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Willow Springs To Host $2000 Wheelie Contest

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From a press release:

SPECIAL WHEELIE CONTEST TO BE HELD AT JULY and AUGUST WSMC MEETS!

WSIR has posted a $2000 cash award to the top 3 for the Fastest Wheelie ridden on the front straight at Willow Springs – the “Finals” to be held at the TOYOTA 200 weekend on Sept. 14-15 2002!

WSMC will host two qualifying rounds, one at our July 20 meet and one at our August 17 meet.

The top 5 fastest wheelie riders from each meet will be seeded into the finals. The top 5 from the July meet will not be eligible to qualify top 5 again in August, but may participate if they so desire. Riders MUST be licensed WSMC road race competitors and MUST wear full racegear during the events. Motorcycles used may not use any wheelie bars, gyroscopic devices or any other method of “wheelie assistance”. A radar gun will be used by WSIR Officials to determine the speed measured at the start-finish line. Staging will be located in turn 9 (no running starts!). The promoter (WSIR) retains the right to add additional riders in the Finals as a “promoter option”.

Entry forms will be available at the track (July and August) – and the event is sponsored by WILLOW SPRINGS INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY so there is NO ENTRY FEE!

What Various Teams Said About Their MotoGP Weekend At Catalunya

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From a Suzuki press release:

Team Suzuki News Service

ROBERTS TAKES STRONG SEVENTH IN BLAZING SPANISH RACE

2002 MotoGP Championship – Round 6, Catalunya, Spain, June 16, 2002

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki’s Kenny Roberts capitalised on the latest round of machine and tyre improvements to claim seventh place in today’s Catalunyan GP, surviving blistering heat and a fast-paced race that saw several accident victims. Team Suzuki rider Akira Ryo, riding as a wild card entry, just missed making it a double top ten for the new 990cc GSV-R V4 MotoGP prototype, in only its sixth race. The Japanese rider was 11th.

Second Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki rider Sete Gibernau was one of those to fall, crashing out with 19 laps remaining in the 25-lap race, run in front of a crowd of 90,000 at the 4.727km Montmelo circuit outside Barcelona. Sete was bitterly disappointed, after qualifying the new four-stroke GSV-R on the front row of grid for the first time. He was in close company with his team-mate at the time, disputing fifth position and hoping to get free to close on the leaders, still in close view up ahead.

The race, sixth round of the 2002 MotoGP World Championship, was won by defending champion Valentino Rossi (Honda).

Tomorrow, the team will stay on at the Catalunyan circuit for two days of tests, in conjunction with the factory engineers, and factory rider Ryo. As well as the first time out on the latest 2002 Michelin tyres, after switching brands earlier in the season, there are chassis and other modifications to test, and engine and electronic changes to get fine tuned – part of the continuing high-intensity race development programme of the newest of the three Japanese factory four-stroke MotoGP prototypes. The GSV-R was brought to the race-tracks a full year earlier than planned, after promising early tests showed the tremendous potential of the new machine.

KENNY ROBERTS – Seventh Position
“It was pretty much as I expected. It was a hot and slippery race-track. If you have a better connection between throttle and rear tyre, then you get a better finishing position. I thought we had a fifth-placed bike, but that was thinking I would be ahead of the two-strokes of Capirossi and Barros. They were in front of me, so I was seventh. What we need to be doing is to beat the top four bikes. We’re a long way from where we need to be, but we’re also a long way ahead of where we would without the new four-stroke. I hope the factory keep listening to us, and give us what we need.”

SETE GIBERNAU – Did Not Finish.
“My pace at the start was not so bad, and I was lapping behind Kenny. I saw the front four pulling away ahead I wanted to pass him to try and follow along. Eventually I did get by, and I led him for a couple of laps before he passed me again. Next time on the straight, I was in his slipstream and going faster than usual, and I lost the front wheel braking for the first corner. I thought I could have gone better … but it’s easy to say things like that after the event. I wanted to try and get amongst the leaders today, so I’m really sorry for my crew, all the guys, for Telefónica MoviStar and the crowds, who have given me a lot off support this weekend. I want to pay them back, but we’ll have to wait until the next race.”

GARRY TAYLOR – Team Manager
“We had some new parts this weekend, and it was our first race on the same tyres as the other Michelin runners, so we were on a level playing field for the first time. We definitely showed some progress. Not enough, but progress is progress, and we’re staying on for the next two days to keep working on the programme, with some new chassis parts to test, and some testing to do for Michelin. Ryo-San did a great job, getting a good finish in his first race on this circuit, and on Michelin tyres. I’m also happy that Sete is not injured.”


From a Honda press release:

HONDA RACING NEWS

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002 Round 6
CATALAN GRAND PRIX, CATALUNYA
Race Day, Sunday June 16 2002

NO STOPPING RAMPAGING ROSSI

Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RCV211V) bagged his fifth win from six races at a scorching Catalunya. More than 90,000 sun-drenched Spaniards watched Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RCV211V) finish a close second as Honda recorded its third one-two of the season so far. This is Rossi’s 44th career win and his 18th premier class win. The new Honda RCV211 has now won every race so far this year.

Rossi started from the front row of the grid in fourth place and held fourth position into the first turn. By the fifth lap he’d got into a rhythm and set the fastest lap of the race at 1m 45.594s on lap five. Carlos Checa (Yamaha), Ukawa, Rossi and Max Biaggi (Yamaha) were now pulling clear. Rossi moved into second place behind Checa on lap 14 and on the next lap he used the speed of the RCV to edge past the Spaniard at the end of the long start/finish straight and into the lead. He led from then on with team-mate Ukawa in close touch throughout.

“That was a really hard race for the bike, the tyres and me,” said the Championship leader. ” I have to say a big thank you to all my team because we changed so many of the settings over the weekend to find the best race set-up. I got a good start, and followed the others. Checa got into a good rhythm and I overtook Biaggi when the others started to get away. I tried to turn some laps in the 45 second bracket but I couldn’t. I got away and Tohru came with me, but I was a little better on the brakes in three of the turns and I managed to stay in front. I’m very happy with this win.”

Second-placed Ukawa looked as if he might have been able to repeat the success he had in the second race of the MotoGP Championship in South Africa when he overtook Rossi in the closing stages for a win. But although Ukawa pressed him hard all the way Rossi had just enough in hand to fend him off.

“I knew I had to make a good start,” said Ukawa. “And I got the holeshot, my first this season. I led until Checa went past me and then I got him back and held it. The tyres were good today and the whole bike felt good. The work we did in qualifying really paid off in the race and I guess I’m happy with second. I’m not so happy that the points gap between Valentino and me has increased. But there’s a long way to go this season and I’ll be giving it everything.”

Alex Barros (West Honda Pons NSR500) was fifth and as the first two-stroke past the flag effectively ‘won’ the race within a race. “I’m really very happy,” said the Brazilian. “I had a great scrap with Loris to be the best two-stroke finisher, just like at Mugello. I couldn’t have done any more than I did today because the long straight here makes things difficult for us. I want to thank my team for the excellent work they’ve done which allowed me to ride well at one of my favourite tracks. We have to try and close the gap with the four-strokes at Assen.”

Sixth-place finisher Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) had an incident-packed race, running off track. “This was a tough race,” he said. “I tried my very best, but we don’t seem to be getting much reward for our efforts. I wanted to stay with the leaders from the start, but I lost a lot of time getting past the two Suzukis, they held me up in the turns and then I couldn’t get past them on the straight. My off-track excursion was because Roberts braked hard well before entering a corner and I had to carry on in a straight line or I would have run into him.”

Daijiro Kato (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR500) finished a fighting eighth after a troubled time in qualifying. “The first corner was tough,” said the MotoGP rookie. “It was really hard to find a way through the bunched-up pack. That really slowed me up and then after ten laps the rear tyre went off a bit. This isn’t a bad result because I was running the same lap times as Barros and Capirossi and if I could have found a faster way through in the early laps things might have been even better.”

Things got slightly better in the race for Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) who had qualifying difficulties and began the race 20th on the grid. He eventually finished 13th. “Unfortunately I just couldn’t do any better,” said the disappointed Japanese. “After all the problems we had yesterday, the situation has improved. The bike was sliding everywhere in the second half of the race and even if I have got three points from this race I don’t feel very good about it.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500) was brought down in a first lap crash and his machine was too badly damaged for him to remount. “I could have scored some good points today,” said the Dutchman. “We ran a new compound rear tyre in the warm-up and I was faster than I had been all weekend. An 11th or 12th place finish was definitely possible today. I knew I was going to crash about two tenths of a second before I went down. Jacque hit Abe who pushed Nakano across in front of me. I had nowhere to go and ended up in the dirt.”

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) made a determined charge through the field from seventh position on the first lap, but he couldn’t overhaul winner Marco Melandri (Aprilia). Rolfo was up to second place by lap fourteen and locked in combat with eventual third place finisher Fonsi Nieto (Aprilia). Although Nieto threw everything he had at the Italian, Rolfo had pulled out just enough of a gap as they crossed the line.

“My problem was at the start,” said Rolfo. “It was really hard to overtake the riders in front of me in the early laps and then getting past De Puniet and Battaini took a while. My bike was a bit down on acceleration, but I pushed hard and got into a rhythm. I really have to thank the team and if we can work as hard as this at every race I will be very happy, second place is not so bad here.”

Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) made rapid progress from a sluggish start and was up to sixth place by lap thirteen of the 23 lap race, but tyre problems relegated him to ninth place at the flag. “I had to push really hard,” said the Spaniard. “I had a problem with the front brake at the first corner which lost me a lot of time, then the front tyre started to go off because I was pushing so hard. As the race went on I lost a lot of the places I spent so much time getting in the early stages of the race.”

Haruchika Aoki (Arie Molenaar Racing Honda RS250R/W) finished 11th and was pleased with his ever-improving performances. “The testing we did here helped a lot,” he said. “In the race I just couldn’t get away from the group of riders I was in. I had a small rear brake problem but the bike was great. We just have to keep making improvements each time we go out.”

The Championship points situation shows a three way dice developing between Nieto on 101 points, Melandri with 95 and Rolfo looking strong in third with 80.

Danny Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) came within a mere 19 thousandths of a second of his first win after a compelling duel with Manuel Poggiali (Gilera) in the burning Catalan sun. Way out in front on their own for the last eight laps, there was never more than a bike length between the pair. Pedrosa led for the final few turns before Poggiali squeezed past as they crossed the line.

“I just couldn’t win it,” said Pedrosa. “It’s a shame to lose a race by such a tiny margin, but I can’t be too unhappy about coming second at my home Grand Prix. After all the trouble I had with tyres over the weekend I can go home happy with this result. I tried my absolute maximum, but it was not to be and I really appreciated the level of support I’ve had here from the fans.”

Joan Olive (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) notched his best ever result in his home Grand Prix. He ran with the leading group in thearly stages before dropping back to finish sixth. “I really needed this result,” said Olive. “I have had bad luck following me for a while and I feel very emotional about this result here. I expected tyre wear and was ready for it when it came. I passed about 13 riders into the first corner and that helped me a lot.”

The increasingly impressive Mika Kallio (Red Devil Honda RS125R) finished ninth, his fourth points scoring finish in his rookie year. Poggiali heads the Championship standings with 111 points from Arnaud Vincent (Aprilia) with 90.


From Marlboro Yamaha:

MARLBORO CATALAN GRAND PRIX, CATALUNYA
Race Day, Sunday June 16 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN SCORE STRONG RESULT

Marlboro Yamaha Team riders Carlos Checa and Max Biaggi roared their YZR-M1s to third- and fourth-place finishes at red-hot Catalunya this afternoon, local Checa making the running throughout the first half of the race and sending the 90,000-strong crowd wild with excitement.

The day after Biaggi had given the M1 its first pole position, Checa was in dazzling form, grabbing the lead from the second row to lead all the way to half distance. He held the Hondas of Valentino Rossi and Tohru Ukawa at bay until lap 15 of 24, when he began to slip back to third. Biaggi shadowed the leading group, gradually finding himself alone in fourth place.

“Overall, not such a bad weekend,” said YZR-M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda. “Max got pole position yesterday and our bikes seemed good in the race until half distance. At Mugello Carlos was passed easily on the straight but the speed difference didn’t seem so big here, though we still need to work on acceleration. Our lap times weren’t so good after half distance, however, so I think we need to work on machine set-up to improve tyre endurance.”

The Marlboro Yamaha Team and several rival MotoGP squads stay at Catalunya tomorrow for a Michelin tyre test.

CHECA BACK WHERE HE BELONGS
Carlos Checa today scored his first podium finish since April’s season-opening Japanese GP, a well-deserved reward for his consistently superb riding and tireless dedication. The local Marlboro Yamaha Team man started brilliantly from the second row, took the lead from Tohru Ukawa on lap two at turn three and stayed there until just before half distance when Ukawa sneaked ahead several times, Checa successfully counter attacking on the brakes. But eventually he did slip to second and then third, his pace tailing off in the closing stages. He crossed the line alone, eight seconds behind the winner.

“That was hard work, the bike was working well and I was able to run a good pace,” said Checa, who qualified seventh after a tumble in final qualifying. “I never had a good feeling here with the Yamaha 500, but this bike is different and we’re making good progress, so thanks to all the team, my engineers and my mechanics. It’s not been easy though, because I crashed yesterday afternoon and the bike wasn’t so good this morning, so we had to change some settings. In the race I was able to lead for a long time, and when Ukawa came by I could pass him again. But when Rossi went ahead I couldn’t keep the pace, it was too risky, I didn’t have enough traction, especially on the throttle, so we must focus on that to improve.”

BIAGGI STARTS FROM POLE, FINISHES 4th

Max Biaggi had high expectations for today’s race, run in sweltering 30-degree heat. The Italian Marlboro Yamaha Team star started from pole position on his number-two machine and made a good enough start to slot into third at the first turn and run third for the first few laps. But he couldn’t quite match the pace of the leading group and dropped to fourth, running the second half of the race very much on his own. Nevertheless the result moves Biaggi to fourth overall, equal on points with his team-mate but one place ahead thanks to his second place at the Italian GP.

“You have big hopes when you get pole position,” said Biaggi after his third successive podium finish on the M1. “I managed to make a good start but I quickly realised that it was going to be a tough race. I was racing my second bike because we had a problem with my number-one machine in morning warm-up. In the race the bike didn’t feel so good in chassis or engine performance, so we effectively lost all the hard work we’d done in practice and qualifying. I did the best I could in the circumstances, and congratulations to Carlos, he rode a great race.”

ROSSI TAKES FIFTH MotoGP VICTORY
Valentino Rossi today scored his fifth victory of the year, beating team-mate Tohru Ukawa into second place after a hard-ridden final few laps. “Checa was running a good rhythm early on,” said the Italian. “In some places I was faster, some places slower. But when Tohru went ahead, I decided to make my move. In the last laps I was better on the brakes, so I knew I could win if I didn’t make a mistake.”


From Proton:

NEW PROTON MAKES POINTS FIRST TIME OUT

Round 6: Catalunyan GP, Montmelo Sunday June 16, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: Twelfth
Nobuatsu Aoki: DNF

Proton Team KR rider Jeremy McWilliams raced the brand new wide-line chassis in today’s Catalunyan GP, finishing 12th for four points – and reporting a big step forward in overall handling performance for the lightweight three-cylinder 500cc machine.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki had a disappointing afternoon, forced into the pits after only one of 25 laps of the 4.727km circuit, where more than 90,000 fans endured blazing heat to watch an exciting race won by defending champion Valentino Rossi’s Honda. Aoki suspected an electrical fault, but the team later diagnosed a crankshaft problem.

McWilliams had decided to use the new chassis only on race morning, after a single example had been rushed to the track following promising tests of a prototype three weeks before. The new chassis not only has widely spaced top rails, to make space for the four-stroke engine now under design at the team’s headquarters in England, but also incorporates some different geometry ideas devised by the team owner, former triple World Champion Kenny Roberts.

During two days of practice, McWilliams had confirmed that promise, finding that the radically different approach gave more predictable handling for the agile KR3 racer, but was also kinder to the tyres, giving longer life and eliminating a “pumping” problem he had encountered on the older chassis. At this early stage of development, however, it was not quite as fast in lap times.

The team worked through Friday night to make a new rear suspension link, and after further adjustments McWilliams decided to race the chassis, in the long-term interests of future development. The gamble paid off in the short term too.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
“I have to say the old man got something right. The new chassis completely cured the pumping problem I’d been having, and the new chassis is all Kenny’s ideas. It probably wasn’t ready to race, but it was the only thing to do after the experiences I’ve been having. I really needed to finish. The race wasn’t much fun. I lost side grip, but even so the bigger bikes were holding me up, then getting away on the straight. We always knew it would be difficult at this track. All in, I’m happy with the result.”

NOBUATSU AOKI
“I got a good start, and I was pretty lucky to escape the Jacque Attack that put three riders out. I was tenth after the first lap, and I was confident I could follow Jacque, but then the engine started to run really rough. There was nothing to do but to pull into the pits.”

KENNY ROBERTS– Team Owner
“We survived it, and with a brand new chassis too. It’s only the third time it’s been out, and it finished the race. Now we know what to do to get it more race ready, and it should pay off. Nobu had another crankshaft problem. It was not the same as the earlier failures, but it was still a failure.”

Tonight’s Two-wheel Tuesday Line-up On SPEED

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From SPEED Channel:

Two-wheel Tuesday Line-up For Tuesday, June 18:

2:00 p.m. FIM 125cc GP, Mugello, Italy

3:00 p.m. FIM World Supersport, Silverstone, England

7:00 p.m. Bike Week

7:30 p.m. Motorcyclist

8:00 p.m. AMA Formula Xtreme, Road America, WI

9:00 p.m. MotoGP, Catalunya, Spain

10:00 p.m. AMA Grand National Dirt Track T.T., Springfield, IL

11:00 p.m. Corbin’s Ride On

11:30 p.m. Harley-Davidson Sportsters, Springfield, IL

12:00 a.m. Bike Week

12:30 a.m. Motorcyclist

1:00 a.m. AMA Formula Xtreme, Road America, WI

2:00 a.m. MotoGP, Catalunya, Spain

3:00 a.m. AMA Grand National Dirt Track T.T., Springfield, IL

Duhamel’s Back On A 600 In Day Two Of AMA Team Tests At VIR

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By Bruce Wilkins

Cooler than normal temperatures with an afternoon of overcast skies allowed for some hot testing today at Virginia International Raceway.

Numerous AMA Superbike teams finished up the second day of tests with faster times than they achieved last season. The teams will converge on the southern Virginia road course on August 9-11 for the doubleheader season finale of the AMA Superbike season.

Miguel Duhamel, who won back-to-back Superbike races at Road America two weekends ago, utilized most of the Tuesday session to set up his Supersport CBR600F4i.

“It’s the first time back on the 600 and we’re right there within two-tenths of the fastest laps done today by the 600 regulars,” said Duhamel, who recorded a 1:28.5 lap as his fastest of the day. “We’re matching our fastest laps in our race here last year and I always run faster in a race than like this, so we’re pretty happy about that. Looks good for August.”

Duhamel’s Superbike times in the morning were off from teammate Nicky Hayden’s best times. “That’s really not too bad, but tomorrow we’re going to concentrate on the Superbike full time,” he pointed out. Duhamel’s fastest Superbike lap today was 1:27.0, while he recorded lap times in the 1:26 range yesterday. “We’re real confident that we’ll get back in the 26s tomorrow.”

Duhamel credited his hot streak with reuniting with crew chief Al Ludington. “I’m really looking forward to VIR…now that I’ve got Al back, we’ve got the right setup, the guys are working really great, I see myself in the mixture in every race. The rest of the season, it will be a big disappointment in each race if we’re not in the top three.”

Kawasaki racer Eric Bostrom has mixed feelings about the VIR testing session so far. “The good thing is that our times are better than last year, but the downside is that I’m not totally happy with the suspension yet,” Bostrom said. “We’ll work on that the rest of the day.” Bostrom recorded numerous laps in the low 1:25 range on Tuesday.

Kawasaki team manager Michael Preston described the sessions so far as averaging about a second faster than his racers did last year. “Nobody’s crashed, we’re getting a lot of work done, and so far, so good,” he said. “We’re real lucky in that we thought it was going to be real hot this week, but so far it hasn’t been that hot. Hot weather like we had here last year is a discomfort for the riders and it’s definitely a lot more work to get the bikes ready. So we like the way the weather was today.”

Preston described the youngest member of his team, Tony Meiring, as a quick learner and taking to VIR real well. “Tony has come along really good and is actually a little ahead of our schedule,” Preston said. “The last few rounds he has had some really good performances and we’re just ecstatic that he’s getting in there and riding with the front runners.

“Tony’s getting better every week that he rides a bike and he’s doing real well here today,” Preston added. “He actually rode here last year as a privateer, so he’s come around really good.” Meiring lost a chain late in the afternoon under the bridge and his bike had to be hauled back to the pits.

The testing session marks the first such test of the year for the Austin Bleu Bayou Ducati team and racer Pascal Picotte. “It’s been good for us because this time has allowed us to go through a lot of stuff, things we couldn’t go too far with on race weekends,” Picotte explained. “At the track in the previous races, we could make a little improvement here or there, but here like this we can go from one extreme to another and figure things out that I really like…and the geometry and those types of things. We’re definitely learning a lot with this test and we’ll carry that over for us the rest of the season.” Picotte recorded laps in the 1:27 range, about a half-second off the leaders, but said he plans to get those times down to the mid-26s by tomorrow.

Points leader Nicky Hayden and winner of the first AMA Superbike race last season at VIR was pleased so far as well. “This test has been really good,” Hayden said. “I’ve gone faster than I qualified last year. I’m having a little problem with my foot. I was practicing the other day and twisted my ankle up pretty bad flat-tracking. I caught my right foot in a hole. It hasn’t slowed me down, but it hurts a lot. It’ll be all right…that’s just part of racing. Hasn’t been that much fun today because of the pain.”

Despite the injury, Hayden recorded consistent laps in the high 1:25s with his fastest lap a 1:25.5, according to Hayden. “I really like this track more each time I come here,” he said. “It’s held up really, really well for the amount of racing on it and it’s a just a cool place to race.”

Teams participating in the tests include Blimpie Yoshimura Suzuki with Mat Mladin, Aaron Yates and Jamie Hacking; Arclight Suzuki with Lee Acree and Craig Connell; Kawasaki with Tony Meiring, Eric Bostrom and Tommy Hayden; American Honda with Nicky Hayden, Miguel Duhamel and Jake Zemke; Austin Bleu Bayou with Pascal Picotte; and Yamaha with Damon Buckmaster.

NASCAR racer Ken Schrader spectated briefly during the test, checking out Mat Mladin’s racebike.

Izutsu Will Be Back On Kawasaki At Misano

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From a press release issue by Fuchs Kawasaki:

WORLD SUPERBIKE & SUPERSPORT CHAMPIONSHIPS
ROUND 8 – MISANO, SAN MARINO
18 JUNE 2002 – EVENT PREVIEW

IZUTSU RETURNS TO THE FRAY AT MISANO

After an enforced eight week lay off through injury, Hitoyasu Izutsu will make his return to the World Superbike Championship aboard the Fuchs Kawasaki ZX-7RR at Misano this weekend. The former Japanese Superbike Champion, who sustained a badly fractured wrist in a qualifying crash at the Sugo round of the championship back in April, tested in Japan last week before declaring himself fit to compete at Misano.

‘I’m looking forward to getting back on the bike and racing again at Misano,’ said Izutsu. ‘It’s been a long, hard two months, but everything felt fine during last week’s test and I’m in pretty good shape for the weekend ahead. Of course, racing is completely different to testing but I’ll be pushing just as hard at Misano as I was in the opening three rounds of the series.’

With Izutsu sidelined through injury Chris Walker has been the main four-cylinder threat to the V-twins over the last four rounds. Walker is currently the highest placed four-cylinder rider in the championship; a position he is determined to maintain at Misano.

‘Misano is a pretty popular test track with all the teams, so I guess everyone is going to be on the pace from the word go this weekend,’ said Walker. ‘The bike seemed to go pretty well when we tested here, but the most important thing was that the test gave me a chance to learn my way around the circuit. I’ve had to learn too many tracks during free practice sessions this year, so it will be good to race at one of the few circuits I’m familiar with this weekend. The fact that Izutsu is back from injury is also a bonus, although if he thinks I’m going to relinquish my position as the top four-cylinder rider without a fight, then he’s in for a shock…’

Having put his World Supersport Championship campaign back on track with a hard fought second place at Lausitz, Andrew Pitt is determined to retake the lead in the championship standings this weekend. The sweltering conditions normally experienced at Misano may cause problems for others, but a rigorous training schedule in Italy, carried out during the hottest part of the day, has left the Australian feeling confident about the weekend ahead.

‘It’s going to be hot and it’s going to be hard this weekend; which suits me just fine,’ declared Pitt. ‘It was hot in Australia and South Africa and I won both those races, so the conditions we normally experience at Misano shouldn’t pose any real problems for me; although I expect a couple of the other riders may struggle with the heat. If I’m to regain the lead in the championship standings then I need nothing less than a race win this weekend, and that’s exactly what I’ll be aiming for.’

Pitt’s Fuchs Kawasaki team-mate, James Ellison, is also looking forward to this weekend’s Misano round, but for very different reasons.

‘It’s been a bit of a nightmare recently, but I’m confident that I can turn things around this weekend’ said Ellison. ‘We’ve seen improvements both in the bike and my times during practice and qualifying at each of the last three rounds, only to suffer some real bad luck in the actual races. The team have worked real hard getting the bike set up how I want it and I need to repay all their hard work with a good result at Misano. I like the track and I’ve always gone well here in the past, so I’ll be bitterly disappointed if I leave here on Sunday without a top ten finish under my belt.’

Roberts Finishes Two Days Of Testing With Suzuki At Catalunya

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From a press release issued by Team Suzuki News Service:

HOT PACE IN SPAIN BOOSTS SUZUKI’S ASSEN HOPES

2002 MotoGP Championship
Catalunya, Spain, June 18, 2002.

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki rider Kenny Roberts Jr. was brimming with confidence after two gruelling days of testing at the Catalunyan GP circuit – “the best tests so far with the new four-stroke machine.”

Blazing heat and exhausting conditions were not enough to keep Roberts from running more than 70 laps on both Monday and Tuesday, as a revised chassis and a series of other development changes kept levels of enthusiasm and excitement at fever pitch.

The factory’s and the team’s latest development work not only brought the 2000 World Champion a significantly faster lap time than he had achieved at the GP on the weekend before. They also opened up a new level of competitive promise for the powerful 990cc Suzuki GSV-R V4 – newest of the three Japanese factory four-stroke racing prototypes, after being brought to the tracks a full year earlier than originally planned.

“This was one of my best tests ever, and certainly the best with the new motorcycle,” enthused Roberts at the end of the second day. “I’m really looking forward to the next GP, at Assen in Holland.

“The team found some different directions, and a new chassis from the factory also seemed to help,” he continued. “We made a lot progress in areas that we hadn’t necessarily expected to, and it made the bike comfortable for me to ride at a very fast pace.

“The lap times reflected it. I was able to go half-a-second faster than I had in qualifying for the weekend’s GP, but I could do so for a number of consecutive laps. That is what’s really important.

“We were all pretty tired and beat up after the weekend, but the progress over the two days meant that I and the whole team ended on a very high note. We have think we have the confidence to challenge for the top five, and we can carry that over to Holland.”

Teammate Sete Gibernau also tested on the first day, but missed the second, after finally succumbing to an illness he had been fighting off all weekend. The bulk of the work – testing next-generation prototype Michelin tyres as well as Suzuki’s own development – fell on Roberts, and team manager Garry Taylor was full of praise.

“Kenny ran almost three times race distance on both days, while the weather just kept on getting hotter and hotter. None of us had been looking forward to the tests after a long and hot weekend, but Kenny showed a lot of grit and determination, and that inspired the whole team. When things are going in a good direction, you can see a lot of difference in Kenny, and in everyone else as well.

“I think the whole team would like to thank him for his efforts.”

AMA Pro Racing Announces Medical Board, Without Any Road Racing Representation

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

AMA Pro Racing has announced a new medical board which only includes doctors associated with motocross and conspicuously lacks participation by doctors who have road raced–including retired emergency room doctor Jim Adams, general practitioner James Norwood and orthopedic surgeon Dave Kieffer–or have made a career out of treating road racers, including orthopedic surgeon Dr. Art Ting.

An AMA Pro Racing press release on the new medical board follows:

AMA PRO RACING FORMS MEDICAL ADVISORY BOARD TO IMPLEMENT UNIFORM RACE MEDICAL CARE

PICKERINGTON, Ohio — AMA Pro Racing has formed a new five-member Medical Advisory Board to implement new standards for trackside medical support of AMA Pro Racing competitors.

The medical advisory board is made up of members with extensive experience in motorcycle racing, including: Bob Moore, former FIM World Motocross champion and chairman of the Road 2 Recovery Foundation; AMA Supercross and Motocross doctors John Bodnar, Medical Director, and Stephen Augustine; Duke Finch, AMA Motocross/Supercross manager; and Hugh Fleming, AMA Pro Racing safety and equipment director.

“The medical advisory board was formed by AMA Pro Racing to implement better safety and medical policies for our professional racers,” said Scott Hollingsworth, CEO, AMA Pro Racing. “Our goals are to standardize medical services in all of AMA Pro Racing with the eventual aim of providing a mobile hospital that would go to as many events as possible. We will shortly announce our first medical policy dealing with concussions and we hope to establish a medical database of our riders to help better evaluate their condition in the event of an injury.”

The mission of the medical advisory board is to promote the safety of the AMA professional athlete, to improve and elevate the quality of on-site medical care available at professional races, and to promote safety and performance research as it relates to professional motorcycle racing.

“The advisory board is working to form policies to benefit the rider’s health and safety first and foremost,” said Fleming. “The work being done in supercross and motocross is acting as a template for other disciplines. Future goals include augmenting the medical staff with professional trainers and therapists.”

The team of Dr. Bodnar and Dr. Augustine work together in covering all AMA Supercross and Motocross events this season thanks in large part to the support of Asterisk, a sub-division of the CTI Kneebrace Company. The addition of these sports-specific doctors, working in conjunction with existing track medical staffs, is helping to better assess and deal with injuries suffered by riders. The board is also formulating standardized policies on how to best deal with specific types of injuries, especially when dealing with head injuries.

Asterisk provides financial assistance for the doctors expenses for both supercross and motocross. Additionally, they have organized and funded the Kawasaki Medical Mule that has been used at the races to provide a prompt response vehicle to assist with injured riders.

The AMA Pro Racing Medical Advisory Board is the latest effort by AMA Pro Racing to further the cause of rider safety in motorcycle racing. Last year, with support from throughout the industry, AMA Pro Racing implemented the use of hundreds of feet of additional air modules at AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship races.

Toye Beats Graves In WSMC F1 At Willow Springs

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Riding a Suzuki GSX-R1000 his mechanics built using a cylinder head ported by Kaz Yoshima, Jeremy Toye unseated reigning WSMC Champion and Willow Springs Emperor Chuck Graves in an epic Toyota Cup Unlimited Formula One duel on Sunday.

Yoshima also developed the suspension and chassis set-up for Toye’s bike, prepared at Toye’s San Diego high-performance shop, Lee’s Cycles.

Graves, riding an ex-Damon-Buckmaster YZF-R7/R1 hybrid, had no answer for Toye and his overbore GSX-R1000 in a race run on a slippery track in hot conditions, although Graves did lead several times.

Vincent Haskovec was third on his AMA Superstock bike, fitted with slick tires, ahead of Jack Pfeifer on a Team Orthopedics Superstock GSX-R1000 and racing lawyer Stephen Hewitt on a YZF-R1.

Graves won the Performance Machine Open Superbike race on the same bike from Hewitt and Keith MacBeth, and used a YZF-R6 to beat Toye in Roadracingworld.com 600cc Superstock action, with Jacob West third and Pfeifer fourth.

Pfeifer won in 600cc Modified Production, beating Robbie Dowie and WSMC Operations Manager Kenny Kopecky. Pfeifer also won the Skorpion Racing Open Modified Production race from class sponsor Tyler Paulson and Kopecky, and won the Open Superstock race from the front row, beating Chris Ulrich, who started on the last row of the grid. Ulrich caught and passed Pfeifer late in the six-lap race, then got kicked completely out of the seat in turn two, barely stayed on the track and finished second.

Haskovec came from the back of the grid to beat Toye in 750cc Superstock and L&L Motorsports 750cc Superbike but Toye beat Haskovec in 750cc Modified Production, which was the pair’s first match-up of the day, a race which saw Haskovec start on the same tires he used in the Superbike race at Sears Point. Haskovec missed Saturday practice because he had to work.

Frank Aragaki held off Mark Watts to win the Bakersfield Yamaha 250cc GP race and Willard Ivins won the 125cc Grand Prix race with Sharyn Namnath second.

Andre Castanos won the Pro-Italia Aprilia Challenge race and also won the Wood-Ease Professional Hand Cleaner 550cc Superbike race, riding a Libasci Racing Aprilia RS250.

Marlboro Yamaha Tests At Catalunya

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From a press release:

MARLBORO YAMAHA TEAM TESTS
Catalunya, Spain
Monday, June 17 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA TEST TYRES AT RED-HOT CATALUNYA

Marlboro Yamaha Team riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa stayed on at Catalunya today for Michelin tyre tests, completing four gruelling days of riding at the Spanish circuit. Both men each completed 65 laps in stifling 40-degree heat, evaluating front and rear development slicks on their YZR-M1 MotoGP bikes.

“I’m glad we stayed on, it was definitely worth it,” said Biaggi. “Michelin have done a great job with their four-stroke tyres and today we tested a new type of front tyre that definitely had some good points, including improved feeling. But these are development tyres that we won’t be racing just yet.”

Biaggi, who scored the M1’s first pole position on Saturday, was unlucky on race day. The Italian had to race his second bike after his number-one machine struck problems in morning warm-up. Nevertheless, he rode a determined race to fourth to lift himself to fourth in the World Championship points standings.

Team-mate Checa, who finished third in Sunday’s Marlboro Catalan GP after leading half the race, was also impressed by Michelin’s latest batch of front and rear slicks. “This was a useful test for us, the new tyres definitely have potential,” said the Spaniard. “The main thing for us was to give the best-possible feedback to Michelin, so they can keep developing their tyres and keep making steps forward.”

Biaggi and Checa were testing alongside rival Michelin-equipped teams. Michelin are dominating the new era of four-stroke MotoGP racing, just as they had dominated 500 GP racing for many years, but the French company never stops working to improve its range of tyres.

“The whole team is pretty exhausted after this very long weekend, but it’s always good to see what new tyres Michelin come up with,” explained Marlboro Yamaha Team manager Geoff Crust. “For us, testing front tyres was the main objective of this test and both Max and Carlos liked what they tried. We tested the fronts first and then a few rears, and the information we gave Michelin will help them to make the next step. Now we’re all going to get a few days of well-deserved rest. We’ve been flat out for six weeks or more, and after next week’s Dutch GP we’ve got back-to-back races in Britain and Germany, so everyone needs a few days off.”

Practice and qualifying for the Dutch GP at Assen commence on Thursday June 27. Race day is Saturday June 29.

Lap times
Max Biaggi (Marlboro Yamaha Team) 1m 45.0s
Carlos Checa (Marlboro Yamaha Team) 1m 45.6s

World’s Fastest Mother Is Pregnant Again

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

This just in: Racer Vicky Jackson-Bell and husband/tuner Tony, part owners of Spectrum Motorsports, are expecting a second child.

Vicky Jackson-Bell is already the fastest mother on the planet, thanks to budding motocross star Christopher, age 9.

The unborn child already has racetrack experience, including crashing; Jackson-Bell served as an instructor at Freddie Spencer’s High-Performance Riding School in Las Vegas on May 23-24 shortly after becoming pregnant (and before she knew it), and crashed when a student turned in front of her at California Speedway during a Fastrack Riders day on June 3rd.

She says she’s giving up riding until after the child is born.

Willow Springs To Host $2000 Wheelie Contest

From a press release:

SPECIAL WHEELIE CONTEST TO BE HELD AT JULY and AUGUST WSMC MEETS!

WSIR has posted a $2000 cash award to the top 3 for the Fastest Wheelie ridden on the front straight at Willow Springs – the “Finals” to be held at the TOYOTA 200 weekend on Sept. 14-15 2002!

WSMC will host two qualifying rounds, one at our July 20 meet and one at our August 17 meet.

The top 5 fastest wheelie riders from each meet will be seeded into the finals. The top 5 from the July meet will not be eligible to qualify top 5 again in August, but may participate if they so desire. Riders MUST be licensed WSMC road race competitors and MUST wear full racegear during the events. Motorcycles used may not use any wheelie bars, gyroscopic devices or any other method of “wheelie assistance”. A radar gun will be used by WSIR Officials to determine the speed measured at the start-finish line. Staging will be located in turn 9 (no running starts!). The promoter (WSIR) retains the right to add additional riders in the Finals as a “promoter option”.

Entry forms will be available at the track (July and August) – and the event is sponsored by WILLOW SPRINGS INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY so there is NO ENTRY FEE!

What Various Teams Said About Their MotoGP Weekend At Catalunya

From a Suzuki press release:

Team Suzuki News Service

ROBERTS TAKES STRONG SEVENTH IN BLAZING SPANISH RACE

2002 MotoGP Championship – Round 6, Catalunya, Spain, June 16, 2002

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki’s Kenny Roberts capitalised on the latest round of machine and tyre improvements to claim seventh place in today’s Catalunyan GP, surviving blistering heat and a fast-paced race that saw several accident victims. Team Suzuki rider Akira Ryo, riding as a wild card entry, just missed making it a double top ten for the new 990cc GSV-R V4 MotoGP prototype, in only its sixth race. The Japanese rider was 11th.

Second Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki rider Sete Gibernau was one of those to fall, crashing out with 19 laps remaining in the 25-lap race, run in front of a crowd of 90,000 at the 4.727km Montmelo circuit outside Barcelona. Sete was bitterly disappointed, after qualifying the new four-stroke GSV-R on the front row of grid for the first time. He was in close company with his team-mate at the time, disputing fifth position and hoping to get free to close on the leaders, still in close view up ahead.

The race, sixth round of the 2002 MotoGP World Championship, was won by defending champion Valentino Rossi (Honda).

Tomorrow, the team will stay on at the Catalunyan circuit for two days of tests, in conjunction with the factory engineers, and factory rider Ryo. As well as the first time out on the latest 2002 Michelin tyres, after switching brands earlier in the season, there are chassis and other modifications to test, and engine and electronic changes to get fine tuned – part of the continuing high-intensity race development programme of the newest of the three Japanese factory four-stroke MotoGP prototypes. The GSV-R was brought to the race-tracks a full year earlier than planned, after promising early tests showed the tremendous potential of the new machine.

KENNY ROBERTS – Seventh Position
“It was pretty much as I expected. It was a hot and slippery race-track. If you have a better connection between throttle and rear tyre, then you get a better finishing position. I thought we had a fifth-placed bike, but that was thinking I would be ahead of the two-strokes of Capirossi and Barros. They were in front of me, so I was seventh. What we need to be doing is to beat the top four bikes. We’re a long way from where we need to be, but we’re also a long way ahead of where we would without the new four-stroke. I hope the factory keep listening to us, and give us what we need.”

SETE GIBERNAU – Did Not Finish.
“My pace at the start was not so bad, and I was lapping behind Kenny. I saw the front four pulling away ahead I wanted to pass him to try and follow along. Eventually I did get by, and I led him for a couple of laps before he passed me again. Next time on the straight, I was in his slipstream and going faster than usual, and I lost the front wheel braking for the first corner. I thought I could have gone better … but it’s easy to say things like that after the event. I wanted to try and get amongst the leaders today, so I’m really sorry for my crew, all the guys, for Telefónica MoviStar and the crowds, who have given me a lot off support this weekend. I want to pay them back, but we’ll have to wait until the next race.”

GARRY TAYLOR – Team Manager
“We had some new parts this weekend, and it was our first race on the same tyres as the other Michelin runners, so we were on a level playing field for the first time. We definitely showed some progress. Not enough, but progress is progress, and we’re staying on for the next two days to keep working on the programme, with some new chassis parts to test, and some testing to do for Michelin. Ryo-San did a great job, getting a good finish in his first race on this circuit, and on Michelin tyres. I’m also happy that Sete is not injured.”


From a Honda press release:

HONDA RACING NEWS

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002 Round 6
CATALAN GRAND PRIX, CATALUNYA
Race Day, Sunday June 16 2002

NO STOPPING RAMPAGING ROSSI

Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RCV211V) bagged his fifth win from six races at a scorching Catalunya. More than 90,000 sun-drenched Spaniards watched Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RCV211V) finish a close second as Honda recorded its third one-two of the season so far. This is Rossi’s 44th career win and his 18th premier class win. The new Honda RCV211 has now won every race so far this year.

Rossi started from the front row of the grid in fourth place and held fourth position into the first turn. By the fifth lap he’d got into a rhythm and set the fastest lap of the race at 1m 45.594s on lap five. Carlos Checa (Yamaha), Ukawa, Rossi and Max Biaggi (Yamaha) were now pulling clear. Rossi moved into second place behind Checa on lap 14 and on the next lap he used the speed of the RCV to edge past the Spaniard at the end of the long start/finish straight and into the lead. He led from then on with team-mate Ukawa in close touch throughout.

“That was a really hard race for the bike, the tyres and me,” said the Championship leader. ” I have to say a big thank you to all my team because we changed so many of the settings over the weekend to find the best race set-up. I got a good start, and followed the others. Checa got into a good rhythm and I overtook Biaggi when the others started to get away. I tried to turn some laps in the 45 second bracket but I couldn’t. I got away and Tohru came with me, but I was a little better on the brakes in three of the turns and I managed to stay in front. I’m very happy with this win.”

Second-placed Ukawa looked as if he might have been able to repeat the success he had in the second race of the MotoGP Championship in South Africa when he overtook Rossi in the closing stages for a win. But although Ukawa pressed him hard all the way Rossi had just enough in hand to fend him off.

“I knew I had to make a good start,” said Ukawa. “And I got the holeshot, my first this season. I led until Checa went past me and then I got him back and held it. The tyres were good today and the whole bike felt good. The work we did in qualifying really paid off in the race and I guess I’m happy with second. I’m not so happy that the points gap between Valentino and me has increased. But there’s a long way to go this season and I’ll be giving it everything.”

Alex Barros (West Honda Pons NSR500) was fifth and as the first two-stroke past the flag effectively ‘won’ the race within a race. “I’m really very happy,” said the Brazilian. “I had a great scrap with Loris to be the best two-stroke finisher, just like at Mugello. I couldn’t have done any more than I did today because the long straight here makes things difficult for us. I want to thank my team for the excellent work they’ve done which allowed me to ride well at one of my favourite tracks. We have to try and close the gap with the four-strokes at Assen.”

Sixth-place finisher Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) had an incident-packed race, running off track. “This was a tough race,” he said. “I tried my very best, but we don’t seem to be getting much reward for our efforts. I wanted to stay with the leaders from the start, but I lost a lot of time getting past the two Suzukis, they held me up in the turns and then I couldn’t get past them on the straight. My off-track excursion was because Roberts braked hard well before entering a corner and I had to carry on in a straight line or I would have run into him.”

Daijiro Kato (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR500) finished a fighting eighth after a troubled time in qualifying. “The first corner was tough,” said the MotoGP rookie. “It was really hard to find a way through the bunched-up pack. That really slowed me up and then after ten laps the rear tyre went off a bit. This isn’t a bad result because I was running the same lap times as Barros and Capirossi and if I could have found a faster way through in the early laps things might have been even better.”

Things got slightly better in the race for Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) who had qualifying difficulties and began the race 20th on the grid. He eventually finished 13th. “Unfortunately I just couldn’t do any better,” said the disappointed Japanese. “After all the problems we had yesterday, the situation has improved. The bike was sliding everywhere in the second half of the race and even if I have got three points from this race I don’t feel very good about it.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500) was brought down in a first lap crash and his machine was too badly damaged for him to remount. “I could have scored some good points today,” said the Dutchman. “We ran a new compound rear tyre in the warm-up and I was faster than I had been all weekend. An 11th or 12th place finish was definitely possible today. I knew I was going to crash about two tenths of a second before I went down. Jacque hit Abe who pushed Nakano across in front of me. I had nowhere to go and ended up in the dirt.”

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) made a determined charge through the field from seventh position on the first lap, but he couldn’t overhaul winner Marco Melandri (Aprilia). Rolfo was up to second place by lap fourteen and locked in combat with eventual third place finisher Fonsi Nieto (Aprilia). Although Nieto threw everything he had at the Italian, Rolfo had pulled out just enough of a gap as they crossed the line.

“My problem was at the start,” said Rolfo. “It was really hard to overtake the riders in front of me in the early laps and then getting past De Puniet and Battaini took a while. My bike was a bit down on acceleration, but I pushed hard and got into a rhythm. I really have to thank the team and if we can work as hard as this at every race I will be very happy, second place is not so bad here.”

Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) made rapid progress from a sluggish start and was up to sixth place by lap thirteen of the 23 lap race, but tyre problems relegated him to ninth place at the flag. “I had to push really hard,” said the Spaniard. “I had a problem with the front brake at the first corner which lost me a lot of time, then the front tyre started to go off because I was pushing so hard. As the race went on I lost a lot of the places I spent so much time getting in the early stages of the race.”

Haruchika Aoki (Arie Molenaar Racing Honda RS250R/W) finished 11th and was pleased with his ever-improving performances. “The testing we did here helped a lot,” he said. “In the race I just couldn’t get away from the group of riders I was in. I had a small rear brake problem but the bike was great. We just have to keep making improvements each time we go out.”

The Championship points situation shows a three way dice developing between Nieto on 101 points, Melandri with 95 and Rolfo looking strong in third with 80.

Danny Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) came within a mere 19 thousandths of a second of his first win after a compelling duel with Manuel Poggiali (Gilera) in the burning Catalan sun. Way out in front on their own for the last eight laps, there was never more than a bike length between the pair. Pedrosa led for the final few turns before Poggiali squeezed past as they crossed the line.

“I just couldn’t win it,” said Pedrosa. “It’s a shame to lose a race by such a tiny margin, but I can’t be too unhappy about coming second at my home Grand Prix. After all the trouble I had with tyres over the weekend I can go home happy with this result. I tried my absolute maximum, but it was not to be and I really appreciated the level of support I’ve had here from the fans.”

Joan Olive (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) notched his best ever result in his home Grand Prix. He ran with the leading group in thearly stages before dropping back to finish sixth. “I really needed this result,” said Olive. “I have had bad luck following me for a while and I feel very emotional about this result here. I expected tyre wear and was ready for it when it came. I passed about 13 riders into the first corner and that helped me a lot.”

The increasingly impressive Mika Kallio (Red Devil Honda RS125R) finished ninth, his fourth points scoring finish in his rookie year. Poggiali heads the Championship standings with 111 points from Arnaud Vincent (Aprilia) with 90.


From Marlboro Yamaha:

MARLBORO CATALAN GRAND PRIX, CATALUNYA
Race Day, Sunday June 16 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN SCORE STRONG RESULT

Marlboro Yamaha Team riders Carlos Checa and Max Biaggi roared their YZR-M1s to third- and fourth-place finishes at red-hot Catalunya this afternoon, local Checa making the running throughout the first half of the race and sending the 90,000-strong crowd wild with excitement.

The day after Biaggi had given the M1 its first pole position, Checa was in dazzling form, grabbing the lead from the second row to lead all the way to half distance. He held the Hondas of Valentino Rossi and Tohru Ukawa at bay until lap 15 of 24, when he began to slip back to third. Biaggi shadowed the leading group, gradually finding himself alone in fourth place.

“Overall, not such a bad weekend,” said YZR-M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda. “Max got pole position yesterday and our bikes seemed good in the race until half distance. At Mugello Carlos was passed easily on the straight but the speed difference didn’t seem so big here, though we still need to work on acceleration. Our lap times weren’t so good after half distance, however, so I think we need to work on machine set-up to improve tyre endurance.”

The Marlboro Yamaha Team and several rival MotoGP squads stay at Catalunya tomorrow for a Michelin tyre test.

CHECA BACK WHERE HE BELONGS
Carlos Checa today scored his first podium finish since April’s season-opening Japanese GP, a well-deserved reward for his consistently superb riding and tireless dedication. The local Marlboro Yamaha Team man started brilliantly from the second row, took the lead from Tohru Ukawa on lap two at turn three and stayed there until just before half distance when Ukawa sneaked ahead several times, Checa successfully counter attacking on the brakes. But eventually he did slip to second and then third, his pace tailing off in the closing stages. He crossed the line alone, eight seconds behind the winner.

“That was hard work, the bike was working well and I was able to run a good pace,” said Checa, who qualified seventh after a tumble in final qualifying. “I never had a good feeling here with the Yamaha 500, but this bike is different and we’re making good progress, so thanks to all the team, my engineers and my mechanics. It’s not been easy though, because I crashed yesterday afternoon and the bike wasn’t so good this morning, so we had to change some settings. In the race I was able to lead for a long time, and when Ukawa came by I could pass him again. But when Rossi went ahead I couldn’t keep the pace, it was too risky, I didn’t have enough traction, especially on the throttle, so we must focus on that to improve.”

BIAGGI STARTS FROM POLE, FINISHES 4th

Max Biaggi had high expectations for today’s race, run in sweltering 30-degree heat. The Italian Marlboro Yamaha Team star started from pole position on his number-two machine and made a good enough start to slot into third at the first turn and run third for the first few laps. But he couldn’t quite match the pace of the leading group and dropped to fourth, running the second half of the race very much on his own. Nevertheless the result moves Biaggi to fourth overall, equal on points with his team-mate but one place ahead thanks to his second place at the Italian GP.

“You have big hopes when you get pole position,” said Biaggi after his third successive podium finish on the M1. “I managed to make a good start but I quickly realised that it was going to be a tough race. I was racing my second bike because we had a problem with my number-one machine in morning warm-up. In the race the bike didn’t feel so good in chassis or engine performance, so we effectively lost all the hard work we’d done in practice and qualifying. I did the best I could in the circumstances, and congratulations to Carlos, he rode a great race.”

ROSSI TAKES FIFTH MotoGP VICTORY
Valentino Rossi today scored his fifth victory of the year, beating team-mate Tohru Ukawa into second place after a hard-ridden final few laps. “Checa was running a good rhythm early on,” said the Italian. “In some places I was faster, some places slower. But when Tohru went ahead, I decided to make my move. In the last laps I was better on the brakes, so I knew I could win if I didn’t make a mistake.”


From Proton:

NEW PROTON MAKES POINTS FIRST TIME OUT

Round 6: Catalunyan GP, Montmelo Sunday June 16, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: Twelfth
Nobuatsu Aoki: DNF

Proton Team KR rider Jeremy McWilliams raced the brand new wide-line chassis in today’s Catalunyan GP, finishing 12th for four points – and reporting a big step forward in overall handling performance for the lightweight three-cylinder 500cc machine.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki had a disappointing afternoon, forced into the pits after only one of 25 laps of the 4.727km circuit, where more than 90,000 fans endured blazing heat to watch an exciting race won by defending champion Valentino Rossi’s Honda. Aoki suspected an electrical fault, but the team later diagnosed a crankshaft problem.

McWilliams had decided to use the new chassis only on race morning, after a single example had been rushed to the track following promising tests of a prototype three weeks before. The new chassis not only has widely spaced top rails, to make space for the four-stroke engine now under design at the team’s headquarters in England, but also incorporates some different geometry ideas devised by the team owner, former triple World Champion Kenny Roberts.

During two days of practice, McWilliams had confirmed that promise, finding that the radically different approach gave more predictable handling for the agile KR3 racer, but was also kinder to the tyres, giving longer life and eliminating a “pumping” problem he had encountered on the older chassis. At this early stage of development, however, it was not quite as fast in lap times.

The team worked through Friday night to make a new rear suspension link, and after further adjustments McWilliams decided to race the chassis, in the long-term interests of future development. The gamble paid off in the short term too.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
“I have to say the old man got something right. The new chassis completely cured the pumping problem I’d been having, and the new chassis is all Kenny’s ideas. It probably wasn’t ready to race, but it was the only thing to do after the experiences I’ve been having. I really needed to finish. The race wasn’t much fun. I lost side grip, but even so the bigger bikes were holding me up, then getting away on the straight. We always knew it would be difficult at this track. All in, I’m happy with the result.”

NOBUATSU AOKI
“I got a good start, and I was pretty lucky to escape the Jacque Attack that put three riders out. I was tenth after the first lap, and I was confident I could follow Jacque, but then the engine started to run really rough. There was nothing to do but to pull into the pits.”

KENNY ROBERTS– Team Owner
“We survived it, and with a brand new chassis too. It’s only the third time it’s been out, and it finished the race. Now we know what to do to get it more race ready, and it should pay off. Nobu had another crankshaft problem. It was not the same as the earlier failures, but it was still a failure.”

Tonight’s Two-wheel Tuesday Line-up On SPEED



From SPEED Channel:

Two-wheel Tuesday Line-up For Tuesday, June 18:

2:00 p.m. FIM 125cc GP, Mugello, Italy

3:00 p.m. FIM World Supersport, Silverstone, England

7:00 p.m. Bike Week

7:30 p.m. Motorcyclist

8:00 p.m. AMA Formula Xtreme, Road America, WI

9:00 p.m. MotoGP, Catalunya, Spain

10:00 p.m. AMA Grand National Dirt Track T.T., Springfield, IL

11:00 p.m. Corbin’s Ride On

11:30 p.m. Harley-Davidson Sportsters, Springfield, IL

12:00 a.m. Bike Week

12:30 a.m. Motorcyclist

1:00 a.m. AMA Formula Xtreme, Road America, WI

2:00 a.m. MotoGP, Catalunya, Spain

3:00 a.m. AMA Grand National Dirt Track T.T., Springfield, IL

Duhamel’s Back On A 600 In Day Two Of AMA Team Tests At VIR

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By Bruce Wilkins

Cooler than normal temperatures with an afternoon of overcast skies allowed for some hot testing today at Virginia International Raceway.

Numerous AMA Superbike teams finished up the second day of tests with faster times than they achieved last season. The teams will converge on the southern Virginia road course on August 9-11 for the doubleheader season finale of the AMA Superbike season.

Miguel Duhamel, who won back-to-back Superbike races at Road America two weekends ago, utilized most of the Tuesday session to set up his Supersport CBR600F4i.

“It’s the first time back on the 600 and we’re right there within two-tenths of the fastest laps done today by the 600 regulars,” said Duhamel, who recorded a 1:28.5 lap as his fastest of the day. “We’re matching our fastest laps in our race here last year and I always run faster in a race than like this, so we’re pretty happy about that. Looks good for August.”

Duhamel’s Superbike times in the morning were off from teammate Nicky Hayden’s best times. “That’s really not too bad, but tomorrow we’re going to concentrate on the Superbike full time,” he pointed out. Duhamel’s fastest Superbike lap today was 1:27.0, while he recorded lap times in the 1:26 range yesterday. “We’re real confident that we’ll get back in the 26s tomorrow.”

Duhamel credited his hot streak with reuniting with crew chief Al Ludington. “I’m really looking forward to VIR…now that I’ve got Al back, we’ve got the right setup, the guys are working really great, I see myself in the mixture in every race. The rest of the season, it will be a big disappointment in each race if we’re not in the top three.”

Kawasaki racer Eric Bostrom has mixed feelings about the VIR testing session so far. “The good thing is that our times are better than last year, but the downside is that I’m not totally happy with the suspension yet,” Bostrom said. “We’ll work on that the rest of the day.” Bostrom recorded numerous laps in the low 1:25 range on Tuesday.

Kawasaki team manager Michael Preston described the sessions so far as averaging about a second faster than his racers did last year. “Nobody’s crashed, we’re getting a lot of work done, and so far, so good,” he said. “We’re real lucky in that we thought it was going to be real hot this week, but so far it hasn’t been that hot. Hot weather like we had here last year is a discomfort for the riders and it’s definitely a lot more work to get the bikes ready. So we like the way the weather was today.”

Preston described the youngest member of his team, Tony Meiring, as a quick learner and taking to VIR real well. “Tony has come along really good and is actually a little ahead of our schedule,” Preston said. “The last few rounds he has had some really good performances and we’re just ecstatic that he’s getting in there and riding with the front runners.

“Tony’s getting better every week that he rides a bike and he’s doing real well here today,” Preston added. “He actually rode here last year as a privateer, so he’s come around really good.” Meiring lost a chain late in the afternoon under the bridge and his bike had to be hauled back to the pits.

The testing session marks the first such test of the year for the Austin Bleu Bayou Ducati team and racer Pascal Picotte. “It’s been good for us because this time has allowed us to go through a lot of stuff, things we couldn’t go too far with on race weekends,” Picotte explained. “At the track in the previous races, we could make a little improvement here or there, but here like this we can go from one extreme to another and figure things out that I really like…and the geometry and those types of things. We’re definitely learning a lot with this test and we’ll carry that over for us the rest of the season.” Picotte recorded laps in the 1:27 range, about a half-second off the leaders, but said he plans to get those times down to the mid-26s by tomorrow.

Points leader Nicky Hayden and winner of the first AMA Superbike race last season at VIR was pleased so far as well. “This test has been really good,” Hayden said. “I’ve gone faster than I qualified last year. I’m having a little problem with my foot. I was practicing the other day and twisted my ankle up pretty bad flat-tracking. I caught my right foot in a hole. It hasn’t slowed me down, but it hurts a lot. It’ll be all right…that’s just part of racing. Hasn’t been that much fun today because of the pain.”

Despite the injury, Hayden recorded consistent laps in the high 1:25s with his fastest lap a 1:25.5, according to Hayden. “I really like this track more each time I come here,” he said. “It’s held up really, really well for the amount of racing on it and it’s a just a cool place to race.”

Teams participating in the tests include Blimpie Yoshimura Suzuki with Mat Mladin, Aaron Yates and Jamie Hacking; Arclight Suzuki with Lee Acree and Craig Connell; Kawasaki with Tony Meiring, Eric Bostrom and Tommy Hayden; American Honda with Nicky Hayden, Miguel Duhamel and Jake Zemke; Austin Bleu Bayou with Pascal Picotte; and Yamaha with Damon Buckmaster.

NASCAR racer Ken Schrader spectated briefly during the test, checking out Mat Mladin’s racebike.

Izutsu Will Be Back On Kawasaki At Misano

From a press release issue by Fuchs Kawasaki:

WORLD SUPERBIKE & SUPERSPORT CHAMPIONSHIPS
ROUND 8 – MISANO, SAN MARINO
18 JUNE 2002 – EVENT PREVIEW

IZUTSU RETURNS TO THE FRAY AT MISANO

After an enforced eight week lay off through injury, Hitoyasu Izutsu will make his return to the World Superbike Championship aboard the Fuchs Kawasaki ZX-7RR at Misano this weekend. The former Japanese Superbike Champion, who sustained a badly fractured wrist in a qualifying crash at the Sugo round of the championship back in April, tested in Japan last week before declaring himself fit to compete at Misano.

‘I’m looking forward to getting back on the bike and racing again at Misano,’ said Izutsu. ‘It’s been a long, hard two months, but everything felt fine during last week’s test and I’m in pretty good shape for the weekend ahead. Of course, racing is completely different to testing but I’ll be pushing just as hard at Misano as I was in the opening three rounds of the series.’

With Izutsu sidelined through injury Chris Walker has been the main four-cylinder threat to the V-twins over the last four rounds. Walker is currently the highest placed four-cylinder rider in the championship; a position he is determined to maintain at Misano.

‘Misano is a pretty popular test track with all the teams, so I guess everyone is going to be on the pace from the word go this weekend,’ said Walker. ‘The bike seemed to go pretty well when we tested here, but the most important thing was that the test gave me a chance to learn my way around the circuit. I’ve had to learn too many tracks during free practice sessions this year, so it will be good to race at one of the few circuits I’m familiar with this weekend. The fact that Izutsu is back from injury is also a bonus, although if he thinks I’m going to relinquish my position as the top four-cylinder rider without a fight, then he’s in for a shock…’

Having put his World Supersport Championship campaign back on track with a hard fought second place at Lausitz, Andrew Pitt is determined to retake the lead in the championship standings this weekend. The sweltering conditions normally experienced at Misano may cause problems for others, but a rigorous training schedule in Italy, carried out during the hottest part of the day, has left the Australian feeling confident about the weekend ahead.

‘It’s going to be hot and it’s going to be hard this weekend; which suits me just fine,’ declared Pitt. ‘It was hot in Australia and South Africa and I won both those races, so the conditions we normally experience at Misano shouldn’t pose any real problems for me; although I expect a couple of the other riders may struggle with the heat. If I’m to regain the lead in the championship standings then I need nothing less than a race win this weekend, and that’s exactly what I’ll be aiming for.’

Pitt’s Fuchs Kawasaki team-mate, James Ellison, is also looking forward to this weekend’s Misano round, but for very different reasons.

‘It’s been a bit of a nightmare recently, but I’m confident that I can turn things around this weekend’ said Ellison. ‘We’ve seen improvements both in the bike and my times during practice and qualifying at each of the last three rounds, only to suffer some real bad luck in the actual races. The team have worked real hard getting the bike set up how I want it and I need to repay all their hard work with a good result at Misano. I like the track and I’ve always gone well here in the past, so I’ll be bitterly disappointed if I leave here on Sunday without a top ten finish under my belt.’

Roberts Finishes Two Days Of Testing With Suzuki At Catalunya

From a press release issued by Team Suzuki News Service:

HOT PACE IN SPAIN BOOSTS SUZUKI’S ASSEN HOPES

2002 MotoGP Championship
Catalunya, Spain, June 18, 2002.

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki rider Kenny Roberts Jr. was brimming with confidence after two gruelling days of testing at the Catalunyan GP circuit – “the best tests so far with the new four-stroke machine.”

Blazing heat and exhausting conditions were not enough to keep Roberts from running more than 70 laps on both Monday and Tuesday, as a revised chassis and a series of other development changes kept levels of enthusiasm and excitement at fever pitch.

The factory’s and the team’s latest development work not only brought the 2000 World Champion a significantly faster lap time than he had achieved at the GP on the weekend before. They also opened up a new level of competitive promise for the powerful 990cc Suzuki GSV-R V4 – newest of the three Japanese factory four-stroke racing prototypes, after being brought to the tracks a full year earlier than originally planned.

“This was one of my best tests ever, and certainly the best with the new motorcycle,” enthused Roberts at the end of the second day. “I’m really looking forward to the next GP, at Assen in Holland.

“The team found some different directions, and a new chassis from the factory also seemed to help,” he continued. “We made a lot progress in areas that we hadn’t necessarily expected to, and it made the bike comfortable for me to ride at a very fast pace.

“The lap times reflected it. I was able to go half-a-second faster than I had in qualifying for the weekend’s GP, but I could do so for a number of consecutive laps. That is what’s really important.

“We were all pretty tired and beat up after the weekend, but the progress over the two days meant that I and the whole team ended on a very high note. We have think we have the confidence to challenge for the top five, and we can carry that over to Holland.”

Teammate Sete Gibernau also tested on the first day, but missed the second, after finally succumbing to an illness he had been fighting off all weekend. The bulk of the work – testing next-generation prototype Michelin tyres as well as Suzuki’s own development – fell on Roberts, and team manager Garry Taylor was full of praise.

“Kenny ran almost three times race distance on both days, while the weather just kept on getting hotter and hotter. None of us had been looking forward to the tests after a long and hot weekend, but Kenny showed a lot of grit and determination, and that inspired the whole team. When things are going in a good direction, you can see a lot of difference in Kenny, and in everyone else as well.

“I think the whole team would like to thank him for his efforts.”

AMA Pro Racing Announces Medical Board, Without Any Road Racing Representation

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

AMA Pro Racing has announced a new medical board which only includes doctors associated with motocross and conspicuously lacks participation by doctors who have road raced–including retired emergency room doctor Jim Adams, general practitioner James Norwood and orthopedic surgeon Dave Kieffer–or have made a career out of treating road racers, including orthopedic surgeon Dr. Art Ting.

An AMA Pro Racing press release on the new medical board follows:

AMA PRO RACING FORMS MEDICAL ADVISORY BOARD TO IMPLEMENT UNIFORM RACE MEDICAL CARE

PICKERINGTON, Ohio — AMA Pro Racing has formed a new five-member Medical Advisory Board to implement new standards for trackside medical support of AMA Pro Racing competitors.

The medical advisory board is made up of members with extensive experience in motorcycle racing, including: Bob Moore, former FIM World Motocross champion and chairman of the Road 2 Recovery Foundation; AMA Supercross and Motocross doctors John Bodnar, Medical Director, and Stephen Augustine; Duke Finch, AMA Motocross/Supercross manager; and Hugh Fleming, AMA Pro Racing safety and equipment director.

“The medical advisory board was formed by AMA Pro Racing to implement better safety and medical policies for our professional racers,” said Scott Hollingsworth, CEO, AMA Pro Racing. “Our goals are to standardize medical services in all of AMA Pro Racing with the eventual aim of providing a mobile hospital that would go to as many events as possible. We will shortly announce our first medical policy dealing with concussions and we hope to establish a medical database of our riders to help better evaluate their condition in the event of an injury.”

The mission of the medical advisory board is to promote the safety of the AMA professional athlete, to improve and elevate the quality of on-site medical care available at professional races, and to promote safety and performance research as it relates to professional motorcycle racing.

“The advisory board is working to form policies to benefit the rider’s health and safety first and foremost,” said Fleming. “The work being done in supercross and motocross is acting as a template for other disciplines. Future goals include augmenting the medical staff with professional trainers and therapists.”

The team of Dr. Bodnar and Dr. Augustine work together in covering all AMA Supercross and Motocross events this season thanks in large part to the support of Asterisk, a sub-division of the CTI Kneebrace Company. The addition of these sports-specific doctors, working in conjunction with existing track medical staffs, is helping to better assess and deal with injuries suffered by riders. The board is also formulating standardized policies on how to best deal with specific types of injuries, especially when dealing with head injuries.

Asterisk provides financial assistance for the doctors expenses for both supercross and motocross. Additionally, they have organized and funded the Kawasaki Medical Mule that has been used at the races to provide a prompt response vehicle to assist with injured riders.

The AMA Pro Racing Medical Advisory Board is the latest effort by AMA Pro Racing to further the cause of rider safety in motorcycle racing. Last year, with support from throughout the industry, AMA Pro Racing implemented the use of hundreds of feet of additional air modules at AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship races.

Toye Beats Graves In WSMC F1 At Willow Springs

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Riding a Suzuki GSX-R1000 his mechanics built using a cylinder head ported by Kaz Yoshima, Jeremy Toye unseated reigning WSMC Champion and Willow Springs Emperor Chuck Graves in an epic Toyota Cup Unlimited Formula One duel on Sunday.

Yoshima also developed the suspension and chassis set-up for Toye’s bike, prepared at Toye’s San Diego high-performance shop, Lee’s Cycles.

Graves, riding an ex-Damon-Buckmaster YZF-R7/R1 hybrid, had no answer for Toye and his overbore GSX-R1000 in a race run on a slippery track in hot conditions, although Graves did lead several times.

Vincent Haskovec was third on his AMA Superstock bike, fitted with slick tires, ahead of Jack Pfeifer on a Team Orthopedics Superstock GSX-R1000 and racing lawyer Stephen Hewitt on a YZF-R1.

Graves won the Performance Machine Open Superbike race on the same bike from Hewitt and Keith MacBeth, and used a YZF-R6 to beat Toye in Roadracingworld.com 600cc Superstock action, with Jacob West third and Pfeifer fourth.

Pfeifer won in 600cc Modified Production, beating Robbie Dowie and WSMC Operations Manager Kenny Kopecky. Pfeifer also won the Skorpion Racing Open Modified Production race from class sponsor Tyler Paulson and Kopecky, and won the Open Superstock race from the front row, beating Chris Ulrich, who started on the last row of the grid. Ulrich caught and passed Pfeifer late in the six-lap race, then got kicked completely out of the seat in turn two, barely stayed on the track and finished second.

Haskovec came from the back of the grid to beat Toye in 750cc Superstock and L&L Motorsports 750cc Superbike but Toye beat Haskovec in 750cc Modified Production, which was the pair’s first match-up of the day, a race which saw Haskovec start on the same tires he used in the Superbike race at Sears Point. Haskovec missed Saturday practice because he had to work.

Frank Aragaki held off Mark Watts to win the Bakersfield Yamaha 250cc GP race and Willard Ivins won the 125cc Grand Prix race with Sharyn Namnath second.

Andre Castanos won the Pro-Italia Aprilia Challenge race and also won the Wood-Ease Professional Hand Cleaner 550cc Superbike race, riding a Libasci Racing Aprilia RS250.

Marlboro Yamaha Tests At Catalunya

From a press release:

MARLBORO YAMAHA TEAM TESTS
Catalunya, Spain
Monday, June 17 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA TEST TYRES AT RED-HOT CATALUNYA

Marlboro Yamaha Team riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa stayed on at Catalunya today for Michelin tyre tests, completing four gruelling days of riding at the Spanish circuit. Both men each completed 65 laps in stifling 40-degree heat, evaluating front and rear development slicks on their YZR-M1 MotoGP bikes.

“I’m glad we stayed on, it was definitely worth it,” said Biaggi. “Michelin have done a great job with their four-stroke tyres and today we tested a new type of front tyre that definitely had some good points, including improved feeling. But these are development tyres that we won’t be racing just yet.”

Biaggi, who scored the M1’s first pole position on Saturday, was unlucky on race day. The Italian had to race his second bike after his number-one machine struck problems in morning warm-up. Nevertheless, he rode a determined race to fourth to lift himself to fourth in the World Championship points standings.

Team-mate Checa, who finished third in Sunday’s Marlboro Catalan GP after leading half the race, was also impressed by Michelin’s latest batch of front and rear slicks. “This was a useful test for us, the new tyres definitely have potential,” said the Spaniard. “The main thing for us was to give the best-possible feedback to Michelin, so they can keep developing their tyres and keep making steps forward.”

Biaggi and Checa were testing alongside rival Michelin-equipped teams. Michelin are dominating the new era of four-stroke MotoGP racing, just as they had dominated 500 GP racing for many years, but the French company never stops working to improve its range of tyres.

“The whole team is pretty exhausted after this very long weekend, but it’s always good to see what new tyres Michelin come up with,” explained Marlboro Yamaha Team manager Geoff Crust. “For us, testing front tyres was the main objective of this test and both Max and Carlos liked what they tried. We tested the fronts first and then a few rears, and the information we gave Michelin will help them to make the next step. Now we’re all going to get a few days of well-deserved rest. We’ve been flat out for six weeks or more, and after next week’s Dutch GP we’ve got back-to-back races in Britain and Germany, so everyone needs a few days off.”

Practice and qualifying for the Dutch GP at Assen commence on Thursday June 27. Race day is Saturday June 29.

Lap times
Max Biaggi (Marlboro Yamaha Team) 1m 45.0s
Carlos Checa (Marlboro Yamaha Team) 1m 45.6s

World’s Fastest Mother Is Pregnant Again

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

This just in: Racer Vicky Jackson-Bell and husband/tuner Tony, part owners of Spectrum Motorsports, are expecting a second child.

Vicky Jackson-Bell is already the fastest mother on the planet, thanks to budding motocross star Christopher, age 9.

The unborn child already has racetrack experience, including crashing; Jackson-Bell served as an instructor at Freddie Spencer’s High-Performance Riding School in Las Vegas on May 23-24 shortly after becoming pregnant (and before she knew it), and crashed when a student turned in front of her at California Speedway during a Fastrack Riders day on June 3rd.

She says she’s giving up riding until after the child is born.

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