Stefano Manzi topped FIM Supersport World Championship Free Practice One (FP1) Friday morning at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, in France. Riding his Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing YZF-R6 on spec Pirelli tires, the Italian lapped the 2.7-mile track in 1:40.669 to lead the field of 33 riders.
Frenchman and former MotoAmerica Supersport regular Valentin Debise was 14th in FP1 with a time of 1:41.869 on his Evan Bros. Yamaha.
Toprak Razgatlioglu was fastest during World Superbike Free Practice One Friday morning at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, in France. Riding his ROKiT BMW Motorrad M 1000 RR on Pirelli control tires, the current World Championship point leader lapped the stop-and-go circuit in 1:36.347 to lead the field of 23 riders.
American Garrett Gerloff was second-best with a 1:36.700 on his Bonovo Action BMW.
Razgatlioglu’s teammate Michael van der Mark made it three BMWs in the top three with a 1:37.016.
Jorge Martin topped MotoGP practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati Desmosedici on Michelin control tires, the current Championship point leader turned a 1:31.707 to lead the field of 23 riders – but it was a very tightly bunched field.
The top 18 riders in the session were within one second of Martin’s lap time.
This included Marc Marquez, who was second with a 1:31.744 on his Gresini Racing Ducati, and wildcard rider Pol Espargaro, who was third with a 1:31.920 on his Red Bull KTM Factory Racing RC16.
Tony Arbolino was fastest during Moto2 World Championship practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. On board his Pirelli-shod Elf Marc VDS Racing Team Kalex, the Italian lapped the 2.6-mile track in 1:35.775, leading the field of 31 riders.
American Joe Roberts was 18th in the session with a 1:36.730 on his OnlyFans American Racing Team Kalex.
David Alonso was fastest in Moto3 World Championship practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. Riding his Gaviota Aspar Team CFMOTO on Pirelli control tires, the Colombian covered the 2.6-mile course in 1:41.175, topping the field of 27 riders.
SSR MOTORSPORTS ANNOUNCES THE ALL NEW 2025 SR-E500 ELECTRIC PIT BIKE
SANTA FE SPRINGS, CA (September 5, 2024)
SSR Motorsports proudly presents the all new 2025 SR-E500 all electric pit bike. The first of an all-new generation of all-electric pit bikes offered by SSR, the SR-E500 takes all the knowledge and experience from the world’s leading pit bike company and combines it into one sleek little package perfect for youth riders from 4 – 10 years old!
Starting with a super clean looking moto-inspired design, the SR-E500 features a perimeter frame, single shock, telescopic forks, 10” wheels and hydraulic brakes. At the heart of this new model is an electric brushless motor powered by a swappable 10,400mAh / 48V lithium battery. Perfect for young riders just starting out the SR-E500 comes with three different power settings low, mid and high mode that can be preset by the parent. Power setting, battery life, and speed are all displayed on a large dashboard centrally mounted on the handlebar.
With an estimated operating time up to 100 minutes (@ low speed), and super easy recharge the SR-E500 is the perfect backyard play bike, track bike, or weekend warrior. Best of all the SR-E500 is very competitively priced at $1,699 MSRP, less than half the retail price of other comparable electric minibikes. The SR-E500 is just the first of an exciting new model range from SSR!
SSR Motorsports was established in 2002 to import and distribute powersports products in the United States. We provide products that are fun to ride, with cutting-edge design, superior engineering and well-managed quality control. Our Mission Statement: Provide Quality Powersports Products at an Affordable Price with Premier Customer Service.
We believe every enthusiast should be able to afford a brand-new powersport product that is backed by a manufacturer warranty, comprehensive dealer network, premier customer service and a West Coast distribution center stocked with readily available replacement parts. For more information, go to: https://www.ssrmotorsports.com/
Bridgestone BATTLAX Racing Tires Achieve Record Year in 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series Season
Seventeen riders on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires set 31 outright lap records throughout the 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series (CSBK) season, with new records achieved at every round.
In the second year as the exclusive CSBK tire provider, Bridgestone delivered exceptional performance and support to all participating teams and riders throughout the season.
Bridgestone supported the Bagger Racing League as the series made its international debut at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park as part of CSBK.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Sept. 5, 2024) – Bridgestone Americas (Bridgestone) today announced a record-setting year of performance during the 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series (CSBK) season. During the 2024 season, 17 riders on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires set 31 total outright lap records, with new records established at every round. This marks the company’s second season as the exclusive tire provider for CSBK, with Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires delivering the grip and consistency that contributed to record-setting lap times.
The addition of RAD Torque Raceway in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada to the 2024 season provided several Western Canadian riders the opportunity to compete in a CSBK race for the first time on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires. Riders unfamiliar with BATTLAX racing tires experienced fast and consistent lap times on a track notorious for its demanding conditions.
2024 Bridgestone CSBK Lap Records
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Vincent Wilson
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – Adolf Silva (New Class)
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Pro) – Cameron Walker
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Zaim Laflamme
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Vincent Wilson
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – Rob Lepp (New Class)
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Ryan Beattie
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Pro Superbike – Ben Young
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Pro Sport Bike – Elliot Vieira
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Amateur Sport Bike – Serge Boyer
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Pro) – Jean-Francois Cyr
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Cecil Montour
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – J-P Schroeder (New Class)
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Pro) – Stacey Nesbitt
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Treston Morrison
“Seventeen racers setting 31 lap records this season is a testament to the outstanding grip, performance and reliability of Bridgestone BATTLAX tires,” said Jim Dowell, National Sales and Racing Program Manager, Bridgestone Motorcycle Products in the United States and Canada. “We look forward to building on this success and supporting the next generation of champions in the CSBK series. Congratulations to each of the class-winning riders on a record-breaking season.”
“CSBK couldn’t be happier at the conclusion of our second season with Bridgestone,” said Ross Millson, National Event Owner, CSBK. “The performance, consistency and durability of the Bridgestone product provides race control and our competitors with an extreme level of confidence in all conditions. Bridgestone BATTLAX race tires have provided competitive racing, numerous lap records and some amazing moments in 2024. We are looking forward to continuing our partnership with Bridgestone through 2025 and beyond.”
Additionally, in 2024 Bridgestone supported the Bagger Racing League’s (BRL) international debut, which took place in association with CSBK at a special event at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park Aug. 9-11. The BRL is a U.S. race series where professional riders compete on custom and performance American V-Twin touring motorcycles known as baggers. During the series’ international debut, Bridgestone provided cutting-edge tire technology to help ensure optimal performance and safety on the track, further solidifying the company’s unmatched dominance as the leading tire brand in the BRL.
Bridgestone’s success in the 2024 CSBK series aligns with the “Emotion” and “Ease” values of the Bridgestone E8 Commitment. The Bridgestone E8 Commitment, encompassing eight values all beginning with the letter “E,” solidifies Bridgestone’s dedication to fostering a more sustainable world.
Bridgestone Americas, Inc. is the U.S.-based subsidiary of Bridgestone Corporation, a global leader in tires and rubber, building on its expertise to provide solutions for safe and sustainable mobility. Headquartered in Nashville, Tenn., Bridgestone Americas employs more than 45,000 people across its worldwide operations. Bridgestone offers a diverse product portfolio of premium tires and advanced solutions backed by innovative technologies, improving the way people around the world move, live, work and play.
“It will be a good fight”: Media Day dispatch from Misano
Thursday, 05 September 2024
The Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli plays host to Round 13 of 2024 and on Thursday at the Gran Premio Red Bull di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini, there wasn’t a shortage of topics to get stuck into.
Check out the key story from Misano’s Media Day as one of the final 2025 rider puzzle pieces slots into place, and then enjoy the press conferences as eight riders sat down to chat to the media on Thursday. Press Conference 1 saw Championship leader Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) sit alongside Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team), Aragon GP winner Marc Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) and Enea Bastianini (Ducati Lenovo Team), before Pedro Acosta (Red Bull GASGAS Tech3), Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) and Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) were joined by Trackhouse Racing MotoGP™’s Miguel Oliveira.
Check out all the top headlines from the day and then come back for more as track action begins on Friday!
Jorge Martin. Photo courtesy Dorna.
JORGE MARTIN (Prima Pramac Racing)
Misano was one of your strongest weekends in MotoGP™. Do you feel you have the potential to dominate this weekend and do you feel that you are the strongest in this lead group in the Championship?
“It’s nice to be here in Misano after last year’s result but what I did last season doesn’t matter anymore. Now the important thing is to keep improving and keep learning because now the level is rising a lot. I feel like I am progressing, I am getting better and better but so are the others so it is quite difficult. I feel like here in Italy will be a super good weekend for Pecco and Enea as they train a lot here so it is a nice track for them but also for us. Dominate will be difficult, trying to repeat what we did last season will be super hard but I will try my best.”
Where did you make the difference last year in Misano?
“Last season I felt good straight away from the first Practice but Pecco and Marco were injured so I don’t know how much this was stopping them, but for sure they were not 100% which was an advantage. I was strong, I was missing some speed at the fast corner on the back straight so hopefully I can be better this year.”
Francesco Bagnaia (left) and Marc Marquez (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
FRANCESCO BAGNAIA (Ducati Lenovo Team)
How are you feeling physically and is Misano the perfect way to turn the page after a difficult weekend in Aragon?
“First of all I want to say sorry to Alex (Marquez) for the strong words I said during the interviews after the race. I was very angry about what happened and looking at the telemetry was even worse from my point of view. I was a bit too strong with my words, I didn’t want to say that he made us crash on purpose but his defence was a bit aggressive, like it is normal when you are fighting for the podium positions. I still think the same about the incident because I have my way of thinking but for sure the words, I said were a bit too much and I said sorry to Alex. Physically I am not at 100%, I feel a lot of pain in my shoulder, over the collarbone by my neck. We will try to be ready; it is my home Grand Prix and it is always fantastic to race in front of the crowd here. I cover a million kilometres every year here so I can be ready in any case.”
Do you think it was important to speak with Alex on Sunday?
“Yeah because sometimes anger can make you say something that you don’t think, so from my point of view it’s that. He came to our office to say sorry and we are two riders with two points of view and are respectful, and for sure we had the same ambition at the wrong moment.”
MARC MARQUEZ (Gresini Racing MotoGP™)
Does Gresini’s home weekend give you an extra push this weekend?
“Yeah for sure my target for this season has been achieved in Aragon so now it’s time to keep working and after that weekend we can breathe a bit more, but we need to use that extra boost, the extra confidence to keep working. With the team and the bike, we are learning something every race and are finding something, feeling better. I would like to start here with the same feeling as the Red Bull Ring, that will be enough for me as it means that already the feeling is good. I know that Aragon had very special conditions because of the surface and the storms during the night. For this GP, I think these three guys will be super-fast and we will try to be close to them.
What was it that convinced you that you could fight for wins again in 2024?
“Right there (referencing a video of him at the Valencia Test) I realised that my decision was the correct one, to keep going and change the direction. At that point I realised that sooner or later a victory would arrive during the 20 races, I knew that I would have some strong points at some circuits. Now we need to work on the most difficult thing in this Championship, which is consistency, this is what these two guys are better at than us and we will try to find a way to be faster in our weak points.”
Enea Bastianini (left) and Francesco Bagnaia (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
ENEA BASTIANINI (Ducati Lenovo Team)
Do you come here with high expectations of hopefully achieving another weekend like Silverstone?
“We will see, it is early to think about it but I am very happy to be back here in Misano, I missed the race last year because of injury. I am ready to come back to this circuit, it is one of my favourites because it is close to my town and also because my speed is also good as we train a lot here. I think we can be competitive, but also these three guys will be competitive and it will be a good fight. In Silverstone, it was so nice to ride from Friday and I hope to have the same sensation here. In Aragon, something didn’t work from the start because of the new asphalt but it can be different so let’s see.”
You will have huge support from family and friends this weekend, does that bring any extra pressure?
“I think we have to do many races and it will be important to stay focused for the rest of the season. I like the rest of the calendar, we have two races here in Misano and we are prepared before the Asian tour.”
PEDRO ACOSTA (Red Bull GASGAS Tech3)
How confident are you that you can maintain the level that you showed in Aragon here at Misano?
“First of all, I’m happy to be competitive again in Aragon. It was a good weekend overall but it’s true that our competitors will be fast here. Also, Brad and Dani had an awesome race last year so why not aim to be as competitive as Aragon as a minimum.”
Herve told us, “I am convinced that Pedro will be a title contender in 2025, not just because of his speed but because he ticks all of the boxes, he is the complete package,” what do you make of his comments?
“Let’s try and cross our fingers, for sure the jump to the factory team will help as the developments that we have made in the past couple of months were awesome and the steps that we have made and I think we will be competitive sooner or later. It’s true that we are one step behind our competitors but this is a thing of time and I think we will best fast sooner or later, and we can’t forget that our project is still quite young. For sure we will make a bigger step in the next few months.”
Fabio Di Giannantonio (left) and Pedro Acosta (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
FABIO DI GIANNANTONIO (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team)
How much of a boost did Aragon give you and what do you expect this weekend in Misano?
“It was a fantastic weekend because before coming there I didn’t think it would be possible to complete the race or this type of race. So, we arrived with no expectations and in the end, it was possible to make the race and make a very good race because I was starting from far back and I made a lot of overtakes. At this moment of the year, we are trying to manage the pain because I am still trying to manage the collarbone from the crash at the Sachsenring and then my left shoulder in Austria. At the moment the body is a little bit on the limit but I’m not worried because with the bike we are feeling really good, we know that the 2023 bike has a little gap between the 2024 bikes but I think we can make a good race here in Misano.”
Your first race here for the VR46 Team, does that give you an extra push?
“For sure. Yesterday we had a big team dinner and the energy is really high, everything and everybody has a lot of will to have a good weekend, so it will be important to give our maximum. Misano is always special but this year is even more special.”
Alex Marquez. Photo courtesy Dorna.
ALEX MARQUEZ (Gresini Racing MotoGP™)
Firstly, how are you physically?
“Good. I mean maybe I’m not 100% after a big crash, it’s true that it’s not easy to recover, the body has just two or three days. I had three hours of physio on Monday, also today I had two hours. Day by day I am much better and I think I will be 100% this weekend. I like the fact that he apologised, it’s something which I am thankful to him for. It’s true that the damage to myself, my team and also to my rider image has already been done. That being said I want to close this chapter and want no one to speak about it. We are coming from a really positive weekend in Aragon, so we will look forward, we have an important weekend here as it is the team’s home GP, so we need to be really focused from the beginning.”
How important is it for it to be Gresini’s home GP?
“It will be really nice to ride at the front. I know the hospitality will be full of guests and these good vibes will be positive so we will try the maximum that we can achieve a good result. We struggled here last year as it’s not a track which suits my riding style well, but I think we are focused and if we come here in good shape then we can get a good result here.”
Miguel Oliveira. Photo courtesy Dorna.
MIGUEL OLIVEIRA (Trackhouse Racing MotoGP™)
What was the motivation behind this new challenge?
“I think first of all it is a little bit of a shift of the focus that they are having at the moment to develop the current bike. Despite the rules changing in two years, Yamaha does not want to wait much longer to come back to the top. After being involved with two manufacturers I feel that my adaption capability is high, I am riding in totally a different way compared to two years ago. I think this will help to give feedback and get things going quicker. Having a second factory team and being involved in a team such as Pramac is a huge motivation for me and I can’t wait to get started.”
Gwan “Chef” Simon, a main staff member of Blackhawk Farms Raceway and integral part of the ASRA family for decades, passed away on Monday, August 26th resulting from injuries sustained in a car accident. In tribute, the ASRA Midwest will be holding a memorial lap in his honor on Saturday, September 14th over lunch during the Blackhawk Farms race weekend.
Anyone wishing to participate need a helmet and pay the $20 gate entry. ASRA will be donating half of the proceeds from the gate entry to Gwan’s family.
We will sincerely miss Gwan. He was always encouraging to all of our racers, treating everyone like family, and a main piece of what made Blackhawk what it is. Our heartfelt condolences go out to his family and friends.
This Is The Key To Long-Term Motorcycling Happiness.
Well trained riders have more fun riding motorcycles for longer.
Yamaha Champions Riding School instructor Cody Wyman with students. Photo by SPImage, courtesy Yamaha Champions Riding School.
The vast majority of motorcycle road racing champions contemplate quitting the sport at some time in their careers. Injury and losing prompt those contemplations. But rather than become another ex-racer, they work harder on their craft. Quitting due to injury is self-explanatory. Pain and expense lead the list of reasons, but embarrassment and family pressure and a loss of points must be added in. Getting beaten is the second reason racers quit and it can be put more simply: Losing isn’t fun.
My Point
Apply this to our entire industry. Crashing is usually tougher on street riders than racers, and not having fun on your new motorcycle prompts you to leave it in the garage. One crash or six months of hardly riding lead to a “showroom condition, selling with riding gear” advertisement in the local want ads.
My Experience
Expert rider training changes all this. Whether it’s an hour spent talking with a championship-winning racer around a track map or enrolling in a school that teaches riding at the highest level, this expert advice and approach is the game changer. It’s the industry grower.
How about this for an industry motto: Don’t quit, get expert training.
Expert rider training is the shortcut past the crashes that might teach you a lot if you continue to ride. The problem with learning through trial and error is that the errors can be quite difficult to deal with in this sport. This is not waterskiing. Failing to make a cut behind the boat doesn’t compare with failing to make the downhill right-hand corner with a truck in the oncoming lane. “If you’re not crashing, you’re not learning” is BS!
Expert rider training will help you identify the steps that lead to a crash, the mistakes that finally add up to a loss of traction. The experience of the instructors is passed on to you, allowing you to skip over all the mistakes the instructors have made and seen. It’s a great shortcut.
Don’t Forget Fun
Expert rider training makes riding more fun. Suddenly, and I mean suddenly, improvements are rapid; you can run with your friends on the way to breakfast. That new fast motorcycle becomes a joy to ride rather than sheer terror. You learn to ride your old “pile of crap” quite rapidly and safely. Touring in the rain is no big deal, and when you visit the Alps on a rented BMW you are always in the lead group. You start to think about trackdays and even racing. Your expert-based knowledge seeps into your riding group and all ships rise. Riding is more fun because expert training brings you bike control and a technical approach to this often overly emotional sport.
Yamaha Champions Riding School Founder and Chief Instructor Nick Ienatsch. Photo by Michael Spain Smith, courtesy Yamaha Champions Riding School.
Maybe I’m Wrong
The solution could be antilock brakes. Linked brakes. Traction control. Power modes. Better tires. Improved suspension. But wait… We have all that. What we need to add to all this incredible technological hardware is the rider software, the expert’s approach pre-ride and during the ride. Not just the physical skills used to manage traction and direction, but the focused all-in mental habits that the best bring to their motorcycling. The bikes and tires are getting better and the rider isn’t keeping up. Proper advanced training brings the rider up to the level of the modern motorcycle.
Maybe another motto: Rider training keeps riders riding.
You And Yours
Maybe I’m writing this to you, maybe to your brother or neighbor. I’m speaking directly to these people:
1.) The person who came into our sport and found it too difficult or too scary after their initial foray at a new-rider school. Additional training helps solve those mysteries, making riding more comfortable in all situations.
2.) Someone who doesn’t have time to ride anymore—a euphemism for “riding isn’t fun.” Riders who are hooked on motorcycling will always find time to ride.
3.) Riders who are done with the sport and are selling the bike and all their gear. In other words, these riders fell in love with the sport. They bought the bike, the Rossi replica helmet, extra oil filters, and changed the pipe and turn signals. But now they’re done. They are quitting a pastime that captivated them at some point in their lives.
4.) Motorcycle industry workers who don’t ride. They got in this industry because of their two-wheeled passion but now, due to injury/expense/embarrassment or not having fun because they couldn’t safely keep up with their friends, they are just going through the motions at work without the passion of riding. A love of motorcycle riding makes this the best industry in the world, but without that love it’s just another job.
5.) Rider coaches who are burned out. Boost your enthusiasm by attending an advanced school. Your enthusiasm is an important concern to the industry because you are often the first motorcycle professional a new rider will meet, and your love of riding will be contagious while your burned-out attitude will be another reason your students don’t ride after class. Rekindle your love of the sport with an advanced school.
6.) Track riders or road racers who have hit a plateau in their lap times and enjoyment. When you try to go quicker, you run off the asphalt, yet there are riders on the same bike and tires who are going consistently faster. “Why go beat around the track doing the same thing next year?” you ask yourself. Easy to become an ex-rider at that point, but a visit to an advanced riding school will give you a toolbox full of new techniques and approaches. Time at a school will make you faster safer, with increased understanding of how and why.
To Be Exact
The fun and safety leave this sport when the motorcycle is poorly ridden. Think of it this way: The motorcycle is designed to work with certain inputs at certain moments by expert development riders working with expert development engineers. If the owner of that motorcycle is riding the bike differently, the bike doesn’t work as well. The faster the owner tries to ride, the larger these discrepancies become. The owner is working with the best advice they have heard or read. Some examples of the poor advice I have seen:
1.) An uncle who has ridden slowly for 40 years will advise “use the rear brake only.” Please don’t listen to your uncle.
2.) A forum writer who lives in Nebraska and rides a Rebel 250 will tell you trail-braking is not necessary. Don’t believe everything you read on the internet, especially on forums.
3.) A rider who races but crashes too often will tell you to “flick that thing in there.” Obviously his simplified view of proper corner technique is serving him well. Right?
4.) A passionate rider who really cares but doesn’t have the background posts “training” videos on the internet and advises downshifting for corners and not braking. Passion does not equal knowledge.
5.) You hear, “Power through the corner.” Not every corner.
6.) You read, “You should be accelerating or braking.” What about between those two?
7.) “When in doubt, gas it.” Not always.
8.) “To tighten your line, accelerate.” Dead wrong.
9.) “Don’t use the brakes at lean angle.” One hundred-percent wrong.
10.) “Don’t touch the rear brake.” Wrong again.
11.) You’re convinced that all you need is more seat time, more laps, and that “practice makes perfect.” However, the best rider coaches know that “practice makes permanent,” so riding more miles with poor technique is not the path to improvement, it’s only the path to grooving your mistakes.
12.) You believe that the rider you are now is the rider you will always be. Wrong! Expert-level riding is logical, explainable, and learnable. The expert coaches in this country have enormous faith in every rider’s ability to learn advanced techniques.
Help Fix Two Other Issues
Students who attend advanced training schools are hit with how seriously good riders take their riding. Not only does this message come through loud and clear from the instructors, but the entire class is extremely intent on riding better. They are also hit with the safety of a racetrack when compared to the street. This helps with two vital issues:
1.) Speed choices on the street. A rider who has been to a track-based school and seen what “fast” really means looks at the immovable objects surrounding most public roads and curbs their street speed accordingly.
2.) Alcohol involvement. An advanced riding school stresses the vital importance of rider inputs and approaches in terms of safety, so drinking alcohol before or during a ride becomes as intelligent as riding blindfolded. Alcohol is involved in 25-to-50 percent of motorcycle accidents (depending upon whose stats you read) but riders with advanced training become focused on eliminating anything that is so sure to cause an error.
Riding advice is everywhere but know this: At the limit, which could be setting your personal best lap time at the track or entering a downhill, blind corner in the rain on a road you’ve never seen before, the rider’s actions must be precise and accurate. Poor technique based on flawed advice gets painful when the pace is up or the traction is down. In those moments, expert-level riding instruction will equip you for survival and triumph.
Notice that I haven’t written, “Expert riding instruction will prevent you from crashing again.” That’s the goal of every professional riding instructor, but not a guarantee. But here is a guarantee: If you crash after expert riding instruction, you will get up off the ground knowing what went wrong. You will be able to review the pre-crash action and form a plan to not repeat that series of actions. That keeps riders in the sport.
Expert riding instruction equips riders with the tools and outlook to continue to coach themselves into a constantly improving rider or racer. These students become technical riders rather than emotional riders. Their initial fascination with motorcycles grows into a lifelong passion because they stay healthy.
Summary
The American motorcycle industry isn’t growing and there are many opinions as to why. Blame is going to video games, millennials, a risk-free society, and not enough beginner bikes. But here is my provable belief: Motorcycling in America isn’t growing because riders don’t get the advanced training necessary early in their riding careers. To put this in our earlier parlance: The new riders aren’t riding the bikes as the bikes are designed to be ridden. That’s simply not much fun—scary, in fact.
ChampSchool is working to evolve rider training in America. We ask that the industry join us in pushing riders toward advanced training, whether through promotions like the free driving school you get when you buy a Mercedes-Benz AMG vehicle, or continued support of schools who provide the necessary curriculum to make riders consistently safer.
The information is out there, and it is the job of the motorcycle industry to get riders into these programs. We can guarantee our long-term future by developing expert riders early in their riding careers.
Join us by pushing yourself, your friends, and any rider you know to increase the safety and enjoyment of motorcycling by taking advanced riding instruction from a source you trust. Well-taught advanced instruction has never failed to make riders safer and happier—and faster, if you care about that. Safe, happy riders grow our industry.
If you haven’t had advanced riding instruction, you don’t know how truly amazing riding a motorcycle can be. Yep, I mean that.
How about this motto on every motorcycle classified-ad site: Don’t sell your bike and quit, get trained.
Stefano Manzi (62). Photo courtesy Ten Kate Racing.
Stefano Manzi topped FIM Supersport World Championship Free Practice One (FP1) Friday morning at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, in France. Riding his Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing YZF-R6 on spec Pirelli tires, the Italian lapped the 2.7-mile track in 1:40.669 to lead the field of 33 riders.
Frenchman and former MotoAmerica Supersport regular Valentin Debise was 14th in FP1 with a time of 1:41.869 on his Evan Bros. Yamaha.
Toprak Razgatlioglu was fastest during World Superbike Free Practice One Friday morning at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, in France. Riding his ROKiT BMW Motorrad M 1000 RR on Pirelli control tires, the current World Championship point leader lapped the stop-and-go circuit in 1:36.347 to lead the field of 23 riders.
American Garrett Gerloff was second-best with a 1:36.700 on his Bonovo Action BMW.
Razgatlioglu’s teammate Michael van der Mark made it three BMWs in the top three with a 1:37.016.
Jorge Martin topped MotoGP practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati Desmosedici on Michelin control tires, the current Championship point leader turned a 1:31.707 to lead the field of 23 riders – but it was a very tightly bunched field.
The top 18 riders in the session were within one second of Martin’s lap time.
This included Marc Marquez, who was second with a 1:31.744 on his Gresini Racing Ducati, and wildcard rider Pol Espargaro, who was third with a 1:31.920 on his Red Bull KTM Factory Racing RC16.
Tony Arbolino (14). Photo courtesy Marc VDS Racing Team.
Tony Arbolino was fastest during Moto2 World Championship practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. On board his Pirelli-shod Elf Marc VDS Racing Team Kalex, the Italian lapped the 2.6-mile track in 1:35.775, leading the field of 31 riders.
American Joe Roberts was 18th in the session with a 1:36.730 on his OnlyFans American Racing Team Kalex.
David Alonso was fastest in Moto3 World Championship practice Friday morning at Misano World Circuit – Marco Simoncelli, in San Marino. Riding his Gaviota Aspar Team CFMOTO on Pirelli control tires, the Colombian covered the 2.6-mile course in 1:41.175, topping the field of 27 riders.
A 2025-model SSR SR-E500 electric pit bike. Photo courtesy SSR Motorsports.
SSR MOTORSPORTS ANNOUNCES THE ALL NEW 2025 SR-E500 ELECTRIC PIT BIKE
SANTA FE SPRINGS, CA (September 5, 2024)
SSR Motorsports proudly presents the all new 2025 SR-E500 all electric pit bike. The first of an all-new generation of all-electric pit bikes offered by SSR, the SR-E500 takes all the knowledge and experience from the world’s leading pit bike company and combines it into one sleek little package perfect for youth riders from 4 – 10 years old!
Starting with a super clean looking moto-inspired design, the SR-E500 features a perimeter frame, single shock, telescopic forks, 10” wheels and hydraulic brakes. At the heart of this new model is an electric brushless motor powered by a swappable 10,400mAh / 48V lithium battery. Perfect for young riders just starting out the SR-E500 comes with three different power settings low, mid and high mode that can be preset by the parent. Power setting, battery life, and speed are all displayed on a large dashboard centrally mounted on the handlebar.
With an estimated operating time up to 100 minutes (@ low speed), and super easy recharge the SR-E500 is the perfect backyard play bike, track bike, or weekend warrior. Best of all the SR-E500 is very competitively priced at $1,699 MSRP, less than half the retail price of other comparable electric minibikes. The SR-E500 is just the first of an exciting new model range from SSR!
SSR Motorsports was established in 2002 to import and distribute powersports products in the United States. We provide products that are fun to ride, with cutting-edge design, superior engineering and well-managed quality control. Our Mission Statement: Provide Quality Powersports Products at an Affordable Price with Premier Customer Service.
We believe every enthusiast should be able to afford a brand-new powersport product that is backed by a manufacturer warranty, comprehensive dealer network, premier customer service and a West Coast distribution center stocked with readily available replacement parts. For more information, go to: https://www.ssrmotorsports.com/
2024 Canadian Superbike Champion Ben Young (1). Photo courtesy Bridgestone.
Bridgestone BATTLAX Racing Tires Achieve Record Year in 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series Season
Seventeen riders on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires set 31 outright lap records throughout the 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series (CSBK) season, with new records achieved at every round.
In the second year as the exclusive CSBK tire provider, Bridgestone delivered exceptional performance and support to all participating teams and riders throughout the season.
Bridgestone supported the Bagger Racing League as the series made its international debut at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park as part of CSBK.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Sept. 5, 2024) – Bridgestone Americas (Bridgestone) today announced a record-setting year of performance during the 2024 Bridgestone Canadian Superbike Championship Series (CSBK) season. During the 2024 season, 17 riders on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires set 31 total outright lap records, with new records established at every round. This marks the company’s second season as the exclusive tire provider for CSBK, with Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires delivering the grip and consistency that contributed to record-setting lap times.
The addition of RAD Torque Raceway in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada to the 2024 season provided several Western Canadian riders the opportunity to compete in a CSBK race for the first time on Bridgestone BATTLAX racing tires. Riders unfamiliar with BATTLAX racing tires experienced fast and consistent lap times on a track notorious for its demanding conditions.
2024 Bridgestone CSBK Lap Records
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Vincent Wilson
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – Adolf Silva (New Class)
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Pro) – Cameron Walker
Round 1 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Pro Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Zaim Laflamme
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Vincent Wilson
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – Rob Lepp (New Class)
Round 2 (Grand Bend Motorplex): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Ryan Beattie
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Pro Superbike – Ben Young
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Pro Sport Bike – Elliot Vieira
Round 3 (RAD Torque Raceway): Amateur Sport Bike – Serge Boyer
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Pro) – Jean-Francois Cyr
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Twins (Am) – Cecil Montour
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Pro) – Mack Weil (New Class)
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am ZX-4RR Cup (Am) – J-P Schroeder (New Class)
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Pro) – Stacey Nesbitt
Round 6 (Shannonville Motorsport Park – Long Track Layout): Pro/Am Lightweight (Am) – Treston Morrison
“Seventeen racers setting 31 lap records this season is a testament to the outstanding grip, performance and reliability of Bridgestone BATTLAX tires,” said Jim Dowell, National Sales and Racing Program Manager, Bridgestone Motorcycle Products in the United States and Canada. “We look forward to building on this success and supporting the next generation of champions in the CSBK series. Congratulations to each of the class-winning riders on a record-breaking season.”
“CSBK couldn’t be happier at the conclusion of our second season with Bridgestone,” said Ross Millson, National Event Owner, CSBK. “The performance, consistency and durability of the Bridgestone product provides race control and our competitors with an extreme level of confidence in all conditions. Bridgestone BATTLAX race tires have provided competitive racing, numerous lap records and some amazing moments in 2024. We are looking forward to continuing our partnership with Bridgestone through 2025 and beyond.”
Additionally, in 2024 Bridgestone supported the Bagger Racing League’s (BRL) international debut, which took place in association with CSBK at a special event at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park Aug. 9-11. The BRL is a U.S. race series where professional riders compete on custom and performance American V-Twin touring motorcycles known as baggers. During the series’ international debut, Bridgestone provided cutting-edge tire technology to help ensure optimal performance and safety on the track, further solidifying the company’s unmatched dominance as the leading tire brand in the BRL.
Bridgestone’s success in the 2024 CSBK series aligns with the “Emotion” and “Ease” values of the Bridgestone E8 Commitment. The Bridgestone E8 Commitment, encompassing eight values all beginning with the letter “E,” solidifies Bridgestone’s dedication to fostering a more sustainable world.
Bridgestone Americas, Inc. is the U.S.-based subsidiary of Bridgestone Corporation, a global leader in tires and rubber, building on its expertise to provide solutions for safe and sustainable mobility. Headquartered in Nashville, Tenn., Bridgestone Americas employs more than 45,000 people across its worldwide operations. Bridgestone offers a diverse product portfolio of premium tires and advanced solutions backed by innovative technologies, improving the way people around the world move, live, work and play.
(From left) Enea Bastianini, Francesco Bagnaia, Jorge Martin, and Marc Marquez at the pre-event press conference at Misano. Photo courtesy Dorna.
“It will be a good fight”: Media Day dispatch from Misano
Thursday, 05 September 2024
The Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli plays host to Round 13 of 2024 and on Thursday at the Gran Premio Red Bull di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini, there wasn’t a shortage of topics to get stuck into.
Check out the key story from Misano’s Media Day as one of the final 2025 rider puzzle pieces slots into place, and then enjoy the press conferences as eight riders sat down to chat to the media on Thursday. Press Conference 1 saw Championship leader Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) sit alongside Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team), Aragon GP winner Marc Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) and Enea Bastianini (Ducati Lenovo Team), before Pedro Acosta (Red Bull GASGAS Tech3), Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) and Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) were joined by Trackhouse Racing MotoGP™’s Miguel Oliveira.
Check out all the top headlines from the day and then come back for more as track action begins on Friday!
Jorge Martin. Photo courtesy Dorna.
JORGE MARTIN (Prima Pramac Racing)
Misano was one of your strongest weekends in MotoGP™. Do you feel you have the potential to dominate this weekend and do you feel that you are the strongest in this lead group in the Championship?
“It’s nice to be here in Misano after last year’s result but what I did last season doesn’t matter anymore. Now the important thing is to keep improving and keep learning because now the level is rising a lot. I feel like I am progressing, I am getting better and better but so are the others so it is quite difficult. I feel like here in Italy will be a super good weekend for Pecco and Enea as they train a lot here so it is a nice track for them but also for us. Dominate will be difficult, trying to repeat what we did last season will be super hard but I will try my best.”
Where did you make the difference last year in Misano?
“Last season I felt good straight away from the first Practice but Pecco and Marco were injured so I don’t know how much this was stopping them, but for sure they were not 100% which was an advantage. I was strong, I was missing some speed at the fast corner on the back straight so hopefully I can be better this year.”
Francesco Bagnaia (left) and Marc Marquez (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
FRANCESCO BAGNAIA (Ducati Lenovo Team)
How are you feeling physically and is Misano the perfect way to turn the page after a difficult weekend in Aragon?
“First of all I want to say sorry to Alex (Marquez) for the strong words I said during the interviews after the race. I was very angry about what happened and looking at the telemetry was even worse from my point of view. I was a bit too strong with my words, I didn’t want to say that he made us crash on purpose but his defence was a bit aggressive, like it is normal when you are fighting for the podium positions. I still think the same about the incident because I have my way of thinking but for sure the words, I said were a bit too much and I said sorry to Alex. Physically I am not at 100%, I feel a lot of pain in my shoulder, over the collarbone by my neck. We will try to be ready; it is my home Grand Prix and it is always fantastic to race in front of the crowd here. I cover a million kilometres every year here so I can be ready in any case.”
Do you think it was important to speak with Alex on Sunday?
“Yeah because sometimes anger can make you say something that you don’t think, so from my point of view it’s that. He came to our office to say sorry and we are two riders with two points of view and are respectful, and for sure we had the same ambition at the wrong moment.”
MARC MARQUEZ (Gresini Racing MotoGP™)
Does Gresini’s home weekend give you an extra push this weekend?
“Yeah for sure my target for this season has been achieved in Aragon so now it’s time to keep working and after that weekend we can breathe a bit more, but we need to use that extra boost, the extra confidence to keep working. With the team and the bike, we are learning something every race and are finding something, feeling better. I would like to start here with the same feeling as the Red Bull Ring, that will be enough for me as it means that already the feeling is good. I know that Aragon had very special conditions because of the surface and the storms during the night. For this GP, I think these three guys will be super-fast and we will try to be close to them.
What was it that convinced you that you could fight for wins again in 2024?
“Right there (referencing a video of him at the Valencia Test) I realised that my decision was the correct one, to keep going and change the direction. At that point I realised that sooner or later a victory would arrive during the 20 races, I knew that I would have some strong points at some circuits. Now we need to work on the most difficult thing in this Championship, which is consistency, this is what these two guys are better at than us and we will try to find a way to be faster in our weak points.”
Enea Bastianini (left) and Francesco Bagnaia (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
ENEA BASTIANINI (Ducati Lenovo Team)
Do you come here with high expectations of hopefully achieving another weekend like Silverstone?
“We will see, it is early to think about it but I am very happy to be back here in Misano, I missed the race last year because of injury. I am ready to come back to this circuit, it is one of my favourites because it is close to my town and also because my speed is also good as we train a lot here. I think we can be competitive, but also these three guys will be competitive and it will be a good fight. In Silverstone, it was so nice to ride from Friday and I hope to have the same sensation here. In Aragon, something didn’t work from the start because of the new asphalt but it can be different so let’s see.”
You will have huge support from family and friends this weekend, does that bring any extra pressure?
“I think we have to do many races and it will be important to stay focused for the rest of the season. I like the rest of the calendar, we have two races here in Misano and we are prepared before the Asian tour.”
PEDRO ACOSTA (Red Bull GASGAS Tech3)
How confident are you that you can maintain the level that you showed in Aragon here at Misano?
“First of all, I’m happy to be competitive again in Aragon. It was a good weekend overall but it’s true that our competitors will be fast here. Also, Brad and Dani had an awesome race last year so why not aim to be as competitive as Aragon as a minimum.”
Herve told us, “I am convinced that Pedro will be a title contender in 2025, not just because of his speed but because he ticks all of the boxes, he is the complete package,” what do you make of his comments?
“Let’s try and cross our fingers, for sure the jump to the factory team will help as the developments that we have made in the past couple of months were awesome and the steps that we have made and I think we will be competitive sooner or later. It’s true that we are one step behind our competitors but this is a thing of time and I think we will best fast sooner or later, and we can’t forget that our project is still quite young. For sure we will make a bigger step in the next few months.”
Fabio Di Giannantonio (left) and Pedro Acosta (right). Photo courtesy Dorna.
FABIO DI GIANNANTONIO (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team)
How much of a boost did Aragon give you and what do you expect this weekend in Misano?
“It was a fantastic weekend because before coming there I didn’t think it would be possible to complete the race or this type of race. So, we arrived with no expectations and in the end, it was possible to make the race and make a very good race because I was starting from far back and I made a lot of overtakes. At this moment of the year, we are trying to manage the pain because I am still trying to manage the collarbone from the crash at the Sachsenring and then my left shoulder in Austria. At the moment the body is a little bit on the limit but I’m not worried because with the bike we are feeling really good, we know that the 2023 bike has a little gap between the 2024 bikes but I think we can make a good race here in Misano.”
Your first race here for the VR46 Team, does that give you an extra push?
“For sure. Yesterday we had a big team dinner and the energy is really high, everything and everybody has a lot of will to have a good weekend, so it will be important to give our maximum. Misano is always special but this year is even more special.”
Alex Marquez. Photo courtesy Dorna.
ALEX MARQUEZ (Gresini Racing MotoGP™)
Firstly, how are you physically?
“Good. I mean maybe I’m not 100% after a big crash, it’s true that it’s not easy to recover, the body has just two or three days. I had three hours of physio on Monday, also today I had two hours. Day by day I am much better and I think I will be 100% this weekend. I like the fact that he apologised, it’s something which I am thankful to him for. It’s true that the damage to myself, my team and also to my rider image has already been done. That being said I want to close this chapter and want no one to speak about it. We are coming from a really positive weekend in Aragon, so we will look forward, we have an important weekend here as it is the team’s home GP, so we need to be really focused from the beginning.”
How important is it for it to be Gresini’s home GP?
“It will be really nice to ride at the front. I know the hospitality will be full of guests and these good vibes will be positive so we will try the maximum that we can achieve a good result. We struggled here last year as it’s not a track which suits my riding style well, but I think we are focused and if we come here in good shape then we can get a good result here.”
Miguel Oliveira. Photo courtesy Dorna.
MIGUEL OLIVEIRA (Trackhouse Racing MotoGP™)
What was the motivation behind this new challenge?
“I think first of all it is a little bit of a shift of the focus that they are having at the moment to develop the current bike. Despite the rules changing in two years, Yamaha does not want to wait much longer to come back to the top. After being involved with two manufacturers I feel that my adaption capability is high, I am riding in totally a different way compared to two years ago. I think this will help to give feedback and get things going quicker. Having a second factory team and being involved in a team such as Pramac is a huge motivation for me and I can’t wait to get started.”
Gwan “Chef” Simon, a main staff member of Blackhawk Farms Raceway and integral part of the ASRA family for decades, passed away on Monday, August 26th resulting from injuries sustained in a car accident. In tribute, the ASRA Midwest will be holding a memorial lap in his honor on Saturday, September 14th over lunch during the Blackhawk Farms race weekend.
Anyone wishing to participate need a helmet and pay the $20 gate entry. ASRA will be donating half of the proceeds from the gate entry to Gwan’s family.
We will sincerely miss Gwan. He was always encouraging to all of our racers, treating everyone like family, and a main piece of what made Blackhawk what it is. Our heartfelt condolences go out to his family and friends.
Yamaha Champions Riding School instructor Cody Wyman and a student mid-lesson. Photo courtesy Yamaha Champions Riding School.
FIRST PERSON/OPINION:
By Nick Ienatsch
Riders!
Enjoy Motorcycles Forever!
This Is The Key To Long-Term Motorcycling Happiness.
Well trained riders have more fun riding motorcycles for longer.
Yamaha Champions Riding School instructor Cody Wyman with students. Photo by SPImage, courtesy Yamaha Champions Riding School.
The vast majority of motorcycle road racing champions contemplate quitting the sport at some time in their careers. Injury and losing prompt those contemplations. But rather than become another ex-racer, they work harder on their craft. Quitting due to injury is self-explanatory. Pain and expense lead the list of reasons, but embarrassment and family pressure and a loss of points must be added in. Getting beaten is the second reason racers quit and it can be put more simply: Losing isn’t fun.
My Point
Apply this to our entire industry. Crashing is usually tougher on street riders than racers, and not having fun on your new motorcycle prompts you to leave it in the garage. One crash or six months of hardly riding lead to a “showroom condition, selling with riding gear” advertisement in the local want ads.
My Experience
Expert rider training changes all this. Whether it’s an hour spent talking with a championship-winning racer around a track map or enrolling in a school that teaches riding at the highest level, this expert advice and approach is the game changer. It’s the industry grower.
How about this for an industry motto: Don’t quit, get expert training.
Expert rider training is the shortcut past the crashes that might teach you a lot if you continue to ride. The problem with learning through trial and error is that the errors can be quite difficult to deal with in this sport. This is not waterskiing. Failing to make a cut behind the boat doesn’t compare with failing to make the downhill right-hand corner with a truck in the oncoming lane. “If you’re not crashing, you’re not learning” is BS!
Expert rider training will help you identify the steps that lead to a crash, the mistakes that finally add up to a loss of traction. The experience of the instructors is passed on to you, allowing you to skip over all the mistakes the instructors have made and seen. It’s a great shortcut.
Don’t Forget Fun
Expert rider training makes riding more fun. Suddenly, and I mean suddenly, improvements are rapid; you can run with your friends on the way to breakfast. That new fast motorcycle becomes a joy to ride rather than sheer terror. You learn to ride your old “pile of crap” quite rapidly and safely. Touring in the rain is no big deal, and when you visit the Alps on a rented BMW you are always in the lead group. You start to think about trackdays and even racing. Your expert-based knowledge seeps into your riding group and all ships rise. Riding is more fun because expert training brings you bike control and a technical approach to this often overly emotional sport.
Yamaha Champions Riding School Founder and Chief Instructor Nick Ienatsch. Photo by Michael Spain Smith, courtesy Yamaha Champions Riding School.
Maybe I’m Wrong
The solution could be antilock brakes. Linked brakes. Traction control. Power modes. Better tires. Improved suspension. But wait… We have all that. What we need to add to all this incredible technological hardware is the rider software, the expert’s approach pre-ride and during the ride. Not just the physical skills used to manage traction and direction, but the focused all-in mental habits that the best bring to their motorcycling. The bikes and tires are getting better and the rider isn’t keeping up. Proper advanced training brings the rider up to the level of the modern motorcycle.
Maybe another motto: Rider training keeps riders riding.
You And Yours
Maybe I’m writing this to you, maybe to your brother or neighbor. I’m speaking directly to these people:
1.) The person who came into our sport and found it too difficult or too scary after their initial foray at a new-rider school. Additional training helps solve those mysteries, making riding more comfortable in all situations.
2.) Someone who doesn’t have time to ride anymore—a euphemism for “riding isn’t fun.” Riders who are hooked on motorcycling will always find time to ride.
3.) Riders who are done with the sport and are selling the bike and all their gear. In other words, these riders fell in love with the sport. They bought the bike, the Rossi replica helmet, extra oil filters, and changed the pipe and turn signals. But now they’re done. They are quitting a pastime that captivated them at some point in their lives.
4.) Motorcycle industry workers who don’t ride. They got in this industry because of their two-wheeled passion but now, due to injury/expense/embarrassment or not having fun because they couldn’t safely keep up with their friends, they are just going through the motions at work without the passion of riding. A love of motorcycle riding makes this the best industry in the world, but without that love it’s just another job.
5.) Rider coaches who are burned out. Boost your enthusiasm by attending an advanced school. Your enthusiasm is an important concern to the industry because you are often the first motorcycle professional a new rider will meet, and your love of riding will be contagious while your burned-out attitude will be another reason your students don’t ride after class. Rekindle your love of the sport with an advanced school.
6.) Track riders or road racers who have hit a plateau in their lap times and enjoyment. When you try to go quicker, you run off the asphalt, yet there are riders on the same bike and tires who are going consistently faster. “Why go beat around the track doing the same thing next year?” you ask yourself. Easy to become an ex-rider at that point, but a visit to an advanced riding school will give you a toolbox full of new techniques and approaches. Time at a school will make you faster safer, with increased understanding of how and why.
To Be Exact
The fun and safety leave this sport when the motorcycle is poorly ridden. Think of it this way: The motorcycle is designed to work with certain inputs at certain moments by expert development riders working with expert development engineers. If the owner of that motorcycle is riding the bike differently, the bike doesn’t work as well. The faster the owner tries to ride, the larger these discrepancies become. The owner is working with the best advice they have heard or read. Some examples of the poor advice I have seen:
1.) An uncle who has ridden slowly for 40 years will advise “use the rear brake only.” Please don’t listen to your uncle.
2.) A forum writer who lives in Nebraska and rides a Rebel 250 will tell you trail-braking is not necessary. Don’t believe everything you read on the internet, especially on forums.
3.) A rider who races but crashes too often will tell you to “flick that thing in there.” Obviously his simplified view of proper corner technique is serving him well. Right?
4.) A passionate rider who really cares but doesn’t have the background posts “training” videos on the internet and advises downshifting for corners and not braking. Passion does not equal knowledge.
5.) You hear, “Power through the corner.” Not every corner.
6.) You read, “You should be accelerating or braking.” What about between those two?
7.) “When in doubt, gas it.” Not always.
8.) “To tighten your line, accelerate.” Dead wrong.
9.) “Don’t use the brakes at lean angle.” One hundred-percent wrong.
10.) “Don’t touch the rear brake.” Wrong again.
11.) You’re convinced that all you need is more seat time, more laps, and that “practice makes perfect.” However, the best rider coaches know that “practice makes permanent,” so riding more miles with poor technique is not the path to improvement, it’s only the path to grooving your mistakes.
12.) You believe that the rider you are now is the rider you will always be. Wrong! Expert-level riding is logical, explainable, and learnable. The expert coaches in this country have enormous faith in every rider’s ability to learn advanced techniques.
Help Fix Two Other Issues
Students who attend advanced training schools are hit with how seriously good riders take their riding. Not only does this message come through loud and clear from the instructors, but the entire class is extremely intent on riding better. They are also hit with the safety of a racetrack when compared to the street. This helps with two vital issues:
1.) Speed choices on the street. A rider who has been to a track-based school and seen what “fast” really means looks at the immovable objects surrounding most public roads and curbs their street speed accordingly.
2.) Alcohol involvement. An advanced riding school stresses the vital importance of rider inputs and approaches in terms of safety, so drinking alcohol before or during a ride becomes as intelligent as riding blindfolded. Alcohol is involved in 25-to-50 percent of motorcycle accidents (depending upon whose stats you read) but riders with advanced training become focused on eliminating anything that is so sure to cause an error.
Riding advice is everywhere but know this: At the limit, which could be setting your personal best lap time at the track or entering a downhill, blind corner in the rain on a road you’ve never seen before, the rider’s actions must be precise and accurate. Poor technique based on flawed advice gets painful when the pace is up or the traction is down. In those moments, expert-level riding instruction will equip you for survival and triumph.
Notice that I haven’t written, “Expert riding instruction will prevent you from crashing again.” That’s the goal of every professional riding instructor, but not a guarantee. But here is a guarantee: If you crash after expert riding instruction, you will get up off the ground knowing what went wrong. You will be able to review the pre-crash action and form a plan to not repeat that series of actions. That keeps riders in the sport.
Expert riding instruction equips riders with the tools and outlook to continue to coach themselves into a constantly improving rider or racer. These students become technical riders rather than emotional riders. Their initial fascination with motorcycles grows into a lifelong passion because they stay healthy.
Summary
The American motorcycle industry isn’t growing and there are many opinions as to why. Blame is going to video games, millennials, a risk-free society, and not enough beginner bikes. But here is my provable belief: Motorcycling in America isn’t growing because riders don’t get the advanced training necessary early in their riding careers. To put this in our earlier parlance: The new riders aren’t riding the bikes as the bikes are designed to be ridden. That’s simply not much fun—scary, in fact.
ChampSchool is working to evolve rider training in America. We ask that the industry join us in pushing riders toward advanced training, whether through promotions like the free driving school you get when you buy a Mercedes-Benz AMG vehicle, or continued support of schools who provide the necessary curriculum to make riders consistently safer.
The information is out there, and it is the job of the motorcycle industry to get riders into these programs. We can guarantee our long-term future by developing expert riders early in their riding careers.
Join us by pushing yourself, your friends, and any rider you know to increase the safety and enjoyment of motorcycling by taking advanced riding instruction from a source you trust. Well-taught advanced instruction has never failed to make riders safer and happier—and faster, if you care about that. Safe, happy riders grow our industry.
If you haven’t had advanced riding instruction, you don’t know how truly amazing riding a motorcycle can be. Yep, I mean that.
How about this motto on every motorcycle classified-ad site: Don’t sell your bike and quit, get trained.
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This mode provides different assistive options to help users with cognitive impairments such as Dyslexia, Autism, CVA, and others, to focus on the essential elements of the website more easily.
ADHD Friendly Mode
Reduces distractions and improve focus
This mode helps users with ADHD and Neurodevelopmental disorders to read, browse, and focus on the main website elements more easily while significantly reducing distractions.
Blindness Mode
Allows using the site with your screen-reader
This mode configures the website to be compatible with screen-readers such as JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and TalkBack. A screen-reader is software for blind users that is installed on a computer and smartphone, and websites must be compatible with it.
Online Dictionary
Readable Experience
Content Scaling
Default
Text Magnifier
Readable Font
Dyslexia Friendly
Highlight Titles
Highlight Links
Font Sizing
Default
Line Height
Default
Letter Spacing
Default
Left Aligned
Center Aligned
Right Aligned
Visually Pleasing Experience
Dark Contrast
Light Contrast
Monochrome
High Contrast
High Saturation
Low Saturation
Adjust Text Colors
Adjust Title Colors
Adjust Background Colors
Easy Orientation
Mute Sounds
Hide Images
Hide Emoji
Reading Guide
Stop Animations
Reading Mask
Highlight Hover
Highlight Focus
Big Dark Cursor
Big Light Cursor
Cognitive Reading
Virtual Keyboard
Navigation Keys
Voice Navigation
Accessibility Statement
www.roadracingworld.com
July 4, 2025
Compliance status
We firmly believe that the internet should be available and accessible to anyone, and are committed to providing a website that is accessible to the widest possible audience,
regardless of circumstance and ability.
To fulfill this, we aim to adhere as strictly as possible to the World Wide Web Consortium’s (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.1 (WCAG 2.1) at the AA level.
These guidelines explain how to make web content accessible to people with a wide array of disabilities. Complying with those guidelines helps us ensure that the website is accessible
to all people: blind people, people with motor impairments, visual impairment, cognitive disabilities, and more.
This website utilizes various technologies that are meant to make it as accessible as possible at all times. We utilize an accessibility interface that allows persons with specific
disabilities to adjust the website’s UI (user interface) and design it to their personal needs.
Additionally, the website utilizes an AI-based application that runs in the background and optimizes its accessibility level constantly. This application remediates the website’s HTML,
adapts Its functionality and behavior for screen-readers used by the blind users, and for keyboard functions used by individuals with motor impairments.
If you’ve found a malfunction or have ideas for improvement, we’ll be happy to hear from you. You can reach out to the website’s operators by using the following email
Screen-reader and keyboard navigation
Our website implements the ARIA attributes (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) technique, alongside various different behavioral changes, to ensure blind users visiting with
screen-readers are able to read, comprehend, and enjoy the website’s functions. As soon as a user with a screen-reader enters your site, they immediately receive
a prompt to enter the Screen-Reader Profile so they can browse and operate your site effectively. Here’s how our website covers some of the most important screen-reader requirements,
alongside console screenshots of code examples:
Screen-reader optimization: we run a background process that learns the website’s components from top to bottom, to ensure ongoing compliance even when updating the website.
In this process, we provide screen-readers with meaningful data using the ARIA set of attributes. For example, we provide accurate form labels;
descriptions for actionable icons (social media icons, search icons, cart icons, etc.); validation guidance for form inputs; element roles such as buttons, menus, modal dialogues (popups),
and others. Additionally, the background process scans all the website’s images and provides an accurate and meaningful image-object-recognition-based description as an ALT (alternate text) tag
for images that are not described. It will also extract texts that are embedded within the image, using an OCR (optical character recognition) technology.
To turn on screen-reader adjustments at any time, users need only to press the Alt+1 keyboard combination. Screen-reader users also get automatic announcements to turn the Screen-reader mode on
as soon as they enter the website.
These adjustments are compatible with all popular screen readers, including JAWS and NVDA.
Keyboard navigation optimization: The background process also adjusts the website’s HTML, and adds various behaviors using JavaScript code to make the website operable by the keyboard. This includes the ability to navigate the website using the Tab and Shift+Tab keys, operate dropdowns with the arrow keys, close them with Esc, trigger buttons and links using the Enter key, navigate between radio and checkbox elements using the arrow keys, and fill them in with the Spacebar or Enter key.Additionally, keyboard users will find quick-navigation and content-skip menus, available at any time by clicking Alt+1, or as the first elements of the site while navigating with the keyboard. The background process also handles triggered popups by moving the keyboard focus towards them as soon as they appear, and not allow the focus drift outside it.
Users can also use shortcuts such as “M” (menus), “H” (headings), “F” (forms), “B” (buttons), and “G” (graphics) to jump to specific elements.
Disability profiles supported in our website
Epilepsy Safe Mode: this profile enables people with epilepsy to use the website safely by eliminating the risk of seizures that result from flashing or blinking animations and risky color combinations.
Visually Impaired Mode: this mode adjusts the website for the convenience of users with visual impairments such as Degrading Eyesight, Tunnel Vision, Cataract, Glaucoma, and others.
Cognitive Disability Mode: this mode provides different assistive options to help users with cognitive impairments such as Dyslexia, Autism, CVA, and others, to focus on the essential elements of the website more easily.
ADHD Friendly Mode: this mode helps users with ADHD and Neurodevelopmental disorders to read, browse, and focus on the main website elements more easily while significantly reducing distractions.
Blindness Mode: this mode configures the website to be compatible with screen-readers such as JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and TalkBack. A screen-reader is software for blind users that is installed on a computer and smartphone, and websites must be compatible with it.
Keyboard Navigation Profile (Motor-Impaired): this profile enables motor-impaired persons to operate the website using the keyboard Tab, Shift+Tab, and the Enter keys. Users can also use shortcuts such as “M” (menus), “H” (headings), “F” (forms), “B” (buttons), and “G” (graphics) to jump to specific elements.
Additional UI, design, and readability adjustments
Font adjustments – users, can increase and decrease its size, change its family (type), adjust the spacing, alignment, line height, and more.
Color adjustments – users can select various color contrast profiles such as light, dark, inverted, and monochrome. Additionally, users can swap color schemes of titles, texts, and backgrounds, with over seven different coloring options.
Animations – person with epilepsy can stop all running animations with the click of a button. Animations controlled by the interface include videos, GIFs, and CSS flashing transitions.
Content highlighting – users can choose to emphasize important elements such as links and titles. They can also choose to highlight focused or hovered elements only.
Audio muting – users with hearing devices may experience headaches or other issues due to automatic audio playing. This option lets users mute the entire website instantly.
Cognitive disorders – we utilize a search engine that is linked to Wikipedia and Wiktionary, allowing people with cognitive disorders to decipher meanings of phrases, initials, slang, and others.
Additional functions – we provide users the option to change cursor color and size, use a printing mode, enable a virtual keyboard, and many other functions.
Browser and assistive technology compatibility
We aim to support the widest array of browsers and assistive technologies as possible, so our users can choose the best fitting tools for them, with as few limitations as possible. Therefore, we have worked very hard to be able to support all major systems that comprise over 95% of the user market share including Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, Opera and Microsoft Edge, JAWS and NVDA (screen readers).
Notes, comments, and feedback
Despite our very best efforts to allow anybody to adjust the website to their needs. There may still be pages or sections that are not fully accessible, are in the process of becoming accessible, or are lacking an adequate technological solution to make them accessible. Still, we are continually improving our accessibility, adding, updating and improving its options and features, and developing and adopting new technologies. All this is meant to reach the optimal level of accessibility, following technological advancements. For any assistance, please reach out to