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Mathers To Take Control Of AMA Pro Road Racing

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Copyright 2001, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Posted 12:00 a.m. EDT Tuesday, July 3

Former Kawasaki and Honda racing manager Gary Mathers will take over control and direction of AMA Pro Road Racing, perhaps as early as this coming weekend at Laguna Seca, an AMA Trustee said Sunday.

Mathers, who recently retired from American Honda, was hired as a consultant to attend several recent AMA Nationals and report on operations to AMA Pro Racing CEO Scott Hollingsworth.

Mathers compiled such a scathing indictment of bungled operations and inconsistent policies and rules enforcement that he fully expected to be dismissed and ignored after turning in the report, according to associates. The report specifically criticized the reign of AMA Pro Racing Director of Competition Merrill Vanderslice, National Technical Director Rob King, and AMA Superbike Operations Manager Ron Barrick.

But instead of getting him fired, Mathers’ report made a deep impact on Hollingsworth and reinforced what several members of the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors have been saying for years, namely that continual problems created or added to by Pro Racing staff members are holding back commercial development and general advancement of the AMA road racing series.

Those problems have been laid mainly at the feet of Vanderslice, the former GP mechanic who came to the AMA over a decade ago professing that he wanted to do away with “the old AMA” and bring fairness and fresh thinking to the organization’s professional racing operations.

Critics say that over the years Vanderslice has morphed completely into a classic example of “the old AMA” he once said he reviled, and his tenure with AMA Pro Racing has been increasingly marked by conflict with the Board of Directors.

Vanderslice in the last 12 months has complained long and hard about what he sees as Directors–who he feels know nothing about racing–interfering with his ability to run Pro Racing as he was hired to do. That charge has irritated several individual Directors who have long been involved in managing or sponsoring riders and teams, as well as the one Director who is a former professional racer.

The Directors have also been angered by what they see as staff members presenting incomplete or selective information when the Board has been asked to make or ratify a decision; as a result, Vanderslice has lost all credibility with some Directors.

It is unknown at post time exactly what responsibilities Mathers will assume, what title he will hold and to whom he will report. Similarly, the fates of Vanderslice, King and Barrick are unknown. They could be fired, reassigned, told to report to Mathers, or left in position with Mathers firmly in control behind the scenes.

But given that some Directors have plainly stated that, to persons outside the AMA bunker, AMA Pro Racing looks the same as it did five or even 10 years ago, it is unlikely that Vanderslice, King and Barrick will retain their jobs.

Directors have complained that the appearance that nothing has changed–and that the interface between AMA Pro Racing and the riders, teams and sponsors that participate in AMA races is as rough and rocky as ever–is diverting attention from successful efforts to increase the size of purses, increase television coverage of races, and increase safety measures.

The debacle at Loudon two weekends ago reinforced the idea, advanced in Mathers’ report, that AMA road racing is completely mismanaged and that any time a choice between the right reaction and the wrong reaction to a problem presents itself, the current management has managed to consistently make the wrong decision.

Vanderslice did his cause no favor with his handling of problems at Loudon, at one point refusing to allow riders five laps of practice prior to the 600cc Supersport race being flagged off on an artificially-dried track, instead declaring (of the riders) “they don’t run the AMA, we do!”

See related posts dated 6/18, 6/19, 6/21, 6/24, 6/25, 6/26, 6/27, 6/28, 7/1 and 7/2.

Hear What Mladin Said, Compare To AMA Press Release, Make Up Your Own Mind, Then E-mail AMA For Or Against Fine

0

For your listening pleasure, the unabridged Mladin interview in MP3. Hear the few complaints voiced in a reasonable fashion that cost the reigning AMA Superbike Champion $5000 and a point in the Championship.

Then compare what Mladin actually said with this press release, written by AMA Media Relations Contractor Larry Lawrence and issued by the AMA:

“MLADIN FINED AND LOSES LOUDON POLE POINT FOR DETRIMENTAL CONDUCT

“PICKERINGTON, Ohio — Yoshimura Suzuki’s Mathew Mladin has been fined $5,000 and penalized a Superbike championship pole position point for detrimental conduct during a post-qualifying press conference at New Hampshire International Speedway on Saturday, June 16.

“When asked a question about his record-setting qualifying run, Mladin instead opened the press conference using profanity at times to criticize New Hampshire International Speedway, an AMA Pro Racing official, a newspaper reporter and fellow competitors.

“AMA Pro Racing deems Mladin’s actions in the press conference as inexcusable. The public form (sic) of a press conference is not the place to raise personal issues with AMA Pro Racing officials, newspaper reporters, fellow competitors or use foul language.

“Mladin leads the AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship with 230 points.”

To express your opinion on the AMA decision to fine Mladin and dock him a point for expressing his opinion and the way he expressed it, send an e-mail to AMA Pro Racing CEO Scott Hollingsworth ([email protected]); Mark Tuttle, Chairman, AMA Pro Racing Board Of Directors ([email protected]); AMA Pro Racing Director of Competition Merrill Vanderslice, ([email protected]); with a copy to Roadracing World ([email protected]).

Large MP3 file (for high bandwidth connections)

Smaller MP3 file

WMRRA Another Progressive Organization When It Comes To Rider Representation

0

This Just In:

“My name is Briggs Willoughby and I am the Grand Prix rider rep for WMRRA. We also have a SuperSport, Vintage and Novice rep. The mission of each particular rep is to represent the interests of their riders, along with riders in general. We are also the people a rider can come to if they have an issue or request to make to the Executive board.

“On top of this, everyone on our Executive board, save one who is the girlfriend of a rider, is an active racer here at WMRRA.

“Briggs Willoughby
Seattle, WA”

Motorcyclist And Sport Rider Magazines Get New Owners

0

EMAP, a British media company, announced on Monday, July 2 that it has sold its United States magazine group (formerly Peterson Publishing) to New York-based Primedia, Inc. for $515 million.

According to a Rueters report appearing on the Yahoo Finance News website, EMAP bought Peterson for $1.2 billion just two years ago, the price based on a strong forecast of U.S. advertising growth.

After the Publishers Information Bureau released word that U.S. magazine advertising dropped 9.4% in May, EMAP made the sale to Primedia, which now becomes the second-largest consumer magazine publishing company in America with some 250 titles.

Included in Primedia’s newly expanded collection of magazines are Motorcyclist and Sport Rider.

CMRA Has Long Had Rider Representation

0

This just in from CMRA Board Member Eric Kelcher:

“The Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association has had a committee of riders that form the Board of Directors of the non-profit organization for as long as I have been part of the CMRA. The BOD is elected by the whole racer contingency on an annual basis to two year terms. As such it represents a broad diverse group of riders. Some of the board has talents in sprints, endurance, mini, and sportsman classes while others more of the operation and promotion of races. We have found this to work very well and the group has been been very proactive in defining and promoting safety at the venues we attend. The Board has at times set up special committees to evaluate and report back to the board on new venues and safety issues that come up that may require rule changes.

“Open forums are held with the general racer populace both live at the track venues and on the web.

“Eric Kelcher
“Dallas, TX
“CMRA BOD 2000-2001
“CCS south central regional affiliate”

What A Great Idea: RPM Establishes Steering Committee Staffed By Cross-section Of Riders

0

RPM, the Texas-based WERA and AMA affiliate, has established a formal system of getting representative rider input. A press release issued July 2 by the organization follows:

“As of June 14, 2001, RPM has formed a Riders Steering Committee. The purpose of the Riders Committee is to:

“1. Serve ALL riders by placing ideas on the
table that address the safety and general direction of the club and its members as to benefit the whole.

“2. To have actual input from their peers (other
riders) and act upon those best ideas as described in item #1 in a swift and well-managed manner.

“The appointed Riders Steering Committee Members are:

“1. Expert – Greg Abbott

“2. Expert – Pete Martins

“3. Novice – David Kagen

“4. Vintage – Scott Howse

“5. Mini – Harold Hixon

“Ideas will be discussed on terms and conditions of these positions held.

“We will have meetings once per month. As it stands right now, it will done in the RPM Chat Room every second Monday of the month from 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. @ www.rpmraceclub.com”

The release was issued via e-mail by RPM’s Tom Shields, who signed the release:

“Tom Shields
“RPM Racing
“A WERA Affiliate
“www.rpmraceclub.com”

Several other club-racing organizations have similar schemes for gathering rider input, frequently putting rider-elected representatives on the organization’s Board of Directors.

If your club is using such a set-up, we’d like to hear from you, via e-mail to [email protected]. Please include your full name, your city and phone number. E-mails without full name, city and phone number will be ignored and deleted.

We Apparently Got The Portland Oiling Deal Wrong, And Now Stand Corrected By OMRRA

0

Never say that roadracingworld.com won’t try to correct a factual error, as in this case, when OMRRA’s Jeff Lind says we were full of (what Mat Mladin said at Loudon) when we reported on the track being oiled by an OMRRA local without an oil-catching bellypan, and webmaster Sam Fleming crashing in that oil at Portland. It actually was a local, but he was riding an AMA-legal Buell fitted with a bellypan, through which he had ground a hole. Jeff’s report follows:

“I learned of the oiling incident involving AMA Buell Pro Thunder racer Willie Jordan and AOD rider Sam Fleming from racer Briggs Willoughby and racer/OMRRA Vice President Bill Cismar. Below are their comments (speaking of Willie Jordan):

“Quoting Briggs – ‘This came from Willie. Call him up, he’s the service manager at Latus. But, he told me yesterday that on Friday he oiled himself, and almost crashed, and then the AOD bike went down in his oil. He said he had a bellypan, but had ground a hole in it.’

“Quoting Bill – ‘It was Willie. He came to me after the incident concerned that I, standing there in my OMRRA OFFICIAL shirt, was coming to see him to tell him he was done racing for the weekend. There were other red-flag incidents related to oil, but this specific incident, resulting in the AOD bike crashing, was Willie on an AMA-prepared Buell.”

“I would also like to correct another part of the Roadracingworld.com post that stated that ‘There are, however, several sections of Air Fence, owned by the racetrack, deployed for the event.’

“In actuality, the sections of Air Fence at the Portland race event(s) are not owned by the racetrack (PIR) but instead provided by OMRRA who rents them from an outside vender for all OMRRA motorcycle racing events.

“We (OMRRA) appreciate the press coverage, but feel the above details more accurately describe the facts of the reported matter.

“Other than the Friday practice oilings, the Saturday WERA 6-hour and Sunday combined OMRRA/WERA/AMA Pro Thunder sprint races went off beautifully and finished ahead of schedule. This is no small feat giving that normal OMRRA race Sundays are jam-packed with classes, then combine them with the WERA classes and visiting riders and throw in an AMA class as well. It’s a testament to the great volunteers who keep OMRRA running.

“Jeff Lind
“OMRRA Secretary, Board of Directors”

The Air Fence referred to is actually Kurt Sager’s Air Bale, which he rents to West Coast racetracks.

We still think every bike on every track should have a fluid-catching bellypan, AMA Pro Racing’s finest innovation, though.

AMA Agrees To Hear Appeals In Mladin And Chouinard Loudon Cases

0

AMA Pro Racing has agreed to hear appeals in the cases of Mat Mladin, (who was fined $5000 and lost a Championship point on trumped-up charges that his behavior in a press conference was detrimental to racing), and Chuck Chouinard, (who was disqualified from the Loudon 750cc Supersport race for allegedly having removed metal from valves).

News of the appeal for Chouinard came from AMA Pro Racing Superbike Operations Manager Ron Barrick, speaking at this weekend’s combined WERA National Challenge Series/AMA Pro Thunder National/OMRRA Regional event at Portland International Raceway.

News of the Mladin appeal came from Yoshimura Suzuki Team Manager Don Sakakura, speaking by phone from Chino, California.

Chouinard’s appeal will claim that the valves were not modified, but were only cleaned using Scotch-Brite. Valves from the engine and new, stock valves will be presented as evidence.

Mladin’s appeal will claim that Mladin did not say what he was accused of saying, and that an AMA press release announcing his fine and point loss misrepresented what Mladin said. A tape recording of the press conference in question and a copy of the AMA press release will be used as evidence.

The date and venue of the Appeal Board Hearings for Chouinard and Mladin have not yet been set.

July 2001

Triumph 955i Daytona Press Intro Letters To The Editor Inside Info Testing Bridgestone Tires With Team Kanemoto New Products Rossi Wins South African GP At Welkom18 Welkom GP Notes Rossi Wins Spanish Grand Prix At Jerez26 Jerez GP Notes Gobert Wins Sears Point AMA Superbike National Sears Point AMA Inside Info Mladin Is The Suzuki Kahuna At Road Atlanta AMA Superbike National Road Atlanta AMA Inside Info Edwards Wins First World Superbike Race At Philip Island, Second Cancelled Phillip Island World Superbike Notes Makoto Wins Everything At Sugo World Superbike Sugo World Superbike Notes Bayliss Is Ducati’s Man at Monza World Superbike Monza World Superbike Notes Connell And Higbee Win Willow Formula USA Racing And School Calendar Nicky Hayden: Young Gun The Crash Page Formula USA Inside Info Racing In Europe, Part 2 Tire Warmers Tested Ad Index and Phone Directory Website Directory High Performance Parts & Services Directory Honda’s GP Racing History Want Ads Chris Ulrich: Adventures Of A Racer Roadracing World Subscription Information On The Front Cover: Yamaha’s Anthony Gobert wheelies over a crest on his way to winning the AMA Superbike National at Sears Point aboard a YZF-R7. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Updated Post: F-USA Sportbike, Buell Lightning And Aprilia Results From VIR

0

Formula USA Pro Sportbike Official Results
1. Lee Acree, Suzuki
2. Paul Harrell, Yamaha
3. Michael Barnes, Suzuki
4. Stoney Landers, Suzuki
5. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki
6. Marc Palazzo, Honda
7. Brett Champagne, Suzuki
8. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki
9. Roland Williams, Suzuki
10. Brian Stokes, Suzuki
11. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki
12. Steve Luxem, Yamaha
13. Shannon Ball, Suzuki
14. Gregory Faiella, Yamaha
15. BJ Bradley, Suzuki
16. John Costa, Yamaha

Buell Lightening Series Official Results
1. Michael Barnes
2. Richie Morris
3. Bryan Bemisderfer
4. Jason Smith
5. Jeff Johnson
6. Chad Healy
7. Steve Luxem
8. Mark Reynolds
9. Brian Frank
10. Brian Bodine
11. Tim Johnson
12. Pat Wakefield
13. Daniel Bilansky

Aprilia Cup Challenge Official Results
1. Brian Kcraget
2. Derek King
3. Thad Halsmer
4. Jeffrey Wood
5. Shannon Silva
6. Andre Castanos
7. Joshua Sortor
8. Dan Fischer
9. Tim Cochran
10. Tim Knutson
11. Brian Roach
12. Chad Healy
13. John Lemak
14. Mark Blackman
15. Eric Stevenson
16. Mathew Wissel
17. Anthony De Greif

Mathers To Take Control Of AMA Pro Road Racing

Copyright 2001, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Posted 12:00 a.m. EDT Tuesday, July 3

Former Kawasaki and Honda racing manager Gary Mathers will take over control and direction of AMA Pro Road Racing, perhaps as early as this coming weekend at Laguna Seca, an AMA Trustee said Sunday.

Mathers, who recently retired from American Honda, was hired as a consultant to attend several recent AMA Nationals and report on operations to AMA Pro Racing CEO Scott Hollingsworth.

Mathers compiled such a scathing indictment of bungled operations and inconsistent policies and rules enforcement that he fully expected to be dismissed and ignored after turning in the report, according to associates. The report specifically criticized the reign of AMA Pro Racing Director of Competition Merrill Vanderslice, National Technical Director Rob King, and AMA Superbike Operations Manager Ron Barrick.

But instead of getting him fired, Mathers’ report made a deep impact on Hollingsworth and reinforced what several members of the AMA Pro Racing Board of Directors have been saying for years, namely that continual problems created or added to by Pro Racing staff members are holding back commercial development and general advancement of the AMA road racing series.

Those problems have been laid mainly at the feet of Vanderslice, the former GP mechanic who came to the AMA over a decade ago professing that he wanted to do away with “the old AMA” and bring fairness and fresh thinking to the organization’s professional racing operations.

Critics say that over the years Vanderslice has morphed completely into a classic example of “the old AMA” he once said he reviled, and his tenure with AMA Pro Racing has been increasingly marked by conflict with the Board of Directors.

Vanderslice in the last 12 months has complained long and hard about what he sees as Directors–who he feels know nothing about racing–interfering with his ability to run Pro Racing as he was hired to do. That charge has irritated several individual Directors who have long been involved in managing or sponsoring riders and teams, as well as the one Director who is a former professional racer.

The Directors have also been angered by what they see as staff members presenting incomplete or selective information when the Board has been asked to make or ratify a decision; as a result, Vanderslice has lost all credibility with some Directors.

It is unknown at post time exactly what responsibilities Mathers will assume, what title he will hold and to whom he will report. Similarly, the fates of Vanderslice, King and Barrick are unknown. They could be fired, reassigned, told to report to Mathers, or left in position with Mathers firmly in control behind the scenes.

But given that some Directors have plainly stated that, to persons outside the AMA bunker, AMA Pro Racing looks the same as it did five or even 10 years ago, it is unlikely that Vanderslice, King and Barrick will retain their jobs.

Directors have complained that the appearance that nothing has changed–and that the interface between AMA Pro Racing and the riders, teams and sponsors that participate in AMA races is as rough and rocky as ever–is diverting attention from successful efforts to increase the size of purses, increase television coverage of races, and increase safety measures.

The debacle at Loudon two weekends ago reinforced the idea, advanced in Mathers’ report, that AMA road racing is completely mismanaged and that any time a choice between the right reaction and the wrong reaction to a problem presents itself, the current management has managed to consistently make the wrong decision.

Vanderslice did his cause no favor with his handling of problems at Loudon, at one point refusing to allow riders five laps of practice prior to the 600cc Supersport race being flagged off on an artificially-dried track, instead declaring (of the riders) “they don’t run the AMA, we do!”

See related posts dated 6/18, 6/19, 6/21, 6/24, 6/25, 6/26, 6/27, 6/28, 7/1 and 7/2.

Hear What Mladin Said, Compare To AMA Press Release, Make Up Your Own Mind, Then E-mail AMA For Or Against Fine

For your listening pleasure, the unabridged Mladin interview in MP3. Hear the few complaints voiced in a reasonable fashion that cost the reigning AMA Superbike Champion $5000 and a point in the Championship.

Then compare what Mladin actually said with this press release, written by AMA Media Relations Contractor Larry Lawrence and issued by the AMA:

“MLADIN FINED AND LOSES LOUDON POLE POINT FOR DETRIMENTAL CONDUCT

“PICKERINGTON, Ohio — Yoshimura Suzuki’s Mathew Mladin has been fined $5,000 and penalized a Superbike championship pole position point for detrimental conduct during a post-qualifying press conference at New Hampshire International Speedway on Saturday, June 16.

“When asked a question about his record-setting qualifying run, Mladin instead opened the press conference using profanity at times to criticize New Hampshire International Speedway, an AMA Pro Racing official, a newspaper reporter and fellow competitors.

“AMA Pro Racing deems Mladin’s actions in the press conference as inexcusable. The public form (sic) of a press conference is not the place to raise personal issues with AMA Pro Racing officials, newspaper reporters, fellow competitors or use foul language.

“Mladin leads the AMA Chevy Trucks U.S. Superbike Championship with 230 points.”

To express your opinion on the AMA decision to fine Mladin and dock him a point for expressing his opinion and the way he expressed it, send an e-mail to AMA Pro Racing CEO Scott Hollingsworth ([email protected]); Mark Tuttle, Chairman, AMA Pro Racing Board Of Directors ([email protected]); AMA Pro Racing Director of Competition Merrill Vanderslice, ([email protected]); with a copy to Roadracing World ([email protected]).

Large MP3 file (for high bandwidth connections)

Smaller MP3 file

WMRRA Another Progressive Organization When It Comes To Rider Representation

This Just In:

“My name is Briggs Willoughby and I am the Grand Prix rider rep for WMRRA. We also have a SuperSport, Vintage and Novice rep. The mission of each particular rep is to represent the interests of their riders, along with riders in general. We are also the people a rider can come to if they have an issue or request to make to the Executive board.

“On top of this, everyone on our Executive board, save one who is the girlfriend of a rider, is an active racer here at WMRRA.

“Briggs Willoughby
Seattle, WA”

Motorcyclist And Sport Rider Magazines Get New Owners

EMAP, a British media company, announced on Monday, July 2 that it has sold its United States magazine group (formerly Peterson Publishing) to New York-based Primedia, Inc. for $515 million.

According to a Rueters report appearing on the Yahoo Finance News website, EMAP bought Peterson for $1.2 billion just two years ago, the price based on a strong forecast of U.S. advertising growth.

After the Publishers Information Bureau released word that U.S. magazine advertising dropped 9.4% in May, EMAP made the sale to Primedia, which now becomes the second-largest consumer magazine publishing company in America with some 250 titles.

Included in Primedia’s newly expanded collection of magazines are Motorcyclist and Sport Rider.

CMRA Has Long Had Rider Representation

This just in from CMRA Board Member Eric Kelcher:

“The Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association has had a committee of riders that form the Board of Directors of the non-profit organization for as long as I have been part of the CMRA. The BOD is elected by the whole racer contingency on an annual basis to two year terms. As such it represents a broad diverse group of riders. Some of the board has talents in sprints, endurance, mini, and sportsman classes while others more of the operation and promotion of races. We have found this to work very well and the group has been been very proactive in defining and promoting safety at the venues we attend. The Board has at times set up special committees to evaluate and report back to the board on new venues and safety issues that come up that may require rule changes.

“Open forums are held with the general racer populace both live at the track venues and on the web.

“Eric Kelcher
“Dallas, TX
“CMRA BOD 2000-2001
“CCS south central regional affiliate”

What A Great Idea: RPM Establishes Steering Committee Staffed By Cross-section Of Riders

RPM, the Texas-based WERA and AMA affiliate, has established a formal system of getting representative rider input. A press release issued July 2 by the organization follows:

“As of June 14, 2001, RPM has formed a Riders Steering Committee. The purpose of the Riders Committee is to:

“1. Serve ALL riders by placing ideas on the
table that address the safety and general direction of the club and its members as to benefit the whole.

“2. To have actual input from their peers (other
riders) and act upon those best ideas as described in item #1 in a swift and well-managed manner.

“The appointed Riders Steering Committee Members are:

“1. Expert – Greg Abbott

“2. Expert – Pete Martins

“3. Novice – David Kagen

“4. Vintage – Scott Howse

“5. Mini – Harold Hixon

“Ideas will be discussed on terms and conditions of these positions held.

“We will have meetings once per month. As it stands right now, it will done in the RPM Chat Room every second Monday of the month from 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. @ www.rpmraceclub.com”

The release was issued via e-mail by RPM’s Tom Shields, who signed the release:

“Tom Shields
“RPM Racing
“A WERA Affiliate
“www.rpmraceclub.com”

Several other club-racing organizations have similar schemes for gathering rider input, frequently putting rider-elected representatives on the organization’s Board of Directors.

If your club is using such a set-up, we’d like to hear from you, via e-mail to [email protected]. Please include your full name, your city and phone number. E-mails without full name, city and phone number will be ignored and deleted.

We Apparently Got The Portland Oiling Deal Wrong, And Now Stand Corrected By OMRRA

Never say that roadracingworld.com won’t try to correct a factual error, as in this case, when OMRRA’s Jeff Lind says we were full of (what Mat Mladin said at Loudon) when we reported on the track being oiled by an OMRRA local without an oil-catching bellypan, and webmaster Sam Fleming crashing in that oil at Portland. It actually was a local, but he was riding an AMA-legal Buell fitted with a bellypan, through which he had ground a hole. Jeff’s report follows:

“I learned of the oiling incident involving AMA Buell Pro Thunder racer Willie Jordan and AOD rider Sam Fleming from racer Briggs Willoughby and racer/OMRRA Vice President Bill Cismar. Below are their comments (speaking of Willie Jordan):

“Quoting Briggs – ‘This came from Willie. Call him up, he’s the service manager at Latus. But, he told me yesterday that on Friday he oiled himself, and almost crashed, and then the AOD bike went down in his oil. He said he had a bellypan, but had ground a hole in it.’

“Quoting Bill – ‘It was Willie. He came to me after the incident concerned that I, standing there in my OMRRA OFFICIAL shirt, was coming to see him to tell him he was done racing for the weekend. There were other red-flag incidents related to oil, but this specific incident, resulting in the AOD bike crashing, was Willie on an AMA-prepared Buell.”

“I would also like to correct another part of the Roadracingworld.com post that stated that ‘There are, however, several sections of Air Fence, owned by the racetrack, deployed for the event.’

“In actuality, the sections of Air Fence at the Portland race event(s) are not owned by the racetrack (PIR) but instead provided by OMRRA who rents them from an outside vender for all OMRRA motorcycle racing events.

“We (OMRRA) appreciate the press coverage, but feel the above details more accurately describe the facts of the reported matter.

“Other than the Friday practice oilings, the Saturday WERA 6-hour and Sunday combined OMRRA/WERA/AMA Pro Thunder sprint races went off beautifully and finished ahead of schedule. This is no small feat giving that normal OMRRA race Sundays are jam-packed with classes, then combine them with the WERA classes and visiting riders and throw in an AMA class as well. It’s a testament to the great volunteers who keep OMRRA running.

“Jeff Lind
“OMRRA Secretary, Board of Directors”

The Air Fence referred to is actually Kurt Sager’s Air Bale, which he rents to West Coast racetracks.

We still think every bike on every track should have a fluid-catching bellypan, AMA Pro Racing’s finest innovation, though.

AMA Agrees To Hear Appeals In Mladin And Chouinard Loudon Cases

AMA Pro Racing has agreed to hear appeals in the cases of Mat Mladin, (who was fined $5000 and lost a Championship point on trumped-up charges that his behavior in a press conference was detrimental to racing), and Chuck Chouinard, (who was disqualified from the Loudon 750cc Supersport race for allegedly having removed metal from valves).

News of the appeal for Chouinard came from AMA Pro Racing Superbike Operations Manager Ron Barrick, speaking at this weekend’s combined WERA National Challenge Series/AMA Pro Thunder National/OMRRA Regional event at Portland International Raceway.

News of the Mladin appeal came from Yoshimura Suzuki Team Manager Don Sakakura, speaking by phone from Chino, California.

Chouinard’s appeal will claim that the valves were not modified, but were only cleaned using Scotch-Brite. Valves from the engine and new, stock valves will be presented as evidence.

Mladin’s appeal will claim that Mladin did not say what he was accused of saying, and that an AMA press release announcing his fine and point loss misrepresented what Mladin said. A tape recording of the press conference in question and a copy of the AMA press release will be used as evidence.

The date and venue of the Appeal Board Hearings for Chouinard and Mladin have not yet been set.

July 2001

Triumph 955i Daytona Press Intro Letters To The Editor Inside Info Testing Bridgestone Tires With Team Kanemoto New Products Rossi Wins South African GP At Welkom18 Welkom GP Notes Rossi Wins Spanish Grand Prix At Jerez26 Jerez GP Notes Gobert Wins Sears Point AMA Superbike National Sears Point AMA Inside Info Mladin Is The Suzuki Kahuna At Road Atlanta AMA Superbike National Road Atlanta AMA Inside Info Edwards Wins First World Superbike Race At Philip Island, Second Cancelled Phillip Island World Superbike Notes Makoto Wins Everything At Sugo World Superbike Sugo World Superbike Notes Bayliss Is Ducati’s Man at Monza World Superbike Monza World Superbike Notes Connell And Higbee Win Willow Formula USA Racing And School Calendar Nicky Hayden: Young Gun The Crash Page Formula USA Inside Info Racing In Europe, Part 2 Tire Warmers Tested Ad Index and Phone Directory Website Directory High Performance Parts & Services Directory Honda’s GP Racing History Want Ads Chris Ulrich: Adventures Of A Racer Roadracing World Subscription Information On The Front Cover: Yamaha’s Anthony Gobert wheelies over a crest on his way to winning the AMA Superbike National at Sears Point aboard a YZF-R7. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Updated Post: F-USA Sportbike, Buell Lightning And Aprilia Results From VIR

Formula USA Pro Sportbike Official Results
1. Lee Acree, Suzuki
2. Paul Harrell, Yamaha
3. Michael Barnes, Suzuki
4. Stoney Landers, Suzuki
5. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki
6. Marc Palazzo, Honda
7. Brett Champagne, Suzuki
8. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki
9. Roland Williams, Suzuki
10. Brian Stokes, Suzuki
11. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki
12. Steve Luxem, Yamaha
13. Shannon Ball, Suzuki
14. Gregory Faiella, Yamaha
15. BJ Bradley, Suzuki
16. John Costa, Yamaha

Buell Lightening Series Official Results
1. Michael Barnes
2. Richie Morris
3. Bryan Bemisderfer
4. Jason Smith
5. Jeff Johnson
6. Chad Healy
7. Steve Luxem
8. Mark Reynolds
9. Brian Frank
10. Brian Bodine
11. Tim Johnson
12. Pat Wakefield
13. Daniel Bilansky

Aprilia Cup Challenge Official Results
1. Brian Kcraget
2. Derek King
3. Thad Halsmer
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