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American Flat Track: Rookies Of ’79 And Friends Continues As Official Charity

Rookies of ’79 and Friends Named Designated Charity of Progressive AFT for Fifth Consecutive Season


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 6, 2022) – Progressive American Flat Track proudly announced today that Rookies of ‘79 and Friends will be the Designated Charity Partner of Progressive AFT for a fifth consecutive season.

The charity traces its origins to, and draws its name from, a special collection of riders and individuals who stepped up to the pinnacle of the sport together in 1979. That legendary crew included some of the greatest motorcycle racers to ever exist, boasting the likes of Scott Parker, Wayne Rainey, Ronnie Jones, Charlie Roberts, Tommy Duma, Jackie Mitchell, Lance Jones, and Johnny Wincewicz among its ranks. Inspired to give back to a sport that gave them so much, the reunited rookies decided three decades after they first faced off to join forces in order to help those who needed it the most.

Now in its 13th year of operation as a 501(c)(3) non-profit charity, Rookies of ‘79 has raised millions of dollars to provide aid to injured riders and their families over the years and has experienced incredible growth during its time as the series’ officially designated charity. Rookies of ‘79 stands ready to answer the call when needed and provides a reassuring presence at all times so that today’s generation of flat track racers can perform at their best knowing someone will always have their back.

“I’ve had the privilege of being on the Board of Directors for the Rookies of ’79 for the past few years,” said Tim Estenson, Estenson Racing Team Owner. “Working closely with a group of people with such deep history in the sport and the love of flat track has been amazing. We have one single goal; to be here in a time of need for any flat track rider injured doing what they love, racing. Through the support of our amazing flat track families and the corporate support we’ve gained over the years we’ve been able to continually fulfill our vision.

“Moving into the 2022 season I’m proud to say Progressive American Flat Track has stepped up in a big way, increasing their support to the charity in several areas. This increased support allows us to ensure our ability to be there for our athletes who may be injured during the season. We are honored to continue our partnership as the designated charity of Progressive American Flat Track.”

Since its inception, the charity has never turned away a flat track rider seeking aid, providing the help necessary to allow many of them to return to the track rather than end their careers prematurely due to injury.

“Progressive AFT is happy to continue our association with Rookies of ’79 for the 2022 season,” said Gene Crouch, COO of Progressive AFT. “They work tirelessly to provide an important service to the flat track community. As always, we encourage our fanbase to visit their display at one of the races or their website to learn more about their contribution to the sport, and to show them how much we all appreciate their efforts.”

Keep up to date with the Rookie’s of ’79 activity and news at https://www.facebook.com/rookiesof79. For more information, to donate, and to purchase merchandise and memorabilia from its online shop, visit https://www.rookies79.com/. And visit the Rookies tent which will be at all Progressive AFT events this season for your chance to purchase raffle tickets for the 2022 featured motorcycle drawings.

Progressive AFT makes its inaugural visit to I-70 Motorsports Park in Odessa, Missouri, on Saturday, April 23 for the I-70 Half-Mile presented by Indian Motorcycle of Kansas City. Secure your tickets now at https://store.americanflattrack.com/ebooking/ticket/view/id/3775.

The I-70 Half-Mile presented by Indian Motorcycle of Kansas City will premiere on FS1 on Sunday, May 1 starting at 10:00 a.m. ET/7:00 a.m. PT.

For more information on Progressive AFT visit https://www.americanflattrack.com. To score the latest gear for the Progressive American Flat Track fan, visit our official merchandise store at https://store.americanflattrack.com.

 

How to Watch:

FOX Sports and Facebook are the official homes for coverage of Progressive American Flat Track. For the 2022 season, all 18 races will premiere in one-hour telecasts on FS1 during highly desirable weekend time slots. The complete schedule can be viewed at https://www.americanflattrack.com/events-foxsports. Viewers can watch livestream coverage of every round in the Facebook mobile app, Facebook desktop site or on the Facebook Watch mobile app. To watch the livestream on TV, fans can download the Facebook Watch TV app, or cast to a TV from the Facebook mobile app. Facebook Watch is available through Apple TV, Samsung Smart TV, Amazon Fire TV, Chromecast, and Xbox One.

British Superbike: Skinner P1, Mackenzie Injured At Silverstone Test

Skinner stays on top as 0.949s covers the top 22 riders at Silverstone Official Test

Rory Skinner held off his Bennetts British Superbike Championship rivals on the opening day of the R&G Official Test at Silverstone, setting the benchmark time for FS-3 Racing Kawasaki as defending champion Tarran Mackenzie crashed out of the action.

The top 22 riders were covered by an incredible 0.949s at the end of the day and Skinner upped the pace in the final session to remain ahead. Bradley Ray was closing the gap to his Scottish rival as he continues to make strong progress since the Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha team changed manufacturer over the winter.

Ray was within 0.069s of Skinner as the last session of the day approached the final five minutes, but a high-speed crash for Mackenzie brought out the red flag. The McAMS Yamaha rider sustained a suspected left ankle fracture and was transferred to hospital for further checks.

Dan Linfoot had a positive start to the two-day test with the iForce BMW team, posting the third fastest time, but by only 0.001s ahead of Tommy Bridewell on the Oxford Products Racing Ducati with Kyle Ryde completing the top five.

Josh Owens had an impressive opening day to finish sixth overall for the Rapid CDH Racing Kawasaki team, edging out Danny Buchan and Leon Haslam who completed the top eight contenders.

Ryan Vickers also crashed in the final session but ended the day ninth for FHO Racing BMW with Josh Brookes rounding out the top ten for MCE Ducati. His teammate Tom Sykes also had a crash in the final session, ending the day in 18th.

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Silverstone, Official Test, Day 1 combined times:

  1. Rory Skinner (FS-3 Racing Kawasaki) 53.730s
  2. Bradley Ray (Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha) +0.069s
  3. Dan Linfoot (iForce BMW) +0.138s
  4. Tommy Bridewell (Oxford Products Racing Ducati) +0.139s
  5. Kyle Ryde (Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha) +0.355s
  6. Josh Owens (Rapid CDH Racing Kawasaki) +0.362s
  7. Danny Buchan (SYNETIQ BMW) +0.400s
  8. Leon Haslam (VisionTrack Kawasaki) +0.463s
  9. Ryan Vickers (FHO Racing BMW) +0.464s
  10. Josh Brookes (MCE Ducati) +0.553s

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

New Petersen Automotive Museum Exhibit Features Custom Electric Motorcycles

NEW PETERSEN AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM EXHIBIT TO FEATURE GROUND-BREAKING AND INNOVATIVE CUSTOM ELECTRIC MOTORCYCLES

The New Display Will Showcase Forward-Thinking Designers and Their Electrified Creations

LOS ANGELES – The Petersen Automotive Museum’s latest exhibit will feature a multitude of the most innovative electric motorcycles ever made by cutting-edge designers. Opening to the public on April 14, 2022, in the Richard Varner Family Gallery, the unique “Electric Revolutionaries” collection is an exclusive look at the ground-breaking creations of the visionaries at the forefront of the ever-expanding electric motorcycle industry.

Highlights of the new exhibition include “KillaJoule,” the land speed racer that made Eva Hakansson the fastest woman on an electric motorcycle with a run of 240.7 mph. Built by Hakansson and her husband at home and with a limited budget, “KillaJoule” is the fastest sidecar streamliner ever, regardless of engine type. On the slower side of the spectrum are the innovative solar-powered  “Solar Scooter” and “Solar Rickshaw” created by Samuel Aboagye. The Ghanaian teenager constructed both using only salvaged, discarded and recycled materials that he could source for free. Making its worldwide debut will be the intricately designed and exquisitely crafted “The One” by Curtiss Motors. Conceptualized by JT Nesbitt, “The One” features a retro-futuristic design and quality of construction usually only found on hypercars.

 

Hugo Eccles' "XP Zero" electric motorcycle. Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Hugo Eccles’ “XP Zero” electric motorcycle. Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

A follow-up to the Petersen Museum’s popular first-ever electric motorcycle exhibit, “Electric Revolution” in 2019, the new display features over 25 unique custom electric motorcycles guest curated by Motor/Cycle Arts Foundation Co-Founder Paul d’Orleans. “I’m super excited to assemble this wildly diverse collection of EV pioneers. ‘Electric Revolutionaries’ really does represent the range of interest in an electric future, from a humble teen in Ghana making EVs from scrap, to genius artisans building conceptual and boundary-pushing designs, to speed demons and global superstar designers interested in pushing mobility into the green zone,” said d’Orleans. “Electric Revolutionaries” is produced by the Motor/Cycle Arts Foundation and Sasha Tcherevkoff, with support from LiveWire and Damon Motorcycles as a contributing sponsor.

 

Curtiss Motors' "The One." Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Curtiss Motors’ “The One.” Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

“It is incredible how far electric motorcycles have come in the short time from our first exhibit in 2019,” said Petersen Automotive Museum Executive Director Terry L. Karges. “This new display gives a unique and close-up look at the innovative machines and the creators behind them pushing the boundaries of motorcycle electrification and design. The detail, level of craftsmanship and unorthodox thinking behind these electric motorcycles make them must-sees.”

 

Walt Siegl's 100-pound "RONTU." Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Walt Siegl’s 100-pound “RONTU.” Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

Other notable electric motorcycles on display include Joey Ruiter’s “NOMOTO,” which camouflages as utilitarian street furniture and his geometric “Moto Undone” concept. Also part of the exhibit is famed motorcycle designer Walt Siegl’s ultra-minimalist “RONTU” that uses carbon fiber, aluminum and a lack of body panels to help weigh a scant 100 lbs. Hugo Eccles’ avant-garde and award-winning “XP Zero,” a radical reinterpretation of a production ZERO SR/F into a futuristic cafe racer, is also among the extensive collection of unique and innovative electric motorcycles.

To purchase tickets or for more information about the Petersen Automotive Museum, please visit www.Petersen.org.

MotoAmerica: Gilbert Racing Suzuki In Superbike Cup & Stock 1000

Michael Gilbert is set to return to the MotoAmerica Superbike and Stock 1000 championships aboard a Team Hammer-prepared Suzuki GSX-R1000R while expanding the racing effort and paddock presence as the Cycle World®  Powered by Octane/ Chuckwalla Valley Raceway Team in 2022.

This season marks the return of industry-leading publication Cycle World to the MotoAmerica paddock, of which Gilbert holds a position as full-time Road Test Editor. Aside from creating original content focused on the racing effort, the collaboration highlights Cycle World’s authority in unbiased, objective reviews and informative storytelling. Cycle World is owned by Octane® (Octane Lending Inc.®), the fintech revolutionizing recreational lifestyle purchases by delivering a seamless, end-to-end digital buying experience. Octane adds value throughout the customer journey: inspiring enthusiasts with its editorial brands, instantly prequalifying consumers for financing on dealer and OEM websites, and routing customers to dealerships for a fast and easy closing experience.

Chuckwalla Valley Raceway is also a major partner in Gilbert’s racing effort. The southern California facility is home to a unique 2.68-mile circuit and Chuckwalla Valley Motorcycle Association (CVMA) series, which has become a hotbed for wintertime testing and racing for MotoAmerica frontrunners. Gilbert is a four-time #1 plate holder at CVMA.

Junior Cup competitor Owen Williams will also race under the new banner in his second season as a MotoAmerica racer.

Michael Gilbert: “What an undertaking it has been to get the Cycle World Powered by Octane/ Chuckwalla Valley Raceway Team off the ground! Still, I’m so excited to get the year started and go after the Stock 1000 championship and transition into full-time Superbike racing. We’ve had an amazing wintertime adapting to the Suzuki GSX-R1000R and I’m excited to see what the season holds.”

Mark Hoyer, Cycle World Editor-in-Chief: “Racing has been a part of ‘Team Cycle World’ from the beginning, thanks to founding Publisher Joseph C. Parkhurst’s love of competition. We are proud to carry on that tradition today, especially in support of our Road Test Editor Michael Gilbert. Michael’s dedication to always improving his skills and getting the most of his motorcycle at a national level underlines Cycle World’s dedication to the reader and he anchors the most talented editorial testing team in the business.”

About Octane:

Octane® offers access to instant financing to fuel your lifestyle. Octane dramatically simplifies and accelerates the transaction process for major recreational purchases such as motorcycles, ATVs, and zero-turn lawn mowers by adding value at each stage of the buying journey. Octane offers automated underwriting, innovative credit products, and financing, through its in-house lender Roadrunner Financial, Inc.®. Octane reaches millions of enthusiasts through its editorial brands like Cycle World® and UTV Driver® and helps consumers buy their favorite products by pre-qualifying them on dealer and OEM websites. Octane is revolutionizing lending in underserved verticals within markets that account for tens of billions of dollars in annual transactions.

Octane is a remote-first fintech company with offices in NYC and Dallas and over 500 employees. In August 2021, Octane announced it raised $52 million in Series D funding bringing the company’s valuation to over $900 million with more than $192 million in total equity funding raised to date. Visit www.octane.co.

WorldSBK: Haslam Doing Four Rounds With TPR Team Pedercini

Leon Haslam announced at Team Pedercini for four WorldSBK rounds in 2022

TPR Team Pedercini is delighted to announce that Leon Haslam will join the team on four occasions during the 2022 FIM Superbike World Championship season.

Haslam, 2010 WorldSBK runner up and with 313 race starts under his belt, will return to the series with the team for the first time at the Misano Round before continuing to run in three further events – Donington Park, Most Autodrom and Portimao.

Wildcarding for TPR Team Pedercini is not something new for the #91, who raced into the top five with the squad at the Losail International Circuit in 2016.

The team and Leon are excited that they have this opportunity to work together again and are optimistic of what they can achieve together. TPR Team Pedercini also wish the best of luck to Leon in his BSB (British Superbike Championship) fight, where he is looking to regain the crown, he won in 2018.

Lucio Pedercini – Team Principal: “Leon coming back to our team is a perfect match. We both still have a lot to say on track in the WorldSBK paddock and we are looking forward to entertaining the public for four rounds of pure racing passion! Thanks to our knowledge and his ability, we are confident that we will do battle and hopefully bring some good results like we did together in the past. For sure it will be a lot of fun”

Leon Haslam: “I am super excited. I’ve known Lucio for so many years and actually raced against him back in the day when I first started. I did a one-off wildcard with the team in Qatar a few years back and managed to finish in the top five and I have a lot of fond memories of being a part of the team. To be able to come back and ride with them again after all these years is really exciting for me and I hope we can achieve some good results together. The focus of course is BSB, but we have been able to find a solution that will see me return to the WorldSBK for these four races and I am really looking forward to it.”

MotoAmerica: May Partners With VETMotorsports To Support Veterans

Geoff May Partners With VETMotorsports to Provide Crew Experiences for the Military Community.

Columbus, OH — Geoff May will collaborate with VETMotorsports to help empower veterans by having them as part of Team Vision Wheel/ Discount Tire/ KWS/ Amsoil/ Honda at all the MotoAmerica SBK rounds. Veterans will have the opportunity to use their skills and knowledge in the fast paced environment of the professional race team paddock.

VETMotorsports is an award-winning, non-clinical outreach program that honors and empowers active military, veterans with service-connected injuries, and their caregivers, as well as Gold Star parents through active participation in motorsports. The program recruits participants give them hands-on access to a variety of motorsports experiences and cover all expenses for them to take part in the experience.

With the support of Geoff May, competing in the MotoAmerica Stock 1000 class with the newly formed Team of Vision Wheel/Discount Tire/Amsoil /KWS Motorsports/Honda, there will be opportunities for qualified participants to be embedded into the team with veteran crew chief Mike Godin of KWSMotorsports.

“It’s was a privilege to be part of the National Guard/Michael Jordan Motor Sports in the past, and I wanted to continue to show how much we appreciate what our warriors in all branches of the military do for our country,” said Geoff May, team principal, and rider. “We are more than honored to be able to give back in any way possible.”

“We continue to loose 22 veterans a day to suicide,” said VETMotorsports Founder and Executive Director Peter Cline, “and that’s something we’re working very hard to stop. It’s why we founded VETMotorsports and why we’re so proud to collaborate with Geoff May to not only honor our brave service members but give them something to learn, be excited about, and engage with.”

Veterans wishing to take part in the program can contact VETMotorsports at 614-407-3894 or [email protected] to learn more.

MotoGP: Previews Of The Red Bull Grand Prix Of The Americas (Updated)

Rodeo ready: MotoGP™ saddles up in Texas 

Marc Marquez returns to the fold with a nearly unbeaten record at the venue as an unpredictable 2022 gets ready to take on COTA

Wednesday, 06 April 2022

The wait is over and we have the answer: the King of COTA is on the way. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) will be back in action at the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas, ready to rodeo and recovered from his Indonesian GP crash. For the rest of the grid, that could spell a very different weekend ahead as the number 93 has only once failed to win at the venue in MotoGP™. It staged his rookie win, he was undefeated until crashing out in 2019, and he’s qualified on pole at the venue for every single event since 2013 – except last year. But then, last year he still went on to win by some margin. He remains, then, the favourite… but there’s plenty more to talk about too.

First mention has to go to Aleix Espargaro and Aprilia. There was only one factory on the grid who hadn’t won in MotoGP™ and one rider who had never taken a Grand Prix win in any class, so it was a truly historic feat for man and machine. It was also – stats and grand narratives aside – just an objectively very impressive performance. Few could go with the number 41 out front, with only Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) in the battle and Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Alex Rins and Joan Mir shadowing the duel. Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing) also took his best result since moving to the factory by far in P7, so the question now is… what do the Noale factory have in the locker for Texas?

Suzuki, too, will be interesting – and Rins arrives not only fresh from the podium but also as the only non-MM93 winner at the track. Ever. Can he bridge that gap that kept him just outside striking distance in Termas? His teammate, 2020 MotoGP™ Champion Joan Mir, will also be looking to do the same, with the number 36 having just missed out on the rostrum. He did say, however, that he’s got that 2020 feeling back – and that a little more time may have allowed a little more attack in Argentina. Team Suzuki Ecstar also lead the teams’ Championship after another interesting race day tango, and have been one of the most consistent teams and factories on the grid, so promises of progress shouldn’t be taken lightly for their rivals.

For Ducati, meanwhile, it’s returned to somewhat of a modern classic for the moment: they lead the Constructors’ standings thanks to three different riders in the first three races. First it was Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP), then Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) and now Martin, and the obvious omission is the Ducati Lenovo Team. Argentina proved a tough weekend overall for both Pecco Bagnaia and Jack Miller, and Miller himself offered a slightly heart-breaking stat on social media after coming home in 14th – having started 14th – saying it’s the first race he can ever remember taking part in where he didn’t overtake a single rider. But he has had some very good form at COTA, and will be confident of a turnaround.

Bagnaia, meanwhile, already bounced back on Sunday, at least into the top five after a really tough first day. That was an impressive show of mettle, and the Italian also has form in the lone star state having been on the podium there last year and qualified on pole. Will more familiar and recently-tilled turf prove a key positive for the Italian?

Martin will want to keep his frontrunning form having taken a front row in every race so far and then failed to convert it into points or podiums until Termas, and Zarco will want to bounce back. Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) nailed Saturday and then slipped down the order on Sunday, ultimately also beaten by the other side of the box. Marco Bezzecchi is now the leading Rookie in 2022 after taking that impressive ninth place, with the Italian having shown flashes of brilliance already but not having been able to quite put it all together on Sunday until Argentina. Can he keep it pinned at COTA?

KTM’s Argentina, meanwhile, was a mixed bag but not a bad one considering the newest factory on the grid’s level of experience at the venue – and the fact that Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) had never actually ridden it before in the premier class. He took P6 and remains second in the riders’ standings, seven points off Aleix Espargaro at the top. Teammate Miguel Oliveira had a tougher weekend that went through Q1 to P13 in the race, but there were positives – and with Yamaha and Honda continuing to have a more difficult season, the team and constructor standings remain very healthy for the Austrian factory even as Aprilia, Ducati and Suzuki pipped them in Argentina.

Over at Yamaha, the feelings will be less mixed. Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Andrea Dovizioso (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP) both suffered issues at Termas – the former a puncture and the latter a technical problem – so there at least, there’s a could have been. And Darryn Binder (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP) continues learning the ropes. But reigning Champion Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) completed the race with nothing actually going wrong, but like Qatar, did not come home with the position he wanted – and not for lack of trying. The number 20 went backwards off the line and backwards some more before eventually taking P8, explaining that rear grip was the biggest hurdle. Last year at COTA he was best of the rest behind what was essentially Marquez’ private Marquez vs Marquez challenge at the front, so it will be interesting to see what has changed – or hasn’t – as we return to Texas only a few months later…

For Honda, finally, the return of Marquez likely marks a return to high hopes following an excellent debut for the new RC213V in Qatar and then a more difficult two rounds. Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) recovered well from being outside Q1 to fourth on the grid before crashing out in Argentina too, showing there is speed even if everything didn’t go to plan on Sunday. Pol Espargaro, as well as Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Castrol) and Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol), will want more from this weekend though… so will having the COTA benchmark back in the saddle help Honda as the new bike gets fettled in?

All will be revealed on Sunday as MotoGP™ takes on Texas, with another 25 points up for grabs – and plenty, plenty of headlines waiting to be made. Tune in on Sunday at 13:00 local time (GMT-7) for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas!

MotoGP™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) – Aprilia – 45

2 Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) – KTM – 38

3 Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) – Ducati – 36

4 Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) – Suzuki – 36

5 Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) – Yamaha – 35

 

 

Will Vietti keep the advantage into the Americas?

The Italian is fast becoming the title favourite as well as the points leader – but there are plenty of fast faces looking to hit back in Texas

Celestino Vietti (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) didn’t finish pre-season as the rider on top of the timesheets or grabbing the headlines, but after the first three races the Italian has most definitely taken centre stage and made it his own. On every podium so far and on top of two of them, it’s going pretty well – an understatement on a par with the quiet confidence of the man himself. So is there reason to doubt the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas will be the same?

The main competition in the standings so far has come from Aron Canet (Flexbox HP 40), and in Argentina the Spaniard only just missed out on also boasting three podiums from three. “Just” fourth wasn’t down to a speed deficit either, it was most definitely down simply to the handiwork of Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) as the Japanese rider attacked late and well to take his first podium of the season. But for Canet, after struggling in previous seasons to be as consistent as some of his competitors, there is heart to be taken from having been fast at every track so far – and it’s hard to bet against him being so in Texas, the number 40 having also won there before in Moto3™.

There is actually another rider with a 100% podium record after Vietti though: Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia). The Thai rider missed the season opener with a hand injury and then promptly returned and won his first race, and another podium in Argentina only backs that up to make it 2/2 so far in 2022. Team manager Hiroshi Aoyama said in pre-season that both Ogura and Chantra could fight at the front and potentially launch a title bid this year, and some corners of the paddock appeared to think the latter overly optimistic. It must feel even sweeter, then, for the number 35 to have taken Thailand’s first Grand Prix win and been part of the first double podium for the team.

Argentina was also the first time two former Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup riders shared the intermediate class podium, and with Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Husqvarna Max) on the box in Moto3™, ATC alumni took a third of the available podium places on race day in Argentina. Ogura, who last year had the upper hand on Chantra, definitely shared his teammate’s joy at his recent successes, but the Japanese rider will most definitely want to turn those tables back as well. What can he do in Texas?

From one side of the world to the other, there’s also the American contingent with some big aims for COTA. There are now three home heroes on the grid in Moto2™, and although the rookie – Sean Dylan Kelly (American Racing) – did a little moonlighting in Termas thanks to his parents hailing from Argentina, this is a huge weekend for him and the two veterans: Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) and Cameron Beaubier (American Racing) as they race on home turf.

Roberts had a tougher time of it in 2021 at COTA, but this season so far there’s been concrete progress and the number 16 will want more from his home GP as we return. Beaubier, meanwhile, came out swinging last year with some serious speed – making track knowledge count for a lot and taking an impressive fifth place, so close to that first podium. What can he do this season? He’ll likely have to contend with Elf Marc VDS Racing’s Sam Lowes and Tony Arbolino – as well as Red Bull KTM Ajo’s Augusto Fernandez and Pedro Acosta, and Jake Dixon (Autosolar GASGAS Aspar Team) – on his way through the top ten to the upper echelons, but last season Beaubier had the goods.

Finally, what will we see from Fermin Aldeguer (MB Conveyors Speed Up)? The Spaniard should have been hyped since the start of last season after his performance in the Moto2™ European Championship and his first Grands Prix, and his progress in the World Championship has only validated both his and then-teammate Alonso Lopez’s 2021 form in the FIM JuniorGP™ paddock. Now, Aldeguer is beating records set by soon-to-be MotoGP™ Legend Jorge Lorenzo as he took over as the youngest ever polesitter in intermediate class history – by more than a year. Race day and that incident with Vietti will leave him wanting to prove more than a few points in Texas.

The time has come to return to the Lone Star State. In a first, Moto2™ race first this time out and the lights go out for the intermediate class at 11:20 (GMT-7) local time for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas. Don’t miss it!

Moto2™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Celestino Vietti (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) – Kalex – 70

2 Aron Canet (Flexbox HP 40) – Kalex – 49

3 Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) – Kalex – 45

4 Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) – Kalex – 36

5 Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) – Kalex – 35

 

Garcia vs Foggia vs… Guevara? The Moto3™ grid arrive in Texas

The top two in the Championship duelled it out something stunning at Termas but it’s Guevara, denied in Argentina, who won here last year…

Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) vs Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) was an instant classic in Argentina, with both underlining their speed in 2022 and Garcia once again sending it on Sunday, pulling off that final lunge to perfection as the number 11 tends to do. The stage could well be set for another showdown in Texas between the duo too, although there is last year’s winner who’ll likely have different ideas about the weekend ahead: Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team). As well as the rest of the pretty packed grid…

Guevara and Garcia were the breakaway early on in Argentina before the number 28 suddenly suffered a technical problem, adding a dash of bad luck to the qualifying penalty that already dampened his charge in Qatar. If it had stayed as it was in Termas before that though, the sophomore would have been leading the Championship, equal on points with his teammate but the first of them to win.

Shoulda woulda coulda is often of little use in racing, but one time it can be relevant is when the points don’t quite reflect speed – especially judging a sophomore rider like Guevara against the wealth of experience of Garcia and Foggia. The number 28 appears to have gone under the radar for some in 2021, despite having arrived in Moto3™ from winning the FIM JuniorGP World Championship as a rookie and won a Grand Prix race as a rookie, but it looks like it’s game on now.

So can anyone else keep challenging the sheer speed of Foggia, the send it masterclasses of Garcia and the elbows out of Guevara? So far, the next fastest rider – and sometimes fastest of all – has been Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Husqvarna Max), but a mixture of bad luck and trouble has hit the Japanese rider in the first couple of rounds. In Argentina though he made it happen, despite a Long Lap for the incident with Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) in Lombok, and sliced back through from outside the points.

Speaking of Migno, the Italian has also been fast but suffered mixed fates since his awesome win in the season opener. He’ll be one to watch, as will Termas sparring partner Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo), also fast but lacking points. Kaito Toba (CIP – Green Power) and Deniz Öncu (Red Bull KTM Tech3) are lurking in the standings thanks to a little better consistency, and the likes of Tatsuki Suzuki (Leopard Racing), Riccardo Rossi (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Carlos Tatay (CFMoto Racing PrüstelGP) are in their stride.

The same can also be said of some of the very impressive rookies joining the class this season. Diogo Moreira (MT Helmets – MSI) was once again the top debutant with another impressive finish in the top six, but as the Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Ajo) gets back to fitness, this time Moreira had close company. Joel Kelso (CIP – Green Power) also impressed in Argentina with provisional pole after the first runs and then a second row start, coming home tenth. What hands can they play in Texas?

Moto3™ race later in the day this time round, with Moto2™ and MotoGP™ heading out first. Tune in for more of the same stunning action at 14:430 local time – GMT-7!

Moto3™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) – GASGAS – 58

2 Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) – Honda – 53

3 Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) – GASGAS – 28

4 Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power) – KTM – 27

5 Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) – KTM – 26

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Lenovo Ducati Team:

Americas GP. The Ducati Lenovo Team returns to Texas for the fourth round of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship

Less than seven days after the Argentina GP, the Ducati Lenovo Team riders are set to return to the track this weekend for the fourth round of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship: the Americas GP.

Once again, the Circuit of The Americas in Austin (Texas) will host the event. The track has been on the calendar since 2013 and has seen Ducati score five podium finishes so far,  most recently last year with the third place of Francesco Bagnaia. The Italian rider, who made a strong comeback in Argentina, finishing fifth after starting from thirteenth on the grid, also took pole position in the 2021 edition of the Grand Prix. Thanks to the good sensations found on his Desmosedici GP in the last GP, Pecco aims to obtain an important result in Sunday’s race.

After a difficult weekend at Termas de Rio Hondo, which saw him finish the race in fourteenth place, Jack Miller returns to the United States determined to turn his season around. The Australian rider boasts a third-place finish in 2019 as his best result in Texas, and he is looking forward to returning a frontrunner at the GP of the Americas.

Jack Miller (#43 Ducati Lenovo Team) – 11th (15 points)

“I’m happy to get back on track this weekend and put the Argentina race behind me. The last GP was strange: we hadn’t raced at Termas for two years, and we struggled a bit with such a tight schedule. Now we go back to Texas for the GP of the Americas at a track that I like and where, in general, I can be fast. I’m determined to do well and finally turn my season around”.

Francesco Bagnaia (#63 Ducati Lenovo Team) – 14th (11 points)

“During the last GP in Argentina, I finally found the same sensations I had last year on my Desmosedici GP, and I’m very happy because it means we’re working in the right direction. I can say that my World Championship really started last week, and now I’m determined to maintain this momentum. On Sunday, we’ll race in Austin, a track where I finished third last year, starting from pole position. I hope to be as competitive this year and get some more important points for the Championship”.

The Grand Prix of the Americas will start this Friday, 10th April, from 9:50am local time (CEST -7.00am) with the first free practice session.

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Team Suzuki Press Office:

SUZUKI ARRIVES IN AUSTIN ON A HIGH AFTER FIRST PODIUM

Team Suzuki Ecstar’s riders Alex Rins and Joan Mir have headed 7000km north from Termas de Rio Hondo in Argentina to tackle the second race of a double-header in Texas.

The Circuit of the Americas (COTA) is a huge facility boasting a technical track layout and a capacity of 120,000. Since joining the MotoGP™ calendar back in 2013 it has become a stand-out stop thanks to its larger-than-life atmosphere and challenging races. The state capital of Austin is just a stone’s throw from the track, and the vibrant city is famed for its music festivals, cultural events, cuisine, and business technology hubs.

In 2019 Alex Rins took a memorable and mesmerising victory at COTA; his first ever win in the MotoGP™ class which helped him on his way to a campaign which left him fourth in the championship. He has also celebrated wins in Moto3™ and Moto2™ here. In 2021, after a year out of America due to the pandemic, Rins took a fourth place in Austin and he is keen to return to the podium in 2022.

Mir has less premier class experience at COTA and he will be aiming to collect data and learn more about the track before pushing his GSX-RR towards the top.

Team Suzuki Ecstar come into this fourth round of the championship leading the Teams’ standings, something which was achieved last time out following Rins’ podium in Argentina and Mir’s fourth place.

Alex Rins:

“I love the vibe in Texas and I always enjoy coming here, even more so after my debut MotoGP win in 2019. That was such a special day and it’s impossible to forget. Last year I was fourth, but I want to do more this year, especially as our GSX-RR has improved and I’m feeling good after the podium in Argentina. It’s not an easy track, but it’s really fun to ride so I’ll give my all for the fans and my team.”

Joan Mir:

“I don’t have many good memories from Texas, my best result is fourth, and I’ve only ridden here in the top class twice, but it’s an amazing circuit. It’s pretty technical and quite different from other tracks we go to. Last weekend I got some really good feelings with my bike and I can’t wait to jump back on it to try and build on that promising progress.”

Livio Suppo – Team Manager:

“Both our riders had a successful race in Argentina last week with third and fourth. That first podium of the season was important to us and of course it’s given us a boost. We come into this race in Texas leading the Teams’ Championship and we’d like to build on that. The forecast looks good for the weekend, and although COTA is a highly technical circuit, I feel confident that we can do well. Alex is especially excited to come back here, and Joan is ready to get his best finish.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Monster Energy Yamaha:

MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP ANTICIPATE COTA RACE WEEKEND

Austin, Texas (USA), 6th April 2022

The Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP team have arrived in America ready for Round 4 on the 2022 MotoGP calendar. This will be the 500th GP of the new era of the FIM MotoGP World Championship, which began in 1992 with the FIM, IRTA, MSMA & Dorna racing together.

The Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Team have made their way to Austin, Texas for this weekend‘s Grand Prix of The Americas. After a disappointing end to the Argentina GP last Sunday, both Fabio Quartararo and Franco Morbidelli are hungry to fight for top results at the COTA track.

Quartararo arrives at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) holding fifth place in the championship with a 10-point gap to first. The championship is still wide open, and with good memories of the COTA track, El Diablo is ready to for the challenge.

In 2015, his very first year of visiting COTA, the Frenchman immediately scored a second place in the Moto3 class. Last year he equalled this feat on a MotoGP bike in only his second premier class race in Austin, which was crucial for his championship title win later on.

Morbidelli was unlucky to suffer a tyre puncture last week, cutting his Argentina GP short. He is looking forward to making a strong comeback at another track and move up from 12th place in the overall standings.

The Italian is a fan of the tricky Austin venue and is anticipating a positive race weekend. Last year he was still contending with a leg injury that prevented him from showing his true potential. This weekend he would like to add another top result to his resume. His best performances at COTA include his win in 2017 in the Moto2 class and the fifth place he scored with Yamaha in the premier class in 2019.

Constructed in 2013, The Circuit of the Americas (COTA) is one of the newest on the calendar, having been added to the Grand Prix schedule that same year. Its length of 5513m and mixture of fast straights and tight hairpins make the track both challenging and exciting to master for teams and riders. They need to find exactly the right balance for their bike‘s set-up to suit the 11 left, 9 right turns, and the 1,200m straight in order snatch a place on the podium. The especially sharp Turn 1 will be a place where the fans can expect a lot of overtaking action, both at the start and during the race.

Those who wish to get to know the COTA track better can watch our latest MotoGP eSport video.

The Grand Prix of The Americas is held in the GMT -5 time zone. FP1 will take place on Friday afternoon from 09:55 – 10:40 local track time, followed by FP2 from 14:10 – 14:55. On Saturday, FP3 will be held from 09:55 – 10:40, FP4 from 13:30 – 14:00, and the qualifying sessions from 14:10 – 14:50. On Sunday, Warm Up is held from 09:40 – 10:00 and the race starts at 13:00.

MASSIMO MEREGALLI

TEAM DIRECTOR

After a difficult weekend in Argentina, it‘s important that we start this GP off on the right foot. We always really enjoy coming to Austin. It‘s a quite technical track. On paper this shouldn‘t be one of our strongest circuits on the MotoGP calendar, but we feel that this could be a good round for us. In recent years we‘ve often scored good results here, as Fabio‘s second place from last year showed. The race conditions then are similar to what we‘re expecting this weekend, so we are optimistic. But COTA has been partly resurfaced, so only on Friday will we truly know what the track conditions will be like.

FABIO QUARTARARO

Austin played a key part in my championship win last year. That second place was like a victory because it gave me my first match point to secure the championship. This time we arrive here in a totally different situation and with a different mindset. Last year I always tried to win, but I was also trying to keep the lead in the championship. We can afford to be more on the attack now. We will do our best as always. Last year the rear grip here was pretty decent, but the bumps were tough. The track has been resurfaced since then. I‘m curious to see what we can do this time round.

FRANCO MORBIDELLI

We now arrived at COTA which is a track that I really like, so it‘s a good place to race at after a disappointing end to the Argentina GP. This track is difficult, but it’s one of my favourites. Last year I wasn‘t able to push because my leg was not 100% healed yet, and the bumps aggravated the situation. This year it should be a completely different story. I‘m fully fit and the track has been smoothed out, so I‘m looking forward to riding in Austin again.

 

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Mooney VR46 Racing Team:

STARS AND STRIPS WEEKEND FOR THE MOONEY VR46 RACING TEAM

Luca Marini and Marco Bezzecchi on track at COTA after a more than positive weekend in Argentina

Austin (USA)- A few hours of relaxation, then the long transfer from Argentina to the USA and it is already time to get back on track for the Mooney VR46 Racing Team busy this weekend in Texas for the GP of the Americas (race is scheduled at 01.00 pm local time, 08.00 pm CET). Fourth race of the 2022 season with Luca Marini and Marco Bezzecchi ready to be among the protagonists after the positive weekend at Termas de Rio Hondo.

Very fast in qualifying and once again in the points in Argentina, Luca is working on the Ducati Desmosedici GP to improve his pace on the long run and be consistent in the final stages of the race on a very demanding track as COTA.

Motivated to confirm himself after the first championship points and the Top10 of the last Sunday, also Marco who hit the podium in Austin just a few months ago in Moto2 and aims to be competitive from the first free practices.

Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas

Circuit Of The Americas

Length: 5.5 km

Turns: 11 left, 9 right

Width: 15 m

Longest straight: 1200 m

MotoGP race: 20 laps

MotoGP race distance: 110.3 km

Red Flag MotoGP race finish: 15 laps (3/4 of the total laps scheduled)

 

Luca Marini #10

We arrive in Austin after an overall positive weekend: in qualifying we made an important step forward, but we are still missing something on the pace. As in the last few races, we will continue to work on the electronic aspect to be fast, not only in entering, but also at the exit of the corners. The COTA is a very demanding track, even physically, and from the particular tarmac conditions.

Marco Bezzecchi #72

I am happy to be back on track immediately after a GP like the one raced in Argentina. It was a good race, I managed well the rear tire on the long run and I finished with a good pace. The Austin track is one of the toughest on the calendar and I’ve never raced there with the MotoGP: it will be challenging, but it’s a track where I was very fast last year in Moto2. I can’t wait to get back at work!

Pablo Nieto

Team Manager

It is always a pleasure to return to the USA for the GP: a technically difficult track, very demanding from the physical point of view but also with a series of beautiful turns. The one in Argentina was a race condensed just into two days, but where we performed well. Both riders in the points, Luca’s front row, Marco’s recovery and an interesting pace from the first free practices. We will continue like this to make another step forward towards the European season.

 

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team:

WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team duo excited to continue in the US

Darryn Binder and Andrea Dovizioso are looking for recuperation in Austin, Texas for round four of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship.

Just a few days of rest and traveling after the third round of the season in Argentina and the entire MotoGP paddock is already off to the United States, where the partly resurfaced Circuit of The Americas awaits for Grand Prix number four. The 5.5-kilometer layout close to Austin is one of the most varied in the GP calendar.

WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team’s Darryn Binder is eager to try his Yamaha YZR-M1 at this special venue, starting from scratch again. Finishing the Argentina Grand Prix in P18, the MotoGP rookie gained more experience and delivered some great battles once again. With six points on his account, he arrives as the second-best premier class newcomer so far and will look to score more.

In the meantime, Andrea Dovizioso is looking to make up some lost ground from Termas de Rio Hondo, where he had to stop in the pitlane after just one lap, but later on found a good rhythm and some improvements. He already had some decent sensations aboard his Yamaha YZR-M1 last year and aims to cement his improvements with a strong result.

The WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team gets ready for Free Practice one this Friday at 09:55 local time (16:55 CET), while the race on Sunday will get underway at 13:00 local time (20:00 CET).

DARRYN BINDER

“I’m really looking forward to getting to Austin. I really enjoy America and I think it’s definitely one of the more difficult circuits on the calendar, so I’m really excited to see how it feels on a MotoGP bike. I’m looking forward to see what the new asphalt is like in the areas they have resurfaced it. I’ll take it like every other race, start from zero, build a way up and see what we can accomplish in the race.”

ANDREA DOVIZIOSO

“I’m happy to go to Austin, because I felt quite good there last year. The asphalt will be new, so we are curious how it’s going to feel. Anyway, I look forward to go there straight away to try to make a decent result. In the end, my pace in the race in Argentina was quite good, I was able to fight and I didn’t expect that before the race. So, we have some ideas after what I tried in the race in Termas. I was riding alone and able to play a little bit with the bike. We will try something in Austin and let’s see if it will help me to get a better feeling overall.”

Razlan Razali, Founder and Team Principal WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team

“We go to Austin with some data and experience based on the last Grand Prix in Termas de Rio Hondo. I’m sure both riders and their respective crew chiefs will look over their data gathered in Argentina and understand what happened and what can be done for America. We just have to keep on working, do the best we can and try to get as many points as possible.”

Wilco Zeelenberg, Team Manager WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team

“We are up for Austin, the fourth round of the 2022 season. So far, we’ve been experiencing mixed emotions. In Argentina we expected a bit more, especially from Andrea in terms of results. He clearly made a mistake with the start device, but this can happen to anyone, even the most experienced riders. We just need to make sure that it doesn’t happen again. But Andrea really likes Austin, because he was strong there last year and for Darryn it’s the same story as in the first three rounds. He is learning fast, in the Warm Up in Argentina he was good, but in Austin he needs to start from scratch. Hopefully he can fight with the other rookies again and let’s hope Andrea can score some decent points.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Tech3 KTM Factory Racing:

Tech3 KTM Factory Racing Travels to Austin for the Final Race Overseas Before European Tour

Only a couple of days after the Gran Premio Michelin® de la Républica Argentina, Tech3 KTM Factory Racing already has its eyes set on Round 4 of the 2022 calendar. Indeed, the crew travelled directly from Termas de Río Hondo to Austin in the United States on Monday, and is now getting ready for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas, to be held at the 5,513m-long Circuit of the Americas.

With just a few days of rest to enjoy the city of Austin, Raul Fernandez will be willing to score his first points in the MotoGP class after three impressive first races this season, including the one in Argentina where he finished in P16, so close to the goal. On the other side, Remy Gardner will also look to continue his progression with the KTM RC16 and aim for a Top 15 finish on this American layout where he often had good results.

We will be back to a usual format this week after the events in Argentina that forced to re-arrange the schedule, and the action will start on Friday, April 8 with Free Practice 1 at 9:55 local time (GMT-5), followed by Free Practice 2 at 14:10. We will be back on Saturday for Qualifying day, starting with Free Practice 3 at 09:55 local time, followed by the final free session at 13:30. It will be time to make a fast lap when Qualifying starts at 14:10, with both Raul and Remy looking to improve their qualifying sessions. The Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas will take place on Sunday, April 10 2022, at 13:00 (GMT-5), for 20 laps.

Remy Gardner

Championship: 22nd

Points: 1

“I look forward to this weekend here in Austin. Last year, I was quite fast on a Moto2 bike, so we will see what I can do with a MotoGP engine. There has been some resurfacing work done in some corners since we came in October, so I am curious to see the results of the re-asphalt. Apart from this, I think that we have to find a bit more of a direction with the bike this weekend and hopefully make the step we want.”

Raul Fernandez

Championship: 23rd

Points: 0

“I am really motivated to be here in Austin, Texas. We had a good race in Argentina, the whole team did a great job, and I am feeling better day by day on the bike. I think that this track will be interesting for us, so let’s see what we can do this weekend!”

Hervé Poncharal

Team Manager

“After the exciting MotoGP round in Termas de Río Hondo in Argentina, the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing team is excited to start a new weekend in Austin, Texas. We enjoy coming to the USA because the circuit and the facilities are amazing. We are also very eager to discover how the track has been resurfaced so everyone is curious to see how much it will improve the grip, and therefore the lap-times. Last year, we had a tough race here, but following the interesting races that both Raul and Remy had in Argentina, they should be ready to make another step, with the target to score some points. It would be a great result. As it is always the case during back-to-back races, the team will be very busy, but we are happy to be back here before heading to Europe.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Aprilia:

APRILIA ARRIVES IN THE UNITED STATES FOR THE GP OF THE AMERICAS
 

AFTER ALEIX ESPARGARÓ’S HISTORIC VICTORY IN ARGENTINA AND WITH MAVERICK VIÑALES IMPROVING RAPIDLY, APRILIA TACKLES THE TEXAS ROUND WITH CONFIDENCE

IT’S TIME FOR ANOTHER DEMANDING CHALLENGE FOR THE 2022 RS-GP, WHICH HAS PROVEN TO BE A WINNING BIKE

Aprilia arrives in Texas, the venue this weekend for the Grand Prix of the Americas, in unprecedented great form. Fresh from the historic victory earned by Aleix Espargaró in Argentina and with Maverick Viñales back to battling for the top spots, the Aprilia Racing team is preparing for the fourth round of the season with confidence, despite the treacheries of the Circuit of the Americas, one of the most demanding on the calendar and recently partially resurfaced.

Thanks to their outstanding performance in the first three Grand Prix races, Aprilia is also leading in the overall rider standings with Aleix Espargaró at 45 points, whereas Maverick Viñales has now moved up to 13 points.

During the MotoGP weekend in Austin, the North America Talent Cup will also be making its début. This is the single-brand series part of the “Road to MotoGP” path which races with the Aprilia RS 250 SP2 bikes. After the success enjoyed on the national level with the Italian FMI Aprilia Sport Production Championship, the “small” 250 from Noale, designed to make rider growth easy and gradual, has now embarked overseas – a testament to Aprilia Racing’s growing commitment to grooming young talent.

ALEIX ESPARGARÓ

“These past few days have been very emotional for me and I was extremely happy to receive so much affection from the fans and the entire paddock after the exciting win at Termas de Rio Hondo. But now it’s already time to think about the Austin race. We are well aware that it will be one of the most complicated ones for us, because we struggled a lot last year, but we’ll try to take full advantage of this positive moment, continuing to have fun. Up to now, we’ve been competitive on three very different tracks and even in Indonesia in the wet, a condition that I have never been particularly crazy about, the bike was truly fast. We have been consistent and this is demonstrated by the fact that we are also in the lead in the championship, but we are keeping our feet firmly planted on the ground. The important thing is to continue this trend without making mistakes.”

MAVERICK VIÑALES

“Aleix’s victory was a huge confidence booster for the entire team and for me, because I got back to battling to the top positions. We knew that the race in Argentina would be very important for us. We were seeking confirmation after the settings changes we tried in Indonesia, and we found it. Now I feel like I’ve found a good base to work on to improve even further and I can’t wait to get back in the saddle. Plus, the Circuit of the Americas is one of my favourite tracks, where I’ve always been fast. That said, we’ll keep going with the same mentality. We are aware that there is still much to learn and in Austin we simply want to make another step forward in terms of me adapting to the bike, because that is the only way we’ll be able to grow and improve further.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Michelin:

A week after the Michelin Grand Prix of Argentina, and just over six months since the previous visit to the Circuit of The Americas, the Michelin team and the rest of the MotoGP™ paddock will be once again heading to Austin, TX for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas.

The Circuit of The Americas, with its 11 right- and 9 left-hand corners, runs in an anti-clockwise direction, with parts of the track inspired by famous sections of iconic racetracks, including Hockenheim, Silverstone, Interlagos and Österreichring. These corners, together with the intimidating 40m (133ft) climb to Turn 1, a 1,200m (0.74 miles) straight and a very demanding track surface, all add up to one of the biggest challenges of the year for the riders, machines, and their Michelin tyres.

Since the previous race here, there has been some work carried out on certain parts of the track to eradicate the severe bumps that were much talked about by the riders. This should hopefully improve things considerably and may lead to faster lap times in 2022.

Another difference compared to last year will be the temperatures. In late September the average is above 30° C, but now it is back in its usual April slot, the average temperatures should be down around 25° C.

The MICHELIN Power Slick tyre allocation for CoTA has been chosen to cope with the expected demands that will be faced during each lap, and also those generated by the abrasive track surface. Available in Soft, Medium and Hard compounds, the three front tyre options will all be symmetric, while the three rear options will be asymmetric, with a harder right side to cope with the extra stresses created by the right-hand corners.

Although rain is unusual here, it doesn’t mean that it can’t happen, and MICHELIN Power Rain tyres will be available to give the riders confidence to push to the limit if any rain should make an appearance. Available in Soft and Medium compounds for both the front and rear, the rears will also feature an asymmetric design, with a harder right-hand-side, just like their slick counterparts.

Speaking about the CoTA race weekend, Piero Taramasso, Michelin Two-Wheel Motorsport Manager, said: “These two consecutive races in Termas de Rio Hondo and Austin are quite a logistical challenge for our team. However, we are always happy to make the trip across the Atlantic and to contribute to some entertaining races that we know the enthusiastic fans here will appreciate very much.

“We know that following the previous visit, some work has been done to the track to try and smooth out the bumps that caused problems for the riders last time. Now we will just need to wait and see if this has worked, and to find out what difference, if any, this might have made to the grip levels. Having said that, I’m sure our CoTA 22 allocation will give the riders the tyres they need to push their limits and to go all-out for the victory.”

The action will get underway on Friday 8 April with the first two Free Practice sessions, followed on Saturday with another two further Free Practice sessions and Qualifying 1 and 2 to decide grid positions for the race. The lights will go out to signal the start of the 20-lap race at 13:00 local time on Sunday 10 April.

MotoAmerica: Young Gun Tyler Scott Joins Team Hammer

YOUNG GUN TYLER SCOTT JOINS TEAM HAMMER

Team Hammer, Inc. is thrilled to announce the signing of rising star Tyler Scott to race in the 2022 MotoAmerica Supersport championship aboard a Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki GSX-R.

The team has committed to an extensive career development program with the 16-year-old Scott, who is the reigning MotoAmerica Junior Cup champion following a thoroughly dominant 2021 campaign. Last season, Scott won the Junior Cup title by a 44-point margin on the strength of 15 podiums, 11 of which were race wins.

 

Tyler Scott. Photo courtesy Team Hammer.
Tyler Scott. Photo courtesy Team Hammer.

The Pennsylvanian has been over-achieving for the majority of his life. Scott, whose father and uncle were professional flat track racers, began racing at the age of four. He quickly proved himself a dirt track prodigy, ultimately earning 13 AMA Grand Championships at the amateur level while being named AMA Youth Dirt Track Racer of the Year on four separate occasions.

Scott started his road racing career at the age of eight, and earned numerous regional titles. Scott was selected to participate in the 2019 Red Bull Rookies Cup, followed that up with a year of intense competition in the 2020 FIM CEV European Talent Cup, and then returned to the U.S.A. full-time to win the 2021 Junior Cup.

“This year, I’ll be on the best team for me,” said Scott. “Team Hammer has the data and history of running up front wherever the team races, and I feel that puts me in the best position to improve. I’m excited for the opportunity, and I want to adapt to the bike quickly and completely. Last year, I ran the tracks in the Junior Cup, so I am familiar with the circuits. I’m looking forward to our upcoming test at Barber to see how the GSX-R feels and to be fast for the first round.”

“Tyler has been on our radar for a few seasons,” said Chris Ulrich, Team Hammer Vice President of Operations. “We had a first-hand look at him last year when he won the Junior Cup. He’s an exceptional talent and a rider for the future. Tyler has earned a lot of accolades already, but what impresses us most is his attitude and desire. I think he will do well on a competitive bike and learn at a fast pace. Similar to what we are already doing with Sam Lochoff and Liam Grant, we have a program in place to help Tyler achieve his goals. This will be fun!”

ABOUT TEAM HAMMER

The 2022 season marks Team Hammer’s 42nd consecutive year of operating as a professional road racing team. Racebikes built and fielded by Team Hammer have won 128 AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National races, have finished on AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National podiums 332 times, and have won 11 AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National Championships, as well as two FIM South American Championships (in Superbike and Supersport.) The team has also won 137 endurance races overall (including seven 24-hour races) and 13 Overall WERA National Endurance Championships with Suzuki motorcycles, and holds the U.S. record for mileage covered in a 24-hour race. The team also competed in the televised 1990s Formula USA National Championship, famously running “Methanol Monster” GSX-R1100 Superbikes fueled by methanol, and won four F-USA Championships.

 ABOUT VISION WHEEL

Founded in 1976, Vision Wheel is one of the nation’s leading providers of custom wheels for cars and trucks, and one of the first manufacturers of custom wheels and tires for ATVs, UTVs, and golf carts. Vision Wheel looks beyond the current trends and to the future in developing, manufacturing, and distributing its wheels. Vision’s lines of street, race, off-road, American Muscle, and Milanni wheels are distributed nationally and internationally through a trusted network of distributors. Vision Wheel also produces the Vision It AR app to allow users to see how their wheel of choice will look on their vehicle before purchase and installation. For more information on Vision Wheel, visit www.visionwheel.com.

ABOUT SUZUKI

Suzuki Motor USA, LLC. (SMO) distributes Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automotive Parts, Accessories, and ECSTAR Oils & Chemicals via an extensive dealer network throughout 49 states. Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC), based in Hamamatsu, Japan, is a diversified worldwide manufacturer of Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automobiles, Outboard Motors, and related products. Founded in 1909 and incorporated in 1920, SMC has business relations with 201 countries/regions. For more information, visit www.suzuki.com.

MotoAmerica: Superbike Championship Begins At COTA

MotoAmerica Superbikes Are Back And Ready For Business In Texas

The MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship Set To Start Alongside MotoGP
In The Red Bull Grand Prix Of The Americas, April 8-10

IRVINE, CA (April 6, 2022) – If history is to repeat itself in the opening round of the 2022 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship at Circuit of The Americas (COTA) this weekend, a non-American will win on a Suzuki GSX-R1000 for his first career MotoAmerica victory.

Welcome to the top step on the podium, Richie Escalante.

Okay, not so fast.

Thanks mostly to a certain Spaniard by the name of Toni Elias, foreigners have won seven of the 10 MotoAmerica Superbike races held at COTA with Elias winning six times and South African Mathew Scholtz taking a lone victory in 2018. The Americans who have tasted victory on the circuit located on the outskirts of Austin? That would be Josh Hayes and Cameron Beaubier way back in 2015, the first year of the race, and Josh Herrin, the winner of race two the last time MotoAmerica took part in the event in 2019.

As for manufacturer victories… Suzuki has seven wins with Yamaha winning the other three.

So will Escalante, who hails from Mexico City, Mexico, win his Superbike debut for the Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki team this weekend? Well, that depends on if you look at just COTA’s history, or the more recent MotoAmerica results.

If you look only at last year, then it would take a brave soul to bet against 2021 MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Jake Gagne. You don’t win 17 of 20 races and not show up as the favorite, and Gagne can boast those results. The Californian, who now calls Colorado home, returns on his Fresh N Lean Progressive Yamaha Racing YZF-R1 fresh off his dominating 2021 season when he not only won 17 of 20 races, but he also won 16 races in a row dating from the end of April to the middle of September. Yes, it was a record-breaking season for Gagne on many fronts.

Last year, Gagne didn’t get much of a challenge from anyone within his team, but this season might be different with the addition of South African Cameron Petersen to the two-rider Yamaha team. Petersen comes to the squad after finishing third in last year’s Superbike title chase on an M4 ECSTAR Suzuki with his first-career Superbike win coming in the final round of the season at Barber Motorsports Park. He also comes with a 2022 race under his belt with his new team after finishing second in the Daytona 200 on a Yamaha YZF-R6. And Petersen was just .007 of a second from victory.

Westby Racing’s Mathew Scholtz begins the 2022 season after enjoying his best year to date in 2021. The South African won his third- and fourth-career Superbike races last year (in the season opener at Road Atlanta and the season finale at Barber) and parlayed his 14 total podiums into a runner-up finish to Gagne in the final point standings. Scholtz is hoping to go one better in 2022 and he’ll tackle the season in the cozy atmosphere of the Westby team for the seventh straight year. Scholtz will also hit the COTA track this weekend as the only rider on the MotoAmerica grid to have won a race there.

If there’s a non-America to be leery of in the season opener, it’s Italian Danilo Petrucci. The 31-year-old two-time MotoGP race winner (2019 at Mugello; 2020 at Le Mans) will make his much-heralded MotoAmerica debut at COTA on the ex-Loris Baz Warhorse HSBK Racing Ducati NYC Panigale V4 R. Petrucci will face a new team, new bike, new tires, and new tracks, but he’s likely faced bigger challenges (the Dakar Rally, for example). And let’s not forget that Elias won his first-ever MotoAmerica race… and at COTA to boot. While Elias claimed COTA as one of his favorites, Petrucci has said it’s not one of his and his best finish in Texas was sixth in the 2019 Red Bull Grand Prix of The Americas on his factory Ducati.

Escalante will also make his MotoAmerica Superbike debut at COTA with the 2020 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion moving up at class to race a GSX-R1000 for the Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki team. Escalante will be joined there by 2021 MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Champion and Superbike Cup winner Jake Lewis, with the Kentuckian getting another shot at the Medallia Superbike class.

There’s a new team rolling into Austin for the season opener and it’s the Tytlers Cycle Racing squad and its BMW M 1000 RR led by Hector Barbera, the Spaniard finishing seventh in the 2021 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship in his debut season in the series. Barbera will be joined by the returning PJ Jacobsen, the New Yorker back in MotoAmerica for the first time since he suffered injuries in the second round of the season at Road America in 2020.

Tytlers will also run a second team, Tytlers Cycle/RideHVMC Racing, with Travis Wyman, Corey Alexander, and Zachary Schumacher. The trio will ride Stock 1000-spec BMWs in both Medallia Superbike and Stock 1000 and will make their debut on the bikes at COTA.

Also, BMW-mounted for the 2022 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike series is Scheibe Racing’s Ashton Yates with the youngster switching from his Honda to Scheibe’s BMW S 1000 RR. Yates’s first race on the bike and with the team will be at COTA.

Hayden Gillim is a popular returnee to the series with the Philpot, Kentucky, resident set to race a Superbike-spec Disrupt Racing Suzuki GSX-R1000 for a full season in the Superbike series after dabbling in MotoAmerica’s Mission King Of The Baggers Championship last year.

Daytona 200 winner Brandon Paasch will be out to win the MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Championship in 2022 and if he does so it will be the third-straight title in that class for the Altus Motorsports team. Paasch will begin his season on the GSX-R1000 at COTA with the Stock 1000 Championship beginning at Road Atlanta two weeks later.

Michael Gilbert Racing’s Michael Gilbert has made the switch from Kawasaki to Suzuki for his 2022 Superbike and Stock 1000 campaigns and he’ll also begin his season at COTA. Another top Stock 1000 racer who will begin his season at COTA is Geoff May with the veteran committing to a full season of Superbike and Stock 1000 racing on his Vision Wheel/Discount Tire/KWS Honda CBR1000RR-R SP, the only Honda entered for COTA.

Veteran Superbike racer David Anthony will again carry the Australian flag in the Medallia Superbike series when he lines up on his Suzuki GSX-R1000R for the COTA opener. Thrashed Bike Racing’s Max Flinders, meanwhile, will again be aboard his trusty all-yellow Yamaha YZF-R1 as he starts his seventh season in the MotoAmerica Championship.

In total, 30 Superbikes – yes, 30 – have entered the season-opener at Circuit of The Americas.

COTA Pre-Race Notes…

With the opening round of the Medallia Superbike Championship a stand-alone for MotoAmerica at Circuit of The Americas, the Auto Parts 4 Less MotoAmerica Championship begins in earnest with all six of its classes on track at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, April 22-24.

Yamaha leads the way in the number of entries for the opening round of the Medallia MotoAmerica Superbike Championship with 10 riders entered on YZF-R1s. BMW and Suzuki will be represented by seven riders each with Ducati next with three Panigale V4 Rs entered. Just three Kawasakis and a lone Honda complete the 30-strong entries.

Dunlop has announced its “Dunlop Fast Nine” program that will offer one free Q (qualifying) tire to the top-nine finishers in Superbike Q1 at COTA. All Superbike competitors are allowed one qualifier to be used in Q2.

More Petrucci Data: Danilo Petrucci, who will make his MotoAmerica debut at COTA, raced for 10 years in MotoGP, the highlight of which were lone victories in the 2019 and 2020 seasons on a Ducati. In total, Petrucci raced in 169 MotoGP races with 10 podiums and the aforementioned two victories. Prior to his MotoGP career, Petrucci raced in the European Superstock 600 Championship and Superstock 1000 Cup.

Petrucci’s last race prior to COTA was in the Dakar Rally where he became the first MotoGP racer to win a stage of the world-famous rally. Petrucci won the fifth stage on his factory KTM.

MotoAmerica last competed at the Circuit of The Americas in 2019 as the race was cancelled in 2020 due to COVID-19. In 2021, MotoGP returned to the Texas venue, but MotoAmerica wasn’t a part of the event due to scheduling conflicts.

Six-time COTA MotoAmerica Superbike winner Toni Elias earned pole position in 2019 with his Superpole lap of 2:08.538. The fastest race lap was turned in by race-two winner Josh Herrin with a 2:08.994 on his Yoshimura Suzuki. Elias and Herrin split the two race wins in 2019.

The Superbike lap record on the 3.4-mile, 20-turn Circuit of The Americas, however, is a 2:08.184 set by Roger Hayden in 2017 on his Yoshimura Suzuki. Hayden will be on hand at COTA doing commentary for MotoAmerica Live+, the series’ live and on-demand streaming service.

The first-ever MotoAmerica Superbike races at COTA were held in MotoAmerica’s debut season of 2015. Yamaha’s four-time AMA Superbike Champion Josh Hayes won race one with teammate Cameron Beaubier, who would go on to win five MotoAmerica Superbike titles, won race two.

American race fans will have three former MotoAmerica racers to cheer for at Circuit of The Americas with 2015 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Champion Joe Roberts, five-time MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Cameron Beaubier and 2021 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion Sean Dylan Kelly all currently taking part in the Moto2 World Championship. Beaubier had his career-best Moto2 finish of fifth in last year’s Red Bull Grand Prix of The Americas.

There will also be two Beaubiers on hand at COTA this year with Cameron’s little brother Ezra Beaubier set to race in the MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike race on a Motorsport Exotica Orange Cat BST Racing BMW M 1000 RR.

Circuit of The Americas has undergone a repave job since last year’s MotoGP with turns two through 10 and 12 through 16 being re-surfaced to eliminate the bumps that put the track in a negative light last year.

About MotoAmerica

MotoAmerica is the North American road racing series created in 2014 that is home to the AMA Superbike Championship. MotoAmerica is an affiliate of KRAVE Group LLC, a partnership that includes three-time 500cc World Champion, two-time AMA Superbike Champion, and AMA Hall of Famer Wayne Rainey, ex-racer and former manager of Team Roberts Chuck Aksland, motorsports marketing executive Terry Karges, and businessman Richard Varner. For more information on MotoAmerica, visit www.MotoAmerica.com. Also make sure to follow MotoAmerica on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

World Supersport: Panta Racing Fuel Named Official Fuel Supplier

Panta Racing Fuel becomes the Official Fuel Supplier of WorldSSP

Already present in WorldSSP300, Panta Racing Fuel gets involved in the reinvigorated WorldSSP class from 2022

On the back of their experience as the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP300 class since its inception in 2017, Panta Racing Fuel has been appointed as the exclusive supplier of the FIM Supersport World Championship as it accompanies the category into its ‘Next Generation’ era, starting this season. The company’s involvement in WorldSSP300 has already been successful and now, it looks to expand into WorldSSP ahead of what is set to be an exciting season of racing.

Part of the Mol Group and based in Italy, Panta Racing Fuel develop and produce specialised racing fuels to support performance in motorsport competitions; it offers many references of fuels and special fuels for the automotive industry. Panta Racing Fuel is the official supplier of several motorsport competitions with the Red Bull MotoGP™ Rookies Cup, the FIM Endurance World Championship and British Superbikes series among them. With such experience in the motorsport industry, Panta Racing Fuel is the ideal fuel partner for both the FIM Supersport World Championship and the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship.

Additionally, the Mol Group is strongly committed to sustainable development, by reducing its ecological footprint but also through its partnership with Dorna WSBK Organization (DWO) as the series’ future will entail the development of more sustainable fuels.

Luca Monico, Head of Panta Racing Fuel: “We are thrilled to join the WorldSBK Paddock as the Official Fuel Supplier of WorldSSP and WorldSSP300. It’s a great opportunity for our brand to widen the field of application of our products.”

Francesco Valentino, Head of WorldSBK Commercial & Marketing dept.: “We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Panta Racing Fuel in WorldSSP300 and to welcome them as the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP class. As we are entering into the Supersport ‘Next Generation’, it is crucial for us to have such a reliable partner by our side to provide our series with high-quality fuel.”
How important is Panta Racing Fuel role in the Supersport ‘Next Generation’ transition?

In 2022, World Supersport enters a new era with new technical regulations. In such an important time for the category, it is essential to be accompanied by an experienced partner such as Panta Racing Fuel.

Scott Smart, the FIM WorldSBK Technical Director explains: “Panta has a great reputation in the world of motorsport and is becoming the choice of many series around the world.” The Italian company was already the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP300 class and the collaboration with the Championship has been fruitful. “Our collaboration has been very productive with great results” adds Scott Smart.

As the Supersport ‘Next Generation’ bikes will take to the track for the start of the 2022 season, Panta Racing Fuel will play a key role in the development of the class. “In a Championship that requires balance of performance calculations, reducing variables that we have to manage is very important. The stakes are raised once again in Supersport ‘Next Generation’, with factory involvement, high level teams and with an even more critical requirement for performance balance, we can only work with partners that we trust implicitly” explains the FIM WorldSBK Technical Director.

Concluding, Smart stated that their expanded collaboration goes further than just a high-end product: “Panta provides a high-quality consistent product. But it doesn’t end there, using their high-level mobile analysis laboratory means that we can make the most precise fuel test right at the track.”

American Flat Track: Rookies Of ’79 And Friends Continues As Official Charity

The American Flat Track series is racing at the Atlanta Short Track doubleheader this coming weekend in Woodstock, Georgia. Photo by Scott Hunter, courtesy AFT.
Action from a past American Flat Track series event. Photo by Scott Hunter, courtesy AFT.

Rookies of ’79 and Friends Named Designated Charity of Progressive AFT for Fifth Consecutive Season


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 6, 2022) – Progressive American Flat Track proudly announced today that Rookies of ‘79 and Friends will be the Designated Charity Partner of Progressive AFT for a fifth consecutive season.

The charity traces its origins to, and draws its name from, a special collection of riders and individuals who stepped up to the pinnacle of the sport together in 1979. That legendary crew included some of the greatest motorcycle racers to ever exist, boasting the likes of Scott Parker, Wayne Rainey, Ronnie Jones, Charlie Roberts, Tommy Duma, Jackie Mitchell, Lance Jones, and Johnny Wincewicz among its ranks. Inspired to give back to a sport that gave them so much, the reunited rookies decided three decades after they first faced off to join forces in order to help those who needed it the most.

Now in its 13th year of operation as a 501(c)(3) non-profit charity, Rookies of ‘79 has raised millions of dollars to provide aid to injured riders and their families over the years and has experienced incredible growth during its time as the series’ officially designated charity. Rookies of ‘79 stands ready to answer the call when needed and provides a reassuring presence at all times so that today’s generation of flat track racers can perform at their best knowing someone will always have their back.

“I’ve had the privilege of being on the Board of Directors for the Rookies of ’79 for the past few years,” said Tim Estenson, Estenson Racing Team Owner. “Working closely with a group of people with such deep history in the sport and the love of flat track has been amazing. We have one single goal; to be here in a time of need for any flat track rider injured doing what they love, racing. Through the support of our amazing flat track families and the corporate support we’ve gained over the years we’ve been able to continually fulfill our vision.

“Moving into the 2022 season I’m proud to say Progressive American Flat Track has stepped up in a big way, increasing their support to the charity in several areas. This increased support allows us to ensure our ability to be there for our athletes who may be injured during the season. We are honored to continue our partnership as the designated charity of Progressive American Flat Track.”

Since its inception, the charity has never turned away a flat track rider seeking aid, providing the help necessary to allow many of them to return to the track rather than end their careers prematurely due to injury.

“Progressive AFT is happy to continue our association with Rookies of ’79 for the 2022 season,” said Gene Crouch, COO of Progressive AFT. “They work tirelessly to provide an important service to the flat track community. As always, we encourage our fanbase to visit their display at one of the races or their website to learn more about their contribution to the sport, and to show them how much we all appreciate their efforts.”

Keep up to date with the Rookie’s of ’79 activity and news at https://www.facebook.com/rookiesof79. For more information, to donate, and to purchase merchandise and memorabilia from its online shop, visit https://www.rookies79.com/. And visit the Rookies tent which will be at all Progressive AFT events this season for your chance to purchase raffle tickets for the 2022 featured motorcycle drawings.

Progressive AFT makes its inaugural visit to I-70 Motorsports Park in Odessa, Missouri, on Saturday, April 23 for the I-70 Half-Mile presented by Indian Motorcycle of Kansas City. Secure your tickets now at https://store.americanflattrack.com/ebooking/ticket/view/id/3775.

The I-70 Half-Mile presented by Indian Motorcycle of Kansas City will premiere on FS1 on Sunday, May 1 starting at 10:00 a.m. ET/7:00 a.m. PT.

For more information on Progressive AFT visit https://www.americanflattrack.com. To score the latest gear for the Progressive American Flat Track fan, visit our official merchandise store at https://store.americanflattrack.com.

 

How to Watch:

FOX Sports and Facebook are the official homes for coverage of Progressive American Flat Track. For the 2022 season, all 18 races will premiere in one-hour telecasts on FS1 during highly desirable weekend time slots. The complete schedule can be viewed at https://www.americanflattrack.com/events-foxsports. Viewers can watch livestream coverage of every round in the Facebook mobile app, Facebook desktop site or on the Facebook Watch mobile app. To watch the livestream on TV, fans can download the Facebook Watch TV app, or cast to a TV from the Facebook mobile app. Facebook Watch is available through Apple TV, Samsung Smart TV, Amazon Fire TV, Chromecast, and Xbox One.

British Superbike: Skinner P1, Mackenzie Injured At Silverstone Test

Rory Skinner (11). Photo courtesy MSVR.
Rory Skinner (11). Photo courtesy MSVR.

Skinner stays on top as 0.949s covers the top 22 riders at Silverstone Official Test

Rory Skinner held off his Bennetts British Superbike Championship rivals on the opening day of the R&G Official Test at Silverstone, setting the benchmark time for FS-3 Racing Kawasaki as defending champion Tarran Mackenzie crashed out of the action.

The top 22 riders were covered by an incredible 0.949s at the end of the day and Skinner upped the pace in the final session to remain ahead. Bradley Ray was closing the gap to his Scottish rival as he continues to make strong progress since the Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha team changed manufacturer over the winter.

Ray was within 0.069s of Skinner as the last session of the day approached the final five minutes, but a high-speed crash for Mackenzie brought out the red flag. The McAMS Yamaha rider sustained a suspected left ankle fracture and was transferred to hospital for further checks.

Dan Linfoot had a positive start to the two-day test with the iForce BMW team, posting the third fastest time, but by only 0.001s ahead of Tommy Bridewell on the Oxford Products Racing Ducati with Kyle Ryde completing the top five.

Josh Owens had an impressive opening day to finish sixth overall for the Rapid CDH Racing Kawasaki team, edging out Danny Buchan and Leon Haslam who completed the top eight contenders.

Ryan Vickers also crashed in the final session but ended the day ninth for FHO Racing BMW with Josh Brookes rounding out the top ten for MCE Ducati. His teammate Tom Sykes also had a crash in the final session, ending the day in 18th.

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Silverstone, Official Test, Day 1 combined times:

  1. Rory Skinner (FS-3 Racing Kawasaki) 53.730s
  2. Bradley Ray (Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha) +0.069s
  3. Dan Linfoot (iForce BMW) +0.138s
  4. Tommy Bridewell (Oxford Products Racing Ducati) +0.139s
  5. Kyle Ryde (Rich Energy OMG Racing Yamaha) +0.355s
  6. Josh Owens (Rapid CDH Racing Kawasaki) +0.362s
  7. Danny Buchan (SYNETIQ BMW) +0.400s
  8. Leon Haslam (VisionTrack Kawasaki) +0.463s
  9. Ryan Vickers (FHO Racing BMW) +0.464s
  10. Josh Brookes (MCE Ducati) +0.553s

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

New Petersen Automotive Museum Exhibit Features Custom Electric Motorcycles

Eva Hakansson's "KillaJoule" electric-powered land speed motorcycle. Photo by Petersen Automotive Museum/Ted7.
Eva Hakansson's "KillaJoule" electric-powered land speed motorcycle. Photo by Petersen Automotive Museum/Ted7.

NEW PETERSEN AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM EXHIBIT TO FEATURE GROUND-BREAKING AND INNOVATIVE CUSTOM ELECTRIC MOTORCYCLES

The New Display Will Showcase Forward-Thinking Designers and Their Electrified Creations

LOS ANGELES – The Petersen Automotive Museum’s latest exhibit will feature a multitude of the most innovative electric motorcycles ever made by cutting-edge designers. Opening to the public on April 14, 2022, in the Richard Varner Family Gallery, the unique “Electric Revolutionaries” collection is an exclusive look at the ground-breaking creations of the visionaries at the forefront of the ever-expanding electric motorcycle industry.

Highlights of the new exhibition include “KillaJoule,” the land speed racer that made Eva Hakansson the fastest woman on an electric motorcycle with a run of 240.7 mph. Built by Hakansson and her husband at home and with a limited budget, “KillaJoule” is the fastest sidecar streamliner ever, regardless of engine type. On the slower side of the spectrum are the innovative solar-powered  “Solar Scooter” and “Solar Rickshaw” created by Samuel Aboagye. The Ghanaian teenager constructed both using only salvaged, discarded and recycled materials that he could source for free. Making its worldwide debut will be the intricately designed and exquisitely crafted “The One” by Curtiss Motors. Conceptualized by JT Nesbitt, “The One” features a retro-futuristic design and quality of construction usually only found on hypercars.

 

Hugo Eccles' "XP Zero" electric motorcycle. Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Hugo Eccles’ “XP Zero” electric motorcycle. Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

A follow-up to the Petersen Museum’s popular first-ever electric motorcycle exhibit, “Electric Revolution” in 2019, the new display features over 25 unique custom electric motorcycles guest curated by Motor/Cycle Arts Foundation Co-Founder Paul d’Orleans. “I’m super excited to assemble this wildly diverse collection of EV pioneers. ‘Electric Revolutionaries’ really does represent the range of interest in an electric future, from a humble teen in Ghana making EVs from scrap, to genius artisans building conceptual and boundary-pushing designs, to speed demons and global superstar designers interested in pushing mobility into the green zone,” said d’Orleans. “Electric Revolutionaries” is produced by the Motor/Cycle Arts Foundation and Sasha Tcherevkoff, with support from LiveWire and Damon Motorcycles as a contributing sponsor.

 

Curtiss Motors' "The One." Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Curtiss Motors’ “The One.” Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

“It is incredible how far electric motorcycles have come in the short time from our first exhibit in 2019,” said Petersen Automotive Museum Executive Director Terry L. Karges. “This new display gives a unique and close-up look at the innovative machines and the creators behind them pushing the boundaries of motorcycle electrification and design. The detail, level of craftsmanship and unorthodox thinking behind these electric motorcycles make them must-sees.”

 

Walt Siegl's 100-pound "RONTU." Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.
Walt Siegl’s 100-pound “RONTU.” Photo courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum.

 

Other notable electric motorcycles on display include Joey Ruiter’s “NOMOTO,” which camouflages as utilitarian street furniture and his geometric “Moto Undone” concept. Also part of the exhibit is famed motorcycle designer Walt Siegl’s ultra-minimalist “RONTU” that uses carbon fiber, aluminum and a lack of body panels to help weigh a scant 100 lbs. Hugo Eccles’ avant-garde and award-winning “XP Zero,” a radical reinterpretation of a production ZERO SR/F into a futuristic cafe racer, is also among the extensive collection of unique and innovative electric motorcycles.

To purchase tickets or for more information about the Petersen Automotive Museum, please visit www.Petersen.org.

MotoAmerica: Gilbert Racing Suzuki In Superbike Cup & Stock 1000

Michael Gilbert (1) is seen here defending his CVMA #1 plate at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway on his new Team Hammer-prepared Suzuki GSX-R1000R. Photo by CaliPhotography, courtesy Michael Gilbert Racing.
Michael Gilbert (1) is seen here defending his CVMA #1 plate at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway on his new Team Hammer-prepared Suzuki GSX-R1000R. Photo by CaliPhotography, courtesy Michael Gilbert Racing.

Michael Gilbert is set to return to the MotoAmerica Superbike and Stock 1000 championships aboard a Team Hammer-prepared Suzuki GSX-R1000R while expanding the racing effort and paddock presence as the Cycle World®  Powered by Octane/ Chuckwalla Valley Raceway Team in 2022.

This season marks the return of industry-leading publication Cycle World to the MotoAmerica paddock, of which Gilbert holds a position as full-time Road Test Editor. Aside from creating original content focused on the racing effort, the collaboration highlights Cycle World’s authority in unbiased, objective reviews and informative storytelling. Cycle World is owned by Octane® (Octane Lending Inc.®), the fintech revolutionizing recreational lifestyle purchases by delivering a seamless, end-to-end digital buying experience. Octane adds value throughout the customer journey: inspiring enthusiasts with its editorial brands, instantly prequalifying consumers for financing on dealer and OEM websites, and routing customers to dealerships for a fast and easy closing experience.

Chuckwalla Valley Raceway is also a major partner in Gilbert’s racing effort. The southern California facility is home to a unique 2.68-mile circuit and Chuckwalla Valley Motorcycle Association (CVMA) series, which has become a hotbed for wintertime testing and racing for MotoAmerica frontrunners. Gilbert is a four-time #1 plate holder at CVMA.

Junior Cup competitor Owen Williams will also race under the new banner in his second season as a MotoAmerica racer.

Michael Gilbert: “What an undertaking it has been to get the Cycle World Powered by Octane/ Chuckwalla Valley Raceway Team off the ground! Still, I’m so excited to get the year started and go after the Stock 1000 championship and transition into full-time Superbike racing. We’ve had an amazing wintertime adapting to the Suzuki GSX-R1000R and I’m excited to see what the season holds.”

Mark Hoyer, Cycle World Editor-in-Chief: “Racing has been a part of ‘Team Cycle World’ from the beginning, thanks to founding Publisher Joseph C. Parkhurst’s love of competition. We are proud to carry on that tradition today, especially in support of our Road Test Editor Michael Gilbert. Michael’s dedication to always improving his skills and getting the most of his motorcycle at a national level underlines Cycle World’s dedication to the reader and he anchors the most talented editorial testing team in the business.”

About Octane:

Octane® offers access to instant financing to fuel your lifestyle. Octane dramatically simplifies and accelerates the transaction process for major recreational purchases such as motorcycles, ATVs, and zero-turn lawn mowers by adding value at each stage of the buying journey. Octane offers automated underwriting, innovative credit products, and financing, through its in-house lender Roadrunner Financial, Inc.®. Octane reaches millions of enthusiasts through its editorial brands like Cycle World® and UTV Driver® and helps consumers buy their favorite products by pre-qualifying them on dealer and OEM websites. Octane is revolutionizing lending in underserved verticals within markets that account for tens of billions of dollars in annual transactions.

Octane is a remote-first fintech company with offices in NYC and Dallas and over 500 employees. In August 2021, Octane announced it raised $52 million in Series D funding bringing the company’s valuation to over $900 million with more than $192 million in total equity funding raised to date. Visit www.octane.co.

WorldSBK: Haslam Doing Four Rounds With TPR Team Pedercini

Leon Haslam (91) at speed in Argentina. Photo courtesy of Kawasaki.
Leon Haslam (91), seen here in Argentina in 2019, will do four WorldSBK rounds with Team Pedercini in 2022. Photo courtesy of Kawasaki.

Leon Haslam announced at Team Pedercini for four WorldSBK rounds in 2022

TPR Team Pedercini is delighted to announce that Leon Haslam will join the team on four occasions during the 2022 FIM Superbike World Championship season.

Haslam, 2010 WorldSBK runner up and with 313 race starts under his belt, will return to the series with the team for the first time at the Misano Round before continuing to run in three further events – Donington Park, Most Autodrom and Portimao.

Wildcarding for TPR Team Pedercini is not something new for the #91, who raced into the top five with the squad at the Losail International Circuit in 2016.

The team and Leon are excited that they have this opportunity to work together again and are optimistic of what they can achieve together. TPR Team Pedercini also wish the best of luck to Leon in his BSB (British Superbike Championship) fight, where he is looking to regain the crown, he won in 2018.

Lucio Pedercini – Team Principal: “Leon coming back to our team is a perfect match. We both still have a lot to say on track in the WorldSBK paddock and we are looking forward to entertaining the public for four rounds of pure racing passion! Thanks to our knowledge and his ability, we are confident that we will do battle and hopefully bring some good results like we did together in the past. For sure it will be a lot of fun”

Leon Haslam: “I am super excited. I’ve known Lucio for so many years and actually raced against him back in the day when I first started. I did a one-off wildcard with the team in Qatar a few years back and managed to finish in the top five and I have a lot of fond memories of being a part of the team. To be able to come back and ride with them again after all these years is really exciting for me and I hope we can achieve some good results together. The focus of course is BSB, but we have been able to find a solution that will see me return to the WorldSBK for these four races and I am really looking forward to it.”

MotoAmerica: May Partners With VETMotorsports To Support Veterans

An eighth-place finish for Geoff May (99) proved his experience at Daytona International Speedway valuable. Photo courtesy Suzuki Motor USA, LLC.
Geoff May (99) in action during the 2022 Daytona 200. Photo courtesy Suzuki Motor USA, LLC.

Geoff May Partners With VETMotorsports to Provide Crew Experiences for the Military Community.

Columbus, OH — Geoff May will collaborate with VETMotorsports to help empower veterans by having them as part of Team Vision Wheel/ Discount Tire/ KWS/ Amsoil/ Honda at all the MotoAmerica SBK rounds. Veterans will have the opportunity to use their skills and knowledge in the fast paced environment of the professional race team paddock.

VETMotorsports is an award-winning, non-clinical outreach program that honors and empowers active military, veterans with service-connected injuries, and their caregivers, as well as Gold Star parents through active participation in motorsports. The program recruits participants give them hands-on access to a variety of motorsports experiences and cover all expenses for them to take part in the experience.

With the support of Geoff May, competing in the MotoAmerica Stock 1000 class with the newly formed Team of Vision Wheel/Discount Tire/Amsoil /KWS Motorsports/Honda, there will be opportunities for qualified participants to be embedded into the team with veteran crew chief Mike Godin of KWSMotorsports.

“It’s was a privilege to be part of the National Guard/Michael Jordan Motor Sports in the past, and I wanted to continue to show how much we appreciate what our warriors in all branches of the military do for our country,” said Geoff May, team principal, and rider. “We are more than honored to be able to give back in any way possible.”

“We continue to loose 22 veterans a day to suicide,” said VETMotorsports Founder and Executive Director Peter Cline, “and that’s something we’re working very hard to stop. It’s why we founded VETMotorsports and why we’re so proud to collaborate with Geoff May to not only honor our brave service members but give them something to learn, be excited about, and engage with.”

Veterans wishing to take part in the program can contact VETMotorsports at 614-407-3894 or [email protected] to learn more.

MotoGP: Previews Of The Red Bull Grand Prix Of The Americas (Updated)

The start of the MotoGP race at COTA. Photo courtesy Michelin.
The MotoGP World Championship returns to Circuit of The Americas April 8-10, 2022. Photo courtesy Michelin.

Rodeo ready: MotoGP™ saddles up in Texas 

Marc Marquez returns to the fold with a nearly unbeaten record at the venue as an unpredictable 2022 gets ready to take on COTA

Wednesday, 06 April 2022

The wait is over and we have the answer: the King of COTA is on the way. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) will be back in action at the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas, ready to rodeo and recovered from his Indonesian GP crash. For the rest of the grid, that could spell a very different weekend ahead as the number 93 has only once failed to win at the venue in MotoGP™. It staged his rookie win, he was undefeated until crashing out in 2019, and he’s qualified on pole at the venue for every single event since 2013 – except last year. But then, last year he still went on to win by some margin. He remains, then, the favourite… but there’s plenty more to talk about too.

First mention has to go to Aleix Espargaro and Aprilia. There was only one factory on the grid who hadn’t won in MotoGP™ and one rider who had never taken a Grand Prix win in any class, so it was a truly historic feat for man and machine. It was also – stats and grand narratives aside – just an objectively very impressive performance. Few could go with the number 41 out front, with only Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) in the battle and Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Alex Rins and Joan Mir shadowing the duel. Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing) also took his best result since moving to the factory by far in P7, so the question now is… what do the Noale factory have in the locker for Texas?

Suzuki, too, will be interesting – and Rins arrives not only fresh from the podium but also as the only non-MM93 winner at the track. Ever. Can he bridge that gap that kept him just outside striking distance in Termas? His teammate, 2020 MotoGP™ Champion Joan Mir, will also be looking to do the same, with the number 36 having just missed out on the rostrum. He did say, however, that he’s got that 2020 feeling back – and that a little more time may have allowed a little more attack in Argentina. Team Suzuki Ecstar also lead the teams’ Championship after another interesting race day tango, and have been one of the most consistent teams and factories on the grid, so promises of progress shouldn’t be taken lightly for their rivals.

For Ducati, meanwhile, it’s returned to somewhat of a modern classic for the moment: they lead the Constructors’ standings thanks to three different riders in the first three races. First it was Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP), then Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) and now Martin, and the obvious omission is the Ducati Lenovo Team. Argentina proved a tough weekend overall for both Pecco Bagnaia and Jack Miller, and Miller himself offered a slightly heart-breaking stat on social media after coming home in 14th – having started 14th – saying it’s the first race he can ever remember taking part in where he didn’t overtake a single rider. But he has had some very good form at COTA, and will be confident of a turnaround.

Bagnaia, meanwhile, already bounced back on Sunday, at least into the top five after a really tough first day. That was an impressive show of mettle, and the Italian also has form in the lone star state having been on the podium there last year and qualified on pole. Will more familiar and recently-tilled turf prove a key positive for the Italian?

Martin will want to keep his frontrunning form having taken a front row in every race so far and then failed to convert it into points or podiums until Termas, and Zarco will want to bounce back. Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) nailed Saturday and then slipped down the order on Sunday, ultimately also beaten by the other side of the box. Marco Bezzecchi is now the leading Rookie in 2022 after taking that impressive ninth place, with the Italian having shown flashes of brilliance already but not having been able to quite put it all together on Sunday until Argentina. Can he keep it pinned at COTA?

KTM’s Argentina, meanwhile, was a mixed bag but not a bad one considering the newest factory on the grid’s level of experience at the venue – and the fact that Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) had never actually ridden it before in the premier class. He took P6 and remains second in the riders’ standings, seven points off Aleix Espargaro at the top. Teammate Miguel Oliveira had a tougher weekend that went through Q1 to P13 in the race, but there were positives – and with Yamaha and Honda continuing to have a more difficult season, the team and constructor standings remain very healthy for the Austrian factory even as Aprilia, Ducati and Suzuki pipped them in Argentina.

Over at Yamaha, the feelings will be less mixed. Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Andrea Dovizioso (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP) both suffered issues at Termas – the former a puncture and the latter a technical problem – so there at least, there’s a could have been. And Darryn Binder (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP) continues learning the ropes. But reigning Champion Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) completed the race with nothing actually going wrong, but like Qatar, did not come home with the position he wanted – and not for lack of trying. The number 20 went backwards off the line and backwards some more before eventually taking P8, explaining that rear grip was the biggest hurdle. Last year at COTA he was best of the rest behind what was essentially Marquez’ private Marquez vs Marquez challenge at the front, so it will be interesting to see what has changed – or hasn’t – as we return to Texas only a few months later…

For Honda, finally, the return of Marquez likely marks a return to high hopes following an excellent debut for the new RC213V in Qatar and then a more difficult two rounds. Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) recovered well from being outside Q1 to fourth on the grid before crashing out in Argentina too, showing there is speed even if everything didn’t go to plan on Sunday. Pol Espargaro, as well as Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Castrol) and Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol), will want more from this weekend though… so will having the COTA benchmark back in the saddle help Honda as the new bike gets fettled in?

All will be revealed on Sunday as MotoGP™ takes on Texas, with another 25 points up for grabs – and plenty, plenty of headlines waiting to be made. Tune in on Sunday at 13:00 local time (GMT-7) for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas!

MotoGP™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) – Aprilia – 45

2 Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) – KTM – 38

3 Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) – Ducati – 36

4 Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) – Suzuki – 36

5 Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) – Yamaha – 35

 

 

Will Vietti keep the advantage into the Americas?

The Italian is fast becoming the title favourite as well as the points leader – but there are plenty of fast faces looking to hit back in Texas

Celestino Vietti (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) didn’t finish pre-season as the rider on top of the timesheets or grabbing the headlines, but after the first three races the Italian has most definitely taken centre stage and made it his own. On every podium so far and on top of two of them, it’s going pretty well – an understatement on a par with the quiet confidence of the man himself. So is there reason to doubt the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas will be the same?

The main competition in the standings so far has come from Aron Canet (Flexbox HP 40), and in Argentina the Spaniard only just missed out on also boasting three podiums from three. “Just” fourth wasn’t down to a speed deficit either, it was most definitely down simply to the handiwork of Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) as the Japanese rider attacked late and well to take his first podium of the season. But for Canet, after struggling in previous seasons to be as consistent as some of his competitors, there is heart to be taken from having been fast at every track so far – and it’s hard to bet against him being so in Texas, the number 40 having also won there before in Moto3™.

There is actually another rider with a 100% podium record after Vietti though: Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia). The Thai rider missed the season opener with a hand injury and then promptly returned and won his first race, and another podium in Argentina only backs that up to make it 2/2 so far in 2022. Team manager Hiroshi Aoyama said in pre-season that both Ogura and Chantra could fight at the front and potentially launch a title bid this year, and some corners of the paddock appeared to think the latter overly optimistic. It must feel even sweeter, then, for the number 35 to have taken Thailand’s first Grand Prix win and been part of the first double podium for the team.

Argentina was also the first time two former Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup riders shared the intermediate class podium, and with Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Husqvarna Max) on the box in Moto3™, ATC alumni took a third of the available podium places on race day in Argentina. Ogura, who last year had the upper hand on Chantra, definitely shared his teammate’s joy at his recent successes, but the Japanese rider will most definitely want to turn those tables back as well. What can he do in Texas?

From one side of the world to the other, there’s also the American contingent with some big aims for COTA. There are now three home heroes on the grid in Moto2™, and although the rookie – Sean Dylan Kelly (American Racing) – did a little moonlighting in Termas thanks to his parents hailing from Argentina, this is a huge weekend for him and the two veterans: Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) and Cameron Beaubier (American Racing) as they race on home turf.

Roberts had a tougher time of it in 2021 at COTA, but this season so far there’s been concrete progress and the number 16 will want more from his home GP as we return. Beaubier, meanwhile, came out swinging last year with some serious speed – making track knowledge count for a lot and taking an impressive fifth place, so close to that first podium. What can he do this season? He’ll likely have to contend with Elf Marc VDS Racing’s Sam Lowes and Tony Arbolino – as well as Red Bull KTM Ajo’s Augusto Fernandez and Pedro Acosta, and Jake Dixon (Autosolar GASGAS Aspar Team) – on his way through the top ten to the upper echelons, but last season Beaubier had the goods.

Finally, what will we see from Fermin Aldeguer (MB Conveyors Speed Up)? The Spaniard should have been hyped since the start of last season after his performance in the Moto2™ European Championship and his first Grands Prix, and his progress in the World Championship has only validated both his and then-teammate Alonso Lopez’s 2021 form in the FIM JuniorGP™ paddock. Now, Aldeguer is beating records set by soon-to-be MotoGP™ Legend Jorge Lorenzo as he took over as the youngest ever polesitter in intermediate class history – by more than a year. Race day and that incident with Vietti will leave him wanting to prove more than a few points in Texas.

The time has come to return to the Lone Star State. In a first, Moto2™ race first this time out and the lights go out for the intermediate class at 11:20 (GMT-7) local time for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas. Don’t miss it!

Moto2™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Celestino Vietti (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) – Kalex – 70

2 Aron Canet (Flexbox HP 40) – Kalex – 49

3 Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) – Kalex – 45

4 Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) – Kalex – 36

5 Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) – Kalex – 35

 

Garcia vs Foggia vs… Guevara? The Moto3™ grid arrive in Texas

The top two in the Championship duelled it out something stunning at Termas but it’s Guevara, denied in Argentina, who won here last year…

Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) vs Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) was an instant classic in Argentina, with both underlining their speed in 2022 and Garcia once again sending it on Sunday, pulling off that final lunge to perfection as the number 11 tends to do. The stage could well be set for another showdown in Texas between the duo too, although there is last year’s winner who’ll likely have different ideas about the weekend ahead: Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team). As well as the rest of the pretty packed grid…

Guevara and Garcia were the breakaway early on in Argentina before the number 28 suddenly suffered a technical problem, adding a dash of bad luck to the qualifying penalty that already dampened his charge in Qatar. If it had stayed as it was in Termas before that though, the sophomore would have been leading the Championship, equal on points with his teammate but the first of them to win.

Shoulda woulda coulda is often of little use in racing, but one time it can be relevant is when the points don’t quite reflect speed – especially judging a sophomore rider like Guevara against the wealth of experience of Garcia and Foggia. The number 28 appears to have gone under the radar for some in 2021, despite having arrived in Moto3™ from winning the FIM JuniorGP World Championship as a rookie and won a Grand Prix race as a rookie, but it looks like it’s game on now.

So can anyone else keep challenging the sheer speed of Foggia, the send it masterclasses of Garcia and the elbows out of Guevara? So far, the next fastest rider – and sometimes fastest of all – has been Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Husqvarna Max), but a mixture of bad luck and trouble has hit the Japanese rider in the first couple of rounds. In Argentina though he made it happen, despite a Long Lap for the incident with Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) in Lombok, and sliced back through from outside the points.

Speaking of Migno, the Italian has also been fast but suffered mixed fates since his awesome win in the season opener. He’ll be one to watch, as will Termas sparring partner Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo), also fast but lacking points. Kaito Toba (CIP – Green Power) and Deniz Öncu (Red Bull KTM Tech3) are lurking in the standings thanks to a little better consistency, and the likes of Tatsuki Suzuki (Leopard Racing), Riccardo Rossi (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Carlos Tatay (CFMoto Racing PrüstelGP) are in their stride.

The same can also be said of some of the very impressive rookies joining the class this season. Diogo Moreira (MT Helmets – MSI) was once again the top debutant with another impressive finish in the top six, but as the Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Ajo) gets back to fitness, this time Moreira had close company. Joel Kelso (CIP – Green Power) also impressed in Argentina with provisional pole after the first runs and then a second row start, coming home tenth. What hands can they play in Texas?

Moto3™ race later in the day this time round, with Moto2™ and MotoGP™ heading out first. Tune in for more of the same stunning action at 14:430 local time – GMT-7!

Moto3™ CHAMPIONSHIP: TOP 5

1 Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) – GASGAS – 58

2 Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) – Honda – 53

3 Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) – GASGAS – 28

4 Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power) – KTM – 27

5 Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) – KTM – 26

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Lenovo Ducati Team:

Americas GP. The Ducati Lenovo Team returns to Texas for the fourth round of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship

Less than seven days after the Argentina GP, the Ducati Lenovo Team riders are set to return to the track this weekend for the fourth round of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship: the Americas GP.

Once again, the Circuit of The Americas in Austin (Texas) will host the event. The track has been on the calendar since 2013 and has seen Ducati score five podium finishes so far,  most recently last year with the third place of Francesco Bagnaia. The Italian rider, who made a strong comeback in Argentina, finishing fifth after starting from thirteenth on the grid, also took pole position in the 2021 edition of the Grand Prix. Thanks to the good sensations found on his Desmosedici GP in the last GP, Pecco aims to obtain an important result in Sunday’s race.

After a difficult weekend at Termas de Rio Hondo, which saw him finish the race in fourteenth place, Jack Miller returns to the United States determined to turn his season around. The Australian rider boasts a third-place finish in 2019 as his best result in Texas, and he is looking forward to returning a frontrunner at the GP of the Americas.

Jack Miller (#43 Ducati Lenovo Team) – 11th (15 points)

“I’m happy to get back on track this weekend and put the Argentina race behind me. The last GP was strange: we hadn’t raced at Termas for two years, and we struggled a bit with such a tight schedule. Now we go back to Texas for the GP of the Americas at a track that I like and where, in general, I can be fast. I’m determined to do well and finally turn my season around”.

Francesco Bagnaia (#63 Ducati Lenovo Team) – 14th (11 points)

“During the last GP in Argentina, I finally found the same sensations I had last year on my Desmosedici GP, and I’m very happy because it means we’re working in the right direction. I can say that my World Championship really started last week, and now I’m determined to maintain this momentum. On Sunday, we’ll race in Austin, a track where I finished third last year, starting from pole position. I hope to be as competitive this year and get some more important points for the Championship”.

The Grand Prix of the Americas will start this Friday, 10th April, from 9:50am local time (CEST -7.00am) with the first free practice session.

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Team Suzuki Press Office:

SUZUKI ARRIVES IN AUSTIN ON A HIGH AFTER FIRST PODIUM

Team Suzuki Ecstar’s riders Alex Rins and Joan Mir have headed 7000km north from Termas de Rio Hondo in Argentina to tackle the second race of a double-header in Texas.

The Circuit of the Americas (COTA) is a huge facility boasting a technical track layout and a capacity of 120,000. Since joining the MotoGP™ calendar back in 2013 it has become a stand-out stop thanks to its larger-than-life atmosphere and challenging races. The state capital of Austin is just a stone’s throw from the track, and the vibrant city is famed for its music festivals, cultural events, cuisine, and business technology hubs.

In 2019 Alex Rins took a memorable and mesmerising victory at COTA; his first ever win in the MotoGP™ class which helped him on his way to a campaign which left him fourth in the championship. He has also celebrated wins in Moto3™ and Moto2™ here. In 2021, after a year out of America due to the pandemic, Rins took a fourth place in Austin and he is keen to return to the podium in 2022.

Mir has less premier class experience at COTA and he will be aiming to collect data and learn more about the track before pushing his GSX-RR towards the top.

Team Suzuki Ecstar come into this fourth round of the championship leading the Teams’ standings, something which was achieved last time out following Rins’ podium in Argentina and Mir’s fourth place.

Alex Rins:

“I love the vibe in Texas and I always enjoy coming here, even more so after my debut MotoGP win in 2019. That was such a special day and it’s impossible to forget. Last year I was fourth, but I want to do more this year, especially as our GSX-RR has improved and I’m feeling good after the podium in Argentina. It’s not an easy track, but it’s really fun to ride so I’ll give my all for the fans and my team.”

Joan Mir:

“I don’t have many good memories from Texas, my best result is fourth, and I’ve only ridden here in the top class twice, but it’s an amazing circuit. It’s pretty technical and quite different from other tracks we go to. Last weekend I got some really good feelings with my bike and I can’t wait to jump back on it to try and build on that promising progress.”

Livio Suppo – Team Manager:

“Both our riders had a successful race in Argentina last week with third and fourth. That first podium of the season was important to us and of course it’s given us a boost. We come into this race in Texas leading the Teams’ Championship and we’d like to build on that. The forecast looks good for the weekend, and although COTA is a highly technical circuit, I feel confident that we can do well. Alex is especially excited to come back here, and Joan is ready to get his best finish.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Monster Energy Yamaha:

MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP ANTICIPATE COTA RACE WEEKEND

Austin, Texas (USA), 6th April 2022

The Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP team have arrived in America ready for Round 4 on the 2022 MotoGP calendar. This will be the 500th GP of the new era of the FIM MotoGP World Championship, which began in 1992 with the FIM, IRTA, MSMA & Dorna racing together.

The Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Team have made their way to Austin, Texas for this weekend‘s Grand Prix of The Americas. After a disappointing end to the Argentina GP last Sunday, both Fabio Quartararo and Franco Morbidelli are hungry to fight for top results at the COTA track.

Quartararo arrives at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) holding fifth place in the championship with a 10-point gap to first. The championship is still wide open, and with good memories of the COTA track, El Diablo is ready to for the challenge.

In 2015, his very first year of visiting COTA, the Frenchman immediately scored a second place in the Moto3 class. Last year he equalled this feat on a MotoGP bike in only his second premier class race in Austin, which was crucial for his championship title win later on.

Morbidelli was unlucky to suffer a tyre puncture last week, cutting his Argentina GP short. He is looking forward to making a strong comeback at another track and move up from 12th place in the overall standings.

The Italian is a fan of the tricky Austin venue and is anticipating a positive race weekend. Last year he was still contending with a leg injury that prevented him from showing his true potential. This weekend he would like to add another top result to his resume. His best performances at COTA include his win in 2017 in the Moto2 class and the fifth place he scored with Yamaha in the premier class in 2019.

Constructed in 2013, The Circuit of the Americas (COTA) is one of the newest on the calendar, having been added to the Grand Prix schedule that same year. Its length of 5513m and mixture of fast straights and tight hairpins make the track both challenging and exciting to master for teams and riders. They need to find exactly the right balance for their bike‘s set-up to suit the 11 left, 9 right turns, and the 1,200m straight in order snatch a place on the podium. The especially sharp Turn 1 will be a place where the fans can expect a lot of overtaking action, both at the start and during the race.

Those who wish to get to know the COTA track better can watch our latest MotoGP eSport video.

The Grand Prix of The Americas is held in the GMT -5 time zone. FP1 will take place on Friday afternoon from 09:55 – 10:40 local track time, followed by FP2 from 14:10 – 14:55. On Saturday, FP3 will be held from 09:55 – 10:40, FP4 from 13:30 – 14:00, and the qualifying sessions from 14:10 – 14:50. On Sunday, Warm Up is held from 09:40 – 10:00 and the race starts at 13:00.

MASSIMO MEREGALLI

TEAM DIRECTOR

After a difficult weekend in Argentina, it‘s important that we start this GP off on the right foot. We always really enjoy coming to Austin. It‘s a quite technical track. On paper this shouldn‘t be one of our strongest circuits on the MotoGP calendar, but we feel that this could be a good round for us. In recent years we‘ve often scored good results here, as Fabio‘s second place from last year showed. The race conditions then are similar to what we‘re expecting this weekend, so we are optimistic. But COTA has been partly resurfaced, so only on Friday will we truly know what the track conditions will be like.

FABIO QUARTARARO

Austin played a key part in my championship win last year. That second place was like a victory because it gave me my first match point to secure the championship. This time we arrive here in a totally different situation and with a different mindset. Last year I always tried to win, but I was also trying to keep the lead in the championship. We can afford to be more on the attack now. We will do our best as always. Last year the rear grip here was pretty decent, but the bumps were tough. The track has been resurfaced since then. I‘m curious to see what we can do this time round.

FRANCO MORBIDELLI

We now arrived at COTA which is a track that I really like, so it‘s a good place to race at after a disappointing end to the Argentina GP. This track is difficult, but it’s one of my favourites. Last year I wasn‘t able to push because my leg was not 100% healed yet, and the bumps aggravated the situation. This year it should be a completely different story. I‘m fully fit and the track has been smoothed out, so I‘m looking forward to riding in Austin again.

 

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Mooney VR46 Racing Team:

STARS AND STRIPS WEEKEND FOR THE MOONEY VR46 RACING TEAM

Luca Marini and Marco Bezzecchi on track at COTA after a more than positive weekend in Argentina

Austin (USA)- A few hours of relaxation, then the long transfer from Argentina to the USA and it is already time to get back on track for the Mooney VR46 Racing Team busy this weekend in Texas for the GP of the Americas (race is scheduled at 01.00 pm local time, 08.00 pm CET). Fourth race of the 2022 season with Luca Marini and Marco Bezzecchi ready to be among the protagonists after the positive weekend at Termas de Rio Hondo.

Very fast in qualifying and once again in the points in Argentina, Luca is working on the Ducati Desmosedici GP to improve his pace on the long run and be consistent in the final stages of the race on a very demanding track as COTA.

Motivated to confirm himself after the first championship points and the Top10 of the last Sunday, also Marco who hit the podium in Austin just a few months ago in Moto2 and aims to be competitive from the first free practices.

Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas

Circuit Of The Americas

Length: 5.5 km

Turns: 11 left, 9 right

Width: 15 m

Longest straight: 1200 m

MotoGP race: 20 laps

MotoGP race distance: 110.3 km

Red Flag MotoGP race finish: 15 laps (3/4 of the total laps scheduled)

 

Luca Marini #10

We arrive in Austin after an overall positive weekend: in qualifying we made an important step forward, but we are still missing something on the pace. As in the last few races, we will continue to work on the electronic aspect to be fast, not only in entering, but also at the exit of the corners. The COTA is a very demanding track, even physically, and from the particular tarmac conditions.

Marco Bezzecchi #72

I am happy to be back on track immediately after a GP like the one raced in Argentina. It was a good race, I managed well the rear tire on the long run and I finished with a good pace. The Austin track is one of the toughest on the calendar and I’ve never raced there with the MotoGP: it will be challenging, but it’s a track where I was very fast last year in Moto2. I can’t wait to get back at work!

Pablo Nieto

Team Manager

It is always a pleasure to return to the USA for the GP: a technically difficult track, very demanding from the physical point of view but also with a series of beautiful turns. The one in Argentina was a race condensed just into two days, but where we performed well. Both riders in the points, Luca’s front row, Marco’s recovery and an interesting pace from the first free practices. We will continue like this to make another step forward towards the European season.

 

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team:

WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team duo excited to continue in the US

Darryn Binder and Andrea Dovizioso are looking for recuperation in Austin, Texas for round four of the 2022 MotoGP World Championship.

Just a few days of rest and traveling after the third round of the season in Argentina and the entire MotoGP paddock is already off to the United States, where the partly resurfaced Circuit of The Americas awaits for Grand Prix number four. The 5.5-kilometer layout close to Austin is one of the most varied in the GP calendar.

WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team’s Darryn Binder is eager to try his Yamaha YZR-M1 at this special venue, starting from scratch again. Finishing the Argentina Grand Prix in P18, the MotoGP rookie gained more experience and delivered some great battles once again. With six points on his account, he arrives as the second-best premier class newcomer so far and will look to score more.

In the meantime, Andrea Dovizioso is looking to make up some lost ground from Termas de Rio Hondo, where he had to stop in the pitlane after just one lap, but later on found a good rhythm and some improvements. He already had some decent sensations aboard his Yamaha YZR-M1 last year and aims to cement his improvements with a strong result.

The WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team gets ready for Free Practice one this Friday at 09:55 local time (16:55 CET), while the race on Sunday will get underway at 13:00 local time (20:00 CET).

DARRYN BINDER

“I’m really looking forward to getting to Austin. I really enjoy America and I think it’s definitely one of the more difficult circuits on the calendar, so I’m really excited to see how it feels on a MotoGP bike. I’m looking forward to see what the new asphalt is like in the areas they have resurfaced it. I’ll take it like every other race, start from zero, build a way up and see what we can accomplish in the race.”

ANDREA DOVIZIOSO

“I’m happy to go to Austin, because I felt quite good there last year. The asphalt will be new, so we are curious how it’s going to feel. Anyway, I look forward to go there straight away to try to make a decent result. In the end, my pace in the race in Argentina was quite good, I was able to fight and I didn’t expect that before the race. So, we have some ideas after what I tried in the race in Termas. I was riding alone and able to play a little bit with the bike. We will try something in Austin and let’s see if it will help me to get a better feeling overall.”

Razlan Razali, Founder and Team Principal WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team

“We go to Austin with some data and experience based on the last Grand Prix in Termas de Rio Hondo. I’m sure both riders and their respective crew chiefs will look over their data gathered in Argentina and understand what happened and what can be done for America. We just have to keep on working, do the best we can and try to get as many points as possible.”

Wilco Zeelenberg, Team Manager WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team

“We are up for Austin, the fourth round of the 2022 season. So far, we’ve been experiencing mixed emotions. In Argentina we expected a bit more, especially from Andrea in terms of results. He clearly made a mistake with the start device, but this can happen to anyone, even the most experienced riders. We just need to make sure that it doesn’t happen again. But Andrea really likes Austin, because he was strong there last year and for Darryn it’s the same story as in the first three rounds. He is learning fast, in the Warm Up in Argentina he was good, but in Austin he needs to start from scratch. Hopefully he can fight with the other rookies again and let’s hope Andrea can score some decent points.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Tech3 KTM Factory Racing:

Tech3 KTM Factory Racing Travels to Austin for the Final Race Overseas Before European Tour

Only a couple of days after the Gran Premio Michelin® de la Républica Argentina, Tech3 KTM Factory Racing already has its eyes set on Round 4 of the 2022 calendar. Indeed, the crew travelled directly from Termas de Río Hondo to Austin in the United States on Monday, and is now getting ready for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas, to be held at the 5,513m-long Circuit of the Americas.

With just a few days of rest to enjoy the city of Austin, Raul Fernandez will be willing to score his first points in the MotoGP class after three impressive first races this season, including the one in Argentina where he finished in P16, so close to the goal. On the other side, Remy Gardner will also look to continue his progression with the KTM RC16 and aim for a Top 15 finish on this American layout where he often had good results.

We will be back to a usual format this week after the events in Argentina that forced to re-arrange the schedule, and the action will start on Friday, April 8 with Free Practice 1 at 9:55 local time (GMT-5), followed by Free Practice 2 at 14:10. We will be back on Saturday for Qualifying day, starting with Free Practice 3 at 09:55 local time, followed by the final free session at 13:30. It will be time to make a fast lap when Qualifying starts at 14:10, with both Raul and Remy looking to improve their qualifying sessions. The Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas will take place on Sunday, April 10 2022, at 13:00 (GMT-5), for 20 laps.

Remy Gardner

Championship: 22nd

Points: 1

“I look forward to this weekend here in Austin. Last year, I was quite fast on a Moto2 bike, so we will see what I can do with a MotoGP engine. There has been some resurfacing work done in some corners since we came in October, so I am curious to see the results of the re-asphalt. Apart from this, I think that we have to find a bit more of a direction with the bike this weekend and hopefully make the step we want.”

Raul Fernandez

Championship: 23rd

Points: 0

“I am really motivated to be here in Austin, Texas. We had a good race in Argentina, the whole team did a great job, and I am feeling better day by day on the bike. I think that this track will be interesting for us, so let’s see what we can do this weekend!”

Hervé Poncharal

Team Manager

“After the exciting MotoGP round in Termas de Río Hondo in Argentina, the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing team is excited to start a new weekend in Austin, Texas. We enjoy coming to the USA because the circuit and the facilities are amazing. We are also very eager to discover how the track has been resurfaced so everyone is curious to see how much it will improve the grip, and therefore the lap-times. Last year, we had a tough race here, but following the interesting races that both Raul and Remy had in Argentina, they should be ready to make another step, with the target to score some points. It would be a great result. As it is always the case during back-to-back races, the team will be very busy, but we are happy to be back here before heading to Europe.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Aprilia:

APRILIA ARRIVES IN THE UNITED STATES FOR THE GP OF THE AMERICAS
 

AFTER ALEIX ESPARGARÓ’S HISTORIC VICTORY IN ARGENTINA AND WITH MAVERICK VIÑALES IMPROVING RAPIDLY, APRILIA TACKLES THE TEXAS ROUND WITH CONFIDENCE

IT’S TIME FOR ANOTHER DEMANDING CHALLENGE FOR THE 2022 RS-GP, WHICH HAS PROVEN TO BE A WINNING BIKE

Aprilia arrives in Texas, the venue this weekend for the Grand Prix of the Americas, in unprecedented great form. Fresh from the historic victory earned by Aleix Espargaró in Argentina and with Maverick Viñales back to battling for the top spots, the Aprilia Racing team is preparing for the fourth round of the season with confidence, despite the treacheries of the Circuit of the Americas, one of the most demanding on the calendar and recently partially resurfaced.

Thanks to their outstanding performance in the first three Grand Prix races, Aprilia is also leading in the overall rider standings with Aleix Espargaró at 45 points, whereas Maverick Viñales has now moved up to 13 points.

During the MotoGP weekend in Austin, the North America Talent Cup will also be making its début. This is the single-brand series part of the “Road to MotoGP” path which races with the Aprilia RS 250 SP2 bikes. After the success enjoyed on the national level with the Italian FMI Aprilia Sport Production Championship, the “small” 250 from Noale, designed to make rider growth easy and gradual, has now embarked overseas – a testament to Aprilia Racing’s growing commitment to grooming young talent.

ALEIX ESPARGARÓ

“These past few days have been very emotional for me and I was extremely happy to receive so much affection from the fans and the entire paddock after the exciting win at Termas de Rio Hondo. But now it’s already time to think about the Austin race. We are well aware that it will be one of the most complicated ones for us, because we struggled a lot last year, but we’ll try to take full advantage of this positive moment, continuing to have fun. Up to now, we’ve been competitive on three very different tracks and even in Indonesia in the wet, a condition that I have never been particularly crazy about, the bike was truly fast. We have been consistent and this is demonstrated by the fact that we are also in the lead in the championship, but we are keeping our feet firmly planted on the ground. The important thing is to continue this trend without making mistakes.”

MAVERICK VIÑALES

“Aleix’s victory was a huge confidence booster for the entire team and for me, because I got back to battling to the top positions. We knew that the race in Argentina would be very important for us. We were seeking confirmation after the settings changes we tried in Indonesia, and we found it. Now I feel like I’ve found a good base to work on to improve even further and I can’t wait to get back in the saddle. Plus, the Circuit of the Americas is one of my favourite tracks, where I’ve always been fast. That said, we’ll keep going with the same mentality. We are aware that there is still much to learn and in Austin we simply want to make another step forward in terms of me adapting to the bike, because that is the only way we’ll be able to grow and improve further.”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Michelin:

A week after the Michelin Grand Prix of Argentina, and just over six months since the previous visit to the Circuit of The Americas, the Michelin team and the rest of the MotoGP™ paddock will be once again heading to Austin, TX for the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas.

The Circuit of The Americas, with its 11 right- and 9 left-hand corners, runs in an anti-clockwise direction, with parts of the track inspired by famous sections of iconic racetracks, including Hockenheim, Silverstone, Interlagos and Österreichring. These corners, together with the intimidating 40m (133ft) climb to Turn 1, a 1,200m (0.74 miles) straight and a very demanding track surface, all add up to one of the biggest challenges of the year for the riders, machines, and their Michelin tyres.

Since the previous race here, there has been some work carried out on certain parts of the track to eradicate the severe bumps that were much talked about by the riders. This should hopefully improve things considerably and may lead to faster lap times in 2022.

Another difference compared to last year will be the temperatures. In late September the average is above 30° C, but now it is back in its usual April slot, the average temperatures should be down around 25° C.

The MICHELIN Power Slick tyre allocation for CoTA has been chosen to cope with the expected demands that will be faced during each lap, and also those generated by the abrasive track surface. Available in Soft, Medium and Hard compounds, the three front tyre options will all be symmetric, while the three rear options will be asymmetric, with a harder right side to cope with the extra stresses created by the right-hand corners.

Although rain is unusual here, it doesn’t mean that it can’t happen, and MICHELIN Power Rain tyres will be available to give the riders confidence to push to the limit if any rain should make an appearance. Available in Soft and Medium compounds for both the front and rear, the rears will also feature an asymmetric design, with a harder right-hand-side, just like their slick counterparts.

Speaking about the CoTA race weekend, Piero Taramasso, Michelin Two-Wheel Motorsport Manager, said: “These two consecutive races in Termas de Rio Hondo and Austin are quite a logistical challenge for our team. However, we are always happy to make the trip across the Atlantic and to contribute to some entertaining races that we know the enthusiastic fans here will appreciate very much.

“We know that following the previous visit, some work has been done to the track to try and smooth out the bumps that caused problems for the riders last time. Now we will just need to wait and see if this has worked, and to find out what difference, if any, this might have made to the grip levels. Having said that, I’m sure our CoTA 22 allocation will give the riders the tyres they need to push their limits and to go all-out for the victory.”

The action will get underway on Friday 8 April with the first two Free Practice sessions, followed on Saturday with another two further Free Practice sessions and Qualifying 1 and 2 to decide grid positions for the race. The lights will go out to signal the start of the 20-lap race at 13:00 local time on Sunday 10 April.

MotoAmerica: Young Gun Tyler Scott Joins Team Hammer

Team Hammer VP of Operations Chris Ulrich (right) welcomes Young Gun Tyler Scott (left). Photo courtesy Team Hammer.
Team Hammer VP of Operations Chris Ulrich (right) welcomes Young Gun Tyler Scott (left). Photo courtesy Team Hammer.

YOUNG GUN TYLER SCOTT JOINS TEAM HAMMER

Team Hammer, Inc. is thrilled to announce the signing of rising star Tyler Scott to race in the 2022 MotoAmerica Supersport championship aboard a Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki GSX-R.

The team has committed to an extensive career development program with the 16-year-old Scott, who is the reigning MotoAmerica Junior Cup champion following a thoroughly dominant 2021 campaign. Last season, Scott won the Junior Cup title by a 44-point margin on the strength of 15 podiums, 11 of which were race wins.

 

Tyler Scott. Photo courtesy Team Hammer.
Tyler Scott. Photo courtesy Team Hammer.

The Pennsylvanian has been over-achieving for the majority of his life. Scott, whose father and uncle were professional flat track racers, began racing at the age of four. He quickly proved himself a dirt track prodigy, ultimately earning 13 AMA Grand Championships at the amateur level while being named AMA Youth Dirt Track Racer of the Year on four separate occasions.

Scott started his road racing career at the age of eight, and earned numerous regional titles. Scott was selected to participate in the 2019 Red Bull Rookies Cup, followed that up with a year of intense competition in the 2020 FIM CEV European Talent Cup, and then returned to the U.S.A. full-time to win the 2021 Junior Cup.

“This year, I’ll be on the best team for me,” said Scott. “Team Hammer has the data and history of running up front wherever the team races, and I feel that puts me in the best position to improve. I’m excited for the opportunity, and I want to adapt to the bike quickly and completely. Last year, I ran the tracks in the Junior Cup, so I am familiar with the circuits. I’m looking forward to our upcoming test at Barber to see how the GSX-R feels and to be fast for the first round.”

“Tyler has been on our radar for a few seasons,” said Chris Ulrich, Team Hammer Vice President of Operations. “We had a first-hand look at him last year when he won the Junior Cup. He’s an exceptional talent and a rider for the future. Tyler has earned a lot of accolades already, but what impresses us most is his attitude and desire. I think he will do well on a competitive bike and learn at a fast pace. Similar to what we are already doing with Sam Lochoff and Liam Grant, we have a program in place to help Tyler achieve his goals. This will be fun!”

ABOUT TEAM HAMMER

The 2022 season marks Team Hammer’s 42nd consecutive year of operating as a professional road racing team. Racebikes built and fielded by Team Hammer have won 128 AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National races, have finished on AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National podiums 332 times, and have won 11 AMA Pro and MotoAmerica National Championships, as well as two FIM South American Championships (in Superbike and Supersport.) The team has also won 137 endurance races overall (including seven 24-hour races) and 13 Overall WERA National Endurance Championships with Suzuki motorcycles, and holds the U.S. record for mileage covered in a 24-hour race. The team also competed in the televised 1990s Formula USA National Championship, famously running “Methanol Monster” GSX-R1100 Superbikes fueled by methanol, and won four F-USA Championships.

 ABOUT VISION WHEEL

Founded in 1976, Vision Wheel is one of the nation’s leading providers of custom wheels for cars and trucks, and one of the first manufacturers of custom wheels and tires for ATVs, UTVs, and golf carts. Vision Wheel looks beyond the current trends and to the future in developing, manufacturing, and distributing its wheels. Vision’s lines of street, race, off-road, American Muscle, and Milanni wheels are distributed nationally and internationally through a trusted network of distributors. Vision Wheel also produces the Vision It AR app to allow users to see how their wheel of choice will look on their vehicle before purchase and installation. For more information on Vision Wheel, visit www.visionwheel.com.

ABOUT SUZUKI

Suzuki Motor USA, LLC. (SMO) distributes Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automotive Parts, Accessories, and ECSTAR Oils & Chemicals via an extensive dealer network throughout 49 states. Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC), based in Hamamatsu, Japan, is a diversified worldwide manufacturer of Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automobiles, Outboard Motors, and related products. Founded in 1909 and incorporated in 1920, SMC has business relations with 201 countries/regions. For more information, visit www.suzuki.com.

MotoAmerica: Superbike Championship Begins At COTA

Defending MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Jake Gagne (1). Photo by Brian J. Nelson, courtesy MotoAmerica.
Defending MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Jake Gagne (1). Photo by Brian J. Nelson, courtesy MotoAmerica.

MotoAmerica Superbikes Are Back And Ready For Business In Texas

The MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship Set To Start Alongside MotoGP
In The Red Bull Grand Prix Of The Americas, April 8-10

IRVINE, CA (April 6, 2022) – If history is to repeat itself in the opening round of the 2022 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship at Circuit of The Americas (COTA) this weekend, a non-American will win on a Suzuki GSX-R1000 for his first career MotoAmerica victory.

Welcome to the top step on the podium, Richie Escalante.

Okay, not so fast.

Thanks mostly to a certain Spaniard by the name of Toni Elias, foreigners have won seven of the 10 MotoAmerica Superbike races held at COTA with Elias winning six times and South African Mathew Scholtz taking a lone victory in 2018. The Americans who have tasted victory on the circuit located on the outskirts of Austin? That would be Josh Hayes and Cameron Beaubier way back in 2015, the first year of the race, and Josh Herrin, the winner of race two the last time MotoAmerica took part in the event in 2019.

As for manufacturer victories… Suzuki has seven wins with Yamaha winning the other three.

So will Escalante, who hails from Mexico City, Mexico, win his Superbike debut for the Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki team this weekend? Well, that depends on if you look at just COTA’s history, or the more recent MotoAmerica results.

If you look only at last year, then it would take a brave soul to bet against 2021 MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Jake Gagne. You don’t win 17 of 20 races and not show up as the favorite, and Gagne can boast those results. The Californian, who now calls Colorado home, returns on his Fresh N Lean Progressive Yamaha Racing YZF-R1 fresh off his dominating 2021 season when he not only won 17 of 20 races, but he also won 16 races in a row dating from the end of April to the middle of September. Yes, it was a record-breaking season for Gagne on many fronts.

Last year, Gagne didn’t get much of a challenge from anyone within his team, but this season might be different with the addition of South African Cameron Petersen to the two-rider Yamaha team. Petersen comes to the squad after finishing third in last year’s Superbike title chase on an M4 ECSTAR Suzuki with his first-career Superbike win coming in the final round of the season at Barber Motorsports Park. He also comes with a 2022 race under his belt with his new team after finishing second in the Daytona 200 on a Yamaha YZF-R6. And Petersen was just .007 of a second from victory.

Westby Racing’s Mathew Scholtz begins the 2022 season after enjoying his best year to date in 2021. The South African won his third- and fourth-career Superbike races last year (in the season opener at Road Atlanta and the season finale at Barber) and parlayed his 14 total podiums into a runner-up finish to Gagne in the final point standings. Scholtz is hoping to go one better in 2022 and he’ll tackle the season in the cozy atmosphere of the Westby team for the seventh straight year. Scholtz will also hit the COTA track this weekend as the only rider on the MotoAmerica grid to have won a race there.

If there’s a non-America to be leery of in the season opener, it’s Italian Danilo Petrucci. The 31-year-old two-time MotoGP race winner (2019 at Mugello; 2020 at Le Mans) will make his much-heralded MotoAmerica debut at COTA on the ex-Loris Baz Warhorse HSBK Racing Ducati NYC Panigale V4 R. Petrucci will face a new team, new bike, new tires, and new tracks, but he’s likely faced bigger challenges (the Dakar Rally, for example). And let’s not forget that Elias won his first-ever MotoAmerica race… and at COTA to boot. While Elias claimed COTA as one of his favorites, Petrucci has said it’s not one of his and his best finish in Texas was sixth in the 2019 Red Bull Grand Prix of The Americas on his factory Ducati.

Escalante will also make his MotoAmerica Superbike debut at COTA with the 2020 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion moving up at class to race a GSX-R1000 for the Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki team. Escalante will be joined there by 2021 MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Champion and Superbike Cup winner Jake Lewis, with the Kentuckian getting another shot at the Medallia Superbike class.

There’s a new team rolling into Austin for the season opener and it’s the Tytlers Cycle Racing squad and its BMW M 1000 RR led by Hector Barbera, the Spaniard finishing seventh in the 2021 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike Championship in his debut season in the series. Barbera will be joined by the returning PJ Jacobsen, the New Yorker back in MotoAmerica for the first time since he suffered injuries in the second round of the season at Road America in 2020.

Tytlers will also run a second team, Tytlers Cycle/RideHVMC Racing, with Travis Wyman, Corey Alexander, and Zachary Schumacher. The trio will ride Stock 1000-spec BMWs in both Medallia Superbike and Stock 1000 and will make their debut on the bikes at COTA.

Also, BMW-mounted for the 2022 MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike series is Scheibe Racing’s Ashton Yates with the youngster switching from his Honda to Scheibe’s BMW S 1000 RR. Yates’s first race on the bike and with the team will be at COTA.

Hayden Gillim is a popular returnee to the series with the Philpot, Kentucky, resident set to race a Superbike-spec Disrupt Racing Suzuki GSX-R1000 for a full season in the Superbike series after dabbling in MotoAmerica’s Mission King Of The Baggers Championship last year.

Daytona 200 winner Brandon Paasch will be out to win the MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Championship in 2022 and if he does so it will be the third-straight title in that class for the Altus Motorsports team. Paasch will begin his season on the GSX-R1000 at COTA with the Stock 1000 Championship beginning at Road Atlanta two weeks later.

Michael Gilbert Racing’s Michael Gilbert has made the switch from Kawasaki to Suzuki for his 2022 Superbike and Stock 1000 campaigns and he’ll also begin his season at COTA. Another top Stock 1000 racer who will begin his season at COTA is Geoff May with the veteran committing to a full season of Superbike and Stock 1000 racing on his Vision Wheel/Discount Tire/KWS Honda CBR1000RR-R SP, the only Honda entered for COTA.

Veteran Superbike racer David Anthony will again carry the Australian flag in the Medallia Superbike series when he lines up on his Suzuki GSX-R1000R for the COTA opener. Thrashed Bike Racing’s Max Flinders, meanwhile, will again be aboard his trusty all-yellow Yamaha YZF-R1 as he starts his seventh season in the MotoAmerica Championship.

In total, 30 Superbikes – yes, 30 – have entered the season-opener at Circuit of The Americas.

COTA Pre-Race Notes…

With the opening round of the Medallia Superbike Championship a stand-alone for MotoAmerica at Circuit of The Americas, the Auto Parts 4 Less MotoAmerica Championship begins in earnest with all six of its classes on track at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta, April 22-24.

Yamaha leads the way in the number of entries for the opening round of the Medallia MotoAmerica Superbike Championship with 10 riders entered on YZF-R1s. BMW and Suzuki will be represented by seven riders each with Ducati next with three Panigale V4 Rs entered. Just three Kawasakis and a lone Honda complete the 30-strong entries.

Dunlop has announced its “Dunlop Fast Nine” program that will offer one free Q (qualifying) tire to the top-nine finishers in Superbike Q1 at COTA. All Superbike competitors are allowed one qualifier to be used in Q2.

More Petrucci Data: Danilo Petrucci, who will make his MotoAmerica debut at COTA, raced for 10 years in MotoGP, the highlight of which were lone victories in the 2019 and 2020 seasons on a Ducati. In total, Petrucci raced in 169 MotoGP races with 10 podiums and the aforementioned two victories. Prior to his MotoGP career, Petrucci raced in the European Superstock 600 Championship and Superstock 1000 Cup.

Petrucci’s last race prior to COTA was in the Dakar Rally where he became the first MotoGP racer to win a stage of the world-famous rally. Petrucci won the fifth stage on his factory KTM.

MotoAmerica last competed at the Circuit of The Americas in 2019 as the race was cancelled in 2020 due to COVID-19. In 2021, MotoGP returned to the Texas venue, but MotoAmerica wasn’t a part of the event due to scheduling conflicts.

Six-time COTA MotoAmerica Superbike winner Toni Elias earned pole position in 2019 with his Superpole lap of 2:08.538. The fastest race lap was turned in by race-two winner Josh Herrin with a 2:08.994 on his Yoshimura Suzuki. Elias and Herrin split the two race wins in 2019.

The Superbike lap record on the 3.4-mile, 20-turn Circuit of The Americas, however, is a 2:08.184 set by Roger Hayden in 2017 on his Yoshimura Suzuki. Hayden will be on hand at COTA doing commentary for MotoAmerica Live+, the series’ live and on-demand streaming service.

The first-ever MotoAmerica Superbike races at COTA were held in MotoAmerica’s debut season of 2015. Yamaha’s four-time AMA Superbike Champion Josh Hayes won race one with teammate Cameron Beaubier, who would go on to win five MotoAmerica Superbike titles, won race two.

American race fans will have three former MotoAmerica racers to cheer for at Circuit of The Americas with 2015 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Champion Joe Roberts, five-time MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Cameron Beaubier and 2021 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion Sean Dylan Kelly all currently taking part in the Moto2 World Championship. Beaubier had his career-best Moto2 finish of fifth in last year’s Red Bull Grand Prix of The Americas.

There will also be two Beaubiers on hand at COTA this year with Cameron’s little brother Ezra Beaubier set to race in the MotoAmerica Medallia Superbike race on a Motorsport Exotica Orange Cat BST Racing BMW M 1000 RR.

Circuit of The Americas has undergone a repave job since last year’s MotoGP with turns two through 10 and 12 through 16 being re-surfaced to eliminate the bumps that put the track in a negative light last year.

About MotoAmerica

MotoAmerica is the North American road racing series created in 2014 that is home to the AMA Superbike Championship. MotoAmerica is an affiliate of KRAVE Group LLC, a partnership that includes three-time 500cc World Champion, two-time AMA Superbike Champion, and AMA Hall of Famer Wayne Rainey, ex-racer and former manager of Team Roberts Chuck Aksland, motorsports marketing executive Terry Karges, and businessman Richard Varner. For more information on MotoAmerica, visit www.MotoAmerica.com. Also make sure to follow MotoAmerica on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

World Supersport: Panta Racing Fuel Named Official Fuel Supplier

Panta Racing Fuel is the new Official Fuel Supplier of the FIM Supersport World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna WorldSBK Press Office.
Panta Racing Fuel is the new Official Fuel Supplier of the FIM Supersport World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna WorldSBK Press Office.

Panta Racing Fuel becomes the Official Fuel Supplier of WorldSSP

Already present in WorldSSP300, Panta Racing Fuel gets involved in the reinvigorated WorldSSP class from 2022

On the back of their experience as the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP300 class since its inception in 2017, Panta Racing Fuel has been appointed as the exclusive supplier of the FIM Supersport World Championship as it accompanies the category into its ‘Next Generation’ era, starting this season. The company’s involvement in WorldSSP300 has already been successful and now, it looks to expand into WorldSSP ahead of what is set to be an exciting season of racing.

Part of the Mol Group and based in Italy, Panta Racing Fuel develop and produce specialised racing fuels to support performance in motorsport competitions; it offers many references of fuels and special fuels for the automotive industry. Panta Racing Fuel is the official supplier of several motorsport competitions with the Red Bull MotoGP™ Rookies Cup, the FIM Endurance World Championship and British Superbikes series among them. With such experience in the motorsport industry, Panta Racing Fuel is the ideal fuel partner for both the FIM Supersport World Championship and the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship.

Additionally, the Mol Group is strongly committed to sustainable development, by reducing its ecological footprint but also through its partnership with Dorna WSBK Organization (DWO) as the series’ future will entail the development of more sustainable fuels.

Luca Monico, Head of Panta Racing Fuel: “We are thrilled to join the WorldSBK Paddock as the Official Fuel Supplier of WorldSSP and WorldSSP300. It’s a great opportunity for our brand to widen the field of application of our products.”

Francesco Valentino, Head of WorldSBK Commercial & Marketing dept.: “We are thrilled to continue our partnership with Panta Racing Fuel in WorldSSP300 and to welcome them as the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP class. As we are entering into the Supersport ‘Next Generation’, it is crucial for us to have such a reliable partner by our side to provide our series with high-quality fuel.”
How important is Panta Racing Fuel role in the Supersport ‘Next Generation’ transition?

In 2022, World Supersport enters a new era with new technical regulations. In such an important time for the category, it is essential to be accompanied by an experienced partner such as Panta Racing Fuel.

Scott Smart, the FIM WorldSBK Technical Director explains: “Panta has a great reputation in the world of motorsport and is becoming the choice of many series around the world.” The Italian company was already the Official Fuel Supplier of the WorldSSP300 class and the collaboration with the Championship has been fruitful. “Our collaboration has been very productive with great results” adds Scott Smart.

As the Supersport ‘Next Generation’ bikes will take to the track for the start of the 2022 season, Panta Racing Fuel will play a key role in the development of the class. “In a Championship that requires balance of performance calculations, reducing variables that we have to manage is very important. The stakes are raised once again in Supersport ‘Next Generation’, with factory involvement, high level teams and with an even more critical requirement for performance balance, we can only work with partners that we trust implicitly” explains the FIM WorldSBK Technical Director.

Concluding, Smart stated that their expanded collaboration goes further than just a high-end product: “Panta provides a high-quality consistent product. But it doesn’t end there, using their high-level mobile analysis laboratory means that we can make the most precise fuel test right at the track.”

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