AMA Sports Road Racing Grand Championships Going On Now At Mid-Ohio

AMA Sports Road Racing Grand Championships Going On Now At Mid-Ohio

© 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

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From a press release issued by AMA Sports:

RECORD ENTRIES FOR 2003 AMA ROAD RACING GRAND CHAMPIONSHIPS

PICKERINGTON, Ohio – The 2003 AMA Road Racing Grand Championships have experienced a large growth spurt this season.

The AMA Grand Championships, which run this Wednesday and Thursday (July 23-24), as part of Cycle-Fest 2003 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio, have more than doubled in entries over the 2002 event.

Nearly 500 pre-entries have been received at AMA Sports from aspiring racers across the country. The number of entries is a record since the event moved to midweek dates between AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days and AMA Chevy Trucks Superbike weekend, and indicates an increased awareness in the AMA Grand Championships.

“This year’s new AMA Club Team Challenge has attracted a more varied group of riders from all over the country,” said Bill Amick, Vice President of AMA Events and entertainment. “Cooperation from racing
clubs and organizations, most notably WERA, has helped increase knowledge of the event. We’re very enthusiastic about the future of the AMA Road Racing Grand Championships. We think it will continue to grow and settle into a midsummer niche within the vibrant national club racing scene.”

The AMA Road Racing Grand Championships are in their seventh year. The event first ran at Loudon, New Hampshire, 1997 and was moved to Mid-Ohio in 2000.

For the first time in 2003, WERA Motorcycle Roadracing will award points at the AMA Grand Championships towards its North Central and Northeastern Championship Series. WERA is also providing the nucleus of the event’s officiating team.

Along with the new AMA Club Challenge, which will spotlight teams from road racing clubs nationwide, a highlight of the event will be announcing the 2003 recipient of the AMA Horizon Award. The Horizon Award recognizes the event’s outstanding young rider as he or she looks toward a professional racing career.


From another press release issued by AMA Sports:

AMA HORIZON AWARD WINNERS SHINE BRIGHTLY TODAY

PICKERINGTON, Ohio – The AMA Horizon Award was established in 1997 to give more recognition to riders who are trying to make the transition from the amateur ranks to the world of professional racing. One of the purposes of the Horizon Award is to help make the difficult move from amateur to pro just a little easier for the AMA’s aspiring young racers. The recognition received in getting the reward could attract a sponsor, or make the factory teams aware of a rising talent. The award is only in its seventh year, but already many past recipients have made a successful jump to the pros.

As the 2003 AMA Road Racing Grand Championships begin at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course we take a look back at some of the past winners of the Horizon Award to find out what they’re doing today.

The class of 1997, the very first year of the AMA Horizon Award, set a standard that would be difficult if not impossible to match. That year Nicky Hayden (Dirt Track), Eric Wood (Road Racing) and Nicholas Wey (Motocross) were the three recipients of the award.

Hayden has gone on to be the most successful of all the Horizon winners. Always a two-sport rider (dirt track and road racing), Hayden, from Owensboro, Ky., became very successful in both disciplines. In 1999 Hayden won the Pro Honda Oils Supersport Championship riding for Erion Honda and also earned the AMA Ricky Graham Rookie of the Year Award for his accomplishments in the AMA Progressive Insurance U.S. Flat Track Championship. Hayden was a throwback to the days of Carroll Resweber and Kenny Roberts – a rider who excelled in all forms of motorcycle racing. For his incredible athleticism across disciplines, Hayden was awarded AMA Pro Racing’s highest honor in 1999, the AMA Speed Channel Athlete of the Year Award. Hayden’s career skyrocketed from there. In 2002 he became the youngest rider ever to win the AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship and was the leader in AMA Grand National wins that season, with a notable victory in the prestigious Peoria TT. He and his brothers Tommy and Roger Lee also became the first brother combination to sweep the podium at an AMA national in May of 2002 in the Springfield (Ill.) TT. Hayden now rides for Honda in the Motorcycle Grand Prix World Championships.

Roger Lee Hayden followed in his brother’s footsteps in 1998 to win the Horizon Award, like his older brother, in the dirt track ranks. The youngest of the Hayden boys continued racing in the U.S. Flat Track Championships, but again made his name in road racing. Today he is a leading factory-supported rider with Erion Honda racing in Lockhart-Phillips Formula Xtreme and Pro Honda Oils Supersport.

Jason DiSalvo went from winning the Horizon Award at Loudon, N.H., in 1999 to road racing in Europe. Former World Champion Freddie Spencer recognized DiSalvo’s talent and convinced his family to bring him back to race in America. It proved to be a good move. DiSalvo now rides for Yamaha in the Pro Honda Supersport Championship and is considered on of the top up-and-coming riders in the sport. That same year Tony Meiring was co-award winner in the Dirt Track Grand Championships. Like DiSalvo, Meiring is a leading rider in the AMA Supersport and Superstock racing with Team Kawasaki.

Texan Ben Spies made a big splash at the Road Racing Grand Championships in its first year at Mid-Ohio in 2000. He was presented the Horizon that year by past winner Nicky Hayden and just a few days later Spies made his AMA pro racing debut at Mid-Ohio, finishing a solid seventh in AMA Superstock (then called 750 Supersport) on a Valvoline EMGO Suzuki. Today Spies rides for the Factory Yoshimura Suzuki squad and leads the Lockhart-Phillips Formula Xtreme Series.

These riders illustrate the realization of the talented recipients of the AMA Horizon Award. On Thursday at Mid-Ohio another rider will be presented the award and here’s hoping that he or she has as bright of a future as their predecessors and they are able to follow the footsteps of previous AMA Horizon winners.

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