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Team Hammer Signs New Primary Title Sponsor

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From a press release issued by Team Hammer, Inc.:

Team Hammer, Inc. has signed M4 Performance Exhausts as a new primary title sponsor and will race as Team M4 EMGO Suzuki during the 2005 and 2006 AMA seasons.

M4 is based in Dallas, Texas and has been an associate sponsor of the team since 1999.

“We at M4 are extremely excited about the 2005 racing season and our stepped-up involvement with Team Hammer,” said M4 Vice President Kyle Martin. “We believe we can make an important contribution toward a winning season for Team Hammer and we’re proud to be associated with the only professional motorcycle road racing team in America that’s been racing continuously for 25 consecutive seasons.”

M4 replaces Valvoline, which has elected to concentrate its racing-related promotional activities in NASCAR.

EMGO International, a manufacturer and importer of oil filters, continues as the team’s secondary title sponsor. EMGO has been involved with Team Hammer since the team was founded.

Team Hammer has won two AMA National Championships, five F-USA National Championships, and 13 WERA National Endurance Championships.

More information on M4 Performance Exhausts is available online at www.m4exhaust.com or via phone at (972) 481-9300.

More information on Team Hammer is available online at www.teamhammer.com

Championship Cup Series Releases 2005 Racing Calendar

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From a press release issued by CCS:

December 28, 2005, Fort Worth, Texas

The Championship Cup Series announced today its 2005 Season schedule.

2005 Race of Champions XXII
October 20-23 Daytona Intl Speedway Daytona Beach, FL

CCS Sanctioned Races
February 12-13 Homestead -Miami Spdwy< Homestead, FL
March 6 Firebird East Chandler, AZ
March 2-6 Daytona Intl Speedway* Daytona Beach, FL
March 12-13 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
March 19-20 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
April 2-3 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
April 9-10 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
April 22-23 Road America** Elkhart Lake, WI
April 24 Road America** Elkhart Lake, WI
April 23-24 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
Apr 30 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
May 1 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
April 30-May 1 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
April 30-May 1 Summit Point @ Summit Point, WV
May 7-8 Blackhawk Farms* South Beloit, IL
May 14-15 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
May 14-15 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
May 29-30 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
May 28-29 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
May 28-30 Summit Point* Summit Point, WV
June 5 Firebird Intl Chandler, AZ
June 11 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
June 12 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
June 11-12 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
June 11-12 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
June 17-19 New Hampshire Intl*.> Loudon, NH
June 19 Heartland Park* Topeka, KS
June 25-26 Homestead -Miami Spdwy< Homestead, FL
June 25-26 Autobahn CC Joliet, IL
June 24-26 Virginia Intl* Danville, VA
July 2 Mid-America Motorplex** Pacific Junction, IA
July 3 Mid-America Motorplex** Pacific Junction, IA
July 2-3 Summit Point @ Summit Point, WV
July 16-17 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
July 23 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
July24 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
July 23-24 New Hampshire Intl. Loudon, NH
July 23-24 Moroso Motorsports Park West Palm Beach, FL
July 31 Gingerman Raceway South Haven, MI
Aug 6-7 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
August 12-14 Barber Motorsports* Leeds, AL
August 20-21 New Hampshire Intl. > Loudon, NH
August 27-28 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
August 27-28 Moroso Motorsports Park < West Palm Beach, FL
August 27-28 Shenandoah Circuit Summit Point, WV
September 3-4 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
September 10-11 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
September 10-11 Autobahn CC* Joliet, IL
September 10-11 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
September 17 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
September 18 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
September 24-25 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
September 24-25 Virginia Intl Danville, VA
September 25 Firebird Intl Chandler, AZ
October 1-2 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
October 1-2 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
October 8-9 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
October 9 Gingerman Raceway* South Haven, MI
October 9-10 Shenandoah Circuit* @ Summit Point, WV
November 12-13 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
November 19 Firebird East * Chandler, AZ
December 3-4 Homestead -Miami Spdwy* Homestead, FL


All Dates Are Subject to Change.
* = Double Points
** = Twin Sprint Event
@ = Friday Licensing Clinic
^ = Hosted by ASMA – Limited CCS Classes
^^ = Hosted by Fasttrax-Limited CCS Classes
< = Hosted by CCS Florida
> = Hosted by LRRS

R.I.P. AHRMA Racer David R. Temple

From Founds Funeral Home, Inc., reprinted with permission: David R. Temple, 46, of West Chester, (Pennsylvania) died suddenly on Friday, December 24, 2004, as the result of a single-car accident. He was the husband of Susan A. Supley Temple, with whom he shared 17 years of marriage. Born in West Chester, he was the son of Robert ‘Bud’ and Carolyn Wright Temple of West Chester. David, a life-long resident of West Chester, was a 1977 graduate of East High School. He also completed other educational courses in conjunction with transportation. He was president of Frames Motor Freight, Inc. in West Chester, a family-owned business. David was a very enthusiastic motorcyclist and a collector of vintage motorcycles. He was a lifetime member of the American Motorcycle Assoc. and the American Historic Racing Motorcycle Assoc. David raced around the USA in the 750cc Sportsman’s Division and was the National #1 Champion in Road Racing five of the last six years with this association. He was also a member of the American Truck Historical Society and Antique Truck Club of America. In addition to his wife and parents, David is survived by his daughters, Cara and Jenna Temple of West Chester; a sister, Rochelle ‘Shelly’ Temple of Richmond, VA; a brother, Todd Temple of West Chester; several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews; and his many motorcycle family of friends. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, December 30, 2004 at the Founds Funeral Home, Inc., High and Union Streets, West Chester, (610) 696-0134. Family and friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday, December 29; and from 10:30 to 11 a.m. on Thursday, at the funeral home. Interment will be in Philadelphia Memorial Park, Frazer. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions to benefit his daughters may be made to the David R. Temple Memorial Fund, c/o First National Bank of Chester County, P.O. Box 514, West Chester, PA 19381. links for funeral information: http://www.foundsfuneralhome.com/ecom/sp

Mladin: Key To Racing Success Is Having A Strong Team

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From a press release issued by Team Suzuki:

For Australian Mat Mladin, the nine seasons he has spent racing in the highly-competitive American Superbike Championship has brought with it considerable success.

Since making the move to the AMA series in 1996, he has been associated with the factory Yoshimura Suzuki team for all bar one of those seasons, having raced for Eraldo Ferracci in his Fast By Ferracci Ducati team in 1997.

In this period he has emerged as one of the most decorated riders in the sport: Five AMA Superbike Championships, 32 career race wins including three Daytona 200’s and 37 career pole positions, which rates him as the best in the business.

Mladin and his tight knit crew has become the yardstick of the American Superbike Championship. His rivals see him as the man to beat. He has many fans as well as detractors, but that does not distract him from the task at hand – winning championships.

Fresh from his recent championship success, Mladin took time to answer a number of questions relating to his season and his time spent racing in the grueling AMA series.

With five AMA Superbike crowns to your credit, how do you rate this year’s title win?

MM: This year was a pretty tough championship. We were up against it, especially over the first two-thirds of the year. The motorcycle was a little behind due to the rule changes imposed after last season. As far as how hard it was, it definitely was hard. As far as how satisfying it was, it was the most satisfying by far.


You went into 2004 as the defending champion but were not rated as the pre-season favourite to take the title. How did that sit with you?

MM: You are probably right and all that was based on one off-season tyre test at Daytona when the Honda guys came out and went really fast. They put a good spin on the publicity there and that seemed to blow a lot of things out of proportion for what could have happened and I think it did.

You won the Daytona 200 for the third time this year and with the rule changes proposed by the AMA for 2005 (it will run as a Formula Extreme class) it could well be the last. What are your thoughts on that decision?

MM: I’d hate to say that it would be the last time that Superbikes race the Daytona 200 because who knows what they are going to have for the future and are they going to have to turn that decision around. Is it really going to be the last Superbike Daytona 200? I’m not really certain of that.

It’s very highly thought of by the manufacturers. Myself as a non-American racer, I don’t place as much importance on it as an American would. For me, it’s the first race of the championship and I don’t want to do anything silly there that would leave me catching up a whole heap of points.

Was there a particular high point for you this year?

MM: The two wins at the penultimate round at Road Atlanta were huge for us. That was a weekend where the championship could have either tightened way up for the final two races at Virginia, or we could essentially clinch it. Even though mathematically we couldn’t clinch it, we could put all of the competitors away at that race and that’s what happened. It made it extra special because there was that tension and pressure that was growing between Miguel DuHamel and myself and we came away with maximum points after taking pole and leading most laps in each race on the way to the two wins. It was a nice way to leave there.

Was it a turning point in the season, even though it was quite late?

MM: I don’t think it was a turning point as we led the whole season. Laguna Seca really stopped the bleeding for us after the few fast race tracks where we lost points to our rivals. Laguna stopped that for us and then we got a win at the following round at Mid-Ohio where we started to stretch the points out again. Then at Atlanta, we put it to bed.

When did you feel that the championship was yours to win?

MM: After Atlanta. We felt pretty comfortable and had over a race in points in the lead of the championship, so it would have taken a big mess up for us to lose it after that.

Has there been any one particular facet that would be the key to your success in America?

MM: The biggest thing was learning six or seven years ago that I needed a strong team to be able to win championships. It’s something that I really woke up to after my year with Eraldo Ferracci. You can’t win titles, especially consistently, without having a solid team who do the same every weekend.

How important has it been to have such a dedicated group of guys around you that form the nucleus of your team?

MM: My long time crew chief Peter Doyle and mechanic Reg O’Rourke have been joined by other members, Johnny Asher, Manny and Henry, but the key is that they are a really solid group that works extremely well together.

They all know what to do. At the track we get the job done and if we win, we go out and have dinner and some fun, but if we don’t, we still go out have dinner and some fun. That’s what it is all about.

How enjoyable has it been over the past two years where you have been able to race 1000cc multi-cylinder Superbikes?

MM: Last year, the Suzuki GSX-R1000 was by far the best motorcycle on the racetrack. Last year we won a lot of races reasonably comfortably and it was good to have won that fourth championship, but it certainly wasn’t as near as hard as this year. This year I’ve spoken about the motorcycle not being fast enough at times, but again, it all goes back to the rule changes that were implemented very late last year, so the motorcycle just wasn’t up to the same specification as the others we were racing against this year. Next year it will be, so we’ll see how it goes then.

How do rate the next crop of riders emerging in the US?

MM: There are a few guys over here doing very well. The Hayden brothers, Tommy and Roger Lee at Kawasaki – Tommy won the Supersport Championship, while there’s also a couple of younger guys over at Yamaha. Aaron Gobert did well in winning the Superstock championship while Jason Disalvo seems to be pretty fast. In my Yoshimura Suzuki team, Ben Spies will be stepping up to Superbike next year so we’ll see how he goes there.

Do you still have that desire for either GP or World Superbike or will you conclude you career in America?

MM: I’d imagine that I’d finish my racing career here in the US. The GP thing has always interested me since I was there in ’93, but certainly even less the more years that we go along because it is one of those things where you really do need the right package – bike and team – or else you are wasting your time. There are only so many factory bikes to go around and the unfortunate thing is that I’m unlikely to get one. Honda has already stated that it will only have two official factory bikes in MotoGP.

As for World Superbike, it just doesn’t interest me full stop. The level of racing I don’t think is that high. To have to travel around the world to say that you race in World Superbike does not appeal to me. I see it as a huge step backwards to what I’m doing here in America. The rules between SWC and the AMA may be slightly different, but the teams here still get the very latest equipment from the factories, so on that score this series is very strong.

To give you an idea, we had factory rider Regis Laconi race here at the final round last weekend straight after being a title contender in the SWC a week earlier and he couldn’t get within a second and a half a lap of our times. During the second race I had to do a stop-go for jumping the start and was still able to catch and beat him by over five seconds at the end of the race. The AMA is not an easy series by any stretch of the imagination.

You’ve spent nine year’s racing in America. You must enjoy the way of life you have created for yourself there?

MM: I love it here. There are so many things that I’ve been able to do because of my time here. My import company is directly attributed to the people I have been fortunate to deal with over here such as Yoshimura and Joe Rocket. My success over here with racing has led to some successful business ventures.

Not only that, but you do tend to live a fairly normal lifestyle where you live in your own house, go and race, then come back to it where you do normal type things. Things like that that I do enjoy.

Many may perceive your over-confidence to verge on arrogance. How do you read this with the positive nature it takes for anyone to win a championship title and where is the fine line?

MM: Personally I see it as a minority that would see it like that. You always have your detractors no matter who you are. Overall I think it is a minority. Some people see me that way, but I do have a lot of fans over here, I enjoy racing, I have a passion for it and finishing second doesn’t sit well with me. So when I lose, it’s annoying until I get to the next race and make amends for it. I like to perform at my best whatever it is – a bit like everyone I guess.

You are very vocal regarding track safety in America. Do you feel that you are being heard by those who make the decisions?

MM: When it comes to track safety, there’s never enough that can be done. You certainly like to see more done, but unfortunately it’s one of those areas that you keep pushing for and make more improvements, but things never seem to be quick enough. Certainly America doesn’t seem to have track safety as high a priority as the European countries are, especially the World Championship circuits.

However, a few have made steady changes over the years, which is great, but there are still a couple of places where the whole circuit is still terrible. I don’t know why we still race there, especially the speeds carried by the current crop of motorcycles.

What do you see in the future direction of Superbike?

MM: The current 1000cc Superbike is an excellent platform. I think they will always have a platform, as they are different to GP bikes. Horsepower figures are not that different between them. The current Superbikes are putting out well over 205hp, while the lead MotoGP machines are around 235 to 240hp.

There will always be a place for them as they are the bikes that people buy and therefore a huge marketing tool for the manufacturers, which is also the reason why they are all getting back into World Superbike next year.

What lies ahead contract wise for you?


MM: I’m done for 2005. I’ll be back to defend the title and see if we can make it six, but after that we have to see what happens. As long as I’m still enjoying it and have that fire in my belly I’d like to keep winning and I guess I’ll be doing it for a few more years yet.


Cornerspeed Releases 2005 Schedule

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From a press release issued by Cornerspeed:

Cornerspeed’s 2005 Schedule:

Saturday, January 22nd, 2005 Jennings GP, Jennings FL. Cornerspeed Advanced Rider Workshop with AMA Superbike rider Scott Carpenter and 2004 F-USA Pro Superbike Champion Scott Harwell

Sunday, January 23rd, 2005 Jennings GP, Jennings FL. Cornerspeed Advanced Rider Workshop with AMA Superbike rider Scott Carpenter and 2004 F-USA Pro Superbike Champion Scott Harwell

Monday, March 21st, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.


APRIL DATES TBA


Monday, May 2nd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Thursday, June 23rd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. F-USA National week-end. Cornerspeed Riderschool and open practice for Licensed Racers.


ADDITIONAL JUNE DATES TBA


Monday, July 25th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway GRAND Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Monday, August 15th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed ALL WOMEN’S Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Friday, September 23rd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. CCS Cornerspeed Riderschool with VIR’s open practice for Licensed Racers.

Monday, October 17th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Monday, November 7th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway GRAND Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.


Office phone 704-332-3147 or email us at
[email protected]
website: http://www.cornerspeed.net


Editorial Note: Scott Harwell is the 2004 Formula USA Formula Sportbike Champion.

Sportbike Track Time Releases 2005 Schedule

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Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Sportbike Track Time’s 2005 Schedule:

3/19-20 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

4/9-10 Putnam Park Road Course, Mt. Merdian, IN

4/16-17 Moroso Motorsports Park, W. Palm Beach, FL

4/19 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

4/23-24 Mid-Ohio Sports Car course, Lexington, OH

4/30-5/1 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

5/7-8 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

5/8 Infineon Raceway, Sonoma, CA

5/14-15 Talladega Gran Prix Raceway, Talladega, AL

5/16 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

5/23 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

5/28-29 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA

5/30 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA

5/30 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

5/31 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA – PRO School

6/4-5 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

6/8 Road America, Elkhart Lake, WI

6/11-12 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

6/11-12 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

6/13 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

6/13 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

6/13 Summit Point Raceway (Main Course), Summit Pt. WV

6/18-19 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

6/20 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

6/27 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

7/1 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI – PRO School

7/2-3 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/4 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

7/4 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/9-10 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

7/16-17 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

7/21 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH – BMW Day

7/25 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/25 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

7/30-31 Putnam Park Road Course, Mt. Meridian, IN

8/6-7 Road Atlanta, Braselton, GA

8/6-7 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

8/9-10 Road America, Elkhart Lake, WI

8/19-21 Gingerman Raceway, South Haven, MI – Trackfest

8/22 Virginia Int’l Raceway (Full Course), Alton, VA

8/29 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

9/3-4 Homestead-Miami Speedway, Homestead, FL

9/3-4 Valley Motorsports Park, Tamworth, NH

9/3-4-5 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

9/5 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

9/12 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

9/17-18 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

9/26 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

9/27 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

9/27 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

10/1 Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, NV – 4th Annual Femmoto Women’s Event

10/2 Las Vegas Classic Course, Las Vegas, NV

10/1-2 Gingerman Raceway, South Haven, MI

10/1-2 Carolina Motorsports Park, Kershaw, SC

10/8-9 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA – Fall Classic

10/15-16 Moroso Motorsports Park, W. Palm Beach, FL

10/29-30 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

10/29-30 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

11/13-14 Jennings GP, Jennings, FL

11/13-14 Las Vegas Classic Course, Las Vegas, NV

12/16 Laguna Seca Raceway, Monterey, CA

Contact Info:

Sportbike Track Time.com

ADDRESS: 5610 State Rt 109 – Delta, OH 43515

Phone 888.390.4020
Fax 419.710.3855
Cell 419.351.0084
www.sportbiketracktime.com
Email:
[email protected] [email protected]

Racing On TV, Although Not The Kind We Love Best

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From a press release issued by Clear Channel Entertainment Motorsports:

MONSTER JAM on SPEED
Monster Jam everyday on Speed! Tune in Monday through Friday at 6 PM ET. Log on to www.ushra.com for more details.

THQ World Supercross GP/THQ AMA Supercross Series on ESPN2
The THQ World Supercross GP/THQ AMA Supercross Series on ESPN2 the very next day! Watch out for our Anaheim, California season opener airing on January 9th
Click on www.supercross.cc.com for airdates and
times.

IHRA Drag Racing on SPEED
IHRA Drag Racing everyday on Speed! Check IHRA out Monday through Friday at 5 PM ET. Log on to www.ihra.com for more details.

Look out for the National Arenacross Series on SPEED in 2005! TV Schedule announced soon! Log on to www.arenacross.com for more details.


Little Nicky Wimbauer Gets A European Superstock Series Ride

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From a press release:

Nicky Wimbauer signs with Moto 1 Suzuki team

Nicky Wimbauer (16), will compete with the Moto 1 team in the 600cc European SuperStock Championship aboard a 2005 Suzuki GSX-R600. The new 600cc European SuperStock Championship will be held at all European rounds of the SBK World SuperBike/SuperSport series.

The Belgium-based Moto 1 team, backed by Playstation and Foster’s, races as a regular in the SBK World SuperSport series and will expand its program for 2005 with Nicky Wimbauer as its 600cc SuperStock rider.

“It’s great to have a spot for 2005, especially on the Moto 1 team who already have experience with Suzuki and all tracks that are on the schedule,” says Wimbauer. “I can’t wait to swing my leg over the 2005 GSX-R600 – we are trying for a test session at the end of January in Spain”

‘Little Nicky’ raced as an American Young Gun in the 2004 Italian SuperSport Championship and finished 8th in the Trofeo Italia class. He also entered and qualified as the youngest rider in three World SuperSport events. “My highlight was probably running 12th in the Misano WSS race before my chain jumped off and I ended up in the turn one gravel trap,” says Wimbauer. “My 2004 season was a great experience and riding with some of the best racers taught me a lot and now I am looking forward to putting the pieces together and showing what I’ve learned. Thanks to all my fellow racers and friends in the States for cheering me on.”

The People Behind Rossi’s 2004 MotoGP World Championship

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From a press release issued by Gauloises Fortuna Yamaha:

YAMAHA’S FACTORY TEAM CHARACTERS

The Gauloises Fortuna Yamaha squad, MotoGP World Champions in 2004, is a cosmopolitan mix of characters. It has seen many changes since multiple World Champion Valentino Rossi joined it last winter, not least the make-up of the squad itself.

It’s normal in the Grand Prix world for a new rider to bring at least one of his favoured mechanics, team helpers and personal assistants into the fold of his new team. For Rossi, so successful since he joined the top flight of the sport in 2000 as a proven champion in both 125 and 250cc World Championships, things were a little different, and the Yamaha Factory Team was heavily revamped when he joined.

Realising that it made sense not to break up a winning team, Yamaha brought no less than four of Rossi’s pit crew over from their mutual previous employer, Honda. Rossi was also followed to Yamaha by some key back room staff, including the head of Yamaha’s impressively proportioned hospitality efforts, so that the environment Rossi operates in when off the bike and outside the garage is still a familiar, almost familial one.

Jeremy Burgess (universally known as ‘JB’), undoubtedly the most successful crew chief of his generation, has been Rossi’s crew chief since he moved into the premier class in 2000, and, before that, was behind premier class successes for Wayne Gardner and Mick Doohan. Showing his confidence in his latest charge and his new employers at Yamaha, ‘JB’ followed Rossi in his move.

Quick witted and acerbic if necessary, Burgess is as Aussie as they come, and has a crew to match, most of whom are fellow Antipodeans. Burgess’ own reasons for moving were entirely human. “I came because I wanted the challenge,” he remarked. “To a degree I felt that if anybody had the potential to be successful, then working with Valentino would help them to maximise that potential. If Yamaha were going to listen to Valentino and myself then we would move forward. If they weren’t going to listen then there was no point in hiring Valentino Rossi. Mr Furusawa did listen to him and we have finished our first season together as World Champions – an A+ report card!”

Many of the men in the garage spend a large amount of their lives on the opposite side of the globe from their homes; MotoGP for them is like a tough boarding school, with never-ending coursework and highly public exams every other weekend. As Burgess explains, that’s part of the reason why they are successful. “You have to think about winning,” says Burgess, “so we don’t come 12,000 miles from Australia just to pick up the pay check. We’re not going home on Monday morning after the race. We’re here for the duration. So we’re keen to hit the whole show pretty hard.

The largely Aussie ‘Frat Pack’ who work with Burgess have a unique style and approach to the job of racing. Their job, as Burgess states, is not racing, it’s winning.

“We don’t go to the racetrack each weekend hoping to win, we expect to win. If we finish second, third or fourth then we have to know the reasons why. I don’t mind finishing second or third as long as I know the reasons why. If we finish second and have no problems then we are in big trouble. If we’re second and we have problems then over time we will be able to fix those problems.”

The core of the Rossi crew was new for 2004, with the link to the 2003 Yamaha team, Kiwi mechanic Brent Stephens, having moved from Carlos Checa’s side. Stephens’ fellow mechanics, Belgian Bernard Ansiau, and Aussie Alex Briggs as well as mechanics assistant Gary Coleman (also Australian), have been with Burgess for various lengths of time, and all three moved from Honda to follow him and Valentino. The second existing Yamaha team member in their new squad is Italian Data Recording Engineer Matteo Flamigni, who worked with Marco Melandri in 2003.

As Briggs explains, working with a new set of people and a new machine has been a pleasing challenge to take on. Of course a natural air of in-house competition is all part of the set-up!. “The guys who were already in the Yamaha team are a really good bunch. I get on great with them. We work with them, help each other build the garage, eat with them, and travel together. But there is a difference between racing and doing all those sorts of things. When it comes to racing, whether it comes to the guy in the garage next door or another company, it doesn’t make any difference to us, we’re just trying to beat them.”

Rossi’s crew have done a lot of learning this year, as well as teaching by example, but the most satisfying aspect for most of them is outlined once more by Briggs. “The best thing has been showing them that we have the ability to do what we always talked about. Before, in the previous team, it was just a small improvement from year to year. Coming here we didn’t know what we would encounter and to see it all happen gives me a good feeling. It’s good to see people excited and wanting to continue. There was nothing bad about coming here at all.”

Other than Team Director Davide Brivio and Flamigni, the ‘link man’ Brent Stephens is the common bond to the 2003 team. Working with Carlos Checa for five years, he moved sideways in 2004, and thus has a unique viewpoint.

The Australia-based Kiwi acknowledges that the new mix of personnel is a positive factor for all involved. “They wanted someone who was familiar with the bike, experienced with the motors and I wanted a change as well. I had worked with Carlos for five years, but change is always good. There used to be a lot more Italians in the team but now they are almost outnumbered by the Aussies!” said Brent. “There are also a few Spaniards and Belgians. It’s really healthy to have all those different cultures working together. The Italians in the team didn’t want to have any more Italians because they themselves admit that they have quite a high temper, and you need a balance. The more relaxed Aussies balance that out. The overall situation works really well.”

Although intensely focused on winning, the Burgess boys have a relaxed attitude to the pressures inherent in their field, a factor of their approach that breaks the stress before it starts. “We have a good old laugh at races,” grins Brent, “sometimes I think it’s not right to have so much fun doing a job! But we have a good old laugh. There is so much seriousness in it that you have to inject a bit of humour as well. People expect there to be much more pressure involved in working with Valentino. Although you want to say there isn’t, there really is; there’s a lot on the line and there is a lot of responsibility resting on you – but it’s all good.”

Compared to the new virtual antipodean homogeny on Rossi’s side of the garage, the crew who worked for Checa in 2004 included Spaniards, Italians, Brits and the ever-present tight-knit group of home factory Japanese. Their crew chief in 2004 was the multi-lingual Antonio Jimenez, who has since, like Checa, moved on to pastures new. Speaking this season, he said, “We communicate in English so it doesn’t matter where we all come from. I can also speak to the mechanics in Spanish, or Italian and French with the Michelin people. But our unifying language is English.”

Like all other people with a racing spirit, Jimenez admitted that this unity does not extend across the garage when racing starts. “There is no wall in the middle of the garage but when everyone is doing their job they are concentrating on that, so we are not worrying about what is going on in the other side. Everybody is doing his job as well as he can. Of course, after qualifying or practice, it is good to look at what the other guys are doing, and they look at what you are doing. This year especially, with Valentino over the other side, we learned a lot of things.”

So even though Valentino was not under his wing, his mere presence made a difference. Over to Antonio again. “I think the difference was that the presence of Valentino has given a lot of motivation to the other Yamaha riders. This also improved their performance.”

Throughout the race weekend, the team’s centre of operations is the Hospitality unit, run this year by another Yamaha new recruit, Italian Massimiliano Montanari– known as Max to all. His role this year was much more than that, however, as he explains.

“I am in charge of the hospitality operations for Yamaha, I followed Valentino. I have followed him for six years, from Aprilia to Honda and now to Yamaha this year. I stay behind him for everything, supporting him over the weekend.”

With so many different countries palates to sate, given the multinational nature of the team, Max’s new culinary experience could have been a nightmare but, although it is undoubtedly a long slog on race weekends, the job is somewhat simplified by the universal popularity of Italian food – and some free beer. “We have a lot of different nationalities in the team now but they all largely eat the same things, so that side of things is not so complicated,” says Max. “I think the Italian food is the best and all the others seem to like it. Also we have the Aussie guys in the team and the most important thing for them is the Nastro Azzurro beer! I think they must have it in their contract to have beer on tap after the sessions and races or else they don’t come to the race!”

Arguably the most popular – and unexpected – integral part of this whole hospitality chain of human sustenance in 2004 was Angelo, the ice-cream man. Come rain or shine, at all times of day during European races, there was a manned ice cream dispensing machine in the Yamaha hospitality, with the uniformed Angelo standing by to dish out his superior home-made ice cream.

After practice sessions on particularly hot days this year he could even be found in the pit garage, a tray full of freshly made ice creams being handed out to the team members during their post session debriefs. A dedicated MotoGP ice cream operative is a peculiar enough sight in the paddock, but watching animated discussions on the nuances of critical chassis setup between key team members, each with a dripping spoon of vanilla and mocha in one hand and top secret computer read-outs in the other, verges on the bizarre.

As well as the on-track performance of the team, there is also the business of promoting all the team’s successes via column inches and TV exposure, and another long-term Yamaha Factory Team collaborator, Alison Forth, heads that effort. Ali has arguably the best vantage point to describe how the GFYT members mesh together, having to deal with all of them at some point over each weekend.

This year, the PR role in the team has changed significantly. “The workload has greatly increased; the interest in the team, not just Rossi but the team as a whole, is massive,” affirms Ali. “We are in the media spotlight and this has to be dealt with. Access time to Rossi however, who everyone wants to get their hands on, is limited, so it’s impossible for us to fulfil all media requests. Last year we only needed one person full-time for the PR area, but this year there were two of us. We deal not just with the PR for Rossi but last year for Checa also, as well as other key team members in the media spotlight. We answer media requests during and away from race weekends, plan the schedules for the riders and the team during the race weekends for press conferences, photography, filming and interviews, and also liaise with the team sponsors over their involvement with the team. We liaise with Yamaha markets worldwide, we run the team’s media website, organise hospitality and guest programmes during race weekends, organise signing sessions, etc. It’s a lot!”

It is a lot, and, after the wholly successful first season for Valentino Rossi and Yamaha, and the arrival of Colin Edwards to the team in 2005, the job can only get more intense.

Vmoto Vintage Racing Series To Expand To The East Coast In 2005

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From a press release issued by Vmoto:

Vmoto Expands Vintage Road Racing Schedule to East Coast of the US in 2005

Mountain View, CA – Today Vmoto (the Vintage
Motorcycle Racing Association) announced an expansion of the 2005 The Vmoto Vintage Challenge Series for historic road race motorcycles.

Previously a west coast only series, in 2005 Vmoto will be a feature race at of one of the East Coast’s premiere historic racing weekends, Brian Redman’s Jefferson 500 at Summit Point Raceway West Virginia May 20-22. The Jefferson 500 is one of the most anticipated historic race weekends in the US and is now in its 15th year. This will mark the first appearance of vintage road race bikes at this great event.

In addition, Vmoto will also stage races at Reno Historic, Fernley, Nevada on April 16-17, The Portland Historic, Portland, Oregon on July 8-10.

About Vmoto
Vmoto promotes and stages vintage motorcycle races in the US with the emphasis on period correct machines. Competition is secondary to seeing the great machines of the past raced once more as there were. Vmoto’sraces are staged in association with HMSA (the Historic Motor Sports Association) historic race car group. HMSA is the sanctioning body for the famed Monterey Historic at Laguna Seca. For more information on Vmoto go to their web site

www.vintagemoto.com

Team Hammer Signs New Primary Title Sponsor

From a press release issued by Team Hammer, Inc.:

Team Hammer, Inc. has signed M4 Performance Exhausts as a new primary title sponsor and will race as Team M4 EMGO Suzuki during the 2005 and 2006 AMA seasons.

M4 is based in Dallas, Texas and has been an associate sponsor of the team since 1999.

“We at M4 are extremely excited about the 2005 racing season and our stepped-up involvement with Team Hammer,” said M4 Vice President Kyle Martin. “We believe we can make an important contribution toward a winning season for Team Hammer and we’re proud to be associated with the only professional motorcycle road racing team in America that’s been racing continuously for 25 consecutive seasons.”

M4 replaces Valvoline, which has elected to concentrate its racing-related promotional activities in NASCAR.

EMGO International, a manufacturer and importer of oil filters, continues as the team’s secondary title sponsor. EMGO has been involved with Team Hammer since the team was founded.

Team Hammer has won two AMA National Championships, five F-USA National Championships, and 13 WERA National Endurance Championships.

More information on M4 Performance Exhausts is available online at www.m4exhaust.com or via phone at (972) 481-9300.

More information on Team Hammer is available online at www.teamhammer.com

Championship Cup Series Releases 2005 Racing Calendar

From a press release issued by CCS:

December 28, 2005, Fort Worth, Texas

The Championship Cup Series announced today its 2005 Season schedule.

2005 Race of Champions XXII
October 20-23 Daytona Intl Speedway Daytona Beach, FL

CCS Sanctioned Races
February 12-13 Homestead -Miami Spdwy< Homestead, FL
March 6 Firebird East Chandler, AZ
March 2-6 Daytona Intl Speedway* Daytona Beach, FL
March 12-13 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
March 19-20 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
April 2-3 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
April 9-10 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
April 22-23 Road America** Elkhart Lake, WI
April 24 Road America** Elkhart Lake, WI
April 23-24 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
Apr 30 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
May 1 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
April 30-May 1 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
April 30-May 1 Summit Point @ Summit Point, WV
May 7-8 Blackhawk Farms* South Beloit, IL
May 14-15 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
May 14-15 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
May 29-30 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
May 28-29 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
May 28-30 Summit Point* Summit Point, WV
June 5 Firebird Intl Chandler, AZ
June 11 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
June 12 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
June 11-12 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
June 11-12 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
June 17-19 New Hampshire Intl*.> Loudon, NH
June 19 Heartland Park* Topeka, KS
June 25-26 Homestead -Miami Spdwy< Homestead, FL
June 25-26 Autobahn CC Joliet, IL
June 24-26 Virginia Intl* Danville, VA
July 2 Mid-America Motorplex** Pacific Junction, IA
July 3 Mid-America Motorplex** Pacific Junction, IA
July 2-3 Summit Point @ Summit Point, WV
July 16-17 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
July 23 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
July24 Roebling Road Raceway** Faulkville, GA
July 23-24 New Hampshire Intl. Loudon, NH
July 23-24 Moroso Motorsports Park West Palm Beach, FL
July 31 Gingerman Raceway South Haven, MI
Aug 6-7 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
August 12-14 Barber Motorsports* Leeds, AL
August 20-21 New Hampshire Intl. > Loudon, NH
August 27-28 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
August 27-28 Moroso Motorsports Park < West Palm Beach, FL
August 27-28 Shenandoah Circuit Summit Point, WV
September 3-4 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
September 10-11 Jennings GP< Jennings, FL
September 10-11 Autobahn CC* Joliet, IL
September 10-11 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
September 17 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
September 18 Las Vegas Classic Course** Las Vegas, NV
September 24-25 Blackhawk Farms South Beloit, IL
September 24-25 Virginia Intl Danville, VA
September 25 Firebird Intl Chandler, AZ
October 1-2 New Hampshire Intl.> Loudon, NH
October 1-2 Moroso Motorsports Park< West Palm Beach, FL
October 8-9 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
October 9 Gingerman Raceway* South Haven, MI
October 9-10 Shenandoah Circuit* @ Summit Point, WV
November 12-13 Arroyo Secco Raceway^ Deming, NM
November 19 Firebird East * Chandler, AZ
December 3-4 Homestead -Miami Spdwy* Homestead, FL


All Dates Are Subject to Change.
* = Double Points
** = Twin Sprint Event
@ = Friday Licensing Clinic
^ = Hosted by ASMA – Limited CCS Classes
^^ = Hosted by Fasttrax-Limited CCS Classes
< = Hosted by CCS Florida
> = Hosted by LRRS

R.I.P. AHRMA Racer David R. Temple

From Founds Funeral Home, Inc., reprinted with permission: David R. Temple, 46, of West Chester, (Pennsylvania) died suddenly on Friday, December 24, 2004, as the result of a single-car accident. He was the husband of Susan A. Supley Temple, with whom he shared 17 years of marriage. Born in West Chester, he was the son of Robert ‘Bud’ and Carolyn Wright Temple of West Chester. David, a life-long resident of West Chester, was a 1977 graduate of East High School. He also completed other educational courses in conjunction with transportation. He was president of Frames Motor Freight, Inc. in West Chester, a family-owned business. David was a very enthusiastic motorcyclist and a collector of vintage motorcycles. He was a lifetime member of the American Motorcycle Assoc. and the American Historic Racing Motorcycle Assoc. David raced around the USA in the 750cc Sportsman’s Division and was the National #1 Champion in Road Racing five of the last six years with this association. He was also a member of the American Truck Historical Society and Antique Truck Club of America. In addition to his wife and parents, David is survived by his daughters, Cara and Jenna Temple of West Chester; a sister, Rochelle ‘Shelly’ Temple of Richmond, VA; a brother, Todd Temple of West Chester; several aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews; and his many motorcycle family of friends. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, December 30, 2004 at the Founds Funeral Home, Inc., High and Union Streets, West Chester, (610) 696-0134. Family and friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday, December 29; and from 10:30 to 11 a.m. on Thursday, at the funeral home. Interment will be in Philadelphia Memorial Park, Frazer. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions to benefit his daughters may be made to the David R. Temple Memorial Fund, c/o First National Bank of Chester County, P.O. Box 514, West Chester, PA 19381. links for funeral information: http://www.foundsfuneralhome.com/ecom/sp

Mladin: Key To Racing Success Is Having A Strong Team

From a press release issued by Team Suzuki:

For Australian Mat Mladin, the nine seasons he has spent racing in the highly-competitive American Superbike Championship has brought with it considerable success.

Since making the move to the AMA series in 1996, he has been associated with the factory Yoshimura Suzuki team for all bar one of those seasons, having raced for Eraldo Ferracci in his Fast By Ferracci Ducati team in 1997.

In this period he has emerged as one of the most decorated riders in the sport: Five AMA Superbike Championships, 32 career race wins including three Daytona 200’s and 37 career pole positions, which rates him as the best in the business.

Mladin and his tight knit crew has become the yardstick of the American Superbike Championship. His rivals see him as the man to beat. He has many fans as well as detractors, but that does not distract him from the task at hand – winning championships.

Fresh from his recent championship success, Mladin took time to answer a number of questions relating to his season and his time spent racing in the grueling AMA series.

With five AMA Superbike crowns to your credit, how do you rate this year’s title win?

MM: This year was a pretty tough championship. We were up against it, especially over the first two-thirds of the year. The motorcycle was a little behind due to the rule changes imposed after last season. As far as how hard it was, it definitely was hard. As far as how satisfying it was, it was the most satisfying by far.


You went into 2004 as the defending champion but were not rated as the pre-season favourite to take the title. How did that sit with you?

MM: You are probably right and all that was based on one off-season tyre test at Daytona when the Honda guys came out and went really fast. They put a good spin on the publicity there and that seemed to blow a lot of things out of proportion for what could have happened and I think it did.

You won the Daytona 200 for the third time this year and with the rule changes proposed by the AMA for 2005 (it will run as a Formula Extreme class) it could well be the last. What are your thoughts on that decision?

MM: I’d hate to say that it would be the last time that Superbikes race the Daytona 200 because who knows what they are going to have for the future and are they going to have to turn that decision around. Is it really going to be the last Superbike Daytona 200? I’m not really certain of that.

It’s very highly thought of by the manufacturers. Myself as a non-American racer, I don’t place as much importance on it as an American would. For me, it’s the first race of the championship and I don’t want to do anything silly there that would leave me catching up a whole heap of points.

Was there a particular high point for you this year?

MM: The two wins at the penultimate round at Road Atlanta were huge for us. That was a weekend where the championship could have either tightened way up for the final two races at Virginia, or we could essentially clinch it. Even though mathematically we couldn’t clinch it, we could put all of the competitors away at that race and that’s what happened. It made it extra special because there was that tension and pressure that was growing between Miguel DuHamel and myself and we came away with maximum points after taking pole and leading most laps in each race on the way to the two wins. It was a nice way to leave there.

Was it a turning point in the season, even though it was quite late?

MM: I don’t think it was a turning point as we led the whole season. Laguna Seca really stopped the bleeding for us after the few fast race tracks where we lost points to our rivals. Laguna stopped that for us and then we got a win at the following round at Mid-Ohio where we started to stretch the points out again. Then at Atlanta, we put it to bed.

When did you feel that the championship was yours to win?

MM: After Atlanta. We felt pretty comfortable and had over a race in points in the lead of the championship, so it would have taken a big mess up for us to lose it after that.

Has there been any one particular facet that would be the key to your success in America?

MM: The biggest thing was learning six or seven years ago that I needed a strong team to be able to win championships. It’s something that I really woke up to after my year with Eraldo Ferracci. You can’t win titles, especially consistently, without having a solid team who do the same every weekend.

How important has it been to have such a dedicated group of guys around you that form the nucleus of your team?

MM: My long time crew chief Peter Doyle and mechanic Reg O’Rourke have been joined by other members, Johnny Asher, Manny and Henry, but the key is that they are a really solid group that works extremely well together.

They all know what to do. At the track we get the job done and if we win, we go out and have dinner and some fun, but if we don’t, we still go out have dinner and some fun. That’s what it is all about.

How enjoyable has it been over the past two years where you have been able to race 1000cc multi-cylinder Superbikes?

MM: Last year, the Suzuki GSX-R1000 was by far the best motorcycle on the racetrack. Last year we won a lot of races reasonably comfortably and it was good to have won that fourth championship, but it certainly wasn’t as near as hard as this year. This year I’ve spoken about the motorcycle not being fast enough at times, but again, it all goes back to the rule changes that were implemented very late last year, so the motorcycle just wasn’t up to the same specification as the others we were racing against this year. Next year it will be, so we’ll see how it goes then.

How do rate the next crop of riders emerging in the US?

MM: There are a few guys over here doing very well. The Hayden brothers, Tommy and Roger Lee at Kawasaki – Tommy won the Supersport Championship, while there’s also a couple of younger guys over at Yamaha. Aaron Gobert did well in winning the Superstock championship while Jason Disalvo seems to be pretty fast. In my Yoshimura Suzuki team, Ben Spies will be stepping up to Superbike next year so we’ll see how he goes there.

Do you still have that desire for either GP or World Superbike or will you conclude you career in America?

MM: I’d imagine that I’d finish my racing career here in the US. The GP thing has always interested me since I was there in ’93, but certainly even less the more years that we go along because it is one of those things where you really do need the right package – bike and team – or else you are wasting your time. There are only so many factory bikes to go around and the unfortunate thing is that I’m unlikely to get one. Honda has already stated that it will only have two official factory bikes in MotoGP.

As for World Superbike, it just doesn’t interest me full stop. The level of racing I don’t think is that high. To have to travel around the world to say that you race in World Superbike does not appeal to me. I see it as a huge step backwards to what I’m doing here in America. The rules between SWC and the AMA may be slightly different, but the teams here still get the very latest equipment from the factories, so on that score this series is very strong.

To give you an idea, we had factory rider Regis Laconi race here at the final round last weekend straight after being a title contender in the SWC a week earlier and he couldn’t get within a second and a half a lap of our times. During the second race I had to do a stop-go for jumping the start and was still able to catch and beat him by over five seconds at the end of the race. The AMA is not an easy series by any stretch of the imagination.

You’ve spent nine year’s racing in America. You must enjoy the way of life you have created for yourself there?

MM: I love it here. There are so many things that I’ve been able to do because of my time here. My import company is directly attributed to the people I have been fortunate to deal with over here such as Yoshimura and Joe Rocket. My success over here with racing has led to some successful business ventures.

Not only that, but you do tend to live a fairly normal lifestyle where you live in your own house, go and race, then come back to it where you do normal type things. Things like that that I do enjoy.

Many may perceive your over-confidence to verge on arrogance. How do you read this with the positive nature it takes for anyone to win a championship title and where is the fine line?

MM: Personally I see it as a minority that would see it like that. You always have your detractors no matter who you are. Overall I think it is a minority. Some people see me that way, but I do have a lot of fans over here, I enjoy racing, I have a passion for it and finishing second doesn’t sit well with me. So when I lose, it’s annoying until I get to the next race and make amends for it. I like to perform at my best whatever it is – a bit like everyone I guess.

You are very vocal regarding track safety in America. Do you feel that you are being heard by those who make the decisions?

MM: When it comes to track safety, there’s never enough that can be done. You certainly like to see more done, but unfortunately it’s one of those areas that you keep pushing for and make more improvements, but things never seem to be quick enough. Certainly America doesn’t seem to have track safety as high a priority as the European countries are, especially the World Championship circuits.

However, a few have made steady changes over the years, which is great, but there are still a couple of places where the whole circuit is still terrible. I don’t know why we still race there, especially the speeds carried by the current crop of motorcycles.

What do you see in the future direction of Superbike?

MM: The current 1000cc Superbike is an excellent platform. I think they will always have a platform, as they are different to GP bikes. Horsepower figures are not that different between them. The current Superbikes are putting out well over 205hp, while the lead MotoGP machines are around 235 to 240hp.

There will always be a place for them as they are the bikes that people buy and therefore a huge marketing tool for the manufacturers, which is also the reason why they are all getting back into World Superbike next year.

What lies ahead contract wise for you?


MM: I’m done for 2005. I’ll be back to defend the title and see if we can make it six, but after that we have to see what happens. As long as I’m still enjoying it and have that fire in my belly I’d like to keep winning and I guess I’ll be doing it for a few more years yet.


Cornerspeed Releases 2005 Schedule

From a press release issued by Cornerspeed:

Cornerspeed’s 2005 Schedule:

Saturday, January 22nd, 2005 Jennings GP, Jennings FL. Cornerspeed Advanced Rider Workshop with AMA Superbike rider Scott Carpenter and 2004 F-USA Pro Superbike Champion Scott Harwell

Sunday, January 23rd, 2005 Jennings GP, Jennings FL. Cornerspeed Advanced Rider Workshop with AMA Superbike rider Scott Carpenter and 2004 F-USA Pro Superbike Champion Scott Harwell

Monday, March 21st, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.


APRIL DATES TBA


Monday, May 2nd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Thursday, June 23rd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. F-USA National week-end. Cornerspeed Riderschool and open practice for Licensed Racers.


ADDITIONAL JUNE DATES TBA


Monday, July 25th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway GRAND Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Monday, August 15th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed ALL WOMEN’S Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Friday, September 23rd, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. CCS Cornerspeed Riderschool with VIR’s open practice for Licensed Racers.

Monday, October 17th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway, North Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.

Monday, November 7th, 2005 Virginia International Raceway GRAND Course. Cornerspeed Riderschool with additional groups for Sport Enthusiasts and Licensed Racers.


Office phone 704-332-3147 or email us at
[email protected]
website: http://www.cornerspeed.net


Editorial Note: Scott Harwell is the 2004 Formula USA Formula Sportbike Champion.

Sportbike Track Time Releases 2005 Schedule

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Sportbike Track Time’s 2005 Schedule:

3/19-20 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

4/9-10 Putnam Park Road Course, Mt. Merdian, IN

4/16-17 Moroso Motorsports Park, W. Palm Beach, FL

4/19 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

4/23-24 Mid-Ohio Sports Car course, Lexington, OH

4/30-5/1 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

5/7-8 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

5/8 Infineon Raceway, Sonoma, CA

5/14-15 Talladega Gran Prix Raceway, Talladega, AL

5/16 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

5/23 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

5/28-29 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA

5/30 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA

5/30 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

5/31 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA – PRO School

6/4-5 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

6/8 Road America, Elkhart Lake, WI

6/11-12 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

6/11-12 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

6/13 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

6/13 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

6/13 Summit Point Raceway (Main Course), Summit Pt. WV

6/18-19 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

6/20 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

6/27 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

7/1 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI – PRO School

7/2-3 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/4 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

7/4 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/9-10 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

7/16-17 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

7/21 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH – BMW Day

7/25 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

7/25 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

7/30-31 Putnam Park Road Course, Mt. Meridian, IN

8/6-7 Road Atlanta, Braselton, GA

8/6-7 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

8/9-10 Road America, Elkhart Lake, WI

8/19-21 Gingerman Raceway, South Haven, MI – Trackfest

8/22 Virginia Int’l Raceway (Full Course), Alton, VA

8/29 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

9/3-4 Homestead-Miami Speedway, Homestead, FL

9/3-4 Valley Motorsports Park, Tamworth, NH

9/3-4-5 Autobahn Country Club, Joliet, IL

9/5 Willow Springs Int’l Raceway, Rosamond, CA

9/12 Grattan Raceway Park, Grattan, MI

9/17-18 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

9/26 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

9/27 Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Lexington, OH

9/27 Thunderhill Raceway, Willows, CA

10/1 Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, NV – 4th Annual Femmoto Women’s Event

10/2 Las Vegas Classic Course, Las Vegas, NV

10/1-2 Gingerman Raceway, South Haven, MI

10/1-2 Carolina Motorsports Park, Kershaw, SC

10/8-9 BeaveRun Motorsports Park, Wampum, PA – Fall Classic

10/15-16 Moroso Motorsports Park, W. Palm Beach, FL

10/29-30 Barber Motorsports Park, Birmingham, AL

10/29-30 Spring Mountain Motorsports Park, Pahrump, NV

11/13-14 Jennings GP, Jennings, FL

11/13-14 Las Vegas Classic Course, Las Vegas, NV

12/16 Laguna Seca Raceway, Monterey, CA

Contact Info:

Sportbike Track Time.com

ADDRESS: 5610 State Rt 109 – Delta, OH 43515

Phone 888.390.4020
Fax 419.710.3855
Cell 419.351.0084
www.sportbiketracktime.com
Email:
[email protected] [email protected]

Racing On TV, Although Not The Kind We Love Best

From a press release issued by Clear Channel Entertainment Motorsports:

MONSTER JAM on SPEED
Monster Jam everyday on Speed! Tune in Monday through Friday at 6 PM ET. Log on to www.ushra.com for more details.

THQ World Supercross GP/THQ AMA Supercross Series on ESPN2
The THQ World Supercross GP/THQ AMA Supercross Series on ESPN2 the very next day! Watch out for our Anaheim, California season opener airing on January 9th
Click on www.supercross.cc.com for airdates and
times.

IHRA Drag Racing on SPEED
IHRA Drag Racing everyday on Speed! Check IHRA out Monday through Friday at 5 PM ET. Log on to www.ihra.com for more details.

Look out for the National Arenacross Series on SPEED in 2005! TV Schedule announced soon! Log on to www.arenacross.com for more details.


Little Nicky Wimbauer Gets A European Superstock Series Ride

From a press release:

Nicky Wimbauer signs with Moto 1 Suzuki team

Nicky Wimbauer (16), will compete with the Moto 1 team in the 600cc European SuperStock Championship aboard a 2005 Suzuki GSX-R600. The new 600cc European SuperStock Championship will be held at all European rounds of the SBK World SuperBike/SuperSport series.

The Belgium-based Moto 1 team, backed by Playstation and Foster’s, races as a regular in the SBK World SuperSport series and will expand its program for 2005 with Nicky Wimbauer as its 600cc SuperStock rider.

“It’s great to have a spot for 2005, especially on the Moto 1 team who already have experience with Suzuki and all tracks that are on the schedule,” says Wimbauer. “I can’t wait to swing my leg over the 2005 GSX-R600 – we are trying for a test session at the end of January in Spain”

‘Little Nicky’ raced as an American Young Gun in the 2004 Italian SuperSport Championship and finished 8th in the Trofeo Italia class. He also entered and qualified as the youngest rider in three World SuperSport events. “My highlight was probably running 12th in the Misano WSS race before my chain jumped off and I ended up in the turn one gravel trap,” says Wimbauer. “My 2004 season was a great experience and riding with some of the best racers taught me a lot and now I am looking forward to putting the pieces together and showing what I’ve learned. Thanks to all my fellow racers and friends in the States for cheering me on.”

The People Behind Rossi’s 2004 MotoGP World Championship

From a press release issued by Gauloises Fortuna Yamaha:

YAMAHA’S FACTORY TEAM CHARACTERS

The Gauloises Fortuna Yamaha squad, MotoGP World Champions in 2004, is a cosmopolitan mix of characters. It has seen many changes since multiple World Champion Valentino Rossi joined it last winter, not least the make-up of the squad itself.

It’s normal in the Grand Prix world for a new rider to bring at least one of his favoured mechanics, team helpers and personal assistants into the fold of his new team. For Rossi, so successful since he joined the top flight of the sport in 2000 as a proven champion in both 125 and 250cc World Championships, things were a little different, and the Yamaha Factory Team was heavily revamped when he joined.

Realising that it made sense not to break up a winning team, Yamaha brought no less than four of Rossi’s pit crew over from their mutual previous employer, Honda. Rossi was also followed to Yamaha by some key back room staff, including the head of Yamaha’s impressively proportioned hospitality efforts, so that the environment Rossi operates in when off the bike and outside the garage is still a familiar, almost familial one.

Jeremy Burgess (universally known as ‘JB’), undoubtedly the most successful crew chief of his generation, has been Rossi’s crew chief since he moved into the premier class in 2000, and, before that, was behind premier class successes for Wayne Gardner and Mick Doohan. Showing his confidence in his latest charge and his new employers at Yamaha, ‘JB’ followed Rossi in his move.

Quick witted and acerbic if necessary, Burgess is as Aussie as they come, and has a crew to match, most of whom are fellow Antipodeans. Burgess’ own reasons for moving were entirely human. “I came because I wanted the challenge,” he remarked. “To a degree I felt that if anybody had the potential to be successful, then working with Valentino would help them to maximise that potential. If Yamaha were going to listen to Valentino and myself then we would move forward. If they weren’t going to listen then there was no point in hiring Valentino Rossi. Mr Furusawa did listen to him and we have finished our first season together as World Champions – an A+ report card!”

Many of the men in the garage spend a large amount of their lives on the opposite side of the globe from their homes; MotoGP for them is like a tough boarding school, with never-ending coursework and highly public exams every other weekend. As Burgess explains, that’s part of the reason why they are successful. “You have to think about winning,” says Burgess, “so we don’t come 12,000 miles from Australia just to pick up the pay check. We’re not going home on Monday morning after the race. We’re here for the duration. So we’re keen to hit the whole show pretty hard.

The largely Aussie ‘Frat Pack’ who work with Burgess have a unique style and approach to the job of racing. Their job, as Burgess states, is not racing, it’s winning.

“We don’t go to the racetrack each weekend hoping to win, we expect to win. If we finish second, third or fourth then we have to know the reasons why. I don’t mind finishing second or third as long as I know the reasons why. If we finish second and have no problems then we are in big trouble. If we’re second and we have problems then over time we will be able to fix those problems.”

The core of the Rossi crew was new for 2004, with the link to the 2003 Yamaha team, Kiwi mechanic Brent Stephens, having moved from Carlos Checa’s side. Stephens’ fellow mechanics, Belgian Bernard Ansiau, and Aussie Alex Briggs as well as mechanics assistant Gary Coleman (also Australian), have been with Burgess for various lengths of time, and all three moved from Honda to follow him and Valentino. The second existing Yamaha team member in their new squad is Italian Data Recording Engineer Matteo Flamigni, who worked with Marco Melandri in 2003.

As Briggs explains, working with a new set of people and a new machine has been a pleasing challenge to take on. Of course a natural air of in-house competition is all part of the set-up!. “The guys who were already in the Yamaha team are a really good bunch. I get on great with them. We work with them, help each other build the garage, eat with them, and travel together. But there is a difference between racing and doing all those sorts of things. When it comes to racing, whether it comes to the guy in the garage next door or another company, it doesn’t make any difference to us, we’re just trying to beat them.”

Rossi’s crew have done a lot of learning this year, as well as teaching by example, but the most satisfying aspect for most of them is outlined once more by Briggs. “The best thing has been showing them that we have the ability to do what we always talked about. Before, in the previous team, it was just a small improvement from year to year. Coming here we didn’t know what we would encounter and to see it all happen gives me a good feeling. It’s good to see people excited and wanting to continue. There was nothing bad about coming here at all.”

Other than Team Director Davide Brivio and Flamigni, the ‘link man’ Brent Stephens is the common bond to the 2003 team. Working with Carlos Checa for five years, he moved sideways in 2004, and thus has a unique viewpoint.

The Australia-based Kiwi acknowledges that the new mix of personnel is a positive factor for all involved. “They wanted someone who was familiar with the bike, experienced with the motors and I wanted a change as well. I had worked with Carlos for five years, but change is always good. There used to be a lot more Italians in the team but now they are almost outnumbered by the Aussies!” said Brent. “There are also a few Spaniards and Belgians. It’s really healthy to have all those different cultures working together. The Italians in the team didn’t want to have any more Italians because they themselves admit that they have quite a high temper, and you need a balance. The more relaxed Aussies balance that out. The overall situation works really well.”

Although intensely focused on winning, the Burgess boys have a relaxed attitude to the pressures inherent in their field, a factor of their approach that breaks the stress before it starts. “We have a good old laugh at races,” grins Brent, “sometimes I think it’s not right to have so much fun doing a job! But we have a good old laugh. There is so much seriousness in it that you have to inject a bit of humour as well. People expect there to be much more pressure involved in working with Valentino. Although you want to say there isn’t, there really is; there’s a lot on the line and there is a lot of responsibility resting on you – but it’s all good.”

Compared to the new virtual antipodean homogeny on Rossi’s side of the garage, the crew who worked for Checa in 2004 included Spaniards, Italians, Brits and the ever-present tight-knit group of home factory Japanese. Their crew chief in 2004 was the multi-lingual Antonio Jimenez, who has since, like Checa, moved on to pastures new. Speaking this season, he said, “We communicate in English so it doesn’t matter where we all come from. I can also speak to the mechanics in Spanish, or Italian and French with the Michelin people. But our unifying language is English.”

Like all other people with a racing spirit, Jimenez admitted that this unity does not extend across the garage when racing starts. “There is no wall in the middle of the garage but when everyone is doing their job they are concentrating on that, so we are not worrying about what is going on in the other side. Everybody is doing his job as well as he can. Of course, after qualifying or practice, it is good to look at what the other guys are doing, and they look at what you are doing. This year especially, with Valentino over the other side, we learned a lot of things.”

So even though Valentino was not under his wing, his mere presence made a difference. Over to Antonio again. “I think the difference was that the presence of Valentino has given a lot of motivation to the other Yamaha riders. This also improved their performance.”

Throughout the race weekend, the team’s centre of operations is the Hospitality unit, run this year by another Yamaha new recruit, Italian Massimiliano Montanari– known as Max to all. His role this year was much more than that, however, as he explains.

“I am in charge of the hospitality operations for Yamaha, I followed Valentino. I have followed him for six years, from Aprilia to Honda and now to Yamaha this year. I stay behind him for everything, supporting him over the weekend.”

With so many different countries palates to sate, given the multinational nature of the team, Max’s new culinary experience could have been a nightmare but, although it is undoubtedly a long slog on race weekends, the job is somewhat simplified by the universal popularity of Italian food – and some free beer. “We have a lot of different nationalities in the team now but they all largely eat the same things, so that side of things is not so complicated,” says Max. “I think the Italian food is the best and all the others seem to like it. Also we have the Aussie guys in the team and the most important thing for them is the Nastro Azzurro beer! I think they must have it in their contract to have beer on tap after the sessions and races or else they don’t come to the race!”

Arguably the most popular – and unexpected – integral part of this whole hospitality chain of human sustenance in 2004 was Angelo, the ice-cream man. Come rain or shine, at all times of day during European races, there was a manned ice cream dispensing machine in the Yamaha hospitality, with the uniformed Angelo standing by to dish out his superior home-made ice cream.

After practice sessions on particularly hot days this year he could even be found in the pit garage, a tray full of freshly made ice creams being handed out to the team members during their post session debriefs. A dedicated MotoGP ice cream operative is a peculiar enough sight in the paddock, but watching animated discussions on the nuances of critical chassis setup between key team members, each with a dripping spoon of vanilla and mocha in one hand and top secret computer read-outs in the other, verges on the bizarre.

As well as the on-track performance of the team, there is also the business of promoting all the team’s successes via column inches and TV exposure, and another long-term Yamaha Factory Team collaborator, Alison Forth, heads that effort. Ali has arguably the best vantage point to describe how the GFYT members mesh together, having to deal with all of them at some point over each weekend.

This year, the PR role in the team has changed significantly. “The workload has greatly increased; the interest in the team, not just Rossi but the team as a whole, is massive,” affirms Ali. “We are in the media spotlight and this has to be dealt with. Access time to Rossi however, who everyone wants to get their hands on, is limited, so it’s impossible for us to fulfil all media requests. Last year we only needed one person full-time for the PR area, but this year there were two of us. We deal not just with the PR for Rossi but last year for Checa also, as well as other key team members in the media spotlight. We answer media requests during and away from race weekends, plan the schedules for the riders and the team during the race weekends for press conferences, photography, filming and interviews, and also liaise with the team sponsors over their involvement with the team. We liaise with Yamaha markets worldwide, we run the team’s media website, organise hospitality and guest programmes during race weekends, organise signing sessions, etc. It’s a lot!”

It is a lot, and, after the wholly successful first season for Valentino Rossi and Yamaha, and the arrival of Colin Edwards to the team in 2005, the job can only get more intense.

Vmoto Vintage Racing Series To Expand To The East Coast In 2005

From a press release issued by Vmoto:

Vmoto Expands Vintage Road Racing Schedule to East Coast of the US in 2005

Mountain View, CA – Today Vmoto (the Vintage
Motorcycle Racing Association) announced an expansion of the 2005 The Vmoto Vintage Challenge Series for historic road race motorcycles.

Previously a west coast only series, in 2005 Vmoto will be a feature race at of one of the East Coast’s premiere historic racing weekends, Brian Redman’s Jefferson 500 at Summit Point Raceway West Virginia May 20-22. The Jefferson 500 is one of the most anticipated historic race weekends in the US and is now in its 15th year. This will mark the first appearance of vintage road race bikes at this great event.

In addition, Vmoto will also stage races at Reno Historic, Fernley, Nevada on April 16-17, The Portland Historic, Portland, Oregon on July 8-10.

About Vmoto
Vmoto promotes and stages vintage motorcycle races in the US with the emphasis on period correct machines. Competition is secondary to seeing the great machines of the past raced once more as there were. Vmoto’sraces are staged in association with HMSA (the Historic Motor Sports Association) historic race car group. HMSA is the sanctioning body for the famed Monterey Historic at Laguna Seca. For more information on Vmoto go to their web site

www.vintagemoto.com

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