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Updated Post: Track Oiling A Problem At Portland WERA/AMA National

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Track oiling proved to be a problem at Portland International Raceway during Friday practice for this weekend’s combined WERA National Challenge Series/AMA Pro Thunder National weekend.

After Roadracingworld.com webmaster Sam Fleming crashed the Army of Darkness Suzuki GSX-R600 on oil in practice, he was told by a cornerworker that his was the fourth bike they saw slipping on oil in that corner and that they were about to deploy a red flag when he crashed. Immediately after his crash, workers spread oil dry on the track. Prior to Fleming’s crash, no oil flags were displayed ahead of or in the corner.

The source of the problem, Fleming reported, is that the event is combined with an OMRRA event, and OMRRA rules do not require all bikes to use oil-catching fairing lowers or belly pans, an innovation introduced by AMA Pro Racing and now used by leading racing organizations nationwide.

The AMA Pro Racing oil-catching fairing has proven to be spectacularly successful in keeping oil from blown engines off the racetrack, dramatically reducing oil-induced crashes and also cutting time lost to track cleanup.

Some OMRRA riders have resisted rules making the oil-catching lowers mandatory, citing the additional cost. Aftermarket fairing manufacturers include oil-catching lowers in their designs, and several firms also make oil-catching lowers for bikes not originally equipped with fairing lowers. The cost of an oil-catching fairing lower or belly pan is small compared to crash-damage repairs or medical expenses related to a crash on oil.

The WERA/AMA event has drawn a sparse turnout, with 15 teams entered in today’s WERA National Endurance Series 6-hour. Both the WERA National Endurance Series and the AMA Pro Thunder Series are “best of” series, allowing teams and riders to drop their worst finishes.

That fact, for example, motivated Buell Pro Thunder points leader Mike Ciccotto to skip the Portland event in favor of racing with Formula USA at Virginia International Raceway this weekend.

The WERA/AMA event at Portland is also is being run without the benefit of AMA Air Fence, despite WERA being an AMA affiliate and the event itself being the first combined WERA/AMA Pro Thunder race.

There are, however, several sections of Air Fence, owned by the racetrack, deployed for the event.

Citing truck problems, AMA Pro Racing officials asked teams and riders to carry Air Fence sections from Loudon, New Hampshire to next weekend’s Laguna Seca Raceway. Grant Lopez, for example, is hauling two sections of Air Fence to Laguna Seca in his trailer. Chris Ulrich’s trailer, now en-route from VIR to Laguna Seca, is also carrying two sections of Air Fence.

Ron Barrick is representing AMA at the Portland event.

This Just In from roadracingworld.com reader and OMRRA racer Jason Hatfield:

“About the Portland oiling issue: I am an OMRRA member and for some reason the rules have made it mandatory for all major classes like 600 Supersport, 750 Supersport, Open and all the Superbike class equivalents to carry oil-catch lowers which must be presented at tech. I think the rule says something like all 600 supersport and above 4-stroke machines originally equipped with fairing lowers or which have had fairing lowers added will incorporate an oil catch-pan capable of holding 4 quarts of oil. But for some reason they allow the Vintage, sportsman and a couple other classes to run amok without oil-catching lowers even though it is these machines that are responsible for oiling the track about 75 percent of the time.”

Vesrah Blows, Pennzoil Goes In WERA 6-hour At Portland

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Vesrah Racing’s Mark Junge, Chris Ulrich and Larry Denning (recruited to replace injured Glenn Szarek) led 5 hours, 23 minutes and 5 seconds of the WERA National Endurance Series 6-hour at Portland International Raceway and were more than three laps ahead when the engine of the team’s GSX-R1000 let go. Vesrah was credited with ninth overall in the race, which was entered by 15 teams, and still leads the series point standings by 5 points.

The mechanical failure gave the lead and the overall win to Pennzoil’s Chris “Opie” Caylor, Scott Harwell, Billy Ethridge, Jamie Lane and Steve Grigg on a Suzuki GSX-R750.

Cox Racing Group was second overall, second in Heavyweight Superbike on a Yamaha YZF-R1, 10 laps behind Pennzoil, with riders Andrew Cox, Bill Cismar and Todd Frey.

Army of Darkness was third overall, first in Mediumweight Superbike with riders Sam Fleming and Jim Williams on a Suzuki GSX-R600.

Team Chaos was fourth overall, first in Mediumweight Supersport on a Suzuki GSX-R600, with riders Mark Crozier, Matt Kramer and Billy Justice; Justice replaced Tripp Nobles, who flew home to Macon, Georgia upon receiving word of his father’s death.

Motorcycleusa.com finished first in the Heavyweight Superstock class on a Suzuki GSX-R750, at fifth overall.

SB Motorsports topped the Lightweight Superbike class with a Suzuki SV650, at 10th overall.

Results

1. Pennzoil Racing, Suzuki GSX-R750, HWSB, 294 laps, 98.277 mph
2. Cox Racing Group, Yamaha YZF-R1, HWSB, 284 laps, 94.801 mph
3. Army Of Darkness, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSB, 283 laps
4. Team Chaos, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSS, 281 laps
5. Motorcycleusa.com, Suzuki GSX-R750, MWSS, 280 laps
6. J&J Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R750, HWSS, 278 laps
7. SB Motorsports 3, Yamaha YZF-R1, HWSS, 276 laps
8. Team Chicago, Yamaha YZF-R6, MWSS, 272 laps
9. Vesrah Racing, Suzuki GSX-R1000, HWSB, 269 laps
10. SB Motorsports, Suzuki SV650, LWSB, 268 laps
11. Neighbor Of The Beast, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSS, 268 laps
12. SB Motorsports 2, 266 laps
13. Speedwerks-Cyberlogtech, 260 laps
14. Poweersports, 298 laps
15. Damage, Inc., 228 laps
16. Lee Auto Body, 88 laps

Point Standings
1. Vesrah Racing, 495.095
2. Pennzoil Racing, 490.975
3. Army Of Darkness, 456.320
4. Team Chaos, 388.385
5. J&J Motorsports, 362.895
6. Neighbor Of The Beast, 356.335
7. Loudoun Motorsports, 333.600
8. Team Chicago, 312.370
9. Team Clinton Cycles, 297.205
10. Racersupply.com, 293.32

When worst finishes are dropped, Pennzoil leads Vesrah by 30 points after five of 10 rounds. The WERA National Endurance Series allows teams to drop their worst finishes, and count their best nine of 10 finishes.

But the series may end up totalling nine races since a round was originally scheduled for the still-uncompleted Rausch Creek circuit.

Harrell Fastest In F-USA Sportbike Qualifying At VIR, Ciccotto DQ

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Shogun Motorsports’ Paul Harrell qualified fastest for tomorrow’s Formula USA Sportbike race, ahead of Arclight Suzuki’s Brian Parriott and Hooters Suzuki’s Mike Ciccotto.

Ciccotto’s time was disqualified because he took his bike back behind the pit wall before it was taken by Formula USA officials to the dyno for post-qualifying tests.

Times follow:

1. Paul Harrell, Yamaha, 1:30.639
2. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:31.165
3. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.332
4. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:31.891
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:32.173
6. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:32.714
7. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:32.909
8. Brian Livengood, Yamaha, 1:33.132
9. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki, 1:33.377
10. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:33.461
11. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:33.713
12. Stoney Landers, Suzuki, 1:33.721
13. Eoin Smith, Yamaha, 1:33.964
14. Brett Champagne, Suzuki, 1:33.976
15. Shannon Ball, Suzuki, 1:33.982
16. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:34.187
17. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki, 1:34.795
18. Steve Luxem, Yamaha, 1:35.497
19. Greg Faiella, Yamaha, 1:38.210
20. William Torbert, Kawasaki, 1:39.099
21. B.J. Bradley, Suzuki, 1:40.903
22. William Stoltz, Kawasaki, 1:43.853

Disqualified: Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:31.222

Updated Post: Barnes On Pole For Buell Lightning Series At VIR

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Michael Barnes qualified fastest for tomorrow’s Buell Lightning race at VIR. Times follow:

1. Michael Barnes, 1:35.894
2. Tim Bemisderfer, 1:37.086
3. Bryan Demisderfer, 1:37.095
4. Jason Smith, 1:37.824
5. Jeff Johnson, 1:38.245
6. Richie Morris, 1:38.588
7. Mark Reynolds, 1:39.945
8. Steve Luxem, 1:40.192
9. Daniel Bilansky, 1:40.513
10. Chad Healy, 1:40.803
11. Brian Bodine, 1:41.598
12. Brian Frank, 1:43.379
13. Tim Johnson, 1:50.211
14. Pat Wakefield, 1:59.281

This Just In: Jason Smith’s qualifying time was thrown out after his bike hit 95.4 horsepower in post-qualifying dyno runs. The class horsepower limit is 95.0.

Loudoun Motorsports Wins 200-mile Team Challenge At VIR

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Loudoun Motorsports’ Ken Snyder and Bryan Bemisderfer rode a Suzuki GSX-R1000 to a one-lap margin of victory over Edge Motorsports’ Mike Fitzpatrick and Gabriel Henning in the 200-mile Team Challenge race at Virginia International Raceway Friday afternoon.

Third overall and third in the GTO class went to imotosports.com’s Sterling Strauser, Brandon Bashore and Peter Friedman on an Aprilia Mille R, another lap behind.

Brotz Motorsports won in the GTU class on a Yamaha YZF-R6 at fourth overall. Edge Junior Varsity was seciond in GTU, 8th overall on a Suzuki GSX-R600. Naked Boy Racing was third in GTU on a Yamaha FZR400 at ninth overall.

Results follow:

1. Loudoun Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R1000, GTO, 89 laps
2. Edge Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 88 laps
3. imotosports.com, Aprilia Mille R, GTO, 87 laps
4. Brotz Motorsports, Yamaha YZF-R6, GTU, 85 laps
5. Bad Apple Racing, Suzuki GSX-R1000, GTO, 84 laps
6. Siemens Patent Services, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 83 laps
7. Go Fast Racing, Kawasaki ZX-7R, GTO, 82 laps
8. Edge Junior Varsity, Suzuki GSX-R600, GTU, 81 laps
9. Naked Boy Racing, Yamaha FZR400, GTU, 72 laps
10. Annandale Racing, Kawasaki ZX-6R, GTU, 29 laps
11. Legal Racing, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 17 laps
12. Whizzie Racing, Yamaha YZF-R6, GTU, 7 laps

Ciccotto On Pole For F-USA Unlimited Superbike At VIR

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Mike Ciccotto took his Hooters Suzuki to pole position for tomorrow’s first Formula USA Unlimited Superbike race at VIR, ahead of Paul Harrell, Shawn Higbee and Lee Acree.

Late in the session, Harrell collided with Jim Bonner and both crashed.

Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:29.060
2. Paul Harrell, Yamaha, 1:29.565
3. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:29.721
4. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:29.833
5. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:29.968
6. Tray Batey, Aprilia, 1:30.061
7. Craig Connell, Ducati, 1:30.208
8. John Haner, Suzuki, 1:30.474
9. Joe Prussiano, Yamaha, 1:30.476
10. Grant Lopez, Suzuki, 1:30.638
11. Eric Wood, Suzuki, 1:30.675
12. Mike Himmelsbach, Aprilia, 1:31.034
13. Ken Chase, Suzuki, 1:31.049
14. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:31.149
15. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:31.158
16. Ken Snyder, Suzuki, 1:31.367
17. Gabriel Henning, Suzuki, 1:31.595
18. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:32.346
19. Tim Bemisderfer, Yamaha, 1:32.547
20. Aaron Clark, Aprilia, 1:32.556
21. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:32.651
22. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:32.828
23. Anthony Fania Jr., Suzuki, 1:32.874
24. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:32.998
25. Mark Ledesman, Aprilia, 1:33.119
26. Mike Fitzpatrick, Suzuki, 1:33.716
27. Russ Masecar, Suzuki, 1:33.909
28. Fritz Kling, Kawasaki, 1:34.149
29. Ray Yoder Jr., Kawasaki, 1:34.584
30. Joseph Spina, Suzuki, 1:34.628
31. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki, 1:35.115
32. Brian Boyd, Yamaha, 1:36.769
33. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:37.990
34. Brett Boyd, Suzuki, 1:38.001
35. Peter Friedman, Suzuki, 1:39.748
36. Brian Baker, Suzuki, 1:40.680

Updated Post: Biaggi Barely Beats Rossi To Win Red-flagged 500cc Grand Prix At Assen

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Max Biaggi was credited with the win in the 500cc Grand Prix at Assen Saturday, when a cloudburst hit the track on the 16th of 20 scheduled laps and the race was red-flagged and called complete, and scoring was backed up a lap.

Biaggi’s advantage over Rossi in official results was 0.126-second with Loris Capirossi another 0.606-second behind.

Crashers included Carlos Checa, who knocked down Norike Abe, and Alex Criville, who crashed by himself. Results follow:

1. Max Biaggi, Italy, Yamaha, 30:56.346
2. Valentino Rossi, Italy, Honda, 30:56.472
3. Loris Capirossi, Italy, Honda, 30:57.078
4. ALex Barros, Brazil, Honda, 30:57.577
5. Shinya Nakano, Japan, Yamaha, 31:06.190
6. Kenny Roberts, USA, Suzuki, 31:06.968
7. Sete Gibernau, Spain, Suzuki, 31:10.605
8. Tohru Ukawa, Japan, Honda, 31:14.966
9. Jurgen van den Goordbergh, Holland, Proton, 31:15.203
10. Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Yamaha, 31:18.903
11. Olivier Jacque, Grance, Yamaha, 31:28.975
12. Jose Luis Cardoso, Spain, Yamaha, 31:56.662
13. Leon Haslam, Great Britain, Honda, 31:56.807
14. Haruchika Aoki, Japan, Honda, 31:57.032
15. Anthony West, Australia, Honda, 31:32.622


Jeremy McWilliams won the 250cc Grand Prix at Assen on a drying track. Key to McWilliams’ victory was his choice of cut slicks.

Points leader Diajiro Katoh was 11th, and Championshiop contender Tetsuya Harada pitted to trade rain tires for slicks and finished 24th and out of the points despite turning the fastest lap of the race.

American Jason DiSalvo did not finish, 29th on the results sheet and 10 laps behind McWilliams, and Katja Poensgen also did not finish, 3 laps behind. Results follow:

1. Jeremy McWilliams, Great Britain, Aprilia, 39:28.516
2. Emilio Alzamora, Spain, Honda, 39:44.887
3. David DeGea, Spain, Yamaha, 40:06.925
4. Sylvain Guintoli, France, Aprilia, 40:07.730
5. Franco Battaini, Italy, Aprilia, 40:37.977
6. Marco Melandro, Italy, Aprilia, 40:57.984
7. Luca Boscoscuro, Italy, Aprilia, 41:05.979
8. Riccardo Chiarello, Italy, Aprilia, 41:10.475
9. Jeronimo Vidal, Spain, 41:10.803
10. David Tomas, Spain, Honda, 41:13.231
11. Daijiro Katoh, Japan, Honda, – 1 lap
12. Alex Hofmann, Germany, -1 lap
24. Tesuya Harada, Japan, Aprilia, -1 lap
27. Katja Poensgen, Germany, Aprilia, -3 laps
29. Jason DiSalvo, USA, Honda, -10 laps


In the wet 125cc race, Spanish teen Toni Elias, 18, beat France’s Arnaud Vincent by 0.607-second to win. Gino Borsoi led, crashed, and picked up his bike to finish sixth, with points lead Manuel Poggiali crashed out. A total of 16 riders crashed in the race. Results follow:

1. Toni Elias, Spain, Honda, 41:34.738
2. Arnaud Vincent, France, Honda, 41:35.345
3. Steve Jenkner, Germany, Aprilia, 41:57.991
4. Noboru Ueda, Japan, TSR-Honda, 42:08.717
5. Jakub Smrz, Czech Republic, Honda, 42:19.934
6. Gino Borsoi, Italy, Aprilia, 42:23.294
7. Mirko Giansanti, Italy, Honda, 42:23.630
8. Jaroslav Hules, Czech Republic, Honda, 42:32.736
9. Alessandro Brannetti, Italy, Aprilia, 42:48.801
10. Jarno Mueller, Germany, Honda, 42:49.798

Capirossi Tops Biaggi And Rossi In Final 500cc Qualifying At Assen

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Loris Capirossi took pole position for tomorrow’s 500cc Grand Prix at Assen, Holland, qualifying fastest in Friday’s second and final qualifying session. Arch-rivals Max Biaggi and Valentino Rossi qualified second and third fastest, and were joined on the front row by fourth-fastest Alex Barros. Times follow:

1. Loris Capirossi, Italy, Honda, 2:00.743
2. Max Biaggi, Italy, Yamaha, 2:00.876
3. Valentino Rossi, Italy, Honda, 2:01.185
4. Alex Barros, Brazil, Honda, 2:01.492
5. Shinya Nakano, Japan, Yamaha, 2:01.646
6. Kenny Roberts, USA, Suzuki, 2:01.773
7. Carlos Checa, Spain, Yamaha, 2:01.897
8. Norike Abe, Japan, Yamaha, 2:02.218
9. Sete Gibernau, Spain, Suzuki, 2:02.440
10. Alex Criville, Spain, Honda, 2:02.521
11. Tohru Ukawa, Japan, Honda, 2:02.913
12. Olivier Jacque, France, Yamaha, 2:03.026
13. Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Yamaha, 2:03.116
14. Jurgen van den Goordbergh, Holland, Proton, 2:03.134
15. Leon Haslam, Great Britain, Honda, 2:04.589


Aprilia’s Tetsuya Harada qualified fastest for the 250cc Grand Prix, followed by Daijiro Katoh and Marco Melandri. Times follow:

1. Tetsuya Harada, Japan, Aprilia, 2:04.363
2. Daijiro Katoh, Japan, Honda, 2:04.549
3. Marco Melandri, Italy, Aprilia, 2:04.644
4. Jeremy McWilliams, Great Britain, Aprilia, 2:04.911
5. Roberto Rolfo, Italy, Aprilia, 2:05.492
6. Randy de Puniet, France, Aprilia, 2:05.763
7. Naoki Matsudo, Japan, Yamaha, 2:05.874
8. Sebastian Porto, Argentina, Yamaha, 2:06.139
9. Roberto Locatelli, Italy, Aprilia, 2:06.287
10. Shahrol Yuzy, Malaysia, Yamaha, 2:06.318
24. Jason DiSalvo, USA, Honda, 2:10.288
28. Katja Poensgen, Germany, Aprilia, 2:11.725


Gino Borsoi topped 125cc qualifying. Times follow:

1. Gino Borsoi, Italy, Aprilia, 2:12.212
2. Lucio Cecchinello, Italy, Aprilia, 2:12.373
3. Youchi Ui, Japan, Derbi, 2:12.393
4. Steve Jenkner, Germany, Aprilia, 2:12.461
5. Toni Elias, Spain, Honda, 2:12.673
6. Manuel Poggiali, San Marino, Gilera, 2:13.464
7. Jaroslav Hules, Czech Republic, Honda, 2:13.781
8. Pablo Nieto, Spain, Derbi, 2:13.782
9. Alex de Angelis, San Marino, Honda, 2:13.824
10. Daniel Pedrosa, Spain, 2:13.918

Happy Birthday, Buster Roberts

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Reader Joe Fenech points out that today is Buster Roberts’ 81st birthday. Buster Roberts is the father of three-time 500cc World Champion Kenny Leroy Roberts and the grandfather of reigning 500cc World Champion Kenny Lee Roberts and of reigning AMA 600cc Supersport and Formula Extreme Champion Kurtis Roberts.

Ciccotto Fastest In Formula USA Practice At VIR

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Hooters Suzuki’s Mike Ciccotto was fastest in Friday afternoon Unlimited Superbike practice at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in Alton, Virginia. Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:30.242
2. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:30.984
3. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.306
4. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:31.378
5. Tray Batey, Aprilia, 1:31.378
6. Grant Lopez, Suzuki, 1:31.602
7. Mike Himmelsbach, Aprilia, 1:31.688
8. John Haner, Suzuki, 1:32.237
9. Eric Wood, Suzuki, 1:32.509
10. Craig Connell, Ducati, 1:32.552
11. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:32.662
12. Tim Bemisderfer, Yamaha, 1:32.713
13. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:32.748
14. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:32.979
15. Ken Chase, Suzuki, 1:33.149
16. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:33.173
17. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:33.351
18. Aaron Clark, Aprilia, 1:33.408
19. Anthony Fania Jr., Suzuki, 1:33.860
20. Mark Ledesma, Aprilia, 1:34.030
21. Gabriel Henning, Suzuki, 1:34.529
22. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:35.000
23. Greg Harrison, Suzuki, 1:35.326
24. Joe Spina, Suzuki, 1:35.805
25. Russ Masecar, Suzuki, 1:36.411
26. Roman Kilgore, Suzuki, 1:36.932
27. Fritz Kling, Kawasaki, 1:37.347
28. Ray Yoder Jr., Kawasaki, 1:38.024
29. Jason D’Amico, Suzuki, 1:39.575
30. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:39.684
31. C.R. “Critter” Gittere, Suzuki, 1:40.045
32. Brian Boyd, Yamaha, 1:40.654
33. Brett Boyd, Suzuki, 1:42.499
34. NA, 1:42.863
35. Brian Baker, Suzuki, 1:43.811


Ciccotto was also fastest in Pro Sportbike practice for 600cc machines Friday afternoon. Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:30.620
2. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.374
3. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:32.852
4. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:33.803
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:33.869
6. Brian Livengood, Yamaha, 1:33.918
7. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:34.014
8. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:34.195
9. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:34.350
10. Shannon Ball, Suzuki, 1:34.597
11. Stoney Landers, Suzuki, 1:34.656
12. Brett Champagne, Suzuki, 1:34.710
13. Eoin Smith, Yamaha, 1:35.195
14. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:35.370
15. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki, 1:36.075
16. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki, 1:36.588
17. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:36.721
18. Steve Luxem, Yamaha, 1:37.685
19. Greg Faiella, Yamaha, 1:38.090
20. NA, 1:40.288
21. B.J. Bradley, Suzuki, 1:43.533
22. John Costa, Yamaha, 1:44.978
23. William K. Stoltz, Kawasaki, 1:48.530

In Friday afternoon practice for Aprilia Cup Challenge, Derek MacKelvie King was fastest. Times follow:

1. Derek M. King, 1:38.480
2. Jeff Wood, 1:39.596
3. Thad Halsmer, 1:40.941
4. Brian Kcraget, 1:41.220
5. Tim Cochran, 1:41.601
6. Gus Holcomb, 1:42.275
7. John Lemak, 1:42.455
8. Shannon Silva, 1:42.629
9. Mat Wissel, 1:42.961
10. Josh Sortor, 1:43.417
11. Roland Williams, 1:43.591
12. Brian Roach, 1:43.791
13. Andre Castanos, 1:44.016
14. Mark Blackman, 1:44.022
15. Tom Knutson, 1:44.965
16. Chad Healy, 1:45.461
17. Dennis Nourry, 1:45.739
18. Doug Barnes, 1:45.932
19. Mark Wissel, 1:46.118
20. Eric Stevenson, 1:47.571
21. Andras Mak, 1:49.199
22. Raymond Chilson Jr. 1:51.493
23. Anthony Degreif, 1:52.079
24. David Moon, 1:54.232

Michael Barnes was fastest in Buell Lightning practice Friday afternoon at VIR. Note that Richie Morris was sixth-fastest in his race-weekend-return from serious injuries suffered at Daytona. Times follow:

1. Michael Barnes, 1:36.249
2. Bryan Bemisderfer, 1:38.443
3. Jason Smith, 1:39.012
4. Brian Kcraget, 1:40.293
5. Jeff Johnson, 1:40.857
6. Richie Morris, 1:41.528
7. Mark Reynolds, 1:41.869
8. Steve Luxem, 1:42.795
9. Daniel Bilansky, 1:44.809
10. Brian Frank, 1:44.848
11. Brian Bodine, 1:55.151
12. Tim Johnson, 1:55.851
13. David Moon, 1:57.159
14. Patrick Wakefield, 2:02.408

Updated Post: Track Oiling A Problem At Portland WERA/AMA National

Track oiling proved to be a problem at Portland International Raceway during Friday practice for this weekend’s combined WERA National Challenge Series/AMA Pro Thunder National weekend.

After Roadracingworld.com webmaster Sam Fleming crashed the Army of Darkness Suzuki GSX-R600 on oil in practice, he was told by a cornerworker that his was the fourth bike they saw slipping on oil in that corner and that they were about to deploy a red flag when he crashed. Immediately after his crash, workers spread oil dry on the track. Prior to Fleming’s crash, no oil flags were displayed ahead of or in the corner.

The source of the problem, Fleming reported, is that the event is combined with an OMRRA event, and OMRRA rules do not require all bikes to use oil-catching fairing lowers or belly pans, an innovation introduced by AMA Pro Racing and now used by leading racing organizations nationwide.

The AMA Pro Racing oil-catching fairing has proven to be spectacularly successful in keeping oil from blown engines off the racetrack, dramatically reducing oil-induced crashes and also cutting time lost to track cleanup.

Some OMRRA riders have resisted rules making the oil-catching lowers mandatory, citing the additional cost. Aftermarket fairing manufacturers include oil-catching lowers in their designs, and several firms also make oil-catching lowers for bikes not originally equipped with fairing lowers. The cost of an oil-catching fairing lower or belly pan is small compared to crash-damage repairs or medical expenses related to a crash on oil.

The WERA/AMA event has drawn a sparse turnout, with 15 teams entered in today’s WERA National Endurance Series 6-hour. Both the WERA National Endurance Series and the AMA Pro Thunder Series are “best of” series, allowing teams and riders to drop their worst finishes.

That fact, for example, motivated Buell Pro Thunder points leader Mike Ciccotto to skip the Portland event in favor of racing with Formula USA at Virginia International Raceway this weekend.

The WERA/AMA event at Portland is also is being run without the benefit of AMA Air Fence, despite WERA being an AMA affiliate and the event itself being the first combined WERA/AMA Pro Thunder race.

There are, however, several sections of Air Fence, owned by the racetrack, deployed for the event.

Citing truck problems, AMA Pro Racing officials asked teams and riders to carry Air Fence sections from Loudon, New Hampshire to next weekend’s Laguna Seca Raceway. Grant Lopez, for example, is hauling two sections of Air Fence to Laguna Seca in his trailer. Chris Ulrich’s trailer, now en-route from VIR to Laguna Seca, is also carrying two sections of Air Fence.

Ron Barrick is representing AMA at the Portland event.

This Just In from roadracingworld.com reader and OMRRA racer Jason Hatfield:

“About the Portland oiling issue: I am an OMRRA member and for some reason the rules have made it mandatory for all major classes like 600 Supersport, 750 Supersport, Open and all the Superbike class equivalents to carry oil-catch lowers which must be presented at tech. I think the rule says something like all 600 supersport and above 4-stroke machines originally equipped with fairing lowers or which have had fairing lowers added will incorporate an oil catch-pan capable of holding 4 quarts of oil. But for some reason they allow the Vintage, sportsman and a couple other classes to run amok without oil-catching lowers even though it is these machines that are responsible for oiling the track about 75 percent of the time.”

Vesrah Blows, Pennzoil Goes In WERA 6-hour At Portland

Vesrah Racing’s Mark Junge, Chris Ulrich and Larry Denning (recruited to replace injured Glenn Szarek) led 5 hours, 23 minutes and 5 seconds of the WERA National Endurance Series 6-hour at Portland International Raceway and were more than three laps ahead when the engine of the team’s GSX-R1000 let go. Vesrah was credited with ninth overall in the race, which was entered by 15 teams, and still leads the series point standings by 5 points.

The mechanical failure gave the lead and the overall win to Pennzoil’s Chris “Opie” Caylor, Scott Harwell, Billy Ethridge, Jamie Lane and Steve Grigg on a Suzuki GSX-R750.

Cox Racing Group was second overall, second in Heavyweight Superbike on a Yamaha YZF-R1, 10 laps behind Pennzoil, with riders Andrew Cox, Bill Cismar and Todd Frey.

Army of Darkness was third overall, first in Mediumweight Superbike with riders Sam Fleming and Jim Williams on a Suzuki GSX-R600.

Team Chaos was fourth overall, first in Mediumweight Supersport on a Suzuki GSX-R600, with riders Mark Crozier, Matt Kramer and Billy Justice; Justice replaced Tripp Nobles, who flew home to Macon, Georgia upon receiving word of his father’s death.

Motorcycleusa.com finished first in the Heavyweight Superstock class on a Suzuki GSX-R750, at fifth overall.

SB Motorsports topped the Lightweight Superbike class with a Suzuki SV650, at 10th overall.

Results

1. Pennzoil Racing, Suzuki GSX-R750, HWSB, 294 laps, 98.277 mph
2. Cox Racing Group, Yamaha YZF-R1, HWSB, 284 laps, 94.801 mph
3. Army Of Darkness, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSB, 283 laps
4. Team Chaos, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSS, 281 laps
5. Motorcycleusa.com, Suzuki GSX-R750, MWSS, 280 laps
6. J&J Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R750, HWSS, 278 laps
7. SB Motorsports 3, Yamaha YZF-R1, HWSS, 276 laps
8. Team Chicago, Yamaha YZF-R6, MWSS, 272 laps
9. Vesrah Racing, Suzuki GSX-R1000, HWSB, 269 laps
10. SB Motorsports, Suzuki SV650, LWSB, 268 laps
11. Neighbor Of The Beast, Suzuki GSX-R600, MWSS, 268 laps
12. SB Motorsports 2, 266 laps
13. Speedwerks-Cyberlogtech, 260 laps
14. Poweersports, 298 laps
15. Damage, Inc., 228 laps
16. Lee Auto Body, 88 laps

Point Standings
1. Vesrah Racing, 495.095
2. Pennzoil Racing, 490.975
3. Army Of Darkness, 456.320
4. Team Chaos, 388.385
5. J&J Motorsports, 362.895
6. Neighbor Of The Beast, 356.335
7. Loudoun Motorsports, 333.600
8. Team Chicago, 312.370
9. Team Clinton Cycles, 297.205
10. Racersupply.com, 293.32

When worst finishes are dropped, Pennzoil leads Vesrah by 30 points after five of 10 rounds. The WERA National Endurance Series allows teams to drop their worst finishes, and count their best nine of 10 finishes.

But the series may end up totalling nine races since a round was originally scheduled for the still-uncompleted Rausch Creek circuit.

Harrell Fastest In F-USA Sportbike Qualifying At VIR, Ciccotto DQ

Shogun Motorsports’ Paul Harrell qualified fastest for tomorrow’s Formula USA Sportbike race, ahead of Arclight Suzuki’s Brian Parriott and Hooters Suzuki’s Mike Ciccotto.

Ciccotto’s time was disqualified because he took his bike back behind the pit wall before it was taken by Formula USA officials to the dyno for post-qualifying tests.

Times follow:

1. Paul Harrell, Yamaha, 1:30.639
2. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:31.165
3. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.332
4. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:31.891
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:32.173
6. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:32.714
7. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:32.909
8. Brian Livengood, Yamaha, 1:33.132
9. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki, 1:33.377
10. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:33.461
11. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:33.713
12. Stoney Landers, Suzuki, 1:33.721
13. Eoin Smith, Yamaha, 1:33.964
14. Brett Champagne, Suzuki, 1:33.976
15. Shannon Ball, Suzuki, 1:33.982
16. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:34.187
17. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki, 1:34.795
18. Steve Luxem, Yamaha, 1:35.497
19. Greg Faiella, Yamaha, 1:38.210
20. William Torbert, Kawasaki, 1:39.099
21. B.J. Bradley, Suzuki, 1:40.903
22. William Stoltz, Kawasaki, 1:43.853

Disqualified: Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:31.222

Updated Post: Barnes On Pole For Buell Lightning Series At VIR

Michael Barnes qualified fastest for tomorrow’s Buell Lightning race at VIR. Times follow:

1. Michael Barnes, 1:35.894
2. Tim Bemisderfer, 1:37.086
3. Bryan Demisderfer, 1:37.095
4. Jason Smith, 1:37.824
5. Jeff Johnson, 1:38.245
6. Richie Morris, 1:38.588
7. Mark Reynolds, 1:39.945
8. Steve Luxem, 1:40.192
9. Daniel Bilansky, 1:40.513
10. Chad Healy, 1:40.803
11. Brian Bodine, 1:41.598
12. Brian Frank, 1:43.379
13. Tim Johnson, 1:50.211
14. Pat Wakefield, 1:59.281

This Just In: Jason Smith’s qualifying time was thrown out after his bike hit 95.4 horsepower in post-qualifying dyno runs. The class horsepower limit is 95.0.

Loudoun Motorsports Wins 200-mile Team Challenge At VIR

Loudoun Motorsports’ Ken Snyder and Bryan Bemisderfer rode a Suzuki GSX-R1000 to a one-lap margin of victory over Edge Motorsports’ Mike Fitzpatrick and Gabriel Henning in the 200-mile Team Challenge race at Virginia International Raceway Friday afternoon.

Third overall and third in the GTO class went to imotosports.com’s Sterling Strauser, Brandon Bashore and Peter Friedman on an Aprilia Mille R, another lap behind.

Brotz Motorsports won in the GTU class on a Yamaha YZF-R6 at fourth overall. Edge Junior Varsity was seciond in GTU, 8th overall on a Suzuki GSX-R600. Naked Boy Racing was third in GTU on a Yamaha FZR400 at ninth overall.

Results follow:

1. Loudoun Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R1000, GTO, 89 laps
2. Edge Motorsports, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 88 laps
3. imotosports.com, Aprilia Mille R, GTO, 87 laps
4. Brotz Motorsports, Yamaha YZF-R6, GTU, 85 laps
5. Bad Apple Racing, Suzuki GSX-R1000, GTO, 84 laps
6. Siemens Patent Services, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 83 laps
7. Go Fast Racing, Kawasaki ZX-7R, GTO, 82 laps
8. Edge Junior Varsity, Suzuki GSX-R600, GTU, 81 laps
9. Naked Boy Racing, Yamaha FZR400, GTU, 72 laps
10. Annandale Racing, Kawasaki ZX-6R, GTU, 29 laps
11. Legal Racing, Suzuki GSX-R750, GTO, 17 laps
12. Whizzie Racing, Yamaha YZF-R6, GTU, 7 laps

Ciccotto On Pole For F-USA Unlimited Superbike At VIR

Mike Ciccotto took his Hooters Suzuki to pole position for tomorrow’s first Formula USA Unlimited Superbike race at VIR, ahead of Paul Harrell, Shawn Higbee and Lee Acree.

Late in the session, Harrell collided with Jim Bonner and both crashed.

Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:29.060
2. Paul Harrell, Yamaha, 1:29.565
3. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:29.721
4. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:29.833
5. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:29.968
6. Tray Batey, Aprilia, 1:30.061
7. Craig Connell, Ducati, 1:30.208
8. John Haner, Suzuki, 1:30.474
9. Joe Prussiano, Yamaha, 1:30.476
10. Grant Lopez, Suzuki, 1:30.638
11. Eric Wood, Suzuki, 1:30.675
12. Mike Himmelsbach, Aprilia, 1:31.034
13. Ken Chase, Suzuki, 1:31.049
14. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:31.149
15. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:31.158
16. Ken Snyder, Suzuki, 1:31.367
17. Gabriel Henning, Suzuki, 1:31.595
18. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:32.346
19. Tim Bemisderfer, Yamaha, 1:32.547
20. Aaron Clark, Aprilia, 1:32.556
21. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:32.651
22. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:32.828
23. Anthony Fania Jr., Suzuki, 1:32.874
24. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:32.998
25. Mark Ledesman, Aprilia, 1:33.119
26. Mike Fitzpatrick, Suzuki, 1:33.716
27. Russ Masecar, Suzuki, 1:33.909
28. Fritz Kling, Kawasaki, 1:34.149
29. Ray Yoder Jr., Kawasaki, 1:34.584
30. Joseph Spina, Suzuki, 1:34.628
31. Scott Carpenter, Suzuki, 1:35.115
32. Brian Boyd, Yamaha, 1:36.769
33. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:37.990
34. Brett Boyd, Suzuki, 1:38.001
35. Peter Friedman, Suzuki, 1:39.748
36. Brian Baker, Suzuki, 1:40.680

Updated Post: Biaggi Barely Beats Rossi To Win Red-flagged 500cc Grand Prix At Assen

Max Biaggi was credited with the win in the 500cc Grand Prix at Assen Saturday, when a cloudburst hit the track on the 16th of 20 scheduled laps and the race was red-flagged and called complete, and scoring was backed up a lap.

Biaggi’s advantage over Rossi in official results was 0.126-second with Loris Capirossi another 0.606-second behind.

Crashers included Carlos Checa, who knocked down Norike Abe, and Alex Criville, who crashed by himself. Results follow:

1. Max Biaggi, Italy, Yamaha, 30:56.346
2. Valentino Rossi, Italy, Honda, 30:56.472
3. Loris Capirossi, Italy, Honda, 30:57.078
4. ALex Barros, Brazil, Honda, 30:57.577
5. Shinya Nakano, Japan, Yamaha, 31:06.190
6. Kenny Roberts, USA, Suzuki, 31:06.968
7. Sete Gibernau, Spain, Suzuki, 31:10.605
8. Tohru Ukawa, Japan, Honda, 31:14.966
9. Jurgen van den Goordbergh, Holland, Proton, 31:15.203
10. Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Yamaha, 31:18.903
11. Olivier Jacque, Grance, Yamaha, 31:28.975
12. Jose Luis Cardoso, Spain, Yamaha, 31:56.662
13. Leon Haslam, Great Britain, Honda, 31:56.807
14. Haruchika Aoki, Japan, Honda, 31:57.032
15. Anthony West, Australia, Honda, 31:32.622


Jeremy McWilliams won the 250cc Grand Prix at Assen on a drying track. Key to McWilliams’ victory was his choice of cut slicks.

Points leader Diajiro Katoh was 11th, and Championshiop contender Tetsuya Harada pitted to trade rain tires for slicks and finished 24th and out of the points despite turning the fastest lap of the race.

American Jason DiSalvo did not finish, 29th on the results sheet and 10 laps behind McWilliams, and Katja Poensgen also did not finish, 3 laps behind. Results follow:

1. Jeremy McWilliams, Great Britain, Aprilia, 39:28.516
2. Emilio Alzamora, Spain, Honda, 39:44.887
3. David DeGea, Spain, Yamaha, 40:06.925
4. Sylvain Guintoli, France, Aprilia, 40:07.730
5. Franco Battaini, Italy, Aprilia, 40:37.977
6. Marco Melandro, Italy, Aprilia, 40:57.984
7. Luca Boscoscuro, Italy, Aprilia, 41:05.979
8. Riccardo Chiarello, Italy, Aprilia, 41:10.475
9. Jeronimo Vidal, Spain, 41:10.803
10. David Tomas, Spain, Honda, 41:13.231
11. Daijiro Katoh, Japan, Honda, – 1 lap
12. Alex Hofmann, Germany, -1 lap
24. Tesuya Harada, Japan, Aprilia, -1 lap
27. Katja Poensgen, Germany, Aprilia, -3 laps
29. Jason DiSalvo, USA, Honda, -10 laps


In the wet 125cc race, Spanish teen Toni Elias, 18, beat France’s Arnaud Vincent by 0.607-second to win. Gino Borsoi led, crashed, and picked up his bike to finish sixth, with points lead Manuel Poggiali crashed out. A total of 16 riders crashed in the race. Results follow:

1. Toni Elias, Spain, Honda, 41:34.738
2. Arnaud Vincent, France, Honda, 41:35.345
3. Steve Jenkner, Germany, Aprilia, 41:57.991
4. Noboru Ueda, Japan, TSR-Honda, 42:08.717
5. Jakub Smrz, Czech Republic, Honda, 42:19.934
6. Gino Borsoi, Italy, Aprilia, 42:23.294
7. Mirko Giansanti, Italy, Honda, 42:23.630
8. Jaroslav Hules, Czech Republic, Honda, 42:32.736
9. Alessandro Brannetti, Italy, Aprilia, 42:48.801
10. Jarno Mueller, Germany, Honda, 42:49.798

Capirossi Tops Biaggi And Rossi In Final 500cc Qualifying At Assen

Loris Capirossi took pole position for tomorrow’s 500cc Grand Prix at Assen, Holland, qualifying fastest in Friday’s second and final qualifying session. Arch-rivals Max Biaggi and Valentino Rossi qualified second and third fastest, and were joined on the front row by fourth-fastest Alex Barros. Times follow:

1. Loris Capirossi, Italy, Honda, 2:00.743
2. Max Biaggi, Italy, Yamaha, 2:00.876
3. Valentino Rossi, Italy, Honda, 2:01.185
4. Alex Barros, Brazil, Honda, 2:01.492
5. Shinya Nakano, Japan, Yamaha, 2:01.646
6. Kenny Roberts, USA, Suzuki, 2:01.773
7. Carlos Checa, Spain, Yamaha, 2:01.897
8. Norike Abe, Japan, Yamaha, 2:02.218
9. Sete Gibernau, Spain, Suzuki, 2:02.440
10. Alex Criville, Spain, Honda, 2:02.521
11. Tohru Ukawa, Japan, Honda, 2:02.913
12. Olivier Jacque, France, Yamaha, 2:03.026
13. Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Yamaha, 2:03.116
14. Jurgen van den Goordbergh, Holland, Proton, 2:03.134
15. Leon Haslam, Great Britain, Honda, 2:04.589


Aprilia’s Tetsuya Harada qualified fastest for the 250cc Grand Prix, followed by Daijiro Katoh and Marco Melandri. Times follow:

1. Tetsuya Harada, Japan, Aprilia, 2:04.363
2. Daijiro Katoh, Japan, Honda, 2:04.549
3. Marco Melandri, Italy, Aprilia, 2:04.644
4. Jeremy McWilliams, Great Britain, Aprilia, 2:04.911
5. Roberto Rolfo, Italy, Aprilia, 2:05.492
6. Randy de Puniet, France, Aprilia, 2:05.763
7. Naoki Matsudo, Japan, Yamaha, 2:05.874
8. Sebastian Porto, Argentina, Yamaha, 2:06.139
9. Roberto Locatelli, Italy, Aprilia, 2:06.287
10. Shahrol Yuzy, Malaysia, Yamaha, 2:06.318
24. Jason DiSalvo, USA, Honda, 2:10.288
28. Katja Poensgen, Germany, Aprilia, 2:11.725


Gino Borsoi topped 125cc qualifying. Times follow:

1. Gino Borsoi, Italy, Aprilia, 2:12.212
2. Lucio Cecchinello, Italy, Aprilia, 2:12.373
3. Youchi Ui, Japan, Derbi, 2:12.393
4. Steve Jenkner, Germany, Aprilia, 2:12.461
5. Toni Elias, Spain, Honda, 2:12.673
6. Manuel Poggiali, San Marino, Gilera, 2:13.464
7. Jaroslav Hules, Czech Republic, Honda, 2:13.781
8. Pablo Nieto, Spain, Derbi, 2:13.782
9. Alex de Angelis, San Marino, Honda, 2:13.824
10. Daniel Pedrosa, Spain, 2:13.918

Happy Birthday, Buster Roberts

Reader Joe Fenech points out that today is Buster Roberts’ 81st birthday. Buster Roberts is the father of three-time 500cc World Champion Kenny Leroy Roberts and the grandfather of reigning 500cc World Champion Kenny Lee Roberts and of reigning AMA 600cc Supersport and Formula Extreme Champion Kurtis Roberts.

Ciccotto Fastest In Formula USA Practice At VIR

Hooters Suzuki’s Mike Ciccotto was fastest in Friday afternoon Unlimited Superbike practice at Virginia International Raceway (VIR) in Alton, Virginia. Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:30.242
2. Shawn Higbee, Suzuki, 1:30.984
3. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.306
4. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:31.378
5. Tray Batey, Aprilia, 1:31.378
6. Grant Lopez, Suzuki, 1:31.602
7. Mike Himmelsbach, Aprilia, 1:31.688
8. John Haner, Suzuki, 1:32.237
9. Eric Wood, Suzuki, 1:32.509
10. Craig Connell, Ducati, 1:32.552
11. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:32.662
12. Tim Bemisderfer, Yamaha, 1:32.713
13. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:32.748
14. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:32.979
15. Ken Chase, Suzuki, 1:33.149
16. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:33.173
17. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:33.351
18. Aaron Clark, Aprilia, 1:33.408
19. Anthony Fania Jr., Suzuki, 1:33.860
20. Mark Ledesma, Aprilia, 1:34.030
21. Gabriel Henning, Suzuki, 1:34.529
22. Chris Rankin, Suzuki, 1:35.000
23. Greg Harrison, Suzuki, 1:35.326
24. Joe Spina, Suzuki, 1:35.805
25. Russ Masecar, Suzuki, 1:36.411
26. Roman Kilgore, Suzuki, 1:36.932
27. Fritz Kling, Kawasaki, 1:37.347
28. Ray Yoder Jr., Kawasaki, 1:38.024
29. Jason D’Amico, Suzuki, 1:39.575
30. Jim Bonner, Yamaha, 1:39.684
31. C.R. “Critter” Gittere, Suzuki, 1:40.045
32. Brian Boyd, Yamaha, 1:40.654
33. Brett Boyd, Suzuki, 1:42.499
34. NA, 1:42.863
35. Brian Baker, Suzuki, 1:43.811


Ciccotto was also fastest in Pro Sportbike practice for 600cc machines Friday afternoon. Times follow:

1. Mike Ciccotto, Suzuki, 1:30.620
2. Lee Acree, Suzuki, 1:31.374
3. Brian Parriott, Suzuki, 1:32.852
4. Michael Barnes, Suzuki, 1:33.803
5. Scott Greenwood, Suzuki, 1:33.869
6. Brian Livengood, Yamaha, 1:33.918
7. Marc Palazzo, Honda, 1:34.014
8. Brian Stokes, Suzuki, 1:34.195
9. Chuck Chouinard, Suzuki, 1:34.350
10. Shannon Ball, Suzuki, 1:34.597
11. Stoney Landers, Suzuki, 1:34.656
12. Brett Champagne, Suzuki, 1:34.710
13. Eoin Smith, Yamaha, 1:35.195
14. Byron Barbour, Suzuki, 1:35.370
15. Shawn Conrad, Suzuki, 1:36.075
16. Kevin Pate, Kawasaki, 1:36.588
17. Roland Williams, Suzuki, 1:36.721
18. Steve Luxem, Yamaha, 1:37.685
19. Greg Faiella, Yamaha, 1:38.090
20. NA, 1:40.288
21. B.J. Bradley, Suzuki, 1:43.533
22. John Costa, Yamaha, 1:44.978
23. William K. Stoltz, Kawasaki, 1:48.530

In Friday afternoon practice for Aprilia Cup Challenge, Derek MacKelvie King was fastest. Times follow:

1. Derek M. King, 1:38.480
2. Jeff Wood, 1:39.596
3. Thad Halsmer, 1:40.941
4. Brian Kcraget, 1:41.220
5. Tim Cochran, 1:41.601
6. Gus Holcomb, 1:42.275
7. John Lemak, 1:42.455
8. Shannon Silva, 1:42.629
9. Mat Wissel, 1:42.961
10. Josh Sortor, 1:43.417
11. Roland Williams, 1:43.591
12. Brian Roach, 1:43.791
13. Andre Castanos, 1:44.016
14. Mark Blackman, 1:44.022
15. Tom Knutson, 1:44.965
16. Chad Healy, 1:45.461
17. Dennis Nourry, 1:45.739
18. Doug Barnes, 1:45.932
19. Mark Wissel, 1:46.118
20. Eric Stevenson, 1:47.571
21. Andras Mak, 1:49.199
22. Raymond Chilson Jr. 1:51.493
23. Anthony Degreif, 1:52.079
24. David Moon, 1:54.232

Michael Barnes was fastest in Buell Lightning practice Friday afternoon at VIR. Note that Richie Morris was sixth-fastest in his race-weekend-return from serious injuries suffered at Daytona. Times follow:

1. Michael Barnes, 1:36.249
2. Bryan Bemisderfer, 1:38.443
3. Jason Smith, 1:39.012
4. Brian Kcraget, 1:40.293
5. Jeff Johnson, 1:40.857
6. Richie Morris, 1:41.528
7. Mark Reynolds, 1:41.869
8. Steve Luxem, 1:42.795
9. Daniel Bilansky, 1:44.809
10. Brian Frank, 1:44.848
11. Brian Bodine, 1:55.151
12. Tim Johnson, 1:55.851
13. David Moon, 1:57.159
14. Patrick Wakefield, 2:02.408

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