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Holiday Gift Guide: Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology Subscription

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology Subscription

An annual subscription to Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine includes 12 monthly, full-color, print issues of the magazine mailed to your home or business, access to the digital version of the magazines plus access to all digitized back issues, and the Trackday Directory annual edition. Each issue includes the latest news, honest motorcycle and product reviews, in-depth coverage of everything from club racing to MotoAmerica and the World Championships, enlightening feature articles on people and businesses in the racing industry, and more. A one-year subscription is only $25 and multi-year subscriptions are available at discounted prices. For more information, go to https://store.roadracingworld.com/collections/all or call (909) 654-4779 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (Pacific Time) Monday-Friday.

Energica: Electric Versus Gas Bikes In MotoAmerica

Featured in the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine:        

 

On The Charge: Electric Energica Podiums In MotoAmerica Against Gas Machines!

By Michael Gougis

Energica officials knew that racing in the one-make MotoE class had its limitations. The Energica Evo Corsa is an awesome machine, but at the end of the day, Energica was racing against itself in the FIM Enel MotoE World Cup. And it left unanswered the big question: How would an electric racebike perform against traditional internal combustion gasoline-powered machines?

“We had to prove to people that we had a legitimate sportbike. And you earn your respect on the racetrack,” says Stefano Benatti, CEO of Energica Motor Company, USA.

So last year, Energica withdrew from the MotoE class and prepped a Eva Ribelle RS, the company’s streetfighter model, to compete in MotoAmerica’s Super Hooligan class. And this year, in Race One at Circuit of The Americas, Stefano Mesa was holding down a solid third place on the Ribelle when a last-corner pass went wrong for Jeremy McWilliams on the Indian in front of him, giving Mesa second, the first podium for an electric motorcycle in a professional race against ICE machines. Respect, indeed.

 

Stefano Mesa finished second on an Energica in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan race against gas bikes ridden by winner Tyler O'Hara (Indian) and Andy DiBrino (KTM). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Stefano Mesa finished second on an Energica in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan race against gas bikes ridden by winner Tyler O’Hara (Indian) and Andy DiBrino (KTM). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

 

“I knew we had third, but, honestly, those two (McWilliams and Indian teammate Tyler O’Hara) race each other so hard all the time, that when I saw that yellow flag, I thought maybe they’d taken each other out!” Mesa says. “We had a legitimate third. We would have been happy with third. We’re super stoked to get the second place. To get the second was so much better.”

In June of 2022, Benatti told Roadracing World that Energica planned to race in America, but he could not reveal details of where and when just yet. The debut came shortly afterward at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, where Mesa was entered on a lightly-modified street Ribelle RS. The results were encouraging, so Tytlers Cycle Racing decided to keep developing the bike (“ribelle” is Italian for “rebel”) and enter the eight-race, four-round 2023 Super Hooligan series.

 

Mesa (137) leads DiBrino (62), AJ Peaslee (126), Tyler Duffy (95), and Nate Kern (9) in Race One at Circuit of The Americas. Photos by Brian J. Nelson.
Mesa (137) leads DiBrino (62), AJ Peaslee (126), Tyler Duffy (95), and Nate Kern (9) in Race One at Circuit of The Americas. Photos by Brian J. Nelson.

 

Mesa scored a seventh and a fifth at Daytona, then DNF and finished fourth at Ridge Motorsports Park, still nearly six seconds off the podium. Then came Laguna, where the results were impressive, but not as impressive as the launch Mesa got in Race One. When the lights went out, Mesa nailed the start and led into Turn One and held the lead for nearly half a lap before finishing sixth. “Our hearts were bursting through our chests,” Benatti says.

The Tytlers team was not looking forward to the COTA round. Heat is the enemy of electric bikes, and the track’s long, fast straights and the forecast high ambient temperatures would not play to the strengths of an electric motorcycle.

But the team had been developing the bike, which now incorporates the company’s Kit Corsa Clienti package. Power management firmware, suspension, and brakes all were upgraded. And the bike worked well enough that Mesa had advantages where he didn’t expect to find them. The bike’s torque got it out of tight corners well; the Öhlins suspension and geometry changes kept the bike stable in the fast corners; and the brakes were amazing. “We’ve done solid work with the package we’ve got,” Mesa says.

 

(From left) Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti, Tytlers Cycle Racing team owner Michael Kiley, and Energica CTO Giampiero Testoni. Photo by Valerio Piccini.
(From left) Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti, Tytlers Cycle Racing team owner Michael Kiley, and Energica CTO Giampiero Testoni. Photo by Rick Flashman, courtesy Energica.

 

The red flag that interrupted Race One in Texas didn’t do the Energica any favors. The few minutes of extra charge weren’t really significant, and the ambient heat didn’t allow the battery pack to cool significantly, Mesa says. Still, Mesa was into the podium positions at the end of the second lap, and was two seconds ahead of Andy DiBrino, who was running fourth, when McWilliams crashed. Fifth in Race Two was anti-climatic, but it was enough for Mesa, Tytlers, and Energica to seal fourth place in the Championship standings. “We could not have asked for more,” Benatti says.

It was good for Energica, but it was also good for Tytlers, which took the chance on an electric racebike program; and good for international energy conglomerate Petronas, which came on board as a sponsor. It turns out that making lubricants for electric vehicles is a new and growing market.

And it was good for Mesa. The 29-year-old Colombian was running his own Supersport and Stock 1000 programs in MotoAmerica when he was approached with a unique opportunity. “We were at Road America and I was riding my own thing, doing the 600 and the 1000 stuff, and Corey Alexander came up to me and said the owner of my team wants to talk to you about a possible ride. So I went to talk to Michael Kiley (founder of Tytlers Cycle Racing.) He wasn’t sure how everything was going to pan out, but it might bring a lot of attention, and it might be the future. I’m really, really glad I took the opportunity.

“When I was doing my own thing, I was changing my own tires, I was the mechanic as well. It was definitely taking a toll on me. I’m super grateful that Michael gave me this opportunity. The biggest thing that changed was having a crew behind me and me being able to just concentrate on riding and going fast. Now every lap counts and I can put in laps and get better at it. I think people are starting to believe in these electric things. I’ve become a huge EV fan since I started.”

 

 

Energica’s Stefano Benatti And Giampiero Testoni, On The First MotoAmerica Podium For An Electric Motorcycle Competing Against Gas Machines

“We Are Making History…”

 

Stefano Mesa on the Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike at Circuit of The Americas, where he finished second place in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Stefano Mesa on the Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike at Circuit of The Americas, where he finished second place in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti  and Energica Chief Technical Officer Giampiero Testoni talked to Roadracing World Editor John Ulrich about Energica racer Stefano Mesa taking second in MotoAmerica Super Hooligan Race One at the Circuit of The Americas. Benatti and Testoni were understandable thrilled at the company’s first podium in MotoAmerica competition, and, more importantly, the first podium for an electric bike racing internal combustion motorcycles in a National Series.

Roadracing World: What were some of the difficulties you had to overcome to make the Energica Eva Ribelle RS model competitive against gas motorcycles. Can you explain those?

Giampiero Testoni: First of all, it’s facing different kinds of bikes, different kinds of usage of the bikes. We have of course power delivery, energy usage, and length of the whole race. And most of all, how well the rider adapts to riding something different than what they’ve been used to for the last maybe 20 years.

So first of all I would say the approach we had during this Championship was to allow Stefano Mesa to adapt to the bike, because as you can see he has done a very good learning curve. He has adapted to the bike. He is riding very well.

And at the same time, one of the major issues, major challenges for us, is facing the energy consumption on very long tracks and very fast tracks. Daytona and COTA are two of the most challenging tracks for electric vehicles. Very long straights, very high top speeds, it’s where the bike is getting more energy requests.

So based on that we have been bringing all the experience we had in MotoE the last four years–of course, it’s different because that was a single-manufacturer race. Here the challenge mostly is to race against different bikes that have a clutch, have gears, have a transmission, have a different braking point, so even the lines could be different because of how you have to brake and how you accelerate.

We have a big advantage in torque, so you can see that the start off the grid is great. That’s the biggest advantage of the electric. But at the same time we have super acceleration and one of the highest top speeds, even without a transmission.

Of course, we have to set up the bike perfectly for every track. We have to see how to do the management of the energy during the whole race, so over the weekend we try to gather data. But this is our first year for us on new tracks, and the rider of course is learning. He’s pulling down seconds between each session! So you have the data from the previous session, and then he goes (several) seconds faster. So all the data you have from qualifying is completely different, because he is going faster.

So every time, we have to re-set our understanding of our data and try to set up for the next race, for the next venue. So let’s say that this first year for us is a learning year, although we are doing very well. It is unexpected. We are, OK, we will participate, we will see how it goes, we don’t have great expectations. Second place, the expectations start to get high! The rider is happy, the rider is happy on the bike. He feels he is very competitive.

 

Editor John Ulrich (left) talking to Energica's Giampiero (center) and Stefano Benatti (right). Photo by Valerio Piccini.
Editor John Ulrich (left) talking to Energica’s Giampiero (center) and Stefano Benatti (right). Photo by Valerio Piccini.

 

Roadracing World: No one’s done this before–racing an electric bike against gas bikes with any kind of success. They might have done it a long time ago, but nobody’s done it at the National level and nobody’s done it in the last 20 years that we can recall. We used to see some guys with experimental bikes they built themselves try to do it in club racing, but they didn’t work very well. So basically you are making history with this. Did you expect it to go this well?

Giampiero Testoni: This well? No. We have the experience working with electric motorcycles. We started with racing, working up to production and now racing again for the last 15 years. So let’s say that we are already pioneers–not the first pioneers, but we were one of the first.

We put our racing experience together with a new vision of propulsion, going electric. And let’s say that we brought our road experience to the racebikes, and the race experience to the road bikes, and now again our road experience to racing. We didn’t expect to go that well, but we know the job that our guys have done in the last 10 years and all the development we have done.

We are the reference for the road market for the electric. We are the top level, the top performance, the top styling and so on, so I think that our guys have done a very good job. We have been pushing everywhere. Racing is our DNA, so wherever it is possible …

We ended last year the four years of the MotoE World (Cup), so we said, what’s next? Our colleagues from the U.S. pushed a lot to go racing against petrol motorcycles, so, OK, we said, you know the market. Europe is completely different. So U.S. is a different market.

But at the end of the day, you have to say they were right, because this is proving, as you say, that we are making history. That the electric bike is a perfect alternative to a combustion bike. You can have fun and go fast. You can race against petrol and you can win against a petrol motorcycle. So this is a great shout to the public, showing that there is something else out there. We don’t want to say that everything will be electric, that there will be only electric so you just have to convert. No. But there is an alternative that is as fun, as fast, maybe funner, if you want, for the torque and so on.

The expectations were not this high, so a podium for us is something really unexpected, and at a track like COTA–it’s a really, really demanding track. So we’re very happy, but being in the top 10 was already being a success, then we started being top five, now the podium, so let’s see what’s next!

Roadracing World: What is next?

Stefano Benatti: Racing is a question mark. Anything could happen, so expectations are high. When you see something new coming on the podium, even the other racers have an extra eye on him, saying now he’s a threat! First he’s at the back, now let’s look out for the electric bike with Stefano, because that is really dangerous. When you are a little back, OK, you are a challenge to those at the back but the (leaders) are more calm and know that they are still winning. When you end up being second against 30, 40, how many petrol motorcycles, they are saying, that is something we have to have an extra eye on! So we think expectations are high everywhere, but at the same time Stefano may be the most targeted rider in the race!

Roadracing World: On Facebook, we’ve seen pictures of electric bikes on fire. We see pictures of electric scooters that people have catch on fire. A couple of weeks ago, when we were on the way to LAX airport there was a big traffic jam. In the middle of the raised transition road from one freeway to another there was a Tesla on fire. So some people worry about that kind of thing. So what would you say to someone who is worried about buying an electric bike because they think it could catch on fire?

Stefano Benatti: It’s just because everyone is looking at what is happening on electric. They say, oh, there was a fire. But how many petrol cars do you see on fire but you don’t think, ah, a car is burning. But if you see an electric car is burning you think, ah, we have to take pictures! We have to send it to the media! But maybe you have seen 10 petrol cars burning. So really I think it’s media attention now because whatever is new is scary because you don’t know. So everyone is having an extra eye on what is electric.

Of course you have to pay attention because there are dangers like everywhere. But we are used to petrol. You smell it, you can see it, you can touch it. While electricity is something you don’t see, you don’t smell. And if you touch it, you can get severely injured. At the same time, it’s an electro-chemical system, so if something goes wrong, mostly it is poor engineering in the battery management system or something intruding from the external. A crash, something severe that is damaging the battery. This can lead to a fire. So in that case, I say everything is dangerous, every vehicle.

Roadracing World: Life is dangerous. Racing is definitely dangerous.

Giampiero Testoni: Racing–how many MotoGP (motorcycles) you see when they slide and catch fire? But they’re used to that. An electric vehicle that is catching fire first of all is a different fire, so you have to know how to manage it. It’s mostly about how conscious we are about how we have to fight fire that is coming from electric.

But that is getting more consolidated because we know how the car industry is going on electric, at least in Europe; (by) 2045, we will have to go all electric. So because of that, the push on electric is huge. And (so is) the development on the safety measures, active and passive.

It’s about knowing and reacting  and doing the right thing. Here we are at the racetrack, so it is a closed environment. Anything may happen, so you have to be ready for that. I would say that it’s not something that we have to hide from. We have electricity in every house. You know that you cannot put fingers inside an outlet in your house, because you will get electrocuted. So it’s a different thing. We are getting used to it, we are getting used to the technology, and then it will be normal.

Video: Jonathan Rea 2023 Winter Testing Vlog, E:3 – “Raw On Board Yamaha R1”

Six-time Superbike World Champion Jonathan Rea has been producing a regular vlog for several seasons. As he begins his transition to Pata Yamaha Prometeon after spending the last nine seasons with Kawasaki Racing Team, we thought we would look back at Rea’s 2023 season through his own vlogs.

This episode is “Raw On Board Yamaha R1.”

 

Holiday Gift Guide: 6D ATS-1R Helmet

6D ATS-1R Helmet

The 6D ATS-1R helmet is designed for both top racers and recreational riders, with class-leading safety technology and premium features in a lightweight, aerodynamic 3k carbon-fiber shell. 6D’s Proprietary Omni-Directional Suspension™ technology is designed to provide superior protection against impacts. 6D offers multiple face shields and tear-offs for any race situation. Retail is $799.95 from 6D dealers, or from 6DHelmets.com. 

Shops: James Compton Customs, In The December Issue

Featured In the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World:         

  

        There’s a saying that if you find a way to get paid doing what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life. People who work with motorcycles know this saying well, as many of them are living proof. 

        But former racer and racebike tuner James Compton has not only found a way to make money doing what he loves at James Compton Customs, he has also found a way to include his family in his thriving niche business…           

            “Shops: James Compton Customs,”  by David Swarts

 

 

            It has been a long and interesting trip for James Compton, from playing in bowl games as a college football athlete to racing and running an employment agency. Now he’s doing what he loves the most, building ridiculously cool motorcycles. Read about someone who loves what they do for a living—it’s in the latest issue of Roadracing World!

                              

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine is available in print and digital formats. Click here for a sample issue of Roadracing World magazine. (Print Edition; one sample issue per household, U.S. address only.)

PREVIEW  December 2023 Issue of Roadracing World

Click to SUBSCRIBE NOW ! Or call (909) 654-4779, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time, Monday through Friday.

—Read the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology with your online subscription. Log in HERE

Available at Cycle Gear and other motorcycle retailers.

Visit www.roadracingworld.com daily for breaking news and events.

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CVMA: More From The Record-Breaking Weekend At Chuckwalla

Multiple lap records fall at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway

Rancho Cucamonga, CA: The CVMA race series at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway witnessed an exciting Round Three with the brand-new Dunlop Sportmax Slicks setting multiple track records! Racers Edge Performance and Dunlop congratulated Corey Alexander, Bobby Fong, and Jayden Fernandez for their notable performances and new class lap records at the event held on December 16th and 17th.

Starting on Saturday, Corey Alexander set a new track record in the Open SuperSport class with a time of 1:43.917, and then came back on Sunday during CVMA’s premier class and set a new track record in Open Shootout with a 1:43.666.

“Every race weekend at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway has been a blast, but this one in particular was a great one,” says Corey Alexander. “Dunlop has placed an increased focus on club racing, and with their support along with Dale Kieffer at Racers Edge Performance, we were able to set some new CVMA class records and personal best times for me aboard my Del’s Flooring Ride HVMC machine.”

Bobby Fong also set two new track records aboard his Wrench Racing Suzuki GSX-R750 over the weekend, with the first in Saturday’s Formula Middleweight class set at 1:44.99 and then on Sunday’s Supersport Middleweight Shootout with a 1:44.856.

“I am really happy with how the weekend ended up, as we set a new lap record for the [Middleweight] Shootout,” says Bobby Fong. “We tried several compounds over the weekend but, we settled with the new R8 compound, and it delivered. Overall, I feel Dunlop has made big strides with the new Sportmax Slick. I cannot wait until March to try to make it a Dunlop sweep on the podium at Daytona for the 200!”

Jayden Fernandez also set a new track record on his Ninja 400 during Saturday’s 500 Supersport race with a 1:53.680.

Dunlop riders also swept the top three podium spots during two premier classes on Sunday, the Supersport Middleweight and Formula Lightweight Twins Shootouts.

“It’s great to see this many records fall in one weekend and to know how hard Dunlop has been working to provide us with the best tires available,” says Dale Kieffer of Racers Edge Performance, Dunlop’s West Coast race tire distributor. “It’s truly a testament to the performance of these new Dunlop Sportmax Slicks!”

About Dunlop Motorcycle Tires:

Dunlop is the largest supplier of original equipment and replacement motorcycle tires in the U.S.A. For more information, visit www.DunlopMotorcycleTires.com. Follow @ridedunlop on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and X for the latest Dunlop news. Use #RideDunlop and/or #RaceDunlop to share your Dunlop moments.

Holiday Gift Guide: Pit Bull Helmet Holder

Pit Bull Helmet Holder

The Pit Bull Helmet Holder adjusts to fit all size helmets, and can securely hold a helmet, riding glasses, keys, and (optional) gloves and riding jacket/suit. It can be mounted in a trailer, garage, or home, and prevents crushing a helmet’s interior foam. It makes a great gift because it fits all sizes! Retail pricing starts at $59.95 from Pit Bull dealers or from pit-bull.com.

 

A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.
A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.

Holiday Gift Guide: 2024 MotoGP Calendar

2024 MotoGP Wall Calendar

Concepts International is selling 2024 wall calendars featuring photography from the 2023 MotoGP World Championship. Produced in Germany with “stunning qualifying,” the calendar measures 13.0 inches (33.0 cm) x 18.75 inches (47.6 cm). Concepts International also sells the 2023 Motocourse racing yearbook and racing-themed holiday cards. Retail price for a calendar is $24.95 USD. From Concepts International, 13492 Research Blvd, Suite 120-R187, Austin, TX 78750 www.conceptsi.com.

SuperMotocross: NBC Releases 2024 Broadcast And Streaming Schedules

NBC SPORTS, PEACOCK, AND SMX LEAGUE ANNOUNCE 2024 SUPERMOTOCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP MEDIA SCHEDULE

31 SuperMotocross Rounds to be Presented Across Peacock, NBC, and USA Network

Peacock to Stream All Races, Qualifying and Heats Live Across Entire Series, Including 17 Exclusive Live Rounds

SuperMotocross Season Begins in Anaheim, Calif., at Angel Stadium on Sat., Jan. 6, at 8 p.m. ET Live on USA Network and Peacock

Second Annual SuperMotocross World Championship Final Presented Sat., Sept. 21, at 10 p.m. ET on Peacock with Encore Presentation Sun., Sept. 22, at 1 p.m. ET on NBC

SMX Preview Show Presented Saturday, Dec. 30, at 4 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock

15-Time AMA Champion Ricky Carmichael, Seven-Time AMA Champion James Stewart, and Leigh Diffey Headline 2024 Commentary Team

 

STAMFORD, Conn. – Dec. 20, 2023 – NBC Sports, Peacock, and the SMX League announced the 2024 SuperMotocross World Championship (SMX) broadcast and streaming schedule, including the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing. All 31 rounds across the series, including exclusive live coverage of qualifiers, heats, Main Events and Motos will be presented on Peacock, NBC, USA Network, CNBC, and NBC Sports digital platforms.

Peacock is the home of the SuperMotocross World Championship Series in 2024, presenting comprehensive live coverage of all qualifying, heats, Main Events and Motos across both Supercross and Pro Motocross, spanning 31 rounds from January to September 2024. 17 races will livestream exclusively on Peacock. The platform will also provide on-demand replays of every race. Qualifiers and heats will be available exclusively on Peacock for every race throughout the season.

 

 

2024 marks the second year of the SuperMotocross World Championship Finals, fueled by Monster Energy which unified both disciplines of Supercross and Pro Motocross. The SMX World Championship culminates in a series-ending postseason playoff style of racing that features the best racers in the world competing for the sport’s ultimate title.
 
NBC Sports’ 2024 SuperMotocross World Championship coverage begins in under a month with the Monster Energy Supercross season opener from Angel Stadium in Anaheim, Calif., live on Saturday, Jan. 6, at 8 p.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network. An encore presentation will air the following day on Sunday, Jan. 7, on NBC at 2 p.m. ET and on Sunday, Jan. 8, on CNBC at 1 a.m. ET. CNBC will air a next-day encore for all 31 rounds across the series in 2024.

The 2024 Pro Motocross season begins with the Fox Raceway National in Pala, Calif., on Saturday, May 25, at 4 p.m. ET exclusively on Peacock.

The much-anticipated second annual SuperMotocross World Championship will culminate with two SuperMotocross World Championship Playoff rounds and the SuperMotocross World Championship Final. SMX Playoff 1 will be presented on Saturday, Sept. 7, at 3 p.m. ET on Peacock with an encore presentation on NBC at 4 p.m. ET the following day, followed by SMX Playoff 2 on Saturday, Sept. 14, at 3 p.m. ET on Peacock and then at 6 p.m. ET same day delayed on USA Network.

The SuperMotocross World Championship Final will be presented on Saturday, Sept. 21, at 10 p.m. ET on Peacock, with an encore presentation on NBC at 1 p.m. ET the following day. Locations for all Playoff and Final events will be announced in January.

The 2024 SuperMotocross commentary team will consist of Leigh Diffey and Jason Weigandt as play-by-play, 15-time AMA champion Ricky Carmichael and seven-time AMA champion James Stewart as analysts, with Will Christien, former veteran racer Jason Thomas, and Katie Osborne as reporters.

Race Day Live will cover all 31 rounds of the SuperMotocross World Championship series exclusively on Peacock. Dan Hubbard and Justin Brayton will serve as hosts of the pre-race program, along with Steven “Lurch” Scott, Haley Shanley, and Osborne as reporters.

A SuperMotocross World Championship one-hour preview special airs Saturday, Dec. 30, at 4 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock, headlined by appearances from 2023 SuperMotocross 450 World Champion Jett Lawrence, who will be making his Supercross debut in the premier class, and 2023 SuperMotocross 250 World Champion Haiden Deegan. The preview show will also feature Jett’s brother Hunter, who will be starting his rookie year in the 450 class, 2022 Supercross and Pro Motocross champion Eli Tomac, 2018 Supercross champion Jason Anderson, two-time Supercross champion Cooper Webb, 2023 Monster Energy 450 Supercross Champion Chase Sexton, and veteran racers Aaron Plessinger and Justin Barcia will also be featured as they prepare for the upcoming 2024 season.

All televised Supercross and Pro Motocross coverage on NBC, USA Network and CNBC will also stream on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

Below is the 2024 Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

 

Below is the 2024 Pro Motocross Championship broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

Below is the SuperMotocross World Championship Playoffs and Final broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

 

For international viewers, The SuperMotocross Video Pass (www.supermotocross.tv) is now available in every country outside the United States, live and on-demand, in both English and Spanish, giving viewers the choice on how to follow all the racing action. SuperMotocross Video Pass subscribers can enjoy all the live 2024 racing action between January and September, plus gain access to 13 years of archival race content dating back to 2010. New for the first time ever, you can now give the gift of a 2024 Subscription to SuperMotocross Video Pass for the holidays.

Visit, https://app.supermotocross.tv/gift to finish your holiday shopping today. The SuperMotocross Video Pass is currently available via the web, and in all major app stores across IOS, Android, Amazon Fire, Roku, and Samsung CTV.

Holiday Gift Guide: Strider Balance Bikes

Strider Balance Bikes

Strider has the whole teaching a kid to ride on two wheels process figured out, based on a line of balance bikes. It starts with an easy-to-install $109.99 rocker kit for a $139.99 Strider 12 Sport, suitable for kids from age 18-months who aren’t ready to balance (a Strider Sport 2-in-1 Rocking Bike kit includes both the bike and rocker kit for $249.98). When a kid is ready to balance, the rocker kit is easy to remove.

 

A Strider Sport 2-In-1 Rocking Bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.
A Strider Sport 2-In-1 Rocking Bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.

 

And once a kid masters a 12-inch-wheel model, there’s a $219.99 14-inch-wheel-model that can transform from being a balance bike to being a pedal bike using an easy-to-install $69 conversion kit.

 

A Strider 14X Sport with an Easy-Ride Pedal Kit installed. Photo courtesy Strider.
A Strider 14X Sport with an Easy-Ride Pedal Kit installed. Photo courtesy Strider.

 

The company also sells a line of accessories ranging from a snow-ski conversion kit to assorted elbow and knee pads, open-face and closed-faced helmets, colored grips, and lights. Available from dealers (including some OEM motorcycle dealers with matching-brand Striders like Honda, KTM, Suzuki and others), or from www.striderbikes.com.

 

A young rider pedaling their Strider 14X Sport. Photo courtesy Strider.
A young rider pedaling their Strider 14X Sport. Photo courtesy Strider.

 

Strider Bikes is also the driving force behind All Kids Bike, which is a national movement led by the Strider Education Foundation to place Kindergarten Physical Education (PE) Learn-To-Ride programs into public schools (at no cost to the schools) by using donations from individuals, businesses, and organizations. For more information about All Kids Bike, go to www.allkidsbike.org.

Holiday Gift Guide: Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology Subscription

The cover of the September 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine. Cover photo by Brian J. Nelson.
The cover of the September 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine. Cover photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology Subscription

An annual subscription to Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine includes 12 monthly, full-color, print issues of the magazine mailed to your home or business, access to the digital version of the magazines plus access to all digitized back issues, and the Trackday Directory annual edition. Each issue includes the latest news, honest motorcycle and product reviews, in-depth coverage of everything from club racing to MotoAmerica and the World Championships, enlightening feature articles on people and businesses in the racing industry, and more. A one-year subscription is only $25 and multi-year subscriptions are available at discounted prices. For more information, go to https://store.roadracingworld.com/collections/all or call (909) 654-4779 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (Pacific Time) Monday-Friday.

Energica: Electric Versus Gas Bikes In MotoAmerica

Stefano Mesa (137) says the torque of his Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike helped it get out of corners quickly and mitigated its lack of top-end speed on the long straights at Circuit of The Americas. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Stefano Mesa (137) says the torque of his Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike helped it get out of corners quickly and mitigated its lack of top-end speed on the long straights at Circuit of The Americas. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Featured in the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine:        

 

On The Charge: Electric Energica Podiums In MotoAmerica Against Gas Machines!

By Michael Gougis

Energica officials knew that racing in the one-make MotoE class had its limitations. The Energica Evo Corsa is an awesome machine, but at the end of the day, Energica was racing against itself in the FIM Enel MotoE World Cup. And it left unanswered the big question: How would an electric racebike perform against traditional internal combustion gasoline-powered machines?

“We had to prove to people that we had a legitimate sportbike. And you earn your respect on the racetrack,” says Stefano Benatti, CEO of Energica Motor Company, USA.

So last year, Energica withdrew from the MotoE class and prepped a Eva Ribelle RS, the company’s streetfighter model, to compete in MotoAmerica’s Super Hooligan class. And this year, in Race One at Circuit of The Americas, Stefano Mesa was holding down a solid third place on the Ribelle when a last-corner pass went wrong for Jeremy McWilliams on the Indian in front of him, giving Mesa second, the first podium for an electric motorcycle in a professional race against ICE machines. Respect, indeed.

 

Stefano Mesa finished second on an Energica in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan race against gas bikes ridden by winner Tyler O'Hara (Indian) and Andy DiBrino (KTM). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Stefano Mesa finished second on an Energica in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan race against gas bikes ridden by winner Tyler O’Hara (Indian) and Andy DiBrino (KTM). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

 

“I knew we had third, but, honestly, those two (McWilliams and Indian teammate Tyler O’Hara) race each other so hard all the time, that when I saw that yellow flag, I thought maybe they’d taken each other out!” Mesa says. “We had a legitimate third. We would have been happy with third. We’re super stoked to get the second place. To get the second was so much better.”

In June of 2022, Benatti told Roadracing World that Energica planned to race in America, but he could not reveal details of where and when just yet. The debut came shortly afterward at WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, where Mesa was entered on a lightly-modified street Ribelle RS. The results were encouraging, so Tytlers Cycle Racing decided to keep developing the bike (“ribelle” is Italian for “rebel”) and enter the eight-race, four-round 2023 Super Hooligan series.

 

Mesa (137) leads DiBrino (62), AJ Peaslee (126), Tyler Duffy (95), and Nate Kern (9) in Race One at Circuit of The Americas. Photos by Brian J. Nelson.
Mesa (137) leads DiBrino (62), AJ Peaslee (126), Tyler Duffy (95), and Nate Kern (9) in Race One at Circuit of The Americas. Photos by Brian J. Nelson.

 

Mesa scored a seventh and a fifth at Daytona, then DNF and finished fourth at Ridge Motorsports Park, still nearly six seconds off the podium. Then came Laguna, where the results were impressive, but not as impressive as the launch Mesa got in Race One. When the lights went out, Mesa nailed the start and led into Turn One and held the lead for nearly half a lap before finishing sixth. “Our hearts were bursting through our chests,” Benatti says.

The Tytlers team was not looking forward to the COTA round. Heat is the enemy of electric bikes, and the track’s long, fast straights and the forecast high ambient temperatures would not play to the strengths of an electric motorcycle.

But the team had been developing the bike, which now incorporates the company’s Kit Corsa Clienti package. Power management firmware, suspension, and brakes all were upgraded. And the bike worked well enough that Mesa had advantages where he didn’t expect to find them. The bike’s torque got it out of tight corners well; the Öhlins suspension and geometry changes kept the bike stable in the fast corners; and the brakes were amazing. “We’ve done solid work with the package we’ve got,” Mesa says.

 

(From left) Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti, Tytlers Cycle Racing team owner Michael Kiley, and Energica CTO Giampiero Testoni. Photo by Valerio Piccini.
(From left) Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti, Tytlers Cycle Racing team owner Michael Kiley, and Energica CTO Giampiero Testoni. Photo by Rick Flashman, courtesy Energica.

 

The red flag that interrupted Race One in Texas didn’t do the Energica any favors. The few minutes of extra charge weren’t really significant, and the ambient heat didn’t allow the battery pack to cool significantly, Mesa says. Still, Mesa was into the podium positions at the end of the second lap, and was two seconds ahead of Andy DiBrino, who was running fourth, when McWilliams crashed. Fifth in Race Two was anti-climatic, but it was enough for Mesa, Tytlers, and Energica to seal fourth place in the Championship standings. “We could not have asked for more,” Benatti says.

It was good for Energica, but it was also good for Tytlers, which took the chance on an electric racebike program; and good for international energy conglomerate Petronas, which came on board as a sponsor. It turns out that making lubricants for electric vehicles is a new and growing market.

And it was good for Mesa. The 29-year-old Colombian was running his own Supersport and Stock 1000 programs in MotoAmerica when he was approached with a unique opportunity. “We were at Road America and I was riding my own thing, doing the 600 and the 1000 stuff, and Corey Alexander came up to me and said the owner of my team wants to talk to you about a possible ride. So I went to talk to Michael Kiley (founder of Tytlers Cycle Racing.) He wasn’t sure how everything was going to pan out, but it might bring a lot of attention, and it might be the future. I’m really, really glad I took the opportunity.

“When I was doing my own thing, I was changing my own tires, I was the mechanic as well. It was definitely taking a toll on me. I’m super grateful that Michael gave me this opportunity. The biggest thing that changed was having a crew behind me and me being able to just concentrate on riding and going fast. Now every lap counts and I can put in laps and get better at it. I think people are starting to believe in these electric things. I’ve become a huge EV fan since I started.”

 

 

Energica’s Stefano Benatti And Giampiero Testoni, On The First MotoAmerica Podium For An Electric Motorcycle Competing Against Gas Machines

“We Are Making History…”

 

Stefano Mesa on the Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike at Circuit of The Americas, where he finished second place in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Stefano Mesa on the Energica Eva Ribelle RS electric racebike at Circuit of The Americas, where he finished second place in a MotoAmerica Super Hooligan. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Energica USA CEO Stefano Benatti  and Energica Chief Technical Officer Giampiero Testoni talked to Roadracing World Editor John Ulrich about Energica racer Stefano Mesa taking second in MotoAmerica Super Hooligan Race One at the Circuit of The Americas. Benatti and Testoni were understandable thrilled at the company’s first podium in MotoAmerica competition, and, more importantly, the first podium for an electric bike racing internal combustion motorcycles in a National Series.

Roadracing World: What were some of the difficulties you had to overcome to make the Energica Eva Ribelle RS model competitive against gas motorcycles. Can you explain those?

Giampiero Testoni: First of all, it’s facing different kinds of bikes, different kinds of usage of the bikes. We have of course power delivery, energy usage, and length of the whole race. And most of all, how well the rider adapts to riding something different than what they’ve been used to for the last maybe 20 years.

So first of all I would say the approach we had during this Championship was to allow Stefano Mesa to adapt to the bike, because as you can see he has done a very good learning curve. He has adapted to the bike. He is riding very well.

And at the same time, one of the major issues, major challenges for us, is facing the energy consumption on very long tracks and very fast tracks. Daytona and COTA are two of the most challenging tracks for electric vehicles. Very long straights, very high top speeds, it’s where the bike is getting more energy requests.

So based on that we have been bringing all the experience we had in MotoE the last four years–of course, it’s different because that was a single-manufacturer race. Here the challenge mostly is to race against different bikes that have a clutch, have gears, have a transmission, have a different braking point, so even the lines could be different because of how you have to brake and how you accelerate.

We have a big advantage in torque, so you can see that the start off the grid is great. That’s the biggest advantage of the electric. But at the same time we have super acceleration and one of the highest top speeds, even without a transmission.

Of course, we have to set up the bike perfectly for every track. We have to see how to do the management of the energy during the whole race, so over the weekend we try to gather data. But this is our first year for us on new tracks, and the rider of course is learning. He’s pulling down seconds between each session! So you have the data from the previous session, and then he goes (several) seconds faster. So all the data you have from qualifying is completely different, because he is going faster.

So every time, we have to re-set our understanding of our data and try to set up for the next race, for the next venue. So let’s say that this first year for us is a learning year, although we are doing very well. It is unexpected. We are, OK, we will participate, we will see how it goes, we don’t have great expectations. Second place, the expectations start to get high! The rider is happy, the rider is happy on the bike. He feels he is very competitive.

 

Editor John Ulrich (left) talking to Energica's Giampiero (center) and Stefano Benatti (right). Photo by Valerio Piccini.
Editor John Ulrich (left) talking to Energica’s Giampiero (center) and Stefano Benatti (right). Photo by Valerio Piccini.

 

Roadracing World: No one’s done this before–racing an electric bike against gas bikes with any kind of success. They might have done it a long time ago, but nobody’s done it at the National level and nobody’s done it in the last 20 years that we can recall. We used to see some guys with experimental bikes they built themselves try to do it in club racing, but they didn’t work very well. So basically you are making history with this. Did you expect it to go this well?

Giampiero Testoni: This well? No. We have the experience working with electric motorcycles. We started with racing, working up to production and now racing again for the last 15 years. So let’s say that we are already pioneers–not the first pioneers, but we were one of the first.

We put our racing experience together with a new vision of propulsion, going electric. And let’s say that we brought our road experience to the racebikes, and the race experience to the road bikes, and now again our road experience to racing. We didn’t expect to go that well, but we know the job that our guys have done in the last 10 years and all the development we have done.

We are the reference for the road market for the electric. We are the top level, the top performance, the top styling and so on, so I think that our guys have done a very good job. We have been pushing everywhere. Racing is our DNA, so wherever it is possible …

We ended last year the four years of the MotoE World (Cup), so we said, what’s next? Our colleagues from the U.S. pushed a lot to go racing against petrol motorcycles, so, OK, we said, you know the market. Europe is completely different. So U.S. is a different market.

But at the end of the day, you have to say they were right, because this is proving, as you say, that we are making history. That the electric bike is a perfect alternative to a combustion bike. You can have fun and go fast. You can race against petrol and you can win against a petrol motorcycle. So this is a great shout to the public, showing that there is something else out there. We don’t want to say that everything will be electric, that there will be only electric so you just have to convert. No. But there is an alternative that is as fun, as fast, maybe funner, if you want, for the torque and so on.

The expectations were not this high, so a podium for us is something really unexpected, and at a track like COTA–it’s a really, really demanding track. So we’re very happy, but being in the top 10 was already being a success, then we started being top five, now the podium, so let’s see what’s next!

Roadracing World: What is next?

Stefano Benatti: Racing is a question mark. Anything could happen, so expectations are high. When you see something new coming on the podium, even the other racers have an extra eye on him, saying now he’s a threat! First he’s at the back, now let’s look out for the electric bike with Stefano, because that is really dangerous. When you are a little back, OK, you are a challenge to those at the back but the (leaders) are more calm and know that they are still winning. When you end up being second against 30, 40, how many petrol motorcycles, they are saying, that is something we have to have an extra eye on! So we think expectations are high everywhere, but at the same time Stefano may be the most targeted rider in the race!

Roadracing World: On Facebook, we’ve seen pictures of electric bikes on fire. We see pictures of electric scooters that people have catch on fire. A couple of weeks ago, when we were on the way to LAX airport there was a big traffic jam. In the middle of the raised transition road from one freeway to another there was a Tesla on fire. So some people worry about that kind of thing. So what would you say to someone who is worried about buying an electric bike because they think it could catch on fire?

Stefano Benatti: It’s just because everyone is looking at what is happening on electric. They say, oh, there was a fire. But how many petrol cars do you see on fire but you don’t think, ah, a car is burning. But if you see an electric car is burning you think, ah, we have to take pictures! We have to send it to the media! But maybe you have seen 10 petrol cars burning. So really I think it’s media attention now because whatever is new is scary because you don’t know. So everyone is having an extra eye on what is electric.

Of course you have to pay attention because there are dangers like everywhere. But we are used to petrol. You smell it, you can see it, you can touch it. While electricity is something you don’t see, you don’t smell. And if you touch it, you can get severely injured. At the same time, it’s an electro-chemical system, so if something goes wrong, mostly it is poor engineering in the battery management system or something intruding from the external. A crash, something severe that is damaging the battery. This can lead to a fire. So in that case, I say everything is dangerous, every vehicle.

Roadracing World: Life is dangerous. Racing is definitely dangerous.

Giampiero Testoni: Racing–how many MotoGP (motorcycles) you see when they slide and catch fire? But they’re used to that. An electric vehicle that is catching fire first of all is a different fire, so you have to know how to manage it. It’s mostly about how conscious we are about how we have to fight fire that is coming from electric.

But that is getting more consolidated because we know how the car industry is going on electric, at least in Europe; (by) 2045, we will have to go all electric. So because of that, the push on electric is huge. And (so is) the development on the safety measures, active and passive.

It’s about knowing and reacting  and doing the right thing. Here we are at the racetrack, so it is a closed environment. Anything may happen, so you have to be ready for that. I would say that it’s not something that we have to hide from. We have electricity in every house. You know that you cannot put fingers inside an outlet in your house, because you will get electrocuted. So it’s a different thing. We are getting used to it, we are getting used to the technology, and then it will be normal.

Video: Jonathan Rea 2023 Winter Testing Vlog, E:3 – “Raw On Board Yamaha R1”

Jonathan Rea (65). Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jonathan Rea (65) during testing at Jerez. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Six-time Superbike World Champion Jonathan Rea has been producing a regular vlog for several seasons. As he begins his transition to Pata Yamaha Prometeon after spending the last nine seasons with Kawasaki Racing Team, we thought we would look back at Rea’s 2023 season through his own vlogs.

This episode is “Raw On Board Yamaha R1.”

 

Holiday Gift Guide: 6D ATS-1R Helmet

A 6D ATS-1R full-face motorcycle helmet. Photo courtesy 6D Helmets.
A 6D ATS-1R full-face motorcycle helmet. Photo courtesy 6D Helmets.

6D ATS-1R Helmet

The 6D ATS-1R helmet is designed for both top racers and recreational riders, with class-leading safety technology and premium features in a lightweight, aerodynamic 3k carbon-fiber shell. 6D’s Proprietary Omni-Directional Suspension™ technology is designed to provide superior protection against impacts. 6D offers multiple face shields and tear-offs for any race situation. Retail is $799.95 from 6D dealers, or from 6DHelmets.com. 

Shops: James Compton Customs, In The December Issue

James Compton assembles a big-bore Kawasaki engine for one of his customers. Customer bikes in various stages of build can be seen in the background along with shop equipment, like the injector cleaner/flow tool over Compton’s right shoulder. Photos by David Swarts.
James Compton assembles a big-bore Kawasaki engine for one of his customers. Customer bikes in various stages of build can be seen in the background along with shop equipment, like the injector cleaner/flow tool over Compton’s right shoulder. Photos by David Swarts.

Featured In the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World:         

  

        There’s a saying that if you find a way to get paid doing what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life. People who work with motorcycles know this saying well, as many of them are living proof. 

        But former racer and racebike tuner James Compton has not only found a way to make money doing what he loves at James Compton Customs, he has also found a way to include his family in his thriving niche business…           

            “Shops: James Compton Customs,”  by David Swarts

 

 

            It has been a long and interesting trip for James Compton, from playing in bowl games as a college football athlete to racing and running an employment agency. Now he’s doing what he loves the most, building ridiculously cool motorcycles. Read about someone who loves what they do for a living—it’s in the latest issue of Roadracing World!

                              

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine is available in print and digital formats. Click here for a sample issue of Roadracing World magazine. (Print Edition; one sample issue per household, U.S. address only.)

PREVIEW  December 2023 Issue of Roadracing World

Click to SUBSCRIBE NOW ! Or call (909) 654-4779, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Pacific Time, Monday through Friday.

—Read the December 2023 issue of Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology with your online subscription. Log in HERE

Available at Cycle Gear and other motorcycle retailers.

Visit www.roadracingworld.com daily for breaking news and events.

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CVMA: More From The Record-Breaking Weekend At Chuckwalla

Corey Alexander (1). Photo by CaliPhotography, courtesy Dunlop.
Corey Alexander (1). Photo by CaliPhotography, courtesy Dunlop.

Multiple lap records fall at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway

Rancho Cucamonga, CA: The CVMA race series at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway witnessed an exciting Round Three with the brand-new Dunlop Sportmax Slicks setting multiple track records! Racers Edge Performance and Dunlop congratulated Corey Alexander, Bobby Fong, and Jayden Fernandez for their notable performances and new class lap records at the event held on December 16th and 17th.

Starting on Saturday, Corey Alexander set a new track record in the Open SuperSport class with a time of 1:43.917, and then came back on Sunday during CVMA’s premier class and set a new track record in Open Shootout with a 1:43.666.

“Every race weekend at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway has been a blast, but this one in particular was a great one,” says Corey Alexander. “Dunlop has placed an increased focus on club racing, and with their support along with Dale Kieffer at Racers Edge Performance, we were able to set some new CVMA class records and personal best times for me aboard my Del’s Flooring Ride HVMC machine.”

Bobby Fong also set two new track records aboard his Wrench Racing Suzuki GSX-R750 over the weekend, with the first in Saturday’s Formula Middleweight class set at 1:44.99 and then on Sunday’s Supersport Middleweight Shootout with a 1:44.856.

“I am really happy with how the weekend ended up, as we set a new lap record for the [Middleweight] Shootout,” says Bobby Fong. “We tried several compounds over the weekend but, we settled with the new R8 compound, and it delivered. Overall, I feel Dunlop has made big strides with the new Sportmax Slick. I cannot wait until March to try to make it a Dunlop sweep on the podium at Daytona for the 200!”

Jayden Fernandez also set a new track record on his Ninja 400 during Saturday’s 500 Supersport race with a 1:53.680.

Dunlop riders also swept the top three podium spots during two premier classes on Sunday, the Supersport Middleweight and Formula Lightweight Twins Shootouts.

“It’s great to see this many records fall in one weekend and to know how hard Dunlop has been working to provide us with the best tires available,” says Dale Kieffer of Racers Edge Performance, Dunlop’s West Coast race tire distributor. “It’s truly a testament to the performance of these new Dunlop Sportmax Slicks!”

About Dunlop Motorcycle Tires:

Dunlop is the largest supplier of original equipment and replacement motorcycle tires in the U.S.A. For more information, visit www.DunlopMotorcycleTires.com. Follow @ridedunlop on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and X for the latest Dunlop news. Use #RideDunlop and/or #RaceDunlop to share your Dunlop moments.

Holiday Gift Guide: Pit Bull Helmet Holder

A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.
A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.

Pit Bull Helmet Holder

The Pit Bull Helmet Holder adjusts to fit all size helmets, and can securely hold a helmet, riding glasses, keys, and (optional) gloves and riding jacket/suit. It can be mounted in a trailer, garage, or home, and prevents crushing a helmet’s interior foam. It makes a great gift because it fits all sizes! Retail pricing starts at $59.95 from Pit Bull dealers or from pit-bull.com.

 

A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.
A Pit Bull Helmet Hanger. Photo courtesy Pit Bull Products.

Holiday Gift Guide: 2024 MotoGP Calendar

The cover of the 2024 MotoGP calendar. Photo courtesy Concepts International.
The cover of the 2024 MotoGP calendar. Photo courtesy Concepts International.

2024 MotoGP Wall Calendar

Concepts International is selling 2024 wall calendars featuring photography from the 2023 MotoGP World Championship. Produced in Germany with “stunning qualifying,” the calendar measures 13.0 inches (33.0 cm) x 18.75 inches (47.6 cm). Concepts International also sells the 2023 Motocourse racing yearbook and racing-themed holiday cards. Retail price for a calendar is $24.95 USD. From Concepts International, 13492 Research Blvd, Suite 120-R187, Austin, TX 78750 www.conceptsi.com.

SuperMotocross: NBC Releases 2024 Broadcast And Streaming Schedules

Eli Tomac (1) leads the 450SX Supercross race January 21 at Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, California. Photo courtesy Feld Motor Sports, Inc.
Eli Tomac (1) leads the 450SX Supercross race January 21 at Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego, California. Photo courtesy Feld Motor Sports, Inc.

NBC SPORTS, PEACOCK, AND SMX LEAGUE ANNOUNCE 2024 SUPERMOTOCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP MEDIA SCHEDULE

31 SuperMotocross Rounds to be Presented Across Peacock, NBC, and USA Network

Peacock to Stream All Races, Qualifying and Heats Live Across Entire Series, Including 17 Exclusive Live Rounds

SuperMotocross Season Begins in Anaheim, Calif., at Angel Stadium on Sat., Jan. 6, at 8 p.m. ET Live on USA Network and Peacock

Second Annual SuperMotocross World Championship Final Presented Sat., Sept. 21, at 10 p.m. ET on Peacock with Encore Presentation Sun., Sept. 22, at 1 p.m. ET on NBC

SMX Preview Show Presented Saturday, Dec. 30, at 4 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock

15-Time AMA Champion Ricky Carmichael, Seven-Time AMA Champion James Stewart, and Leigh Diffey Headline 2024 Commentary Team

 

STAMFORD, Conn. – Dec. 20, 2023 – NBC Sports, Peacock, and the SMX League announced the 2024 SuperMotocross World Championship (SMX) broadcast and streaming schedule, including the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing. All 31 rounds across the series, including exclusive live coverage of qualifiers, heats, Main Events and Motos will be presented on Peacock, NBC, USA Network, CNBC, and NBC Sports digital platforms.

Peacock is the home of the SuperMotocross World Championship Series in 2024, presenting comprehensive live coverage of all qualifying, heats, Main Events and Motos across both Supercross and Pro Motocross, spanning 31 rounds from January to September 2024. 17 races will livestream exclusively on Peacock. The platform will also provide on-demand replays of every race. Qualifiers and heats will be available exclusively on Peacock for every race throughout the season.

 

 

2024 marks the second year of the SuperMotocross World Championship Finals, fueled by Monster Energy which unified both disciplines of Supercross and Pro Motocross. The SMX World Championship culminates in a series-ending postseason playoff style of racing that features the best racers in the world competing for the sport’s ultimate title.
 
NBC Sports’ 2024 SuperMotocross World Championship coverage begins in under a month with the Monster Energy Supercross season opener from Angel Stadium in Anaheim, Calif., live on Saturday, Jan. 6, at 8 p.m. ET on Peacock and USA Network. An encore presentation will air the following day on Sunday, Jan. 7, on NBC at 2 p.m. ET and on Sunday, Jan. 8, on CNBC at 1 a.m. ET. CNBC will air a next-day encore for all 31 rounds across the series in 2024.

The 2024 Pro Motocross season begins with the Fox Raceway National in Pala, Calif., on Saturday, May 25, at 4 p.m. ET exclusively on Peacock.

The much-anticipated second annual SuperMotocross World Championship will culminate with two SuperMotocross World Championship Playoff rounds and the SuperMotocross World Championship Final. SMX Playoff 1 will be presented on Saturday, Sept. 7, at 3 p.m. ET on Peacock with an encore presentation on NBC at 4 p.m. ET the following day, followed by SMX Playoff 2 on Saturday, Sept. 14, at 3 p.m. ET on Peacock and then at 6 p.m. ET same day delayed on USA Network.

The SuperMotocross World Championship Final will be presented on Saturday, Sept. 21, at 10 p.m. ET on Peacock, with an encore presentation on NBC at 1 p.m. ET the following day. Locations for all Playoff and Final events will be announced in January.

The 2024 SuperMotocross commentary team will consist of Leigh Diffey and Jason Weigandt as play-by-play, 15-time AMA champion Ricky Carmichael and seven-time AMA champion James Stewart as analysts, with Will Christien, former veteran racer Jason Thomas, and Katie Osborne as reporters.

Race Day Live will cover all 31 rounds of the SuperMotocross World Championship series exclusively on Peacock. Dan Hubbard and Justin Brayton will serve as hosts of the pre-race program, along with Steven “Lurch” Scott, Haley Shanley, and Osborne as reporters.

A SuperMotocross World Championship one-hour preview special airs Saturday, Dec. 30, at 4 p.m. ET on NBC and Peacock, headlined by appearances from 2023 SuperMotocross 450 World Champion Jett Lawrence, who will be making his Supercross debut in the premier class, and 2023 SuperMotocross 250 World Champion Haiden Deegan. The preview show will also feature Jett’s brother Hunter, who will be starting his rookie year in the 450 class, 2022 Supercross and Pro Motocross champion Eli Tomac, 2018 Supercross champion Jason Anderson, two-time Supercross champion Cooper Webb, 2023 Monster Energy 450 Supercross Champion Chase Sexton, and veteran racers Aaron Plessinger and Justin Barcia will also be featured as they prepare for the upcoming 2024 season.

All televised Supercross and Pro Motocross coverage on NBC, USA Network and CNBC will also stream on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app via authentication, giving consumers additional value to their subscription service, and making high-quality content available to MVPD customers both in and out of the home and on multiple platforms.

Below is the 2024 Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

 

Below is the 2024 Pro Motocross Championship broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

Below is the SuperMotocross World Championship Playoffs and Final broadcast and streaming schedule:

 

 

For international viewers, The SuperMotocross Video Pass (www.supermotocross.tv) is now available in every country outside the United States, live and on-demand, in both English and Spanish, giving viewers the choice on how to follow all the racing action. SuperMotocross Video Pass subscribers can enjoy all the live 2024 racing action between January and September, plus gain access to 13 years of archival race content dating back to 2010. New for the first time ever, you can now give the gift of a 2024 Subscription to SuperMotocross Video Pass for the holidays.

Visit, https://app.supermotocross.tv/gift to finish your holiday shopping today. The SuperMotocross Video Pass is currently available via the web, and in all major app stores across IOS, Android, Amazon Fire, Roku, and Samsung CTV.

Holiday Gift Guide: Strider Balance Bikes

A future rider with a Strider 12 Sport balance bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.
A future rider with a Strider 12 Sport balance bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.

Strider Balance Bikes

Strider has the whole teaching a kid to ride on two wheels process figured out, based on a line of balance bikes. It starts with an easy-to-install $109.99 rocker kit for a $139.99 Strider 12 Sport, suitable for kids from age 18-months who aren’t ready to balance (a Strider Sport 2-in-1 Rocking Bike kit includes both the bike and rocker kit for $249.98). When a kid is ready to balance, the rocker kit is easy to remove.

 

A Strider Sport 2-In-1 Rocking Bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.
A Strider Sport 2-In-1 Rocking Bike. Photo courtesy Strider Bikes.

 

And once a kid masters a 12-inch-wheel model, there’s a $219.99 14-inch-wheel-model that can transform from being a balance bike to being a pedal bike using an easy-to-install $69 conversion kit.

 

A Strider 14X Sport with an Easy-Ride Pedal Kit installed. Photo courtesy Strider.
A Strider 14X Sport with an Easy-Ride Pedal Kit installed. Photo courtesy Strider.

 

The company also sells a line of accessories ranging from a snow-ski conversion kit to assorted elbow and knee pads, open-face and closed-faced helmets, colored grips, and lights. Available from dealers (including some OEM motorcycle dealers with matching-brand Striders like Honda, KTM, Suzuki and others), or from www.striderbikes.com.

 

A young rider pedaling their Strider 14X Sport. Photo courtesy Strider.
A young rider pedaling their Strider 14X Sport. Photo courtesy Strider.

 

Strider Bikes is also the driving force behind All Kids Bike, which is a national movement led by the Strider Education Foundation to place Kindergarten Physical Education (PE) Learn-To-Ride programs into public schools (at no cost to the schools) by using donations from individuals, businesses, and organizations. For more information about All Kids Bike, go to www.allkidsbike.org.

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