Home Blog Page 6667

Hacking Fastest, Buckmaster Does Not Ride In First AMA Supersport Practice At PPIR

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

The first AMA Supersport practice at Pikes Peak International Raceway (PPIR) saw Yamaha’s Jamie Hacking, the defending Champion, set the fastest time (56.019), while his teammate Damon Buckmaster did not ride in the session due to injury and may not race in the class this weekend.

“I don’t know what it is about this place, but I like it. It’s not my favorite track in the world, but I just seem to go good here,” said two-time PPIR Supersport race winner Hacking. “Everything’s good. We made a few changes and were able to go better. I ran the whole session on one set of tires and went quickest at the end.”

As for Buckmaster, Yamaha Team Manager Tom Halverson told Roadracingworld.com, “He’s just going to try to run Superstock practice and see how he feels. At this moment, we’re 90 percent sure he will not run in Supersport, but like I said, we’ll know more after this session.”

Buckmaster injured his right elbow, right shoulder, left wrist and left ankle/foot in a crash during practice May 16 at Barber Motorsports Park.

Saturday Morning’s Provisional AMA Supersport Practice Times:

1. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha, 56.019
2. Aaron Gobert, Yamaha, 56.049
3. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 56.253
4. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 56.263
5. Ben Spies, Suzuki, 56.469
6. Roger Lee Hayden, Kawasaki, 56.482
7. Chris Peris, Suzuki, 56.716
8. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 56.726
9. Aaron Yates, Suzuki, 56.921
10. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 57.062
11. Ben Attard, Suzuki, 57.335
12. Michael Barnes, Yamaha, 57.498
13. Jason Perez, Yamaha, 57.636
14. Heath Small, Yamaha, 57.690
15. Danny Eslick, Suzuki, 57.874
16. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 57.935
17. Darren Luck, Suzuki, 58.143
18. Giovanni Rojas, Yamaha, 58.309
19. Chris Siebenhaar, Honda, 58.431
20. Nicky Moore, Suzuki, 58.709
21. Martin Sims, Yamaha, 58.865
22. Pedro Valiente, Yamaha, 58.936
23. Jason Mathiason, Yamaha, 59.978
24. Brad Hendry, Yamaha, 59.019
25. Daniel Doty, Yamaha, 59.044
26. Montez Stewart, Yamaha, 59.215
27. Mike Shreve, Yamaha, 59.359
28. Ryan Andrews, Triumph, 59.566
29. John-O Bowman, Yamaha, 59.643
30. Justin Meyer, Yamaha, 59.710
31. Doug Venezia, Yamaha, 59.838
32. Nathan Dressman, Yamaha, 59.848
33. Crash Lowe, Suzuki, 59.917
34. Hector Romero Moreno, Honda, 59.947
35. Nathan Hester, Yamaha, 59.953
36. Jeff Grace, Kawasaki, 59.978
37. Anthony Manciu, Yamaha, 1:00.164
38. Tyler Jones, Yamaha, 1:00.409
39. Elton Curry, Kawasaki, 1:00.547
40. Tamer Kekhia, Yamaha, 1:00.674
41. Michael Applehans, Yamaha, 1:01.328
42. Jim Davis, Yamaha, 1:01.533
43. Eric Pinson, Triumph, 1:01.673

SPEED To Air PPIR AMA Supersport Race Before Airing Barber AMA Supersport Race

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

SPEED Channel will televise the AMA Supersport race from Pikes Peak International Raceway live on Sunday, May 23, two days before it will show the AMA Supersport from Barber Motorsports Park, which took place May 16.

This means that SPEED commentators Brian Drebber, Dave Sadowski and Greg White will be making references to events from the Barber race, which viewers have not been seen yet, during the PPIR telecast.

The AMA Supersport race at PPIR was not originally planned to be broadcast live. However, the time slot in Sunday’s schedule became open, and SPEED programming executives chose to put the AMA Supersport race in the time slot and “take their licks” from viewers, according to a source within SPEED.


AMA Event At Pikes Peak A Unique Two-day Event

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

The AMA Superbike event this weekend at Pikes Peak International Raceway in Fountain, Colorado is only a two-day event, breaking away from a decades-old trend of three- and four-day AMA events, according to paddock veterans. In fact, a quick survey of knowledgeable sources found no one who could remember when the last two-day AMA Superbike event was, if ever.

On a normal, three-day AMA Superbike weekend, official practice starts on Friday morning and continues into Friday afternoon, followed by qualifying sessions for Superbike and one of the support classes, usually Formula Xtreme or Superstock.

Practice, final Superbike qualifying and qualifying for the remaining support classes take place Saturday morning and early afternoon, followed by the first Superbike race (if it is a double-header event) and one of the support races.

Sunday morning sees warm-up sessions for each class in the morning with the remaining final events in the afternoon.

The two-day schedule at Pikes Peak calls for practice for each class Saturday morning and single qualifying sessions for each class – including Superbike – Saturday afternoon.

Each class will have a warm-up session Sunday morning, followed by final events in the following order: Supersport, Superstock, Formula Xtreme and Superbike.

Many from the larger teams in the AMA paddock are optimistic about the two-day event format in Colorado and the potential for more two-day AMA events in the future. But some privateers who don’t have access to pre-season testing say the format doesn’t give them enough practice to get up to speed and set up their bikes.

Jamie Hacking Captures Provisional AMA Superstock Pole In Colorado

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Graves Yamaha’s Jamie Hacking took pole position, his second of the season, for the AMA Superstock race Saturday during qualifying at Pikes Peak International Raceway. Riding a Dunlop-shod YZF-R1, Hacking turned a time of 54.577, a new lap record for the revised class on the 1.3-mile infield road course.

The old record of 55.535 was set by 2003 AMA Superstock Champion Josh Hayes in 2003 on a Suzuki GSX-R750.

“The wind was playing a big role, I think, in the session,” Hacking told reporters. “My qualifying lap back there, I ran it in pretty hard on the brakes because I thought the wind was blowing toward us. I was way wide! I didn’t even know if that lap was going to be any good. I came in, looked at the board and I was on top. I was pretty surprised.”

The bonus Championship point for earning pole position increases Hacking’s Superstock point lead to 18 points over his teammate Aaron Gobert, who qualified second.

Third Graves Yamaha rider Jason DiSalvo and Kawasaki’s Tommy Hayden earned the final two spots on the front row.

Neither Damon Buckmaster nor Chris “Opie” Caylor attempted to qualify for the Superstock final, which will consist of 24 riders.


Provisional AMA Superstock Qualifying Results:


1. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.577
2. Aaron Gobert, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.655
3. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.749
4. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.063
5. Roger Lee Hayden, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.225
6. Ben Spies, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 55.298
7. Josh Hayes, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.345
8. John Haner, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 55.349
9. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.093
10. Alex Gobert, Honda CBR1000RR, 56.199
11. Steve Rapp, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.223
12. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.305
13. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.433
14. Jake Holden, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.492
15. Geoff May, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.670
16. J.J. Roetlin, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 57.029
17. Christopher Ancein, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 57.510
18. Montez Stewart, Yamaha YZF-R1, 58.017
19. Christian Pistoni, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 58.039
20. Jason Curtis, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 58.111
21. Kevin Hanson, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.058
22. Brad Puetz, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.168
23. Dan Sallis, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.706
24. Corey Sarros, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:00.411

Updated Post: Rider Count Off Dramatically For AMA National At Pikes Peak

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Far fewer riders are participating in this year’s AMA National at Pikes Peak International Raceway compared to 2003.

In total count, using the number of riders who went out in the first official AMA practice for each class, 66 fewer riders are at Pikes Peak this year compared to last year.

Total rider count at PPIR in 2003 was 189, compared to 123 this weekend.

The Superbike class drew 41 riders in 2003 and 29 this weekend.

The Superstock class drew 47 riders in 2003 and 26 this weekend.

The Formula Xreme class drew 40 riders in 2003 and 27 this weekend.

The Supersport class bucked the trend, drawing 37 riders in 2003 and 40 this weekend.

Of the 66 missing riders this weekend, 24 came from the 2003 250cc Grand Prix class, which is no longer part of an AMA National weekend.

The PPIR rider count continues a season-long trend.

At Daytona this year, 57 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 71 in 2003; 39 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 52 in 2003; 52 ran the first Supersport practice versus 42 in 2003. The Formula Xtreme class didn’t run at Daytona in 2003 but did in 2004, with 20 riders running in the first FX practice session. The 250cc GP class didn’t run in 2004 but did in 2003, with 42 riders running in the first practice session. In the non-AMA BoxerCup class, 44 riders ran in the first practice session in 2003 versus 20 riders this year.

At California Speedway this year, 38 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 61 in 2003; 38 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 63 in 2003; 46 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 41 in 2003; 28 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 27 in 2003; 29 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.

At Infineon Raceway this year, 42 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 57 in 2003; 36 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 53 in 2003; 42 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 35 in the first dry Supersport practice in 2003; 30 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 36 in 2003; and 39 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.

At Barber Motorsports Park this year, 42 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 51 in 2003; 30 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 48 in 2003; 44 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 39 in 2003; 25 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 29 in 2003; and 37 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.


HMC Milwaukee Ducati 749R, Chandler Make Successful Debut At PPIR

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

“I thought it went exceptionally well,” said three-time AMA Superbike Champion Doug Chandler after his first-ever ride on his new HMC Milwaukee Ducati 749R AMA Formula Xtreme racebike during promoter practice Friday at Pikes Peak International Raceway (PPIR).

“Anytime you get something all brand new put together, you expect a lot more gremlins than really occurred,” continued Chandler. “For its first day on the track, it went around exceptionally well. The bike has been flawless. I think it’s more me getting myself up to speed than the bike. The bike seems to be ahead of me right now.”

Fully recovered from leg injuries that knocked him out of AMA Supermoto racing last season, Chandler said he has only done two days of riding on a road race track (at Laguna Seca during a Keith Code California Superbike School) since early in 2003 and just needed to knock the rust off.

“We’re as prepared as we could be with the short notice,” Team Owner Mitch Hansen told Roadracingworld.com. “We have one bike ready. We’re waiting on some more parts to get the second bike ready. I think we’re prepared pretty well, but once we get out in practice we’ll find out how prepared we really are.”

Hansen said his team is being supported by Ducati North America, and Ducati Corse in Italy is helping out with World Supersport kit parts, which result in Chandler’s 749R producing over 140 rear-wheel horsepower.

“We’ve got Gary Medley, Elliott Cho, Richard Boyd, myself – we’ll see how it works. We’ve got good chemistry on the team, and Doug has worked with everyone before. So hopefully we can hit the ground running,” said Hansen.

Updated Post: Vesrah Suzuki Wins WERA 4-hour At VIR, AOD 2nd Overall

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By Beth Wyse

Vesrah Suzuki’s Mark Junge, Tray Batey and John Jacobi won the 4-hour WERA National Endurance Series race Friday at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in Danville, Virginia, battling extreme heat and a huge grid of 57 teams on their Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Army of Darkness’ (AOD) Sam Fleming took second place overall in the final three minutes of the race, winning the Mediumweight Superbike class on the Suzuki GSX-R600 he shares with Ben Walters and Scott Brown. AOD was four laps behind Vesrah at the finish.

Mark Reeser, Michael Garafolo, Tommy Heath and Matthew Vojvoda finished third overall and first in the Mediumweight Superstock class on the D&D Racing Yamaha YZF-R6. D&D Racing was second overall until AOD came past.

Team Velocity Racing’s Steven Breckenridge, Bradley Champion and Reuben Frankenfield won in the Heavyweight Superstock class on a Yamaha YZF-R1, finishing fourth overall. Team Velocity Racing suffered a setback in practice the day before the race, when team owner Chuck Ivey crashed and broke his hand and several ribs.

Bells Suzuki II took a Suzuki SV650 to the Lightweight Superbike class win. Roger and Myron Bell finished 10th overall, two laps ahead of the rest of the Lightweight Superbike field.

At the start of the race, Vesrah Suzuki took the lead with Batey at the controls. Team Velocity Racing was in second, but Vesrah Suzuki wasted no time in building up a long lead. By lap three, Vesrah Suzuki was encountering lapped traffic.

The only red flag of the day came 10 minutes into the second hour for a crash that left debris on the track. The race was restarted 22 minutes later.

Temperatures near 90 degrees F and high humidity made racing tough for many riders, who chose to ride shorter stints to compensate.

RESULTS

1. Vesrah Suzuki (Mark Junge/Tray Batey/John Jacobi), Heavyweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R1000, 135 laps.

2. Army of Darkness (Ben Walters/Scott Brown/Sam Fleming), Mediumweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R600, 131 laps.

3. D&D Racing (Mark Reeser/Michael Garafolo/Tommy Heath/Matthew Vojvoda), Mediumweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R6, 131 laps.

4. Team Velocity Racing (Reuben Frankenfield/Steven Breckenridge/Bradley Champion), Heavyweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R1, 131 laps.

5. Canton Racing #1 (Dale Davenport/David Davis/Rob Palmieri/Sean Dillon), Heavyweight Superbike, Yam YZF-R1, 131 laps.

6. CherokeeChallenge.net (Scotty VanScoik/Chris Normand), Mediumweight Superstock/Yam YZF-R6, 130 laps.

7. Taylor Knapp/Ray C’s Racing (Taylor Knapp/Fritz Kling/Jason Temme), Mediumweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R6, 130 laps.

8. B&S Roadracing (Brian Dalke/Josh Smith-Moore), Mediumweight Superstock, Suz GSX-R600, 130 laps.

9. Velocity Crew Racing (Kevin Perkins/Paul Youngman/Josh Joseph/Larry Goldstein), Mediumweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R600, 129 laps.

10. Bells Suzuki II (Roger Bell/Myron Bell), Lightweight Superbike, Suz SV650, 128 laps.

More, From a press release issued by Team Velocity:

TEAM VELOCITY RACING WINS HEAVYWEIGHT SUPERSTOCK IN WERA ENDURANCE AT VIR

ALTON, Va.- Team Velocity Racing overcame a crash during practice to win the Heavyweight Superstock class of the four-hour WERA National Endurance Series race at Virginia International Raceway, finishing fourth overall on their Yamaha YZF-R1.

Team owner Chuck Ivey crashed during practice on Thursday, May 20, the day before the race. Ivey suffered a severely broken hand, a bruised hip and he was knocked unconscious. In addition to being unable to race the next day, Ivey will also have to have surgery on his hand.

Despite the setback, Team Velocity Racing made repairs to the Yamaha and prepared for the race. “I went out in practice and everything felt good on the bike,” explained Ivey. “I had made four or five good laps. Going into turn one, everything felt normal, and that’s the last thing I remember. My Arai helmet really saved my head. Everybody seemed to pull together to the best of their ability. First place in class is definitely where we wanted to be, and overall finishes are just a bonus.

“Our crew doesn’t get much credit,” added Ivey. “They really come together for nothing; just for the fun of being out here. They pull us through this. Without them, there’s no reason to even try this stuff.”

Frankenfield started the race, taking second overall and first in class off the starting line. The team had pulled a significant gap over the rest of the field when he pitted and handed the bike over to Breckenridge. Champion rode the third stint, and Frankenfield rode an additional half hour at the end of the race.

Frankenfield said, “I just got into my own pace. By lap five we had a pretty big gap on everybody and I did my entire first stint in second overall, doing what I thought was a pretty easy pace.”

“I got settled in and just clicked off laps,” said Breckenridge. “I got the red flag. I’ve never started that bike before and it has a really tall first gear, but the power of the 1000 made up for that.”

“I’m still sore and hurting from my crash at Nashville,” said Champion, who is usually the starting rider for Team Velocity Racing. “I don’t know if I would have been able to put my head down like Reuben did at the start. I ran a comfortable pace.”

The next endurance race for Team Velocity Racing will be a six-hour event at California Speedway on June 12.

Updated Post: Buckmaster Has Broken Hand/Wrist, May Sit Out Races For Treatment

0


Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Yamaha/Graves Yamaha’s Damon Buckmaster has a non-displaced fracture of the navicular bone in his left wrist and is currently deciding whether he will sit out races for treatment or continue to ride with the injury.

“It’s still intact and it’s still recoverable for the season,” Buckmaster told Roadracingworld.com Saturday afternoon. “Like, I can get it repaired and come back and still finish pretty well at the end of the year. Our big concern is if I damage it or fall or get knocked off. I might not even have to get knocked off. If I damage it more at all, I could finish the year on the sidelines. So we’re trying to make the right decision here, but it’s just a very difficult decision for me to make and say, ‘OK, let’s quit,’ because I’m not a quitter.”

Buckmaster has consulted with his normal physician, Dr. Thomas Bryan, and with famed orthopedic surgeon Dr. Arthur Ting, both of whom recommended that Buckmaster stop riding and have the fracture repaired.

“So I have it on pretty good authority it needs repair and to continue riding is a pretty stupid thing to do,” said Buckmaster. “I’m just going to talk to (Yamaha Team Manager) Tom (Halverson) a bit more, and we might give Keith (McCarty, Yamaha Racing Supervisor) a call and try and get the information from a few different angles. I don’t want to make a decision that someone isn’t happy with.”

If he stops riding to get the fracture repaired, Buckmaster said he may return for the Brainerd AMA round in late-June.

Buckmaster injured his hand/wrist in a crash during practice May 16 at Barber Motorsports Park.

Update: Buckmaster has decided to withdraw from the races at PPIR and immediately return to California for treatment to his injured left hand.

A Reader Comments On The Two-day Schedule At PPIR

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

FIRST PERSON/OPINION

Via e-mail:

Let the whining begin.

I can already hear the factory Superbike stars complaining about lappers screwing up their program at Pikes Peak. It’s not bad enough that the track is extremely short, with lap times under one minute. Now, they take away an entire day from the schedule! So the privateers will now get, what, three total practice sessions all weekend? Is it any wonder they can’t get close to the times set by the factory riders? Any wonder why you see some guys getting lapped 4 or 5 times at PPIR?

The factories send their teams to every track in the country during the off-season, and between races, so their riders can turn literally hundreds of test laps. By the time the race weekend comes along, those guys know exactly what suspension settings to use, what kind of gearing to run, which tire compounds will work best, and the perfect line through every turn.

The privateers – some of which have never seen the track before – have to figure all of that out in just a few dozen laps. After the race, they have to endure all the derisive comments by the superstars – or in some cases, physical attacks – because they’re “idiots who have no business being out there”.

Gee, why not get rid of practice altogether, and send everyone to the starting grid right off the trailer?

Scott Willock
Tucson, Arizona


Zemke Fastest In AMA Formula Xtreme Qualifying At PPIR

0

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Jake Zemke, Honda CBR600RR, 55.346
2. Miguel Duhamel, Honda CBR600RR, 55.544
3. Doug Chandler, Ducati 749R, 55.932
4. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki GSX-R600, 56.053
5. Alex Gobert, Honda CBR600RR, 56.113
6. Jake Holden, Suzuki GSX-R600, 56.737
7. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki GSX-R600, 57.026
8. Larry Pegram, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.108
9. Danny Eslick, Suzuki GSX-R600, 57.269
10. Mike Ciccotto, Buell XB9R, 57.305
11. Michael Barnes, Buell XB9R, 57.518
12. Mickey Lane, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.569
13. Heath Small, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.997
14. Nicky Moore, Suzuki GSX-R600, 58.470
15. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha YZF-R6, 58.628
16. Marty Sims, Yamaha YZF-R6, 58.978
17. Nathan Hester, Yamaha YZF-R6, 59.175
18. Shannon Moham, Suzuki GSX-R600, 59.487
19. Hector Romero Moreno, Honda CBR600RR, 59.804
20. Bob Siebenhaar, Honda CBR600RR, 60.036
21. Michael Applehans, Suzuki GSX-R600, 60.174
22. Chad Rolland, Yamaha YZF-R6, 60.391
23. Tim Knutson, Yamaha YZF-R6, 60.438
24. David Lambert, Suzuki GSX-R600, 50.560
25. Charles Sipp, Buell XB12R, 61.740
26. Larry Doe, Honda CBR600RR, 62.046
27. James Davis, Yamaha YZF-R6, 62.113


Hacking Fastest, Buckmaster Does Not Ride In First AMA Supersport Practice At PPIR

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

The first AMA Supersport practice at Pikes Peak International Raceway (PPIR) saw Yamaha’s Jamie Hacking, the defending Champion, set the fastest time (56.019), while his teammate Damon Buckmaster did not ride in the session due to injury and may not race in the class this weekend.

“I don’t know what it is about this place, but I like it. It’s not my favorite track in the world, but I just seem to go good here,” said two-time PPIR Supersport race winner Hacking. “Everything’s good. We made a few changes and were able to go better. I ran the whole session on one set of tires and went quickest at the end.”

As for Buckmaster, Yamaha Team Manager Tom Halverson told Roadracingworld.com, “He’s just going to try to run Superstock practice and see how he feels. At this moment, we’re 90 percent sure he will not run in Supersport, but like I said, we’ll know more after this session.”

Buckmaster injured his right elbow, right shoulder, left wrist and left ankle/foot in a crash during practice May 16 at Barber Motorsports Park.

Saturday Morning’s Provisional AMA Supersport Practice Times:

1. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha, 56.019
2. Aaron Gobert, Yamaha, 56.049
3. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 56.253
4. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 56.263
5. Ben Spies, Suzuki, 56.469
6. Roger Lee Hayden, Kawasaki, 56.482
7. Chris Peris, Suzuki, 56.716
8. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 56.726
9. Aaron Yates, Suzuki, 56.921
10. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 57.062
11. Ben Attard, Suzuki, 57.335
12. Michael Barnes, Yamaha, 57.498
13. Jason Perez, Yamaha, 57.636
14. Heath Small, Yamaha, 57.690
15. Danny Eslick, Suzuki, 57.874
16. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 57.935
17. Darren Luck, Suzuki, 58.143
18. Giovanni Rojas, Yamaha, 58.309
19. Chris Siebenhaar, Honda, 58.431
20. Nicky Moore, Suzuki, 58.709
21. Martin Sims, Yamaha, 58.865
22. Pedro Valiente, Yamaha, 58.936
23. Jason Mathiason, Yamaha, 59.978
24. Brad Hendry, Yamaha, 59.019
25. Daniel Doty, Yamaha, 59.044
26. Montez Stewart, Yamaha, 59.215
27. Mike Shreve, Yamaha, 59.359
28. Ryan Andrews, Triumph, 59.566
29. John-O Bowman, Yamaha, 59.643
30. Justin Meyer, Yamaha, 59.710
31. Doug Venezia, Yamaha, 59.838
32. Nathan Dressman, Yamaha, 59.848
33. Crash Lowe, Suzuki, 59.917
34. Hector Romero Moreno, Honda, 59.947
35. Nathan Hester, Yamaha, 59.953
36. Jeff Grace, Kawasaki, 59.978
37. Anthony Manciu, Yamaha, 1:00.164
38. Tyler Jones, Yamaha, 1:00.409
39. Elton Curry, Kawasaki, 1:00.547
40. Tamer Kekhia, Yamaha, 1:00.674
41. Michael Applehans, Yamaha, 1:01.328
42. Jim Davis, Yamaha, 1:01.533
43. Eric Pinson, Triumph, 1:01.673

SPEED To Air PPIR AMA Supersport Race Before Airing Barber AMA Supersport Race

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

SPEED Channel will televise the AMA Supersport race from Pikes Peak International Raceway live on Sunday, May 23, two days before it will show the AMA Supersport from Barber Motorsports Park, which took place May 16.

This means that SPEED commentators Brian Drebber, Dave Sadowski and Greg White will be making references to events from the Barber race, which viewers have not been seen yet, during the PPIR telecast.

The AMA Supersport race at PPIR was not originally planned to be broadcast live. However, the time slot in Sunday’s schedule became open, and SPEED programming executives chose to put the AMA Supersport race in the time slot and “take their licks” from viewers, according to a source within SPEED.


AMA Event At Pikes Peak A Unique Two-day Event

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

The AMA Superbike event this weekend at Pikes Peak International Raceway in Fountain, Colorado is only a two-day event, breaking away from a decades-old trend of three- and four-day AMA events, according to paddock veterans. In fact, a quick survey of knowledgeable sources found no one who could remember when the last two-day AMA Superbike event was, if ever.

On a normal, three-day AMA Superbike weekend, official practice starts on Friday morning and continues into Friday afternoon, followed by qualifying sessions for Superbike and one of the support classes, usually Formula Xtreme or Superstock.

Practice, final Superbike qualifying and qualifying for the remaining support classes take place Saturday morning and early afternoon, followed by the first Superbike race (if it is a double-header event) and one of the support races.

Sunday morning sees warm-up sessions for each class in the morning with the remaining final events in the afternoon.

The two-day schedule at Pikes Peak calls for practice for each class Saturday morning and single qualifying sessions for each class – including Superbike – Saturday afternoon.

Each class will have a warm-up session Sunday morning, followed by final events in the following order: Supersport, Superstock, Formula Xtreme and Superbike.

Many from the larger teams in the AMA paddock are optimistic about the two-day event format in Colorado and the potential for more two-day AMA events in the future. But some privateers who don’t have access to pre-season testing say the format doesn’t give them enough practice to get up to speed and set up their bikes.

Jamie Hacking Captures Provisional AMA Superstock Pole In Colorado

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Graves Yamaha’s Jamie Hacking took pole position, his second of the season, for the AMA Superstock race Saturday during qualifying at Pikes Peak International Raceway. Riding a Dunlop-shod YZF-R1, Hacking turned a time of 54.577, a new lap record for the revised class on the 1.3-mile infield road course.

The old record of 55.535 was set by 2003 AMA Superstock Champion Josh Hayes in 2003 on a Suzuki GSX-R750.

“The wind was playing a big role, I think, in the session,” Hacking told reporters. “My qualifying lap back there, I ran it in pretty hard on the brakes because I thought the wind was blowing toward us. I was way wide! I didn’t even know if that lap was going to be any good. I came in, looked at the board and I was on top. I was pretty surprised.”

The bonus Championship point for earning pole position increases Hacking’s Superstock point lead to 18 points over his teammate Aaron Gobert, who qualified second.

Third Graves Yamaha rider Jason DiSalvo and Kawasaki’s Tommy Hayden earned the final two spots on the front row.

Neither Damon Buckmaster nor Chris “Opie” Caylor attempted to qualify for the Superstock final, which will consist of 24 riders.


Provisional AMA Superstock Qualifying Results:


1. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.577
2. Aaron Gobert, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.655
3. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha YZF-R1, 54.749
4. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.063
5. Roger Lee Hayden, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.225
6. Ben Spies, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 55.298
7. Josh Hayes, Kawasaki ZX-10R, 55.345
8. John Haner, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 55.349
9. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.093
10. Alex Gobert, Honda CBR1000RR, 56.199
11. Steve Rapp, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.223
12. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.305
13. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.433
14. Jake Holden, Suzuki GSX-R750, 56.492
15. Geoff May, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 56.670
16. J.J. Roetlin, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 57.029
17. Christopher Ancein, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 57.510
18. Montez Stewart, Yamaha YZF-R1, 58.017
19. Christian Pistoni, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 58.039
20. Jason Curtis, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 58.111
21. Kevin Hanson, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.058
22. Brad Puetz, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.168
23. Dan Sallis, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 59.706
24. Corey Sarros, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:00.411

Updated Post: Rider Count Off Dramatically For AMA National At Pikes Peak

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Far fewer riders are participating in this year’s AMA National at Pikes Peak International Raceway compared to 2003.

In total count, using the number of riders who went out in the first official AMA practice for each class, 66 fewer riders are at Pikes Peak this year compared to last year.

Total rider count at PPIR in 2003 was 189, compared to 123 this weekend.

The Superbike class drew 41 riders in 2003 and 29 this weekend.

The Superstock class drew 47 riders in 2003 and 26 this weekend.

The Formula Xreme class drew 40 riders in 2003 and 27 this weekend.

The Supersport class bucked the trend, drawing 37 riders in 2003 and 40 this weekend.

Of the 66 missing riders this weekend, 24 came from the 2003 250cc Grand Prix class, which is no longer part of an AMA National weekend.

The PPIR rider count continues a season-long trend.

At Daytona this year, 57 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 71 in 2003; 39 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 52 in 2003; 52 ran the first Supersport practice versus 42 in 2003. The Formula Xtreme class didn’t run at Daytona in 2003 but did in 2004, with 20 riders running in the first FX practice session. The 250cc GP class didn’t run in 2004 but did in 2003, with 42 riders running in the first practice session. In the non-AMA BoxerCup class, 44 riders ran in the first practice session in 2003 versus 20 riders this year.

At California Speedway this year, 38 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 61 in 2003; 38 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 63 in 2003; 46 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 41 in 2003; 28 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 27 in 2003; 29 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.

At Infineon Raceway this year, 42 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 57 in 2003; 36 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 53 in 2003; 42 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 35 in the first dry Supersport practice in 2003; 30 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 36 in 2003; and 39 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.

At Barber Motorsports Park this year, 42 riders ran in the first Superbike practice versus 51 in 2003; 30 ran in the first Superstock practice versus 48 in 2003; 44 ran in the first Supersport practice versus 39 in 2003; 25 ran in the first Formula Xtreme practice versus 29 in 2003; and 37 riders ran in the now-eliminated 250cc GP class in 2003.


HMC Milwaukee Ducati 749R, Chandler Make Successful Debut At PPIR

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

“I thought it went exceptionally well,” said three-time AMA Superbike Champion Doug Chandler after his first-ever ride on his new HMC Milwaukee Ducati 749R AMA Formula Xtreme racebike during promoter practice Friday at Pikes Peak International Raceway (PPIR).

“Anytime you get something all brand new put together, you expect a lot more gremlins than really occurred,” continued Chandler. “For its first day on the track, it went around exceptionally well. The bike has been flawless. I think it’s more me getting myself up to speed than the bike. The bike seems to be ahead of me right now.”

Fully recovered from leg injuries that knocked him out of AMA Supermoto racing last season, Chandler said he has only done two days of riding on a road race track (at Laguna Seca during a Keith Code California Superbike School) since early in 2003 and just needed to knock the rust off.

“We’re as prepared as we could be with the short notice,” Team Owner Mitch Hansen told Roadracingworld.com. “We have one bike ready. We’re waiting on some more parts to get the second bike ready. I think we’re prepared pretty well, but once we get out in practice we’ll find out how prepared we really are.”

Hansen said his team is being supported by Ducati North America, and Ducati Corse in Italy is helping out with World Supersport kit parts, which result in Chandler’s 749R producing over 140 rear-wheel horsepower.

“We’ve got Gary Medley, Elliott Cho, Richard Boyd, myself – we’ll see how it works. We’ve got good chemistry on the team, and Doug has worked with everyone before. So hopefully we can hit the ground running,” said Hansen.

Updated Post: Vesrah Suzuki Wins WERA 4-hour At VIR, AOD 2nd Overall

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By Beth Wyse

Vesrah Suzuki’s Mark Junge, Tray Batey and John Jacobi won the 4-hour WERA National Endurance Series race Friday at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in Danville, Virginia, battling extreme heat and a huge grid of 57 teams on their Suzuki GSX-R1000.

Army of Darkness’ (AOD) Sam Fleming took second place overall in the final three minutes of the race, winning the Mediumweight Superbike class on the Suzuki GSX-R600 he shares with Ben Walters and Scott Brown. AOD was four laps behind Vesrah at the finish.

Mark Reeser, Michael Garafolo, Tommy Heath and Matthew Vojvoda finished third overall and first in the Mediumweight Superstock class on the D&D Racing Yamaha YZF-R6. D&D Racing was second overall until AOD came past.

Team Velocity Racing’s Steven Breckenridge, Bradley Champion and Reuben Frankenfield won in the Heavyweight Superstock class on a Yamaha YZF-R1, finishing fourth overall. Team Velocity Racing suffered a setback in practice the day before the race, when team owner Chuck Ivey crashed and broke his hand and several ribs.

Bells Suzuki II took a Suzuki SV650 to the Lightweight Superbike class win. Roger and Myron Bell finished 10th overall, two laps ahead of the rest of the Lightweight Superbike field.

At the start of the race, Vesrah Suzuki took the lead with Batey at the controls. Team Velocity Racing was in second, but Vesrah Suzuki wasted no time in building up a long lead. By lap three, Vesrah Suzuki was encountering lapped traffic.

The only red flag of the day came 10 minutes into the second hour for a crash that left debris on the track. The race was restarted 22 minutes later.

Temperatures near 90 degrees F and high humidity made racing tough for many riders, who chose to ride shorter stints to compensate.

RESULTS

1. Vesrah Suzuki (Mark Junge/Tray Batey/John Jacobi), Heavyweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R1000, 135 laps.

2. Army of Darkness (Ben Walters/Scott Brown/Sam Fleming), Mediumweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R600, 131 laps.

3. D&D Racing (Mark Reeser/Michael Garafolo/Tommy Heath/Matthew Vojvoda), Mediumweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R6, 131 laps.

4. Team Velocity Racing (Reuben Frankenfield/Steven Breckenridge/Bradley Champion), Heavyweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R1, 131 laps.

5. Canton Racing #1 (Dale Davenport/David Davis/Rob Palmieri/Sean Dillon), Heavyweight Superbike, Yam YZF-R1, 131 laps.

6. CherokeeChallenge.net (Scotty VanScoik/Chris Normand), Mediumweight Superstock/Yam YZF-R6, 130 laps.

7. Taylor Knapp/Ray C’s Racing (Taylor Knapp/Fritz Kling/Jason Temme), Mediumweight Superstock, Yam YZF-R6, 130 laps.

8. B&S Roadracing (Brian Dalke/Josh Smith-Moore), Mediumweight Superstock, Suz GSX-R600, 130 laps.

9. Velocity Crew Racing (Kevin Perkins/Paul Youngman/Josh Joseph/Larry Goldstein), Mediumweight Superbike, Suz GSX-R600, 129 laps.

10. Bells Suzuki II (Roger Bell/Myron Bell), Lightweight Superbike, Suz SV650, 128 laps.

More, From a press release issued by Team Velocity:

TEAM VELOCITY RACING WINS HEAVYWEIGHT SUPERSTOCK IN WERA ENDURANCE AT VIR

ALTON, Va.- Team Velocity Racing overcame a crash during practice to win the Heavyweight Superstock class of the four-hour WERA National Endurance Series race at Virginia International Raceway, finishing fourth overall on their Yamaha YZF-R1.

Team owner Chuck Ivey crashed during practice on Thursday, May 20, the day before the race. Ivey suffered a severely broken hand, a bruised hip and he was knocked unconscious. In addition to being unable to race the next day, Ivey will also have to have surgery on his hand.

Despite the setback, Team Velocity Racing made repairs to the Yamaha and prepared for the race. “I went out in practice and everything felt good on the bike,” explained Ivey. “I had made four or five good laps. Going into turn one, everything felt normal, and that’s the last thing I remember. My Arai helmet really saved my head. Everybody seemed to pull together to the best of their ability. First place in class is definitely where we wanted to be, and overall finishes are just a bonus.

“Our crew doesn’t get much credit,” added Ivey. “They really come together for nothing; just for the fun of being out here. They pull us through this. Without them, there’s no reason to even try this stuff.”

Frankenfield started the race, taking second overall and first in class off the starting line. The team had pulled a significant gap over the rest of the field when he pitted and handed the bike over to Breckenridge. Champion rode the third stint, and Frankenfield rode an additional half hour at the end of the race.

Frankenfield said, “I just got into my own pace. By lap five we had a pretty big gap on everybody and I did my entire first stint in second overall, doing what I thought was a pretty easy pace.”

“I got settled in and just clicked off laps,” said Breckenridge. “I got the red flag. I’ve never started that bike before and it has a really tall first gear, but the power of the 1000 made up for that.”

“I’m still sore and hurting from my crash at Nashville,” said Champion, who is usually the starting rider for Team Velocity Racing. “I don’t know if I would have been able to put my head down like Reuben did at the start. I ran a comfortable pace.”

The next endurance race for Team Velocity Racing will be a six-hour event at California Speedway on June 12.

Updated Post: Buckmaster Has Broken Hand/Wrist, May Sit Out Races For Treatment


Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Yamaha/Graves Yamaha’s Damon Buckmaster has a non-displaced fracture of the navicular bone in his left wrist and is currently deciding whether he will sit out races for treatment or continue to ride with the injury.

“It’s still intact and it’s still recoverable for the season,” Buckmaster told Roadracingworld.com Saturday afternoon. “Like, I can get it repaired and come back and still finish pretty well at the end of the year. Our big concern is if I damage it or fall or get knocked off. I might not even have to get knocked off. If I damage it more at all, I could finish the year on the sidelines. So we’re trying to make the right decision here, but it’s just a very difficult decision for me to make and say, ‘OK, let’s quit,’ because I’m not a quitter.”

Buckmaster has consulted with his normal physician, Dr. Thomas Bryan, and with famed orthopedic surgeon Dr. Arthur Ting, both of whom recommended that Buckmaster stop riding and have the fracture repaired.

“So I have it on pretty good authority it needs repair and to continue riding is a pretty stupid thing to do,” said Buckmaster. “I’m just going to talk to (Yamaha Team Manager) Tom (Halverson) a bit more, and we might give Keith (McCarty, Yamaha Racing Supervisor) a call and try and get the information from a few different angles. I don’t want to make a decision that someone isn’t happy with.”

If he stops riding to get the fracture repaired, Buckmaster said he may return for the Brainerd AMA round in late-June.

Buckmaster injured his hand/wrist in a crash during practice May 16 at Barber Motorsports Park.

Update: Buckmaster has decided to withdraw from the races at PPIR and immediately return to California for treatment to his injured left hand.

A Reader Comments On The Two-day Schedule At PPIR

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

FIRST PERSON/OPINION

Via e-mail:

Let the whining begin.

I can already hear the factory Superbike stars complaining about lappers screwing up their program at Pikes Peak. It’s not bad enough that the track is extremely short, with lap times under one minute. Now, they take away an entire day from the schedule! So the privateers will now get, what, three total practice sessions all weekend? Is it any wonder they can’t get close to the times set by the factory riders? Any wonder why you see some guys getting lapped 4 or 5 times at PPIR?

The factories send their teams to every track in the country during the off-season, and between races, so their riders can turn literally hundreds of test laps. By the time the race weekend comes along, those guys know exactly what suspension settings to use, what kind of gearing to run, which tire compounds will work best, and the perfect line through every turn.

The privateers – some of which have never seen the track before – have to figure all of that out in just a few dozen laps. After the race, they have to endure all the derisive comments by the superstars – or in some cases, physical attacks – because they’re “idiots who have no business being out there”.

Gee, why not get rid of practice altogether, and send everyone to the starting grid right off the trailer?

Scott Willock
Tucson, Arizona


Zemke Fastest In AMA Formula Xtreme Qualifying At PPIR

Copyright 2004, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Jake Zemke, Honda CBR600RR, 55.346
2. Miguel Duhamel, Honda CBR600RR, 55.544
3. Doug Chandler, Ducati 749R, 55.932
4. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki GSX-R600, 56.053
5. Alex Gobert, Honda CBR600RR, 56.113
6. Jake Holden, Suzuki GSX-R600, 56.737
7. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki GSX-R600, 57.026
8. Larry Pegram, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.108
9. Danny Eslick, Suzuki GSX-R600, 57.269
10. Mike Ciccotto, Buell XB9R, 57.305
11. Michael Barnes, Buell XB9R, 57.518
12. Mickey Lane, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.569
13. Heath Small, Yamaha YZF-R6, 57.997
14. Nicky Moore, Suzuki GSX-R600, 58.470
15. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha YZF-R6, 58.628
16. Marty Sims, Yamaha YZF-R6, 58.978
17. Nathan Hester, Yamaha YZF-R6, 59.175
18. Shannon Moham, Suzuki GSX-R600, 59.487
19. Hector Romero Moreno, Honda CBR600RR, 59.804
20. Bob Siebenhaar, Honda CBR600RR, 60.036
21. Michael Applehans, Suzuki GSX-R600, 60.174
22. Chad Rolland, Yamaha YZF-R6, 60.391
23. Tim Knutson, Yamaha YZF-R6, 60.438
24. David Lambert, Suzuki GSX-R600, 50.560
25. Charles Sipp, Buell XB12R, 61.740
26. Larry Doe, Honda CBR600RR, 62.046
27. James Davis, Yamaha YZF-R6, 62.113


0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
1,620SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Posts