Thank you to the event organisers and sponsors for putting on such a cool race and hopefully events like this can continue as racing a dirt bike is fun and this weekend was awesome fun.”

Todd Waters
Todd Waters

Taking the Prince of Capricorn in the junior division was Mackay’s, Jackson Camilleri. Camilleri was on fire all weekend and like Waters, took victory in his 125 and 250cc classes over the weekend before going on to cap of a huge weekend for the teenager who celebrated his 16th birthday on Sunday, with an emphatic win in the junior feature event.

Jackson Camilleri

“It was good to get the win here and finish the season on a good note. I had an injury that saw me miss a few events earlier in the year and then I wasn’t prepared as I wanted to be for the state titles but it’s good to be back up front and winning again.”

Jackson Camilleri
Jackson Camilleri

Despite the 20K on offer across the weekend, the vibe of the event was fun and light-hearted with all the pro races taking time to work with the young riders. Each rider was assigned a class to mentor and encouragement prize packs were handed out to young riders by their heroes.

Jay Wilson

“With our national events cancelled due to COVID, to have this event was awesome for everyone in Queensland. All the riders got behind it with over 300 turning up and supporting the weekend and the prizemoney on offer made it the biggest for the 2020 season. The racing was serious but also a bit more relaxed than a national title and the club did a great job of running the event. The pro riders all got a kick out of working with the young guys and hopefully they now feel we are approachable and can talk to us about their riding any time. Hopefully it’s the first of this style event and we can do more like this in the future.”

Jay Wilson
Jay Wilson

With the dust now settled on a successful event, race secretary Debbie Dark can now reflect on the weekend.

Debbie Dark

“The event came about because plenty of enthusiastic people wanted to continue racing in Queensland. We were due to have the Australian Junior Motocross Championships the past week, but when they was cancelled, the club got together with supporters and we put the event on. It was great to see so many sponsors support it and not only raise money to host it, but also boast $20,000 in prizemoney. I also must thank the dedication of the people in our club who put in so much hard work as well those that helped me behind the scenes. The smile on the riders and their thanks at the end of the weekend made it all worth it.”

A full list of results from all classes can be found at: https://speedhive.mylaps.com/Events/1813733 (link)

King of Capricorn Results
  1. Todd Waters
  2. Kirk Gibbs
  3. Aaron Tanti
  4. Jai Walker
  5. Jay Wilson
Prince of Capricorn Results
  1. Jackson Camilleri
  2. Kobe Drew
  3. Jack Williams
  4. Arran Humphreys
  5. Lachlan Hawkins

2020 WA MX Senior State Championship – Round 2

Round 2 of the 2020 WA MX Senior State Championship had wrapped up with Regan Duffy sweeping the MX1 and MX2 classes, while Chris Errey went 2-1-1 in Veterans for the round win. The Amateur Cup saw Jay White take the win, going 1-2-2, with Callum Bayliss second with a 2-1-3 result.

MX1 Overall Results
Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 REGAN DUFFY 105 35 35 35
2 JOHN DARROCH 94 32 30 32
3 CHARLIE CREECH 86 30 28 28
4 JOSH ADAMS 84 28 26 30
5 CONNOR TIERNEY 83 25 32 26
6 STUEY WILMOT 74 24 25 25
7 LUKE FEW 67 20 24 23
8 ASH ROGERS 66 21 23 22
9 STEVEN POCOCK 61 19 21 21
10 ANTHONY HICKS 59 17 22 20
11 BRYNN CUTTS 53 16 19 18
12 DYLAN HEARD 51 23 11 17
13 BLAIR OUTRAM 47 14 17 16
14 CORBEN WEINERT 46 22 24
15 DANE CUTTS 43 13 16 14
16 MITCHELL WILHELM 42 12 15 15
17 JOE DI GIULIO 38 18 20
18 CHRISTIAN SILVESTRO 33 15 18
19 JACOB WHATELY 26 13 13
20 LUKE DAVIS 26 26
21 TAINE KINGS 23 11 12
22 BRENDON BAYLISS 19 19
23 SAM CLARKE 14 14
MX2 Overall Results
Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 REGAN DUFFY 105 35 35 35
2 DANIEL PAJEWSKI 96 32 32 32
3 JOSH ADAMS 90 30 30 30
4 CONAN FORRESTER 82 26 28 28
5 CODY CHITTICK 74 25 23 26
6 SETH MANUEL 73 28 26 19
7 BRENDON BAYLISS 70 23 22 25
8 CHRISTIAN SILVESTRO 65 20 21 24
9 EVAN BROWNE 65 24 25 16
10 CHRISTOPHER WHEELER 57 18 18 21
11 TOM LILLY 57 19 20 18
12 SHAUN SNOW 52 16 19 17
13 JAYDEN MCFERRAN 50 14 16 20
14 REVONN NIEUWOUDT 47 24 23
15 HARRISON SMITH 45 15 15 15
16 BRAYDON BAYNES 44 13 17 14
17 BEN COOK 43 21 22
18 MATTHEW MARSON 36 11 12 13
19 SHANE MURRAY 36 22 14
20 MITCHELL KILLEEN 30 17 13
21 KARA CATS 12 12
22 ZAC SAFFIOTI 10 10
Veterans Overall Results
Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 CHRIS ERREY 102 32 35 35
2 BEN SHINGLER 97 35 30 32
3 AARON CHIRCOP 90 28 32 30
4 TREVOR UNSTEAD 82 30 24 28
5 STEVE BARRINGTON 78 26 28 24
6 STUART MCFERRAN 74 23 26 25
7 AARON MAZZA 73 25 22 26
8 SCOTT KOSTIN 71 24 25 22
9 DIARMUID FITZPATRICK 66 20 23 23
10 MARC PAYNE 64 22 21 21
11 NATHAN WILLCOCKS 59 19 20 20
12 BRETT NEWBOULT 59 21 19 19
13 BEN MARTIN 53 17 18 18
14 CHRIS HALLETT 50 18 17 15
15 TIMOTHY WARR 46 15 14 17
16 JOHN GAILES 45 16 13 16
17 BENJI DAWSON 43 14 16 13
18 PETER FREIGHT 42 13 15 14
Amateur Cup Overall Results
Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 JAY WHITE 99 35 32 32
2 CALLUM BAYLISS 97 32 35 30
3 FLETCHER STUBBS 89 28 26 35
4 DANIEL WRIGHT 74 25 28 21
5 DECLAN O’LEARY 74 24 30 20
6 CALLUM THOMSON 73 30 20 23
7 KACEY KINGS 69 22 22 25
8 CAMPBELL LEE 67 26 15 26
9 BEN TRELOAR 65 20 21 24
10 JACOB JONES 65 23 23 19
11 JOSHUA RASMUSSEN 62 21 19 22
12 KIRK SHIER 59 18 24 17
13 MASON COOPER 55 19 18 18
14 SCOTT BROWN 50 17 17 16
15 RICKY LADISZLAI 50 10 25 15
16 CLAYTON CLUNIE 42 14 28
17 RUBEN PLANT 40 16 12 12
18 WILLIAM JONES 39 12 14 13
19 HANNAH STEWART 30 16 14
20 SAM DAVIES 29 8 13 8
21 JEREMY RODGER 26 15 11
22 TAHLIA LANG 24 6 11 7
23 REECE LAWRENCE 22 13 9
24 JUDD THOMAS 22 7 9 6
25 RILEY LITTLEFAIR 19 9 10
26 ADAM PLANT 11 11
27 MAKALA EDWARDS 10 10
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2020 Queensland Dirt Track Titles – Ayr MCC

The 2020 Queensland Dirt Track Titles saw Ayr MCC host the event over October 3 & 4, with Jarred Brook dominating the MX Open and Pro 450 classes across both days.

Jarred Brook

“That’s a wrap for the 2020 QLD Long Track and Dirt Track Titles. Thank you to Ayr Motorcycle Club Inc for running a great event. Thank you to my little team and sponsors for helping me come away with a win in the MX Open, second place in the Pro 450 for Long Track, then the double win for Dirt Track!”

MX Open Results – October 3
Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6
1 Jarred Brook 72 22 25 25
2 Dale Borlase 67 25 22 20
3 Joshua Grajczonek 65 20 20 25
4 Cyshan Weale 63 22 25 16
5 Harrison Maxwell 62 18 22 22
6 Damien Koppe 62 20 20 22
7 Morty Michelmore 54 18 18 18
8 Steven Reid 49 16 18 15
9 Brooke Goulding 48 15 15 18
10 Adam Lovell 48 16 16 16
11 Tyrone Campbell 43 15 14 14
12 Troy Pritchard 41 13 13 15
13 Miles Roe 38 13 13 12
14 Joshua King 38 14 12 12
15 Russell Fabbro 37 14 12 11
16 Hagan Campbell 36 16 20
17 Brody Viney 29 15 14
18 Briony Hendrickson 27 14 13
19 Jacob Allan 25 25
20 Brock O’Connor 24 11 13
MX Open Results – October 4
Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6
1 Jarred Brook 75 25 25 25
2 Dale Borlase 72 25 25 22
3 Damien Koppe 66 22 22 22
4 Cyshan Weale 62 22 20 20
5 Joshua Grajczonek 60 15 20 25
6 Harrison Maxwell 60 20 22 18
7 Hagan Campbell 58 20 18 20
8 Morty Michelmore 50 18 16 16
9 Steven Reid 49 18 16 15
10 Brooke Goulding 48 16 14 18
11 Troy Pritchard 46 15 15 16
12 Adam Lovell 44 16 18 10
13 Briony Hendrickson 39 10 15 14
14 Tyrone Campbell 39 14 13 12
15 Brock O’Connor 37 12 12 13
16 Joshua King 36 11 11 14
17 Miles Roe 34 9 14 11
18 Brody Viney 28 13 15
Pro 450 Results – October 3
Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6
1 Jarred Brook 75 25 25 25
2 Cyshan Weale 66 25 16 25
3 Dale Borlase 64 20 22 22
4 Joshua Grajczonek 63 22 25 16
5 Damien Koppe 58 22 18 18
6 Morty Michelmore 55 18 15 22
7 Harrison Maxwell 54 12 22 20
8 Hagan Campbell 52 14 20 18
9 Shayne Crowhurst 51 16 15 20
10 Leonard Snell 49 16 18 15
11 Luke Burgess 49 20 20 9
12 Hayden Barr 48 18 16 14
13 Blake Goulding 44 15 14 15
14 Thomas McLean 43 14 13 16
15 Jared Poletti 43 15 14 14
16 Tyrone Campbell 37 13 11 13
17 Dylan Erquiaga 35 13 11 11
18 Troy Pritchard 34 10 12 12
19 Joseph Barton 31 11 10 10
20 Briony Hendrickson 25 12 13
21 Brody Viney 24 11 13
22 Jacob Allan 12 12
Pro 450 Results – October 4
Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6
1 Jarred Brook 70 25 20 25
2 Damien Koppe 69 22 25 22
3 Cyshan Weale 65 22 18 25
4 Harrison Maxwell 65 25 22 18
5 Dale Borlase 62 20 22 20
6 Joshua Grajczonek 61 20 25 16
7 Hagan Campbell 56 16 18 22
8 Morty Michelmore 54 18 16 20
9 Leonard Snell 49 14 20 15
10 Jared Poletti 47 18 15 14
11 Shayne Crowhurst 45 14 16 15
12 Blake Goulding 44 13 13 18
13 Brody Viney 43 16 14 13
14 Troy Pritchard 39 13 12 14
15 Hayden Barr 39 15 12 12
16 Dylan Erquiaga 38 12 15 11
17 Joseph Barton 35 11 11 13
18 Thomas McLean 30 14 16
19 Tyrone Campbell 28 15 13
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Source: MCNews.com.au

2020 Australian Motocross Championship cancelled

Australian Motocross Championship


Motorcycling Australia have officially announced that the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship will not run, as continuing border restrictions related to COVID-19 create ongoing uncertainty, with the decision reached after consultations with teams, riders, clubs and stakeholders. See the full statement below:


Due to the ongoing uncertainty around State Government COVID-19 border restrictions, Motorcycling Australia (MA) after consultation with key stakeholders, have been forced to make the difficult decision to abandon any further attempts to conduct the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship.

MA reviewed the championship operations including the format and potential event dates, in consultation with industry, teams, riders and clubs to see if it was possible to run the championship during this COVID-19 period.

Despite significant work by MA over recent months in exploring all possible options to hold the Championship, the uncertainly around State Government COVID-19 border restrictions, has meant it is not possible to run the Championship in 2020.

MA sincerely thank all stakeholders, clubs, teams and riders for their support and patience, but this late in the year has proven too difficult to start the Championship without clear plans from State Government’s around State borders being reopened.

MA is now focusing all its efforts on delivering a successful 2021 Australian Motocross Championship.

Peter Doyle – MA CEO

“While the cancellation is disappointing for riders, teams, industry and fans, MA is already working hard to ensure that we have the best possible championship in 2021. The Australian Motocross Championship is the breeding ground of future superstars and will continue to showcase the best motocross action in the country.”


Source: MCNews.com.au

2020 Australian Motocross Championship Update

Motorcycling Australia (MA) is continuing to review the ability to host the Australian Motocross Championship in 2020.

Since announcing its intent to evaluate running a condensed 2020 Australian Motocross Championship, MA have held a number of discussions with key stakeholders, venues and industry to create the framework, should COVID restrictions allow.

The response has been very positive, and MA would like to thank those involved for their commitment and hard work behind the scenes in this difficult COVID-19 environment.

MA is pleased to witness the positive news in relation to the reduction of COVID cases in Victoria and some State border restrictions beginning to ease. We know riders and teams are eager to race and MA is continuing to monitor the situation.

MA are now committed to provide a final update regarding the status of the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship no later than October 1, 2020.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto Wrap | AFT | MXGP | TrialGP | GNCC | Speedway

Moto News Weekly Wrap
September 15, 2020

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Williams Grove Half-Mile I

Images by Scott Hunter

Briar Bauman showed just what an American Flat Track Grand National Championship at the peak of his powers is capable of in Friday evening’s Williams Grove Half-Mile I. Bauman flat-out crushed the opposition in a AFT SuperTwins Main Event, which the race’s runner-up accurately described as “demoralizing” while accepting his second-place trophy. The result did not come as much of a shock – it was the third year running Bauman proved his superiority at Williams Grove Speedway in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - SuperTwins
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT SuperTwins

Championship rival Jared Mees stole the holeshot and led for about two corners before giving way to Bauman at the front. The race for the win was effectively over at that point; Bauman was more than a second out in front with 11 minutes remaining on the clock and worked that advantage up to more than six seconds before cruising to an easy 4.347-second margin of victory.

The aforementioned runner-up was not Mees, however. It was Brandon Robinson, who picked up his second-consecutive second place. Robinson swapped positions early with Mees, Jake Johnson, and Bronson Bauman before breaking free from that fight with a good nine minutes to go. Bronson put in a late charge, first dispatching of Johnson and then overhauling Mees to earn his first podium result of 2020.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - AFT SuperTwins
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT SuperTwins

The slowing Mees managed to outlast a charging Dan Bromley, who registered an inspired ride to sixth in front of his home fans. After running in podium contention early, the out-from-retirement Johnson ultimately lost out to Sammy Halbert late but still managed to pick up a strong seventh place in his first ride of the year.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - SuperTwins
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT SuperTwins podium – 1. Briar Bauman, 2. Brandon Robinson, 3. Bronson Bauman

Bauman’s dominant win combined with Mees’ first non-podium of the year tightened up their title fight. Mees continues to lead, but only by three points (147-144) with another race at Williams Grove coming tomorrow. Halbert and Robinson are even in points at 108.

Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 Briar Bauman Indian FTR750 30 Laps
2 Brandon Robinson Indian FTR750 4.347
3 Bronson Bauman Indian FTR750 7.311
4 Jared Mees Indian FTR750 8.904
5 Dan Bromley Indian FTR750 9.836
6 Sammy Halbert Indian FTR750 10.085
7 Jake Johnson Indian FTR750 11.276
8 Larry Pegram Indian FTR750 15.932
9 Jarod Vanderkooi Harley-Davidson XG750R 16.056
10 Bryan Smith Harley-Davidson XG750R 16.348

AFT Singles

2019 AFT Singles championship runner-up Mikey Rush finally broke through to claim his first Main Event victory of 2020. It didn’t come easily, as he had to defeat his second-ranked teammate, Dallas Daniels and 2016 GNC2 champ Ryan Wells to make it happen.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - AFT Singles
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT Singles

Rising star Daniels was ahead of the field early, running away at the front as a huge pack ran as many as four-wide while battling over second position. Once some order emerged from the chaos, Wells, Rush, and Morgen Mischler worked together to claw their way back up to Daniels.

By half-distance, Wells was the man on the move and Daniels looked in danger of fading back to the second group. Wells moved into first and promptly ripped open a half-second of padding before Rush stepped up to the challenge and made it a two-way race for the win with one minute to go.

Rush dove under Wells at that point, only to have his opponent square him back up. Undeterred, Rush executed a second overtake and made the position change stick for good as the race went into its final two laps.

Behind, Daniels not only regrouped, he sprinted back up to Wells and powered past him while exiting Turn 2 on the final lap. The Estenson Racing 1-2 marked its second double podium finish of the season. Wells took his first podium of the ‘20 in third, with Mischler taking a close fourth. Volusia Half-Mile winner Max Whale – who was just out of touch of the lead group throughout — completed the top five.

Meanwhile, title leader Henry Wiles suffered through a difficult day. He failed to advance through his Semi and was forced to burn his provisional just to line up for the Main. He then finished 14th, allowing Daniels, Whale, and Rush to gobble up the majority of his hard-earned championship advantage.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - AFT Singles
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT Singles Podium – 1. Michael Rush, 2. Dallas Daniels, 3. Ryan Wells

Wiles still leads, albeit by just five points over Daniels (113-108). Whale (102) and Rush (99) are in position to strike in third and fourth, respectively.

Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 Michael Rush Yamaha YZ450F 20 Laps
2 Dallas Daniels Yamaha YZ450F 0.818
3 Ryan Wells KTM 450 SX-F 1.166
4 Morgen Mischler KTM 450 SX-F 1.294
5 Max Whale Kawasaki KX450F 1.704
6 Kevin Stollings Honda CRF450R 3.023
7 Trevor Brunner Honda CRF450R 3.193
8 Trent Lowe Honda CRF450R 5.726
9 Tanner Dean Honda CRF450R 7.218
10 Chad Cose Suzuki RMZ 450 9.129

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AFT Production Twins

James Rispoli continued his recent tear, scoring his third AFT Production Twins victory in the class’ most recent four Main Events. “The Rocket” tracked down reigning champion Cory Texter early and the two spent the next several minutes determining who had the superior line around Williams Grove Speedway.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - AFT Production Twins
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT Production Twins

Texter appeared to have the early advantage running down low, but Rispoli’s high line got progressively stronger as the race developed. With around three minutes remaining on the clock, there was no longer a debate concerning who found the fast way around; Rispoli blasted away at the front and furthered his standing as the championship favorite.

Ryan Varnes not only made up for a less-than-ideal start, he managed to overcome a mid-race encounter with the wall to take the final spot on the box.

Varnes reeled in Indy Mile winner Ben Lowe and the two then engaged in a scrap for third position. With around four minutes remaining, Lowe ran up the inside of Varnes and the ‘19 class runner-up actually impacted the fence in the melee. Varnes somehow managed to remain upright, maintained his composure, ran Lowe back down, and beat him to the flag in the end.

Williams Grove Half-Mile I - AFT Production Twins Podium
Williams Grove Half-Mile I – AFT Production Twins Podium – 1. James Rispoli, 2. Core Texter, 3. Ryan Varnes

Rispoli’s fellow multinational championship-winning roadracer, Danny Eslick, rounded out the top five. Also of note was Johnny Lewis, who gave Royal Enfield a flat track debut to be proud of, finishing an impressive sixth in the Twins FT’s maiden AFT Main Event.

Royal Enfield American Flat Track Production Twin
Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 James Rispoli Harley-Davidson XG750R 20 Laps
2 Cory Texter Yamaha MT-07 2.794
3 Ryan Varnes Kawasaki Ninja 650 7.443
4 Ben Lowe Yamaha MT-07 7.577
5 Danny Eslick Kawasaki Ninja 650 10.253
6 Johnny Lewis Royal Enfield 650 10.806
7 Nick Armstrong Yamaha MT-07 15.096
8 Jeremiah Duffy Kawasaki Ninja 650 18.474
9 Cody Johncox Yamaha MT-07 21.492
10 Mitch Harvat Kawasaki Ninja 650 27.324

Williams Grove Half-Mile II

Images by Scott Hunter

If possible, Briar Bauman was even more dominant on Saturday night as he completed his second double victory of the 2020 American Flat Track season at the Williams Grove Half-Mile II and did so with authority. It took Bauman all of two corners to seize control of Friday’s AFT SuperTwins Main Event; he didn’t even need that many second time around. Bauman translated the holeshot into a one-sided, 5.544-second beatdown.

Sammy Halbert was the only rider who could even hope to cling to Bauman wake in the race’s opening stages. Doing so successfully pulled Halbert clear of the rest of the field but that early advantage only delayed the inevitable. Jeffrey Carver Jr. overhauled Halbert with four minutes remaining before shaking free to take the runner-up position by more than two seconds.

Halbert later found himself under assault by Jared Mees, who chased him down in time for a two-lap podium showdown as the clock showed 0:00. Mees slid into third with a tight pass with just over a lap-and-a-half remaining, but Halbert set him up for a last corner counterattack. Those plans, however, were foiled by the unfortunate positioning of some slower riders, allowing Mees to capture third at the checkered flag by 0.078 seconds.

Home-state hero Dan Bromley rounded out his best weekend yet since rejoining the premier class, backing up Friday’s fifth with an identical result on Saturday night.

Bauman’s win pushes him back ahead of Mees in his quest to repeat as Grand National Champion as the season officially reaches its midpoint. Bauman will carry a slim five-point advantage (169-164) into what promises to be an epic four-weekend, eight-race stretch run to the throne.

Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 Briar Bauman Indian FTR750 30 Laps
2 Jeffrey Carver Jr. Indian FTR750 5.544
3 Jared Mees Indian FTR750 7.895
4 Sammy Halbert Indian FTR750 7.973
5 Dan Bromley Indian FTR750 9.618
6 Davis Fisher Indian FTR750 12.713
7 Brandon Price Indian FTR750 14.42
8 Jake Johnson Indian FTR750 15.796
9 Dalton Gauthier Harley-Davidson XG750R 16.581
10 Larry Pegram Indian FTR750 17.13

AFT SuperTwins Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Briar Bauman 169
2 Jared Mees 164
3 Sammy Halbert 123
4 Brandon Robinson 116
5 Bronson Bauman 101
6 Davis Fisher 92
7 Brandon Price 89
8 Jeffrey Carver Jr. 87
9 Bryan Smith 73
10 Dan Bromley 69

AFT Singles

The AFT Singles Main Event served as a showcase for the sport’s future stars as Dallas Daniels earned a close victory over fellow second-year pro Trent Lowe. Daniels blasted off to the lead at the start and never saw as much as a wheel from a rival throughout the eight-minute (plus two lap) Main.

Williams Grove Half-Mile II - AFT Singles
Williams Grove Half-Mile II – AFT Singles

However, Lowe was right there throughout, primed to capitalize on any mistake. Unfortunately for Lowe, that mistake never came. Still, it was a breakout performance for Lowe, who boasted a pair of fifth-place finishes as his personal bests prior to Saturday’s runner-up ride. Daniels’ third win of the season not only elevates him into the championship lead, it also hands him a relatively healthy 14-point advantage.

Tanner Dean engaged in an extended scrap for third with Morgen Mischler before breaking loose to claim the final spot on the box all by his lonesome. Mischler dropped a couple more positions before it was all over with Kevin Stollings finishing fourth and highly touted rookie Trevor Brunner rounding out the top five.

Williams Grove Half-Mile II - AFT Singles Podium
Williams Grove Half-Mile II – AFT Singles Podium – 1. Dallas Daniels, 2. Trent Lowe, 3. Tanner Dean
Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 Dallas Daniels Yamaha YZ450F 21 Laps
2 Trent Lowe Honda CRF450R 0.52
3 Tanner Dean Honda CRF450R 3.2
4 Kevin Stollings Honda CRF450R 3.845
5 Trevor Brunner Honda CRF450R 5.174
6 Morgen Mischler KTM 450 SX-F 5.232
7 Max Whale Kawasaki KX450F 6.375
8 Michael Rush Yamaha YZ450F 7.097
9 Wyatt Anderson KTM 450 SX-F 7.387
10 Brandon Kitchen KTM 450 SX-F 8.71

AFT Singles Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Dallas Daniels 133
2 Henry Wiles 119
3 Max Whale 114
4 Michael Rush 110
5 Brandon Kitchen 90
6 Trent Lowe 87
7 Trevor Brunner 76
8 Tanner Dean 74
9 Shayna Texter 73
10 Chad Cose 71

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AFT Production Twins

James Rispoli continued his steamroller act on Saturday night, claiming his fourth win in the last five AFT Production Twins Main Events, and he did so in almost drama-free fashion, going nearly unchallenged in his green light to checkered flag victory.

Williams Grove Half-Mile II - AFT Production Twins
Williams Grove Half-Mile II – AFT Production Twins

Rispoli and reigning AFT Production Twins champion Cory Texter briefly reenacted last night’s high-line/low-line comparo, but within a matter of laps, “the Rocket” was working his way out of reach and to a lopsided victory. Rispoli’s 2.642-second victory increases his championship lead to an imposing 30 points at the season’s halfway point.

Other than a mid-race pass for third by Ryan Varnes over Ben Lowe, the race inside the top five was rather processional… until the very final two corners that is. Varnes slowly closed down on Texter over the Main’s final three minutes and worked his way into position to dive underneath his potential prey just as the two entered Turn 3 for the last time. However, they arrived there alongside a pair of lappers who were embroiled in their battle for position, adding another layer of complexity to the attempted maneuver.

Texter got the better of the fray, reclaiming the position as they exited 4 and holding on to grab second in the sprint to the checkered flag by 0.058 seconds. Lowe cruised to fourth a couple seconds back. Chad Cose rode a lonely race in fifth for the bulk of the Main, only to get some unwelcome company late from Jeremiah Duffy. Duffy got the better of Cose in the end, stealing fifth position by 0.111 seconds.

Williams Grove Half-Mile II - AFT Production Twins
Williams Grove Half-Mile II – AFT Production Twins

Johnny Lewis continued to demonstrate the potential of the Royal Enfield’s developing new racebike; he raced his way forward to seventh after starting from last position due to being black flagged in his semi.

Royal Enfield American Flat Track Production Twin
Pos Rider Man. Gap
1 James Rispoli Harley-Davidson XG750R 21 Laps
2 Cory Texter Yamaha MT-07 2.642
3 Ryan Varnes Kawasaki Ninja 650 2.701
4 Ben Lowe Yamaha MT-07 4.909
5 Jeremiah Duffy Kawasaki Ninja 650 9.575
6 Chad Cose Harley-Davidson XG750R 9.686
7 Johnny Lewis Royal Enfield 650 13.94
8 Nick Armstrong Yamaha MT-07 14.131
9 Danny Eslick Kawasaki Ninja 650 15.879
10 Cody Johncox Yamaha MT-07 22.358

AFT Production Twins Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 James Rispoli 174
2 Cory Texter 144
3 Ben Lowe 135
4 Ryan Varnes 134
5 Danny Eslick 107
6 Chad Cose 87
7 Jeremiah Duffy 86
8 Nick Armstrong 75
9 Cody Johncox 61
10 Hayden Gillim 45

MXGP

The FIM Motocross World Championship completed its triple header and Round 8 in Faenza with the MXGP of Emilia Romagna, with Antonio Cairoli riding two consistent races to take his 91st Grand Prix victory in front of a cheering crowd of Italian fans, while claiming the MXGP Red Plate.

Mitchell Evans was the lone Australian rider competing in the MXGP class, fighting his way to fourth in Race 1, but having to settle for eighth in Race 2 after expending so much energy in the first moto. The result sees Evans 11th in the standings, although there’s a 41-point gap to reach the top 10 to overcome at this stage.

Mitch Evans

“I had another good day again and we’re still improving with sixth overall today. It’s been better each time so I’m happy with that. The first moto I didn’t get that great of a start and pushed really hard to come back to fourth so it was a good moto but I pretty much used all of my energy in that one. In the second moto I had a really good start, almost grabbing the holeshot but I had nothing left in the tank so it was just survival mode after that, with me holding on as best I could. I’m happy that I was still able to keep improving and stay healthy and be moving onto the next GP in a couple of weeks at a track I really like.”

Mitch Evans
Mitch Evans
Pos Rider Nat. Bike Race 1 Race 2 Total
1 Cairoli, Antonio ITA KTM 22 22 44
2 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 16 25 41
3 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 25 15 40
4 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 20 18 38
5 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 11 20 31
6 Evans, Mitchell AUS HON 18 13 31
7 Coldenhoff, Glenn NED GAS 13 16 29
8 Desalle, Clement BEL KAW 12 14 26
9 Lupino, Alessandro ITA YAM 14 11 25
10 Jasikonis, Arminas LTU HUS 15 8 23
11 Paulin, Gautier FRA YAM 10 12 22
12 Van Horebeek, Jeremy BEL HON 9 10 19
13 Vlaanderen, Calvin NED YAM 7 9 16
14 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM 8 7 15
15 Jacobi, Henry GER YAM 5 4 9

MXGP Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Cairoli, A. ITA KTM 285
2 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 278
3 Herlings, J. NED KTM 263
4 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 255
5 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 237
6 Jasikonis, A. LTU HUS 233
7 Coldenhoff, G. NED GAS 233
8 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 203
9 Paulin, G. FRA YAM 201
10 Desalle, C. BEL KAW 194
11 Evans, M. AUS HON 153
12 Van Horebeek, J. BEL HON 141
13 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM 91
14 Vlaanderen, C. NED YAM 80
15 Cervellin, M. ITA YAM 73
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MX2

In MX2 Tom Vialle secured his second consecutive GP win, while the leading Aussie riders was Jed Beaton, taking fourth in Race 1, just 0.7s off the final podium position, while Race 2 saw Beaton improve to third, for third overall for the MXGP of Emilia Romagna. He now sits fourth overall in the MX2 standings, 12-points off third placed Maxime Renaux.

Jed Beaton

“It feels great. It’s been a long time coming and it’s great to finally get the monkey off my back and have a great first moto. My starts weren’t the best today but I made it work, especially in the second moto. I’m really happy to finally get onto the podium this season for myself and the team. It’s extra special because it’s my first podium result for Husqvarna. I’ve had a few second-place finishes, but the first moto has let me down so it’s great to turn it around and get on the podium with two good results. My riding was good today. My bike was great so thanks to the team and we’ll build on this ahead of Mantova.”

Jed Beaton
Jed Beaton

Fellow Aussie Nathan Crawford had a strong weekend, claiming 11th in Race 1, with a challenging Race 2 seeing him settle for 14th, for 11th overall for the round. He now sits 14th in the MX2 standings as a result of the 17-points collected at Round 8.

Bailey Malkiewicz was just off Crawford in Race 1, coming home in 12th, while in Race 2 he claimed 21st, bringing home nine championship points and sitting 17th overall for the GP. Malkiewicz now sits 24th in the MX2 standings.

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Race 1 Race 2 Total
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 22 25 47
2 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 25 22 47
3 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 18 20 38
4 Olsen, Thomas Kjer DEN HUS 20 15 35
5 Van De Moosdijk, Roan NED KAW 15 18 33
6 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 14 16 30
7 Fernandez, Ruben ESP YAM 12 14 26
8 Rubini, Stephen FRA HON 13 13 26
9 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 11 12 23
10 Mewse, Conrad GBR KTM 16 5 21
11 Crawford, Nathan AUS HON 10 7 17
12 Lesiardo, Morgan ITA KTM 6 9 15
13 Gilbert, Josh GBR HUS 4 10 14
14 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 8 6 14
15 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 5 8 13
16 Horgmo, Kevin NOR KTM 0 11 11
17 Malkiewicz, Bailey AUS HON 9 0 9

MX2 Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 354
2 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 333
3 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 259
4 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 247
5 Van De Moosdijk, R. NED KAW 210
6 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 191
7 Olsen, T. DEN HUS 188
8 Boisrame, M. FRA KAW 182
9 Mewse, Conrad GBR KTM 162
10 Fernandez, R. ESP YAM 156
11 Rubini, S. FRA HON 118
12 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 112
13 Haarup, Mikkel DEN KAW 105
14 Crawford, N. AUS HON 86
15 Hofer, Rene AUT KTM 73
16 Gilbert, Josh GBR HUS 68
17 Forato, A. ITA HUS 66
18 Guadagnini, M. ITA HUS 62
19 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 62
20 Laengenfelder, S. GER GAS 59
21 Sikyna, R. SVK KTM 52
22 Lesiardo, M. ITA KTM 46
23 Genot, Cyril BEL YAM 43
24 Malkiewicz, B. AUS HON 43

2020 TrialGP Rounds 3 & 4 – Spain

Repsol Honda Team rider Toni Bou claimed the top honours with a fine ride in Pobladura de las Regueras, León, the third round of the TrialGP World Championship. The third round of the elite trial competition proved to be a tough course, not least due to the official observers who were often overly-strict in scoring the ten sections which riders had to complete over the three laps.

Toni Bou
Toni Bou

Repsol Honda Team rider Toni Bou, rode a rags-to-riches trial, starting poorly, later dominating and finally finishing to be crowned winner atop the podium. Toni did not get off to the best of starts, picking up seventeen marks on the first lap, but was able to bounce back with eight points on lap two and just three on the third.

Wanting to make a strong start to the opening day, Jorge Casales completed the first lap with the sixth best score and 34 marks lost. Improving to 31 marks lost on lap two, an issue with his bike during lap three resulted in the Spaniard collecting maximum scores of five in each of the 10 sections, ending the day in 10th overall.

Jorge Casales
Jorge Casales

Toni Bou once again claimed the top honours on day two of the trial in Pobladura de las Regueras, León, taking his season victory tally to three and increasing his lead in the overall standings to a ten-point advantage.

Differing from yesterday’s trial, the route for the second day of the Spanish TrialGP proved to be much tougher with certain sections virtually impossible to overcome. As a consequence, the trial produced a fairly even result in the final table.

The demanding sections, coupled with the physical issues in the rider’s arms, saw Toni move up and down positions over the first lap, but by the second and third he was able to take command of the trial to eventually claim a third victory of the season. The result allows the current champion to stretch the gap at the top of the championship general standings where the trial star now holds a ten-point advantage over the nearest second place rival.

Toni Bou
Toni Bou

Despite some impressive riding during the early part of day two, a significant crash held Casales back on the second day of competition. Collecting 27 marks at the end of his first lap to ensure he was well in contention for a strong end-of-day result, on lap two he dropped just 17 marks, only two more than eventual day winner Toni Bou. Frustratingly, it wasn’t to be for Casales who was unable to ride at his best throughout lap three following his lap-two crash. Bravely riding on, he completed the lap for 31 marks lost, ending his day in eighth yet having performed much better than his final result suggests.

The next Trial World Championship event will be held next week in the town of Sant Julià de Lória, in Andorra.

Toni Bou

“Today has been a very positive day as it was very hard and we all made quite a few mistakes. It has been a difficult day, not only because of the discomfort in my arm, but also because I didn’t feel quite right on the bike. The trial was very close, but we struggled to get a very important victory in the championship. We will try to arrive in the best possible shape for the trial in Andorra.”

Toni Bou topped the podium from
Toni Bou topped the podium from Adam Raga and Gabriel Marcelli
Jorge Casales

“It’s clear that this wasn’t my best weekend, and certainly not the results we were hoping for. Things started ok on day one – I felt good and things were going ok, but around midday I had some issues with my bike. I tried to fix it, but we couldn’t make the changes we needed to, so the day didn’t end well. Everyone in the team put that behind us for day two and I honestly felt great during the first and second laps. Frustratingly, I had a big crash in section five, which was one of the toughest sections of the event. I hurt my leg when I crashed, which made the next one-and-a-half laps really tough. I had some other misfortune towards the end of the day as well, which added another five marks to my score, so all-in-all not the event I had hoped for. I’ll be working hard to come back strong next weekend in Andorra.”

Round 3 Results

Pos. Rider Nation Team Constr. Points
1 BOU Toni SPA Repsol Honda Team Montesa 28
2 BUSTO Jaime SPA Vertigo Factory Team Vertigo 49
3 RAGA Adam SPA TRRS Factory Team TRRS 57
4 MARCELLI Gabriel SPA RG Team Montesa 68
5 GELABERT Miquel SPA Gas Gas Gas Gas 69
6 FAJARDO Jeroni SPA Sherco Factory Team Sherco 69
7 DABILL James GBR Beta Factory Racing Beta 70
8 FUJINAMI Takahisa JPN Repsol Honda Team Montesa 86
9 PEACE Dan GBR Sherco Factory Team Sherco 93
10 CASALES Jorge SPA Gas Gas Factory Team Gas Gas 115
11 PRICE Jack GBR Vertigo Factory Team Vertigo 136
12 BINCAZ Benoit FRA Beta Factory Racing Beta 147

Round 4 Results

Pos. Rider Nation Team Constructor Points
1 BOU Toni SPA Repsol Honda Team Montesa 48
2 RAGA Adam SPA TRRS Factory Team TRRS 56
3 MARCELLI Gabriel SPA RG Team Montesa 62
4 BINCAZ Benoit FRA Beta Factory Racing Beta 66
5 GELABERT Miquel SPA Gas Gas Gas Gas 68
6 BUSTO Jaime SPA Vertigo Factory Team Vertigo 69
7 DABILL James GBR Beta Factory Racing Beta 69
8 CASALES Jorge SPA Gas Gas Factory Team Gas Gas 75
9 FUJINAMI Takahisa JPN Repsol Honda Team Montesa 77
10 PEACE Dan GBR Sherco Factory Team Sherco 78
11 PRICE Jack GBR Vertigo Factory Team Vertigo 150

2020 TrialGP Standings

Pos. Rider Nation Points
1 BOU Toni SPA 55
2 BUSTO Jaime SPA 51
3 RAGA Adam SPA 48
4 FAJARDO Jeroni SPA 38
5 GELABERT Miquel SPA 28
6 FUJINAMI Takahisa JPN 28
7 CASALES Jorge SPA 28
8 MARCELLI Gabriel SPA 23
9 DABILL James GBR 21
10 BINCAZ Benoit FRA 21

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Enea Gorzow FIM Speedway Grand Prix Round 3

World champion Bartosz Zmarzlik admitted “I feel at my best” in Gorzow after celebrating victory in Enea Gorzow FIM Speedway Grand Prix Round 3 on Friday. The 26-year-old saw off an incredible last-lap challenge from Aussie icon Jason Doyle to win his home event for the second time in his career.

Zmarzlik famously topped the 2014 Gorzow SGP podium as a wild card – becoming the youngest-ever SGP winner at 19 years and 140 days old.

Now he’s very much the King of the Edward Jancarz Stadium and won six of his seven races on his way to a maximum 20 World Championship points, which puts him on 48 overall – just one behind series leader Maciej Janowski.

Bartosz Zmarzlik

“This is an unbelievable night. Everything is working so well and a big thank you to my team and all the fans. You are the best! I live in Gorzow and I feel at my best here. I am very happy because it’s the second time I have won a GP in Gorzow. Winning a GP in Gorzow is a little bit different to other rounds because this is my home track and these are my home people. I live my whole life here. It has been really nice and I am really happy with everything today. Everything worked really nicely. It was a very big feeling for four laps in the final with Jason Doyle. He kept going after me all the time – right to the last corner. I am happy I won. But I must go home and get a good sleep. Tomorrow is a new day and everyone starts again.”

Bartosz Zmarzlik
Bartosz Zmarzlik

Former world champion Jason Doyle piled the pressure on Zmarzlik in a breathtaking last lap in the final, dive-bombing the local hero on the last corner. Zmarzlik held his nerve and maintained his momentum to top the podium, but 18 championship points sees Doyle rocket from 15th place in the standings prior to the meeting up to seventh on 26.

After scoring eight points combined in the opening two rounds and enduring an up-and-down season in Poland’s PGE Ekstraliga, Czestochowa star Doyle paid tribute to those who helped him bounced back.

Jason Doyle

“It has been a tough year, but I have worked really hard – and not just myself. My mechanics and family have done a lot behind the scenes when times have been tough; these are things you don’t always see. There are a lot of good people in my corner and I want to say thanks to them now. This is a step in the right direction and it’s always nice to be on the podium at any GP.”

Third-placed Fredrik Lindgren reached his third SGP final in as many rounds and is determined to keep that run going in a season when the biggest rewards go to riders who make it into the rostrum race.

Enea Gorzow SGP Round 3 Points

Pos. Rider Points
1 Bartosz Zmarzlik 20
2 Jason Doyle 18
3 Fredrik Lindgren 16
4 Leon Madsen 14
5 Martin Vaculik 12
6 Tai Woffinden 11
7 Maciej Janowski 10
8 Matej Zagar 9
9 Artem Laguta 8
10 Emil Sayfutdinov 7
11 Niels-Kristian Iversen 6
12 Mikkel Michelsen 5
13 Max Fricke 4
14 Anders Thomsen 3
15 Patryk Dudek 2
16 Antonio Lindback 1
17 Wiktor Jasinski 0
18 Rafal Karczmarz 0

Enea Gorzow FIM Speedway Grand Prix Round 4

New FIM Speedway Grand Prix World Championship leader Fredrik Lindgren admitted his Enea Gorzow SGP round-four win was, “a burden lifted from my shoulders.”

The Swedish icon topped the podium after overhauling Jason Doyle to win the final with a jaw-dropping opening lap and a half at the Edward Jancarz Stadium. The Aussie was later pipped to second place by Danish star Leon Madsen on the run to the line.

1. Fredrik Lindgren 2. Leon Madsen 3. Jason Doyle 
1. Fredrik Lindgren 2. Leon Madsen 3. Jason Doyle

This completed a Czestochowa one-two-three, but the night belonged to Lindgren, who reached his fourth straight final of 2020 to charge into a seven-point lead at the top of the standings. Despite impressing with two third places and a fourth going into tonight’s event, Lindgren admits he was determined to end his wait for a win.

Fredrik Lindgren

“This was a bit of a burden lifted from my shoulders tonight – to be able to finally get a win when I have been in three finals and not been able to execute it. It feels really good. I am super happy – so, so happy! You don’t want to be the guy who makes it to the final and never wins. It’s a relief to be able to do it. I have that burden off my back now and I can keep the focus for next weekend.”

Lindgren was taken wider and wider by Doyle as they battled over the lead going into lap two, before producing a majestic cutback to dive under the Aussie for the lead. Madsen’s second place fires him up to fifth in the World Championship on 50 points – 16 short of leader Lindgren.

Third-placed Doyle produced his second SGP podium finish in 24 hours after also racing to second spot on Friday. Having started the weekend with just eight championship points to his name, Doyle now has 42 and is delighted with a turnaround that has seen him climb from 15th to seventh in just two rounds.

Jason Doyle

“It was an unbelievable weekend for me in Gorzow. Two podiums get me back up into a good position for the next two rounds in Prague and also Torun. We are working hard. It’s a tough year, but we are getting there in the end and we also have some speed, so I’m happy.”

Next up is the third SGP 2020 double-header in Czech capital Prague this weekend. Visit Czech Republic SGP round five takes place on Friday, before Marketa Stadium hosts Aztorin SGP round six on Saturday night.

Enea Gorzow SGP Round 4 Points

Pos. Rider Points
1 Fredrik Lindgren  20
2 Leon Madsen  18
3 Jason Doyle  16
4  Emil Sayfutdinov  14
5  Bartosz Zmarzlik  12
6  Martin Vaculik  11
7  Tai Woffinden  10
8  Maciej Janowski 9
9  Max Fricke  8
10  Anders Thomsen  7
11  Matej Zagar  6
12  Artem Laguta  5
13  Niels-Kristian Iversen  4
14  Antonio Lindback  3
15  Mikkel Michelsen  2
16  Patryk Dudek  1
17  Rafal Karczmarz  0
18  Wiktor Jasinski  0

Speedway GP Standings

Pos. Rider Points
1 Fredrik Lindgren  66
2 Bartosz Zmarzlik  59
3 Maciej Janowski  57
4 Tai Woffinden  53
5 Leon Madsen  50
6 Artem Laguta  45
7 Jason Doyle  42
8 Emil Sayfutdinov  36
9 Martin Vaculik  35
10 Matej Zagar  27
11 Niels-Kristian Iversen  24
12 Max Fricke  24
13 Mikkel Michelsen  18
14 Patryk Dudek  16
15 Gleb Chugunov  16
16 Anders Thomsen  10
17 Antonio Lindback  6

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Women’s World Motocross Champ Duncan returns to Europe to continue title defence

The long wait is over and New Zealand’s Courtney Duncan has packed her bags and returned to Europe this week to continue her Women’s Motocross World Championship (WMX) title defence.

MXGP Rnd Britain Courtney Duncan
Courtney Duncan

She has been home in Dunedin since March, flying back after the second WMX round in The Netherlands, with a five-point lead over her closest rival. Since then the MXGP calendar has been affected by Covid-19 and 24-year old Duncan has been waiting on a green light for the women’s racing to resume.

Her final three rounds are all scheduled to take place in Italy. The first two meetings on September 27 (MXGP Lombardia) and September 30 (MXGP of Città di Mantova), which are both held on the hard sand Mantova track, are following the 2020 FIM Motocross World Championship’s new racing format of mid-week races.

Duncan will remain in Europe and train towards the final Italian round – the MXGP of Trentino on November 1 – where she is targeting her name being re-engraved on the winner’s trophy for 2020.

MXGP Rnd Britain Courtney Duncan
Courtney Duncan – Image courtesy of MXGP

She flew to England to re-join her Kawasaki Dixon Racing Team at their Portsmouth base. Her self-isolation time will be happily spent getting straight onto her new 2021 Kawasaki KX250F and turning out some test laps at the team’s track.

Duncan was even able to enter a national race meeting for the first time in three years, competing at the King of Central in Cromwell in July. Easily winning her four races against both the MX2 men and in the women’s class, the race-pace outings gave her the edge she needed to head back into battle mode.

Courtney Duncan

“I’d be lying if I said I was happy with just one world championship. I want another one and that’s what I’m aiming towards. I want to go over there and ride to the best of my ability. I’ll be putting myself in good positions to score some strong finishes and the rest will come. Kawasaki have bought out a whole new bike. It will be cool to go over there a few weeks early and get comfortable on it. Everything happens for a reason. I’m excited for the new schedule. To be honest, I’ve just enjoyed being home training back in New Zealand and I made the most of the local tracks. There’s nothing like racing itself and getting behind the gate a few times. You learn different things in racing that you don’t pick up in practise. Even though this was a local event, it still got my adrenaline pumping and gave me an appetite for what I’ve got coming up in Italy. Thanks to my supporters and sponsors for everything you do for me. I’ll do my best to bring the world number one title back home to New Zealand for you all again come November.”

MXGP Rnd Netherlands Courtney Duncan
Courtney Duncan – Image courtesy of MXGP

2020 Women’s Motocross World Championship points

Pos. Rider Nat. Man. Points
1 Duncan, Courtney. NZL KAW 90
2 Papenmeier, Larissa. GER YAM 85
3 Fontanesi, Kiara. ITA KTM 80
4 Van De Ven, Nancy. NED YAM 78
5 Valk, Lynn NED YAM 66

Revised Women’s Motocross World Championship calendar

  • September 27 – MXGP Lombardia, Mantova circuit, Italy
  • September 30 – MXGP of Città di Mantova, Mantova circuit, Italy
  • November 1 – MXGP of Trentino, Pietramurata, Italy

2021 Pilot Air Compressors A4DE Update

The organising committee of the 2021 Pilot Air Australian Four Day Enduro in Harvey, Western Australia are busy with the preparations for the event which is planned to run from May 19 – 22.

The top Masters riders about to head off on Day 3
The A4DE back in 2018 – Image by Jeff Mawston

Despite the impact of the Corona Virus pandemic and its consequences on the motorcycle events calendar, the committee has made great progress towards running a memorable four-day event with planning proceeding with optimism and a positive attitude.

Collin Jennings of the Trail and Enduro Motorcycle Club of WA Inc said excellent cooperation from the Shire of Harvey and the Parks and Wildlife Services, who are the guardians of the land that will be used, has ensured the club can plan interesting and enjoyable trails.

Despite COVID-19 and a number of current State border closures, the 2021 Pilot Air A4DE committee will continue planning for a successful event. The 2021 Pilot Air A4DE committee plan to make a decision in mid-February.

In the meantime, the Committee wishes to advise prospective competitors and supporters to ensure accommodation bookings can be refundable and flights are booked after entries open.

Collin Jennings – Trail and Enduro Motorcycle Club of WA

“Each of the first three days will be held in a different area and the fourth day will have a short one-hour trail section culminating in the spectacular final natural terrain motocross heats. At this time, it is impossible for us to make an informed decision about the effect of COVID-19 restrictions on the viability of the Australian Championship event. We hope to have confirmation of border restrictions being lifted before February when entries will open. We’d like to thank competitors and families for their understanding at this unprecedented time and will ensure that if State Government regulations change, we will keep competitors and fans up to date.”

Matthew Falvo – Motorcycling Australia’s Event Manager

“We are very pleased to see the work that is going on behind the scenes by the committee for the 2021 A4DE as we know the enormous effort it takes to make the event so great. We are very excited that we can build on the successes of previous A4DE events and look forward to 2021.”

The 2021 Pilot Air Compressors committee this week launched the new event website www.pilotaircompressorsa4de.com is now live with all updates. If you require further information please email [email protected]

2021 Pilot Air Compressors A4DE

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Clout returns to racing at the East Coast Motocross Championship

Luke Clout returned to Australia following his first full season in America to prepare for the Australian Supercross Championship, unfortunately due to the coronavirus schedules have changed and now Clout has turned his attention to the Australian Motocross Championship which is set to run later in the year.

Luke Clout

“It’s disappointing that Australia Supercross has been postponed but I am looking forward to racing again this weekend in preparation for the motocross championship. “The experience was priceless, and I learnt a lot. Leading some laps was something I will never forget. Everything I learnt will help and I can’t wait to get back behind the gate this weekend.”

Luke Clout had an amazing first season in America with Penrite Honda, he finished as high as fifth and led some of the world’s best supercross racers on his way to eighth overall.

Penrite Honda have now committed to the East Coast Motocross Championship starting with Round 3, which ran this past weekend in Maitland. Team director Yarrive Konksy believes racing locally will help Luke prepare for the Australian Motocross Championships.

Luke Clout’s first outing with the East Coast Motocross Championship saw the Penrite Honda rider claim three race wins over the September 12-13 round, as well as the overall win, marking Clout’s first race on Honda’s CRF450R, after racing a 250 in his overseas competition.

Luke Clout

“It was great, I love racing. I also go to connect with my roots, my parents were there and there were riders of all ages and classes competing. I enjoyed being amongst it. It was also good to use the weekend for testing. Nothing beats racing. The 450 is different and you need to ride it differently. I am glad I am getting some racing in ahead of the nationals. We are really close with bike setup; I learnt a little over the weekend as the track got rougher and we will make some minor changes ahead of the next round.”

Luke Clout – Penrite Honda

GNCC Round Nine

The Grand National Cross Country (GNCC) Series presented by Specialized, an AMA National Championship, continued Sunday, September 13, as the motorcycles took to the woods of West Virginia. Round 9, the Rocky Mountain ATV/MC Mountaineer, took place at Summit Bechtel Reserve in Beckley, WV. Cloudy conditions made for a great weekend of racing, even with some showers taking place on Sunday afternoon’s Pro race.

In the XC1 Open Pro class it was FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Kailub Russell racing off the line first to grab the All Balls Racing XC1 Holeshot award. However, as the pack of riders headed into the woods, Russell would make a mistake and be forced to fight through the pack of riders early in the race. Russell’s teammate, FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Ben Kelley would capitalize and move into the lead for the opening lap.

FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Kailub Russell grabbed the $250 All Balls Racing XC1 Holeshot award. Photo: Ken Hill

Making his return to racing aboard a new team for the event was AmPro Yamaha’s Steward Baylor Jr. As the lead pack of racers came through timing and scoring on lap one, Baylor found himself sitting 5.5 seconds behind Kelley. Throughout the course of lap two, Kelley and Baylor would engage in a battle with Baylor taking over the top spot as they came through just 1.9 seconds apart. Russell had made his way into the number three spot, but found himself 53 second behind the lead duo.

As the race wore on Baylor Jr. would put his head down and push to put a sizeable gap between himself and Kelley. With the fans cheering him on throughout all six laps, Baylor Jr. would come through to take his first overall win of the season with over a minute lead. Kelley, who tangled with some lappers, would manage to hold onto second overall with Russell rounding out the top three overall at this year’s Mountaineer GNCC.

AmPro Yamaha’s Steward Baylor Jr. clinched his first overall win of the season aboard his new team in West Virginia. Photo: Ken Hill

FactoryONE Sherco’s Grant Baylor steadily moved up through the pack after a seventh place start to the day. Baylor found himself running in the third place position at the halfway point in the race, but would be unable to hold off a charging Russell. As the checkered flag flew Baylor would check-in with a fourth overall on the day.

Babbitt’s Online/Monster Energy/Kawasaki’s Jordan Ashburn found himself sitting just outside the top five as the race began. Ashburn would put his head down and push making the pass for fifth on lap two, however, he would soon find himself back in sixth. As the white flag flew Ashburn knew he only had one more lap to make the pass stick, and he would do just that crossing the finish line fifth overall.

FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Ben Kelley claimed the second overall spot at round nine. Photo: Ken Hill

After missing the last two rounds before GNCC’s summer break, AmPro Yamaha’s Layne Michael made his return to racing in his home state of West Virginia. Michael had a mid-pack start to the day, but would work his way up to fourth for the second and third laps. Michael put up quite a fight for a top five finishing position, only missing out by 20 seconds behind Ashburn.

Phoenix Honda Racing’s Andrew Delong had a great start, and as he came through timing and scoring he would find himself fourth overall. However, as Delong made his way through the second lap and then third laps he would have to take make a long pit stop. Delong’s team worked feverishly to fix the mechanical issue with his bike, and he would head back out into the race still running in that eighth place position. By the time the checkered flag flew Delong had worked his way to seventh in the XC1 Open Pro class.

FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Josh Toth was running a good race as he registered in third on the opening lap. However, a small mistake in the woods happened to reaggravate his knee from a practice incident a couple of weeks ago. With rain showers presenting themselves and the tough conditions, Toth made the difficult decision to pull out of the race after three laps of racing.

In the XC2 250 Pro class it was Trail Jesters KTM’s Jonathan Girroir taking his fourth class win of the season. Girroir was off to a great start and would come through on the opening lap in the first place position. Girroir would find himself up into the third overall position based off of his adjusted time. However, as the race worse on Girroir found a good flow and did not want to make a mistake to jeopardize his XC2 class win. Girroir would come through to take the win with a 13 second gap back to second place.

Tely Energy Racing/KTM’s Liam Draper made his way onto the XC2 class podium with a second place finish in West Virginia. Draper had started off his day running in the fourth place position, but would steadily work his way through the pack. When the white flag came out, Draper would make a last lap charge to ensure his second place finish.

Rounding out the XC2 top three finishers was AmPro Yamaha/St. Lawrence Radiology’s Mike Witkowski. Witkowski would have his work cut out for himself throughout the race, as he would find himself back in the fifth place position at one point in the race. Witkowski found himself third as the white flag was flying, and he would hold onto that position until the checkered flag flew.

Australian Lyndon Snodgrass finished eighth in the XC2 category.

Raines Riding University/Fly Racing/Yamaha’s Jason Raines would battle throughout the duration of the race with Moose Racing/Carolina KTM/XC Gear’s Zack Hayes for the FMF XC3 125cc Pro-Am class win. Raines and Hayes would swap the lead position multiple times throughout the three-hour race; however it would be Raines making a last lap pass to take the win. Hayes would finish out the day with a second in the class, with FXR/KTM’s Jason Lipscomb making his way up to third in the class.

AmPro Yamaha’s Rachael Archer earned her second WXC class win of the season. Photo: Ken Hill

AmPro Yamaha’s Rachael Archer battled throughout the 10 a.m. race to take her second WXC class win of the season. Archer made her way into the lead position early in the race, but would face a battle with Beta USA’s Rachel Gutish on the second lap of racing. Gutish, who grabbed the $100 Trail Jesters WXC Holeshot award, was eager to battle at the front of the pack. Archer would make the pass back around Gutish to retake the lead as the white flag came out. When the checkered flag flew after four laps of racing, Archer would cross the finish line a minute ahead of her competition. Gutish would come through to hold onto second place at round nine. BABS Racing Yamaha/Maxxis’ Becca Sheets maintained her third place position throughout the duration of the two-hour race. Sheets remains in the WXC points lead after nine rounds of racing are complete.

Mountaineer Results and Points Standings – Beckley, West Virginia
GNCC Round 9 of 13 – Sunday, September 13, 2020

XC1 Pro Event Results

  1. Steward Baylor Jr. (YAM)
  2. Benjamin Kelley (KTM)
  3. Kailub Russell (KTM)
  4. Grant Baylor (SHR)
  5. Jordan Ashburn (KAW)
  6. Layne Michael (YAM)
  7. Andrew Delong (HON)
  8. Joshua Toth (KTM)

Overall National Championship Standings

  1. Kailub Russell (256)
  2. Josh Strang (193)
  3. Jordan Ashburn (143)
  4. Craig DeLong (133)
  5. Michael Witkowski (123)
  6. Jonathan Girroir (121)
  7. Grant Baylor (103)
  8. Cody Barnes (91)
  9. Liam Draper (83)
  10. Benjamin Kelley (82)
Rocky Mountain ATV/MC Mountaineer GNCC Overall Winner: Steward Baylor.
Photo: Ken Hill

XC2 250 Pro Event Results

  1. Jonathan Girroir (KTM)
  2. Liam Draper (KTM)
  3. Michael Witkowski (YAM)
  4. Craig Delong (HQV)
  5. Ryder Lafferty (HQV)
  6. Cody Barnes (BET)
  7. Thorn Devlin (BET)
  8. Lyndon Snodgrass (KAW)
  9. Jonathan Johnson (HON)
  10. Samuel Evans (KTM)

XC2 250 Pro Series Standings

  1. Craig DeLong (224)
  2. Jonathan Girroir (224)
  3. Michael Witkowski (209)
  4. Cody Barnes (154)
  5. Liam Draper (143)
  6. Thorn Devlin (121)
  7. Ryder Lafferty (105)
  8. Jonathan Johnson (101)
  9. Benjamin Nelko (82)
  10. Simon Johnson (79)

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Kirk Gibbs readying for King of Capricorn Cup

It’s been a long break between races for CDR Yamaha Monster Energy Team rider Kirk Gibbs, but he is set and ready to compete at The King of Capricorn Cup in Rockhampton at the start of October.

Way back in February, Gibbs won the New Zealand Motocross Championships for the second time and was in good form leading up to the start of the Australian racing season. But with the delays in the season due to the Covid pandemic and then a wrist injury sustained in July, Gibbs hasn’t been behind the gate for over six months.

Racing returned to Queensland in July and as Gibbs prepared for a string of events, he fell and broke his wrist just days prior to the MX Farm round of the Sunshine State Series. After six weeks on the sidelines, he was given the all-clear to resume riding and the Rockhampton event is to be his first race back and first race on Australian soil in 2020.

Kirk Gibbs

“2020 has been a strange year for everyone and to think this will be my first race of the year when its usually the end of our season is odd. It was disappointing that the national season was delayed and then my injury prior to the state races starting just compounded my frustration. I have missed racing and so keen to get back on track and get some racing in. It’s been hard work watching all the Queensland based riders racing up here and not being a part of it as we have been fortunate to keep racing when other states couldn’t. It’s great that Rockhampton have been able to organise this event and it’s given me something to work towards as I regain full speed and fitness. The $20K in prizemoney also means there is a bit on the line and things will be intense on the track, so I can’t wait.”

MX Nationals Moree Kirk Gibbs
Kirk Gibbs

The King of Capricorn will be held the weekend of October 3- 4 and include a wide range of races catering for everyone from juniors through to professionals. The Six Mile circuit is a popular one with the riders and the local community has relied behind the event and with $20,000 prize money on offer, it will also be one of the biggest events of the season.

Craig Dack – CDR Yamaha

“We are happy to support Kirk at this event and will put things in place around him to ensure he is in good hands. With the team based in Victoria, we are unable to attend due to the border restrictions, but we are desperate to do what we can to get our riders on track and races events like this where the state regulations allow. Kirk has been back on the bike for just over a week and with a couple of weeks before the event, he will be able to increase his fitness base and riding volume in the coming weeks. It will also his first hit out on the 2020 YZ450F race bike, so we are hoping for a positive few weeks and a good result in Rockhampton.”


AORC Events Calendar Update

The Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship (AORC) presented by MXstore is closely monitoring the health crisis developments and the effects COVID-19 are having on state borders restrictions and the potential impacts this may have on the current 2020 championship remaining date.

The up coming Round 11 & 12 of AORC, scheduled to be held on 14-15 November are currently under review. The final decision regarding this event will be announced no later than 9th of October 2020. Should further information be available at an earlier date, this will be communicated.

Matthew Falvo – Motorcycling Australia’s Event Manager

“We are working together with all our key stakeholders to get the final rounds up and running to have one last shot to go racing. From the outset we have remained committed to racing and this is still our aim. We understand the effects the current situation is having on all parties involved in the championship and we thank them all from our host clubs, riders, officials, in addition to our loyal sponsors for their patience and understanding in this difficult time.”

AORC can confirm that if it becomes clear that the event is not able to go ahead there will no further adjustments made to the remaining date.


AMA Supermoto National Championship scheduled for Nov. 7-8
Two-day competition to determine winners of AMA National No. 1 plates

The 2020 AMA Supermoto National Championship features two days of competition in November in Tucson, Ariz., to determine who receives the coveted AMA National No. 1 plate in five classes.

Originally scheduled as a six-event series, this national championship, sanctioned by the American Motorcyclist Association, will consist of four points-earning races. The format includes two races per day Nov. 7-8. Each race offers points toward the overall championship. The six scheduled events were cancelled due to restrictions put in place by government officials during the coronavirus pandemic.

The series is run by the AMA promoter, DRT Racing. Classes include Open, Lites, National Amateur, Sportsman MX and Kids.


Baja TT do Pinhal postponed

The Baja TT do Pinhal, scheduled for September 12-13 has had to be cancelled due to the extension of the fire risk alert situation put in place by the local authorities in Portugal. This opening round of the FIM Bajas World Cup was to mark the return to off-road motorcycle competition after the interruption caused by the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

After consultation with the teams, riders and all stakeholders involved and with the agreement of the local authorities, the FIM, the motorcycling federation of Portugal, and the local organiser Escuderia Castelo Branco have decided to postpone the event to September 19-20, 2020.


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Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto Wrap | Speedway GP | AMA MX | QLD MX

Moto News Weekly Wrap
September 1, 2020

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FIM Speedway Grand Prix

Russian ace Artem Laguta was elated to bring his Polish winning combination on to the world stage after claiming his first FIM Speedway Grand Prix victory in Wroclaw on Friday.

The Grudziadz rider has been in red-hot form since the PGE Ekstraliga season launched in Poland. And he was delighted to reproduce that scoring in the opening round of SGP 2020.

Artem Laguta, Maciej Janowski, Fredrik Lindgren

He topped the Betard FIM Speedway Grand Prix round one podium ahead of local hero Maciej Janowski, Swedish charger Fredrik Lindgren and Great Britain star Tai Woffinden.

Laguta has regularly piled up the points in Poland, but hasn’t always transferred his high scoring on to the SGP stage. Asked what made the difference in Wroclaw, he said: “There is no special secret. My form has been very good since the Polish league started. The bike is very, very fast. The guys in the workshop do fantastic work. My tuner, Ryszard Kowalski helps with fantastic engines. Everything has been set up for me. We also had the possibility to use Anlas tyres as well. We have been testing them in the last couple of matches and have gained a little bit more knowledge. They are slightly different. They don’t guarantee success, but they help to get success if you can set the bike up correctly. That’s what happened today. The bike was very fast from the start. I made very good starts. We are working hard in the team to make sure everything with the bikes is at the top.”

Laguta, who powered to 14 race points from a possible 15 in the heats, added: “It’s about the whole combination. The tyres helped and the engines from Kowalski Racing, which have been very good for a long time. The communication within the team and with the tuner is very important. That has all been a success. The tyre adds another couple of percent. Not everybody on the Anlas tyres won the races. But if you’re smart and you have a little more knowledge, you can get a benefit.”

Artem Laguta

Laguta admits working on his mental approach in the winter also boosted his bid to transfer Ekstraliga form into the SGP series.

He said: “We have been working very hard on that. I was quite close a few times to winning the Grand Prix, but we were always missing something. The work I did on my physical performance in the winter and also on the mental side of things meant I was really focused. I would like to say thanks to my family for their support and the whole team – everyone who has been working on the bikes. One of our mechanics wasn’t allowed to be in the pits, but he was part of the success as well. The engine tuners at Ryszard Kowalski Racing – the whole crew – have been great. We know the GPs have only just started. We have to stay focused and work hard to finish with a good result. Now we have won, and hopefully we can do it again.”

After racing to second place in round one on Friday night, Magic completed a dream weekend in extraordinary style as he won the round-two final ahead of Wroclaw team mate Tai Woffinden, world champion Bartosz Zmarzlik and Swedish star Fredrik Lindgren.

Maciej Janowski

The Olympic Stadium erupted to salute a rider who spent his youth on the terraces, before learning his craft on the famous track.

Janowski has spent all but two seasons of his career in Wroclaw colours and after watching his idols stand atop the Olympic Stadium podium, he lived that dream himself.

Maciej Janowski, Tai Woffinden, Bartosz Zmarzlik

After charging into a six-point lead at the World Championship’s summit, Janowski said: “That was an amazing night. Thank you to my team. They have done amazing work today. It’s really hard to race on your home track, but I felt I had so much focus and I was ready and prepared for some hard racing. Thank you to all the fans!”

Janowski had speed to burn as he topped the heat scorechart on 13 points, before winning his semi-final ahead of Lindgren, Niels-Kristian Iversen and Wroclaw rider Max Fricke.

He then triumphed in the final showdown, seeing off a strong early challenge from Great Britain hero Woffinden, who also impressed on the Olympic Stadium circuit he has called home since 2013.

Woffinden won a jaw-dropping battle with Zmarzlik in semi-final two, with round-one winner Artem Laguta forced to settle for third ahead of wild card Gleb Chugunov, whose progression in eighth place on the heat scorechart ensured all four Wroclaw riders in the 16-man field reached the semi-final stages.

Janowski leads the standings going into rounds three and four in Gorzow on September 11 and 12 on 38 points. Laguta and Woffinden are second and third respectively, tied on 32.

Swedish star Freddie Lindgren holds fourth place on 30, with Zmarzlik fifth on 27 points. Leading Australian in the standings is Max Fricke on 12-points while Jason Doyle has eight-points.

FIM Speedway Grand Prix Points Standings

  1. Maciej Janowski 38
  2. Artem Laguta 32
  3. Tai Woffinden 32
  4. Fredrik Lindgren 30
  5. Bartosz Zmarzlik 27
  6. Leon Madsen 18
  7. Gleb Chugunov 16
  8. Emil Sayfutdinov 15
  9. Niels-Kristian Iversen 14
  10. Patryk Dudek 13
  11. Martin Vaculik 12
  12. Matej Zagar 12
  13. Max Fricke 12
  14. Mikkel Michelsen 11
  15. Jason Doyle 8
  16. Antonio Lindback 2
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2020 Queensland Motocross Championship – Hervey Bay

After three rounds of the Sunshine State Series, Queenslanders turned their attention to the one and only round of the Queensland Motocross Championship which was held at the sandy and often challenging Hervey Bay track. It is one of the few sand based tracks on the east coast and always makes the riders work hard for their results.

Husqvarna’s Todd Waters rode both MX1 and MX2 categories and after narrowly missing out on taking the MX2 honours Waters did the business in MX1 and dominated all three motos to finish the day on top ahead of Lochie Latimer and Jai Walker.

MX1 Results

Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 Todd WATERS 105 35 35 35
2 Lochie LATIMER 92 32 32 28
3 Jai WALKER 90 28 30 32
4 Joel EVANS 88 30 28 30
5 Kaleb BARHAM 78 26 26 26
6 Navrin GROTHUES 72 22 25 25
7 Ryan GAYLOR 71 25 22 24
8 Luke ZIELINSKI 69 23 24 22
9 Blake COBBIN 67 21 23 23
10 Cody O’LOAN 62 20 21 21

MX2

The Yamaha MX2 trio of Aaron Tanti, Jesse Dobson and Jay Wilson were up against Husqvarna’s Todd Waters as well as host of other up and coming hot shots.  After the first two races, five points separated Tanti, Waters and Wilson – in that order. As the last race blasted off – the running order was Wilson, Waters and Tanti which would have seen a three way tie for the championship if they were to cross the finish line in that order. Just before the half way point, Tanti made a mistake and dropped to fourth place, leaving Wilson and Waters to fight it out with the gap around three to five seconds as they charged through lapped traffic. In the end, Wilson took the race win and with it the Queensland MX2 Championship over Waters by virtue of a better finish in the final race, despite both finishing on equal points. Tanti was third for the day but despite the fall in the last race, showed his sand riding skills have improved significantly. Dobson held down fourth while Japanese rider, Kota Toriyabe took sixth just behind Ricky Latimer.

Jay Wilson took the MX2 title by virtue of winning the final moto despite finishing on equal points with Todd Waters – Image Sam Phillips

MX2 Results

Pos Competitor Total R1 R2 R3
1 Jay WILSON 97 30 32 35
2 Todd WATERS 97 35 30 32
3 Aaron TANTI 95 32 35 28
4 Jesse DOBSON 86 28 28 30
5 Ricky LATIMER 74 24 26 24
6 Kota TORIYABE 69 22 24 23
7 Jake KOWAL 68 23 23 22
8 Joel PHILLIPS 62 20 21 21
9 Luke REARDON 61 16 25 20
10 Zhane DUNLOP 61 21 22 18

2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship Rnd 3

Images by Jeff Kardas

The third round of the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship featured the season’s most competitive afternoon of racing thus far, with compelling battles for victory across both the 450 Class and 250 Class. Indiana’s Ironman Raceway serves as one of the most dynamic tracks on the championship schedule and it was no surprise to see the best riders in the world put their talents of full display at the Guaranteed Rate Ironman National.

Reigning three-time 450 Class Champion Eli Tomac found himself in unfamiliar territory coming into Indiana, sitting seventh in the championship standings and facing a 40-point deficit to leader Zach Osborne. As a result, Tomac and his Monster Energy Kawasaki squad entered the Ironman National looking to turn their season around, and they did just that. The Colorado native captured the 45th victory of his career, emphasized by an impressive Moto 2 win.

Over in the 250 Class, the intrigue of the early season title fight between GEICO Honda’s Jeremy Martin and Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis took another turn when Ferrandis’ dominant Moto 1 win was nullified by a first-turn crash in Moto 2 that left the point leader at the tail end of the field. While Martin was able to take full advantage of the opportunity and earn his second straight victory, Ferrandis was stellar in his recovery effort, salvaging both a runner-up finish and his points lead.

Up next the Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will celebrate Labor Day weekend with its first-ever doubleheader from Michigan’s legendary RedBud MX, which will host the fourth and fifth rounds of the 2020 season. The Circle K RedBud I National will begin the holiday festivities on Friday, September 4. The second half of the doubleheader will take place on Labor Day, Monday, September 7, for the Circle K RedBud II National.


450

The opening 450 Class moto saw a pair of familiar rivals out front early as Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Marvin Musquin secured the MotoSport.com Holeshot just ahead of Tomac’s Kawasaki, with point leader Zach Osborne in third aboard his Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing machine.

450 underway

The top three asserted themselves at the front of the pack, while the rookies of Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Adam Cianciarulo and Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton gave pursuit to build a close fight amongst the top five. This group continued to trade momentum through the middle portion of the moto and at one point were collectively separated by just a handful of seconds. As the race wore on, the running order began to spread out, with Musquin and Tomac pulling away. Behind them, Osborne made a costly misjudgement trying to pass a lapped rider, resulting in contact that forced the point leader off his bike. That allowed both Cianciarulo and Sexton to get by, while Osborne continued in fifth. He then almost crashed again a short time later, which caused him to lose fifth to Rocky Mountain ATV/MC-KTM-WPS rider Blake Baggett.

Adam Cianciarulo

Musquin withstood one final push from Tomac to capture his first moto win since suffering a knee injury at this same track one year ago, taking the checkered flag by 2.2 seconds over the champ. Cianciarulo finished in third, just ahead of Sexton, while Baggett rounded out the top five. Osborne lost another position late to finish a season-worst seventh.

When the gate dropped on the second and deciding moto it was Osborne who prevailed to take the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Cianciarulo, while Tomac and Musquin gave chase right behind them. Musquin and Tomac battled for third briefly, but Tomac got the upper hand to secure the position. With a clear track Osborne looked to pull away, but Cianciarulo responded to the torrid pace of the opening laps.

With Tomac closing in from third Cianciarulo put the pressure on Osborne for the lead and successfully made the pass stick, leaving Osborne to fight with the reigning champion. Meanwhile, Musquin lost additional ground after getting passed by Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing’s Justin Barcia for fourth.

Zach Osborne

The top four maintained their positions throughout the middle of the moto, but with 10 minutes remaining this group had closed in on one another and were separated by just a couple seconds. As they encountered lapped traffic Osborne was slowed, which allowed both Tomac and Barcia to get around and drop the point leader off the podium. The lead trio still sat within less than two seconds of one another and Tomac went on the attack, successfully taking the lead away from his teammate. Barcia followed through into second, and then Osborne dropped Cianciarulo off the podium by moving up to third.

The closing stages of the moto turned into a compelling head-to-head battle between Tomac and Barcia, and while Barcia appeared to be faster in some areas of the track, Tomac excelled in different areas as well to keep the Yamaha at bay. In the end, Tomac charged to the finish line to take his first moto win of the season by 1.1 seconds over Barcia, while Osborne finished in a distant third.

Eli Tomac

By virtue of his 2-1 moto results Tomac was able to secure his 45th-career victory just one week after finishing a career-worst 16th overall. The win puts him in sole possession of fourth on the all-time wins list. Musquin finished in second (1-6), while Cianciarulo rounded out the overall podium in third (3-4). Osborne’s strong second moto helped him finish fifth overall (7-3).

I just had a better feel . The track came to us all day. We had good starts in both motos and that pace was insane there in Moto 2,” explained Tomac. “I had pressure from Barcia for a while there and we were really pushing it at the end. He kept me honest, but I was able to keep it going and get us a win. We’ve got some good tracks for us coming up and hopefully we can keep putting work in to make up some ground in the championship.”

Eli Tomac

Osborne’s strong finish to the afternoon helped minimize the ground he lost in the championship standings. He now holds a 13-point lead over Musquin, while Barcia sits 26 points behind in third. Tomac vaulted from seventh to fourth, and now faces a 27-point deficit behind Osborne.

The first moto was just really bad for me. I made some mistakes and it was just a mess, really,” said Osborne. “It was a disappointment, but we bounced back in the second moto. I didn’t have the pace to run up front with those guys, but still put in on the box and still have the red plate . We’ll look forward to RedBud.

50 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Kawasaki (2-1)
Marvin Musquin, France, KTM (1-6)
Adam Cianciarulo, Port Orange, Fla., Kawasaki (3-4)

Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship
Ironman Raceway – Crawfordsville, Indiana
August 29, 2020 – 450 Class Overall Results

Pos Rider Motos Bike
1  Eli Tomac 2 – 1 Kawasaki
2  Marvin Musquin 1 – 6 KTM
3  Adam Cianciarulo 3 – 4 Kawasaki
4  Justin Barcia 6 – 2 Yamaha
5  Zach Osborne 7 – 3 Husqvarna
6 Chase Sexton 4 – 5 Honda
7  Blake Baggett 5 – 7 KTM
8  Dean Wilson 8 – 8 Husqvarna
9  Broc Tickle 9 – 10 Yamaha
10  Christian Craig 11 – 12 Honda
11  Fredrik Noren 10 – 13 Suzuki
12  Henry Miller 12 – 14 KTM
13  John Short 13 – 16 Honda
14  Joey Savatgy 40 – 9 Suzuki
15  Benny Bloss 37 – 11 Husqvarna
16  Jake Masterpool 16 – 17 Husqvarna
17  Coty Schock 15 – 18 Honda
18  Max Anstie 14 – 37 Suzuki
19  Justin Bogle 34 – 15 KTM
20  Ben LaMay 17 – 38 KTM
21  Jeremy Smith 18 – 22 Honda
22  Tyler Bowers 38 – 19 Kawasaki
23  Grant Harlan 19 – 21 Honda
24  Justin Rodbell 21 – 20 Kawasaki
25  Jared Lesher 20 – 24 KTM
26  Tristan Lewis 26 – 23 Yamaha
27  Mcclellan Hile 22 – 28 KTM
28  Bryce Backaus 25 – 27 Yamaha
29  Scott Meshey 24 – 29 Husqvarna
30  Alex Ray 23 – 34 Kawasaki
31  Dalton Dyer 32 – 26 Kawasaki
32  Carson Tickle 27 – 31 Honda
33  Matthew Hubert 35 – 25 Honda
34  Adam Enticknap 33 – 30 Suzuki
35  Christopher Prebula 28 – 35 KTM
36  Tristan Lane 31 – 33 KTM
37  Luke Neese 30 – 36 Honda
38  Luke Renzland 39 – 39 Husqvarna
39  Chase Felong 29 – DNS Husqvarna
40  Timothy Crosby DNS – 32 Kawasaki
41  Jason Anderson 36 – DNS Husqvarna
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450 Class Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Zach Osborne 122
2 Marvin Musquin 109
3 Justin Barcia 96
4 Eli Tomac 95
5 Adam Cianciarulo 89
6 Blake Baggett 81
7 Chase Sexton 78
8 Broc Tickle 71
9 Christian Craig 59
10 Dean Wilson 58
11 Jason Anderson 58
12 Max Anstie 54
13 Joey Savatgy 48
14 Fredrik Noren 37
15 Henry Miller 37
16 Cooper Webb 29
17 Jake Masterpool 28
18 Coty Schock 23
19 Benny Bloss 21
20 Justin Bogle 21
21 Justin Rodbell 19
22 Jeremy Smith 16
23 John Short 13
24 Tyler Bowers 11
25 Luke Renzland 11
26 Matthew Hubert 9
27 Chase Felong 8
28 Justin Hoeft 7
29 Ben LaMay 6
30 Jeffrey Walker 4
31 Jared Lesher 3
32 Cory Carsten 3
33 Grant Harlan 2

250

The first 250 Class moto saw point leader Dylan Ferrandis grab the MotoSport.com Holeshot aboard his Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing machine, just edging out Martin. With the clear track Ferrandis was able to sprint out to an early lead over his Honda counterpart, while the field jockeyed for position behind them. Ferrandis quickly built a multi-second advantage over Martin, who soon was forced to contend with Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/KTM’s Brandon Hartranft from third. Martin responded and soon asserted himself into the runner-up spot, while Hartranft solidified his hold of third.

AMA Pro Motocross 250 gets underway

Out front Ferrandis continued to add to his advantage and eventually opened up a margin of more than 20 seconds on the rest of the field. He went wire-to-wire to earn his third moto win of the season in dominant fashion, crossing the finish line 26 seconds over Martin, followed by Hartranft in third. GEICO Honda’s Jett Lawrence finished in fourth, while Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire completed the top five.

GEICO Honda’s Jett Lawrence finished in fourth in the opening 250 moto

As the field emerged from the first turn to start Moto 2 it was Martin who surged to the head of the pack to secure the MotoSport.com Holeshot ahead of Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper. Behind them Ferrandis was on the ground after an incident with his Star Yamaha teammate Shane McElrath, with the Frenchman finally returning to action in dead last.

Ferrandis had to come back through the pack

With Ferrandis forced to battle his way through the field of 40 riders the window of opportunity opened for Martin to take advantage. The Honda rider was able to put some space between he and Cooper early on and continued to build that lead into a multi-second advantage, with Hartranft once again asserting himself in third. As Martin continued to lead the way out front, Ferrandis was making an impressive climb up the running order. He needed just one lap to break into the top 20, and continued to charge his way into the top 10 before the halfway point of the moto. The Frenchman’s determined comeback didn’t end there. He continually picked off riders, one-by-one, and eventually fought his way back into podium position.

Hunter Lawrence

Martin went unchallenged en route to his second moto win of the season, taking the checkered flag 5.7 seconds over Cooper, while Ferrandis made the most of a moto that started with him in the worst possible position by finishing third.

Martin’s Moto 2 triumph gave him 2-1 finishes for the afternoon, which was enough to put him atop the overall standings for the second week in a row, and the 16th time in his career. Ferrandis’ impressive performance helped him secure the runner-up spot (1-3), while Hartranft earned the first overall podium finish of his career in third (3-4).

Jeremy Martin

Last week was a special moment , but I didn’t win a moto. It made it more special to get a good start and ride my own race to get a moto win,” said Martin. “Dylan was on it today, but I knew I needed to get a good start and that would put me in a position to win. I know Dylan didn’t get the start he wanted , but my GEICO Honda was working really well in these conditions and I’m just happy to be back on top of the podium. It’s going to be a fun battle .

Jeremy Martin

By virtue of his damage control in the final moto Ferrandis maintained his hold of the point lead, losing just two points to Martin. The top two are now separated by four points.

I just ride as fast as I can and pass the most riders I can. I have nothing to lose,” said Ferrandis. “I wish there was more laps, but it is what it is. It’s a disappointment to lose out on the second moto, but this is racing and sometimes things like that happen. We’ll just keep fighting and try again next week.”

Ferrandis had to come back through the pack

Jett Lawrence took fifth overall for the round after carding 4-5 results while older brother Hunter was unhappy with his efforts after taking 16th overall on the back of a 15-14 scorecard.

Jett Lawrence took fifth overall for the round after carding 4-5 results

The Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will celebrate Labor Day weekend with its first-ever doubleheader from Michigan’s legendary RedBud MX, which will host the fourth and fifth rounds of the 2020 season. The Circle K RedBud I National will begin the holiday festivities on Friday, September 4. The second half of the doubleheader will take place on Labor Day, Monday, September 7, for the Circle K RedBud II National.

Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship
Ironman Raceway – Crawfordsville, Indiana
August 29, 2020 – 250 Class Overall Results

Pos Rider Motos Bike
1 Jeremy Martin 2 – 1 Honda
2 Dylan Ferrandis 1 – 3 Yamaha
3 Brandon Hartranft 3 – 4 KTM
4 Justin Cooper 8 – 2 Yamaha
5 Jett Lawrence 4 – 5 Honda
6 Alex Martin 7 – 6 Suzuki
7 Shane McElrath 6 – 10 Yamaha
8 Jo Shimoda 12 – 7 Honda
9 Mitchell Harrison 11 – 8 Kawasaki
10 Carson Mumford 13 – 9 Honda
11 Derek Drake 10 – 12 KTM
12 R.J. Hampshire 5 – 17 Husqvarna
13 Cameron McAdoo 9 – 15 Kawasaki
14 Stilez Robertson 16 – 13 Husqvarna
15 Gonzalez 15 – 14 Yamaha
16 Hunter Lawrence 19 – 11 Honda
17 Hardy Munoz 14 – 20 Husqvarna
18 Jerry Robin 18 – 18 Husqvarna
19 Hoey Crown 38 – 16 Yamaha
20 Pierce Brown 17 – 32 KTM
21 Derek Kelley 20 – 19 Husqvarna
22 Joshua Varize 23 – 21 KTM
23 Kevin Moranz 24 – 22 KTM
24 Jace Kessler 21 – 26 Husqvarna
25 Cody Williams 26 – 24 Husqvarna
26 Vincent Luhovey 28 – 27 KTM 250
27 Lance Kobusch 22 – 33 KTM 250
28 Marcus Phelps 25 – 31 KTM 250
29 Ryder Floyd 35 – 23 Honda
30 Nathen Laporte 29 – 30 Honda
31 Colton Eigenmann 32 – 28 Suzuki
32 Jake Pinhancos 30 – 34 KTM
33 Maxwell Sanford 37 – 29 Yamaha
34 Chase Lorenz 27 – 39 Honda
35 Dennis Gritzmacher 33 – 35 KTM
36 Nick Gaines 34 – 38 Yamaha
37 Mathias Jorgensen 39 – 36 Kawasaki
38 Gared Steinke 36 – 40 Kawasaki
39 Austin Root 40 – 37 Husqvarna
40 Zack Williams DNS – 25 KTM
41 Bryton Carroll 31 – DNS Yamaha
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250 Class Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1  Dylan Ferrandis 135
2  Jeremy Martin 131
3  Alex Martin 100
4  Shane McElrath 95
5  R.J. Hampshire 90
6  Cameron McAdoo 79
7  Justin Cooper 75
8  Jett Lawrence 63
9  Brandon Hartranft 61
10  Mitchell Harrison 61
11  Carson Mumford 52
12  Derek Drake 50
13  Mason Gonzalez 45
14  Stilez Robertson 40
15  Jo Shimoda 36
16  Pierce Brown 31
17  Nick Gaines 28
18  Hardy Munoz 21
19  Hunter Lawrence 19
20  Lance Kobusch 18
21  Ezra Hastings 14
22  Joey Crown 12
23  Jerry Robin 11
24  Gared Steinke 11
25  Austin Root 9
26  Darian Sanayei 7
27  Zack Williams 6
28  Jordan Bailey 6
29  Joshua Varize 5
30  Dilan Schwartz 5
31  Maxwell Sanford 4
32  Derek Kelley 3
33  Mathias Jorgensen 3

2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Calendar

Date Round Location
Sep 4 (Fri) RedBud I Buchanan, MI
Sep 7 (Mon) RedBud II Buchanan, MI
Sep-19 Spring Creek Millville, MN
Sep-26 WW Ranch Jacksonville, FL
Oct-03 Thunder Valley Lakewood, CO
Oct-10 Fox Raceway Pala, CA

2020 Grass Track – Senior All Powers

Pos Rider Total R1 R2 R3
1 Seth Qualischefski 65 25 18 22
2 Cyshan Weale 50 25 25
3 Craig Andrews 49 18 15 16
4 Nathan Delaware 48 16 14 18
5 Tomas Kruger 46 15 16 15
6 Jarred Brook 42 22 20
7 Kye Thomson 42 22 20
8 Ryan Mills 38 13 11 14
9 Bill Mcfarlane 33 10 10 13
10 Aaron Morgan 24 12 12
11 Steven Harrison 21 9 12
12 Kye Thomson 20 20
13 Travis Wearne 13 13
14 Steven Harrison 11 11

2020 Brookton Pony Express Round 3

Pos Riders Time/Gap
1 EVAN BROWNE / JACKSON MCGRATH 4:20:32.327
2 BLAKE KLANJSCEK / CODY HEGGS 4:00:30.908
3 CHRIS RUTTICO / DAMON GIBBONS 4:01:30.587
4 CARSON BASCOMBE / SCOTT HEWITT 4:04:13.483
5 BLAIR OUTRAM / DEAN PORTER 4:11:09.513
6 CHARLIE CREECH 4:11:44.944
7 CAM VANSTAN 4:20:16.748
8 CORBEN WEINERT 4:21:00.495
9 AARON ANDERSON / MATHEW JOHNS 4:22:08.967
10 MICHAEL BURGESS / SHANE STEELE 4:22:23.042

2020 Brookton Cross Country Round 3

Pos Rider Time
1 BEN LYNCH 2:55:05.541
2 JOEL HOOGEWERF 2:33:08.436
3 CAOLAN MASTERSON 2:36:11.571
4 ALEX DOYLE 2:38:56.459
5 RILEY DE SAN MIGUEL 2:41:39.166
6 JACKSON VERSTEEGEN 2:42:12.113
7 LACHLAN TAYLOR 2:44:36.724
8 CALLUM NAPOLI 2:46:01.695
9 HAMISH WALMSLEY 2:46:57.763
10 BEN WALLING 2:48:16.475
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Source: MCNews.com.au

Dean Ferris surgery deemed successful

3 x MX Nationals Champion On Road To Recovery

MX Nationals Champion and MX1 team rider Dean Ferris has successfully undergone surgery to stabilise injuries to his back and ribs, sustained at Connondale QLD on Saturday 8th August.

Dean Ferris

“Renae and I would like to take this time to thank everyone for the kind words and support across social media, the numerous calls and texts we received and finally everyone at the Connondale Club who assisted me from the crash. I also have to thank the team of Doctors and Surgeons between the two Hospitals that have been a huge help with my recovery. This crash was unfortunate as I have been feeling great on the bike this year and itching to go racing. For now my focus is solely on my rehab and getting strong enough to spend quality time with my family, chasing the kids around at the farm again. I have been here before with injuries and know the process, it is time to dedicate myself to the rehab with 100% focus and I know I can bounce back as strong as ever when it’s time to get back on the bike. I will update everyone of my progress accordingly and once again thank you to the team , the industry and my fans for the unwavering support”.

Ferris initially spent the first two days following the incident at a local Sunshine Coast Hospital and was later transferred to a Brisbane Hospital in preparation for surgery that was completed on Wednesday 11th August. The goal of surgery was to stabilize Ferris injuries to his back, as a time sensitive priority to ensure recovery could begin.

Kevin Williams – Business Development Manager for Raceline Performance

Dean has a long road ahead of him in regards to recovery but I am very pleased to report the surgery was successful and there have been no further complications from the back injury. Dean has been able to get out of bed under his own power and walk around a little since surgery was completed and all reports are that he will make a full recovery. I know the question everyone wants to ask is when will Dean be back on the bike? At this stage it is early days, but with Dean’s championship mindset I know he will dedicate himself to rehabilitation and his recovery to ensure he is ready for a return to riding as soon as possible. We are optimistically anticipating a six to eight month recovery period before the injuries are stable enough to begin riding again.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto wrap | MX Nats news | Ferris injury update | Roczen out | MXGP Video Highlights

Moto News Weekly Wrap
August 11, 2020

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Viability of MX Nationals and SX still under discussion

The ever changing dynamic in regards to travel restrictions amongst the current plague sees discussions inside Motorcycling Australia still continuing into the viability of running a Supercross and/or MX Nationals competition this year.

M.A. are playing a waiting game in the hope of cross-border restrictions starting to be eased in Spring.

We believe that Motorcycling Australia expect to make a call later this month in regards to the running of a Supercross season, or whether Supercross competition will be cancelled in favour of using the limited time left remaining in 2020 in order to successfully run a MX Nationals competition.


Roczen to Miss AMA Pro Motocross Series

American Honda and Ken Roczen announced overnight that they have decided to have the German sit out the 2020 AMA Pro Motocross series. In his place, Christian Craig will ride the factory CRF450R alongside Chase Sexton.

Over the course of the next few months, Roczen will focus on his family (wife Courtney is due with their first child in September), on giving his body time to fully recover from the health issues that have hampered him in recent seasons, and on resetting physically and mentally, with the ultimate objective of making a championship run at the 2021 AMA Supercross series.

Taking this shortened outdoor season off was a very difficult decision, but I’m confident it’s what’s best for me and my team in the long run,” Roczen explained. “It will be good to regroup, let my body heal, enjoy this important experience with Courtney, and build back up for 2021. I’d like to thank my team and sponsors for having my back through this, and I look forward to supporting Chase and Christian from home this summer before once again doing my job the best I possibly can.”

Roczen to Miss AMA Pro Motocross Series

Ferris injured in Conondale practice crash

RecoveR8 KTM Thor racing have confirmed that three time MX Nationals Champion and MX1 team rider Dean Ferris was injured on the weekend whilst practicing at the Connondale circuit in QLD.

Directly following the incident, Dean was airlifted to a local hospital where he was stabilised with back and ribs pain where it was later confirmed that Dean had suffered seven broken ribs and had fractured some vertebrae and is in a stable but serious condition.

Dean was then transferred to Brisbane Hospital where he is undergoing further scans, treatment and evaluations ahead of a plan being formulated for his rehabilitation. It is anticipated that by tomorrow, Wednesday, doctors will settle for an action plan that will help stabilise his spine which may or may not involve surgical intervention. We believe that at this stage there are no signs of nerve damage or anything that might indicate significant long term problems.

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 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship opener this weekend

This weekend marks the end of the long and anticipated wait for the start of the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship as AMA Motocross embarks on its 49th season of competition. In the midst of one of the most challenging periods motorcycle competition has ever faced, American Motocross continues to find a way to return to racing, with a different look and feel.The beginning of this “new normal” will feature a landmark moment for the championship, which will open the season with an inaugural visit to famed Loretta Lynn’s Ranch on Saturday, August 15, for the Circle K Loretta Lynn’s National.

Since 1982 this sprawling landscape and tourist attraction nestled in the quaint rural town of Hurricane Mills, Tennessee, has served as some of the most hallowed ground in American Motocross. For four decades, the namesake home of the country music icon has hosted the single-largest motocross event on the planet – the AMA Amateur National Motocross Championship – where a showcase of the sport’s future generations has fostered an unprecedented legacy. This proving ground has given rise to the career of virtually every motocross superstar, whether it’s “The G.O.A.T.” Ricky Carmichael and James “Bubba” Stewart, or current household names like Eli Tomac and Ken Roczen. Simply put, the legacy of Loretta Lynn’s Ranch is a who’s who of motocross history and now that legacy will deepen even further with the addition of the Pro Motocross Championship.

2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Calendar

Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki bolster line-up for MX

With the recent injuries to Austin Forkner, Jordon Smith, and Garrett Marchbanks during the Monster Energy Supercross season, the team has added two strong riders to join Cameron McAdoo under the prestigious Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki tent as the team welcomes Mitchell Harrison and Darian Sanayei to race the KX250 for the recently announced nine-round 2020 AMA Pro Motocross Championship series scheduled to begin August 15th at Loretta Lynn’s Ranch in Hurricane Mills, TN.

We are in a unique situation with Cameron McAdoo being our only healthy rider at the moment,” said team owner Mitch Payton. “We weren’t exactly sure when racing would resume but we knew whenever that was, we needed to be ready so we had Darian and Mitchell tryout our KX™250 and they both rose to the challenge. We have worked with both of them previously through the Kawasaki Team Green™ program. We’re familiar with who they are and how they ride, and it was an additional bonus that they have both been riding Kawasaki motorcycles for quite some time now. We are ready to get back to the races and to see the team back on the track.”

MXGP 2016 Switzerland Darian Sanayei
Darian Sanayei joins Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki

Both riders will be returning to their roots as they grew up riding for the Kawasaki Team Green racing team throughout their amateur careers. In their professional careers, both Harrison and Sanayei have competed in Europe in the MX2 class for Kawasaki supported race teams with Sanayei on the Dixon Kawasaki MX2 team and Harrison competing for the Bud Racing Kawasaki MX2 team. After reaching the age limit in Europe, Sanayei returned home to the United States to contest in the 2020 Arenacross for the Babbitt’s Online/Monster Energy/Kawasaki team as well as competing in the Monster Energy Supercross 250SX East Region class. Due to the global pandemic, Harrison was forced to close the chapter on racing in Europe for now and looks forward to racing again back in the United States.

Everybody knows that this is easily the best team in the paddock, just look at the wall of championship plates hanging on the door,” said Sanayei. “This is a huge opportunity for me and I’m really looking forward to making the most of it. I’ve had the chance to ride the bike a couple of times now, and all I can really say is wow. I’ve been on a Kawasaki pretty much my entire pro career and this KX250 really has it all. I am usually a pretty good starter so with the power of this bike and the support of this team, I believe I can put myself in a good position to be battling up front.

Man, I cannot tell you how excited I am for this opportunity,” said Harrison. “Right away, I gelled with the bike and felt right at home on the KX250. Up until recently, I have been racing in Europe on a KX250 for Bud Racing for the past year or so and I also grew up racing for the Team Green amateur race team, so I have felt super comfortable from the get-go. This year has been unique for everyone in our sport, especially for myself since I’m from the U.S. but have been racing in Europe and have been dealing with all of the travel restrictions; that’s why it was a no brainer when this opportunity came up. I want to be here racing with the best of the best. I have podiumed at races in the past here and I believe with where I am at this stage in my career and with this bike I can be a threat each weekend.”

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2020 MXGP – Round 3 – Kegums, Latvia

Video Highlights


The MXGP of Latvia saw Glenn Coldenhoff take a historic win for Gas Gas, going 2-1 and taking the overall GP win on 47-points, with Tim Gajser and Romain Febvre separated by just a point in second and third. Aussie Mitchell Evans also added five-points to his championship tally, with a 19-18 result.

Glenn Coldenhoff claims the MXGP of Latvia win for Gas Gas
Glenn Coldenhoff claims the MXGP of Latvia win for Gas Gas

Jeffrey Herlings retained his championship lead however, sitting four-points clear of Tim Gajser on 130, while round winner Coldenhoff moved into third with 103 points. Antonio Cairoli and Arminas Jasikonis complete the top five in the championship standings. Mitchel Evans sits 13th in the championship standings following Round 3, now on 39-points.

In the MX2 Tom Vialle came out on top, after a consistent performance finishing 2-1, extending his championship lead. Roan Van De Moosdijk was second overall for the GP, with Mathys Boisrame third. Aussie Jed Beaton had to settle for ninth after a challenging Race 1, with Nathan Crawford 12th, and Bailey Malkiewicz 27th.

Tom Vialle claimed the MX2 victory, extending his lead
Tom Vialle claimed the MX2 victory, extending his lead

The MX2 standings now see Tom Vialle with a strong 22-point lead heading into round four, ahead of Geerts and Jed Beaton, with Maxime Renaux and Ben Watson completing the standings top five.


By lap 4, Romain Febvre was all over the back of Jorge Prado and eventually found his way past the Spaniard to move into fourth place.

Gajser meanwhile, managed to clinch the lead from Coldenhoff halfway through the race, while Jasikonis was trying find a way past Desalle and Herlings. He passed the two riders a couple of laps later, then set his sights on fifth.

With 5 minutes and 2 laps to go, Herlings was on a mission passing Prado, Jasikonis and breathing down Seewer’s neck. By the end of the race he managed to pass the Yamaha rider and move into fourth place.

At the finish line it was Tim Gajser who claimed the win from Coldenhoff and Febvre, with Herlings and Seewer completing the top five.

Jasikonis had to settle for sixth, ahead of Cairoli and Prado, with Gautier and Van Horebeek rounding out the top 10. Aussie Mitchell Evans came come in 19th, claiming two-points.

MXGP Race 2

As the gate dropped for the second MXGP race of the day, it was the Coldenhoff who reached the FOX Holeshot line first, followed by Gajser and Seewer who were also quick out of the gate.

The opening lap saw Coldenhoff lead Gajser, Seewer, Prado, Desalle, Febvre and Jasikonis, while Tonus was not having the best of luck coming back from the back of the field.

Jasikonis, with a crowd of Lithuanian fans supporting him, was keen to put on a show as he moved quickly past Desalle for P5 and then Prado for P4.

As the top five continued to battle amongst themselves, Tonus found himself caught in more trouble as he crashed out and was left fighting from dead last.

A couple of laps later and Febvre was chasing down Jasikonis for fourth, and the two had a brief battle changing positions among one another for a couple of corners, though it was Febvre who came out on top.

Antonio Cairoli was having a tough day, as he made his way through the back end of the field, but all eyes were on the three riders out front, with Coldenhoff, Gajser and Seewer all neck and neck, with it proving hard to predict a clear winner.

Gajser may have pushed a little too hard and went down pretty hard in the wave sections, giving Coldenhoff a little bit of breathing room, though not for long as Seewer was straight on the back of him. The last two laps saw the GasGas and Yamaha factory riders locked in battle, though Coldenhoff was able to keep it cool and maintain the lead.

Overall, it was a historic day for GasGas and Glen Coldenhoff as they claimed the first race win and podium for the manufacturer, with Seewer second and Febvre completing the podium. Top KTM rider was Herlings in fourth, ahead of Gajser. Jasikonis was once again sixth, ahead of Prado and Patural, while Tixier and Desalle completed the top 10. Mitchell Evans improved to 18th, taking a further three points for the weekend.

Despite missing out on the podium, Jeffrey Herlings still managed to hold on to his championship lead, heading into round 4 on Wednesday with the MXGP of Riga.


Glenn Coldenhoff – P1

“What can I say? It’s been a great day! After qualifying we made some adjustments to my bike’s suspension and it really paid off in the races. The Standing Construct team have worked hard during lockdown to keep improving our bikes on the starts and it clearly showed today. I started 2nd in race 1, nearly had the holeshot and then I took the lead on the 3rd lap. After a few laps there was a big rock in the rut I was in, which I hit, and it knocked me off balance just before the waves section. I re-joined the race quickly and made another charge towards the end, but it was too late. I finished in 2nd place, which was really good after a not so great qualifying. Race 2, another great start taking the holeshot! It was a tough race though, especially during the final laps, but I’m really happy to have won for myself and the team, especially as it’s only the 3rd MXGP for GASGAS. It’s just awesome. It’s nice to be back in MXGP, I really like the 1-day format and I can’t wait for Wednesday.”

Tim Gajser – P2

“I got a solid start in both motos, getting the holeshot on my Honda CRF450RW in race one and then right behind Glenn in race two, so I’m happy with how that went. My qualification was good too, giving me first gate pick and it was good to see that we were able to adapt to the new format quickly. Unfortunately, after winning the first race, I had a crash in the waves in race two as I tried to change my lines in order to make the pass for the lead. I did my best to re-join the race as quickly as possible but I dropped down to fifth, which is where I finished. Obviously I would have liked to have made that pass but it didn’t quite work and instead I had to settle for second overall. The championship gap has closed to four points so I’m happy with that and I’m excited for the next two rounds here on Wednesday and Sunday. A big thanks to everyone for getting the series running again and for my team who have continued to work hard during this break.”

Romain Febvre – P3

“It was good. This is my first MXGP race of the year, we came far with my injury and not racing the first two GPs, so I’m really happy about that and also for the team even if I want more. At some point I was faster and was catching the leaders at the end but the last few laps were complicated, finished 3rd twice so I’m happy to be on the podium.”

Jeremy Seewer – P4

“Decent start to the week. We need to consider that we have three races this week as well, so it is important we stay healthy. Any crash that could make you feel stiff a few days after will make it tricky. In the first race I started off calm, I dropped back a bit but I was still in safety mode after not racing for such a long time. I didn’t want to make that mistake of going too hard too soon, and I managed to pick up my pace as the race went on and finished fifth. In race two, I felt I knew the track a lot better and that I had to speed to win. I almost got Glenn in the last lap, but just missed out and missed the podium, but I feel good and I look forward to the next two GP’s here.”

Jeffrey Herlings – P5

“Today could have been better. Some bad starts, and in the first moto I was a bit too slow at the beginning. I came back from last to 4th but wasted too much energy pushing through to the front. I’m definitely not satisfied but we’ve started racing again now and I know what to do for when we go again in three days.”

Arminas Jasikonis – P6

“It was nice to be back racing MXGP again today with a slightly different format with everything on one day. I think it was good. I was consistent with my results, so this is a good thing, sixth place in both races, which is a good place to build from. I rode a little tight early in the first race and just eased my way back into racing the MXGP class. About halfway in I went from ninth to fifth in a couple of laps so that was good and then ended the race in sixth. Race two I was a little too eager and hit the start gate, but as I was on the inside I stayed tight around the first corner and missed a big pile up. I then had a battle with Jorge Prado for a few laps before moving into sixth place around halfway through the race. I then stayed here until the finish so two sixths and sixth overall. The bike was great on the track today, it was a tough track but the bike set up was perfect, so it made it much easier for me.”

Mitch Evans – P19

“It’s good to be back racing and it’s good to back at the GPs with everyone, even though there is a few restrictions. I’m just glad to be here racing really because the surgeon told me when I first had my operation that I would be out for six months so to be on the line in four months, I’m pretty happy with it. Unfortunately I got caught up in the first turn pile ups in both motos, and fought my way back to 19th and 18th so it wasn’t great but I’m treating it as a building process and I need to regroup for Wednesday and work on my starts in order to make my life a bit easier. Still, the first race is done and I’m sure I’ll feel better and better as the season progresses.”

Mitchell Evans - 2020 MXGP of Latvia
Mitchell Evans – 2020 MXGP of Latvia

MXGP of Latvia 2020 – Results

Pos. Rider Nat. Man. Time/Gap
1 Gajser, Tim SLO Honda 34:47.6
2 Coldenhoff, Glenn NED GASGAS +00:01.9
3 Febvre, Romain FRA Kawasaki +00:04.8
4 Herlings, Jeffrey NED KTM +00:05.9
5 Seewer, Jeremy SUI Yamaha +00:07.0
6 Jasikonis, Arminas LTU Husqvarna +00:11.7
7 Cairoli, Antonio ITA KTM +00:22.5
8 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM +00:24.8
9 Paulin, Gautier FRA Yamaha +00:41.4
10 Van Horebeek, Jeremy BEL Honda +00:47.9
11 Vlaanderen, Calvin NED Yamaha +00:52.5
12 Desalle, Clement BEL Kawasaki +00:58.7
13 Cervellin, Michele ITA Yamaha +01:07.4
14 Paturel, Benoit FRA Honda +01:10.5
15 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM +01:16.5
16 Tonus, Arnaud SUI Yamaha +01:21.6
17 Petrov, Petar BUL KTM +01:22.9
18 Bogers, Brian NED KTM +01:34.1
19 Evans, Mitchell AUS Honda +01:36.1

Pos. Rider Nat. Man. Time/Gap
1 Coldenhoff, Glenn NED GASGAS 34:42.6
2 Seewer, Jeremy SUI Yamaha +00:01.2
3 Febvre, Romain FRA Kawasaki +00:18.2
4 Herlings, Jeffrey NED KTM +00:21.0
5 Gajser, Tim SLO Honda +00:23.2
6 Jasikonis, Arminas LTU Husqvarna +00:24.3
7 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM +01:03.3
8 Paturel, Benoit FRA Honda +01:07.9
9 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM +01:15.8
10 Desalle, Clement BEL Kawasaki +01:19.0
11 Paulin, Gautier FRA Yamaha +01:19.8
12 Vlaanderen, Calvin NED Yamaha +01:27.4
13 Bogers, Brian NED KTM +01:31.3
14 Cervellin, Michele ITA Yamaha +01:32.8
15 Lupino, Alessandro ITA Yamaha +01:33.1
16 Jacobi, Henry GER Yamaha +01:34.9
17 Cairoli, Antonio ITA KTM +01:35.0
18 Evans, Mitchell AUS Honda +01:51.4

Pos. Rider Nat. Man. Race 1 Race 2 Total
1 Coldenhoff, Glenn NED GAS 22 25 47
2 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 25 16 41
3 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 20 20 40
4 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 16 22 38
5 Herlings, Jeffrey NED KTM 18 18 36
6 Jasikonis, Arminas LTU HUS 15 15 30
7 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 13 14 27
8 Paulin, Gautier FRA YAM 12 10 22
9 Paturel, Benoit FRA HON 7 13 20
10 Desalle, Clement BEL KAW 9 11 20
11 Vlaanderen, Calvin NED YAM 10 9 19
12 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM 6 12 18
13 Cairoli, Antonio ITA KTM 14 4 18
14 Cervellin, Michele ITA YAM 8 7 15
15 Bogers, Brian NED KTM 3 8 11
16 Van Horebeek, Jeremy BEL HON 11 0 11
17 Lupino, Alessandro ITA YAM 0 6 6
18 Jacobi, Henry GER YAM 0 5 5
19 Evans, Mitchell AUS HON 2 3 5

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Herlings, J. NED KTM 130
2 Gajser, Tim SLO HON 126
3 Coldenhoff, G. NED GAS 103
4 Cairoli, A. ITA KTM 86
5 Jasikonis, A. LTU HUS 83
6 Seewer, Jeremy SUI YAM 80
7 Paulin, G. FRA YAM 80
8 Desalle, C. BEL KAW 80
9 Prado, Jorge ESP KTM 74
10 Van Horebeek, J. BEL HON 50
11 Paturel, B. FRA HON 41
12 Febvre, Romain FRA KAW 40
13 Evans, M. AUS HON 39
14 Cervellin, M. ITA YAM 37
15 Bogers, Brian NED KTM 34
16 Simpson, Shaun GBR KTM 31
17 Jacobi, Henry GER YAM 28
18 Tonus, Arnaud SUI YAM 28
19 Jonass, Pauls LAT HUS 26
20 Tixier, Jordi FRA KTM 21


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MX2 Race 1

MX2 riders were the first to take to the line, with their opening race of the day and as the gate dropped it was the Tom Vialle claiming the FOX Holeshot, followed by Jago Geerts, Roan Van de Moosdijk and Ruben Fernandez. Geerts then crashed out of second, dropping down to ninth position, leaving him a tough job on his hands to catch the leaders.

By lap four the top five was made up of Vialle, Moosdijk, Mathys Boisrame, Rene Hofer and Thomas Kjer Olsen. Vialle continued to pull away, while Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Jed Beaton was making his way back up from P20, despite starting in the top 10. Geerts’ bad luck continued on lap 6, when he went down, dropping from P9 to 22nd place.

A few laps later and we were treated to a battle between Boisrame and Hofer chasing top positions, before Hofer dropped to P5 was Fernandez executed a pass on the KTM rider.

Meanwhile, Ben Watson was locked in a battle with Maxime Renaux, before Watson made a mistake and went off track. Though he did lose any positions straight away.

With three laps to go Vialle continued his lead, as Van de Moosdijk tried to remain within striking distance, while Fernandez separated the two Kawasaki riders with Boisrame in fourth followed by Hofer, Watson, Renaux and Alvin Ostlund.

Vialle proved unstoppable however, taking a clean win with a six-second lead, while Van de Moosdijk was second and Fernandez third. Boisrame and Hofer completed the top five.

Top Australian was Nathan Crawford in 14th, leading Jed Beaton in 15th, with almost nothing to separate the two. Bailey Malkiewicz was 21st.

MX2 Race 2

In race two, it was Vialle once again with a flyer out of the gate as he took the second FOX Holeshot in Latvia, with Boisrame and Van de Moosdijk right there as well. Geerts was hot on their heels, making quick moves and moving into the top three by the end of the lap.

It was bad luck however for Rene Hofer who had a DNF due to a problem with the front wheel, while Jed Beaton was having a much better race, making moves into P8.

With a bad first race, Geerts was not wasting any time in the second as he moved quickly to try passing Van de Moosdijk. A few laps later and Geerts was pushing for Vialle as they came around towards the start side-by-side. Geerts was able to find a gap however and had to muscle his way past the Frenchman to become the new race leader.

In the later stages of the race Watson was eager to catch Van de Moosdijk and vie for fourth place, though his attempts would fail.

Race 2 culminated with a real last lap showdown, as Vialle pushed past Geerts heading into the final lap, before in his eagerness to win Vialle made a mistake allowing Geerts to jump back into first.

That was how the race ended with Jago Geerts taking the win from Vialle, while Boisrame completed the podium. Van de Moosdijk had to settle for fourth, while Watson was fifth.

Top Australian was Jed Beaton in sixth, while Nathan Crawford finished eighth. Bailey Malkiewicz came home in 26th.

Overall it was Vialle who took the GP victory at the MXGP of Latvia with a double podium, while Moosdijk and Boisrame finished second and third respectively. Heading into Round 4, Vialle retains the championship lead with a strong 22-point lead, ahead of Geerts and Beaton.


Tom Vialle – P1

“It was a good weekend and I’m really happy. There was a lot of water on the track in the morning, but I felt good on the bike by the time of the races and made great starts. Jago crashed in the first moto and then I was comfortable in first position. We had a good fight in the second moto and we passed each other on the last lap. It was decent fight and I was happy to overtake him at the end because it was very hot and I was pretty tired. I just made a little mistake and he got me back. It was so close but I’m happy to win the overall.”

Tom Vialle took the round overall - 2020 MXGP of Latvia
Tom Vialle took the round overall – 2020 MXGP of Latvia
Roan Van de Moosdijk – P2

“I had two good starts in the top five and then I just stayed calm the whole day, it was really hot and I had some consistent speed. In the first race I got my best result in MX2 and in the second race, I had a small problem with my bike, but we managed to finish. I am now looking forward to Wednesday.”

Mathys Boisrame – P3

“For me it was a good day, in the first race it was a little bit difficult because I broke my front brake in the start, then all race with no brakes is not easy and I finished fourth. In the second race I started in fourth, I was fast and just wanted to keep cool but overall it was a good weekend and I’m happy to be on the podium.”

Jed Beaton – P9

“Qualifying went really well and I’m happy with my speed. I had a good start in race one and caught the edge of a rut entering a corner early on and fell. I was then dead last and coming through the pack pretty well, I got up to 18th and then someone just ran me off the track. So, the work I did was for nothing and then I had to start over. I used up a little too much energy in that one, basically battling the whole race. In the second moto, I didn’t get the best of starts and ran eighth for a little while. I then pushed hard to get up to sixth but by then fifth was just too far ahead to close in on. I’m looking forward to Wednesday, it’ll be a new race and I’m going in with an open mind so hopefully I can stay out of trouble and get some decent results.”

Nathan Crawford – P12

“I had a few issues with transponders in qualifying and although I put in a really good lap, my transponder didn’t record it. This gave me a poor gate pick which lead to a pretty average start in race one. I battled my way through the pack for the whole race and finished in 14th, which on paper isn’t the best, but I was very happy with my riding. I got a good start in the second race and raced hard to finish 8th, so that was much better and my best result so for on the MX2 World Championship, so that gives me confidence and I feel that I have more speed in me and will build off that result now.”

Pos Rider Nat. Man. Time/Gap
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 35:20.7
2 Van De Moosdijk, Roan NED Kawasaki +00:06.9
3 Fernandez, Ruben ESP Yamaha +00:13.5
4 Boisrame, Mathys FRA Kawasaki +00:19.0
5 Hofer, Rene AUT KTM +00:21.8
6 Watson, Ben GBR Yamaha +00:24.0
7 Renaux, Maxime FRA Yamaha +00:37.9
8 Östlund, Alvin SWE Honda +00:38.1
9 Haarup, Mikkel DEN Kawasaki +00:39.8
10 Forato, Alberto ITA Husqvarna +00:44.1
11 Olsen, Thomas Kjer DEN Husqvarna +00:50.9
12 Genot, Cyril BEL Yamaha +00:52.1
13 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM +00:56.4
14 Crawford, Nathan AUS Honda +00:57.0
15 Beaton, Jed AUS Husqvarna +00:57.0
16 Geerts, Jago BEL Yamaha +01:15.7
17 Rubini, Stephen FRA Honda +01:33.9
18 Roosiorg, Hardi EST KTM +01:39.9
19 Sikyna, Richard SVK KTM +01:41.4
20 Gilbert, Josh GBR Husqvarna +01:42.9
21 Malkiewicz, Bailey AUS Honda +01:51.0

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Time/Gap
1 Geerts, Jago BEL Yamaha 35:16.8
2 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 00:04.3
3 Boisrame, Mathys FRA Kawasaki 00:07.5
4 Van De Moosdijk, Roan NED Kawasaki 00:10.5
5 Watson, Ben GBR Yamaha 00:12.8
6 Beaton, Jed AUS Husqvarna 00:33.5
7 Fernandez, Ruben ESP Yamaha 00:37.7
8 Crawford, Nathan AUS Honda 00:44.9
9 Olsen, Thomas Kjer DEN Husqvarna 00:49.3
10 Renaux, Maxime FRA Yamaha 00:55.0
11 Forato, Alberto ITA Husqvarna 01:02.8
12 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM 01:10.1
13 Östlund, Alvin SWE Honda 01:12.6
14 Genot, Cyril BEL Yamaha 01:15.0
15 Sikyna, Richard SVK KTM 01:44.0
16 Rubini, Stephen FRA Honda 01:50.2
17 Polak, Petr CZE Yamaha 01:53.8
18 Gilbert, Josh GBR Husqvarna 02:01.5
19 Roosiorg, Hardi EST KTM 02:12.9
20 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 1 lap
21 Laengenfelder, Simon GER GASGAS 1 lap
22 Dickinson, Ashton GBR KTM 1 lap
23 Teresak, Jakub CZE KTM 1 lap
24 Vesterinen, Matias FIN KTM 1 lap
25 Haarup, Mikkel DEN Kawasaki 1 lap
26 Malkiewicz, Bailey AUS Honda 1 lap

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Race 1 Race 2 Total
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 25 22 47
2 Van De Moosdijk, Roan NED KAW 22 18 40
3 Boisrame, Mathys FRA KAW 18 20 38
4 Fernandez, Ruben ESP YAM 20 14 34
5 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 15 16 31
6 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 5 25 30
7 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 14 11 25
8 Olsen, Thomas Kjer DEN HUS 10 12 22
9 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 6 15 21
10 Forato, Alberto ITA HUS 11 10 21
11 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 13 8 21
12 Crawford, Nathan AUS HON 7 13 20
13 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM 8 9 17
14 Genot, Cyril BEL YAM 9 7 16
15 Hofer, Rene AUT KTM 16 0 16
16 Haarup, Mikkel DEN KAW 12 0 12
17 Rubini, Stephen FRA HON 4 5 9
18 Sikyna, Richard SVK KTM 2 6 8
19 Roosiorg, Hardi EST KTM 3 2 5
20 Polak, Petr CZE YAM 0 4 4
21 Gilbert, Josh GBR HUS 1 3 4
22 Pancar, Jan SLO KTM 0 1 1
23 Laengenfelder, Simon GER GAS 0 0 0
24 Dickinson, Ashton GBR KTM 0 0 0
25 Teresak, Jakub CZE KTM 0 0 0
26 Vesterinen, Matias FIN KTM 0 0 0
27 Malkiewicz, Bailey AUS HON 0 0 0

Pos Rider Nat. Bike Total
1 Vialle, Tom FRA KTM 134
2 Geerts, Jago BEL YAM 112
3 Beaton, Jed AUS HUS 95
4 Renaux, Maxime FRA YAM 86
5 Watson, Ben GBR YAM 79
6 Olsen, T. DEN HUS 73
7 Van De Moosdijk, R. NED KAW 71
8 Boisrame, M. FRA KAW 70
9 Hofer, Rene AUT KTM 69
10 Haarup, Mikkel DEN KAW 64
11 Forato, A. ITA HUS 49
12 Mewse, Conrad GBR KTM 48
13 Crawford, N. AUS HON 48
14 Fernandez, R. ESP YAM 45
15 Vaessen, Bas NED KTM 35
16 Sydow, Jeremy GER GAS 35
17 Östlund, Alvin SWE HON 34
18 Harrison, M. USA KAW 22
19 Genot, Cyril BEL YAM 21
20 Roosiorg, H. EST KTM 17
21 Laengenfelder, S. GER GAS 16
22 Guadagnini, M. ITA HUS 15
23 Gilbert, Josh GBR HUS 15
24 Sikyna, R. SVK KTM 14
25 Rubini, S. FRA HON 11
26 Malkiewicz, B. AUS HON 9
27 Todd, Wilson AUS KAW 8


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2020 AMA Amateur National Motocross Championships

Following a memorable week showcasing the world’s finest amateur motocross talent the 2020 Monster Energy AMA Amateur National Motocross Championship came to an exciting conclusion on Saturday. The final motos of an action-packed week of racing resulted in the crowning of AMA National Champions across the remaining 17 classes.

2020 AMA Amateur National Motocross Championships

Open Pro Sport

The final day of racing for the week was headlined by Open Pro Sport, where Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Stilez Robertson had an opportunity to wrap up the championship in the two most high profile divisions. Robertson wrapped up the title in 250 Pro Sport on Friday and entered Saturday tied with Yamaha/Rock River/bLU cRU Amateur Motocross Team rider Mason Gonzales atop the Open Pro Sport classification.

All week long Gonzales had his starts dialed in and in the biggest moment he rose to the occasion, emerging with the early lead ahead of Robertson in second. Gonzales dropped the hammer and successfully put some distance between himself and Robertson, but soon the Husqvarna rider closed back in. Just before the halfway point of the moto Robertson applied heavy pressure on the lead and made the pass for the lead stick. Once out front Robertson continued to add to his lead and charged home to take the moto win and clinch the title by six seconds over Gonzales.

Stilez Robertson is the 2020 Nicky Hayden AMA Motocross Horizon Award winner. Photo: Derek Garcia

With his AMA National Championships in both 250 Pro Sport and Open Pro Sport Robertson was named the 2020 Nicky Hayden AMA Motocross Horizon Award winner, the highest honor in amateur motocross.

Stilez Robertson is the 2020 Nicky Hayden AMA Motocross Horizon Award winner. Photo: Derek Garcia
Open Pro Sport Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Stilez Robertson, Bakersfield, Calif., Husqvarna (1-2-1)
  2. Mason Gonzales, Fort Walton Beach, Fla., Yamaha (2-1-2)
  3. Dilan Schwartz, Alpine, Calif., Suzuki (3-4-3)
  4. Vincent Luhovey Jr., Greensburg, Pa., KTM (5-6-7)
  5. Austin Black, Lake Elsinore, Calif., KTM (6-8-5)

250 B

After a pair of wild motos in 250 B, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Matt Leblanc entered Saturday’s final moto in control of his own destiny. With a lead of four points Leblanc enjoyed a comfortable cushion, which allowed him to take a more conservative approach once the gate dropped.

Leblanc settled into fourth on the opening lap, behind early leader and Moto 2 winner Nate Thrasher aboard his Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/KTM, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Nick Romano, and EBR Performance KTM’s Kaeden Amerine. The clear track allowed Thrasher to quickly open up a big lead on the field, leaving the Yamaha duo of Romano and Amerine to battle for second. Leblanc continued to lose touch with the lead trio, and eventually gave up fourth to Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Chance Hymas.

The momentum Thrasher gained from his Moto 2 victory carried over into the final moto, where he continued to pull away en route to securing back-to-back wins. He took the checkered flag 11 seconds ahead of Amerine, who battled his way around Romano for second in the closing laps. Leblanc came through a distant fifth.

Nate Thrasher won the final 250 B moto – Photo: Ken Hill

Leblanc’s consistency proved to be the difference maker in the overall standings, as Thrasher’s ninth-place finish in the first moto was simply too much to overcome despite securing a pair of moto wins. Leblanc’s title is his second of the week, to go along with a 450 B championship.

Matt Leblanc prevailed as 250B champion. Photo: Ken Hill
250 B Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Matthew Leblanc, Breaux Bridge, La., Yamaha (1-2-5)
  2. Nate Thrasher, Livingston, Tenn., KTM (9-1-1)
  3. Chance Hymas, Pocatello, Idaho, Kawasaki (2-5-4)
  4. Kaeden Amerine, Great Bend, Kan., Yamaha (7-4-2)
  5. Nick Romano, Bayside, N.Y., Yamaha (12-3-3)

Schoolboy 1 (12-17) B/C

On the heels of a three-moto sweep in 125cc B/C, Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/KTM’s Max Vohland had the opportunity to wrap up an undefeated week at Loretta Lynn’s with another victory in Schoolboy 1 B/C. He carried a two-point edge over Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Talon Hawkins, where the second generation racer was once again on point aboard his KTM.

Max Vohland completed a perfect week, going a total of 6-0 in motos. Photo: Derek Garcia

When the gate dropped on the final moto the two championship combatants put themselves at the front of the field, with Vohland leading Hawkins. The impressive speed Vohland has displayed all week saw him establish a near two-second lead at the conclusion of the opening lap, which proved to be all the advantage he needed. Vohland continued to build on his lead and rode to a stress-free moto win by almost 13 seconds, securing his undefeated record and a second AMA National Championship. Hawkins earned his third runner-up result, while Yamaha/Rock River/bLU cRU Amateur Motocross Team rider Larry Reyes Jr. rounded out the podium.

Max Vohland completed a perfect week, going a total of 6-0 in motos. Photo: Derek Garcia
Schoolboy 1 (12-17) B/C Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Max Vohland, Granite Bay, Calif., KTM (1-1-1)
  2. Talon Hawkins, Temecula, Calif., Husqvarna (2-2-2)
  3. Larry Reyes Jr., Houston, Texas, Yamaha (3-3-3)
  4. Avery Long, New London, Minn., KTM (8-5-5)
  5. Gage Stine, Woodsboro, Md., KTM (4-11-4)

Schoolboy 2 (12-17) B/C

Parity defined the first two motos of Schoolboy 2 B/C, as three riders entered Saturday’s final moto with a shot at taking home the title. With 1-2 finishes coming into the deciding moto Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Jett Reynolds was in the favorable position, but both KTM Orange Brigade’s Nate Thrasher and Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Chance Hymas were right in the hunt.

Reynolds was right where he wanted to be as Moto 3 got underway, initially sitting second behind KTM rider Wyatt Liebeck before taking over the lead on the second lap. Neither Hymas nor Thrasher were anywhere to be seen, slotting into seventh and 10th, respectively.

Reynolds was able to maintain his position out front, but he was facing heavy and persistent pressure from Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Nick Romano. Less than a second separated the lead duo, and as the moto reached its halfway point Reynolds faltered, giving up the lead to Romano and falling from first to fourth. As that sequence unfolded, both Hymas and Thrasher, who had fought their way into the top four, were able to take advantage of Reynolds’ misfortune, taking over second and third. On the ensuing lap Reynolds dropped another spot to fifth.

Realising a championship was within reach, Hymas dug deep and went to work on Romano for the lead, successfully seizing control of the moto in the waning minutes. One lap later Thrasher moved into second. At that point the Kawasaki of Hymas had opened an insurmountable advantage and he became the class’ third different moto winner, crossing the line two seconds ahead of Thrasher, with Romano third and Reynolds fifth.

The victory was enough to vault Hymas to the top of the overall standings, where he earned a tiebreaker over Thrasher by virtue of Hymas’ Moto 3 win. The finish was undoubtedly one of the most dramatic and exciting of any class at this year’s event.

A win in the final Schoolboy 2 moto vaulted Chance Hymas to the title. Photo: Ken HIll
Schoolboy 2 (12-17) B/C Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Chance Hymas, Pocatello, Idaho, Kawasaki (2-3-1)
  2. Nate Thrasher, Livingston, Tenn., KTM (3-1-2)
  3. Jett Reynolds, Bakersfield, Calif., Kawasaki (1-2-5)
  4. Wyatt Liebeck, New Franken, Wis., KTM (5-8-4)
  5. Kaeden Amerine, Great Bend, Kan., Yamaha (8-4-8)

Supermini 1 (12-15) & Supermini 2 (13-16)

Like Haiden Deegan (Sr. Mini 1 & 2) and Max Vohland (125cc & Schoolboy 1), Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Ryder Difrancesco was one of a few riders chasing a perfect 6-0 run at Loretta Lynn’s. He entered Saturday in control of both the Supermini 1 and Supermini 2 classes, where another pair of good starts and consistent performances were all that separated him from perfection. Difrancesco rose to the occasion on each gate drop and brought home two impressive victories to wrap up a pair of titles on the final day.

The Kawasaki rider first took to the track to complete Supermini 2. Out of the gate, KTM rider Ben Garib continued his hot streak of stellar starts to lead Difrancesco through the opening couple laps. Not to be denied, Difrancesco powered his way into the lead and quickly began to put distance between himself and Garib. Soon enough, he enjoyed a comfortable multi-second lead. Difrancesco continued to charge and brought home the first of two wins by four seconds over Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Evan Ferry, who started sixth, with Garib in third.

As Difrancesco rolled out one last time for Supermini 1 he was determined to make the final moto as stress free as possible. When the gate dropped he seized the moment and emerged with the lead. A blistering opening lap helped Difrancesco put multiple seconds on Ferry in second, and from there the Kawasaki rider never looked back. He stormed to the sweep and a perfect week-long record by just under six seconds. Ferry finished the day with back-to-back runner-up finishes, while Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Gavin Towers finished third.

It capped off a banner week for Difrancesco, who will surely be one of the most talked about riders at Loretta Lynn’s in 2021.

Supermini 1 (12-15) Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Ryder Difrancesco, Bakersfield, Calif., Kawasaki (1-1-1)
  2. Gavin Towers, Venetia, Pa., Kawasaki (2-2-3)
  3. Evan Ferry, Dade City, Fla., Husqvarna (4-5-2)
  4. Jayden Clough, Elko, Minn., KTM (5-3-4)
  5. Jordan Renfro, Lake Park, Ga., KTM (9-9-7)
Supermini 2 (13-16) Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Ryder Difrancesco, Bakersfield, Calif., Kawasaki (1-1-1)
  2. Evan Ferry, Dade City, Fla., Husqvarna (2-2-2)
  3. Benjamin Garib, Chile, KTM (4-3-3)
  4. Gavin Towers, Venetia, Pa., Kawasaki (3-5-4)
  5. Jayden Clough, Elko, Minn., KTM (5-4-5)
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250 Pro Sport

On the heels of a convincing win in the second 250 Pro Sport moto, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Stilez Robertson carried a surge of momentum into the deciding third moto on Friday afternoon. Robertson carried a three-point advantage over Yamaha/Rock River/bLU cRU Amateur Motocross Team rider Mason Gonzales into the final race.

Fully aware of the significance of the moment, Robertson took care of business right out of the gate and put his Husqvarna at the head of the pack. He dropped the hammer on the opening laps and set the fastest lap time of the entire moto to establish an insurmountable seven-second advantage after just two laps. From that moment forward Robertson was able to focus on managing the lead and staying out of trouble, particularly as he approached lapped riders in the late stages of the moto.

After struggling with starts most of the week, BarX/Chaparral/Suzuki’s Dilan Schwartz finally put himself at the front of the field and assumed control of second early on. However, his deficit to Robertson was simply too much to overcome.

Stilez Robertson took home the AMA National Championship in 250 Pro Sport. Photo: Ken Hill

Robertson went unchallenged for virtually the entirety of the moto, taking the moto win and clinching the 250 Pro Sport title by seven seconds over Schwartz. Gonzales, who had been one of the best starters all week, was forced to battle his way from a sixth-place start and fought his way to the final spot on the podium in third.

Stilez Robertson took home the AMA National Championship in 250 Pro Sport. Photo: Ken Hill
250 Pro Sport Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Stilez Robertson, Bakersfield, Calif., Husqvarna (2-1-1)
  2. Dilan Schwartz, Alpine, Calif., Suzuki (1-5-2)
  3. Mason Gonzales, Fort Walton Beach, Fla., Yamaha (3-2-3)
  4. Preston Kilroy, Afton, Wyo., Suzuki (7-3-5)
  5. Austin Black, Lake Elsinore, Calif., KTM (5-7-4)

450 B

The battle atop the 450 B classification was the tightest of any division entering Friday’s final moto as Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Matt Leblanc, Deep South Kawasaki’s Luca Marsalisi, and SmarTop/Bullfrog Spas/MotoConcepts/Honda’s Luke Kalaitzian all sat tied atop the overall classification. With all three riders holding an equal opportunity to take home the title, and each finishing inside the top three in both motos, it was anyone’s guess as to who would prevail. For Leblanc, he hoped the experience from his victory in the class last year would work to his advantage.

As the field jockeyed for position early on it was Kalaitzian who grabbed the early advantage and jumped out to the lead ahead of Leblanc and Husqvarna rider Wyatt Mattson, while Marsalisi was just outside the top five in sixth. A determined Leblanc was able to muscle his way around Kalaitzian to seize control of the race lead. On his first full lap as race leader, Leblanc put his head down and charged out to a multiple-second advantage. As this unfolded, Marsalisi’s eagerness to catch the leaders resulted in misfortune and dropped him to the tail end of the running order, effectively ending his championship hopes.

Matt Leblanc captured his second consecutive title in 450 B.  Photo: Ken Hill

Once he built his gap on the field, Leblanc controlled the remainder of the moto with ease as Kalaitzian encountered misfortune as well in pursuit. Leblanc capped off his second consecutive 450 B championship in dominant fashion, taking the moto win by more than 21 seconds over Mattson, with SLM KTM’s Matthew Curler in third.

Matt Leblanc captured his second consecutive title in 450 B.  Photo: Ken Hill
450 B Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Matthew Leblanc, Breaux Bridge, La., Yamaha (3-1-1)
  2. Luke Kalaitzian, Sun Valley, Calif., Honda (2-2-6)
  3. Matthew Curler, Wills Point, Texas, KTM (4-4-3)
  4. Wyatt Mattson, Murrieta, Calif., Husqvarna (6-6-2)
  5. Cole Bradford, Tampa, Fla., Honda (5-5-4)

125cc (12-17) B/C

As he entered the third and final 125cc B/C moto on Friday for the final race of the day Troy Lee Designs/Red Bull/KTM’s Max Vohland had amassed an undefeated record across two divisions and was in a prime position to wrap up a pair of titles, an accomplishment he achieved one year prior by taking home the Supermini 1 and Supermini 2 championships. On Friday, his first task would be wrapping up the 125cc B/C crown.

When the gate dropped on the final moto, Vohland wasted no time putting his KTM out front and established some breathing room between himself and MTF KTM’s Gage Linville, his primary challenger, at the end of the opening lap. Well aware of the situation at hand, Linville gave his all to keep Vohland within striking distance, ready to take advantage of any mistakes or find an opening to attempt a pass.

As the moto wore on, Vohland’s consistency was putting the pressure on Linville to keep up and as the race surpassed the halfway point Linville lost touch, falling back to a double-digit deficit. Out front, Vohland was on cruise control and easily swept the 125cc B/C motos by nearly 22 seconds over Linville. Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Talon Hawkins followed in third.

Vohland has now won a title in each of the last three classes he entered and is poised to earn a fourth in Schoolboy 1 (12-17) B/C on Saturday.

125cc (12-17) B/C Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Max Vohland, Granite Bay, Calif., KTM (1-1-1)
  2. Gage Linville, Lake Park, Ga., KTM (2-2-2)
  3. Larry Reyes Jr., Houston, Texas, Yamaha (3-4-4)
  4. Talon Hawkins, Temecula, Calif., Husqvarna (7-3-3)
  5. Myles Gilmore, Australia, Yamaha (6-7-9)

Women

Carrying back-to-back moto wins into the final moto on Friday, SBG Racing/Maxxis/Babbitt’s Online Kawasaki’s Jordan Jarvis was in a comfortable spot to bring home a third Women class title thanks to a five-point cushion over KTM Orange Brigade’s Tayler Allred.

All week long Jarvis had been at her best when the gate dropped and that trend continued to start Moto 3 as the Kawasaki rider moved into the early lead over Allred, with Newground Husqvarna’s Hannah Hodges in third. Jarvis laid down her fastest lap of the moto on Lap 2, which helped her put a little breathing room between her and Allred, who was able to secure her hold on second after Hodges encountered misfortune.

Jarvis continued to nail her marks and log consistent laps, which only added to her lead and eventually allowed her to build a double-digit advantage. She finished strong and wrapped up a 1-1-1 sweep of the motos with a winning margin of nearly 19 seconds over Allred, while Rocky Mountain ATV/MC KTM’s Sophia Phelps rounded out the podium in third.

Jordan Jarvis’ week-long dominance continued en route to her third Women’s title. Photo: Ken Hill

With six career AMA National Championships to her credit, Jarvis is now one of the most decorated riders in Loretta Lynn’s history.

Jordan Jarvis’ week-long dominance continued en route to her third Women’s title. Photo: Ken Hill

Australia’s Tayla Jones was on the overall podium thanks to 6-3-4 results across the three motos.

Women Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Jordan Jarvis, Clayton, N.C., Kawasaki (1-1-1)
  2. Tayler Allred, Riverton, Utah, KTM (3-2-2)
  3. Tayla Jones, Australia, Husqvarna (6-3-4)
  4. Sophia Phelps, Saint George, Utah, KTM (9-4-3)
  5. Hannah Hodges, Deland, Fla., Husqvarna (2-5-9)
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Mini Sr. 1 (12-14) & Mini Sr. 2 (13-15)

Undoubtedly one of the hottest riders all week long at Loretta Lynn’s was second generation racer Haiden Deegan. Entering Friday’s final motos for both Mini Sr. 1 and Mini Sr. 2 the KTM Orange Brigade rider had compiled an undefeated record and was poised to go a perfect 6-0 en route to a pair of AMA National Championships. To no one’s surprise, Deegan rose to the occasion yet again and put forth arguably his best rides of the entire event to finish undefeated.

The first race of the day for Deegan came in Mini Sr. 2, where he put his stamp on the winning effort after just a single lap, building an insurmountable lead of more than five seconds ahead of Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green’s Krystian Janik and Triangle Cycles/bLU cRU/Yamaha’s Logan Best, who were engaged in their own battle for the runner-up spot in the overall classification. At the conclusion of the third lap Deegan’s advantage had grown to double-digits and he continued to build on the lead through to the checkered flag, where he wrapped up the sweep of the motos by just under 19 seconds. The battle for second raged on for much of the moto, but Best got the better of Janik in the end to secure the position in the overall standings.

When Deegan returned to the track for the final Mini Sr. 1 moto, he put his KTM to the front early and opened up a lead of more than a second over Best, his closest challenger, at the end of the opening lap. Deegan continued to run at a blistering pace and found himself out front by almost 10 seconds halfway through the moto. That allowed him to maintain the lead and bring home a drama free moto sweep by 18 seconds over Best, followed by KTM rider Landin Pepperd in third.

With his pair of victories, Deegan became the first rider at the 2020 event to bring home multiple AMA National Championships. He’s also the first rider to complete the week undefeated across more than one division.

Mini Sr. 1 (12-14) Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Haiden Deegan, Temecula, Calif., KTM (1-1-1)
  2. Logan Best, North Port, Fla., Yamaha (2-2-2)
  3. Krystian Janik, Oak Lawn, Ill. Kawasaki (3-5-10)
  4. Jeremy Fappani, Scottsdale, Ariz., KTM (6-8-5)
  5. Agustin Barreneche, Colombia, KTM (7-4-11)
Mini Sr. 2 (13-15) Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Haiden Deegan, Temecula, Calif., KTM (1-1-1)
  2. Logan Best, North Port, Fla., Yamaha (2-4-2)
  3. Krystian Janik, Oak Lawn, Ill. Kawasaki (3-2-3)
  4. Adler Caudle, Moore, Okla., KTM (5-10-4)
  5. Casey Cochran, Clermont, Fla., Suzuki (7-3-9)

Mini-E (4-6) Jr.

Friday signified a landmark moment in the history of Loretta Lynn’s as the first ever AMA National Championship was handed out for an electric motorcycle class. The debut of the Mini-E Jr. division in 2020 was well received, with a significant number of entries and alternates. As for the action on the track, one rider, Kade Nightingale, had set the benchmark coming into Friday with wins in the first two motos.

Mini-E (4-6) Jr.

Nightingale found himself in a familiar spot to start the final moto and led the field around to complete the first lap, but Jaydin Smart, Nightingale’s primary rival all week, made a bid for the lead and successfully seized control of the moto. As he attempted to fight back, Nightingale lost ground and faced a multi-second deficit early in the moto.

Smart continued to ride strong and extended his lead further in the closing stages of the moto, becoming just the second rider to win a Mini-E moto. Nightingale settled for second, nearly nine seconds back, but still enjoyed the spoils of the first AMA National Championship in the division thanks to his consistent 1-1-2 moto finishes.

Kade Nightingale took a historic first title in the debut of the Mini-E Jr. class. Photo: Ken Hill
Mini-E (4-6) Jr. Overall Results (Moto Finishes)
  1. Kade Nightingale, Mounds, Okla., KTM (1-1-2)
  2. Jaydin Smart, Berry Creek, Calif., KTM (2-2-1)
  3. Anderson Waldele, Lizella, Ga., KTM (7-3-3)
  4. Jeter Ramirez, El Reno, Okla., KTM (3-6-4)
  5. Gavin McCoy, Clever, Mo., KTM (13-4-5)

Additional AMA Amateur National Champions

  • 250 B Limited: Levi Kitchen, Washougal, Wash., Yamaha (1-1-1)
  • 125 C: Garrett Alumbaugh, Newark, Texas, Yamaha (1-1-1)
  • Vet (30+): Nicholas Hayes, Chester, Va., Kawasaki (1-2-1)
  • 85cc (10-12) Limited: Luke Fauser, Midland, Pa., KTM (1-1-3)
  • Masters (50+): Kevin Walker, Kingsport, Tenn., Suzuki (3-1-1)
  • 51cc (7-8) Limited: Gauge Brown, Cypress, Texas, Cobra (2-2-3)
  • 65cc (10-11) Limited: Seth Dennis, Minneola, Fla., KTM (1-1-2)
  • 250 C: Albert Haberle IV, Atco, N.J, KTM (3-3-3)
  • 65cc (7-9) Limited: Darren Pine, Crosby, Texas, Cobra (1-1-3)
  • 51cc (4-6) Limited: Jaydin Smart, Berry Creek, Calif., Cobra (2-1-1)
  • 51cc (4-6) Shaft Drive Ltd: Grayson Porco, Barberton, Ohio, Yamaha (3-2-2)
  • Senior (40+): Kris Keefer, Hesperia, Calif., Yamaha (1-1-2)
  • 250 C Limited: Jacob Henry, Cortland, N.Y., KTM (3-1-3)
  • Junior (25+): Brandon Scharer, Hamer, S.C., Yamaha (2-1-1)
  • College (18-24): Michael Hicks, Fenton, Mo., KTM (9-1-1)
  • Girls (11-16): Katie Benson, Greer, S.C., KTM (1-1-3)
  • 250 C Jr. (12-17) Limited: Dakota Bender, Winchester, Pa., Honda (1-1-2)
  • 450 B Limited: Levi Kitchen, Washougal, Wash., Yamaha (1-1-1)
  • 85cc (10-12): Luke Fauser, Midland, Pa., KTM (2-3-2)
  • 65cc (7-9): Gage Dunham, Golden, Colo., KTM (5-1-2)
  • 450 C: Cameron Horner, Bozeman, Mont., Kawasaki (1-1-1)
  • Senior (45+): Joe Buskirk, Hanna City, Ill., Suzuki (3-3-3)
  • 65cc (10-11): Seth Dennis, Minneola, Fla., KTM (1-3-2)

Final 2020 FIM Speedway Grand Prix date set for Torun

The FIM and BSI Speedway announced today the final venue in the 2020 FIM Speedway Grand Prix calendar.

The Friday, October 2 event will take place at Torun’s Marian Rose Motoarena in Poland, preceding the Saturday event at the same venue.

The final 2020 FIM Speedway Grand Prix calendar is as follows:

  • August 28-29: Poland (Olympic Stadium, Wroclaw)
  • September 11-12: Poland (Edward Jancarz Stadium, Gorzow)
  • September 18-19: Czech Republic (Marketa Stadium, Prague)
  • October 2-3: Poland (Marian Rose Motoarena, Torun)
Paul Bellamy, Senior Vice President of Motorsports Events at IMG

“We are pleased we are able to have the last two events in Torun, a long-time partner of the series. We appreciate their years of support and are delighted to now finalise the full 2020 calendar.”

As previously announced, each night, riders will compete for the maximum 20 points and full prize money per SGP round.

2020 FIM Speedway Grand Prix
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Source: MCNews.com.au

Dean Ferris seriously injured in practice crash

Ferris injured in Conondale practice crash

RecoveR8 KTM Thor racing have confirmed that three time MX Nationals Champion and MX1 team rider Dean Ferris was injured yesterday, Saturday 8th August whilst practicing at the Connondale circuit in QLD.

Directly following the incident, Dean was airlifted to a local hospital where he was stabilised for symptoms of back and rib pain. Dean has suffered several broken ribs and fractured vertebrae and is in a stable but serious condition. We will announce further updates accordingly regarding Deans progress as his recovery develops and more information becomes available. Dean will be transferred this coming week to Brisbane Hospital for further treatment and evaluation.

Dean and Renae would like to take this time to thank all those involved at the Connondale club for helping Dean following the crash and also everyone for their phone calls and support.

Kevin Williams, Brand and Business Devleopment manager of Raceline Performance

During this time Dean and Renae will not be taking any calls to solely focus on Deans recovery and we will release more information to the public accordingly once it becomes available to us.”

Dean Ferris has signed with Raceline KTM Dean Ferris Facebook photo
Raceline KTM

Source: MCNews.com.au

KTM withdraw from Aussie off-road racing for remainder of 2020

Note: This statement pertains to KTM involvement in AORC, as that is the only in-house racing effort currently run by KTM Australia. Thus KTM supported private teams will likely still take part in motocross competition.

KTM Statement

In response to the ongoing Government imposed restrictions on travel and border closures, the KTM Group has made the difficult decision to forego participating at a Factory level in any Australian national off-road races for the remainder of 2020.

“With daily changes related to travel restrictions, whether or not racing can resume in 2020 is beyond all of our control, with the only certainty being COVID-19 does not abide by any schedule,” states Brad Hagi, Managing Director of the KTM Group Australia and New Zealand.

“This decision has not been made lightly and we would like to thank our outstanding riders, mechanics and dedicated sponsors for their support during these challenging times and look forward to what 2021 and beyond can offer.”

The KTM Group will refocus for the remainder of the year on the dealership network and riders through state-based activities, while looking forward with optimism for the 2021 racing season.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto Weekly | SX likely cancelled | MX Nats setting up for late spring start

Moto News Weekly Wrap
August 4, 2020

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Aussie Supercross in doubt
MX Nationals to start in late Spring

High level discussions are taking place this week to decide the fate of the 2020 Australian Supercross Championship amidst the current travel restrictions put in place by various states to try and counter the COVID-19 pandemic.

MCNews.com.au believe that it is highly likely that no Supercross Championship will take place this year, and that an Australian Motocross Championship will be scheduled to run over some of the months that Supercross would normally take place.

There could be as few as three double-header events that will make up the 2020 Australian Motocross Championship and at this stage the gates are unlikely to drop for round one until late October or possibly even into November.

Motorcycling Australia this week have already added the 2020 Australian Junior Track Championship, Australian Classic and Post Classic Dirt Track Championships, and the 2020 GasGas Australian Trial Championships to the list of cancelled events.  The Australian Junior MX Championships have now suffered the same fate and have been officially cancelled.


AORC Events Calendar Update

The Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship (AORC) presented by MXStore has made the decision to cancel Round 7 and 8 of the Championship which was to be held at Omeo, Victoria on September 19 and 20.

KTM have also released a statement that due to the complications of the pandemic they will not race AORC for the remainder of the year with their factory squad.

2020 Yamaha AORC Presented by MXstore Calendar
  • Round 9 & 10: Wynyard, TAS 17 – 18 Oct 2020
  • Round 11 & 12, Venue TBC 14 – 15 Nov 2020

Will Ruprecht tastes victory in Italy

Australian Will Ruprecht won both days against a well stacked field of top-level competitors racing in the Italian Enduro Championship in what were hot and dusty conditions at Carsoli on the weekend.

Will Ruprecht tasted victory in Italy

The 21-year-old from Taree got the better of fellow Beta rider and reigning champ Steve Holcombe to take victory on his Beta Boano Racing Beta RR300.

Riders contesting the Carsoli Enduro included the likes of Davidea Guarnoni, Alex Salvini, Dan McCanney, Thomas Oldrati, Matteo Cavallo, Brad Freeman and Loic Larrieu.

Ruprecht had not contested the opening two rounds of the series but his perfect scores on the weekend rank him in sixth place in the Italian Enduro Championship points standings and the highest ranked two-stroke rider.

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MXGP stars have final hit-out in the sand of Axel ahead of MXGP getting underway again

The sand of Axel – on the Dutch/Belgian border – provided a suitable training exercise for many MXGP competitors ahead of the Grand Prix of Latvia at the similarly surfaced Kegums circuit; round three of the long-delayed 2020 FIM Motocross World Championship.

Jeffrey Herlings won the opening moto convincingly but the KTM man was caught up in a first turn crash in the second outing. The Dutchman and MXGP standings leader flew back through the field to 5th position, going 1-5 on the day and for 2nd place overall.

Jeffrey Herlings

Today was a good day. I holeshotted the first moto before it was red-flagged and then did the same again and dominated. It was pretty-easy going. I started well in the second moto but a bunch of guys crashed and I ended up with my front wheel stuck between the rear wheel and the fender of another bike. So, it took some time to get free and start again. I was last but worked my way up to the front-runners. I just ran out of time. It was decent practice and beneficial day. I enjoyed it. Now we’re looking forward to Latvia.”

Jeffrey Herlings

Romain Febvre was runner up in the opening moto but the Frenchman won the second to celebrate his first overall victory since joining KRT last winter and was credited with the overall win.

Romain Febvre

It was another good weekend for us; the goal again this weekend was to prepare for the GPs with more starts. Two races, four starts, two holeshots and twice second, so that’s really positive. Here at Axel my feeling was not so good in the first race but better in the second; a win is always a good result but I feel that I can still improve and we’ll continue to work this week before the three GPs in Latvia.

Romain Febvre

Glenn Coldenhoff didn’t quite manage to back up his recent success at Arnhem. The GasGas rider was sixth place for much of the opening moto, the Dutchman took his time before disposing of Benoit Paturel with two laps to go. Coldenhoff then went on to make a last-lap pass on team-mate Ivo Monticelli for fourth place when the Italian became held up by a lapped rider. Coldenhoff went on to claim a great start in race two, rounding the first corner in third place before shadowing early race leader Romain Febvre well into the second half of the race. The 29-year-old then unfortunately clashed with a lapped rider while setting up a pass for the lead and fell. Remounting quickly, Glenn crossed the finish line in fourth place, enough to secure the final step of the overall podium.

Glenn Coldenhoff

Overall, I’m happy with today. Qualifying was really close with everyone and I qualified fifth so that was ok. I felt great ahead of the first race, taking the holeshot but then the race was red flagged. On the restart my start was not so good, around 10th place. I was quickly up to sixth, however the track was quite smooth and one lined, so it was hard to make passes. I knew my fitness was good so I passed Benoit Paturel with two laps to go, then Monticelli got caught up with a back marker so I passed him and finished fourth. Race two I had another good start in third place. I moved into second place quickly and stayed there for most of the race. I was setting up the pass for the lead when I came together with a lapped rider. I dropped back to fourth and took a couple of laps to find my rhythm again. When I did I closed in on third place but by then the race was over. I’m really happy with my MC 450F, we made some small suspension changes for today and they worked, my speed and fitness are good so I’m really looking forward to next weekend in Latvia.

Glenn Coldenhoff

Riders are now heading for three consecutive one-day MXGP World Championship rounds at Kegums in Latvia; the first will take place on Sunday 9th August, the second on Wednesday 12th and the third on Sunday 16th. Herlings currently leads the MXGP World Championship by nine-points over Honda’s Tim Gajser.

Axel International MXGP Overall

  1. Romain Febvre (FRA), Kawasaki 47 points
  2. Jeffrey Herlings (NED), Red Bull KTM 41
  3. Glenn Coldenhoff (NED), GasGas 36
  4. Jeremy Seewer (SUI), Yamaha 35
  5. Arminas Jasikonis (LTU), Husqvarna 34

Axel International MX2 Overall

  1. Jago Geerts (BEL), Yamaha 50 points
  2. Roan VD Moosdijk (NED), Kawasaki 44
  3. Mathys Boisrame (FRA), Kawasaki 40
  4. Rene Hofer (AUT) Red Bull KTM 34
  5. Mikkel Haarup (DEN), Kawasaki 34

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2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Calendar

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Source: MCNews.com.au