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Bringing you the high-speed motorcycle racing news & action from today with the race photos from yesterday & today. Having followed AMA Flat Track, AMA Road Racing, WERA & various other series since the early to mid '70s, the adrenaline-fed rush still lives on. Thanks for making Stu's Shots your one-stop shop for racing news, info & links to the action on & off the track! ALL shots COPYRIGHT Mike 'Stu' Stuhler/Stu's Shots (unless otherwise noted.)
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(April 27, 2012) - The M1
PowerSports-promoted Triumph Big Kahuna Atlanta presented by Dunlop Tire and
LeoVince showcased amazing races in all four AMA Pro Road Racing classes, and
the AMA Pro Vance & Hines XR1200 Series contained some of the weekend's most
compelling action.
Bartel's Harley-Davidson walked
away with a 1-2 in the Vance & Hines XR1200 Series race at Road Atlanta with
Tyler O'Hara, who scored a breakthrough win last year at
Indianapolis, ending up the man of the weekend after winning pole, leading the
most laps and ultimately claiming the victory.
However, races are rarely won
easily in the Vance & Hines XR1200 Series and that proved to be the case in
Georgia as well.
Pulling double-duty on the
weekend, AMA Pro National Guard SuperBike contender Steve Rapp
fought for the lead in Sunday's Vance & Hines XR1200 Series slugfest. The
Harv's Harley-Davidson pilot swapped the lead back-and-forth with O'Hara before
a mechanical issue ended his race a couple laps short of the checkered flag.
O'Hara's Bartel's Harley-Davidson
teammate, Michael Barnes, picked up the pursuit from close
behind to push the Californian to the line from second position for his second
career AMA Pro victory.
"Every win is very special,"
O'Hara said. "I'm super excited. The whole goal this weekend was to have fun and
that's what we did. We put in a good lap in qualifying and won pole. And what a
race today. Rapp passed me in a place I didn't think I could be passed. I
followed him a little bit and learned a lot and that helped me out when I got
back in the lead. And Barney was there the whole time keeping us honest. There's
no down time on these Harleys. It's pretty much pinned wire-to-wire."
After receiving his Big Kahuna
surfboard trophy, O'Hara added, "It just works out. I'm from California. I don't
surf but I think I might start now."
Michael Barnes #34, Kyle Wyman #33, Shane Narbonne #164, Tyler O'Hara #29, Steve Rapp #5 and Barrett Long #2 lead the 18-rider field into turn one during the AMA Pro Vance & Hines XR1200 Series main event at the Big Kahuna Road Atlanta round on Sunday, April 22, 2012. AMA Pro Road Racing photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Barnes said, "The last couple of
laps I was doing what I could, but I know Tyler and he was doing everything he
could. He was going so deep into [Turn] 10 and I didn't really have a run on him
out of [Turn] 7. He was really strong, as was Rapp until he broke or whatever
happened to him. He must have downshifted a bit
too hard because I heard that thing pop coming out of 10b. He put his hand up
and that made it a little easier for me, but Tyler was just too tough to latch
onto. Steve and Tyler were slowing each other down a little bit and keeping me
there. Today wasn't the one but it's coming soon. It's been 16 years, I think,
since I got one and I'm pretty hungry to get a win and determined to get one,
one of these days."
Daytona winner Kyle
Wyman made the most of what could have been a championship-killer. The
KLR Group/Vesrah crashed in oil on the opening lap of the contest while running
in second. He was forced to start from the back of the field after switching to
his backup bike for the restart, but still managed to pick his way up to third
in the end.
"I guess there was some fluid
down in Turn 10a that I didn't know was there. I guess someone had an issue on
the warm-up lap. Before I knew it I was on my head. I just tried to hustle and
get back to pit lane to get back out there. I'm glad we did because we got back
out there and got on the podium. I put my head down. I wanted to
get back up there as quick as I could. I had only done three laps on the backup
bike ever. That one just got built and brought down here. I'm just happy I had
an opportunity to get back out there; I've never had a spare bike before,
actually. It's really nice."
Gerry Signorelli (Kuryakyn/Racing for a
Wish) now leads the Sunoco "Go The Distance" Award, given to the rider that
completes the furthest total distance in 2012 AMA Pro Road Racing race-weekend
events, with 280.65 miles to second-place
Darren
James'
(Deeley Racing/ Ruthless Racing) 280.02 miles.
Next
Event
AMA Pro Road
Racing will next head west for Round 3 with a stop at scenic Sonoma, Calif. The
Great Clips West Coast Moto Jam will take place at Infineon Raceway in two weeks
time, May 4-6. For tickets and event information, please visit www.infineonraceway.com.
|
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AMA Pro Racing is the premier professional
motorcycle racing organization in North America, operating a full schedule of
events and championships for a variety of motorcycle disciplines. Learn more
about AMA Pro Racing at www.amaproracing.com.
For additional information
contact:
AMA Pro Racing Communications, (386) 492-1014, communications@amaproracing.com
|
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(April 27, 2012) - James
Rispoli and Jake Lewis put on a show at Road Atlanta,
with the two AMA Pro Motorcycle-Superstore.com SuperSport aces splitting the
wins in Georgia. It was a tale of the king and the young challenger dueling to a
draw.
Defending
Motorcycle-Superstore.com SuperSport National Champion Rispoli (Orient Express
Celtic Racing) won Saturday's race when he made it through lapped traffic better
late in the race, but he never really shook the upstart 16-year-old. Lewis
(Riders Discount Vesrah Suzuki) returned the favor on Sunday, aided by a red
flag that stopped the race early.
The 20-year-old Rispoli was
actually leading on the red flag lap, but as they were the only two riders on
the lead lap, scoring was reverted to the last lap completed by the entire
field. Lewis, who perhaps looked a little stronger on Sunday, was declared the
winner.
In Saturday's contest Rispoli,
officially registered as a Motorcycle-Superstore.com SuperSport West division
competitor but contesting all the races, had a "freebie" at his disposal but he
made the most of it. A race-long battle meant he needed to make something happen
to come out on top. We wanted to see who could run
the pace. It was going to be hard once we had 'plus five' on the board. We were
having a lot of fun," said Rispoli. "(Jake) was obviously stronger going down
into Turn 10A, so I had to find something somewhere else. I went into Turn 1,
got a good drive, and got it through."
"James dropped the hammer," said
Lewis, who complimented Rispoli on his race. Lewis earned the lap leader point
on Saturday. "With James on me, I couldn't slow down very much."
Dustin Dominguez
(Castrol Triumph) won the battle for third on Saturday ahead of Travis
Wyman (Harv's Harley Davidson) and Stefano Mesa
(Kneedragers.com Yamaha).
Hayden Gillim
(RoadRaceFactory/Red Bull) led the battle for third but faded with tire issues.
He still managed sixth, just ahead of Miles Thornton (Eyeball
Yamaha), Elena Myers (SuzukiScoopFans SportbikeTrackGear.com M4
Suzuki), Tomas Puerta (RoadRaceFactory/ Red Bull) and
Corey Alexander (National Guard Fairhills Group).
On Sunday, the 16-lap race was
red flagged and called official after 11 laps, with Lewis getting his first AMA
Pro win over friend and training partner Rispoli.
"I led most of the race and James
and I had an awesome battle," said Lewis. "I felt more comfortable out front.
Yesterday I got a little unlucky with a lapper and today I got a little lucky
with the red flag taking it back a lap."
"It was a good overall race,"
said Rispoli, who crashed Sunday morning. "I could do a few more moves that Jake
couldn't because it isn't a points paying round for me but congratulations to
Jake."
Jake Lewis leads James Rispoli in one of their battles in the AMA Pro Motorcycle-Superstore.com SuperSport Series at the Big Kahuna Road Atlanta round in April 2012. AMA Pro Road Racing photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Dominguez was once again third
but closer to the front on Sunday. "I didn't get the start I wanted but I put my
head down and tried to charge as much as I could," said Dominguez. "I could see
them ahead of me but I couldn't reel them in. It would have been fun to be up
with them but we're happy with the points we got out of it."
Fourth was Gillim, who used a
harder tire and stiffed up the suspension on his Yamaha for Race 2.
Mesa finished fifth again, ahead
of Wyman and Puerta. Mesa now leads the chase for the $2,500 Sunoco "Go
The Distance" Award, given to the rider that completes the furthest
total distance in 2012 AMA Pro Road Racing race-weekend events, with 471.99
miles in 161 laps.
Myers finished eighth on the
track but was penalized for repeatedly cutting the course in Turn 3. That
elevated Ryan Kerr (RFC Kawasaki) one position. Local talent
Jake Morman (Apex Racing Services) rounded out the top ten.
Lewis now leads the AMA Pro
Motorcycle-Superstore.com SuperSport East division points by 15 over Mesa,
82-57. Puerta is a further eight points back with 59.
Next
Event
AMA Pro Road
Racing will next head west for Round 3 with a stop at scenic Sonoma, Calif. The
Great Clips West Coast Moto Jam will take place at Infineon Raceway in two weeks
time, May 4-6. For tickets and event information, please visit www.infineonraceway.com.
|
Title
Sponsor
Photo Galleries
Videos
Next Up
|
AMA Pro Racing is the premier professional
motorcycle racing organization in North America, operating a full schedule of
events and championships for a variety of motorcycle disciplines. Learn more
about AMA Pro Racing at www.amaproracing.com.
For additional information
contact:
AMA Pro Racing Communications, (386) 492-1014, communications@amaproracing.com
|
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. (April 26, 2012) - At
Road Atlanta, the AMA Pro GoPro Daytona SportBike class returned to a more
conventional event after last month's DAYTONA® 200. Instead of the single
endurance race on the banks of Daytona International Speedway replete with pit
stops, the doubleheader sprint race format came to Braselton, Ga.'s 2.55-mile
natural road course for the M1 PowerSports-promoted Triumph Big Kahuna Atlanta
presented by Dunlop Tire and LeoVince. Martin Cardenas of GEICO
Suzuki won both 20-lap races in Dixie and assumed the points lead for his
efforts in what was an impressive display.
Cardenas won the
GoPro Daytona SportBike championship the last season he raced in the class
before moving to AMA Pro National Guard last year and earning a rare
first-season win. Cardenas was right there with the lead pack at the front in
Daytona and finished fourth, a result that went a bit under the radar with
Joey Pascarella's flawless run to victory and Jason
DiSalvo's brilliant charge getting most of the accolades.
On Saturday at
Road Atlanta, Cardenas ran away with the win, taking the checkers 4.461 seconds
in front of the scrapping behind him. Cardenas had a couple of moments in the
victory, but did not crash either time and quickly recovered to go even
faster. "I thought it
was going to be a battle between four or five bikes. I don't know why, but it
didn't happen that way this time," said Cardenas. "The first few laps, I got a
good gap and that was it. I ran a very good pace and I kept pushing."
Dane
Westby of M4 Broaster Chicken Suzuki took second place with a charge
through the field. Westby had a poor start but his run through the field was
exciting as he picked off rivals with skill. "By the time I
got up there, Martin was pretty far away. I couldn't see him over Turn 3 or a
couple other corners. Maybe if I had been up there at the start it would have
been easier on me," Westby said. "The guys on the pitboard kept giving me the
'plus zero' -- they wanted me to catch Martin so I was really on the stick the
whole time."
Martin Cardenas leads Jason DiSalvo, Benny Solis and Tommy Hayden early in one of the AMA Pro Daytona SportBike Series races at the Big Kahuna Road Atlanta round in April 2012. AMA Pro Road Racing photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Tommy
Hayden earned third for Y.E.S. Graves Yamaha. Hayden faced a stiff
challenge when he was drafted to replace the injured Garrett
Gerloff on the second day at the season-opening round at Daytona.
Following a successful test at Homestead, Hayden had a much better grasp on
things at Road Atlanta. The Kentucky-native had a race-long battle with
Benny Solis (Riders Discount Vesrah Suzuki) that ended with
just over a lap remaining in the race when Solis crashed at Turn 10A.
Jake
Zemke on the Ducshop Ducati showed steady progress in his run to fourth
on Saturday and hard-braking Cory West earned the top five for
Riders Discount Vesrah Suzuki in his race. After a season away from the AMA Pro
Road Racing scene, former GoPro Daytona SportBike race winner Bobby
Fong proved tough on the Meen Motorsports Yamaha to get sixth.
Local rider
Huntley Nash got his best GoPro Daytona SportBike result yet
for LTD Racing when he took seventh after being in the top 10 all weekend. He
led a pack of riders including Daytona winner Pascarella, now riding for SGA
Yamaha, J.D. Beach (RoadRace Factory/Red Bull) and
Michael Beck (Full Tuck Yamaha) that finished within one
second.
Beck put a
decent gap on the competition in the chase for the $5,000
Sunoco "Go The Distance" Award, given to the rider
that completes the furthest total distance in 2012 AMA Pro Road Racing
race-weekend events. The Californian has logged 731.04 miles to second-place
Beach's 711.9 miles.
On Sunday,
Cardenas had a tougher go of it. Zemke got the holeshot ahead of fast-starting
Hayden (from the second row) and Jake Gagne (RoadRace
Factory/Red Bull).
By lap two,
Cardenas made his way to the front with a bold pass at Turn 10A. Unlike
Saturday, Hayden was able to hang with Cardenas, as was Castrol Triumph's
DiSalvo until he had a mechanical issue on lap 12. The trio lived in the
low-1:29 second range, a hot pace for the 20-lap race. With less than
two laps to go, Cardenas fared better through traffic and then put in a flyer to
take the impressive win by 1.220 seconds.
"Tommy put the
pressure on me the whole race, so it was very difficult," said Cardenas of his
18th career GoPro Daytona SportBike victory. "I tried to pull a gap on him but
it wasn't possible. At the end, we found a few lapped riders and I think that
helped me a bit."
"We made a few
changes and that made a few of the sections more comfortable for me," said
Hayden. "I've been chipping away at it and I feel like I am getting closer and
closer. It was important for me to take the next step."
The battle for
third proved to be highly contested. Westby, Zemke, and Gagne rode in tight
formation for much of the race. Westby could not move through the group on
Sunday, but started to consolidate the placing starting with five laps to go. It
wasn't over, though. Zemke, riding for a small team based out of Atlanta,
regrouped and made a pass for position at Turn 10A with three remaining. Westby,
who was quicker than Zemke through the Esses, managed to wrest third with the
pass and hold it to the flag.
"I was able to
get in there on the brakes in Turn 10 and stick it to (Zemke)," said Westby, who
clearly enjoyed his battle with the California native. Zemke's two
fourth-place results showed the progress his new Ducshop Ducati team has been
able to make despite limited testing opportunities.
Gagne took
fifth, a stellar result for the class rookie who has more experience racing in
Europe than the US; the young standout won the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup two
years ago and raced a Moto2 bike in Spain last year. With 29 GoPro Daytona
SportBike points, he continues to lead in the $5,000
Saddlemen Rookie of the Year award program. Fong was sixth
in another impressive run, holding off Beach in his best result of the year of
seventh. Nash was eighth
on Sunday despite some arm pump issues and showed that he, too, is a young rider
to watch in the class. Solis responded
from his Saturday crash by beating Pascarella for ninth by less than 0.3
seconds.
Cardenas has now
won five of the six AMA Pro GoPro Daytona SportBike races held at Road Atlanta.
The Colombian now leads the points 82 to 62 over Westby, with Hayden just two
back in third.
Next
Event
AMA Pro Road
Racing will next head west for Round 3 with a stop at scenic Sonoma, Calif. The
Great Clips West Coast Moto Jam will take place at Infineon Raceway in two weeks
time, May 4-6. For tickets and event information, please visit www.infineonraceway.com.
|
Title
Sponsor
Photo Galleries
Videos
|
AMA Pro Racing is the premier professional
motorcycle racing organization in North America, operating a full schedule of
events and championships for a variety of motorcycle disciplines. Learn more
about AMA Pro Racing at www.amaproracing.com.
For additional information
contact:
AMA Pro Racing Communications, (386) 492-1014, communications@amaproracing.com
|
DAYTONA
BEACH, Fla. (April 25, 2012) - It's often cautioned that the AMA Pro
Road Racing season opener at Daytona International Speedway can provide a false
read -- a one-off weekend contested on a banked superspeedway that doesn't
necessarily serve as a good indicator of the field's true strength for when they
arrive at more conventional road circuits.
However, the
Triumph Big Kahuna Atlanta presented by Dunlop Tire and LeoVince only confirmed
what was learned at Daytona, providing even more evidence that we're in for
another season of remarkably competitive AMA Pro National Guard SuperBike racing
in 2012.
This past
weekend's stop at Road Atlanta in Braselton, Ga. hinted that the status quo that
took shape throughout 2011 remains intact with a pecking order that is
relatively unchanged. Fortunately, the '11 season was one of the most compelling
in the series' history and more of the same is exactly what everyone had hoped
to see.
If anything, the
racing early in 2012 has been even more spirited. While just 0.002 seconds
separated title favorites Blake Young and Josh Hayes at the flag
in Race 2 at Daytona, Young one-upped that dramatic performance with what may go
down as the signature victory for the emerging superstar on Saturday at Road
Atlanta.
The Yoshimura
Racing Suzuki pilot and his Monster Energy Graves Yamaha-backed rival again
elevated their fight for the lead to a level that was impossible for the
remainder of the pack to match early in Saturday's contest.
The two
routinely swapped positions in tight quarters, with Young swooping around the
inside or outside of Turn 10 at will, while Hayes had a counterpunch in the form
of an inside jab as they headed down the hill toward the track's final corner,
Turn 12.
Young and Hayes
have fought fiercely on just about every race weekend for over a year now, but
what happened on lap 14 was unprecedented. The two touched as they crested the
hill, front wheels aloft. Hooked together, Young was slammed to the pavement and
left dazed on the track. A red flag was immediately thrown and Hayes powered his
way around the 2.55-mile circuit at race pace to check on the condition of his
primary rival. Appearing for a
moment to be seriously injured, Young finally picked himself up off the tarmac,
brushed off the approaching medical attention, and limped his way to his fallen
GSX-R1000 (which somehow managed to merely slide on its side instead of roll).
Young remounted his #79 machine and rode it back into the pits to prepare for
the restart.
Of course, he
was forced to do so from the back of the field. Not happy with that development,
Young channeled his anger and aggression to fuel his charge up through the field
and arrived on Hayes' tail almost immediately.
The two resumed
their epic battle and once again Young pulled a last-lap rabbit out of his
helmet to walk away victorious following another final corner duel.
"My Yoshimura
Suzuki guys did a great job putting the bike back together," Young said. "I
mean, when I got back on the thing it was like when I just got off of it, it was
so perfect. And I wasn't too happy about starting on the back row. I didn't feel
like that's where I should've been placed. But that's I guess that's the
rule.
"I got a
spectacular start. I tried to settle in but I found myself trying to get a
breath and it was pretty tough. I was taking a lot of short breaths -- I don't
know if it was a result of the crash or because of the adrenaline. Once I got to
the back of Josh, it seemed like he had a pace that I didn't think I could keep
up with but maybe try to do something toward the end there and get a wheel in
and mount a pass. I would have been happy to come away with second today. Josh
came up in the inside on the last lap. He came up there pretty fast and I knew
it was going to be tough to get slowed down there and I just squared him up and
took it back."
Despite being
defeated in another close dogfight, Hayes was quick to pay tribute to Young's
performance: "For him to be able to get his stuff together and get back out
there and race the way he did... bravo. Man, I think it's a great story. It was
a hero ride and it's great for our sport. Big congrats to him."
That doesn't
mean Hayes would back down the following day, however. He proved untouchable on
Sunday, reminiscent of his Friday ride at Daytona. Hayes (who crashed twice on
Friday) and Young (feeling the effects of his Race 1 crash) were both beaten up
heading into their rematch but still proved to be the class of the field. In a dominant
display, the Mississippian clicked off multiple laps under his pole mark and
broke Young's pursuit early en route to a dominating payback ride on Sunday. The win was the
first-ever for Yamaha in the SuperBike category at Road Atlanta.
"I'm excited
about it," Hayes said. "This has always been a pretty good track for me and I've
always had pretty good speed here. I've gotten outfoxed at the line a couple
times by Blake here. So I'm glad to be able to put one together this afternoon
and put some good strong laps down. "It's not how I
expected the race to go -- I expected another battle. It's a lot easier on my
ticker to be able to get away a little bit and ride by myself and do my own
laps."
And true to the
trend established a year ago, even though they are even on wins (2-2), Hayes has
garnered every possible bonus point this season and currently sits six points
ahead of Young in the early title fight (116-110).
Hayes remarked,
"I don't think I can change my game plan and I doubt he's going to change his.
We seem to be splitting wins and it's great for the series and a good show. I
don't know what I would do different quite honestly because I feel like my plan
is one that works and has brought me to a couple championships. I think it's
going to be a lot of this season."
Hayes and Young
left Atlanta once again tied for the $2,000 Cortech "Performance Edge"
Award, which will go to the AMA Pro National Guard SuperBike rider who
posts the highest number of "fastest lap of the race" in event finals during the
2012 season. In Race 1, Young turned the fastest lap of the race on Lap 5 with a
time of 1:25.364 and in Race 2, Hayes turned the fastest lap of the race on Lap
6 with a time of 1:24.922. With a total of 581.3 miles and 213 laps completed so
far in the 2012 AMA Pro National Guard SuperBike season, Hayes also leads the
Sunoco "Go The Distance" Award.
Josh Hayes leads Blake Young during one of the AMA Pro Superbike races at the Big Kahuna Road Atlanta round in April 2012. AMA Pro Road Racing photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Hayes' Sunday
victory earned him the distinction of being named the weekend's National Guard
SuperBike 'Big Kahuna,' and with that came the iconic surfboard trophy provided
by M1 PowerSports and designed by Roland Sands
and Motorcycle-Superstore.com. "Getting the
surfboard is awesome," Hayes commented. "I was able to get one of the ones at
VIR when I was riding Formula Xtreme. I've got that in the living room and I
think this will look great sitting next to it to bookend it."
Also confirming
the Daytona opener, there were two distinct groups chasing behind the fight for
the win. The first was a
two-man fight featuring Hayes' Monster Energy Graves Yamaha teammate, Josh
Herrin, and National Guard Jordan Suzuki's Roger Hayden. The two were
just short of the winning pace, able to run in tow for a handful of laps but not
at full distance.
That reality is
a welcome one for National Guard SuperBike rookie Herrin, who is still learning
the ropes and expecting to steadily improve. It's not quite so pleasant for
Hayden, who remains consistently quick but a step off of the form at which he
concluded 2011, where he proved capable of challenging Hayes and Young for race
wins.
While Hayden
took a pair of thirds at Daytona, he was twice relegated to fourth by Herrin,
who scored the first two podiums of his young SuperBike career. Additionally,
Herrin continued to get great starts and enjoyed a stint at the front of the
pack both days (if rather abbreviated). The Dublin, Ga.
resident was thrilled with the outcome but also aware of the areas in which he
needs to improve to take the next step. He explained,
"It was a really good race -- I had fun just keeping Josh and Blake in my sights
for the first seven laps or so. That felt good. I'll go home and get ready for
the next one -- work on my strength; I just need to be a little stronger to
throw these bikes around on tight tracks. The Yamaha R1 was working great --
obviously, you can see Josh is doing pretty good on it. The bike is capable of
winning -- I just wasn't ready yet. But it was a good weekend. I'm glad to be on
the podium twice."
Hayden said,
"Two fourths is a little disappointing after being on the podium twice at
Daytona. At the same time, we made a run for the podium, we finished both races
and we learned some stuff. Although fourth place isn't where we want to be, I
feel like I'm riding good and the National Guard Jordan Suzuki GSX-R1000 is
working great. Hopefully, we can move on to Infineon and get back on the
podium."
After Herrin and
Hayden was another significant gap leading back to a big pack of contenders for
fifth place, which included Team Amsoil/Hero EBR's Geoff May, Attack
Performance Kawasaki's Steve Rapp, Foremost Insurance Pegram Racing BMW's
Larry Pegram, Jordan Suzuki's Ben Bostrom, Yoshimura Racing
Suzuki's Chris Clark, KTM/HMC's Chris Fillmore, Team Hero EBR's
Danny Eslick, and Riders Discount Vesrah Suzuki's Taylor
Knapp.
Of the group,
May was probably the most impressive over the course of the weekend. From nearby
Gainesville, Ga., May was in stunning form on the EBR 1190RS, claiming a spot on
the provisional front row on Friday, locking down a top-five qualifying position
on Saturday, securing a top-five result in Race 1, and was well positioned for a
repeat of that finish in Race 2 before a mechanical issue force him into the
pits. He still managed to return to the fray and finish 13th.
Team owner
Erik Buell said, "Pretty good weekend overall at Road Atlanta, although
not quite as good as we had hoped. A shifter pivot bolt fell out on Geoff's
Amsoil Hero #99, or he would have had at least a fifth again; he was right on
top of fourth at the time of the problem."
Pegram walked
away with that fifth after finishing 12th the day before after
hitting a curb and damaging his wheels. Fillmore was solid on his orange RC8
both days, taking sixth and seventh, as was Rapp in seventh and eighth. Eslick picked up
a couple top tens (tenth and ninth) and Knapp impressed on Sunday with a
sixth. Knapp, who
gridded up for each of the race finals in 16th position, finished one position
ahead of Pegram in Race 1 one position behind him in Race 2. Gaining 15
positions combined at Road Atlanta, Knapp took home the MotoBatt "Hard Charger
Award," a $500 award given at the completion of each race weekend to the rider
who improves the most positions combined from each of the weekend's race finals.
Clark ran
further up the third pack in both races before eventually settling down in ninth
and tenth. He said, "This weekend, we got out with some points and we're not too
far from my goal of fifth overall. The Yoshimura Suzuki GSX-R1000 is running
great and we're figuring out the best package for me to beat the guys in front
of me, and hopefully come out of the season in the top five. Now, we have a few
things we're going to test and a few things we have better knowledge on. So I'm
looking forward to going to Infineon and having a good race."
However, it was
another nightmarish weekend for former class champion Bostrom. After crashing
twice at Daytona, Bostrom managed eighth on Saturday but suffered another fall
on Sunday. "It was really a
tough weekend," said Bostrom. "The Jordan Suzuki GSX-R1000 is a lot better than
I've shown at the first few races. I've crashed out of three of four races and
that's unheard of. I usually don't crash all year, so I'm not doing the bike any
favors. I got eighth on Saturday and that's top 10, but it's not where I want to
be. I'm definitely looking forward to racing at Infineon. I grew up in that area
and I like the racetrack, and I think our bike will be racing for first
there."
While the entire
field carries big aspirations into Infineon Raceway, title leader Hayes could
prove tough to handle. The Yamaha ace has picked up four of the most recent AMA
Pro National Guard SuperBike victories in Sonoma, Ca. with the other two wins
going to riders no longer competing in the class (Mat Mladin and Tommy
Hayden).
Next
Event
AMA Pro Road
Racing will next head west for Round 3 with a stop at scenic Sonoma, Calif. The
Great Clips West Coast Moto Jam will take place at Infineon Raceway in two weeks
time, May 4-6. For tickets and event information, please visit www.infineonraceway.com.
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AMA Pro Racing is the premier professional
motorcycle racing organization in North America, operating a full schedule of
events and championships for a variety of motorcycle disciplines. Learn more
about AMA Pro Racing at www.amaproracing.com.
For additional information
contact:
AMA Pro Racing Communications, (386) 492-1014, communications@amaproracing.com
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