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Nannelli To Run Final Two World Superbike Rounds With NCR Nortel Ducati

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From a press release issued by Scuderia Caracchi NCR Nortel Networks:

The bad weather shuts off the Misano’s test of Gianluca Nannelli

(Misano Adriatico 2004, September 16)

The atrocious weather conditions on the Adriatic coast did shut off the practice day organised by Team Xerox Ducati Nortel Networks today on the Santamonica circuit for the first contact of Gianluca Nannelli on the 999RS that the Florentine rider will ride in the final rounds of 2004 World Superbike at Imola and Magny Cours.

The incessant rain allowed to Gianluca “Conann” Nannelli only a few laps on the flooded track, just 18, and Nannelli could just set the bike for his requirements, the riding position and start to know his new team.

“Of course with those weather conditions I’m not able to give a fair judgement on the 999RS”. – Said Gianluca Nannelli, soaking wet but satisfied at the end of the test – “The rain didn’t stop a moment and I must ride always with rain tyres on. But also is this has been my first approach I could appreciate the working system of the team, I esteem the bike and I got a good feeling easily. But for sure un a dry track and in the racing fight it will be another thing. The Xerox 999RS Ducati feels more aggressive as the 998RS I rode still now, but I must know that just riding today this bike, which has been one of the fastest during all the season, I’m able to appraise as my 998RS that Donato Pedercini got at my disposition still now is a very good bike and I wish to thank him for giving me the possibility to put me in a good light. Now we’ll ride in Imola and Magny Cours, two circuits where last year I made good performances that I’m confident to repeat this year too.”

Also Stefano Caracchi, Team Xerox Ducati Nortel Networks team manager, is satisfied for today’s first approach.

“Gianluca showed today too, under the flood, that his will to ride a bike is inexhaustible.” – commented Caracchi – “I had any hesitation to enter the track with the flooded track and, rejoining the pit, gave correct information following the experience reached by the team during the season. We are sure that our decision about Gianluca is good and we are confident that “Nanna”, together Garry McCoy and Miguel Praia, will be able to give to our sponsor all the satisfaction missing in the final events after the splendid season’s debut in Australia and Monza.”

Gianluca Nannelli profile

Born in Florence 1973, August 22

2003 – Supersport Italian Champion (Yamaha)

– 15th Supersport World Championship (Yamaha)

2002 – 9th Supersport Italian Championship (Ducati)

– 22nd Supersport World Championship (Ducati)

2001 – 4th Supersport Italian Championship (Ducati)

– 5th Supersport European Championship (Ducati)

WERA Postpones Nashville Regional Due To Hurricane Concerns

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Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

WERA Motorcycle Roadracing, Inc. has rescheduled this coming weekend’s regional event at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tennessee due to concerns over the potential impact of Hurricane Ivan.

The event has been moved to November 13-14.

Fila Ducati World Superbike Team Completes Two-day Test At Magny-Cours

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From a press release issued by Ducati Corse:

DUCATI FILA RIDERS LACONI AND TOSELAND COMPLETE PREPARATIONS FOR WORLD SUPERBIKE FINALE

Magny-Cours (France), 15 September 2004: Regis Laconi and James Toseland completed preparations for the last two rounds of the World Superbike championship with a two-day test session at Magny-Cours, France, the venue for the season’s finale on October 3.

Almost two days of good weather in the Nevers area enabled the two Ducati Fila riders to lap without any problems and find some good settings for the French circuit in view of the race.

Laconi, whose best time was 1:43.0 on race rubber, declared: “We worked a lot on chassis settings here and I was very happy with the feeling. We started with the same front-end problem as at Assen, but over the two days we sorted that out and I was able to run very quick and at a very constant pace. I’m optimistic for the race.”

Toseland, with a time of 1:43.2, was just a couple of tenths of a second off the pace of his French team-mate. “These two days were very positive, we were trying to get the bike to work good around this difficult circuit and we succeeded. We tested a number of different tyre compounds, both front and rear, and made some changes to the bike, but I found that I was also pretty happy with my Assen set-up with which I won last Sunday’s race.”

Four riders, Toseland, Vermeulen (Honda), Laconi and Haga (Renegade Ducati) are still in with a chance of the title as World Superbike heads to Imola next week and then Magny-Cours seven days later for its exciting finale.

POINTS (after 9 of 11 rounds); (Riders) 1. Toseland 255; 2. Vermeulen 252; 3. Laconi 245; 4. Haga 241; 5. Chili 213; 6. McCoy 163; etc.

(Manufacturers) 1. Ducati 430 (champions); 2. Honda 259; 3. Petronas 173 ; 4. Kawasaki 106 ; 5. Suzuki 84 ; 6. Yamaha 60.

Road Atlanta AMA Superbike Races On SPEED This Sunday

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From a press release issued by AMA Pro Racing:

AMA PRO RACING ON TV THIS WEEK

(All times Eastern)


AMA Chevrolet Motocross Championship, Steel City Raceway, Delmont, Pennsylvania – Friday, Sept. 17, 3-5 p.m. – ESPN2

AMA Lockhart Phillips USA Formula Xtreme Series – Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Thursday, Sept. 16, 3 a.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Progressive Insurance Flat Track Championship, Black Hills Speedway, Rapid City, South Dakota – Friday, Sept. 17, 3 a.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 1, Sunday, Sept. 19, 2-3 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 2, Sunday, Sept. 19, 3-4 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Motocross Championship, Glen Helen Raceway Park, San Bernardino, California – Sunday, Sept. 19, 11 p.m.-1 a.m. (Sept. 20), –
ESPN2

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 1, Tuesday, Sept. 21, 12-1 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 2, Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2-3 p.m. – SPEED Channel

All times subject to change. Check local listings

September 25-26 CCS Event At VIR To Pay Double Points

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From a press release issued by CCS:

CCS at VIR to Pay Double Points

Due to the cancellation of the Championship Cup Series event presented by Lockhart Phillips USA originally scheduled at Summit Point Raceway’s Shenandoah Circuit October 8-10… The next CCS round of racing at Virginia Int’l Raceway scheduled for September 25-26 will award double points for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships. The event however will only pay single points for the Southeast Regional Championships. The event will remain a two-day event, and the weekend schedule will remain as posted.

Due to this turn of events however, CCS will re-open pre-registrations for the VIR event. Pre-Entries will now be accepted for the September 25-26 VIR event until 5:00 pm (Central Time) September 20th. Pre-Entry forms and On-Line Registration are all available on the “Forms” page of www.FormulaUSA.com.

Visit FormulaUSA.com and CCSracing.com for more details about racing and track days near you.

Suzuki’s Hopkins Aiming For Top-five Finish At Motegi

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From a press release issued by Team Suzuki:

MOTEGI – HOME RACE FOR SUZUKI

Suzuki’s mighty GSV-R MotoGP prototype goes home this weekend – for the fastest-ever racing Suzuki’s only race this year on Japanese soil.

The two factory machines, ridden by 2000 World Champion Kenny Roberts Jr. and team-mate John Hopkins, will be wearing their blue-and-white factory colours with pride, after a season in which steadily growing strength culminated in a best-of-year performance at the last round, the Portuguese GP.

The Suzukis had again qualified strongly in the top ten, and though Roberts dropped back with a minor but costly mechanical ailment, Hopkins claimed a personal career-best sixth place – only six tenths of a seconds from wresting fifth from rival Carlos Checa.

Now the team is bringing the bikes home, to race under the direct supervision of senior Suzuki factory racing and management personnel. Riders and crew have a strong resolve to reward their presence with another demonstration of the traditional racing marque’s growing strength in the MotoGP class.

Suzuki has a good record at Motegi, with Roberts claiming victory in 1999 and 2000. Hopes are high for a return to success in 2004.

“It’s a favourite track for both riders, and it’s also a track where we expect the Bridgestone tyres to perform very well,” said team manager Garry Taylor.

“Ever since Kenny’s pole position at Rio five races ago, our qualifying and race results have been getting consistently better,” he continued.

“John’s motivation is sky high at the moment, as he showed with a really impressive ride at Estoril, and a richly deserved career best finish. And I know that Kenny’s determination will be renewed after his disappointment in Portugal.

“We’re all looking forward to the race,” said Taylor.

The Motegi Twin-Ring circuit is an imposing and rather austere venue. Overlooked by the unused control tower for the banked oval track, the MotoGP bikes use a different circuit and a different pit complex, on the other side of the pit straight. The bikes run mainly out of sight and out of earshot, the track passing out beyond the banking through an underpass, then returning through a similar tunnel for the final corners.

From 2000 until last year, the race at Motegi was known as the Pacific GP, and was the second race of the year in Japan. This year, Suzuka was dropped from the calendar awaiting safety modifications, and Motegi resumed its inaugural 1999 title of Japanese GP.

The 12th of 16 rounds, the first of the end-of-season flyaways is separated from the following back-to-back trio in Qatar, Malaysia and Australia by a weekend’s break.

KENNY ROBERTS – SEE WHAT MOTEGI BRINGS:

“We’ve been working this season to get the bike the best possible track by track, and problems apart, we’ve made the most of what we have. Especially we’ve improved corner speed, though the nature of Motegi – U-bends and short straights – means that’s not so valuable there. But I’ve had good results at the track before with Suzuki – like beating Mick Doohan in the rain in 1999, my second GP win, and beating Rossi the next year. We’ll work to get the bike to its best, and see what the conditions bring.”

JOHN HOPKINS – AIM FOR THE TOP:

“I like Motegi – it’s kind of all action, hard braking, and I’ve always had fun there. Not so much last year, with my first turn crash and some bad consequences, but that’s past now. This season has really been coming together over the last races. We have the bike working real good and the Bridgestone tyres keep getting better. I just missed out on the top five at Estoril. That’s my aim for this race too.”

ABOUT THIS RACE:

After a false start in the Sixties, with races run for smaller classes only, at Suzuka and Fuji, the Japanese GP proper started at Suzuka in 1987, and has bee n on th e calendar ever since – this is the 18th running. Apart from an inaugural visit to Motegi in 1999, it has until now taken place at Suzuka. Last year’s fatal injury to Daijiro Kato saw that circuit struck off the calendar, and this year’s national race returns to Motegi, where since 2000 a second Japanese race has run under the title of Pacific GP. North-east of Tokyo in a scenic hilly area, Motegi is a spectacular all-in-one motoring and racing area, incorporating both racing and road driver education, kart tracks and a major mainly motorcycling museum.


ABOUT THIS TRACK:

The Twin Ring is actually two circuits – the US-style banked oval, with its own pits, grandstands and infrastructure, and the 2.98-mile road-racing track, with pits and paddock within the oval, and the track looping out under the banking through one underpass, returning through another for the final chicane back onto the short pit straight. Precise computer-designed corners loop the track back and forth within the oval, with more of the same outside – slow corners linked by short power-burst straights. It seems a sterile design, but there is enough rise and fall in the terrain to inject interest. “It’s a surprisingly fun track,” said double winner Kenny Roberts Jr.


GP DATA:

Twin-Ring Motegi
Circuit Length: 2.983 miles / 4.801 km
Lap Record: 1:48.885 – 98.631 mph / 158.732 km/h. V Rossi (Honda), 2004
2003 Race Winner: M Biaggi (Honda)
2003 Race Average: 43:57.590 – 97.721 mph / 157.267 km/h.
2003 Fastest Race Lap: see lap record
2003 Pole Position: Biaggi 1:47.696
2003 KENNY ROBERTS: 15th, qualified 19th (Suzuki)
2003 JOHN HOPKINS: DNF, qualified 16th (Suzuki)

October CCS Races At Summit Point’s Shenandoah Circuit Cancelled

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From a press release issued by CCS/Formula USA:

CCS at Shenandoah Cancelled October 9-10

Update (Sept 15, 2004)

The Mid-Atlantic regional Championship Cup Series event presented by Lockhart Phillips USA originally scheduled at Summit Point Raceway’s Shenandoah Circuit October 9-10, which includes a Lockhart Phillips Sport Rider Day on Octover 8, has been cancelled due to more construction delays with the new facility.

After a track inspection on Monday by Kevin Elliott – Senior Director of Road Race Competition for, the new circuit at Summit Point (with it’s SCCA mandated barrier placements), concluded that a few areas of the facility are not adequate for motorcycle racing at this time. In further conversations with Bill Scott, he has agreed to make improvements to insure the safety of motorcycle riders, but those improvements cannot be done before the October CCS date.

All CCS motorcycle events at Summit Point Raceway had been moved by Bill Scott Racing from the original 2.1 mile Summit Point Circuit to the Shenandoah Circuit in 2004 including the events scheduled for October 8-10.

Bill Scott Racing and Summit Point Raceway management expected that Championship Cup Series would have been the first group to race at the new facility when CCS motorcycle racing returned after the original construction delays at the Shenandoah Circuit on October 9-10.

Bill Scott of Summit Point Raceway commented that “We really enjoy having the CCS events here, and we are dissappointed this has happened, we will do everything we can to make sure that the future events are a success for all of us.”

Visit FormulaUSA.com and CCSracing.com for more details about racing and track days near you.

Another Woman Makes It Onto The Podium Without Using An Umbrella

Moto Primo Suzuki team finishes on podium for CRA Endurance Race Instead of honeymooning, newlywed Jessica Zalusky joined Robert Jensen and Mike Sundstrom for the annual Central Roadracing Assocation 5-Hour Endurance Race, held September 12. Jensen, who is the current points leader for Formula USA Superbike, joined Zalusky, who currently stands 31st in points for AMA Superstock, to finish 2nd overall among 40 teams and 2nd in class for Heavyweight Gran Prix. Aboard the Michelin-equipped Moto Primo Suzuki GSX-R 750, the team set the pace with the fastest lap time of the race by two seconds, but encountered challenges to result in the 2nd place overall finish. As a result of the team finish and the overall CRA standings, Zalusky has become the first woman in the CRA’s 30-year history to finish 2nd overall in the Endurance Race and 10th overall in season points for the expert class for 2004 in a field of over 130 expert racers. Following the Endurance race, Jensen and Zalusky leave for Nevada. Jensen will race the next round of Formula USA, racing at the Las Vegas Classic Course, and Zalusky will be a guest speaker and rider at the Femmoto event, scheduled for September 18 at the Spring Mountain Motorsports Park in Pahrump, Nevada. For more information on Moto Primo Suzuki Team, visit www.roadracinggirl.com

VIR Race Cancellation, Premature AMA Championship End A Possibility

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Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By David Swarts

Think AMA Pro Racing would never end a season prematurely by canceling the final race of a Championship? Think again, because it’s been done before–last year, in fact.

The 2003 AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Motocross Championship ended prematurely with the cancellation of the final round at Kenworthy’s Motocross Park in Troy, Ohio due to rain and flooding.

The race at Kenworthy’s was originally scheduled to take place in the middle of the season, July 12-13, but rain and flooding forced that event to be postponed until September 12-13. More rain and flooding plus other commitments for the AMA motocross riders and teams, however, led AMA Pro Racing to cancel the event and end the season one round short.

Grant Langston was awarded the 125cc AMA Championship even though he would have had to defend a seven-point lead over Ryan Hughes at the final round.

If the 2004 AMA Chevrolet Superbike series were to end without the race at Virginia International Raceway (VIR), Mat Mladin would win his fifth AMA Superbike Championship by 42 points over Jake Zemke, Tommy Hayden would take the AMA Supersport Championship by 11 points over teammate and brother Roger Lee Hayden and Aaron Gobert would gain the AMA Superstock Championship by five points over teammate Jamie Hacking and Tommy Hayden. Miguel Duhamel has already clinched the AMA Formula Xtreme title.

The last AMA Superbike series event AMA Pro Racing cancelled was the September 14-16, 2001 event at Willow Springs International Raceway, the penultimate round of that season, following the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and the resultant grounding of all civilian aircraft.


Denning Set New Lap Record For Nelson Ledges This Past Weekend

From a press release issued by WERA:

DENNING SETS NEW TRACK RECORD DURING WERA NATIONAL AT NELSON LEDGES

GARRETTSVILLE, Oh. – Larry Denning was the fastest racer at Nelson Ledges the weekend of September 11-12, setting a new track record during round eight of the WERA National Challenge Series races.

The two-day event included a six-hour Dunlop/WERA National Endurance Series race on Saturday, September 11. Vesrah Suzuki led for five hours as Mark Junge, Tray Batey and John Jacobi rode away to an 11-lap win on a Heavyweight Superbike Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Velocity Crew Racing took second overall, winning Mediumweight Superbike. Kevin Perkins and Paul Youngman were riding a Suzuki GSX-R600. Neighbor of the Beast earned their second overall podium of the season, winning Mediumweight Superstock with Melissa Berkoff, Chris Pyles and Scott Fisher on a Yamaha YZF-R6.

Dixie Mafia won Lightweight Superbike, as Bruce Stanford, Bo Morgan and Derek Keyes rode to a finish of fourth overall on a Suzuki SV650. The Team Xtreme/Maxxis Suzuki GSX-R1000 crossed the line in sixth overall, winning Heavyweight Superstock, with riders Mark Edwards, Billy Ethridge and Jeff Walker.

Open Superstock was the first of the 10-lap WERA National Challenge Series sprint races on Sunday, September 13, and Denning set a new track record of 1:06.568 on a Suzuki GSX-R750 on his way to the win.

While Denning got the quickest time, Tray Batey earned the most wins with three. He won Formula 1 and 750 Superstock on his Vesrah Suzuki GSX-R750 and Heavyweight Twins, overall and Superstock, on his Suzuki SV1000.

Mark Junge scored another victory for Vesrah Suzuki, winning 600 Superstock on his Suzuki GSX-R600. Brent Bennett won 600 Superbike on a Yamaha YZF-R6, and Keith Reed won 750 Superbike on his Suzuki GSX-R750.

Kendrick Morrison won both Formula 2 and the Superbike division of Heavyweight Twins on his Honda RS250. Bo Morgan won Lightweight Twins, overall and Superbike, while Blue Ridge Performance’s Gary Schilling took the Superstock division win. Both riders were on Suzuki SV650s.

In the novice classes, three riders each took home two first-place trophies. Ryan Gordon won 750 Superbike and 750 Superstock on his Suzuki GSX-R750. Brandon Parrish rode his Yamaha YZF-R6 to victories in 600 Superbike and 600 Superstock. Daniel Parkerson was at the front in Formula 2 and Lightweight Twins Superbike on his Suzuki SV650.

Ross Ryals, also riding a Suzuki SV650, won the Superstock division of Lightweight Twins. In Heavyweight Twins, Bill Green won Superstock on a Honda RC51 and Vincent Lorusso won Superbike on a Ducati 996.

The ninth and penultimate round of the 2004 WERA National Challenge Series will be held at Barber Motorsports Park, September 25-26. The Dunlop/WERA National Endurance Series race on September 25 will be four hours in length, and the ten-lap WERA National Challenge Series sprint races will be held the afternoon of September 26.

Complete results and a schedule of the remaining 2004 WERA season can be found at www.WERA.com.

Nannelli To Run Final Two World Superbike Rounds With NCR Nortel Ducati

From a press release issued by Scuderia Caracchi NCR Nortel Networks:

The bad weather shuts off the Misano’s test of Gianluca Nannelli

(Misano Adriatico 2004, September 16)

The atrocious weather conditions on the Adriatic coast did shut off the practice day organised by Team Xerox Ducati Nortel Networks today on the Santamonica circuit for the first contact of Gianluca Nannelli on the 999RS that the Florentine rider will ride in the final rounds of 2004 World Superbike at Imola and Magny Cours.

The incessant rain allowed to Gianluca “Conann” Nannelli only a few laps on the flooded track, just 18, and Nannelli could just set the bike for his requirements, the riding position and start to know his new team.

“Of course with those weather conditions I’m not able to give a fair judgement on the 999RS”. – Said Gianluca Nannelli, soaking wet but satisfied at the end of the test – “The rain didn’t stop a moment and I must ride always with rain tyres on. But also is this has been my first approach I could appreciate the working system of the team, I esteem the bike and I got a good feeling easily. But for sure un a dry track and in the racing fight it will be another thing. The Xerox 999RS Ducati feels more aggressive as the 998RS I rode still now, but I must know that just riding today this bike, which has been one of the fastest during all the season, I’m able to appraise as my 998RS that Donato Pedercini got at my disposition still now is a very good bike and I wish to thank him for giving me the possibility to put me in a good light. Now we’ll ride in Imola and Magny Cours, two circuits where last year I made good performances that I’m confident to repeat this year too.”

Also Stefano Caracchi, Team Xerox Ducati Nortel Networks team manager, is satisfied for today’s first approach.

“Gianluca showed today too, under the flood, that his will to ride a bike is inexhaustible.” – commented Caracchi – “I had any hesitation to enter the track with the flooded track and, rejoining the pit, gave correct information following the experience reached by the team during the season. We are sure that our decision about Gianluca is good and we are confident that “Nanna”, together Garry McCoy and Miguel Praia, will be able to give to our sponsor all the satisfaction missing in the final events after the splendid season’s debut in Australia and Monza.”

Gianluca Nannelli profile

Born in Florence 1973, August 22

2003 – Supersport Italian Champion (Yamaha)

– 15th Supersport World Championship (Yamaha)

2002 – 9th Supersport Italian Championship (Ducati)

– 22nd Supersport World Championship (Ducati)

2001 – 4th Supersport Italian Championship (Ducati)

– 5th Supersport European Championship (Ducati)

WERA Postpones Nashville Regional Due To Hurricane Concerns

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

WERA Motorcycle Roadracing, Inc. has rescheduled this coming weekend’s regional event at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tennessee due to concerns over the potential impact of Hurricane Ivan.

The event has been moved to November 13-14.

Fila Ducati World Superbike Team Completes Two-day Test At Magny-Cours

From a press release issued by Ducati Corse:

DUCATI FILA RIDERS LACONI AND TOSELAND COMPLETE PREPARATIONS FOR WORLD SUPERBIKE FINALE

Magny-Cours (France), 15 September 2004: Regis Laconi and James Toseland completed preparations for the last two rounds of the World Superbike championship with a two-day test session at Magny-Cours, France, the venue for the season’s finale on October 3.

Almost two days of good weather in the Nevers area enabled the two Ducati Fila riders to lap without any problems and find some good settings for the French circuit in view of the race.

Laconi, whose best time was 1:43.0 on race rubber, declared: “We worked a lot on chassis settings here and I was very happy with the feeling. We started with the same front-end problem as at Assen, but over the two days we sorted that out and I was able to run very quick and at a very constant pace. I’m optimistic for the race.”

Toseland, with a time of 1:43.2, was just a couple of tenths of a second off the pace of his French team-mate. “These two days were very positive, we were trying to get the bike to work good around this difficult circuit and we succeeded. We tested a number of different tyre compounds, both front and rear, and made some changes to the bike, but I found that I was also pretty happy with my Assen set-up with which I won last Sunday’s race.”

Four riders, Toseland, Vermeulen (Honda), Laconi and Haga (Renegade Ducati) are still in with a chance of the title as World Superbike heads to Imola next week and then Magny-Cours seven days later for its exciting finale.

POINTS (after 9 of 11 rounds); (Riders) 1. Toseland 255; 2. Vermeulen 252; 3. Laconi 245; 4. Haga 241; 5. Chili 213; 6. McCoy 163; etc.

(Manufacturers) 1. Ducati 430 (champions); 2. Honda 259; 3. Petronas 173 ; 4. Kawasaki 106 ; 5. Suzuki 84 ; 6. Yamaha 60.

Road Atlanta AMA Superbike Races On SPEED This Sunday

From a press release issued by AMA Pro Racing:

AMA PRO RACING ON TV THIS WEEK

(All times Eastern)


AMA Chevrolet Motocross Championship, Steel City Raceway, Delmont, Pennsylvania – Friday, Sept. 17, 3-5 p.m. – ESPN2

AMA Lockhart Phillips USA Formula Xtreme Series – Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Thursday, Sept. 16, 3 a.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Progressive Insurance Flat Track Championship, Black Hills Speedway, Rapid City, South Dakota – Friday, Sept. 17, 3 a.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 1, Sunday, Sept. 19, 2-3 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 2, Sunday, Sept. 19, 3-4 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Motocross Championship, Glen Helen Raceway Park, San Bernardino, California – Sunday, Sept. 19, 11 p.m.-1 a.m. (Sept. 20), –
ESPN2

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 1, Tuesday, Sept. 21, 12-1 p.m. – SPEED Channel

AMA Chevrolet Superbike Championship, Road Atlanta, Braselton, Georgia – Superbike Race 2, Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2-3 p.m. – SPEED Channel

All times subject to change. Check local listings

September 25-26 CCS Event At VIR To Pay Double Points

From a press release issued by CCS:

CCS at VIR to Pay Double Points

Due to the cancellation of the Championship Cup Series event presented by Lockhart Phillips USA originally scheduled at Summit Point Raceway’s Shenandoah Circuit October 8-10… The next CCS round of racing at Virginia Int’l Raceway scheduled for September 25-26 will award double points for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Championships. The event however will only pay single points for the Southeast Regional Championships. The event will remain a two-day event, and the weekend schedule will remain as posted.

Due to this turn of events however, CCS will re-open pre-registrations for the VIR event. Pre-Entries will now be accepted for the September 25-26 VIR event until 5:00 pm (Central Time) September 20th. Pre-Entry forms and On-Line Registration are all available on the “Forms” page of www.FormulaUSA.com.

Visit FormulaUSA.com and CCSracing.com for more details about racing and track days near you.

Suzuki’s Hopkins Aiming For Top-five Finish At Motegi

From a press release issued by Team Suzuki:

MOTEGI – HOME RACE FOR SUZUKI

Suzuki’s mighty GSV-R MotoGP prototype goes home this weekend – for the fastest-ever racing Suzuki’s only race this year on Japanese soil.

The two factory machines, ridden by 2000 World Champion Kenny Roberts Jr. and team-mate John Hopkins, will be wearing their blue-and-white factory colours with pride, after a season in which steadily growing strength culminated in a best-of-year performance at the last round, the Portuguese GP.

The Suzukis had again qualified strongly in the top ten, and though Roberts dropped back with a minor but costly mechanical ailment, Hopkins claimed a personal career-best sixth place – only six tenths of a seconds from wresting fifth from rival Carlos Checa.

Now the team is bringing the bikes home, to race under the direct supervision of senior Suzuki factory racing and management personnel. Riders and crew have a strong resolve to reward their presence with another demonstration of the traditional racing marque’s growing strength in the MotoGP class.

Suzuki has a good record at Motegi, with Roberts claiming victory in 1999 and 2000. Hopes are high for a return to success in 2004.

“It’s a favourite track for both riders, and it’s also a track where we expect the Bridgestone tyres to perform very well,” said team manager Garry Taylor.

“Ever since Kenny’s pole position at Rio five races ago, our qualifying and race results have been getting consistently better,” he continued.

“John’s motivation is sky high at the moment, as he showed with a really impressive ride at Estoril, and a richly deserved career best finish. And I know that Kenny’s determination will be renewed after his disappointment in Portugal.

“We’re all looking forward to the race,” said Taylor.

The Motegi Twin-Ring circuit is an imposing and rather austere venue. Overlooked by the unused control tower for the banked oval track, the MotoGP bikes use a different circuit and a different pit complex, on the other side of the pit straight. The bikes run mainly out of sight and out of earshot, the track passing out beyond the banking through an underpass, then returning through a similar tunnel for the final corners.

From 2000 until last year, the race at Motegi was known as the Pacific GP, and was the second race of the year in Japan. This year, Suzuka was dropped from the calendar awaiting safety modifications, and Motegi resumed its inaugural 1999 title of Japanese GP.

The 12th of 16 rounds, the first of the end-of-season flyaways is separated from the following back-to-back trio in Qatar, Malaysia and Australia by a weekend’s break.

KENNY ROBERTS – SEE WHAT MOTEGI BRINGS:

“We’ve been working this season to get the bike the best possible track by track, and problems apart, we’ve made the most of what we have. Especially we’ve improved corner speed, though the nature of Motegi – U-bends and short straights – means that’s not so valuable there. But I’ve had good results at the track before with Suzuki – like beating Mick Doohan in the rain in 1999, my second GP win, and beating Rossi the next year. We’ll work to get the bike to its best, and see what the conditions bring.”

JOHN HOPKINS – AIM FOR THE TOP:

“I like Motegi – it’s kind of all action, hard braking, and I’ve always had fun there. Not so much last year, with my first turn crash and some bad consequences, but that’s past now. This season has really been coming together over the last races. We have the bike working real good and the Bridgestone tyres keep getting better. I just missed out on the top five at Estoril. That’s my aim for this race too.”

ABOUT THIS RACE:

After a false start in the Sixties, with races run for smaller classes only, at Suzuka and Fuji, the Japanese GP proper started at Suzuka in 1987, and has bee n on th e calendar ever since – this is the 18th running. Apart from an inaugural visit to Motegi in 1999, it has until now taken place at Suzuka. Last year’s fatal injury to Daijiro Kato saw that circuit struck off the calendar, and this year’s national race returns to Motegi, where since 2000 a second Japanese race has run under the title of Pacific GP. North-east of Tokyo in a scenic hilly area, Motegi is a spectacular all-in-one motoring and racing area, incorporating both racing and road driver education, kart tracks and a major mainly motorcycling museum.


ABOUT THIS TRACK:

The Twin Ring is actually two circuits – the US-style banked oval, with its own pits, grandstands and infrastructure, and the 2.98-mile road-racing track, with pits and paddock within the oval, and the track looping out under the banking through one underpass, returning through another for the final chicane back onto the short pit straight. Precise computer-designed corners loop the track back and forth within the oval, with more of the same outside – slow corners linked by short power-burst straights. It seems a sterile design, but there is enough rise and fall in the terrain to inject interest. “It’s a surprisingly fun track,” said double winner Kenny Roberts Jr.


GP DATA:

Twin-Ring Motegi
Circuit Length: 2.983 miles / 4.801 km
Lap Record: 1:48.885 – 98.631 mph / 158.732 km/h. V Rossi (Honda), 2004
2003 Race Winner: M Biaggi (Honda)
2003 Race Average: 43:57.590 – 97.721 mph / 157.267 km/h.
2003 Fastest Race Lap: see lap record
2003 Pole Position: Biaggi 1:47.696
2003 KENNY ROBERTS: 15th, qualified 19th (Suzuki)
2003 JOHN HOPKINS: DNF, qualified 16th (Suzuki)

October CCS Races At Summit Point’s Shenandoah Circuit Cancelled

From a press release issued by CCS/Formula USA:

CCS at Shenandoah Cancelled October 9-10

Update (Sept 15, 2004)

The Mid-Atlantic regional Championship Cup Series event presented by Lockhart Phillips USA originally scheduled at Summit Point Raceway’s Shenandoah Circuit October 9-10, which includes a Lockhart Phillips Sport Rider Day on Octover 8, has been cancelled due to more construction delays with the new facility.

After a track inspection on Monday by Kevin Elliott – Senior Director of Road Race Competition for, the new circuit at Summit Point (with it’s SCCA mandated barrier placements), concluded that a few areas of the facility are not adequate for motorcycle racing at this time. In further conversations with Bill Scott, he has agreed to make improvements to insure the safety of motorcycle riders, but those improvements cannot be done before the October CCS date.

All CCS motorcycle events at Summit Point Raceway had been moved by Bill Scott Racing from the original 2.1 mile Summit Point Circuit to the Shenandoah Circuit in 2004 including the events scheduled for October 8-10.

Bill Scott Racing and Summit Point Raceway management expected that Championship Cup Series would have been the first group to race at the new facility when CCS motorcycle racing returned after the original construction delays at the Shenandoah Circuit on October 9-10.

Bill Scott of Summit Point Raceway commented that “We really enjoy having the CCS events here, and we are dissappointed this has happened, we will do everything we can to make sure that the future events are a success for all of us.”

Visit FormulaUSA.com and CCSracing.com for more details about racing and track days near you.

Another Woman Makes It Onto The Podium Without Using An Umbrella

Moto Primo Suzuki team finishes on podium for CRA Endurance Race Instead of honeymooning, newlywed Jessica Zalusky joined Robert Jensen and Mike Sundstrom for the annual Central Roadracing Assocation 5-Hour Endurance Race, held September 12. Jensen, who is the current points leader for Formula USA Superbike, joined Zalusky, who currently stands 31st in points for AMA Superstock, to finish 2nd overall among 40 teams and 2nd in class for Heavyweight Gran Prix. Aboard the Michelin-equipped Moto Primo Suzuki GSX-R 750, the team set the pace with the fastest lap time of the race by two seconds, but encountered challenges to result in the 2nd place overall finish. As a result of the team finish and the overall CRA standings, Zalusky has become the first woman in the CRA’s 30-year history to finish 2nd overall in the Endurance Race and 10th overall in season points for the expert class for 2004 in a field of over 130 expert racers. Following the Endurance race, Jensen and Zalusky leave for Nevada. Jensen will race the next round of Formula USA, racing at the Las Vegas Classic Course, and Zalusky will be a guest speaker and rider at the Femmoto event, scheduled for September 18 at the Spring Mountain Motorsports Park in Pahrump, Nevada. For more information on Moto Primo Suzuki Team, visit www.roadracinggirl.com

VIR Race Cancellation, Premature AMA Championship End A Possibility

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By David Swarts

Think AMA Pro Racing would never end a season prematurely by canceling the final race of a Championship? Think again, because it’s been done before–last year, in fact.

The 2003 AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Motocross Championship ended prematurely with the cancellation of the final round at Kenworthy’s Motocross Park in Troy, Ohio due to rain and flooding.

The race at Kenworthy’s was originally scheduled to take place in the middle of the season, July 12-13, but rain and flooding forced that event to be postponed until September 12-13. More rain and flooding plus other commitments for the AMA motocross riders and teams, however, led AMA Pro Racing to cancel the event and end the season one round short.

Grant Langston was awarded the 125cc AMA Championship even though he would have had to defend a seven-point lead over Ryan Hughes at the final round.

If the 2004 AMA Chevrolet Superbike series were to end without the race at Virginia International Raceway (VIR), Mat Mladin would win his fifth AMA Superbike Championship by 42 points over Jake Zemke, Tommy Hayden would take the AMA Supersport Championship by 11 points over teammate and brother Roger Lee Hayden and Aaron Gobert would gain the AMA Superstock Championship by five points over teammate Jamie Hacking and Tommy Hayden. Miguel Duhamel has already clinched the AMA Formula Xtreme title.

The last AMA Superbike series event AMA Pro Racing cancelled was the September 14-16, 2001 event at Willow Springs International Raceway, the penultimate round of that season, following the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and the resultant grounding of all civilian aircraft.


Denning Set New Lap Record For Nelson Ledges This Past Weekend

From a press release issued by WERA:

DENNING SETS NEW TRACK RECORD DURING WERA NATIONAL AT NELSON LEDGES

GARRETTSVILLE, Oh. – Larry Denning was the fastest racer at Nelson Ledges the weekend of September 11-12, setting a new track record during round eight of the WERA National Challenge Series races.

The two-day event included a six-hour Dunlop/WERA National Endurance Series race on Saturday, September 11. Vesrah Suzuki led for five hours as Mark Junge, Tray Batey and John Jacobi rode away to an 11-lap win on a Heavyweight Superbike Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Velocity Crew Racing took second overall, winning Mediumweight Superbike. Kevin Perkins and Paul Youngman were riding a Suzuki GSX-R600. Neighbor of the Beast earned their second overall podium of the season, winning Mediumweight Superstock with Melissa Berkoff, Chris Pyles and Scott Fisher on a Yamaha YZF-R6.

Dixie Mafia won Lightweight Superbike, as Bruce Stanford, Bo Morgan and Derek Keyes rode to a finish of fourth overall on a Suzuki SV650. The Team Xtreme/Maxxis Suzuki GSX-R1000 crossed the line in sixth overall, winning Heavyweight Superstock, with riders Mark Edwards, Billy Ethridge and Jeff Walker.

Open Superstock was the first of the 10-lap WERA National Challenge Series sprint races on Sunday, September 13, and Denning set a new track record of 1:06.568 on a Suzuki GSX-R750 on his way to the win.

While Denning got the quickest time, Tray Batey earned the most wins with three. He won Formula 1 and 750 Superstock on his Vesrah Suzuki GSX-R750 and Heavyweight Twins, overall and Superstock, on his Suzuki SV1000.

Mark Junge scored another victory for Vesrah Suzuki, winning 600 Superstock on his Suzuki GSX-R600. Brent Bennett won 600 Superbike on a Yamaha YZF-R6, and Keith Reed won 750 Superbike on his Suzuki GSX-R750.

Kendrick Morrison won both Formula 2 and the Superbike division of Heavyweight Twins on his Honda RS250. Bo Morgan won Lightweight Twins, overall and Superbike, while Blue Ridge Performance’s Gary Schilling took the Superstock division win. Both riders were on Suzuki SV650s.

In the novice classes, three riders each took home two first-place trophies. Ryan Gordon won 750 Superbike and 750 Superstock on his Suzuki GSX-R750. Brandon Parrish rode his Yamaha YZF-R6 to victories in 600 Superbike and 600 Superstock. Daniel Parkerson was at the front in Formula 2 and Lightweight Twins Superbike on his Suzuki SV650.

Ross Ryals, also riding a Suzuki SV650, won the Superstock division of Lightweight Twins. In Heavyweight Twins, Bill Green won Superstock on a Honda RC51 and Vincent Lorusso won Superbike on a Ducati 996.

The ninth and penultimate round of the 2004 WERA National Challenge Series will be held at Barber Motorsports Park, September 25-26. The Dunlop/WERA National Endurance Series race on September 25 will be four hours in length, and the ten-lap WERA National Challenge Series sprint races will be held the afternoon of September 26.

Complete results and a schedule of the remaining 2004 WERA season can be found at www.WERA.com.

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