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Moto Weekly – GNCC – Rally – AMA MX/SX – NZ Enduro

Moto News Weekly Wrap
June 16, 2020

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Dunlop High Point GNCC

Round six of the 2020 Grand National Cross Country (GNCC) Series was staged last weekend at High Point Raceway in Pennsylvania.

After seven laps and three-hours of racing it was FMF/KTM Factory Racing’s Kailub Russell earning the overall win by 11.5 seconds. Russell just missed out on grabbing the XC1 holeshot, but wasted no time moving into the number one spot as they headed into the woods. Russell maintained his lead for the duration of the race, clinching his fifth overall win of the season.

Kailub Russell (FMF/KTM Factory Racing) clinched his fifth overall win of the season in Pennsylvania.

Starting at the back of the pack on lap one, Australian Josh Strang was on a mission to get to the front and battle for another win. Strang made the necessary passes and move into second place on the fourth lap of racing, however Strang would run out of time to close the gap between Russell and himself. After six rounds of racing, Strang sits 28-points behind Russell in the National Championship points standings.

Josh Strang (Babbitt’s Online/Monster Energy Kawasaki) battled his way back to second overall. PC: Ken Hill

Sherco’s Grant Baylor was battling for a top three position for majority of the race, but as the white flag came out his bike was visibly smoking. After fighting for a top spot, Baylor would end up unable to complete the seventh and final lap of racing.

Kailub Russell (FMF/KTM Factory Racing) clinched his fifth overall win of the season in Pennsylvania.

Australian fast femme Tayla Jones battled back to take her first WXC class win of the season. Jones worked her way up to the lead from a third place start to the day. Jones faced a tough battle to get to the lead as fellow WXC competitor Factory Beta USA’s Rachel Gutish held the lead for the majority of the race. Gutish would be the first to run into lapped riders, and on the last lap she would find herself back into fourth to cross the finish line.

Tayla Jones

Finally got that monkey off my back and grabbed the win this past weekend at the Highpoint GNCC! Wasn’t the easiest race and it kept the fans on their toes right down until the end. I was close to a minute behind in the mid part of the race but was able to charge hard and by the start of the final lap I was on the leaders tail and made the pass with a few miles to go! Got some things to work on to be better next round but definitely pumped to get one under the belt.”

Tayla Jones (Rockstar Energy/LanMills XC/Husqvarna) earned her first WXC class win of the season. PC: Ken Hill

BABS Racing Yamaha/Maxxis’ Becca Sheets and Enduro Engineering KTM’s Mackenzie Tricker capitalised as lapped riders got into the mix of the front runners. Sheets moved into second with Australian Tricker making her way to third in the WXC class. Sheets remains in the points lead after earning the first five WXC class wins of the season.

Here is a link to the full video covering GNCC round six

Rounds 7 and 8 of the GNCC Racing Series will be held the weekend of June 27/28 at the John Penton in Millfield, OH and the weekend of July 11/12 at the Hoosier GNCC in Crawfordsville, IN.

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2020 AMA Supercross
Round 15 of 17 – Salt Lake City

With third place on Sunday night Eli Tomac still has a very handy 24-point lead with 52-points left up for grabs across the final two rounds in this COVID-19 induced quick-fire end to the Monster Energy Supercross season. Racers will be back on track this Wednesday June 17 ahead of the finale on June 21. A very comprehensive blow-by-low race report can be found at this link, while here in Moto Wrap we bring you the quotes, championship standings and video highlights.

Ken Roczen – P1

“Tonight we did really, really good. I felt like I was able to go the full distance in the main, which was great. I knew it was just going to take a few extra days to get everything back lined up after the last couple of rounds and everything that’s been going on with my body. We won our heat race, which was really stacked–I got a holeshot there and it was great. I really felt good with the bike; we’ve been tweaking it a little bit here and there, and I was really gelling with it nicely tonight. I kind of liked the track; the whoops got really chewed up again and I think that was one of my strong points tonight. We ended up getting the win, which was great because the last three rounds have been really tough on me and the team. It was good to come back and turn all that negativity around into something positive. Every time I go out and win for myself and my team, it feels like my first win back. We were the best tonight, which is awesome. The team is happy and I’m happy and looking forward to the race on Wednesday.”

Ken Roczen

Cooper Webb – P2

“The holeshot was huge tonight. Kenny was riding well and I knew he was a little faster, so when he got by me I was just going to try to pace him. I made a charge at the end but we were so close in times it’s hard to make those chunks up. The track was definitely tough – it had a lot of flat turns, which was a little different than what we’re used to. We’ll come back in a few days and try to get the top step.”

Eli Tomac – P3

“Overall it was a good race. I felt good and got in the groove up until halfway and then I got a little squirrelly in the whoops. I tried pushing it for a while and realized it wasn’t worth it to go too wild and I know I need to reserve some of the energy for these last two rounds. It’s not a win, but I’m happy with the result because we’re thinking about the bigger picture.”

Eli Tomac

Zach Osborne – P4

“I came home with a fourth, it’s a decent result but after the last few weeks I want more. I do have to keep things in perspective and know that at the beginning of the season I would have given anything for a string of results like this. So all-in-all, I’m happy but still striving for more.”

Dean Wilson – P6

“I feel like my pace was decent through the whole Main and I think a few different line choices would have helped me throughout the race. I think I had a couple bad lines after watching it and that kind of held me up a little bit. But other than that, I can’t get too frustrated. I gave it my best and that’s all you can do.”

Justin Brayton – P8

“I’m proud of that one–that was pretty good. I didn’t get the greatest of starts, but I made some good passes early. There was just a train of us–like six, seven, eight, nine guys–and I ended up eighth; I felt pretty good about my riding and my effort. The bike was great. I’d have loved a little better track position at the beginning of the race to play into my strength, which was whoops–I felt really good in the whoops all day. Overall, I’m fairly happy with it–not super stoked on the position, but my effort, the bike and the way I was riding were really good. I’m stoked on that and super stoked on the team getting a win with Ken. It’s awesome, and everybody here deserves it.”

Justin Brayton

Justin Barcia – P9

“I had a solid ride in the Heat race in third. It was the best I’ve ridden in a while. In the Main Event, I came out inside the top 10 and was riding really good. I feel like tonight would’ve been a top-five finish, it just didn’t work out that way. I went into one of the ruts before the mechanic’s area, and unfortunately that was like the only soft spot on the track. The rut caved in, my front wheel hit it and I ended up falling. I went all the way back to 16th and charged back to ninth. The result really doesn’t show the way I rode today and the progress that we’ve made on the bike. So that was definitely a little disappointing, but I think overall that’s the best day I’ve ridden and the best I’ve felt on the bike. We just have to take the positives going into these next two races and try to keep it on two wheels, and just keep moving forward.”

Aaron Plessinger – P10

“I think today was pretty good, all in all. I got off to a really bad start in the Main. I really have to figure that out. I have got to get the jump on those guys and just bull dog my way to the front.  I was riding really good though and made my way back up to seventh. At about five minutes to go, I started struggling in the whoops quite a bit. The whoops were really slick, one side of them was cupped out and the middle was really slick. I just kind of tightened up in the last few laps and (Justin) Brayton got by me, (Blake) Baggett got by me and then Justin got by me. So yeah, I was a little frustrated with the way I rode in the last five minutes, but I have to take the positives out of it and move forward. Come Wednesday, I will try and get a better start and just ride the whole race as hard as I can. I’m looking forward to the next one and hopefully we can get off the line and break into the top five.”

450 Video Highlights

450 SX Championship Points

  1. Eli Tomac 342
  2. Ken Roczen 319
  3. Cooper Webb 318
  4. Justin Barcia 255
  5. Jason Anderson 246
  6. Malcolm Stewart 217
  7. Dean Wilson 208
  8. Zach Osborne 205
  9. Justin Brayton 199
  10. Justin Hill 188
  11. Aaron Plessinger 186
  12. Blake Baggett 180
  13. Martin Davalos 157
  14. Vince Friese 141
  15. Adam Cianciarulo 129
  16. Chad Reed 92
  17. Benny Bloss 87
  18. Tyler Bowers 85
  19. Kyle Chisholm 76
  20. Kyle Cunningham 48

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250 Quotes

Austin Forkner – P1

“After a few rounds where I was caught and passed by Dylan, it was my turn to catch him and get around him. It felt totally different to chase him down and there really weren’t a lot of places to make a move since everyone was running pretty much the same lines. I had a small opportunity and I knew I had to take it. I know he would have done the same thing, and has done the same thing. It’s awesome to be in contention for the championship as we head into the final race next week. We’ll see what happens.”

Austin Forkner had to chase down Dylan Ferrandis

Dylan Ferrandis – P2

“It was a bad night for me. I got the holeshot from the outside in the Main which was good, but I made a small mistake and missed a rhythm when I saw a yellow flag and (Austin) Forkner got me after that. I lost some important points for the championship tonight. We have a few days off from racing now before the last round next Sunday and will keep working.”

Jett Lawrence – P3

Cameron McAdoo – P4

“It was tough to see that podium finish slip away because we’ve been working really hard to be up there every time we hit the track. I know I have been riding well and I will take that with me to the final race, but another podium finish would have been sweet to push through the week. Now we’ll have to get back at it and make sure we come out ready to fight for it next Sunday.”

Cameron McAdoo

Michael Mosiman – P5

“It was a tough day, I got into some lapped traffic in the Main Event and made some mistakes that really set me back. I’m disappointed that I had a podium finish going and to have that taken away but I’m fired up for the last round!”

Justin Cooper – P6

“I got a terrible start in the Main, which really hurt me. It made it really tough to come through the pack and I was just not aggressive enough to get by the people that I needed to in the early laps. I can’t expect to be up front battling when I start outside the top 10. We have one more go next Sunday. I’ll come back try and to finish out strong.”

Hunter Lawrence – P7

“Ok day yesterday.. not happy with the overall result 7th but happy with my progress and how I am riding.
Couldn’t be happier for my brother @jettson83 so proud of him and how he is riding. Can’t wait to join you on the box soon.”

Hunter Lawrence scored 16-points in his second ever Supercross event

250 Video Highlights

250 SX West Championship Points

  1. Dylan Ferrandis 181
  2. Austin Forkner 174
  3. Justin Cooper 164
  4. Brandon Hartranft 141
  5. Michael Mosiman 118
  6. Alex Martin 117
  7. Luke Clout 106
  8. Derek Drake 106
  9. Mitch Oldenburg 96
  10. Jacob Hayes 89
  11. Jett Lawrence 79
  12. Carson Brown 74
  13. Martin Castelo 70
  14. Cameron McAdoo 67
  15. Killian Auberson 65

250 SX East Championship Points

  1. Chase Sexton – 166
  2. Shane McElrath – 163
  3. Garrett Marchbanks – 119
  4. Jeremy Martin – 105
  5. Jalek Swoll – 91
  6. Jo Shimoda – 89
  7. Enzo Lopes – 81
  8. RJ Hampshire – 80
  9. Pierce Brown – 73
  10. Kyle Peters – 69

Sunday’s  round was the last conventional round for the 250 West competitors as the next 250 round will see 250 East competitors race on June 17, ahead of the combined 250 East-West showdown on Sunday, June 21.

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Rally Safety
Technical and Safety improvements for 2021

The FIM has announced the sporting rules and safety measures that will apply in the FIM Cross-Country Rally World Championship and Dakar in the RallyGP class for 2021.

The measures that will be applicable for the 2021 Dakar and the 2021 FIM Cross-Country World Championship are:

  • Limitation of the number of rear tyres to 6 for the 12 stages (30 min penalties for non-compliance). For shorter rallies: 1 tyre for 2 Days of racing. For example, a rally consisting of 1 Prologue and 5 days, the limitation will be 3 tyres.
  • Single brand and model of rear tyre for the entire rally (1 hour penalty for non-compliance)
  • Possibility to change only one piston during the entire rally (10 min penalties for non-compliance)
  • No intervention on the motorcycle allowed during refuelling (only the road book dispenser can be opened to change the road book if necessary).
  • Sound alert on danger 2 and 3 (will be tested in Rally Morocco in 2020) using the sentinel.
  • Wearing of an Air Bag Vest equipped with passive safety paddings is mandatory.
  • Work on the itinerary: search for the slowest possible route, setting up slow zones if the ground is poor and fast especially in the HP zones, more WPs on the risk points.
  • First aid training certificate compulsory for all motorcycle riders.

Moreover, the following safety measures will also apply in 2021 for Elite riders (RallyGP Riders):

  • Navigation tower protected by foam for Elite riders (RallyGP Riders), especially the road book reader, best practice in order to reduce impact to the rider.
  • Detachable front windscreen, in case of impact by the rider (mandatory for Elite riders (RallyGP Riders) in 2021 Dakar rules).

No engine power reduction with air-intake restrictors that require an ECU re-setting will be done for the 2021 season. Engine development will be done until the end of 2021 for the reduction of the power of the machines.

Electronic road book will be tested in 2021 and should be implemented in 2022.

Dakar 2021


AMA Pro Motocross will run with spectators

After considerable communication between race organizers, local government, and local health officials, MX Sports Pro Racing has confirmed that the opening two rounds of the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing, will be permitted to allow spectator attendance. The season opening Circle K Ironman National will be held in Crawfordsville, Indiana’s Ironman Raceway on July 18, followed by the WW Ranch National from Jacksonville, Florida’s WW Motocross Park on July 25.  Additional rounds will be announced as the states advance through their phase-in recovery plans to allow large gatherings.

While all of our championship venues have been permitted to reopen for recreational use, there are still varying state-by-state regulations that prevent many of them from allowing spectators at an organized sporting event,” said Roy Janson, MX Sports Pro Racing Competition Director. “As a result, the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship schedule will be rolled out in phases as additional venues are given the green light to welcome fans. Each event organizer is in constant contact with their local government and health officials in order to ensure that a fan-attended event adheres to all health and safety measures implemented by the county, and we’re confident that approach will allow us to have a proper championship calendar that allows for the return of spectators, and follows social distancing guidelines.”

Both the Ironman National and WW Ranch National, along with each remaining round on the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship schedule, will be hosted in compliance with social distancing guidelines that have been established from ongoing communication between local officials. A significant component of those guidelines will be eliminating spectator interaction from competitors and their teams, members of the media, as well as all event staff, meaning paddock access will be limited to credentialed personnel only. Additional details surrounding the implementation of social distancing policies at the 2020 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship will be announced at a later date.

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Jorge Prado undergoes surgery after practice crash

Double FIM MX2 Motocross World Champion Jorge Prado is recovering from a procedure to fix his right collarbone after a fall while training in Belgium on Tuesday.

The 19 year old MXGP class rookie for 2020 suffered a clean break in the wake of his tumble at a circuit in Olmen, Belgium. He was transported to hospital in Herentals for examination and x-rays and entered corrective surgery the same day, performed by Dr Tom Claes, who inserted a plate to help re-join and support the bone. A scan late Tuesday evening showed the operation had been a success and Prado is expected to be back at his residence today . Early indications point to a four-week rehabilitation phase if the injury heals well and the Spaniard can ride his KTM 450 SX-F once more.

Prado defied a short winter of preparation to make his MXGP debut at Matterley Basin and the British Grand Prix at end of February for the first round of the 2020 series. He has been training and working at his base in Belgium in readiness for the resumption of the FIM World Championship that is provisionally scheduled to begin again with the Grand Prix of Russia on August 2nd.

Jorge Prado

It’s disappointing to be dealing with another injury but I’m really happy with how the operation went and how the collarbone is looking. I was riding through a fast corner and there was a rider ahead of me; I just misjudged the line. I lost the front end and went over the handlebars. At first I wasn’t sure if I’d broken anything but after about thirty minutes it was clear that something was wrong. Anyway, we are on the recovery path again and I hope to be able to do some training again after about a week and we’ll wait another three to be back on the bike. Luckily we have some time before the races start again.


Rene Hofer extends KTM contract

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing are pleased to announce a two-year contract extension with FIM MX2 Motocross World Championship rookie Rene Hofer. The 18-year old Austrian will steer the factory KTM 250 SX-F for the 2021 and 2022 Grand Prix seasons.

Hofer was drafted into the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing team for 2020 after showing promise through the EMX European Championship ranks with the KTM 125 SX and the KTM 250 SX-F in the EMX125 and EMX250 divisions. Rene impressed with his maturity, work ethic and strong mentality and brought those characteristics into the beginning of the 2020 Grand Prix campaign where he captured two top five finishes in four motos before the season was halted.

Rene Hofer

So far Hofer has shown encouraging signs of continuing KTM’s powerful lineage in the MX2 class. The manufacturer has owned the category 12 times in the last 16 years; including every season since 2008, with the exception of 2015. Eight different racers have earned the #1 plate while riding the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing KTM 250 SX-F. 2019 rookie and teammate Tom Vialle is the current series leader. Hofer is the first Austrian to represent Red Bull KTM in the principal MX2/MXGP Grand Prix competitions since Robert Jonas at the turn of the century.

Rene Hofer

“I’ve been with KTM for about a decade now and every time I step into the company, I feel like I’m in the right place. It’s only my first year with the factory team but it already feels like home and it’s a pleasure to work and spend time with the guys and achieve our goals together. All I can say is that I am super-excited about what the next two years will bring and I will enjoy every minute of it. From my side, I will obviously put in maximum effort and I know everybody in the team will do the same. Working together with an Austrian brand will hopefully have a positive effect on Austrian motorsport as well. I am extremely grateful for the opportunity to live my dream but I can’t forget to give-it-up to all the people who helped me get here, especially my family.”

Rene Hofer


2020 Yamaha NZ Enduro Championship

Round One (Masterton) AA Class Overall
  1. Dylan Yearbury
  2. Hamish McDonald
  3. Seth Reardon
  4. Jason Dickey
  5. Jason Davis
Round Two (Martinborough) AA Class Overall
  1. Seth Reardon
  2. Dylan Yearbury
  3. Hamish McDonald
  4. Tom Buxton
  5. Paul Whibley
2020 Yamaha NZ Enduro Championship Calendar

Round 1 – 13th June 2020, Masterton
Round 2 – 14th June, Martinborough
Round 3 – 11th July, Santoft (Kapi-Mana MCC)
Round 4 – 12th July, Santoft (Kapi-Mana MCC)

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Source: MCNews.com.au

Massive race report from AMA SX Rnd 15 | Video Highlights

2020 Monster Energy AMA Supercross

Supercross reconvened at Salt Lake City overnight for the fifth round of the seven that will be held without spectators inside Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium to close out the 17-round 2020 AMA Supercross season.

Eli Tomac entered this round with a 27-point advantage over defending champion Cooper Webb. Ken Roczen has been experiencing some health problems of late that has seen him lose pace in the second half of the main events. Would this be the round that the German bounces back..?

450 Heat One

Veteran and dead-set supercross legend Chad Reed scored the hole-shot in the opening 450 Heat ahead of Martin Davalos and Benny Bloss but that pair pushed the Aussie back to third place later on that opening lap.

Chad Reed scored the holeshot in the opening 450 Heat race

Once through to the lead Davalos had clear air and used that to his advantage to pull away from Bloss. Dean Wilson worked his way up to third while things were very busy in a tussle over fourth that involved Adam Enticknap, Chad Reed, Justin Barcia, Zach Osborne and Jason Anderson.

With just over a lap remaining and while holding down a 2.5-second lead, Martin Davalos threw away an almost certain victory, losing the front in a left-hander. Davalos was relegated to eighth position by the time he was up and running again while Bloss had inherited the lead.

At the last lap board Dean Wilson jumped past Bloss and the two battled all the way to the finish line but it was Bloss that took the chequered flag and his first ever heat victory.

Justin Barcia took third ahead of Chad Reed while Zach Osborne rounded out the top five ahead of Justin Brayton and Justin Hill. Davalos salvaged eighth place after leading the first seven laps of what was a ten lap race.

450 Heat One Results

  1. Benny Bloss – KTM
  2. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +1.151s
  3. Justin Barcia – Yamaha +1.928s
  4. Chad Reed – KTM +3.795s
  5. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +4.699s
  6. Justin Brayton – Honda +7.013s
  7. Justin Hill – Honda +8.915s
  8. Martin Davalos – KTM +13.893s
  9. Adam Enticknap – Suzuki +15.878s
  10. Alex Ray – Kawasaki +17.771s

450 Heat Two

Lining up directly alongside each other on the starting gates for the second 450 Heat race were the top four in the championship, Eli Tomac, Ken Roczen, Cooper Webb and Jason Anderson all side-by-side as the gates dropped but it was Roczen that scored the hole-shot and the early race lead from Malcolm Stewart. The #27 Honda rider showing a ‘Back Lives Matter’ patch on the seat of his ‘Seven’ branded nylons to Tomac, Anderson and Webb, the defending champion rounding out the early top five.

The quintuple largely remained in that order for the first six laps until Tomac put a move past Stewart with a minute remaining on the shot clock to take second place and then laid down the fastest lap of the race to try and claw back ground on race leader Ken Roczen. Tomac took almost a full-second out of Roczen on the penultimate lap but the German had enough in reserve to take the chequered flag 1.3-seconds in front of Tomac.

Roczen leading Tomac

Malcolm Stewart was five-seconds further back in third place ahead of Jason Anderson and Cooper Webb while Aaron Plessinger took sixth.

450 Heat Two Results

  1. Ken Roczen – Honda
  2. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki +1.345s
  3. Malcolm Stewart – Honda +6.300s
  4. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +7.234s
  5. Cooper Webb – KTM +7.601s
  6. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha +16.549s
  7. Vince Friese – Honda +19.762s
  8. Tyler Bowers – Kawasaki +22.154s
  9. Kyle Chisholm – Yamaha +24.103s
  10. Broc Tickle – Suzuki +28.023s

450 LCQ

Blake Baggett had to race the LCQ after having problems in his heat race but the KTM rider sailed through the LCQ with a nine-second victory over Broc Tickle. Ryan Breece scored the final transfer position.

450 LCQ Results

  1. Blake Baggett – KTM
  2. Broc Tickle – Suzuki +9.046s
  3. Ryan Breece – Suzuki +15.573s

450 Main

Cooper Webb and Eli Tomac went into turn one side-by-side but as Webb spun the bike through the exit of the corner he then ran a little wide and his rear clipped the front wheel of Tomac which saw the Kawasaki man have to get out of the throttle, by the time he recovered he had been shuffled back to around tenth place.

Supercross 450 Main

Ken Roczen and Jason Anderson were the men left to chase Webb on that opening lap but Anderson then made a mistake and went off the track. The #21 rejoined the race at the back of the field, 20-seconds behind the leaders.

It only took two-minutes for Eli Tomac to work his way up to fifth place while at the front of the pack Ken Roczen had done the Kawasaki rider a big favour by slipping past Cooper Webb for the race lead.

Ken Roczen passes Cooper Webb

Five-minutes in and the battle for third place was hotting up as Tomac caught Malcolm Stewart and Zach Osborne. It didn’t take long for Tomac to take that third place and with 13-minutes remaining he was now five-seconds behind Webb and seven-seconds behind Roczen.

Ken Roczen leading Cooper Webb

A mid-pack melee then unfolded that involved Anderson, Friese, Hill and Bloss, all four of those riders left on the ground after getting caught up while battling for tenth place. Friese and Anderson faring the worst as their bikes were hooked up on each other and it took help from officials for the two machines to finally be separated. Anderson could only watch on as he saw his fourth place in the championship chase evaporating in front of his eyes. The initial accident that caused the melee was initiated when Bloss and Friese went down together, an accident that Chad Reed narrowly managed to avoid and take that tenth position.

Cooper Webb

Up front Ken Roczen was looking smooth and in control. The German had extended his lead over Webb to three-seconds but now Eli Tomac was the fastest man on track and starting to close in on Webb.

This time around Roczen showed no signs of fading. After finally being diagnosed with shingles a few days ago, an extremely painful ailment related to chicken pox but much more painful, Roczen now at least knows one of the things that has been holding him back of late and can hopefully find a way forward though his medical dramas.

Ken Roczen

After looking as though he would easily close in on and pass Webb, Tomac’s charge started to falter. After getting to within two-seconds of Webb the Kawasaki man then started losing ground to the tune of almost a second a lap. With two-minutes left on the clock Tomac was now seven-seconds behind Webb, but had a clear 12-seconds over fourth placed Zach Osborne. Perhaps the championship leader was just playing the safe game and did not want to give Webb the chance to take him out and make a huge leap towards him in the points…

With two laps to run Roczen had backed things off a little and Cooper Webb now had the #94 Honda in his sights and had the hammer down to try and get on terms with Roczen. The German though had his measure and took a clear victory in what was a huge boost to the pysche of the 26-year-old. That victory also saw him move back past Cooper Webb in the championship standings with only two rounds remaining.

Ken Roczen moved back up to second place in the championship standings.

Tomac’s third place good enough for him to only lose two-points on Webb and the Kawasaki man has a very handy 24-point lead with 52-points left up for grabs across the final two rounds in this COVID-19 induced quick-fire end to the season. Racers will be back on track this Wednesday June 17 ahead of the finale on June 21.


450 SX Main Results

  1. Ken Roczen – Honda
  2. Cooper Webb – KTM +3.140s
  3. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki +17.844s
  4. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +29.584s
  5. Malcolm Stewart – Honda +32.389s
  6. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +40.472s
  7. Blake Baggett – KTM +40.865s
  8. Justin Brayton – Honda +42.677s
  9. Justin Barcia – Yamaha +44.729s
  10. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha +1 lap
  11. Chad Reed – KTM +1 lap
  12. Broc Tickle – Suzuki +1 lap
  13. Benny Bloss – KTM +1 lap
  14. Justin Hill – Honda +1 lap
  15. Tyler Bowers – Kawasaki +1 lap
  16. Kyle Chisholm – Yamaha +2 laps
  17. Vince Friese – Honda +2 laps
  18. Adam Enticknap – Suzuki +2 laps
  19. Martin Davalos – KTM +3 laps
  20. Ryan Breece – Suzuki +4 laps

450 Main Video Highlights


450 SX Championship Points

  1. Eli Tomac 342
  2. Ken Roczen 319
  3. Cooper Webb 318
  4. Justin Barcia 255
  5. Jason Anderson 246
  6. Malcolm Stewart 217
  7. Dean Wilson 208
  8. Zach Osborne 205
  9. Justin Brayton 199
  10. Justin Hill 188
  11. Aaron Plessinger 186
  12. Blake Baggett 180
  13. Martin Davalos 157
  14. Vince Friese 141
  15. Adam Cianciarulo 129
  16. Chad Reed 92
  17. Benny Bloss 87
  18. Tyler Bowers 85
  19. Kyle Chisholm 76
  20. Kyle Cunningham 48

250 SX West

The final 250 SX West round until the East-West showdown finale played out once again in front of no spectators this morning in Salt Lake City.

250 Heat One

Jett Lawrence got an absolutely amazing run out of the gates and it looked as though he would score the hole-shot by a country mile but the 16-year-old carried so much speed into turn one that he ran a little wide, quickly filling that hole up the inside was Austin Forkner, who perhaps held Jett out a little wider than he had to, as the Kawasaki rider finally turned his bike on the gas to exit that opening turn his rear tyre clipped the front wheel of Jett’s Geico Honda and pitched the youngster on to the deck. From a perfect start off the gates to the back of the field in one split second. It looked as though Forkner would have a clean run from there but only metres later he himself got hooked up a little with Hunter Lawrence, this time around it was Forkner that came off second best.

Far away from all that melee out front was Justin Cooper and after the opening few laps the Monster Energy Star Yamaha rider was more than four-seconds ahead of Alex Martin while Aussies Hunter Lawrence and Luke Clout were running third and fourth. Jett Lawrence had worked his way up from dead last to seventh while Forkner was ninth.

Moments later Forkner was all over the back of Jett Lawrence and then forced his way up the inside to take sixth. Jett looked to have been taking it a little easy, knowing he was in a safe transport spot, but being passed by Forkner seemed to light a fire underneath his Shift ensconced arse.

Jett followed Forkner for a while before choosing his moment to run up the inside into a very tight left-hander that Forkner had entered a little wide, Jett executed a great turn which sent Forkner further wide and the 16-year-old was back up to fifth. A lap later thoughtForkner capitalised on a mistake by the youngster to re-take that fifth position once again.

Meanwhile up front Justin Cooper had no idea of all the excitement that was being played out behind him and cruised home to an easy victory over Alex Martin.  Hunter Lawrence held on to his third position all the way to the flag.

On the final lap Austin Forkner relegated Penrite Honda’s Luke Clout to fifth while Jett Lawrence claimed sixth.

250 Heat One Results

  1. Justin Cooper – Yamaha
  2. Alex Martin – Suzuki +31.05s
  3. Hunter Lawrence – Honda +5.049s
  4. Austin Forkner – Kawasaki +9.733s
  5. Luke Clout – Honda +10.707s
  6. Jett Lawrence – Honda +11.045s
  7. Robbie Wageman – Yamaha +20.942s

250 Heat Two

Shortly after witnessing one of the most action packed heat races in recent memory the other half of the 250 West field lined up for their heat race. Dylan Ferrandis scored the holeshot but at the end of the first rhythm section Cameron McAdoo put an aggressive pass on the Yamaha rider after he had made a small mistake, leaving the series leader in the dirt and at the back of the field.  It only took Ferrandis a couple of laps to get back inside the top ten and into a secure transfer spot.

At the front of the field Christian Craig had worked his way to the front but was being chased hard by McAdoo but the Honda man held on for the win. Derek Drake rounded out the podium ahead of Brandon Hartranft.

250 Heat Two Results

  1. Christian Craig – Honda
  2. Cameron McAdoo – Kawasaki +1.026s
  3. Derek Drake – KTM +4.873s
  4. Brandon Hartranft – KTM +9.315s
  5. Mitch Oldenburg – Honda +10.525s
  6. Michael Mosiman – Husqvarna +11.201s
  7. Dylan Ferrandis – Yamaha +16.574s

250 LCQ

Aussie privateer Geran Stapleton scored the hole-shot in the LCQ and the Victorian had a few bobbles on the opening lap before settling to take a clear victory over Lorenzo Camporese while Chris Howell scored the final transfer spot.

250 LCQ Results

  1. Geran Stapleton – Honda
  2. Lorenzo Camporese – Kawasaki +1.536s
  3. Chris Howell – Husqvarna +2.245s

250 Main

Dylan Ferrandis got the best run down the start straight and came out the other side of turn one leading Christian Craig and Hunter Lawrence. Right behind Hunter Lawrence was the Kawasaki pairing of Austin Forkner and Cameron McAdoo.   After winning the LCQ 27-year-old Aussie privateer Geran Stapleton had lined up for his first 250 Main of the season and was tenth on the opening lap just ahead of countrymen Jett Lawrence in 11th and Luke Clout in 13th.

Two-minutes in and it was still Ferrandis from Craig while both Forkner and McAdoo had worked their way past Hunter Lawrence before Michael Mosiman then pushed Hunter further back to sixth while Jett was now up to eighth.

Forkner then relegated Craig back to third place and set about chasing down the championship leader. Forkner had gone into this round ten-points behind Ferrandis and needed victory here to strengthen his championship challenge. It only took the Kawasaki rider a couple of laps to pull back more than two-seconds on the defending champ and he then settled into a position only a few bike lengths behind the Frenchman.

Christian Craig fell as the race neared its halfway-point and was shuffled back to ninth place. At this stage of the race the Lawrence brothers were running on track together and after Craig’s mishap were in fifth and sixth positions. The younger Jett squeezing past Hunter with a little over seven-minutes remaining, 20-year-old Hunter in only his second Supercross event while 16-year-old Jett has a few more under his belt. The brothers had Justin Cooper chasing them hard.

Dylan Ferrandis

Ferrandis had responded to the challenge of Forkner and was maintaining a lead of just over a second. Forkner was gaining a lot of time on the flat stop-go turns while Ferrandis seemed to have the upper hand through the jump sections. Lapped traffic started to really become a factor and with five-minutes remaining that had allowed Forkner to get on direct terms with Ferrandis. Forkner then put a very aggressive pass on Ferrandis for the race lead, effectively running into the Frenchman and forcing him off the circuit. By the time Ferrandis was back on track and up to speed he was 4.5-seconds behind Forkner.

Jett Lawrence pulled away from his brother later in the race and closed in on Cameron McAdoo before then taking fourth place with two-minutes remaining. Jett then caught and passed Mosiman for third but the Husqvarna rider then came back at him and held Jett wide in a corner to re-take that third position. The young Aussie though was much faster through the whoops section and moved back up to third with 45-seconds left on the clock.  Mosiman then made a small mistake which saw him passed by McAdoo and that allowed Jett to get away and race to a well-earned podium result. The 16-year-old absolutely pumped with that result and deservedly so.

Despite missing three rounds after that crushing shoulder injury after leading the Main at A2 Jett is now within striking distance of a top ten finish in the championship chase.

Hunter Lawrence scored 16-points in his second ever Supercross event

Hunter Lawrence was caught and passed by Cooper a few minutes before the chequered flag but still took a great 16-point haul from that seventh place finish in what is only his second AMA Supercross event and now has 26-points to his name.

Penrite Honda’s Luke Clout continued his run of scoring points in every single event this season with 11th position here today. That consistency sees Clout a hugely impressive seventh place in the 250 West Championship with only the East-West showdown remaining.

Luke Clout is now seventh in the 250 West Championship standings

In his first ever Main event Victorian privateer Geran Stapleton finished in 20th position and scored his first points of the series. A great achievement in itself for the self-funded 27-year-old.

Austin Forkner though the winner here though, his fourth victory of the season thus far, and in the process the 21-year-old pulled back three-points on second placed Ferrandis to head to the East-West showdown only seven-points behind the defending champion.

Austin Forkner pumped with victory

That round is the last conventional round for the 250 West competitors as the next 250 round will see 250 East competitors race on June 17, ahead of the combined 250 East-West showdown on Sunday, June 21.

250 SX Main West Results

  1. Austin Forkner – Kawasaki
  2. Dylan Ferrandis – Yamaha +1.751s
  3. Jett Lawrence – Honda +23.510s
  4. Cameron McAdoo – Kawasaki +24.946s
  5. Michael Mosiman – Husqvarna +27.654s
  6. Justin Cooper – Yamaha +28.046s
  7. Hunter Lawrence – Honda +28.841s
  8. Brandon Hartranft – KTM +37.584s
  9. Derek Drake – KTM +38.306s
  10. Christian Craig – Honda +42.860s
  11. Luke Clout – Honda +49.716s
  12. Mitch Oldenbug – Honda +1 lap
  13. Mitchell Falk – Honda +1 lap
  14. Martin Castelo – Husqvarna +1 lap
  15. Killian Auberson – Husqvarna +1 lap
  16. Robbie Wageman – Yamaha +1 lap
  17. Logan Karnow – Kawasaki +2 laps
  18. Chris Howell – Husqvarna +3 laps
  19. Derek Kelley – Husqvarna +3 laps
  20. Geran Stapleton – Honda +3 laps

250 Main Video Highlights


250 SX West Championship Points

  1. Dylan Ferrandis 181
  2. Austin Forkner 174
  3. Justin Cooper 164
  4. Brandon Hartranft 141
  5. Michael Mosiman 118
  6. Alex Martin 117
  7. Luke Clout 106
  8. Derek Drake 106
  9. Mitch Oldenburg 96
  10. Jacob Hayes 89
  11. Jett Lawrence 79
  12. Carson Brown 74
  13. Martin Castelo 70
  14. Cameron McAdoo 67
  15. Killian Auberson 65

250 SX East Championship Points

  1. Chase Sexton – 166
  2. Shane McElrath – 163
  3. Garrett Marchbanks – 119
  4. Jeremy Martin – 105
  5. Jalek Swoll – 91
  6. Jo Shimoda – 89
  7. Enzo Lopes – 81
  8. RJ Hampshire – 80
  9. Pierce Brown – 73
  10. Kyle Peters – 69

Source: MCNews.com.au

Aaron Plessinger Race Day Morning Interview

Aaron Plessinger

By Eric Johnson


Race day. Race day in Salt Lake City, Utah for the fifth consecutive date. And Hamilton, Ohio’s Aaron Plessinger is present front and centre as part of the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing Team that will try and make a run at victory later this morning inside the NCAA college football venue. Aaron Plessinger’s 2020 race season has not been bad, but it has also not exactly lit up the klieg lights of America’s sports stadiums either. Hovering in and out of the top 10 and top 15 during the season’s first 14 races – pre and post COVID-19 – Plessinger is looking to this Salt Lake round to make a run at a top five, if not a podium finish. Determined and quite aware of the immediate reality of his 450cc competitive surroundings in Utah, Plessinger has been toiling away, hoping the Salt Lake City dirt can provide him with high performance traction and trajectory tonight as he looks to continue to move on up.

Thanks for taking the time to do this. How’s Salt Lake City treating you?

All good. I have fun doing these interviews. I’m just hanging out in good old Salt Lake City. I booked an Airbnb right in the middle of the city, and dude, it was hectic for the first few days. It was riots and protests gong on. It was pretty crazy.”

AMA SX Rnd PLESSINGER DAYTONA SX OCTOPI GMAaron Plessinger

Really? Even in Salt Lake City?

Yeah, yeah. It was pretty wild. It was all going on right outside of the apartment, so I got the firsthand view of it all. It was pretty crazy. I have a balcony that looks onto the street and, man, I’ve never witnessed anything like it. But it’s going pretty good. Shoot, the city here is unreal. I’ve been mountain biking a few times and rode around the city and went up into the mountains a little bit and the scenery is unreal, dude. The scenery is unbeatable. Race results I haven’t been too, too happy with. I’ve struggled off the starts and trying to come back through, you know? Trying to come back through the 450 pack is not an easy task. I’m looking forward to getting some better starts.”

AMA SX Rnd A Plessinger Multiple SX Rd KardyAaron Plessinger at A1

Yes, going back to the very first Salt Lake City race run on May 31, you’ve raced to 12-12-11-9 main event finishes. What do you make of racing inside the same stadium? As of tonight, this will mark five straight races here at Rice-Eccles Stadium.

Yeah, it’s definitely weird not switching stadiums and just being in the same venue for so long, but it’s kind of cool, actually. I don’t know. I guess I’ve gotten acquainted with the stadium. I will say it’s really weird without fans, man. It’s definitely odd. You can hear everyone talking down on the floor, especially when we’re getting ready to start our bikes up – you can hear a pin drop out there. It’s pretty wild. It was awkward at first and we’ve finally gotten used to it. But it’s definitely weird. You can yell inside the stadium and hear yourself echo. It’s odd and definitely a new experience, for sure.”

So with a race set for this evening, what have you done in, say, the past 24 hours to prepare and be ready?

I got up in the morning and did a little 30-minute spin and a little bit of stretching. Other than that, I’ve just been trying to hang out and enjoy the city a little bit and explore a little bit. I went grocery shopping today. I brought my Xbox with me, so I’ve been playing a little bit of that to kill time, but I’m not too good at it. It’s not so fun sometimes.”

AMA SX Rnd Atlanta Plessinger SX ATL KardyAaron Plessinger in Atlanta

So you’re in Salt Lake City by yourself?

Yeah, I left the family at home. I’m here by myself. Yeah, it’s definitely unusual to be here alone and not have the family here supporting me. I know they’re back home supporting me, but it’s a little different, for sure.

Broad stroke question here, but when taking a quick look back to the 2020 season-opening Angel Stadium round up to this evening’s round in Salt Lake City, what do you make of your racing season thus far?

My season. With my season, I was starting to get going, I guess. Things were starting to come around for me a little bit. I was pretty bummed when Indianapolis got cancelled because that was my home race and I think I was about to get a podium there, man. I was really excited. I had just got off a good week and I was super-bummed when the cancelled it. So far, I man I would like to do better, as we all do, but I have to take the positives out of every race and just go with it and just build off what I’ve been doing. I just have to remind myself every time that I can be up front and really put that into my head. These 450 riders are unreal riders out here. It’s no joke in the 450 class. It’s a struggle, at times. I’m not going to lie. I’ve been keeping it fun and keeping it light and I think that’s what’s been helping me come back happy at every race and keeps a smile on my face. You know, I definitely know I can do better than what I have been doing, it’s just a matter of getting off the line and pushing myself to get up to the front.

Aaron Plessinger in Salt Lake City

You’re a champion. You’ve won very big races. You know you can do it, huh? Maybe the stars just need to line up or something…

Yeah, for sure. It’s just a matter of putting everything together and keeping it there for 20 minutes plus a lap. Yeah, it’s pretty stressful at times when you don’t do as good as you think you’re going to do, but that’s what keeps us coming back. It’s kind of like golf, when you don’t do as good as you think you’re going to do, but you know you can do better. All that keeps you always coming back.”

Aaron Plessinger2018 AMA Supercross 250 West Champion – Aaron Plessinger – Image by Hoppenworld

You guys live and die on your results. It’s a tough business, huh?

Yeah, for sure. And as they say, you’re only as good as your last finish. It’s tough when you don’t perform like you want to.”

The rest of the summer. What can you do? What can you achieve?

I mean, finishing off supercross, I know I can top five. That’s a no-brainer. I’ve been there before and I’ve done it before. It’s just a matter of getting that start and getting it up top. And for outdoors, I’m shooting for the stars. I want to get podiums and I want to get a win. I really love outdoors and I think it’s going to bring me and the team some good. And I think the fans will be there. That pumps me up because as you know, I am definitely a fan person. I love my fans. I’m really, really, really excited for that.”

Aaron Plessinger – Salt Lake City
Source: MCNews.com.au

AMA Supercross Image Gallery from Round 14

AMA Supercross Image Gallery from Round 14 | MCNews.com.au | Motorcycle News, Sport and Reviews

AMA Supercross Images by Hoppenworld

2020 AMA Supercross – Round 13 of 17 – Salt Lake City


Source: MCNews.com.au

Martin Davalos Interview

By Eric Johnson

A few minutes after winning the 2019 250SX East main event at Nashville last April, all veteran rider Martin Davalos could point to was the fact that he wanted to graduate to the premier 450SX class for the 2020 Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.

I just want a 450 ride, man,” exclaimed the native of Ecuador who has spent virtually his entire career racing in the United States. “I’ve been in this class a long time and I just want a shot. I know what I’m capable of doing on that bike, outdoors on a 450 was good for me on the Husky in 2017. I believe in myself, I know I can do it.

Martin DavalosMartin Davalos at Unadilla in 2017

It came at the eleventh hour early last December, but Davalos, a five-time 250SX main event winner during his career, was hired to race a KTM 450 SX-F for Team Tedder/Monster Energy/Lucas Oil/KTM Racing. And thus far, and despite the chaos and uncertainty the Pandemic has cast upon this year’s stadium tour, Davalos and the entire Team Tedder outfit have had plenty to be both pleased and optimistic about. Davalos placed ninth overall in the 2017 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship in his only season racing 450 – But Davalos hit the ground running at Angel Stadium early this year and has performed well throughout the season. Now we are on the outskirts of Salt Lake City where Davalos will contest the final rounds of the 2020 Championship.

Martin, first and foremost, how are you and how have you been?

“Well, obviously, we all went into quarantine and weren’t able to do much, so I took advantage of it all and took some time to enjoy my new son Leo, who just turned nine months old this week. That’s something I didn’t get to do much of when he was born because he was born and the racing season started. I sort of wanted to get the season done and to get my summer going, but at the end of the day, it is what it is. We just kind of made the best out of it and took a little break and enjoyed my son as much as I could. I’m having so much fun with him.”

Martin Davalos

Okay, so as of the resumption of the Monster Energy Supercross Series, you’ve been holding station in the Salt Lake City vicinity, correct?

“Yes, basically, and luckily enough, Dakota and Matt Tedder arranged us a really, really nice Airbnb and we’ve been able to stay in Park City, which is really beautiful. My wife couldn’t come here with me with my son, so I basically came solo and I’m trying to do as much as I can. My wife works full-time, and we’ve just kind of been getting it done. And like you’ve probably been told, we’re quarantined here for the time, so we can’t leave. I’m surrounded by good people here and we’re taking advantage of beautiful Utah is and how nice everything is and I’m continuing my training just as if I were at home. That’s all been keeping me kind of humbled and entertained a little bit.”

You guys have run these consecutive races at Salt Lake’s Rice-Eccles Stadium. What do you make of it all thus far?

“It’s what we have to do. I honestly don’t mind this format because we’re just kind of getting it done. For me, it’s very important on trying to be as fresh as possible for the race. I’m 34 years-old, I’m not 15 or 20 years-old like other people that I’m racing. For me, the race day is the most important thing. I’m trying to get as much possible out race day that I can. I’m also focusing on recovery. As you know, the altitude here is a huge problem. I was born in Ecuador and I kind of know what my body is going to feel like and what I need to do, so I’ve been focusing a lot on that so that I can be as fresh as possible for race day.”

Martin Davalos

As of the late December of 2019 you were without a ride for 2020. Then, during the first week of that month, word dropped that the Tedder/Monster Energy/Lucas Oil/KTM Racing signed you to a race a KTM 450 SX-F in the 2020 Monster Energy Supercross Series. It was as if the stars lined up…?

“As you said Eric, there were no rides. I mean it’s just incredible what everybody has to go through. You know, I’ve known Dakota for a long time. I trained with him at Pro Circuit, as we both shared Ty Kady, who was our trainer. I knew Dakota’s family very well and they’ve been so good to me and are great people. I’ve been very blessed to end up where I am right now. We have a great program. The relationship that Matt Tedder has with factory KTM and the amount of parts that we’re able to get from them is excellent. What I like the most about it all, though, is that I’m really able to focus on and set the bike up the way I want it. I have that freedom. Anything that I need from KTM, they have been good to me and so has WP with the testing. Honestly, at the beginning of the season I was riding Kawasaki and went to Geneva and raced. We didn’t have a lot of time on the bike and I didn’t do much testing because I wanted to get comfortable with it. Honestly, the more I ride the KTM, the better I am. I think more time on the bike is helping me right now. it’s only going to get better. If I decide to race next year and continue my partnership with the Tedders, it’s only going to become a better thing for me. I’m going to be more familiar with the team, the bike and I’ll have more time to test and I think that’s all going to be very important.”

Martin Davalos

It’s very noticeable that KTM and KTM North America have had a heavy hand in creating your race bike. I mean the motorcycle has essentially the same race motor as the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing bikes. Good equipment for you and Team Tedder?

“Yeah, it’s a very good bike, man. I’m super-pumped with what we have going on and the amount of parts that we’re able to get. Everything has been good. During practice, the bikes are great. That was one of my biggest concerns, you know: I wanted to be comfortable in a team where I was ale to set up the bike they way I wanted to and focus on my riding. They’re family owners and they really understand giving me the freedom to do what I wanted to do. They respect that I have a family and I’m able to train at home. Yeah, it’s just been great, man. I’m super, super happy where I am right now and I think that’s another huge part of how my year is going. I think it’s all about just having a good program and being happy with what you’re doing.”

And the results have been coming! I mean going back to Atlanta, you’ve gone 5-14-6-11-8-6 in the last six main events, you are now slotted-in at 13th in 450SX points. That’s encouraging.

“Yeah, and I feel like I have a little more in me. I feel like at the beginning of the year I was kind of riding the bike like a 250F. I’ve had experience on the 450, but it takes a lot of riding and racing to really get what you want. I’m learning and I think I’m getting better and my fitness is getting a lot better. You know, I’m just happy to race. I have a really good team behind me. Matt, Christine and Dakota have done nothing but help me. They’re here for me and want to help me succeed. To be able to have that behind you is obviously a great thing.”

Okay Martin, what’s the masterplan for the rest of the summer, and for the rest of the year, for that matter?

“When I first talked with Matt, we just decided to do supercross and to see where it went. I think I wanted to just take my time with supercross. We didn’t really think much about outdoors. He’s mentioned that I could do a few rounds if I wanted to, but this year has been very awkward already and it sounds like the outdoor races might be limited now. I think this is a good year for me to focus just on my supercross season and go into the summer and just stay on the bike and get some more base fitness going on and talk to Matt and see what options we have for next year and maybe just give it my all next year, you know? I think I’m riding the only Monster Energy KTM in the world. That’s pretty cool. I’m excited, you know? I’m excited to finish of these rounds and to try and get in the top 10 and just really prove myself.”

AMA SX Rnd Glendale Davalos Starts SX PHX KardyMartin Davalos leading at Glendale earlier this season
Source: MCNews.com.au

Detailed blow by blow race report from AMA SX Rnd 14

2020 Monster Energy AMA Supercross

Supercross reconvened at Salt Lake City overnight for the fourth round of the seven that will be held without spectators inside Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium to close out the 2020 AMA Supercross season.

450 Heat One

Zach Osborne took the hole-shot in the opening 450 Heat but Cooper Webb was soon through to the lead. A few turns later Ken Roczen slipped past Osborne to take second place. Malcolm Stewart followed him through shortly afterwards to push Osborne further back to fourth.

Roczen and Webb then went bar-to-bar for the race lead, the German putting on some great moves but the pressure was resisted by the crafty and cool Cooper Webb. Roczen looked quicker but Webb had the track position and played it smart enough to take the win in what was an intriguing race long tussle between the two.

450 Heat One Results

  1. Cooper Webb – KTM
  2. Ken Roczen – Honda +0.621s
  3. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +2.605s
  4. Malcolm Stewart – Honda +4.383s
  5. Justin Barcia – Yamaha +14.673s
  6. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha  +17.021
  7. Chad Reed – KTM +22.540s
  8. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +25.439s
  9. Carlen Gardner – Honda +28.449s
  10. Vince Friese – Honda +33.809s

450 Heat Two

Martin Davalos and Blake Baggett got the best runs out of the gate ahead of Eli Tomac and Justin Brayton in the second of the 450 Heat races. They remained in that order throughout the opening laps before Tomac finally put a move on Baggett halfway through the race and then took his time before slipping last Davalos for the lead with two laps remaining. Baggett then pushed Davalos back to third and they remained in that order at the chequered flag.

450 Heat Two Results

  1. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki
  2. Blake Baggett – KTM +2.880s
  3. Martin Davalos – KTM +5.419s
  4. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +11.166s
  5. Justin Brayton – Honda +14.763s
  6. Kyle Chisholm – Yamaha +19.265s
  7. Broc Tickle – Suzuki RM-Z450 +19.472s
  8. Tyler Bowers – Kawasaki +21.045s
  9. Justin Hill – Honda +21.869s
  10. Benny Bloss – KTM +23.588s

450 LCQ

  1. Benny Bloss – KTM
  2. Vince Friese – Honda +3.966s
  3. Alex Ray – Kawasaki +5.186s

450 Main

Cooper Webb and Ken Roczen went around the first turn side=by-side but it was the Honda man that was officially accredited with the hole-shot. Zach Osborne, Chad Reed and Blake Baggett also made great starts and filled positions third through fifth throughout the opening laps of the track. Championship leader Eli Tomac was stuck in the pack right back in 15th place.

Zach Osborne made a great start

Cooper Webb maintained station at the front of the field but Ken Roczen was all over him. The Honda man clearly displayed superior speed through the whoops section every time but could not get quite close enough to show Webb a wheel until seven-minutes in to the race. The German briefly then took the lead but Webb got him right back at the end of the next section and went about reasserting his dominance.

With 11-minutes remaining on the clock Blake Bagget was holding down third position almost four-seconds behind the leading duo, but with another three-seconds over fourth placed Zach Osborne. Eli Tomac was up to fifth after pushing his way past Martin Davalos, Chad Reed and Justin Barcia.

As the race progressed into its second half Ken Roczen started to fade. The German again dealing with those respiratory issues that have seen him run out of puff in the latter stages of the Mains of late. After looking the fastest rider in the opening laps, and recording the fastest lap of the race, he started losing more than a second a lap to Webb in the second half of the race.

Zach Osborne then started reeling in Roczen hand-over-fist and slipped past the #94 Honda with seven-minutes left on the clock to take that second position. Two-minutes later Blake Baggett was pushed back to fourth. A minute later Tomac relegated Roczen further back to fifth in what would have been a devastating blow to Roczen’s pysche but he could offer up no real resistance.

Justin Barcia was running in ninth place behind Dean Wilson and Jason Anderson but with three-minutes remaining Barcia headed off the track and out of the race. That would cost him his fourth ranking in the series standings.

Tomac was challenging Baggett for third position during the final laps and took that place just as the shot clock hit zero to signal one lap remaining.

The clear winner though was Cooper Webb and with that victory the defending champion moved up to second place in the series standings, 27-points behind championship leader Eli Tomac.

Cooper Webb – P1

Cooper Webb – P1

It was a great race, I almost got the holeshot and led every lap, which is the first time I’ve been able to do that this year. Kenny was riding really well at the beginning. I made a few mistakes and we battled there for a second but I regained focus and I was able to ride my laps and ended up getting a decent lead, which is nice. I feel like the first three we’ve been battling down to the last lap so it was cool to be able to enjoy that one a little bit more, not so stressful.”

Cooper Webb – P1

Zach Osborne was a fast and tidy second place with a handy buffer over third placed Tomac and moved up to eighth in the series standings off the back of that 23-point score today.

Zach Osborne – P2

I feel like we’re building some momentum here. I’ve been enjoying this Salt Lake trip and I feel like I’m in a good headspace, which is good. I managed two good starts tonight and was able to come away with my second podium of the stretch here. I really felt like I was in a good position tonight and we had a good result so I’m pretty happy with it.

Zach Osborne – P2

There are now three rounds remaining in the 2020 Monster Energy Supercross Championship in this COVID-19 induced quick-fire end to the season. Racers will be back on track this Sunday June 14 then Wednesdauy June 17 ahead of the finale on June 21.


450 SX Main Results

  1. Cooper Webb – KTM
  2. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +5.091s
  3. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki +8.693s
  4. Blake Baggett – KTM +9.622s
  5. Ken Roczen – Honda +16.618s
  6. Martin Davalos – KTM +20.255s
  7. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +25.011s
  8. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +38.322s
  9. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha +43.141s
  10. Benny Bloss – KTM +49.391s
  11. Chad Reed – KTM +1 lap
  12. Justin Brayton – Honda +1 lap
  13. Justin Hill – Honda +1 lap
  14. Tyler Bowers – Kawasaki +1 lap
  15. Vince Friese – Honda +1 lap

450 SX Main Results
1. Cooper Webb – KTM
2. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +5.091s
3. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki +8.693s


450 SX Championship Points

  1. Eli Tomac – 322
  2. Cooper Webb – 295
  3. Ken Roczen – 293
  4. Jason Anderson – 245
  5. Justin Barcia – 241
  6. Malcolm Stewart – 199
  7. Dean Wilson – 191
  8. Zach Osborne – 186
  9. Justin Brayton – 184
  10. Justin Hill – 179

250 SX West

The long awaited return of the 250 West competitors was staged overnight and the event also marked the return of the injured Lawrence brothers. 20-year-old Hunter getting back in the game after an ACL re-build, while younger brother Jett is making his return following a collar-bone injury sustained in the most sensational fashion while battling series leader Dylan Ferrandis for the race win at Anaheim 2. Luke Clout and Geran Stapleton made it four Aussies in the 36-rider 250 West entry list.

250 Heat One

Series leader Dylan Ferrandis scored the hole-shot in the opening heat but was chased hard throughout the opening laps by Cameron McAdoo. The 22-year-old Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki rider did not let Ferrandis break away and doggedly pursued the Frenchman before making a bold move halfway through the heat that sent Ferrandis over the bars. It was a solid but fair move that only looked so sensational due to Ferrandis’ rear tyre going underneath the bike of McAdoo before then gripping onto the rear tyre of his machine and climbing up and over it, pitching the Yamaha up on to its nose. Ferrandis rejoined the race in seventh position with some damage to his bars and controls.

It looked as though McAdoo was home and hosed but with only seconds left on the shot clock a late challenge by Mosiman took both riders down! Christian Craig inherited the lead and sailed home to what ended up being an easy victory.

Both Mosiman and McAdoo got up and running again to round out the podium ahead of Alex Martin while Dylan Ferrandis had worked his way back up to fifth ahead of Penrite Honda’s Luke Clout by the chequered flag. Geran Stapleton was tenth, thereby just missing out on an automatic transfer spot to the Main.

250 Heat One Results

  1. Christian Craig – Honda
  2. Michael Mosiman – Husqvarna +2.216s
  3. Cameron McAdoo – Kawasaki +3.132s
  4. Alex Martin – Suzuki +6.606s
  5. Dylan Ferrandis – Yamaha +9.325s
  6. Luke Clout – Honda +12.535s
  7. Carson Brown – Husqvarna +14.384s
  8. Robbie Wageman – Yamaha +22.358s
  9. Logan Karnow – Kawasaki +26.642s
  10. Geran Stapleton – Honda +28.987s

250 Heat Two

Austin Forkner scored the hole-shot ahead of Jett Lawrence before Hartranft pushed Jett back to third place but the 16-year-old Aussie returned the favour shortly thereafter to move back up to second place.

Forkner had the upper hand throughout but a late charge by Jett Lawrence saw the determined youngster almost get on terms with Forkner but then lost the front and hit the deck.  Jett recovered got up and going again and managed to retain that second place all the way to the flag. Forkner a clear winner and Brandon Hartranft rounded out the podium ahead of Justin Cooper.

Further back Hunter Lawrence had been runing seventh before losing the front and then coming together with Mitchell Falk which saw both riders go down. Hunter slipped to tenth place which meant the 20-year-old was heading to the LCQ.

250 Heat Two Results

  1. Austin Forkner – Kawasaki
  2. Jett Lawrence – Honda +9.418s
  3. Brandon Hartranft – KTM +10.266s
  4. Justin Cooper – Yamaha +10.551s
  5. Mitch Oldenburg – Honda +28.283s
  6. Derek Kelley – Husqvarna +29.797s
  7. Martin Castelo – Husqvarna +34.758s
  8. Derek Drake – KTM +39.985s
  9. Bryson Gardner – Honda +43.035s
  10. Hunter Lawrence – Honda +50.908s

250 LCQ

Hunter Lawrence had to battle Killian Auiberson for the lead on the opening lap but he eventually got the better of the Husqvarna rider and streaked away to a clear 15-second victory in the LCQ to secure his spot in the 250 Main. Countryman Geran Stapleton had some problems in the LCQ and did not make the cut for a transfer position to the Main.

250 LCQ Results

  1. Hunter Lawrence – Honda
  2. Mitchell Falk – Honda +14.807s
  3. Killian Auberson – Husqvarna +19.455s

250 Main

Cooper Webb scored the hole-shot but was quickly gazumped by Austin Forkner and Cameron McAdoo. Jett Lawrence was right in the mix at the first turn but managed to stay out of any melee and looked to be treading a little carefully.  Jett Lawrence just avoided contact with Ferrandis a couple of laps into the race which nearly put him down but he stayed upright to maintain his position.  His brother Hunter though got caught up avoiding a stopped rider in a right-hander and dropped his machine before rejoining near the back of the field.

Jett Lawrence was in fifth place and resisting some heavy pressure from a determined Alex Martin before managing to break away a little as Michael Mosiman pushed Martin back to seventh.

Up front Forkner had broke away from Cooper while Ferrandis then made his way past Cooper to take third place as the Main reached its halfway point. A lap later Ferrandis moved up to second place after passing McAdoo.

Jett Lawrence was looking solid in fifth place and had started to close in on Cooper before going down in the whoops with six-minutes remaining. By the time he was up and running again the 16-year-old had been pushed all the way back to 12th, just in front of countryman Luke Clout. Hunter Lawrence had been recovering from that early tumble and was in 15th with five-minutes left on the clock.

At the last lap board Forkner had three-seconds on Ferrandis and a further ten-seconds on McAdoo. The trio finished in that order at the chequered flag.

The Aussie triumvirate of Jett Lawrence, Luke Clout and Hunter Lawrence filled positions 11, 12 and 13.

250 West competitors will next race on Sunday June 14 before a 250 East round on June 17 ahead of the 250 East-West showdown on Sunday, June 21.

250 SX Main West Results

  1. Austin Forkner – Kawasaki
  2. Dylan Ferrandis – Yamaha +3.109s
  3. Cameron McAdoo – Kawasaki +14.151s
  4. Justin Cooper – Yamaha +16.300s
  5. Michael Mosiman – Husqvarna +17.315s
  6. Alex Martin – Suzuki +31.222s
  7. Brandon Hartranft – KTM +33.615s
  8. Christian Craig – Honda +35.687s
  9. Derek Drake – KTM +41.214s
  10. Mitch Oldenburg – Honda +45.173s
  11. Jett Lawrence – Honda +45.636s
  12. Luke Clout – Honda +1 lap
  13. Hunter Lawrence – Honda +1 lap
  14. Derek Kelley – Husqvarna +1 lap
  15. Martin Castelo – Husqvarna +1 lap

250 SX West Championship Points

  1. Dylan Ferrandis 158
  2. Austin Forkner 148
  3. Justin Cooper 147
  4. Brandon Hartranft 126
  5. Alex Martin 115
  6. Michael Mosiman 100
  7. Luke Clout 94
  8. Derek Drake 92
  9. Jacob Hayes 89
  10. Mitch Oldenburg 85

250 SX East Championship Points

  1. Chase Sexton – 166
  2. Shane McElrath – 163
  3. Garrett Marchbanks – 119
  4. Jeremy Martin – 105
  5. Jalek Swoll – 91
  6. Jo Shimoda – 89
  7. Enzo Lopes – 81
  8. RJ Hampshire – 80
  9. Pierce Brown – 73
  10. Kyle Peters – 69

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto wrap | Duncan wins gong | SX quotes & highlights

Moto Wrap
June 9, 2022

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Courtney Duncan
NZ Sports Woman of the year

Last season the twenty-four-year-old from Dunedin finally achieved her goal of winning the FIM World WMX Women’s Motocross Championship at the fourth attempt; her stunning success saw Courtney win nine of the ten races in the series.

Her overwhelming march to the title as she shrugged off three years of misfortune prior to joining Kawasaki has now brought her the ultimate recognition in her native New Zealand when she was named as NZME Sports Woman of the Year at the ASB Otago Sports Awards; it was a tough category which also featured Netball World Cup winner Gina Crampton and para-athletics world championships silver medallist Holly Robinson.

She currently leads the 2020 WMX world series after four races in March before racing activities were suspended worldwide; the next round of the series is tentatively scheduled for the fifth of September at Afyonkarahisar in Turkey.

Courtney Duncan

‘‘There were definitely some days when I’d lay in bed wondering was I ever going to get across the line. It weighed on me a lot but I still had that belief and knowledge deep down that I had something that was good enough. It was just about putting all the pieces of the puzzle together and just figuring it out was the main thing.

MXGP Rnd Turkey Courtney DuncanCourtney Duncan


2020 AMA Supercross
Round 13 of 17 – Salt Lake City
450 Main Video Highlights


450 SX Results

  1. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki
  2. Cooper Webb – KTM +1.281s
  3. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +43.995s
  4. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +1 lap
  5. Malcolm Stewart – Honda +1 lap
  6. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +1 lap
  7. Justin Brayton – Honda +1 lap
  8. Martin Davalos – KTM +1 lap
  9. Justin Barcia – Yamaha +1 lap
  10. Ken Roczen – Honda + 2 laps
  11. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha + 2 laps
  12. Blake Baggett – KTM + 2 laps
  13. Benny Bloss – KTM + 2 laps
  14. Chad Reed – KTM + 2 laps
  15. Justin Hill – Honda + 3 laps

450 SX Championship Points

  1. Eli Tomac – 301
  2. Ken Roczen – 275
  3. Cooper Webb – 269
  4. Justin Barcia – 239
  5. Jason Anderson – 229
  6. Malcolm Stewart – 198
  7. Dean Wilson – 176
  8. Justin Brayton – 173
  9. Justin Hill – 169
  10. Zach Osborne – 163
  11. Aaron Plessinger – 159
  12. Blake Baggett – 145
  13. Martin Davalos – 136
  14. Adam Cianciarulo – 129
  15. Vince Friese – 127
  16. Chad Reed 68

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Four Supercross rounds remaining

There are four rounds remaining in the 2020 Monster Energy Supercross Championship in this COVID-19 induced quick-fire end to the season. Racers will be back on track this Wednesday, June 10, then again on June 14 and June 17 ahead of the finale on June 21.


450 Quotes

Eli Tomac – P1

“We had a pretty great battle going, but I did not want to let the win go. I ended up getting a triple combo at the end of that rhythm, which was the real make or break moment for me. That was a great battle and a lot of fun. The track had some great character and it was just a great day for the Monster Energy Kawasaki team.”

Eli Tomac took a 13-point lead over Roczen into the round and left with a 26-point buffer

Cooper Webb – P2

“It sucks I got second but man, it was a battle from lap one until the last lap. The conditions were tricky and the lappers were gnarly – a lot of it came down to that. It seemed like one lap I might get it right and one lap he might get it right but we were really pushing hard. It was a fun race even though I got beat. We’ll try to get the top spot on Wednesday.”

Jason Anderson – P3

“I’m happy to be up here. I feel like I’m getting closer to old form and my headspace is a little better so I’m just trying to keep building. I feel like I’ve had some good speed the last two races so I’m going to work on some stuff and come back at the next round and hopefully try to make it a little less easy on the championship guys.”

Jason Anderson

Zach Osborne – P4

“It was a decent day, I felt really good in the one qualifying session that we got and the heat race was good with the hole-shot even though I had a good little spill. I came out with a hole-shot in the Main but I rode kind of tight and the track was a little sketchy for me. I didn’t really find the flow right off the bat so it was a tough Main but it was a fourth-place, so we’ll take it. I’ve got a little bit of consistency to build with so I’m happy with it.”

Zach Osborne scored the hole-shot but was then quickly overhauled

Dean Wilson – P6

“It was a little bit different of a day with the weather and having only one qualifier, which went really well with a second. Unfortunately, with the rain I spun really hard on the gate and was pretty much dead last going down the start straight. I knew it was important to stay on two wheels and just try to click people off every lap, so that’s what I did. I don’t think it was my best riding but I managed to get a sixth, which is not too bad considering I came through the pack with a bad start.”

Dean Wilson

Justin Brayton – P7

What a crazy day–the weather was just wild! It rained all day yesterday and most of the day today. Then the sun came out right after practice, which kind of dried up the track for the heat race, which was actually pretty good. I got third and then the rain blew in again. It dropped like 10 to 15 degrees and was raining on us before the main event, but all in all it was a good day. I ended up seventh–ran sixth for a long time and then got passed with a few to go. Overall, it was a solid night. Of course I want to be closer to the top five, but I feel like we’re working our way there. We made some awesome bike changes this week and that really helped me in the muddy conditions. When I got off the track, I told the guys that I can’t wait to ride this setup in the dry, so hopefully we’ll be able to do that here in a couple days.

Justin Barcia – P9

It was a tough day. Not a whole lot more to say than that. It didn’t go the way I wanted to. We’re definitely going to keep trying, stay positive and keep moving forward. I’m really looking forward to going racing in two days to try and turn things around.

Ken Roczen – P10

These past two races obviously haven’t been the results that we needed to be in the fight. That doesn’t mean that we aren’t still trying. Sometimes you’re dealt a hand of cards that are completely out of your control, but we’re trying to make the smartest and quickest decisions to get through some of the health issues that keep coming up. My heat went well and I led a handful of laps until I got a flat. The boulders started popping up and I think I know right where the rock got me in the whoops. With the weather changing, we tried to make a tyre decision that would give me the best chances of not having that same thing happen in the main, but that obviously didn’t work well. I’m not the type of guy that likes to roll around or is satisfied with a fifth or tenth place finish, but sometimes if that’s the best you can do for the night, you just have to accept it for what it is. I can’t thank my team enough for being patient with me and for never wavering in their support. I know the sacrifices they’re making to be up here and all of the work they’re putting in to give me the best equipment and support, and I want to do better for them. I couldn’t be more grateful for them and I hope we can turn this around and be in a better position to put up a fight on Wednesday.

Ken Roczen’s title hopes were dealt a massive blow

Aaron Plessinger – P11

It started out pretty muddy and I was doing really well in practice. I went out for the Heat race and I struggled pretty hard. The track dried out, got pretty rough but I got a good start and was moving forward before I started to struggle and fell back to fifth. In the Main, it was pretty much the same thing. I was moving forward and got up into seventh and was right on (Ken) Roczen for sixth, then I tightened up and couldn’t hold on anymore and fell back to 11th.”

450 SX Results
1. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki
2. Cooper Webb – KTM +1.281s
3. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +43.995s


250 Main Video Highlights


250 SX East Results

  1. Chase Sexton – Honda
  2. Shane McElrath – Yamaha +8.023s
  3. Colt Nichols – Yamaha +20.252s
  4. Pierce Brown – KTM +48.893s
  5. Kyle Peters – Honda +1 lap
  6. Jalek Swoll – Husqvarna +1 lap
  7. Chris Blose – Honda +1 lap
  8. Enzo Lopes – Yamaha +1 lap
  9. Jace Owen – Honda +1 lap
  10. John Short – Honda +1 lap
  11. Jo Shimoda – Honda +1 lap
  12. Hunter Sayles – KTM +2 laps
  13. Justin Starling – Husqvarna +2 laps
  14. Carter Halpain – Yamaha +2 laps
  15. Wilson Fleming – Honda +2 laps

250 SX East Championship Points

  1. Chase Sexton – 166
  2. Shane McElrath – 163
  3. Garrett Marchbanks – 119
  4. Jeremy Martin – 105
  5. Jalek Swoll – 91
  6. Jo Shimoda – 89
  7. Enzo Lopes – 81
  8. RJ Hampshire – 80
  9. Pierce Brown – 73
  10. Kyle Peters – 69

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Jett Lawrence makes return to racing this week

When Supercross reconvenes mid-week it will be the turn of the 250 West competitors to swing back into action which of course means the return of popular young Aussie Jett Lawrence after that sickening crash early in the season at Anaheim 2. Jett’s older brother Hunter will join him on track and taste the heat of Supercross competition for the first time this season as the young GEICO Honda team-mates aim to make a splash. 250 West competitors will race on Wednesday June 10 and Sunday June 14 before a 250 East round on June 17 ahead of the 250 East-West showdown on Sunday, June 21.

AMA SX Rnd Anaheim LawrenceJ SX A Kardy CoverBJett Lawrence broke his collarbone at Anaheim II but will be back racing later this week – Image Hoppenworld


Another pair of Aussie brothers making their mark

Australian motocross has often seen successful families in racing. Names like Jay and Ryan Marmont, Craig and Danny Anderson to more recently Mitch and Richie Evans, have all enjoyed success on the race track and done it has a family as they travel the country enjoying a sport and hobby they all love. Then there is of course the Lawrence brothers making their mark in America after cutting their teeth in the junior ranks of Australian motocross and now another pair of young Aussie brothers are looking to continue the sibling tradition. Based in Goulburn, New South Wales, Ryder and Kayd Kingsford are starting to make waves in the junior racing as they spend their weekends travelling the country in search of events and competition.

Ryder Kingsford

Ryder, the oldest brother at age 14, is the 2019 Australian 12-14 years 85cc champion and backed that up with a third place in the 13-14 years 125cc class. For 2020, he makes the full transition onto the bigger bikes and will be contesting the 125 and 250cc divisions.

And his talent is not just on a motocross track, he is pretty handy inside the stadiums on a supercross track where he also won the 85cc class at the 2019 Australian Supercross Championships.

Ryder was also selected to represent Australia at the world junior titles in 2019 and the family travelled to Italy where he finished a very respectable 13th place in the 85cc class.

Ryder Kingsford

2019 was a great year on my 85 and I was able to win a few things but I’m really excited about racing the 250 this year and contesting as many events as we can,” Ryder explains. “The YZ250F is such an awesome bike and once I got on it, I didn’t want to get off and its been so much fun to learn how to ride a four stroke properly. My goal this year to race both the 125 and 250 classes and I would love to win a national championship on both.”

Ryder Kingsford

Kayd, now 12, has moved from the 65 and 85cc small wheel classes to focus on the 85cc big wheel and a YZ125 isn’t too far off into the future. Kayd was one of the few selected riders to represent Yamaha and the YZ65 when the bike was released in mid 2018 and he has achieved significant success on the bike but is now looking forward to racing the bigger machines.

Both riders have been important members of the GYTR Yamaha Junior Racing Team since joining in 2017 and haven grown into great ambassadors for the brand and feisty competitors on the track.

The last few years with Yamaha Junior Racing has been amazing,” comments their father and team leader, Scott. “We have been humbled by the amount of support we receive from not just Yamaha but also the team sponsors and our NSW guru, Darren Thompson, as running two riders can be costly and time consuming. We have been fortunate in the last couple of years that while Kayd has been racing two bikes, the 65 and the 85, Ryder had been just on one, the 85, but now both guys can contest two classes at most events, so I will be a busy man with the pressure washer and the air-filter changes between races.”

Living in the country also allows the family to have a track in their back yard to practice and train on. Both riders are still attending school, but once they are home and the homework is done, they hit the track several times a day in preparation for up coming events.

Having the luxury to access a track at any time has been great and it frees up so much time,” Scott continues. “Both of them are self-motivated and will ride from dawn to dusk but we have a few rules in place to make sure their schoolwork is done as is any chores around the house.”

With restrictions beginning to end, the family are eyeing off the coming race season and look forward to a hectic finish to the year.

The down time has been good, but like most racing families, we are all desperate to get back to the track and start racing again. The boys miss their mates, they miss racing and we miss the camaraderie from it so hopefully things get back on track and we can do what we love, as a family,” Scott ends.

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FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championships

Due to the ongoing coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic and the associated travel restrictions, the Sertões Rally originally scheduled for 14 to 23 August has had to be postponed until 07 to 15 November.

Given the already condensed nature of the 2020 calendar and particularly the limited time between the Rally of Morocco and the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge (UAE) plus the logistical issues this will cause, the FIM and the local organisers have decided that it will be in the best interest of all the competitors and related parties if the Sertões Rallye is withdrawn from the 2020 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship.

The good news is that the Sertões Rally will be back in the 2021 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship calendar and will take place next summer; the exact dates will be confirmed at a later stage.

Revised 2020 FIM Cross-Country Rallies World Championship Calendar
  • 14-20 September – Rally Kazakhstan
  • 9-14 October – Rallye du Maroc
  • 20-26 November – Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge

Source: MCNews.com.au

Blow by blow race report from AMA SX Rnd 13

Supercross Race Report

450 SX

The Wasatch Mountains that form a great backdrop to the Rice-Eccles Stadium had received a fresh 50 mm of snow overnight which put a chill in the air and it was forecast that rain would likely fall during this 13th round of the 2020 Monster Energy Supercross Championship.

Earlier in the week competitors had raced here in temperatures approaching the mid-30s (Celsius), but today temperatures had only just struggled into the double digits with thermometers registering 12-degrees. The track itself was also very different, not only due to a change up in design, but recent rainfall had made some of the corners a little sloppy.

Eli Tomac took a 13-point lead over Roczen into this round

Eli Tomac took a 13-point lead over Ken Roczen into this round. After starting strongly the German had faded badly in the second half of the Main in the previous round and since then had made some comments on Instagram that he had been suffering breathing issues unrelated to the altitude, but lingering after-effects from a sickness he suffered late last year.


Ken Roczen on Instagram before this event


Previous round winner Cooper Webb scored the holeshot in the opening 450 Heat and was chased and then passed by Ken Roczen who managed to stave off a couple of late advances from Webb until the German lost pressure in his rear tyre two laps from the end, which gave Webb the upper hand and victory. Roczen had enough of a buffer over Justin Brayton to cruise home to second place ahead of his HRC team-mate Justin Brayton.

Roczen was on course to win his Heat race before a deflating back tyre allowed Webb to close in and steal the win

Zach Osborne led the field away in Heat Two and had clear air over Jason Anderson, Vince Friese and Aaron Plessinger in the early stages while Eli Tomac was down in tenth after getting caught up in the pack at the beginning of the race. Anderson got the better of his Rockstar Energy Husqvarna team-mate Osborne in the middle of the race and romped away to his first Heat win in almost two years. Meanwhile Tomac had steadily worked his way up through the field to take third at the chequered flag.

Jason Anderson took his first Heat race victory in almost two years

By the Main Event the track had got quite messy and even the fastest riders were struggling to put together those sweet rhythms of perfect timing that we generally witness in Supercross. Instead it was a scrappy affair in very challenging conditions.

Zach Osborne scored the hole-shot ahead of Cooper Webb while Eli Tomac actually got a decent start for a change and was running just behind that pair on the opening lap. Webb was all over Osborne and eventually forced his way through, Tomac then added further insult by pushing Osborne back to third.  Fourth on these opening laps was Jason Anderson ahead of Ken Roczen and Malcolm Stewart.

Zach Osborne scored the hole-shot but was then quickly overhauled

Roczen then moved up to fourth place and started to reel in Osborne. That pair though were five-seconds behind race leader Cooper Webb, who in turn had two-seconds on second placed Tomac.

It had looked as though Roczen would close in on and pass Osborne for third but instead the German made a couple of mistakes which allowed Jason Anderson to close in on him and make an aggressive pass to relegate Roczen back to fifth place. Anderson then pulled away from Roczen with ease before then reeling in and passing his Husqvarna team-mate Zach Osborne to move up to third.

Jason Anderson

Tomac had been shadowing Webb for some time and the Kawasaki man finally made his move through to the lead with 12-minutes remaining on the time clock. Webb came right back at him but Tomac held on to the position. Further back Malcolm Stewart relegated Roczen to sixth.

Once he had clear air Tomac pulled away from Webb and it looked as though he might run away with it. Lapped traffic though saw Tomac have to pull some punches and with seven-minutes remaining Webb was back in the fight for the win. Tomac then lost his rhythm through the whoops while putting Roczen a lap down, Webb was on a different line and sailed right past both of them to take the race lead.

With four-minutes remaining that leading duo had lapped three-quarters of the field. Tomac was right with Webb but his Kawasaki started to spit out a little coolant and steam which put some consternation on the faces of his pit crew.

Despite that Tomac took the lead with just over two-minutes left on the clock and then managed to stretch away from Webb to take the win despite a determined and exciting last lap charge by Webb.

Eli Tomac takes victory

Jason Anderson finished third more than 40-seconds behind the Tomac and Webb. His Husqvarna team-mate Zach Osborne scored fourth, a lap down on the leaders.

450 SX Results
1. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki
2. Cooper Webb – KTM +1.281s
3. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +43.995s

Ken Roczen eventually finished tenth, two laps down on the leaders and losing another 13-points in the championship chase to Tomac. The Kawasaki man now has a 26-point buffer over Roczen, while the German’s lead over third placed Webb has been trimmed to only six-points.

There are four rounds remaining in the 2020 Monster Energy Supercross Championship in this COVID-19 induced quick-fire end to the season. Racers will be back on track this Wednesday, June 10, then again on June 14, June 17 ahead of the finale on June 21.

450 SX Results

  1. Eli Tomac – Kawasaki
  2. Cooper Webb – KTM +1.281s
  3. Jason Anderson – Husqvarna +43.995s
  4. Zach Osborne – Husqvarna +1 lap
  5. Malcolm Stewart – Honda +1 lap
  6. Dean Wilson – Husqvarna +1 lap
  7. Justin Brayton – Honda +1 lap
  8. Martin Davalos – KTM +1 lap
  9. Justin Barcia – Yamaha +1 lap
  10. Ken Roczen – Honda + 2 laps
  11. Aaron Plessinger – Yamaha + 2 laps
  12. Blake Baggett – KTM + 2 laps
  13. Benny Bloss – KTM + 2 laps
  14. Chad Reed – KTM + 2 laps
  15. Justin Hill – Honda + 3 laps

450 SX Championship Points

  1. Eli Tomac – 301
  2. Ken Roczen – 275
  3. Cooper Webb – 269
  4. Justin Barcia – 239
  5. Jason Anderson – 229
  6. Malcolm Stewart – 198
  7. Dean Wilson – 176
  8. Justin Brayton – 173
  9. Justin Hill – 169
  10. Zach Osborne – 163
  11. Aaron Plessinger – 159
  12. Blake Baggett – 145
  13. Martin Davalos – 136
  14. Adam Cianciarulo – 129
  15. Vince Friese – 127
  16. Chad Reed 68

250 SX

The issue whereby high-achievers in the 250 class then rule themselves out of the remaining rounds has reared its head again with Geico Honda’s Jeremy Martin not turning up for the final rounds of the 250 East series. This predicament arises due to series rules which dictate that when a rider achieves a certain level of results they must move out of the category the following season and up to the 450 class. With a dirth of paying 450 seats available in competitive teams, riders without such a deal the following season self-limit their ultimate results in the closing rounds so as not to rule themselves out of eligibility for the 250 category.  Normally riders sand-bag their decision not to breach this results limit but Jeremy Martin and Geico Honda have been honest and up front with this following statement from the rider himself that he released prior this round.

Jeremy Martin

Unfortunately my season has come to an end for supercross in 2020. I’ve given it a lot of thought about how to publicly announce not racing the last three races of sx this year. Instead of covering it up with an injury The team and I decided to be completely honest about my current situation. I’ve reached the eligibility limit for points in the 250sx class, and any additional points would force me into the 450 class for 2021. There isn’t any opportunities nor openings for me in 2021 for the 450 class. Geico Honda doesn’t campaign the 450sx class. I haven’t won a race yet this year and feel that before making the step to the premier class I need an additional year to improve my performance and health in the quest to earn a factory 450 ride for 2022. I’m 27-years-old and I’d love to be in the 450 class racing but sometimes you have to take the longer path, which right now is licking my wounds and keep rebuilding myself in supercross so I can win races and championships for Geico Honda next year!”

Heading into this round of the 250 SX East Championship Shane McElrath and Chase Sexton were tied on 140-points apiece after McElrath’s victory mid-week.

Today McElrath got the holeshot and walked away from the field in his Heat while Chase Sexton did the same in his Heat race.

Shane McElrath

Come the Main it was Sexton with the hole-shot but McElrath then made an aggressive pass which sent his championship rival very wide and the Honda man lost a number of positions as a result. The rain then started falling as Chase Sexton clipped Enzo Lopes which sent both of them down on the entry in to a tight left-hander. That fall saw Sexton lose yet more positions, the 20-year-old defending champion had been shuffled back to ninth by the time he was up and running again.  Meanwhile Shane McElrath was leading from Jo Shimoda and looking likely to score another win, that was until officials brought out the red flag so they could give an injured Garrett Marchbanks medical attention, the 18-year-old clutching at his back after a fall and obviously in plenty of pain.

After a short delay, during which much more rain fell, the field assembled on the gates again for a complete re-start, as they had not completed three laps before the red flag came out.  Shane McElrath scored the hole-shot with Chase Sexton right behind. That pair quickly pulled away from the field. Then with ten-minutes remaining McElrath collided with Coty Schock while lapping him and went down, that tumble allowed Sexton through to the lead. McElrath rejoined the race still in second place but was now 13-seconds behind Sexton, two laps later that gap had blown out to 22-seconds.

After backing right off in the final laps Sexton eventually took the chequered flag eight-seconds ahead of McElrath who was joined on the podium by his Monster Energy Star Racing Yamaha team-mate Colt Nichols.

That victory sees Sexton pull three-points clear of McElrath with two rounds left for 250 East competitors before a champion is crowned.

Chase Sexton was pumped with his victory

When Supercross reconvenes mid-week it will be the turn of the 250 West competitors to swing back into action which of course means the return of popular young Aussie Jett Lawrence after that sickening crash early in the season at Anaheim 2. Jett’s older brother Hunter will join him on track and taste the heat of Supercross competition for the first time this season. 250 West competitors will race on Wednesday June 10 and Sunday June 14 before a 250 East round on June 17 ahead of the 250 East-West showdown on Sunday, June 21.


250 SX East Results

  1. Chase Sexton – Honda
  2. Shane McElrath – Yamaha +8.023s
  3. Colt Nichols – Yamaha +20.252s
  4. Pierce Brown – KTM +48.893s
  5. Kyle Peters – Honda +1 lap
  6. Jalek Swoll – Husqvarna +1 lap
  7. Chris Blose – Honda +1 lap
  8. Enzo Lopes – Yamaha +1 lap
  9. Jace Owen – Honda +1 lap
  10. John Short – Honda +1 lap
  11. Jo Shimoda – Honda +1 lap
  12. Hunter Sayles – KTM +2 laps
  13. Justin Starling – Husqvarna +2 laps
  14. Carter Halpain – Yamaha +2 laps
  15. Wilson Fleming – Honda +2 laps

250 SX East Championship Points

  1. Chase Sexton – 166
  2. Shane McElrath – 163
  3. Garrett Marchbanks – 119
  4. Jeremy Martin – 105
  5. Jalek Swoll – 91
  6. Jo Shimoda – 89
  7. Enzo Lopes – 81
  8. RJ Hampshire – 80
  9. Pierce Brown – 73
  10. Kyle Peters – 69

Source: MCNews.com.au