Tag Archives: Competition

Consistent Cairoli takes MXGP of Trentino round victory

News 2 Nov 2020

Consistent Cairoli takes MXGP of Trentino round victory

Geerts maintains pressure in MX2 with fifth overall win of the season.

Image: Octopi Media.

Italian Antonio Cairoli has won the MXGP of Trentino as the final stage of the world championship opened on Sunday, while Jago Geerts was back on top in MX2.

Red Bull KTM’s Cairoli went 2-2 at the picturesque circuit for his third overall of the season, despite Tim Gajser (Team HRC) and Clement Desalle (Monster Energy Kawasaki) splitting the moto wins.

Moto one was taken out by defending world champion Gajser ahead of Cairoli and Jeremy Seewer (Monster Energy Yamaha), before the retiring Desalle led the way in moto two from Cairoli and Gautier Paulin (Monster Energy Yamaha), who will also retire at the close of the season.

Overall it was Cairoli who stood atop the podium, joined by Gajser and Desalle. In the championship, Gajser now holds a 73-point lead over Cairoli, with Seewer a further 18 points behind in third position.

Image: Octopi Media.

Monster Energy Yamaha’s Geerts crossed the line fourth in the opening MX2 encounter, but bounced back second time out to win and secure the round victory.

Moto one was topped by Thomas Kjer Olsen (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna) ahead of world championship leader Tom Vialle (Red Bull KTM) and Jed Beaton (Rockstar Energy Husqvarna).

Later, Geerts won moto two from EMX250 champion Thibault Benistant (Hutten Metaal Yamaha) and Vialle. Those results saw Geerts win overall from Olsen and Vialle, while Beaton was P4 overall. Bailey Malkiewicz (Team Honda 114 Motorsports) finished P18.

Vialle now holds a 73-point lead in the world championship standings ahead of Geerts, who is the final rider within mathematical reach of the lead with two rounds remaining. The GP of Pietramurata will be held this Wednesday, 4 November.

New Zealander Courtney Duncan (DRT Kawasaki) claimed her second world title in the Women’s Motocross World Championship at the final round, edging Nancy Van De Ven (Yamaha) and Larissa Papenmeier (Yamaha). Australian Tahlia O’Hare (KTM) claimed 10th in points.

Detailed results


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Brayton to lead expanded Penrite Honda team in 450SX effort

Future confirmed as Australian team transitions into premier class for 2021.

Image: Octopi Media.

Justin Brayton will lead an expanded Penrite Honda Racing effort in Monster Energy Supercross for 2021, the team in which he’s won four Australian championships with set to transition into 450SX.

Following a single season back at Team Honda HRC, Brayton has aligned with the team that he’s won the past four Australian SX1 championships with.

It will be a significant step for 36-year-old Brayton and the Yarrive Konsky-owned Penrite Honda team as the pair looks to carry its success from down under into the US-based world championship in the premier division. Konsky fielded Luke Clout and Mitchell Oldenburg in a 250SX West program this season.

Brayton will continue on his longstanding professional career and will be on-board the anticipated new CRF450R when the new season opens in Houston, Texas, on 16 January. His deal will extend into the Australian championship once again, where he will target a fifth-straight crown in 2021.

“I’m super-excited, working closely with Yarrive and his whole team down in Australia for the past four years, I really got to know the team well, knowing what they’re all about,” Brayton told MotoOnline.com. “When he made a push to come here to America in 2020, I thought it was really cool and his passion for the sport speaks volumes.

“Yarrive thinks big, he thinks like me in a sense, which you just don’t feel like there’s any limits – that’s why he and I get along so well. Obviously, being with American Honda this year in Supercross, riding for the factory team, I was still close with Yarrive and the Penrite guys.

“We’ve always talked about doing something in America. We never knew for sure if we’d get the right support or if it could ever happen, but if there was ever a way to make it happen, we were going to do it. We’ve been working on it a long time and yeah, we’re going racing here in America and in Australia. We’ve got an awesome program put together and it works well for me, having some continuity with the same team. I’m excited about it.”

Longtime Brayton mechanic Brent Duffe will be part of the program in both the US and Australia after working together at HRC this season and that combined experience will be essential in Penrite Honda Racing becoming a success at the highest levels of Supercross.

Konsky is a renowned commercial director and has broad credentials both in motocross and the Australian-based Supercars series, working day and night – often alongside Brayton – in order to raise the necessary funding to enter the 17-round 450SX season and in a bid to be competitive at an international scale. It isn’t known if Australian oil giant Penrite will remain the team’s US title sponsor moving forward.

“Yarrive is a genius when it comes to the marketing side and sponsorship side, so I just open some of those doors and get him introduced to the right people,” Brayton added. “Racing for as long as I have, I know a lot of people in the sport and the right people to talk to at each company.

“That’s been really fun for me, to be super-involved and we talk pretty much daily to try and put all this together, get all the pieces of the puzzle to connect where it makes sense for me and also for him as well. I feel like we work well together and that I know what it takes over here to truly make something work, because he’s obviously got the Australian thing mastered.

“But it’s also very similar once you know the right people, get the right pieces and parts for the motorcycle and understand the landscape of it all such as travel and things like that. The older I get, the more I enjoy to help programs get to the best level and essentially be kind of a team manager and rider, you know? It’s been quite fun.”

It’s not clear what the final specification of Brayton’s Penrite Honda CRF450R will be, however, with close ties to American Honda and immense experience in working with Konsky Motorsport Group in Australia, it’s expected that his race bike will be to the highest of standards.

“My relationship with American Honda’s really good, obviously riding for the team this year, I know a lot of guys there,” he added. “The 2021 model is quite different, so I haven’t actually ridden one yet, but we’re hoping to get them here in the next couple of weeks. If I need any assistance, if we have any questions, we can go right to them and get those questions answered.

“As far as pieces and parts to the motorcycle, we’re just going to have to wait and see. If I get on and feel that we need specific parts that will make it better, I don’t know what exactly that looks like. We’ll have good support from everybody that we need to get support from and my bike will be as good as any other bike out there.”

Brayton finished ninth in this year’s 450SX standings with best results of sixth both in Glendale and Salt Lake City 6, recording 12 top 10 finishes over the course of the season. Plans to return to Australia in the later stages of this year were halted when that national championship was cancelled as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

It was always expected that Brayton’s time at Team Honda HRC would be for the single season in an interim arrangement, since two-time 250SX East champion Chase Sexton had signed for the works team late last year to ride alongside the already-contracted Ken Roczen full-time in 2021.

Penrite Honda, despite only committing to a US program at the 11th hour, also had its share of encouraging results, with Oldenburg eighth and Clout – understood to be remaining for next year – ninth in the final 250SX West standings. The team’s best finish came courtesy of Clout when he finished fifth at Oakland.

Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Guest appearances in 2021 increasingly unlikely for ‘done’ Reed

News 30 Oct 2020

Guest appearances in 2021 increasingly unlikely for ‘done’ Reed

Desire isn’t there for former Supercross champion to compete again.

Image: Octopi Media.

Retired Australian icon Chad Reed has conceded that it’s becoming increasingly unlikely that he will make any one-off guest appearances in Monster Energy Supercross during 2021, stating that he doesn’t have any desire to race at this point.

Reed, 38, formally completed his final full-time season with a top 10 result at Salt Lake City 7 in June, but didn’t rule out the chances of him returning for one-off races next year while in Utah.

However, that stance continues to fade as the Reed family embarks on a series of BMX events with their three young children learning their craft with immediately encouraging results. That’s where Reed’s focus lies less than three months out from Houston’s opening round on 16 January and during recent months he’s not even considered a return.

The 2021 Monster Energy Supercross series will be held with just 20 to 25 percent spectator capacities unless COVID-19 restrictions ease dramatically, with limited locations and strict protocols still to be in effect in order for the championship to be held across 17 rounds. That isn’t an attractive

“I think I’m done,” Reed told MotoOnline.com.au. “Very little in me wants to race next year. I haven’t honestly given it any thought, just been wide-open being a BMX dad. I just don’t have any desire to race with all the restrictions the world has going on right now – it sucks the fun out of it for me.”

It’s been a remarkable career for Reed at the professional level for over two decades, the two-time 450SX champion defying the odds to remain competitive into his late 30s and continually reinvent himself among multiple generations of riders at the very top level of the sport.


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

MXGP veteran Paulin to retire at the end of current season

News 30 Oct 2020

MXGP veteran Paulin to retire at the end of current season

Monster Energy Yamaha rider hanging up his helmet following 2020.

Image: Supplied.

Frenchman Gautier Paulin has announced that he will retire at the conclusion of this year’s MXGP World Championship, choosing to hang up his helmet after departing from Monster Energy Yamaha.

Paulin is currently sixth in the 2020 standings after winning a moto – his first since 2017 – and finishing on the podium at Lommel 1, but won’t continue next season.

“It is with a great deal of emotion that I have decided to call time on my career,” announced the 30-year-old. “I have dedicated my whole life to my sport and it has made me the man I am today. I had a wonderful awakening in 2007 when I signed my first pro contract and won my first title – it set me on a path I had dreamt of.

“I’m so grateful that I got to fight with the best riders in the world, gain the trust of the most prestigious companies and brands, wear my nation’s jersey for 11 consecutive years at the Motocross of Nations (MXoN) and win the event. I love challenges, performance, hard work, and having the desire to give my best.

“I’ve experienced indescribable feelings of joy, I’ve led the MX2 and MXGP world championships, sang the Marseillaise with the public and lived through strong emotions that have marked me forever.

“I also have the most unbelievable fans and I humbly thank every single one of them, as well as every single person that helped or believed in me for the last 15 years and more. Sport unites us, now it is time for the next chapter.”

Monster Energy Yamaha has already confirmed that Jeremy Seewer will continue on-board the factory YZ450FM next season alongside Ben Watson, who will transition from the MX2 category for his rookie premier class campaign. It’s also expected that Glenn Coldenhoff will join Yamaha after exiting GasGas.


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

GasGas factory MXGP team to field Jonass and Bogers in 2021

News 30 Oct 2020

GasGas factory MXGP team to field Jonass and Bogers in 2021

Fresh new line-up made official following Coldenhoff departure.

Image: Supplied.

Standing Construct GasGas Factory Racing will field a fresh new line-up in the 2021 MXGP World Championship after signing Pauls Jonass and Brian Bogers to ride the works MC 450F next season.

The announcement confirms that Glenn Coldenhoff will depart GasGas – linked to Monster Energy Yamaha – as Jonass moves across from Rockstar Energy Husqvarna on-board the same KTM Group platform.

Jonass entered the grand prix scene in 2014, rapidly progressing to become MX2 World Champion in 2017. The Latvian then moved to the MXGP class for the following 2019, securing three overall podiums and an impressive sixth place in the final standings.

2020 was set to be Jonass’ breakout year, but an untimely training crash ended his season early. Following months of rehabilitation and with his desire for success stronger than ever, he’s now back to full fitness and ready to fight for podiums when the gate drops for the start of the 2021 season.

“I’m really excited for my future with GasGas,” Jonass said. “I have to thank the Standing Construct team for believing in me while I have been injured, but I will be back to 100 percent and then I can start testing with the team. It’s an exciting time for me and my rehabilitation is going very well. I’m looking forward to a great future together with GasGas and I look forward to achieving some great results when the 2021 season starts.”

Competing alongside Jonass, Bogers is currently ranked 12th in the 2020 MXGP World Championship and the Dutchman has been a constant threat for top-five results during recent GPs. Bogers, like his new teammate, will soon head into the off-season focused on testing and preparation ahead of the new season.

“It’s a great feeling to be on the Standing Construct GasGas team for 2021,” commented Bogers. “I’m really looking forward to next season as I know the team is very professional and the bike is great. They have had impressive results over recent years, so it gives me a lot of confidence. It’s an exciting opportunity, I’ve had a strong season in 2020 and I’m ready for the next step with GasGas in 2021.”


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

MXGP 2021 calendar coming mid-November with three contingencies

News 29 Oct 2020

MXGP 2021 calendar coming mid-November with three contingencies

Multiple plans in place for next season depending on direction of COVID-19.

Words: Adam Wheeler

Image: Supplied.

The shape of 2021 MXGP seems to be taking shape even if the schedule needs to be as flexible as possible to deal with the changing scenarios for international travel and fan attendances.

Infront Motor Racing CEO David Luongo admitted that the company are ‘aiming to run the 2021 season like normal’, but will also be ‘ready for all scenarios’.

After the unsettling period for many motorsports in the first phases of the lockdown that saw cancellations, postponements and re-writing of 2020 fixture lists, Infront are waiting later than usual to publish the latest line-up of provisional dates.

Calendars are usually fixed and announced at the end of October. Infront want 2021 to reach 20 events and the Motocross of Nations and are delaying the launch of the season to the middle/end of April.

“Hopefully there will be a vaccine ready by then,” commented Luongo. “We will finish at the beginning of November with the goal for 2022 to return to the normal timing from February to end September.”

The promoters will have a plan B and plan C ready depending on the public health ‘landscape’, but they will have little room to manoeuvre as another year without fans at the tracks could be potentially ruinous.

“As we say always, the goal is to save all the championships and the employment and now we have the experience of this year,” Luongo stated. “Therefore, we have three different plans – the normal one, the partially-normal/partially-COVID and the full COVID-19, but it’s also clear we cannot afford to lose the same amount of money as we did this year.”

Society patiently waits for a COVID-19 vaccine and what could be a major feat of modern-day medicine (considering the time scale). For MXGP’s 1000-plus people crossing borders to race, accumulating thousands of PCR tests, any sort of effective treatment would be a step closer to normal competition.

Aside from the health aspect there is also the sporting effect, as seen with Jorge Prado’s recent positive diagnosis and the loss of a late charge at the 2020 crown due to isolation and missing at least two grands prix.

“We believe a vaccine will change a lot of things,” he added. “First to protect the weak people, then to take away the overall fear and this will also help the governments to make more pragmatic decisions. We really hope this will work and by January/February it starts to be over. Once a vaccine is working, then people can start to travel and work freely.”

Allegedly, the grands prix of Russia and Turkey will return to the agenda and could be the furthest MXGP travels if trips to Indonesia and Argentina are not cleared.

Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Star Racing Yamaha 450 team expands with Stewart signing

News 29 Oct 2020

Star Racing Yamaha 450 team expands with Stewart signing

Newfound factory team to field three riders in Supercross from 2021.

Image: Supplied.

Monster Energy Star Racing Yamaha has signed Malcolm Stewart to ride alongside Dylan Ferrandis and Aaron Plessinger in the 450SX division of Monster Energy Supercross for 2021.

Yamaha’s newfound factory 450 program expands to three riders, with reigning 250SX West champion Ferrandis and the returning Plessinger already confirmed.

“I’m really excited to join the team,” said 28-year-old Stewart. “I’ve known a lot of the guys before, when I was around the team back in 2011. Gareth Swanepoel is my trainer and he works with their guys, plus I have a few buddies there, so it isn’t a big change for me.

“It just kind of adds another piece to the puzzle and I’m definitely happy. The team has had a lot of success and has dominated the 250 class. They have a phenomenal set-up and to be a part of their first year in the 450 class, it makes it more exciting for all of us.

“I feel like we have some good heavy hitters. Myself, Dylan Ferrandis, and Aaron Plessinger, every single one of us has won a 250 title. It should be a really good year. It’s only Supercross right now, but hopefully it goes well, and we can turn it into something in the future.”

Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing 450 team manager Jeremy Coker added: “Adding Malcolm to our already great line up excites me that much more for this upcoming season. He is an amazing rider, especially when it comes to the whoops. I can’t wait to see him on the track.”

Stewart is fresh off his best season in 450SX class with MotoConcepts aboard a Honda, hitting his stride in the seven-race run in Salt Lake City and finishing fourth at the season finale to end the year seventh in the standings. He now looks to build on that momentum next season with the Monster Energy Star Yamaha Racing team.


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

GasGas confirms 2021 MX2 World Championship line-up

News 28 Oct 2020

GasGas confirms 2021 MX2 World Championship line-up

Gifting and Langenfelder to ride MC 250F throughout next season.

Image: Supplied.

GasGas has signed Isak Gifting alongside Simon Langenfelder in its Diga Procross GasGas Factory Racing team for the 2021 MX2 World Championship.

After beginning the year in EMX250, Gifting has been a fill-in rider at GasGas and turned heads with a fifth-place result overall at Lommel 3 on Sunday.

“It’s an amazing feeling to continue with the Diga Procross GasGas team in 2021 as a full factory rider,” 19-year-old Gifting said. “Riding grands prix has been a dream of mine since I was a little boy and now I’ve made it. Racing for a factory team, it’s just unbelievable.

“The bike is fantastic and having a solid team around me with a great manager, mechanics and a trainer gives me a lot of confidence. I have a great feeling going into 2021 – I can’t wait to have a full winter of testing with the team and I’m sure that together we can achieve some great results.”

Meanwhile, Langenfelder will return to the team for 2021, his second term of MX2 World Championship action. Having shown flashes of speed throughout this season before an untimely leg injury, the young German is fully focused on his recovery and looking ahead to prepare for the new season.


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Houston triple-header to open 2021 Supercross schedule

News 28 Oct 2020

Houston triple-header to open 2021 Supercross schedule

Complete 17-round calendar confirmed across at least six different locations.

Image: Octopi Media..

The 2021 Monster Energy Supercross championship schedule has been released and will commence with a triple-header from mid-January in Houston, set to span the full 17-round season.

No longer will the series take-off with its traditional Anaheim 1 opener on the first weekend of the year, instead confirming the gates will first drop at NRG Stadium in Texas.

With a reduced spectator attendance welcomed, due to go on sale in December, all but four rounds have been uncovered as we await confirmation on the locations of rounds 13-15. Salt Lake City will again host the 2021 Supercross finals at Rice-Eccles Stadium, that date also remaining to be announced.

California has hosted the opening round of Supercross over a 25-year period, however, Texas will have the honor in 2021 with round one scheduled for Saturday, 16 January. That will lead three-straight events followed by Tuesday, 19 January, and the following Saturday, 23 January in an unprecedented strategy.

From there the series will travel to Indianapolis where round four will take place on Saturday, 30 January, directly followed by Tuesday, 2 February, in a double-header at Lucas Oil Stadium. Almost three weeks later, Glendale will stage a triple-header from Saturday, 20 February, followed by Tuesday and Saturday races in State Farm Stadium.

Round nine will see the historic Daytona International Speedway remain on the schedule, before another lengthy pause until Arlington holds the next three events at AT&T Stadium between Saturday, 20 March, Tuesday, 23 March and Saturday, 27 March. The following round rounds are to be announced.

The regional 250SX East series will take place across the opening five rounds, as well as round nine at Daytona, while 250SX West will debut from round six, also having six rounds confirmed to date.

After hosting the final seven rounds of this year’s Monster Energy Supercross season, Salt Lake City has been confirmed as round 17 once again. Additionally, the remaining 250SX Class races, Triple Crown and East/West 250SX Showdown events will also be announced later.

The mid-week races, which proved widely popular in SLC this year and also boosted television ratings, have been labelled ‘SuperTuesday’, with one confirmed for each of the host cities in Houston, Indianapolis, Glendale and Arlington – a first in the sport’s 48-year-history.

2021 Monster Energy AMA Supercross, an FIM World Championship, calendar (provisional):
Rd1 – 16 JAN – Houston, Texas – NRG Stadium (250SX East)
Rd2 – 19 JAN – Houston, Texas – NRG Stadium (250SX East)
Rd3 – 23 JAN – Houston, Texas – NRG Stadium (250SX East)
Rd4 – 30 JAN – Indianapolis, Indiana – Lucas Oil Stadium (250SX East)
Rd5 – 2 FEB – Indianapolis, Indiana – Lucas Oil Stadium (250SX East)
Rd6 – 20 FEB – Glendale, Arizona – State Farm Stadium (250SX West)
Rd7 – 23 FEB – Glendale, Arizona – State Farm Stadium (250SX West)
Rd8 – 27 FEB – Glendale, Arizona – State Farm Stadium (250SX West)
Rd9 – 6 MAR – Daytona, Florida – Daytona International Speedway (250SX East)
Rd10 – 20 MAR – Arlington, Texas – AT&T Stadium (250SX West)
Rd11 – 23 MAR – Arlington, Texas – AT&T Stadium (250SX West)
Rd12 – 27 MAR – Arlington, Texas – AT&T Stadium (250SX West)
Rd13 – TBA – TBA
Rd14 – TBA – TBA
Rd15 – TBA – TBA
Rd16 – TBA – TBA
Rd17 – TBA – Salt Lake City, Utah – Rice-Eccles Stadium

Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Monster Energy Yamaha signs Watson to 2021 MXGP deal

News 27 Oct 2020

Monster Energy Yamaha signs Watson to 2021 MXGP deal

Second of three premier class riders announced by factory team.

Image: Supplied.

British standout Ben Watson will step up to the MXGP World Championship division with Monster Energy Yamaha in 2021, rewarded for his form with the team in MX2 as he ages out of the 250 category.

Watson, 23, won his first grand prix at Lommel on Sunday and was informed immediately afterwards that the factory Yamaha team would be signing him to ride the YZ450FM in the premier class from next season.

“Firstly, I want to thank each and every member of staff in Kemea,” Watson said. “The Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 team gave me everything and more every day for three years. I am so grateful to join the factory MXGP team and stay with my Yamaha family – it means so much to me and I cannot wait for this new challenge.

“I have been lucky enough to work closely and get to know Louis Vosters, Vitaliy Tonkov and some of the other Wilvo team members and I know I will be welcomed with open arms. I truly believe the YZ450FM will be a great bike for my riding style and I am really motivated to show everyone what I can do in MXGP. I know the category is at such a high level, so I am fortunate to join a team with a lot of experience, success and motivation.

“I really want to learn and show progression, it’s what I work towards every year and with the experience of my teammates in MXGP, I know I will be able to gain a lot of knowledge and continue my development. I am so excited to get started now and jump on this amazing bike to prepare for the new season.”

Watson is the second Monster Energy Yamaha rider to be signed, joining the returning Jeremy Seewer, however, it’s expected that both Gautier Paulin and Arnaud Tonus will depart at the end of the season. Current GasGas rider Glenn Coldenhoff has been linked to Yamaha in recent months.

Yamaha Motor Europe off-road racing manager Alexandre Kowalski commented: “We are really happy to keep Ben inside the Yamaha family by moving him up to the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MXGP team. It’s just rewards for Ben’s hard work and dedication to training and racing and his commitment to Yamaha as well.

“At Yamaha it is our mission to develop riders and make it possible for them to achieve their dreams within the Yamaha family and, like Thibault Benistant stepping up from the MJC Yamaha Official EMX125 team to the Hutten Metaal Yamaha Official EMX250 team and then to the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 team, we are seeing Ben progress from the factory MX2 team to the factory MXGP team.

“We have to thank the Kemea team and all of the guys at Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2, who have supported Ben since 2018 and have allowed him to achieve all that he has. It’s time for Ben to step up to the Yamaha Factory MXGP team – has been a long time Yamaha Factory rider in MX2, he is very close to us at Yamaha and it was his dream was to be a Yamaha Factory MXGP rider, and today his dream comes true.”

Source: MotoOnline.com.au