Home Blog Page 6932

More Team Press Releases From Brainerd

From a press release issued by Eric Bostrom’s publicist:

Boss still leading the points

After a consistent ride in Minnesota that saw Eric Bostrom conserve his tires while others experienced problems with theirs, the “Boss” finds himself still leading the Chevy Trucks AMA Superbike Championship.

“That’s just luck, huh? Because in all honesty, we really struggled at Brainerd. I tried hard all weekend, the bike ran well, but we just couldn’t come to a compromise with the set-up. I was just really slow. I got a good start and really tried to put my head down, but I was just a roadblock. It sucks because we tried so hard but we just kept going backwards. Ultimately I just tried to conserve my tires and get as many points as I could comfortably earn.”

When asked how it felt to be leading the Superbike championship after a second consecutive weekend, Eric’s reply was clearly that of a racer. “To be honest, it’s a little bit hollow. If we were winning races it would feel a lot better. I’m not happy. I’d much rather win most of the races and not win the championship than drone along like this.”

Fortunately for Eric, he will have the opportunity in two weeks to win another race at his ‘home’ track, Laguna Seca, where he has clearly been the man to beat for the past two years. To add a little spice to the special weekend, Eric will unveil a special set of racing leathers. The suit is being pieced together in Italy at this very moment, and was done with the creative assistance and support of Airtrix and Alpinestars. So far, the designs have exceeded all expectations for the “WOW” factor.

“Not that I need any extra motivation, but I better win at Laguna with this suit! Chris (at www.Airtrix.com) came up with the design after we gave him our ideas. When I first saw the design I thought, wow, I don’t know if Kawasaki is going to let me run that! Because it was just so good that it was unreal. I can’t wait to see the thing in person. It’s definitely going to be pretty loud on my bike and won’t quite look like what everyone is used to seeing at the track. Which is a good thing, because I think it’ll be a breath of fresh air. It’ll be pretty incredible if Alpinestars is able to make it, because it looks pretty difficult to make. It’ll be a testament to their abilities. But even if it comes out half as good as the design, people are going to be talking about it. I definitely want to thank Kawasaki ahead of time for being open-minded enough let me wear it. It’s going to bring such attention to my team, wait and see.”

From a press release issued by American Honda:

AMA/Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship: Round 11
Crowd: 15,000
Temperature: 17 degrees C
Weather: Cloudy, overcast

Double Podium for American Honda

American Honda’s Miguel DuHamel and Erion Honda’s Kurtis Roberts fought to the final corner with both earning a spot on the podium at Brainerd International Raceway, round 11 of the AMA/Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship.

It was DuHamel’s second podium of the day, the winningest rider in AMA Superbike and Supersport history adding to his legend by winning a hard fought Pro Honda Oils Supersport race on the ultra high speed three-mile circuit.

“My Honda CBR600RR is working as good almost as good, I think as (Valentino) Rossi’s bike in GP,” DuHamel said after winning his class leading 41st Supersport race, then added, “but maybe not as fast.”

On Saturday, Erion Honda’s Jake Zemke used the top speed advantage of his Honda CBR954RR to race to a thrilling Formula Xtreme win in record time.

“Going down the front straightaway the thing was just a bullet,” Zemke said after breaking Kurtis Roberts’ race record and winning his first race in nearly a year. “It was the fastest thing I’ve been on by far.”

The Superbike fight was so intense that DuHamel felt obliged to apologize to Roberts about the pass he made on the final lap. Close as it was, it secured his second place, with Roberts finishing third.

American Honda’s Ben Bostrom was in fourth place and moving up to challenge his teammates when he had a frightening rear tire failure in the fastest part of the course, just as he was bending it into the full throttle first turn. The former dirt tracker made a spectacular save, then quickly returned to the pits where his crew, led by crew chief Merlyn Plumlee, changed tires and sent him back out. He finished 12th.

The Honda trio remains together in the championship point standings, Roberts fourth, Bostrom fifth, and DuHamel sixth after 11 of 18 races.

The race was won by Suzuki’s Aaron Yates. Yates was being pressured by teammate Mat Mladin when Mladin had a tire failure similar to Bostrom’s. He also pitted, re-joining the race to finish seventh.

Miguel DuHamel, Second Place
“I tried to get (Roberts) in one, can’t do it. Got a run on him coming out of two and we were side by side and I braked pretty deep and he went deeper. He went a little wide and I was trying to keep it in tight. I figured he was going to go a little wide. I tried to squeeze in underneath him. I thought I left him enough room. We talked a little bit afterward and he said I really pinched him off on the track. I was sliding coming out of there and I might have miscalculated it. I really thought I had a clean pass. I thought I left him enough room.”

Kurtis Roberts, Third Place
“I was driving out of turn three. Unfortunately I was a little wide and Miguel was underneath. I was probably a foot or so ahead of him. He slid into me. I had to get out of the throttle. It’s racing. One thing about racing is that there’s a race in a couple of weeks and you know who your teammates are. We’ll get through these and go on to Laguna Seca and hopefully pull out one because this second and third is getting old.”

Ben Bostrom, 12th Place
“It was the scariest thing. coming out of one full stick, right as you throw it down a gear and lean it in. It was like jumping off the ground. I fully started dirt tracking off the corner waiting for that thing to explode. I nearly highsided myself out of two. That was a moment. I don’t think I ever had a tire do that before, putting 26 laps on one of those tires, 20 plus on the next tire and it was fine. The tire guys said they were shaving some tires, to reduce heat in the center of the tire. So we said, let’s play it safe. I think it’s pick of the litter.”

Superbike:
1. Aaron Yates (Suzuki)
2. Miguel DuHamel (Honda)
3. Kurtis Roberts (Honda)
4. Eric Bostrom (Kawasaki)
5. Giovanni Bussei (Ducati)
6. Jason Pridmore (Suzuki)
7. Mat Mladin (Suzuki)
8. Jordan Szoke (Suzuki)
9. Shawn Higbee (Suzuki)
10. Vincent Haskovec (Suzuki)
11. Michael Barnes (Suzuki)
12. Ben Bostrom (Honda)

Championship Standings:
1. Eric Bostrom (321)
2. Mat Mladin (318)
3. Aaron Yates (313)
4. Kurtis Roberts (301)
5. Ben Bostrom (293)
6. Miguel DuHamel 9278)
7. Shawn Higbee (229)
8. Jason Pridmore (225)
9. Larry Pegram (211)
10. Vincent Haskovec (180)

More, from a press release issued by 1-888-FASTLAP:

1-888-FASTLAP RIDERS FINISH IN TOP 10 IN AMA SUPERSTOCK

BRAINERD, Minn.- 1-888-FASTLAP riders Opie Caylor and Brian Stokes both finished in the top ten during the AMA’s Genuine Suzuki Accessories Superstock race held at Brainerd International Raceway on Sunday, June 29.

Caylor finished seventh, despite having to run the 13-lap race on his backup Suzuki GSX-R750. Following Superstock qualifying the day before the race, Caylor went out in Superbike qualifying, where he continued to fine-tune his bike for the upcoming race. Several laps into the session, however, Caylor missed a shift and bent a valve in the motor of his primary bike.

“I jumped on the backup bike and got it prepared. We got it set up as close as we could to the A bike, but we just couldn’t get the chassis to feel like the bike I qualified on, so I struggled a bit in the race,” said Caylor.

The seventh place finish was not as high as Caylor had hoped for, but it was a remarkable improvement over his performance at Brainerd in 2002, when he only finished 12th. His best lap time during the race, a 1:40.6, was two seconds faster than his best time last year.

Stokes earned his best AMA finish ever, riding the Team Embry Suzuki GSX-R750 to a tenth-place finish in Superstock. His previous best finish in the series was 16th.

“I was up to seventh off the start,” commented Stokes. “I got passed up the inside a couple of times. I started running down a group of riders ahead of me, but I came into the bus stop a little too hot and lost some ground. I was happy to get a tenth, especially at a track I had never been to. I’m looking forward to heading to Laguna Seca with Team Embry, where I hope to get closer to the podium.”

Stokes also competed in the Superbike race, which was held prior to the Superstock event. He worked his way up to a finish of 13th, riding a Suzuki GSX-R750 Superbike.

More, from a press release issued by Corona Extra Suzuki:

MISFORTUNE COMES IN THREES FOR CORONA EXTRA SUZUKI AT BRAINERD AMA SUPERBIKE EVENT

So the saying goes; “When it rains it pours!” And once again the weather contributed to the worst of the bad luck for Corona Extra Suzuki riders at Brainerd International Raceway.

Corona Extra Suzuki Champion Jimmy Moore suffered a broken arm along, other fractures and an injury to his spleen in a freak accident during a blustery Superstock practice on Thursday. A strong gust of wind took out the front wheel of his bike as he entered the 170+ mile per hour turn one. Jimmy slid almost 230 yards before hitting a tree. From his hospital bed Jimmy said; “I came down the straight (1 mile long) tached out in top gear and into (turn) one. Then just as I passed the line of trees I felt this big gust of wind. It just lifted the front end washed it out. I remember sliding for ever and seeing this wood coming to meet me!” Jimmy was Medevac’d to a hospital in Minneapolis where he is in stable condition. All at Corona Extra Suzuki wish Jimmy a speedy recovery.

In the Formula Extreme race, Adam Fergusson, starting from the third row of the grid finished 9th. A disappointed Fergusson said; ” I just couldn’t get comfortable. The bike was working OK but I just couldn’t get into the corners hot enough. I could put together a good lap or two as fast as the leaders but never string them together. I just don’t know what it was!” Fergusson is currently 5th in the Formula Extreme championship.

A wet track after rain showers just dried in time for the Superbike event. Jordan Szoke, who qualified 10th, got a good start but on lap two the gremlins struck, going into turn one he found his right knee slider had gone, slowing his progress. Jordan said; “BIR is so fast you get around without really putting your knee down hard to stabilize the bike”. Still Jordan gritted his teeth and holed his leathers to finish a good eighth. Szoke is currently 11th in the Superbike championship.

The Superstock race was rescheduled to follow the Superbike race due to the rain. Fergusson had qualified on the second row in fifth position, less than half a second off pole so everyone was hoping for a good finish. After a good start Adam went after the leaders and started to draw them in when suddenly he slowed dramatically. In a repeat of the Fontana event, the tab at the end of his gearshift had broken off though this time he did not hit anything! Adam struggled on using a combination of hand, toes and heel to change gear and finished in 20th position but gaining valuable points. He is currently fourth in the Genuine Suzuki Accessories SuperStock Championship.

Next race: Laguna Seca, CA., July 11-13, 2003. Look for Corona Extra Suzuki display race bikes at retail stores throughout the Monterey area during the month of July. This has been arranged by Corona in conjunction with Barton Beers and the local distributor to promote the Corona brand, race team and event.

CMRA Issues Official Statement On Split With CCS

0

From a press release issued by CMRA:

In a meeting held on June 7, 2003, the CMRA’s Board of Directors voted unanimously to return to Independent status after four years as a CCS affiliate. This decision has been explored extensively over the past two years in columns printed in the monthly newsletter, The Inside Line, and on the club’s message board. The decision was reached after a number of meetings with CCS failed to resolve issues that the CMRA had raised. There are certainly few people involved in the sport of Amateur road racing who are as committed to the advancement of the sport as CCS’ Kevin Elliott. Hopefully we will find an opportunity for our two organizations to participate on the racetrack at some point in the future.

The return to Independent status comes after a series of accomplishments by the CMRA over a two-year period. A new Club Secretary, Race Director and a new Editor for the newsletter have been hired, the conversion to GAP accounting reports accomplished, the establishment of the CMRA Hall of Fame (Colin Edwards and Kevin Schwantz were the first inductees), purchase of Airfence, repaving of Oak Hill Raceway, the purchase of a new AMB timing/scoring system and a cash contingency program that has grown by more than $50,000 are evidence that the club is strong and getting stronger. Race entries are at an all-time high and the CMRA’s development of a Motard series that reaches youngsters of ages 8 to 12 provides entry-level opportunities to get the next generations on the track.

The goal of the return to Independent status is to provide an even greater value to CMRA members and to the road racing community, in general.

Preliminary conversations with others in the club road racing business provide encouragement that there will greater flexibility in regards to out-of-region and end-of-the-season competition. It is the CMRA’s desire to see these kinds of reciprocal opportunities granted to amateur road racers regardless of affiliation. This requires a whole different way of thinking but change can be good and in this case, what is good for the rider is good for the sport. Further details on the rulebook for 2004 and the programs to be offered will be announced in the near future.

Brooks Gremmels
President, CMRA
CMRA #26



Emmett And Renegade Ducati Split

0

From a press release issued by Renegade Ducati, which competes in the British Superbike Championship:

RENEGADE ANNOUNCE EMMETT DEPARTURE

Team Renegade Ducati today announced that the team has parted company with Sean Emmett. Team Owner Mark Griffiths said, “I am disappointed that our professional relationship has come to an end, but due to irreconcilable differences we have gone our separate ways.”

Team Rider Leon Haslam has been upgraded from his participation in the British Supersport class to partner Michael Rutter and Nick Medd in spearheading the team’s challenge for the British Superbike title.

Title sponsors Red Bull will continue their association with the team and on a personal level with Sean Emmett.

Renegade Ducati wishes to place on record its appreciation of the contribution made by Sean Emmett during his time with the team and to offer its very best wishes for his future career.

Updated Post: CCS Boss Comments On CMRA Dropping CCS Affiliation

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc. CCS boss Kevin Elliott said he wonders if Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association (CMRA) club members had the opportunity to vote on their club dropping its CCS affiliation. Asked for his response to Texas-based CMRA’s announcement that it planned on dropping its CCS affiliation at the end of the 2003 season, Elliott said, “We wish them the best of luck on their future endeavors. “We feel we provided all services and everything promised under our sanction agreement. We saved them a huge amount of money on their insurance. We provided staff uniforms, printed their rulebooks, did their license renewal mailers and included the CMRA in all activities as all CCS regions.” Elliott added that the total amount of contingencies available to racers in the CMRA/CCS South Central region tripled from what it was before CMRA affiliated with CCS. “My only regret is that I don’t know if they did a membership vote. I believe they only did a Board of Directors vote,” Elliott said June 28 at Virginia International Raceway. Elliott said that he learned of CMRA’s intention to end its affiliation with CCS by reading it on Roadracingworld.com. See related post: 06/25/03 CMRA To Drop CCS Affiliation More, from readers: FIRST PERSON/OPINION Via e-mail As far as Mr. Elliot’s ponderings to the membership’s wants and desires, it was not put to a general vote. We (the CMRA) elect BOD (board of director) positions the same as we (Americans) elect congress, house and presidential candidates. By electing the people we deem best suited for the position we also entrust them to make decisions on our behalf that best suit us as a club or citizen. Does Mr. Elliot have a direct say in his taxes, local and national laws or his country’s foreign policy? No. He entrusts those decisions to others the same as the CMRA’s membership does to our elected BOD. You would have to be brain dead and not paying attention for the last year to not know this was a action being discussed and appraised by the BOD and membership at large. The fact that this action may have been a surprise to Mr. Elliot is a example of the reasoning behind the decision. He (CCS) knew of our dissatisfaction with the services being rendered for quite awhile and has done nothing but give lip service to remediate it. Thank you Emmett Dibble Rosharon, Texas I just wanted to reply to Kevin Elliot’s recent comments regarding the CMRA. This split has been widely and loudly discussed on our website’s bulletin board for over 3 months. In fact, I believe the discussion came from the membership, and not the BOD. I think I speak for most of the members when I say we have confidence in our BOD, and that this was not a sudden move, or ill-advised. I think the real issue, is why did the CCS not stage a National race in the CMRA area? WERA, in its attempt to save their franchise in the state, has held one each of the years it was involved in the Texas area (one year was in Louisiana). When we signed on board with CCS, I for one was very excited about the deal. We saw the potential for greatness CCS had, with its TV connections, to break a national series into the mainstream, and challenge the AMA monopoly. I for one, feel disappointed by the results of the last three years. Mr. Elliot talks about the services he provided, but he doesn’t seem to understand that all this was being taken care of by the CMRA long before he came on the scene. I for one, have STILL not gotten my rulebook. I don’t think a mailing service is what we paid over $20K for, anyway. As a member of one of the largest racing clubs in the U.S., I feel confident that racing will continue on the grand scale that it always has in Texas (no, I don’t live there), producing more National and World Champions along the way. I don’t think any of us have any ill will towards Mr. Elliot, or CCS; our association has been a good one, but now is the time to move on. Thanks for your time, you have a great magazine and website! Steve Creech CMRA #550 Minden, Louisiana

Oliver Wins 7th Straight AMA Pro 250cc GP Race

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

AMA 250c Grand Prix Results
Brainerd International Raceway
Brainerd, Minnesota
12 laps

1. Rich Oliver, Yamaha
2. Simon Turner, Honda, -22.132 seconds
3. Colin Jensen, Aprilia, -33.714
4. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha, -48.068
5. Chris Pyles, Honda, -58.349
6. Ed Marchini, Yamaha, -68.911
7. Sandy Noce, Yamaha, -72.016
8. Greg Esser, Honda, -72.256
9. John France, Honda, -83.117
10. Sean Wray, Yamaha, -100.405
11. Steve Scott, Yamaha, -100.732
12. Mark Stiles, Yamaha, -106.336
13. Shawn Murray, Honda, -111.142
14. Stephen Bowline, Honda, -1 lap
15. Glen Christianson, -1 lap
16. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, -1 lap
17. Sohn Wehseler, Yamaha, -1 lap
18. Justin Long, Yamaha, -1 lap
19. Sean McNew, Honda, -3 laps
20. Ed Sorbo, Yamaha, -3 laps, mechanical
21. Jeff Japs, Yamaha, -4 laps
22. Chuck Sorensen, Aprilia, -8 laps, DNF, mechanical
23. Barrett Long, Yamaha, -8 laps, DNF

Rapp Wins Superstock At Brainerd, Hayes Survives Bird Strike For Second

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Steve Rapp won his second straight AMA Superstock race, and Josh Hayes survived a 170-mph Turn One collision with a seagull and a resultant off-track excursion to finish second for the second straight race. And points leader Vincent Haskovec was again third.

Hayes showed up on the podium with a bird bone sticking straight out of the hump of his leathers, and the front of Haskovec’s bike was splattered with blood and guts.

Rapp said he ducked his head to miss the bird, which was one in a group of four or five which had landed on the track. Haskovec said after the post-race press conference that he wished cornerworkers had scared the birds away before the lead group arrived in the corner.

“Don’t even think about a triple,” said Haskovec, referring to Rapp’s two-race win streak. “The next one is mine.”

Chris Ulrich started last, pitting after he lost his right knee puck–critical to save front-end slides in Turn One–on the warm-up lap, then rolling back out onto the track moments before the start, stopping well behind the grid, and finished 11th, almost side-by-side with 10th-place Brian Stokes. Local hero Robert Jensen ran fourth early-on but DNF with a transmission failure.

Results
AMA Superstock
Brainerd International Raceway
Brainerd, Minnesota
June 29
13 laps

1. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, Michelin
2. Josh Hayes, Suzuki, Dunlop, -0.143 second
3. Vicent Haskovec, Suzuki, Pirelli, -2.537
4. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, Pirelli, -15.260
5. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, Dunlop, -15.929
6. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, Dunlop, -16.292
7. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, Pirelli, -17.064
8. John Dugan, Suzuki, Dunlop, -19.560
9. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, Dunlop, -21.470
10. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, Pirelli, -28.208
11. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, Michelin, -28.292
12. Jake Holden, Suzuki, Dunlop, -31.995
13. Steve Atlas, Suzuki, Michelin, -37.376
14. JJ Roetlin, Suzuki, Dunlop, -37.505
15. Alex Gobert, Honda, Dunlop, -38.898
16. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, -54.635
17. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, -58.827
18. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, -58.958
19. Hawk Mazzotta, Suzuki, -59.311
20. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, -74.600
21. David Bell, Suzuki, -90.907
22. Matt Malterer, Suzuki, -90.926
23. Eric Dooyema, Suzuki, -107.213
24. James Kerker, Honda, -129.683
25. Jessica Zalusky, Suzuki, -1 lap
26. Michael Kosta, Suzuki, -1 lap
27. Chris Peris, Honda, -5 laps
28. Robert Jensen, Suzuki, -9 laps, DNF, mechanical
29. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, -10 laps, DNF, crash

Superstock Series Point Standings
After 7 of 11 races
1. Haskovec, 204 points
2. Tommy Hayden, 195
3. Josh Hayes, 190
4. Adam Fergusson, 177
5. Tony Meiring, 169
6. Jason DiSalvo, 169
7. Opie Caylor, 162
8. Mike Ciccotto, 145
9. Jimmy Moore, 142
10. Steve Rapp, 125
11. John Haner, 119
12. Chris Ulrich, 113
13. JJ Roetlin, 85
14. Brian Stokes, 80
15. Jordan Szoke, 76
16. Matt Furtek, 72
17. Jake Holden, 62
18. John Dugan, 59
19. Tom Wertman, 56
20. Hawk Mazzotta, 55

Note: The Superstock race was moved to after the Live TV window for the Superbike race, due to a rain delay earlier in the day.

More, from a press release issued by Team Valvoline EMGO Suzuki:

RAPP VICTORIOUS AGAIN IN BRAINERD SUPERSTOCK

Valvoline EMGO Suzuki’s Steve Rapp won his second consecutive Suzuki Genuine Parts Superstock race on Sunday, emerging victorious after a race-long battle on the 3.0 mile Minnesota circuit. Rapp, a former series runner-up, won the 13 lap final by a scant 0.143 seconds. It was quite a follow-up to his Elkhart Lake win just two weeks ago.

“That’s like almost my whole entire AMA win total in two weekends!” laughed Rapp, who has in fact doubled his Superstock win total in the past month. “It was awesome. I knew it would be a tough race, and I was prepared for a battle every lap, every single corner. And it turned out that way.” Rapp not only had to race the competition, he also was forced to fight the local wildlife. A heard of seagulls obstructed the lead pack at the end of the race, nearly causing several of the lead riders to crash.

After being at the top of the time sheets most of the weekend, Rapp used his Michelin tires to make a late charge. “The team is really fantastic, and I think working with them has really helped my riding. The results are proving that.”

Chris Ulrich finished eleventh in the Superstock final despite being the last man to leave the grid after an equipment problem caused some pre-race drama. “I lost my knee puck,” Ulrich said. “I didn’t really know what to do, since I use my knee for feel more than most riders. By the time we had everything sorted out, the field had gotten the green light. I feel great for the team because Steve won again, but I wish my race had gone differently because of all the progress we’ve made lately.

“I guess the only thing you can do is chalk it up to bad luck. If I had to do it all over again, I would have just raced,” commented the second generation competitor. “Despite all that, I built a lot of confidence over the weekend. Passing guys in the race, making a few set-up changes on the bike, getting my shoulder a little healthier, it all helped me become a confident rider again. I’m ready to go to Laguna Seca, a race I won two years ago. I wish it was tomorrow.”

The team’s third rider, Matt Furtek, crashed out of Sunday’s Superstock final.

A rain delay early Sunday afternoon caused the Superstock race to be rescheduled to accommodate TV schedules, and Rapp elected to concentrate on the Superstock feature.

The team will race next at Laguna Seca, July 10-13.

Sunday Morning Practice Times From Brainerd

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

600cc Supersport
1. Damon Buckmaster, Yamaha, 1:40.303
2. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 1:40.353
3. Miguel Duhamel, Honda, 1:40.465
4. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha, 1:40.507
5. Jake Zemke, Honda, 1:40.577
6. Ben Spies, Suzuki, 1:40.656
7. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 1:40.821
8. Alex Gobert, Honda, 1:41.021
9. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 1:41.153
10. Robert Jensen, Yamaha, 1:41.226
11. Jamie Stauffer, Suzuki, 1:41.723
12. Roger Lee Hayden, 1:41.798
13. Marty Craggill, 1:42.012
14. Larry Pegram, Honda, 1:42.758
15. Jason Curtis, Honda, 1:42.975
16. Chris Peris, Honda, 1:43.302
17. Gary Carter, Yamaha, 1:44.619
18. Jason Hobbs, Yamaha, 1:44.828
19. Chris Rankin, Honda, 1:44.834
20. Giovanni Rojas, Yamaha, 1:45.642
21. Dirk Sanchez, Kawasaki, 1:46.076
22. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, 1:46.753
23. Bradley Frey, Yamaha, 1:47.421
24. Hector Romero, Yamaha, 1:48.423
25. Dr. Jeff Purk, Suzuki, 1:48.983
26. Steven Skoog, Kawasaki, 1:49.799
27. Gordy Halsey, Yamaha, 1:49.972
28. Christopher Flores, Suzuki, 1:51.136
29. Tim Mitchell, Yamaha, 1:51.543
30. Jessica Zalusky, Yamaha, 1:51.568
31. David Guy, Suzuki, 1:51.808
32. Mike Petersen, Yamaha, 1:52.041
33. Darby Brauning, Yamaha, 1:52.041
34. Peter Bohlig, Suzuki, 1:54.263




250cc Grand Prix
1. Rich Oliver, Yamaha, 1:41.056
2. Chuck Sorensen, Aprilia, 1:41.360
3. Simon Turner, Honda, 1:44.549
4. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha, 1:45.775
5. Ed Sorbo, Yamaha, 1:46.660
6. Chris Pyles, Honda, 1:46.837
7. Greg Esser, Honda, 1:48.081
8. John France, Honda, 1:48.542
9. Barrett Long, Yamaha, 1:49.012
10. Sean Wray, Yamaha, 1:49.237
11. Ed Marchini, Yamaha, 1:49.402
12. Sean McNew, Honda, 1:49.555
13. Steve Scott, Yamaha, 1:49.589
14. Sandy Noce, Yamaha, 1:50.646
15. Shawn Murray, Honda, 1:50.774
16. Glen Christianson, Yamaha, 1:51.772
17. Mark Stiles, Yamaha, 1:51.920
18. Sohn Wehseler, Yamaha, 1:52.391
19. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:52.835
20. Stephen Bowline, Honda, 1:52.886
21. Jeff Japs, Yamaha, 1:54.910
22. Justin Long, Yamaha, 1:56.468
23. Colin Jensen, Aprilia, 1:57.977




750cc Superstock
1. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 1:39.731
2. Josh Hayes, Suzuki, 1:40.032
3. Robert Jensen, Suzuki, 1:40.303
4. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki, 1:40.324
5. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 1:40.636
6. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 1:40.667
7. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:41.178
8. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, 1:41.204
9. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, 1:41.336
10. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, 1:41 612
11. Jamie Stauffer, Suzuki, 1:41.782
12. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 1:41.865
13. Jake Holden, Suzuki, 1:42.155
14. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, 1:42.726
15. Steve Atlas, Suzuki, 1:42.886
16. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:43.540
17. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, 1:44.103
18. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, 1:44.640
19. Hawk Mazzotta, Suzuki, 1:44.882
20. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, 1:44.994
21. John Dugan, Suzuki, 1:45.097
22. David Bell, Suzuki, 1:47.434
23. Matt Malterer, Suzuki, 1:48.225
24. Eric Dooyema, Suzuki, 1:48.230
25. Jessica Zalusky, Suzuki, 1:48.283
26. James Kerker, Honda, 1:48.781
27. Michael Kosta, Suzuki, 1:50.423
28. Jason Peters, Suzuki, 1:58.792


Superbike
1. Mat Mladin, Suzuki, 1:35.705
2. Aaron Yates, Suzuki, 1:36.559
3. Kurtis Roberts, Honda, 1:36.605
4. Eric Bostrom, Kawasaki, 1:36.911
5. Ben Bostrom, Honda, 1:36.964
6. Miguel Duhamel, Honda, 1:37.253
7. Giovanni Bussei, Ducati, 1:37.327
8. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki, 1:38.747
9. Jordan Szoke, Suzuki, 1:38.485
10. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 1:39.631
11. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:39.708
12. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki, 1:39.818
13. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:40.488
14. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:40.650
15. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, 1:41.015
16. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, 1:41.248
17. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, 1:41.538
18. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, 1:41.544
19. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:42.525
20. Chris Voelkler, Ducati, 1:42.533
21. Wes Good, Suzuki, 1:42.700
22. David Duprey, Suzuki, 1:42.996
23. John Dugan, Suzuki, 1:43.028
24. Scott Jensen, Suzuki, 1:43.047
25. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, 1:43.311
26. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, 1:43.413
27. Dean Mizdal, Suzuki, 1:43.659
28. Rob Christman, Suzuki, 1:43.667
29. Monte Nichols, Suzuki, 1:43.945
30. Jason Knupp, Suzuki, 1:44.146
31. Dr. Jeff Purk, Suzuki, 1:44.343
32. Kevin Lehman, Yamaha, 1:44.498
33. JJ Roetlin, Suzuki, 1:44.587
34. Paul Heinen, Yamaha, 1:45.292
35. Kevin Hanson, Suzuki, 1:45.656
36. Roger Hendricks, Suzuki, 1:46.370
37. Brian Boyd, Suzuki, 1:49.442



Updated Post: Acree, Harwell, Bilansky, Eric Wood Win Formula USA Races At VIR

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Lee Acree, Scott Harwell, Dan Bilansky and Eric Wood each won a Formula USA feature event Sunday at Virginia International Raceway in Alton, Virginia.

Triad Powersports’ Acree won the twice-red-flagged, 28-lap Sportbike main event on his new, Pirelli-sponsored Yamaha YZF-R6. Bettencourts/Argo Cycle’s Jeff Wood chased Acree the entire race, but when victory seemed out of his grasp, Jeff Wood began short-shifting his Honda CBR600RR to ensure that he finished the race with enough fuel to complete his mandatory, post-race dyno run. Kneedraggers.com Yamaha’s Matt Wait, who rode in pain due to a two-week-old broken shoulder blade, was happy to finish several seconds back in third.

The Sportbike race was stopped first when Eric Wood crashed his Kosco Buell in VIR’s turn 16. Wood’s Buell slid back across the track at turn 17 and knocked Andrew Nelson off his Z Tech Cycle Honda CBR600RR.

Eric Wood and Nelson were running fourth and fifth, respectively, in the lead pack at the time of their crashes.

Argo Cycles/Bettencourt Suzuki’s Scott Greenwood crashed on the next lap in debris left on the track by the Wood/Nelson crash.

Greenwood was uninjured and, after repairs, was able to continue in the restarted race.

Eric Wood’s Buell was essentially broken in half, and he suffered relatively minor injuries to both feet and ankles that kept him from continuing on his back-up bike.

Nelson and his Honda were both too battered to return to action Sunday, but neither bike nor rider suffered permanent damage.

The 100-kilometer Sportbike race was stopped a second time, near the halfway point, when David Rose lost the rear of his Yamaha and spun out on the racetrack. Rose restarted the final leg of the race from the back of the grid but retired before the end due to damage from the crash.

Arclight Suzuki’s Dave Stanton finished fourth in Sportbike in front of Greenwood, Formula USA Grand National Championship point leader Nate Wait, Mike Hale (who was hampered by transmission troubles), Celtic Racing’s Des Conboy, Shaun Fields on his new Yamaha and Smith Brother Harley-Davidson’s Jason Smith.

Arclight Suzuki’s Scott Harwell, who is still nursing a two-week-old broken right hand, sat out the long Sportbike race to concentrate his energy on the Superbike final, and the strategy paid off. Harwell swapped the lead several times with former teammate Acree until the final run to the line. Harwell, riding a Superbike-spec GSX-R600, powered past Acree and his new Supersport-spec Yamaha in the last dash to the flag to take the win.

Acree finished second well ahead of second-row-starter Jeff Wood, Matt Wait, Stanton, Hooters Suzuki’s Michael Himmelsbach (who also rode at the front of the Sportbike field until a rearset broke mid-race), Greenwood, Hale, Conboy and Tripp Nobles on a Tilley Harley-Davidson/Buell X1 ex-AMA Pro Thunder machine.

Nobles and Kosco Harley-Davidson/Buell’s Dave Estok raced nose-to-tail for all 14 laps of the Thunderbike final with Nobles taking the checkered flag first by half a bikelength over Estok. However, Nobles and Estok each disregarded meatball flags calling them in for stop-and-go penalties during the race, and each were docked one lap in the final results.

Nobles had lined up in the wrong grid spot, and Estok had jumped the start.

Nobles and Estok each protested the scoring of the Thunderbike race, each protest was denied and each rider appealed.

The Thunderbike race win went to Hal’s Performance Advantage Buell’s Dan Bilansky over Cyco Cycles’ Derek Keyes and Hovey Performance Engines’ Steve Keener. Both Keyes and Keener rode 700cc Suzuki SV650 Superbikes.

Harding Harley-Davidson’s Bryan Bemisderfer ran with Nobles and Estok early-on but retired while running third when his fuel tank overflow catch bottle spilled, causing smoke and motovating officials to give Bemisderfer a black flag.

Earlier in the day, Woodcraft/Barden Bearing’s Eric Wood won the Expert Unlimited Grand Prix race on his Dunlop-equipped Suzuki GSX-R750. Wood won the 14-lap race by 16 seconds.

Joe Spina and Scott Carpenter raced for second in Expert Unlimited Grand Prix until Carpenter got pinched off by a slower rider late in the race. Spina took the runner-up position with Carpenter salvaging third.

Euro Shop of Waco’s 16-year-old Ryan Andrews rode his Aprilia RS125R to victory in the 14-lap USGPRU final over NESBA.com’s Brian Kcraget and Kneedraggers.com’s Scott Moxey.

Race Results:

Sportbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha YZF-R6, 28 laps
2. Jeff Wood, Honda CBR600RR
3. Matt Wait, Yamaha YZF-R6
4. David Stanton, Suzuki GSX-R600
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki GSX-R600
6. Nate Wait, Kawasaki ZX-6R
7. Mike Hale, Yamaha YZF-R6
8. Des Conboy, Suzuki GSX-R600
9. Shaun Fields, Yamaha YZF-R6
10. Jason Smith, Kawasaki ZX-6RR

13. David Rose, Yamaha YZF-R6, -7 laps, DNF, mechanical
14. Brett Champagne, Honda CBR600RR, -15 laps, DNF, crash

16. Chad Simons, Yamaha YZF-R6, -15 laps, DNF, crash
17. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki GSX-R600, -16 laps, DNF, mechanical

19. Nicky Cummings, Honda CBR600RR, -19 laps, DNF, crash

22. Eric Wood, Buell XB9R, -23 laps, DNF, crash
23. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR600RR, -23 laps, DNF, crash

Sportbike Point Standings:

1. Jeff Wood, 97 points
2. Greenwood, 82 points
3. Matt Wait, 62 points
4. Conboy, 52 points
5. Nate Wait/Stanton, TIE, 33 points
7. Robert Jensen/Acree, TIE, 26 points
9. Harwell/Smith, TIE, 20 points

Superbike:

1. Scott Harwell, Suzuki GSX-R600, 14 laps
2. Lee Acree, Yamaha YZF-R6
3. Jeff Wood, Honda CBR600RR
4. Matt Wait, Yamaha YZF-R6
5. David Stanton, Suzuki GSX-R600
6. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki GSX-R600
7. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki GSX-R600
8. Mike Hale, Yamaha YZF-R6
9. Des Conboy, Suzuki GSX-R600
10. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1
11. Dave Ebben, Suzuki GSX-R600
12. Shaun Fields, Yamaha YZF-R6
13. Jason Smith, Kawasaki ZX-6RR
14. Ryan Andrews, Yamaha YZF-R6
15. Marcus Winfree, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap
16. Adam Vella, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap
17. John Lemak, Suzuki GSX-R600, -5 laps, DNF

Superbike Point Standings:

1. Matt Wait, 64 points
2. Jeff Wood, 63 points
3. Harwell, 61 points
4. Greenwood, 46 points
5. Conboy, 38 points
6. Acree, 28 points
7. Himmelsbach, 24 points
8. Robert Jensen, 20 points
9. Stanton, 19 points
10. Craig Connell, 16 points

Thunderbike:

1. Dan Bilansky, Buell XB9R, 14 laps
2. Derek Keyes, Suzuki SV700
3. Steve Keener, Suzuki SV700
4. Ray Bowman, Suzuki GSX-R750
5. Ray Silika, Suzuki SV650
6. Walt Sipp, Buell X1
7. Arthur Wagner, Honda CBR600F2
8. Jeff Johnson, Buell X1
9. Joseph Rozinski, Buell X1
10. David White, Suzuki SV650
11. Nate Kern, BMW R1100S
12. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1, -1 lap
13. Dave Estok, Buell XB9R, -1 lap
14. Jeff Harding, Buell X1, -1 lap
15. Greg Avello, Buell XB9R, -1 lap
16. Rhiannon Lucente, Honda CBR600F2, -1 lap
17. Jason Rice, Suzuki SV650, -2 laps
18. Patrick Wakefield, Buell X1, -2 laps
19. Sam Rozynski, Buell X1, -4 laps
20. Randy Rega, Suzuki SV650, -5 laps
21. Bryan Bemisderfer, Buell X1, -6 laps, DNF, mechanical
22. Darren Danilowicz, Suzuki SV650, -7 laps, DNF, crash

24. Dave Yaakov, Suzuki SV650, -14 laps, DNF, crash

Thunderbike Point Standings:

1. Estok, 67 points
2. Bemisderfer, 44 points
3. Bilansky, 41 points
4. Wagner, 39 points
5. Rozynski, 36 points
6. Keyes, 31 points
7. Johnson, 27 points
8. Ed Key/Bowman, TIE, 25 points
10. Rick Doucette, 21 points

Expert Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R750, 14 laps
2. Joe Spina, Suzuki GSX-R750
3. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki GSX-R750
4. John McGarity, Suzuki GSX-R1000
5. Russell Masecar, Suzuki GSX-R1000
6. Arthur Wagner, Suzuki GSX-R750
7. Thomas Eckfeldt, Ducati 996
8. Joe Ribeiro, Suzuki GSX-R750
9. Jason Moss, Yamaha YZF-R1
10. Mark Morgan, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap

15. Chris Rankin of Maryland, Suzuki GSX-R750, -10 laps, DNF, crash
16. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR954RR, -10 laps, DNF

Expert Unlimited GP Point Standings:

1. Eric Wood, 52 points
2. Michael Barnes/Robert Jensen/Alex Barrera, TIE, 26 points
5. Wagner, 25 points
6. McGarity, 24 points
7. Brian Stokes/Eric Gulbransen/Shawn Conrad/Spina, TIE, 20 points

USGPRU 125cc Grand Prix:

1. Ryan Andrews, Aprilia, 14 laps
2. Brian Kcraget, Honda
3. Scott Moxey, Honda
4. Dale Greenwood, Honda
5. John Klaras, Honda
6. Reet Das, Honda
7. David Deggendorf, Honda
8. Frank Guadagnino, Honda, -1 lap
9. Samantha Cotter, Honda, -1 lap
10. Mark Johnson, Honda, -1 lap

Amateur Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Hector Jimenez, Honda CBR600
2. J. Michael Branson, Suzuki GSX-R750
3. Donny Kelley, Honda CBR600
4. Brian Logan, Yamaha YZF-R6
5. William Meyers, II, Kawasaki ZX-7
6. Ned Brown, Yamaha YZF-R6
7. Jason Lewis, Honda CBR600
8. Stephane Reynolds, Honda CBR600
9. Stuart Vernon, Yamaha YZF-R6
10. Geoff Gray, Honda 1000

Amateur Unlimited GP Point Standings:

1. Jimenez, 56 points
2. Meyers, 37 points
3. Henry Chin, 26 points
4. Mark Nelson/Kevin Ruopp, TIE, 25 points
6. Michael Shallcross, 21 points
7. Branson/David Loikits, TIE, 20 points
9. Bruce Villerup, 17 points
10. Kelley/Robert Collins/Brian Shaw, TIE, 16 points

More, from a press release issued by Proforma:

LEE ACREE WINS FORMULA USA SPORTBIKE RACE AT VIRGINIA

Lee Acree won the feature 28-lap Sportbike event during round four of the Formula USA National Championship Series at Virginia International Raceway, and he also finished a close second to Scott Harwell in the Superbike event that followed. Lee was the fastest qualifier in both classes after qualifying sessions held Sunday morning. Acree rode his nearly-stock Triad Powersport-sponsored 2003 Yamaha R6 on Pirelli DOT race tires in both events.

The Sportbike event was red-flagged twice for incidents on the VIR course. Acree ran with early leader Jeff Wood after the original and first re-starts. “I was content to let Jeff lead,” said Acree. “I didn’t want to push too hard early on.” On the second re-start, Acree led the entire race, except once when Wood passed in turn four and Acree re-passed immediately in turn six. After that, Lee pulled out to win by almost five seconds at the end. Acree’s bike made 110.4 horsepower in the mandatory post-race inspection, safely within the 115 horsepower limit for the class.

In the 14-lap Superbike race, Acree led most of the laps across the finish line, but he knew it was going to be difficult to shake Scott Harwell. “On the last lap, I went into turn one first,” said Acree. “Scott passed me back, then we caught a lapper going under the bridge (turn seven). I passed Scott going into the rollercoaster, but he followed me through the last few corners and passed me right before start-finish.

“This new Yamaha is incredible,” said Acree after both races. “I hadn’t even started it before last Thursday. The motor is still bone-stock, I put on the Graves pipe and the Dynojet box. Ohlins installed a standard fork kit last Monday and I put one of their shocks on it. Even the brake lines are stock, but the Vesrah pads were really good. This all came together in a very short amount of time, my sponsors really came through with getting me product in a hurry.”

More, from a press release issued by USGPRU:

In a race as hot as the Virginia weather, Ryan Andrews set an incredible pace aboard his Aprilia and held off Brian Kcraget for the win in the USGPRU 125cc race at VIR. Andrews got a great start from pole position with Kcraget hounding him for most of the race. As the laps wound down Ryan used lappers to his advantage and pushed the pace faster than his qualifying time to secure the win. Scott Moxey was close to the leaders early but ended up running a lonely race for third ahead of Dale Greenwood. The battle for 5th was contested until the end with John Klaras able to hold off Reet Das and David Deggendorf to take the position.

The USGRPU race was run in conjunction with the F-USA “Festival of Speed” at VIR.

USGRPU is sponsored by: CCS/F-USA, Motion Pro, Braking USA, Silkolene, VP fuels, EBC, GPStar, Bridgestone tires, and Hjelm Motorsports.

For more information, visit our website at www.USGPRU.org.

Updated Post: Where To Write Moore And Connell

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Jimmy Moore remains hospitalized in Minneapolis following surgery, while Craig Connell has been released from a local hospital and plans to fly to San Jose, California today to see Dr. Art Ting, who will operate on Connell’s broken upper arm Monday.

Moore crashed in turn one during Thursday practice at Brainerd International Raceway, slid about 230 yards over wet grass and hit a tree, rupturing his spleen, breaking an upper arm and fracturing a hip.

Connell crashed Friday during Formula Xtreme qualifying, breaking his arm.

“I just remember going into turn three and
thinking, ‘Oh, shit!’ said Connell. “Something had definitely gone wrong. From that point I just tried to work out where I was going to go and what I was going to do. I lost consciousness for about three minutes according to the medical personnel, but the CAT scan said everything was apparently OK. I broke my right humerus (upper arm) right in the middle with about 1 cm of displacement. The arm has been put back in place now. I’m flying out this afternoon to California. Dr. Arthur Ting is going to see me at my hotel tomorrow night and look at the X-rays, then he’s going to operate at 4:00 p.m. on Monday.”

Early reports said Connell lost an axel, but while team manager Anna Johnston said it was definitely a mechanical problem, it was unclear what went wrong. “It lost a lot of parts in the accident, and we’re piecing it together now. When we find out what went wrong, we’ll issue a press release.”



Jimmy Moore
c/o Morgan Broadhead
American Suzuki Motor Corp.
PO Box 1100
Brea, CA 92822-1100
e-mail [email protected]

Craig Connell
c/o Annandale Racing
PO Box 529
Cresson, TX 76035
e-mail [email protected].




Meanwhile, Ty Howard is hanging out with injury-hit Annandale Racing, rolling around the garage area on a mechanic’s chair. Howard broke his hip at Pikes Peak and underwent surgery in Colorado before flying home to Texas. Howard said he used crutches until about two weeks ago.


Acree Takes Formula USA Sportbike, Superbike Pole Positions At VIR, Estok On Thunderbike Pole

0

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Formula USA Qualifying Results:

Sportbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha, 1:30.079*
2. Jeff Wood, Honda, 1:30.571
3. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:30.929
4. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki, 1:31.222
5. David Rose, Yamaha, 1:31.407
6. Andrew Nelson, Honda, 1:31.564
7. Eric Wood, Buell, 1:31.576
8. Matt Wait, Yamaha, 1:31.707
9. Chris Rankin of Maryland, Suzuki, 1:31.781
10. Nate Wait, Kawasaki, 1:31.909
11. Scott Harwell, Suzuki, 1:31.917
12. Mike Hale, Yamaha, 1:32.076
13. Brett Champagne, Honda, 1:32.437
14. Nicky Cummings, Honda, 1:32.604
15. Dave Stanton, Suzuki, 1:32.918
16. Shaun Fields, Yamaha, 1:33.260
17. Jason Smith, Kawasaki, 1:33.504
18. Trey Vonce, Suzuki, 1:34.873
19. John Lemak, Suzuki, 1:36.268
20. Adrian Jones, Yamaha, 1:36.272

*New lap record

Des Conboy, Suzuki, 1:34.629, DQ, went behind pit wall

Superbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha, 1:30.078
2. Scott Harwell, Suzuki, 1:30.436
3. Andrew Nelson, Honda, 1:31.154
4. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:31.161
5. Mike Hale, Yamaha, 1:31.524
6. Jeff Wood, Honda, 1:31.763
7. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki, 1:31.823
8. Dave Stanton, Suzuki, 1:31.840
9. Matt Wait, Yamaha, 1:32.004
10. Dave Ebben, Suzuki, 1:32.483
11. Tripp Nobles, Buell, 1:32.591
12. Brett Champagne, Honda, 1:32.675
13. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:32.937
14. Shaun Fields, Yamaha, 1:33.979
15. Des Conboy, Suzuki, 1:35.098
16. Ryan Andrews, Yamaha, 1:35.367
17. John Lemak, Suzuki, 1:36.623
18. Marcus Winfree, Suzuki, 1:37.877
19. Jason Smith, Kawasaki, 1:40.016
20. Adam Vella, Suzuki, 1:41.979

Thunderbike:

1. Dave Estok, Buell XB9R, 1:33.699*
2. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1, 1:33.699
3. Bryan Bemisderfer, Buell X1, 1:35.915
4. Dan Bilansky, Buell XB9R, 1:36.485
5. Dan Danilowilz, Suzuki SV650, 1:36.679
6. Dave Yaakov, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.007
7. Steve Keener, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.288
8. Jeff Johnson, Buell X1, 1:37.514
9. Derek Keyes, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.699
10. R. Silika, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.907
11. Joseph Rozynski, Buell X1, 1:38.182
12. Randy Rega, Suzuki SV650, 1:38.258
13. Jason Rice, Suzuki SV650, 1:38.401
14. Arthur Wagner, Honda CBR600F2, 1:38.684
15. Nate Kern, BMW R1100S, 1:39.005
16. Darren James, Buell X1, 1:39.291
17. David White, Suzuki SV650, 1:40.107
18. Walt Sipp, Buell X1, 1:40.362
19. Sam Rozynski, Buell X1, 1:40.982
20. Jeff Harding, Buell X1, 1:43.119

*Awarded pole position based on second-fastest lap time.

Expert Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:30.577
2. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR954RR, 1:31.290
3. Joseph Spina, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:31.644
4. Chris Greer, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:32.799
5. Tim Bemisderfer, Honda CBR954RR, 1:33.931
6. Chris Rankin, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:34.354
7. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:34.527
8. Trevor Prater, Yamaha YZF-R1, 1:34.787
9. Thomas Eckfeldt, Ducati 996, 1:34.936
10. Russell Masecar, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:35.045

USGPRU 125cc Grand Prix:

1. Ryan Andrews, Aprilia, 1:35.021
2. Brian Kcraget, Honda, 1:35.733
3. Scott Moxey, Honda, 1:37.031
4. Dale Greenwood, Honda, 1:38.551
5. J. Laras, 1:40.361
6. David Deggendorf, Honda, 1:40.783
7. Reet Das, Honda, 1:42.218
8. Mark Johnson, Honda, 1:43.635
9. Joseph Melchionda, 1:44.405
10. Samantha Cotter, Honda, 1:46.161

More Team Press Releases From Brainerd

From a press release issued by Eric Bostrom’s publicist:

Boss still leading the points

After a consistent ride in Minnesota that saw Eric Bostrom conserve his tires while others experienced problems with theirs, the “Boss” finds himself still leading the Chevy Trucks AMA Superbike Championship.

“That’s just luck, huh? Because in all honesty, we really struggled at Brainerd. I tried hard all weekend, the bike ran well, but we just couldn’t come to a compromise with the set-up. I was just really slow. I got a good start and really tried to put my head down, but I was just a roadblock. It sucks because we tried so hard but we just kept going backwards. Ultimately I just tried to conserve my tires and get as many points as I could comfortably earn.”

When asked how it felt to be leading the Superbike championship after a second consecutive weekend, Eric’s reply was clearly that of a racer. “To be honest, it’s a little bit hollow. If we were winning races it would feel a lot better. I’m not happy. I’d much rather win most of the races and not win the championship than drone along like this.”

Fortunately for Eric, he will have the opportunity in two weeks to win another race at his ‘home’ track, Laguna Seca, where he has clearly been the man to beat for the past two years. To add a little spice to the special weekend, Eric will unveil a special set of racing leathers. The suit is being pieced together in Italy at this very moment, and was done with the creative assistance and support of Airtrix and Alpinestars. So far, the designs have exceeded all expectations for the “WOW” factor.

“Not that I need any extra motivation, but I better win at Laguna with this suit! Chris (at www.Airtrix.com) came up with the design after we gave him our ideas. When I first saw the design I thought, wow, I don’t know if Kawasaki is going to let me run that! Because it was just so good that it was unreal. I can’t wait to see the thing in person. It’s definitely going to be pretty loud on my bike and won’t quite look like what everyone is used to seeing at the track. Which is a good thing, because I think it’ll be a breath of fresh air. It’ll be pretty incredible if Alpinestars is able to make it, because it looks pretty difficult to make. It’ll be a testament to their abilities. But even if it comes out half as good as the design, people are going to be talking about it. I definitely want to thank Kawasaki ahead of time for being open-minded enough let me wear it. It’s going to bring such attention to my team, wait and see.”

From a press release issued by American Honda:

AMA/Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship: Round 11
Crowd: 15,000
Temperature: 17 degrees C
Weather: Cloudy, overcast

Double Podium for American Honda

American Honda’s Miguel DuHamel and Erion Honda’s Kurtis Roberts fought to the final corner with both earning a spot on the podium at Brainerd International Raceway, round 11 of the AMA/Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship.

It was DuHamel’s second podium of the day, the winningest rider in AMA Superbike and Supersport history adding to his legend by winning a hard fought Pro Honda Oils Supersport race on the ultra high speed three-mile circuit.

“My Honda CBR600RR is working as good almost as good, I think as (Valentino) Rossi’s bike in GP,” DuHamel said after winning his class leading 41st Supersport race, then added, “but maybe not as fast.”

On Saturday, Erion Honda’s Jake Zemke used the top speed advantage of his Honda CBR954RR to race to a thrilling Formula Xtreme win in record time.

“Going down the front straightaway the thing was just a bullet,” Zemke said after breaking Kurtis Roberts’ race record and winning his first race in nearly a year. “It was the fastest thing I’ve been on by far.”

The Superbike fight was so intense that DuHamel felt obliged to apologize to Roberts about the pass he made on the final lap. Close as it was, it secured his second place, with Roberts finishing third.

American Honda’s Ben Bostrom was in fourth place and moving up to challenge his teammates when he had a frightening rear tire failure in the fastest part of the course, just as he was bending it into the full throttle first turn. The former dirt tracker made a spectacular save, then quickly returned to the pits where his crew, led by crew chief Merlyn Plumlee, changed tires and sent him back out. He finished 12th.

The Honda trio remains together in the championship point standings, Roberts fourth, Bostrom fifth, and DuHamel sixth after 11 of 18 races.

The race was won by Suzuki’s Aaron Yates. Yates was being pressured by teammate Mat Mladin when Mladin had a tire failure similar to Bostrom’s. He also pitted, re-joining the race to finish seventh.

Miguel DuHamel, Second Place
“I tried to get (Roberts) in one, can’t do it. Got a run on him coming out of two and we were side by side and I braked pretty deep and he went deeper. He went a little wide and I was trying to keep it in tight. I figured he was going to go a little wide. I tried to squeeze in underneath him. I thought I left him enough room. We talked a little bit afterward and he said I really pinched him off on the track. I was sliding coming out of there and I might have miscalculated it. I really thought I had a clean pass. I thought I left him enough room.”

Kurtis Roberts, Third Place
“I was driving out of turn three. Unfortunately I was a little wide and Miguel was underneath. I was probably a foot or so ahead of him. He slid into me. I had to get out of the throttle. It’s racing. One thing about racing is that there’s a race in a couple of weeks and you know who your teammates are. We’ll get through these and go on to Laguna Seca and hopefully pull out one because this second and third is getting old.”

Ben Bostrom, 12th Place
“It was the scariest thing. coming out of one full stick, right as you throw it down a gear and lean it in. It was like jumping off the ground. I fully started dirt tracking off the corner waiting for that thing to explode. I nearly highsided myself out of two. That was a moment. I don’t think I ever had a tire do that before, putting 26 laps on one of those tires, 20 plus on the next tire and it was fine. The tire guys said they were shaving some tires, to reduce heat in the center of the tire. So we said, let’s play it safe. I think it’s pick of the litter.”

Superbike:
1. Aaron Yates (Suzuki)
2. Miguel DuHamel (Honda)
3. Kurtis Roberts (Honda)
4. Eric Bostrom (Kawasaki)
5. Giovanni Bussei (Ducati)
6. Jason Pridmore (Suzuki)
7. Mat Mladin (Suzuki)
8. Jordan Szoke (Suzuki)
9. Shawn Higbee (Suzuki)
10. Vincent Haskovec (Suzuki)
11. Michael Barnes (Suzuki)
12. Ben Bostrom (Honda)

Championship Standings:
1. Eric Bostrom (321)
2. Mat Mladin (318)
3. Aaron Yates (313)
4. Kurtis Roberts (301)
5. Ben Bostrom (293)
6. Miguel DuHamel 9278)
7. Shawn Higbee (229)
8. Jason Pridmore (225)
9. Larry Pegram (211)
10. Vincent Haskovec (180)

More, from a press release issued by 1-888-FASTLAP:

1-888-FASTLAP RIDERS FINISH IN TOP 10 IN AMA SUPERSTOCK

BRAINERD, Minn.- 1-888-FASTLAP riders Opie Caylor and Brian Stokes both finished in the top ten during the AMA’s Genuine Suzuki Accessories Superstock race held at Brainerd International Raceway on Sunday, June 29.

Caylor finished seventh, despite having to run the 13-lap race on his backup Suzuki GSX-R750. Following Superstock qualifying the day before the race, Caylor went out in Superbike qualifying, where he continued to fine-tune his bike for the upcoming race. Several laps into the session, however, Caylor missed a shift and bent a valve in the motor of his primary bike.

“I jumped on the backup bike and got it prepared. We got it set up as close as we could to the A bike, but we just couldn’t get the chassis to feel like the bike I qualified on, so I struggled a bit in the race,” said Caylor.

The seventh place finish was not as high as Caylor had hoped for, but it was a remarkable improvement over his performance at Brainerd in 2002, when he only finished 12th. His best lap time during the race, a 1:40.6, was two seconds faster than his best time last year.

Stokes earned his best AMA finish ever, riding the Team Embry Suzuki GSX-R750 to a tenth-place finish in Superstock. His previous best finish in the series was 16th.

“I was up to seventh off the start,” commented Stokes. “I got passed up the inside a couple of times. I started running down a group of riders ahead of me, but I came into the bus stop a little too hot and lost some ground. I was happy to get a tenth, especially at a track I had never been to. I’m looking forward to heading to Laguna Seca with Team Embry, where I hope to get closer to the podium.”

Stokes also competed in the Superbike race, which was held prior to the Superstock event. He worked his way up to a finish of 13th, riding a Suzuki GSX-R750 Superbike.

More, from a press release issued by Corona Extra Suzuki:

MISFORTUNE COMES IN THREES FOR CORONA EXTRA SUZUKI AT BRAINERD AMA SUPERBIKE EVENT

So the saying goes; “When it rains it pours!” And once again the weather contributed to the worst of the bad luck for Corona Extra Suzuki riders at Brainerd International Raceway.

Corona Extra Suzuki Champion Jimmy Moore suffered a broken arm along, other fractures and an injury to his spleen in a freak accident during a blustery Superstock practice on Thursday. A strong gust of wind took out the front wheel of his bike as he entered the 170+ mile per hour turn one. Jimmy slid almost 230 yards before hitting a tree. From his hospital bed Jimmy said; “I came down the straight (1 mile long) tached out in top gear and into (turn) one. Then just as I passed the line of trees I felt this big gust of wind. It just lifted the front end washed it out. I remember sliding for ever and seeing this wood coming to meet me!” Jimmy was Medevac’d to a hospital in Minneapolis where he is in stable condition. All at Corona Extra Suzuki wish Jimmy a speedy recovery.

In the Formula Extreme race, Adam Fergusson, starting from the third row of the grid finished 9th. A disappointed Fergusson said; ” I just couldn’t get comfortable. The bike was working OK but I just couldn’t get into the corners hot enough. I could put together a good lap or two as fast as the leaders but never string them together. I just don’t know what it was!” Fergusson is currently 5th in the Formula Extreme championship.

A wet track after rain showers just dried in time for the Superbike event. Jordan Szoke, who qualified 10th, got a good start but on lap two the gremlins struck, going into turn one he found his right knee slider had gone, slowing his progress. Jordan said; “BIR is so fast you get around without really putting your knee down hard to stabilize the bike”. Still Jordan gritted his teeth and holed his leathers to finish a good eighth. Szoke is currently 11th in the Superbike championship.

The Superstock race was rescheduled to follow the Superbike race due to the rain. Fergusson had qualified on the second row in fifth position, less than half a second off pole so everyone was hoping for a good finish. After a good start Adam went after the leaders and started to draw them in when suddenly he slowed dramatically. In a repeat of the Fontana event, the tab at the end of his gearshift had broken off though this time he did not hit anything! Adam struggled on using a combination of hand, toes and heel to change gear and finished in 20th position but gaining valuable points. He is currently fourth in the Genuine Suzuki Accessories SuperStock Championship.

Next race: Laguna Seca, CA., July 11-13, 2003. Look for Corona Extra Suzuki display race bikes at retail stores throughout the Monterey area during the month of July. This has been arranged by Corona in conjunction with Barton Beers and the local distributor to promote the Corona brand, race team and event.

CMRA Issues Official Statement On Split With CCS

From a press release issued by CMRA:

In a meeting held on June 7, 2003, the CMRA’s Board of Directors voted unanimously to return to Independent status after four years as a CCS affiliate. This decision has been explored extensively over the past two years in columns printed in the monthly newsletter, The Inside Line, and on the club’s message board. The decision was reached after a number of meetings with CCS failed to resolve issues that the CMRA had raised. There are certainly few people involved in the sport of Amateur road racing who are as committed to the advancement of the sport as CCS’ Kevin Elliott. Hopefully we will find an opportunity for our two organizations to participate on the racetrack at some point in the future.

The return to Independent status comes after a series of accomplishments by the CMRA over a two-year period. A new Club Secretary, Race Director and a new Editor for the newsletter have been hired, the conversion to GAP accounting reports accomplished, the establishment of the CMRA Hall of Fame (Colin Edwards and Kevin Schwantz were the first inductees), purchase of Airfence, repaving of Oak Hill Raceway, the purchase of a new AMB timing/scoring system and a cash contingency program that has grown by more than $50,000 are evidence that the club is strong and getting stronger. Race entries are at an all-time high and the CMRA’s development of a Motard series that reaches youngsters of ages 8 to 12 provides entry-level opportunities to get the next generations on the track.

The goal of the return to Independent status is to provide an even greater value to CMRA members and to the road racing community, in general.

Preliminary conversations with others in the club road racing business provide encouragement that there will greater flexibility in regards to out-of-region and end-of-the-season competition. It is the CMRA’s desire to see these kinds of reciprocal opportunities granted to amateur road racers regardless of affiliation. This requires a whole different way of thinking but change can be good and in this case, what is good for the rider is good for the sport. Further details on the rulebook for 2004 and the programs to be offered will be announced in the near future.

Brooks Gremmels
President, CMRA
CMRA #26



Emmett And Renegade Ducati Split

From a press release issued by Renegade Ducati, which competes in the British Superbike Championship:

RENEGADE ANNOUNCE EMMETT DEPARTURE

Team Renegade Ducati today announced that the team has parted company with Sean Emmett. Team Owner Mark Griffiths said, “I am disappointed that our professional relationship has come to an end, but due to irreconcilable differences we have gone our separate ways.”

Team Rider Leon Haslam has been upgraded from his participation in the British Supersport class to partner Michael Rutter and Nick Medd in spearheading the team’s challenge for the British Superbike title.

Title sponsors Red Bull will continue their association with the team and on a personal level with Sean Emmett.

Renegade Ducati wishes to place on record its appreciation of the contribution made by Sean Emmett during his time with the team and to offer its very best wishes for his future career.

Updated Post: CCS Boss Comments On CMRA Dropping CCS Affiliation

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc. CCS boss Kevin Elliott said he wonders if Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association (CMRA) club members had the opportunity to vote on their club dropping its CCS affiliation. Asked for his response to Texas-based CMRA’s announcement that it planned on dropping its CCS affiliation at the end of the 2003 season, Elliott said, “We wish them the best of luck on their future endeavors. “We feel we provided all services and everything promised under our sanction agreement. We saved them a huge amount of money on their insurance. We provided staff uniforms, printed their rulebooks, did their license renewal mailers and included the CMRA in all activities as all CCS regions.” Elliott added that the total amount of contingencies available to racers in the CMRA/CCS South Central region tripled from what it was before CMRA affiliated with CCS. “My only regret is that I don’t know if they did a membership vote. I believe they only did a Board of Directors vote,” Elliott said June 28 at Virginia International Raceway. Elliott said that he learned of CMRA’s intention to end its affiliation with CCS by reading it on Roadracingworld.com. See related post: 06/25/03 CMRA To Drop CCS Affiliation More, from readers: FIRST PERSON/OPINION Via e-mail As far as Mr. Elliot’s ponderings to the membership’s wants and desires, it was not put to a general vote. We (the CMRA) elect BOD (board of director) positions the same as we (Americans) elect congress, house and presidential candidates. By electing the people we deem best suited for the position we also entrust them to make decisions on our behalf that best suit us as a club or citizen. Does Mr. Elliot have a direct say in his taxes, local and national laws or his country’s foreign policy? No. He entrusts those decisions to others the same as the CMRA’s membership does to our elected BOD. You would have to be brain dead and not paying attention for the last year to not know this was a action being discussed and appraised by the BOD and membership at large. The fact that this action may have been a surprise to Mr. Elliot is a example of the reasoning behind the decision. He (CCS) knew of our dissatisfaction with the services being rendered for quite awhile and has done nothing but give lip service to remediate it. Thank you Emmett Dibble Rosharon, Texas I just wanted to reply to Kevin Elliot’s recent comments regarding the CMRA. This split has been widely and loudly discussed on our website’s bulletin board for over 3 months. In fact, I believe the discussion came from the membership, and not the BOD. I think I speak for most of the members when I say we have confidence in our BOD, and that this was not a sudden move, or ill-advised. I think the real issue, is why did the CCS not stage a National race in the CMRA area? WERA, in its attempt to save their franchise in the state, has held one each of the years it was involved in the Texas area (one year was in Louisiana). When we signed on board with CCS, I for one was very excited about the deal. We saw the potential for greatness CCS had, with its TV connections, to break a national series into the mainstream, and challenge the AMA monopoly. I for one, feel disappointed by the results of the last three years. Mr. Elliot talks about the services he provided, but he doesn’t seem to understand that all this was being taken care of by the CMRA long before he came on the scene. I for one, have STILL not gotten my rulebook. I don’t think a mailing service is what we paid over $20K for, anyway. As a member of one of the largest racing clubs in the U.S., I feel confident that racing will continue on the grand scale that it always has in Texas (no, I don’t live there), producing more National and World Champions along the way. I don’t think any of us have any ill will towards Mr. Elliot, or CCS; our association has been a good one, but now is the time to move on. Thanks for your time, you have a great magazine and website! Steve Creech CMRA #550 Minden, Louisiana

Oliver Wins 7th Straight AMA Pro 250cc GP Race

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

AMA 250c Grand Prix Results
Brainerd International Raceway
Brainerd, Minnesota
12 laps

1. Rich Oliver, Yamaha
2. Simon Turner, Honda, -22.132 seconds
3. Colin Jensen, Aprilia, -33.714
4. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha, -48.068
5. Chris Pyles, Honda, -58.349
6. Ed Marchini, Yamaha, -68.911
7. Sandy Noce, Yamaha, -72.016
8. Greg Esser, Honda, -72.256
9. John France, Honda, -83.117
10. Sean Wray, Yamaha, -100.405
11. Steve Scott, Yamaha, -100.732
12. Mark Stiles, Yamaha, -106.336
13. Shawn Murray, Honda, -111.142
14. Stephen Bowline, Honda, -1 lap
15. Glen Christianson, -1 lap
16. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, -1 lap
17. Sohn Wehseler, Yamaha, -1 lap
18. Justin Long, Yamaha, -1 lap
19. Sean McNew, Honda, -3 laps
20. Ed Sorbo, Yamaha, -3 laps, mechanical
21. Jeff Japs, Yamaha, -4 laps
22. Chuck Sorensen, Aprilia, -8 laps, DNF, mechanical
23. Barrett Long, Yamaha, -8 laps, DNF

Rapp Wins Superstock At Brainerd, Hayes Survives Bird Strike For Second

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Steve Rapp won his second straight AMA Superstock race, and Josh Hayes survived a 170-mph Turn One collision with a seagull and a resultant off-track excursion to finish second for the second straight race. And points leader Vincent Haskovec was again third.

Hayes showed up on the podium with a bird bone sticking straight out of the hump of his leathers, and the front of Haskovec’s bike was splattered with blood and guts.

Rapp said he ducked his head to miss the bird, which was one in a group of four or five which had landed on the track. Haskovec said after the post-race press conference that he wished cornerworkers had scared the birds away before the lead group arrived in the corner.

“Don’t even think about a triple,” said Haskovec, referring to Rapp’s two-race win streak. “The next one is mine.”

Chris Ulrich started last, pitting after he lost his right knee puck–critical to save front-end slides in Turn One–on the warm-up lap, then rolling back out onto the track moments before the start, stopping well behind the grid, and finished 11th, almost side-by-side with 10th-place Brian Stokes. Local hero Robert Jensen ran fourth early-on but DNF with a transmission failure.

Results
AMA Superstock
Brainerd International Raceway
Brainerd, Minnesota
June 29
13 laps

1. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, Michelin
2. Josh Hayes, Suzuki, Dunlop, -0.143 second
3. Vicent Haskovec, Suzuki, Pirelli, -2.537
4. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, Pirelli, -15.260
5. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, Dunlop, -15.929
6. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, Dunlop, -16.292
7. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, Pirelli, -17.064
8. John Dugan, Suzuki, Dunlop, -19.560
9. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, Dunlop, -21.470
10. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, Pirelli, -28.208
11. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, Michelin, -28.292
12. Jake Holden, Suzuki, Dunlop, -31.995
13. Steve Atlas, Suzuki, Michelin, -37.376
14. JJ Roetlin, Suzuki, Dunlop, -37.505
15. Alex Gobert, Honda, Dunlop, -38.898
16. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, -54.635
17. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, -58.827
18. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, -58.958
19. Hawk Mazzotta, Suzuki, -59.311
20. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, -74.600
21. David Bell, Suzuki, -90.907
22. Matt Malterer, Suzuki, -90.926
23. Eric Dooyema, Suzuki, -107.213
24. James Kerker, Honda, -129.683
25. Jessica Zalusky, Suzuki, -1 lap
26. Michael Kosta, Suzuki, -1 lap
27. Chris Peris, Honda, -5 laps
28. Robert Jensen, Suzuki, -9 laps, DNF, mechanical
29. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, -10 laps, DNF, crash

Superstock Series Point Standings
After 7 of 11 races
1. Haskovec, 204 points
2. Tommy Hayden, 195
3. Josh Hayes, 190
4. Adam Fergusson, 177
5. Tony Meiring, 169
6. Jason DiSalvo, 169
7. Opie Caylor, 162
8. Mike Ciccotto, 145
9. Jimmy Moore, 142
10. Steve Rapp, 125
11. John Haner, 119
12. Chris Ulrich, 113
13. JJ Roetlin, 85
14. Brian Stokes, 80
15. Jordan Szoke, 76
16. Matt Furtek, 72
17. Jake Holden, 62
18. John Dugan, 59
19. Tom Wertman, 56
20. Hawk Mazzotta, 55

Note: The Superstock race was moved to after the Live TV window for the Superbike race, due to a rain delay earlier in the day.

More, from a press release issued by Team Valvoline EMGO Suzuki:

RAPP VICTORIOUS AGAIN IN BRAINERD SUPERSTOCK

Valvoline EMGO Suzuki’s Steve Rapp won his second consecutive Suzuki Genuine Parts Superstock race on Sunday, emerging victorious after a race-long battle on the 3.0 mile Minnesota circuit. Rapp, a former series runner-up, won the 13 lap final by a scant 0.143 seconds. It was quite a follow-up to his Elkhart Lake win just two weeks ago.

“That’s like almost my whole entire AMA win total in two weekends!” laughed Rapp, who has in fact doubled his Superstock win total in the past month. “It was awesome. I knew it would be a tough race, and I was prepared for a battle every lap, every single corner. And it turned out that way.” Rapp not only had to race the competition, he also was forced to fight the local wildlife. A heard of seagulls obstructed the lead pack at the end of the race, nearly causing several of the lead riders to crash.

After being at the top of the time sheets most of the weekend, Rapp used his Michelin tires to make a late charge. “The team is really fantastic, and I think working with them has really helped my riding. The results are proving that.”

Chris Ulrich finished eleventh in the Superstock final despite being the last man to leave the grid after an equipment problem caused some pre-race drama. “I lost my knee puck,” Ulrich said. “I didn’t really know what to do, since I use my knee for feel more than most riders. By the time we had everything sorted out, the field had gotten the green light. I feel great for the team because Steve won again, but I wish my race had gone differently because of all the progress we’ve made lately.

“I guess the only thing you can do is chalk it up to bad luck. If I had to do it all over again, I would have just raced,” commented the second generation competitor. “Despite all that, I built a lot of confidence over the weekend. Passing guys in the race, making a few set-up changes on the bike, getting my shoulder a little healthier, it all helped me become a confident rider again. I’m ready to go to Laguna Seca, a race I won two years ago. I wish it was tomorrow.”

The team’s third rider, Matt Furtek, crashed out of Sunday’s Superstock final.

A rain delay early Sunday afternoon caused the Superstock race to be rescheduled to accommodate TV schedules, and Rapp elected to concentrate on the Superstock feature.

The team will race next at Laguna Seca, July 10-13.

Sunday Morning Practice Times From Brainerd

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

600cc Supersport
1. Damon Buckmaster, Yamaha, 1:40.303
2. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 1:40.353
3. Miguel Duhamel, Honda, 1:40.465
4. Jamie Hacking, Yamaha, 1:40.507
5. Jake Zemke, Honda, 1:40.577
6. Ben Spies, Suzuki, 1:40.656
7. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 1:40.821
8. Alex Gobert, Honda, 1:41.021
9. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 1:41.153
10. Robert Jensen, Yamaha, 1:41.226
11. Jamie Stauffer, Suzuki, 1:41.723
12. Roger Lee Hayden, 1:41.798
13. Marty Craggill, 1:42.012
14. Larry Pegram, Honda, 1:42.758
15. Jason Curtis, Honda, 1:42.975
16. Chris Peris, Honda, 1:43.302
17. Gary Carter, Yamaha, 1:44.619
18. Jason Hobbs, Yamaha, 1:44.828
19. Chris Rankin, Honda, 1:44.834
20. Giovanni Rojas, Yamaha, 1:45.642
21. Dirk Sanchez, Kawasaki, 1:46.076
22. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, 1:46.753
23. Bradley Frey, Yamaha, 1:47.421
24. Hector Romero, Yamaha, 1:48.423
25. Dr. Jeff Purk, Suzuki, 1:48.983
26. Steven Skoog, Kawasaki, 1:49.799
27. Gordy Halsey, Yamaha, 1:49.972
28. Christopher Flores, Suzuki, 1:51.136
29. Tim Mitchell, Yamaha, 1:51.543
30. Jessica Zalusky, Yamaha, 1:51.568
31. David Guy, Suzuki, 1:51.808
32. Mike Petersen, Yamaha, 1:52.041
33. Darby Brauning, Yamaha, 1:52.041
34. Peter Bohlig, Suzuki, 1:54.263




250cc Grand Prix
1. Rich Oliver, Yamaha, 1:41.056
2. Chuck Sorensen, Aprilia, 1:41.360
3. Simon Turner, Honda, 1:44.549
4. Perry Melneciuc, Yamaha, 1:45.775
5. Ed Sorbo, Yamaha, 1:46.660
6. Chris Pyles, Honda, 1:46.837
7. Greg Esser, Honda, 1:48.081
8. John France, Honda, 1:48.542
9. Barrett Long, Yamaha, 1:49.012
10. Sean Wray, Yamaha, 1:49.237
11. Ed Marchini, Yamaha, 1:49.402
12. Sean McNew, Honda, 1:49.555
13. Steve Scott, Yamaha, 1:49.589
14. Sandy Noce, Yamaha, 1:50.646
15. Shawn Murray, Honda, 1:50.774
16. Glen Christianson, Yamaha, 1:51.772
17. Mark Stiles, Yamaha, 1:51.920
18. Sohn Wehseler, Yamaha, 1:52.391
19. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:52.835
20. Stephen Bowline, Honda, 1:52.886
21. Jeff Japs, Yamaha, 1:54.910
22. Justin Long, Yamaha, 1:56.468
23. Colin Jensen, Aprilia, 1:57.977




750cc Superstock
1. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 1:39.731
2. Josh Hayes, Suzuki, 1:40.032
3. Robert Jensen, Suzuki, 1:40.303
4. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki, 1:40.324
5. Jason DiSalvo, Yamaha, 1:40.636
6. Tommy Hayden, Kawasaki, 1:40.667
7. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:41.178
8. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, 1:41.204
9. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, 1:41.336
10. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, 1:41 612
11. Jamie Stauffer, Suzuki, 1:41.782
12. Tony Meiring, Kawasaki, 1:41.865
13. Jake Holden, Suzuki, 1:42.155
14. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, 1:42.726
15. Steve Atlas, Suzuki, 1:42.886
16. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:43.540
17. Kevin Gordon, Suzuki, 1:44.103
18. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, 1:44.640
19. Hawk Mazzotta, Suzuki, 1:44.882
20. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, 1:44.994
21. John Dugan, Suzuki, 1:45.097
22. David Bell, Suzuki, 1:47.434
23. Matt Malterer, Suzuki, 1:48.225
24. Eric Dooyema, Suzuki, 1:48.230
25. Jessica Zalusky, Suzuki, 1:48.283
26. James Kerker, Honda, 1:48.781
27. Michael Kosta, Suzuki, 1:50.423
28. Jason Peters, Suzuki, 1:58.792


Superbike
1. Mat Mladin, Suzuki, 1:35.705
2. Aaron Yates, Suzuki, 1:36.559
3. Kurtis Roberts, Honda, 1:36.605
4. Eric Bostrom, Kawasaki, 1:36.911
5. Ben Bostrom, Honda, 1:36.964
6. Miguel Duhamel, Honda, 1:37.253
7. Giovanni Bussei, Ducati, 1:37.327
8. Jason Pridmore, Suzuki, 1:38.747
9. Jordan Szoke, Suzuki, 1:38.485
10. Steve Rapp, Suzuki, 1:39.631
11. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:39.708
12. Vincent Haskovec, Suzuki, 1:39.818
13. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:40.488
14. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:40.650
15. Opie Caylor, Suzuki, 1:41.015
16. Chris Ulrich, Suzuki, 1:41.248
17. Matt Furtek, Suzuki, 1:41.538
18. Adam Fergusson, Suzuki, 1:41.544
19. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:42.525
20. Chris Voelkler, Ducati, 1:42.533
21. Wes Good, Suzuki, 1:42.700
22. David Duprey, Suzuki, 1:42.996
23. John Dugan, Suzuki, 1:43.028
24. Scott Jensen, Suzuki, 1:43.047
25. Tom Wertman, Suzuki, 1:43.311
26. Jeff Bostrom, Suzuki, 1:43.413
27. Dean Mizdal, Suzuki, 1:43.659
28. Rob Christman, Suzuki, 1:43.667
29. Monte Nichols, Suzuki, 1:43.945
30. Jason Knupp, Suzuki, 1:44.146
31. Dr. Jeff Purk, Suzuki, 1:44.343
32. Kevin Lehman, Yamaha, 1:44.498
33. JJ Roetlin, Suzuki, 1:44.587
34. Paul Heinen, Yamaha, 1:45.292
35. Kevin Hanson, Suzuki, 1:45.656
36. Roger Hendricks, Suzuki, 1:46.370
37. Brian Boyd, Suzuki, 1:49.442



Updated Post: Acree, Harwell, Bilansky, Eric Wood Win Formula USA Races At VIR

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Lee Acree, Scott Harwell, Dan Bilansky and Eric Wood each won a Formula USA feature event Sunday at Virginia International Raceway in Alton, Virginia.

Triad Powersports’ Acree won the twice-red-flagged, 28-lap Sportbike main event on his new, Pirelli-sponsored Yamaha YZF-R6. Bettencourts/Argo Cycle’s Jeff Wood chased Acree the entire race, but when victory seemed out of his grasp, Jeff Wood began short-shifting his Honda CBR600RR to ensure that he finished the race with enough fuel to complete his mandatory, post-race dyno run. Kneedraggers.com Yamaha’s Matt Wait, who rode in pain due to a two-week-old broken shoulder blade, was happy to finish several seconds back in third.

The Sportbike race was stopped first when Eric Wood crashed his Kosco Buell in VIR’s turn 16. Wood’s Buell slid back across the track at turn 17 and knocked Andrew Nelson off his Z Tech Cycle Honda CBR600RR.

Eric Wood and Nelson were running fourth and fifth, respectively, in the lead pack at the time of their crashes.

Argo Cycles/Bettencourt Suzuki’s Scott Greenwood crashed on the next lap in debris left on the track by the Wood/Nelson crash.

Greenwood was uninjured and, after repairs, was able to continue in the restarted race.

Eric Wood’s Buell was essentially broken in half, and he suffered relatively minor injuries to both feet and ankles that kept him from continuing on his back-up bike.

Nelson and his Honda were both too battered to return to action Sunday, but neither bike nor rider suffered permanent damage.

The 100-kilometer Sportbike race was stopped a second time, near the halfway point, when David Rose lost the rear of his Yamaha and spun out on the racetrack. Rose restarted the final leg of the race from the back of the grid but retired before the end due to damage from the crash.

Arclight Suzuki’s Dave Stanton finished fourth in Sportbike in front of Greenwood, Formula USA Grand National Championship point leader Nate Wait, Mike Hale (who was hampered by transmission troubles), Celtic Racing’s Des Conboy, Shaun Fields on his new Yamaha and Smith Brother Harley-Davidson’s Jason Smith.

Arclight Suzuki’s Scott Harwell, who is still nursing a two-week-old broken right hand, sat out the long Sportbike race to concentrate his energy on the Superbike final, and the strategy paid off. Harwell swapped the lead several times with former teammate Acree until the final run to the line. Harwell, riding a Superbike-spec GSX-R600, powered past Acree and his new Supersport-spec Yamaha in the last dash to the flag to take the win.

Acree finished second well ahead of second-row-starter Jeff Wood, Matt Wait, Stanton, Hooters Suzuki’s Michael Himmelsbach (who also rode at the front of the Sportbike field until a rearset broke mid-race), Greenwood, Hale, Conboy and Tripp Nobles on a Tilley Harley-Davidson/Buell X1 ex-AMA Pro Thunder machine.

Nobles and Kosco Harley-Davidson/Buell’s Dave Estok raced nose-to-tail for all 14 laps of the Thunderbike final with Nobles taking the checkered flag first by half a bikelength over Estok. However, Nobles and Estok each disregarded meatball flags calling them in for stop-and-go penalties during the race, and each were docked one lap in the final results.

Nobles had lined up in the wrong grid spot, and Estok had jumped the start.

Nobles and Estok each protested the scoring of the Thunderbike race, each protest was denied and each rider appealed.

The Thunderbike race win went to Hal’s Performance Advantage Buell’s Dan Bilansky over Cyco Cycles’ Derek Keyes and Hovey Performance Engines’ Steve Keener. Both Keyes and Keener rode 700cc Suzuki SV650 Superbikes.

Harding Harley-Davidson’s Bryan Bemisderfer ran with Nobles and Estok early-on but retired while running third when his fuel tank overflow catch bottle spilled, causing smoke and motovating officials to give Bemisderfer a black flag.

Earlier in the day, Woodcraft/Barden Bearing’s Eric Wood won the Expert Unlimited Grand Prix race on his Dunlop-equipped Suzuki GSX-R750. Wood won the 14-lap race by 16 seconds.

Joe Spina and Scott Carpenter raced for second in Expert Unlimited Grand Prix until Carpenter got pinched off by a slower rider late in the race. Spina took the runner-up position with Carpenter salvaging third.

Euro Shop of Waco’s 16-year-old Ryan Andrews rode his Aprilia RS125R to victory in the 14-lap USGPRU final over NESBA.com’s Brian Kcraget and Kneedraggers.com’s Scott Moxey.

Race Results:

Sportbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha YZF-R6, 28 laps
2. Jeff Wood, Honda CBR600RR
3. Matt Wait, Yamaha YZF-R6
4. David Stanton, Suzuki GSX-R600
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki GSX-R600
6. Nate Wait, Kawasaki ZX-6R
7. Mike Hale, Yamaha YZF-R6
8. Des Conboy, Suzuki GSX-R600
9. Shaun Fields, Yamaha YZF-R6
10. Jason Smith, Kawasaki ZX-6RR

13. David Rose, Yamaha YZF-R6, -7 laps, DNF, mechanical
14. Brett Champagne, Honda CBR600RR, -15 laps, DNF, crash

16. Chad Simons, Yamaha YZF-R6, -15 laps, DNF, crash
17. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki GSX-R600, -16 laps, DNF, mechanical

19. Nicky Cummings, Honda CBR600RR, -19 laps, DNF, crash

22. Eric Wood, Buell XB9R, -23 laps, DNF, crash
23. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR600RR, -23 laps, DNF, crash

Sportbike Point Standings:

1. Jeff Wood, 97 points
2. Greenwood, 82 points
3. Matt Wait, 62 points
4. Conboy, 52 points
5. Nate Wait/Stanton, TIE, 33 points
7. Robert Jensen/Acree, TIE, 26 points
9. Harwell/Smith, TIE, 20 points

Superbike:

1. Scott Harwell, Suzuki GSX-R600, 14 laps
2. Lee Acree, Yamaha YZF-R6
3. Jeff Wood, Honda CBR600RR
4. Matt Wait, Yamaha YZF-R6
5. David Stanton, Suzuki GSX-R600
6. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki GSX-R600
7. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki GSX-R600
8. Mike Hale, Yamaha YZF-R6
9. Des Conboy, Suzuki GSX-R600
10. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1
11. Dave Ebben, Suzuki GSX-R600
12. Shaun Fields, Yamaha YZF-R6
13. Jason Smith, Kawasaki ZX-6RR
14. Ryan Andrews, Yamaha YZF-R6
15. Marcus Winfree, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap
16. Adam Vella, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap
17. John Lemak, Suzuki GSX-R600, -5 laps, DNF

Superbike Point Standings:

1. Matt Wait, 64 points
2. Jeff Wood, 63 points
3. Harwell, 61 points
4. Greenwood, 46 points
5. Conboy, 38 points
6. Acree, 28 points
7. Himmelsbach, 24 points
8. Robert Jensen, 20 points
9. Stanton, 19 points
10. Craig Connell, 16 points

Thunderbike:

1. Dan Bilansky, Buell XB9R, 14 laps
2. Derek Keyes, Suzuki SV700
3. Steve Keener, Suzuki SV700
4. Ray Bowman, Suzuki GSX-R750
5. Ray Silika, Suzuki SV650
6. Walt Sipp, Buell X1
7. Arthur Wagner, Honda CBR600F2
8. Jeff Johnson, Buell X1
9. Joseph Rozinski, Buell X1
10. David White, Suzuki SV650
11. Nate Kern, BMW R1100S
12. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1, -1 lap
13. Dave Estok, Buell XB9R, -1 lap
14. Jeff Harding, Buell X1, -1 lap
15. Greg Avello, Buell XB9R, -1 lap
16. Rhiannon Lucente, Honda CBR600F2, -1 lap
17. Jason Rice, Suzuki SV650, -2 laps
18. Patrick Wakefield, Buell X1, -2 laps
19. Sam Rozynski, Buell X1, -4 laps
20. Randy Rega, Suzuki SV650, -5 laps
21. Bryan Bemisderfer, Buell X1, -6 laps, DNF, mechanical
22. Darren Danilowicz, Suzuki SV650, -7 laps, DNF, crash

24. Dave Yaakov, Suzuki SV650, -14 laps, DNF, crash

Thunderbike Point Standings:

1. Estok, 67 points
2. Bemisderfer, 44 points
3. Bilansky, 41 points
4. Wagner, 39 points
5. Rozynski, 36 points
6. Keyes, 31 points
7. Johnson, 27 points
8. Ed Key/Bowman, TIE, 25 points
10. Rick Doucette, 21 points

Expert Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R750, 14 laps
2. Joe Spina, Suzuki GSX-R750
3. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki GSX-R750
4. John McGarity, Suzuki GSX-R1000
5. Russell Masecar, Suzuki GSX-R1000
6. Arthur Wagner, Suzuki GSX-R750
7. Thomas Eckfeldt, Ducati 996
8. Joe Ribeiro, Suzuki GSX-R750
9. Jason Moss, Yamaha YZF-R1
10. Mark Morgan, Suzuki GSX-R600, -1 lap

15. Chris Rankin of Maryland, Suzuki GSX-R750, -10 laps, DNF, crash
16. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR954RR, -10 laps, DNF

Expert Unlimited GP Point Standings:

1. Eric Wood, 52 points
2. Michael Barnes/Robert Jensen/Alex Barrera, TIE, 26 points
5. Wagner, 25 points
6. McGarity, 24 points
7. Brian Stokes/Eric Gulbransen/Shawn Conrad/Spina, TIE, 20 points

USGPRU 125cc Grand Prix:

1. Ryan Andrews, Aprilia, 14 laps
2. Brian Kcraget, Honda
3. Scott Moxey, Honda
4. Dale Greenwood, Honda
5. John Klaras, Honda
6. Reet Das, Honda
7. David Deggendorf, Honda
8. Frank Guadagnino, Honda, -1 lap
9. Samantha Cotter, Honda, -1 lap
10. Mark Johnson, Honda, -1 lap

Amateur Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Hector Jimenez, Honda CBR600
2. J. Michael Branson, Suzuki GSX-R750
3. Donny Kelley, Honda CBR600
4. Brian Logan, Yamaha YZF-R6
5. William Meyers, II, Kawasaki ZX-7
6. Ned Brown, Yamaha YZF-R6
7. Jason Lewis, Honda CBR600
8. Stephane Reynolds, Honda CBR600
9. Stuart Vernon, Yamaha YZF-R6
10. Geoff Gray, Honda 1000

Amateur Unlimited GP Point Standings:

1. Jimenez, 56 points
2. Meyers, 37 points
3. Henry Chin, 26 points
4. Mark Nelson/Kevin Ruopp, TIE, 25 points
6. Michael Shallcross, 21 points
7. Branson/David Loikits, TIE, 20 points
9. Bruce Villerup, 17 points
10. Kelley/Robert Collins/Brian Shaw, TIE, 16 points

More, from a press release issued by Proforma:

LEE ACREE WINS FORMULA USA SPORTBIKE RACE AT VIRGINIA

Lee Acree won the feature 28-lap Sportbike event during round four of the Formula USA National Championship Series at Virginia International Raceway, and he also finished a close second to Scott Harwell in the Superbike event that followed. Lee was the fastest qualifier in both classes after qualifying sessions held Sunday morning. Acree rode his nearly-stock Triad Powersport-sponsored 2003 Yamaha R6 on Pirelli DOT race tires in both events.

The Sportbike event was red-flagged twice for incidents on the VIR course. Acree ran with early leader Jeff Wood after the original and first re-starts. “I was content to let Jeff lead,” said Acree. “I didn’t want to push too hard early on.” On the second re-start, Acree led the entire race, except once when Wood passed in turn four and Acree re-passed immediately in turn six. After that, Lee pulled out to win by almost five seconds at the end. Acree’s bike made 110.4 horsepower in the mandatory post-race inspection, safely within the 115 horsepower limit for the class.

In the 14-lap Superbike race, Acree led most of the laps across the finish line, but he knew it was going to be difficult to shake Scott Harwell. “On the last lap, I went into turn one first,” said Acree. “Scott passed me back, then we caught a lapper going under the bridge (turn seven). I passed Scott going into the rollercoaster, but he followed me through the last few corners and passed me right before start-finish.

“This new Yamaha is incredible,” said Acree after both races. “I hadn’t even started it before last Thursday. The motor is still bone-stock, I put on the Graves pipe and the Dynojet box. Ohlins installed a standard fork kit last Monday and I put one of their shocks on it. Even the brake lines are stock, but the Vesrah pads were really good. This all came together in a very short amount of time, my sponsors really came through with getting me product in a hurry.”

More, from a press release issued by USGPRU:

In a race as hot as the Virginia weather, Ryan Andrews set an incredible pace aboard his Aprilia and held off Brian Kcraget for the win in the USGPRU 125cc race at VIR. Andrews got a great start from pole position with Kcraget hounding him for most of the race. As the laps wound down Ryan used lappers to his advantage and pushed the pace faster than his qualifying time to secure the win. Scott Moxey was close to the leaders early but ended up running a lonely race for third ahead of Dale Greenwood. The battle for 5th was contested until the end with John Klaras able to hold off Reet Das and David Deggendorf to take the position.

The USGRPU race was run in conjunction with the F-USA “Festival of Speed” at VIR.

USGRPU is sponsored by: CCS/F-USA, Motion Pro, Braking USA, Silkolene, VP fuels, EBC, GPStar, Bridgestone tires, and Hjelm Motorsports.

For more information, visit our website at www.USGPRU.org.

Updated Post: Where To Write Moore And Connell

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Jimmy Moore remains hospitalized in Minneapolis following surgery, while Craig Connell has been released from a local hospital and plans to fly to San Jose, California today to see Dr. Art Ting, who will operate on Connell’s broken upper arm Monday.

Moore crashed in turn one during Thursday practice at Brainerd International Raceway, slid about 230 yards over wet grass and hit a tree, rupturing his spleen, breaking an upper arm and fracturing a hip.

Connell crashed Friday during Formula Xtreme qualifying, breaking his arm.

“I just remember going into turn three and
thinking, ‘Oh, shit!’ said Connell. “Something had definitely gone wrong. From that point I just tried to work out where I was going to go and what I was going to do. I lost consciousness for about three minutes according to the medical personnel, but the CAT scan said everything was apparently OK. I broke my right humerus (upper arm) right in the middle with about 1 cm of displacement. The arm has been put back in place now. I’m flying out this afternoon to California. Dr. Arthur Ting is going to see me at my hotel tomorrow night and look at the X-rays, then he’s going to operate at 4:00 p.m. on Monday.”

Early reports said Connell lost an axel, but while team manager Anna Johnston said it was definitely a mechanical problem, it was unclear what went wrong. “It lost a lot of parts in the accident, and we’re piecing it together now. When we find out what went wrong, we’ll issue a press release.”



Jimmy Moore
c/o Morgan Broadhead
American Suzuki Motor Corp.
PO Box 1100
Brea, CA 92822-1100
e-mail [email protected]

Craig Connell
c/o Annandale Racing
PO Box 529
Cresson, TX 76035
e-mail [email protected].




Meanwhile, Ty Howard is hanging out with injury-hit Annandale Racing, rolling around the garage area on a mechanic’s chair. Howard broke his hip at Pikes Peak and underwent surgery in Colorado before flying home to Texas. Howard said he used crutches until about two weeks ago.


Acree Takes Formula USA Sportbike, Superbike Pole Positions At VIR, Estok On Thunderbike Pole

Copyright 2003, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Formula USA Qualifying Results:

Sportbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha, 1:30.079*
2. Jeff Wood, Honda, 1:30.571
3. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:30.929
4. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki, 1:31.222
5. David Rose, Yamaha, 1:31.407
6. Andrew Nelson, Honda, 1:31.564
7. Eric Wood, Buell, 1:31.576
8. Matt Wait, Yamaha, 1:31.707
9. Chris Rankin of Maryland, Suzuki, 1:31.781
10. Nate Wait, Kawasaki, 1:31.909
11. Scott Harwell, Suzuki, 1:31.917
12. Mike Hale, Yamaha, 1:32.076
13. Brett Champagne, Honda, 1:32.437
14. Nicky Cummings, Honda, 1:32.604
15. Dave Stanton, Suzuki, 1:32.918
16. Shaun Fields, Yamaha, 1:33.260
17. Jason Smith, Kawasaki, 1:33.504
18. Trey Vonce, Suzuki, 1:34.873
19. John Lemak, Suzuki, 1:36.268
20. Adrian Jones, Yamaha, 1:36.272

*New lap record

Des Conboy, Suzuki, 1:34.629, DQ, went behind pit wall

Superbike:

1. Lee Acree, Yamaha, 1:30.078
2. Scott Harwell, Suzuki, 1:30.436
3. Andrew Nelson, Honda, 1:31.154
4. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:31.161
5. Mike Hale, Yamaha, 1:31.524
6. Jeff Wood, Honda, 1:31.763
7. Michael Himmelsbach, Suzuki, 1:31.823
8. Dave Stanton, Suzuki, 1:31.840
9. Matt Wait, Yamaha, 1:32.004
10. Dave Ebben, Suzuki, 1:32.483
11. Tripp Nobles, Buell, 1:32.591
12. Brett Champagne, Honda, 1:32.675
13. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:32.937
14. Shaun Fields, Yamaha, 1:33.979
15. Des Conboy, Suzuki, 1:35.098
16. Ryan Andrews, Yamaha, 1:35.367
17. John Lemak, Suzuki, 1:36.623
18. Marcus Winfree, Suzuki, 1:37.877
19. Jason Smith, Kawasaki, 1:40.016
20. Adam Vella, Suzuki, 1:41.979

Thunderbike:

1. Dave Estok, Buell XB9R, 1:33.699*
2. Tripp Nobles, Buell X1, 1:33.699
3. Bryan Bemisderfer, Buell X1, 1:35.915
4. Dan Bilansky, Buell XB9R, 1:36.485
5. Dan Danilowilz, Suzuki SV650, 1:36.679
6. Dave Yaakov, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.007
7. Steve Keener, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.288
8. Jeff Johnson, Buell X1, 1:37.514
9. Derek Keyes, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.699
10. R. Silika, Suzuki SV650, 1:37.907
11. Joseph Rozynski, Buell X1, 1:38.182
12. Randy Rega, Suzuki SV650, 1:38.258
13. Jason Rice, Suzuki SV650, 1:38.401
14. Arthur Wagner, Honda CBR600F2, 1:38.684
15. Nate Kern, BMW R1100S, 1:39.005
16. Darren James, Buell X1, 1:39.291
17. David White, Suzuki SV650, 1:40.107
18. Walt Sipp, Buell X1, 1:40.362
19. Sam Rozynski, Buell X1, 1:40.982
20. Jeff Harding, Buell X1, 1:43.119

*Awarded pole position based on second-fastest lap time.

Expert Unlimited Grand Prix:

1. Eric Wood, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:30.577
2. Andrew Nelson, Honda CBR954RR, 1:31.290
3. Joseph Spina, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:31.644
4. Chris Greer, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:32.799
5. Tim Bemisderfer, Honda CBR954RR, 1:33.931
6. Chris Rankin, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:34.354
7. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki GSX-R750, 1:34.527
8. Trevor Prater, Yamaha YZF-R1, 1:34.787
9. Thomas Eckfeldt, Ducati 996, 1:34.936
10. Russell Masecar, Suzuki GSX-R1000, 1:35.045

USGPRU 125cc Grand Prix:

1. Ryan Andrews, Aprilia, 1:35.021
2. Brian Kcraget, Honda, 1:35.733
3. Scott Moxey, Honda, 1:37.031
4. Dale Greenwood, Honda, 1:38.551
5. J. Laras, 1:40.361
6. David Deggendorf, Honda, 1:40.783
7. Reet Das, Honda, 1:42.218
8. Mark Johnson, Honda, 1:43.635
9. Joseph Melchionda, 1:44.405
10. Samantha Cotter, Honda, 1:46.161

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
1,620SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Posts