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Moto Wrap special | 50 Years of the Harley-Davidson XR750

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Celebrating 50 Years of the Harley-Davidson XR750

By Chris Martin

If forced to condense the long, illustrious history of the Grand National Championship into a single mental image, what would jump into your head?

Would you drift back to the mid-’70s and envision an epic showdown featuring legendary champions Jay Springsteen, Kenny Roberts, and Gary Scott?

Harley Davidson XR Grand National Gary Scott

Harley Davidson XR Grand National Gary Scott

Gary Scott – Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

Or maybe the mid-’80s, when superstars Ricky Graham and Bubba Shobert went to war with double champ Randy Goss and an up-and-coming Scott Parker?

Carr at his final Lima Half Mile appearance in . Photo Dave Hoenig

Carr at his final Lima Half Mile appearance in . Photo Dave Hoenig

Chris Carr at his final Lima Half-Mile appearance in 2011.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

For many — perhaps even most — it would have to be the mid-’90s, after Parker had long since established himself as the most successful rider in series history, but then found himself pushed to the very brink by fellow GOAT candidate Chris Carr?

Bryan Smith leading a pack around the Mile aboard his XR Photo Dave Hoenig

Bryan Smith leading a pack around the Mile aboard his XR Photo Dave Hoenig

“The Piper” Bryan Smith leading a pack around the Mile aboard his XR750.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

But whatever era you chose, it’s almost unavoidable that mental image would prominently feature Harley-Davidson’s iconic XR750 — just as it did in all of the examples provided above.

Harley Davidson XR dirt track

Harley Davidson XR dirt track

Harley-Davidson XR750

The overwhelming mindshare the XR750 has acquired in dirt track circles is backed in full by the numbers, which are staggering… numbers that should not be possible in a technologically-driven endeavor such as motorsport.

We’re talking incomprensible, ridiculous numbers… 37 Grand National Championships and 502 premier-class Main Event victories for starters.

But for all the sensational statistics, one number stands out at this moment: 50.

The XR750 was introduced into Grand National Championship competition in 1970, a full half-century ago. And as the XR did its very best to practice social distancing from the competition over the decades, this seems like the ideal time to celebrate an industry-defining machine in a multi-part feature.

Harley Davidsonl XR dirt track RHSjpg

Harley Davidsonl XR dirt track RHSjpg

Harley-Davidson XR750

“It is an absolutely remarkable achievement for how long the XR750 dominated the AMA field… earning the description of being the ‘most successful racebike of all time’ in the process,” said Jon Bekefy, Harley-Davidson’s GM of Global Brand Marketing. “That dynasty is crazy for any motorsports machine, two wheels or four.”

How is it even possible that a racebike, of all things, could not only remain competitive, but dominant for such a vast stretch of time?

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It’s difficult to grasp, let alone explain, but it’s as if the stars aligned… and then stayed aligned for nearly five decades. The XR750’s irreplicable record is the result of an astutely engineered platform, continually developed in both radical and subtle ways, applied to a sport where traction is imperfect by definition, and mastered by multiple generations of the most accomplished racers and tuners two-wheeled sport has ever known.

The list of all time greats already inducted into the AMA Hall of Fame whose legends were built in concert with the XR750’s runs into the double digits — names like O’Brien, Werner, Springsteen, Parker, Carr, Brelsford, Scott, Eklund, and Goss. And the future Hall of Fame candidates who earned Grand National Championships on the machine are destined to further expand that list — names like Kopp, Coolbeth, Johnson, Mees, and Baker.

Chief among those masters is the aforementioned Scott Parker, who is arguably more closely associated with the XR750 than any other rider. During his time, Parker earned a jaw-dropping nine Grand National Championships and 94 Main Event wins (nearly all of them on the XR750).

Parker wins this showdown ahead of the Honda mounted Dan Ingram Bubba Shobert Alex Jorgensen Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker wins this showdown ahead of the Honda mounted Dan Ingram Bubba Shobert Alex Jorgensen Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker wins this 1988 showdown ahead of the Honda-mounted Dan Ingram, Bubba Shobert & Alex Jorgensen.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

To add some perspective to the astounding longevity of the XR750, consider that following the conclusion of a 20-year GNC career, Parker came out of retirement 20 years ago to win the Springfield Mile one last time. Now consider that by the time he first threw a leg over the XR750, it was already considered a legendary machine with five national titles stacked in its corner.

Even as the decades have ticked along, Parker still has vivid memories of his first time on the XR. “The first time I got to ride one is one of my greatest memories. My buddy flew down and picked one up on an airplane and brought it back. I just couldn’t wait to ride it. It had so much more horsepower than anything I had ever ridden. To get on that thing — and just the way it delivered the horsepower… Wow!

“I was more of a cushion rider, and you just get it in a corner and you could just give it the gas. It would turn the rear wheel and start putting traction down to the ground and down the straightaway you’d go. The first time I got on it, I remember going, ‘Oh my gosh, this thing is badass.’”

The AFT paddock is lined with riders with similar tales of their anticipation of riding an XR750 for the first time and then having it meet, if not exceed, all the hype.

2000 Grand National Champion Joe Kopp, who happens to be the same age as the XR750, said, “I remember… Gosh… It was probably ’90 or ’91. I was new to a twin — I had ridden a Triumph a little bit but definitely never an XR750.

Joe Kopp attempting to tackle the titan Parker in Photo Dave Hoenig

Joe Kopp attempting to tackle the titan Parker in Photo Dave Hoenig

Joe Kopp attempting to tackle the titan Parker in 1999.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

“That was the one everyone wanted to be on. It was just kinda the bike you dreamed of. And when I finally got to ride one… ‘Holy Smokes!’ I just couldn’t believe I was on one, and how it put the power to the ground compared to all the bikes I had ridden before that.

“I was working with Vance & Hines and Harley a couple years ago (developing the XG750R), and with Indian (developing the FTR750), and the XR750 was still their benchmark. Even though the Indian is doing really well, they still sometimes look for ideas from the XR750. It’s pretty crazy to think it was designed and built 50 years ago.”

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That same sort of awe is shared by the sport’s fanbase at large. Bekefy, who worked at Ducati,

IMZ Ural, Mission Motors, Alta Motors, and Triumph prior to taking his current position at H-D, still views the XR750 through the eyes of a fan.

“When I was a young kid from San Francisco, Harley-Davidson was two things: Easy Rider and flat track. I knew all these names; Parker, Springer, and for sure Carr. Norcal has a deep flat track legacy regardless of brand or rider, but those names I knew like I knew the States’ names.

Parker leads an entire pack of the greats including Nicky Hayden at the Springfield Mile Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker leads an entire pack of the greats including Nicky Hayden at the Springfield Mile Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker leads an entire pack of the greats including Nicky Hayden at the 1999 Springfield Mile.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

“It’s a legacy alive in the pits of AFT racing today. It’s awesome to hear stories of how the XR750 has played a pivotal role in the racing community. From late-night wrench sessions to the checkered flag, so many people have fond memories of the bike, and that continues to stick with me.”

While not intentional, it’s apt Bekefy should mention Easy Rider; the XR750’s generations-spanning success is due in no small part to the fact that, for all its power, it’s a famously easy-riding machine, albeit one far removed from the “Captain America” and “Billy Bike” H-D Hydra-Glide choppers featured in the film.

Kopp explained, “I see a fair amount of young kids who hop on an XR750 for the first time and do pretty darn good. I just think it generally puts the power to the ground and is such a super easy bike to ride… Big flywheels, doesn’t rev up all that quick…

“Actually, to me, as a racer, it could be kinda frustrating when we went to an easy track — like a real round, circle track that wasn’t real technical. When we were all on XR750s, everybody was so dang fast. Instead of five or six guys up front, it was 15. I was like, ‘Oh s—… here’s another one of those races.”

Bill Werner had a hand in developing the original cast-iron XR750 first introduced in 1970, and then played a critical role in transforming it into the all-dominant aluminum XR750 a couple years after that. As a race tuner of XR750s, he’s credited with 13 Grand National Championships and 130 Main Event wins. In other words, he knows its secrets better than anyone.

And one of those secrets is the fact that riders tuned themselves to the XR750 as much as the bike was tuned to them. Due to its rider-friendly nature, decades of racers built their styles around its strengths, creating a feedback loop of championship-winning glory.

Parker and George Roeder Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker and George Roeder Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker and George Roeder.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

Werner said, “So many riders, their internal clocks — their skillsets — revolved around the unique idiosyncrasies of that motorcycle. So when they jumped on something else that was foreign to them, that accelerated differently… like the Kawasakis and stuff that had lighter flywheel mass and maybe more horsepower… Some guys found it difficult to adapt to something different from what they knew.” 

Incredibly, even while celebrating the 50th anniversary of the XR750, it’s not dead yet, even if the factory Harley-Davidson squad moved on with the XG750R a few years back.

The XR750 reigned supreme at the very pinnacle of the sport as recently as 2017, when Jeffrey Carver Jr. dominated the Lone Star Half-Mile, leaving a stacked field of Indian FTR750s, Kawasaki Ninja 650s, H-D XG750Rs, and Yamaha FZ-07s in his wake.

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And just last season, Danny Eslick raced his way into the Main and snared a handful of championship points on an XR750 at the Lima Half-Mile.

Reflecting on its modern-day success, Parker said, “You can look at the lap times over the decades. Bryan Smith only recently took one of the records I had at Springfield. All these years, the XR has been… Some of these other bikes may be faster, but it just delivers the power and the traction to the ground and that’s what really matters.”

Kopp took it a step further. “I’ve got a really good, fresh one, sitting inside my home. If I ever dig it off the shelf for my kid, I would update the suspension, but other than that, she’s ready to go. I think they’re still good.

“I’m getting excited talking about it… This is making me want to go race again.”

Harley XR Sehl

Harley XR Sehl

Dave Sehl – Harley-Davidson XR750

It’s a definitional reality of racing that you can’t win by sitting in place. For the legendary Harley-Davidson XR750, that was every bit as true in the race shops as it was on the race tracks.

The basic platform has remained recognizable as the genuine article throughout its existence; the iconic XR750 name is not merely a common designation shared by an endless string of complete technical overhauls and reinventions as one might find in MotoGP.

That said, winning an average of ten-plus races per season over the span of a half-century required non-stop evolutionary innovations in order to extract every last molecule of performance from that basic platform.

Nine-time Grand National Champion Scott Parker said, “Think about it: The thing was designed 50 years ago and was competitive up until… I think people are still riding them from time to time today. They could still win races, that’s the cool thing about it.

Parker exhibiting the XR unbeatable speed Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker exhibiting the XR unbeatable speed Photo Dave Hoenig

Scott Parker exhibiting the XR750’s unbeatable speed.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

“Here you’ve got a motorcycle that is 50 years old and even through all the stages that it’s gone through to get here, there are some parts that have been there the whole 50 years, which is amazing.

“They kept trying to improve it and improve it and improve it, but it still had the same basic design… They just kept innovating, getting a tad bit better constantly, and here it is, still competitive all these years later.”

Ironically, the most successful racebike of all time is one Harley-Davidson likely would have preferred not to have to build, only designing it when its hand was forced.

Afterall, H-D already had its generational flat track machine in the flathead KR750 — at least up until it didn’t. Introduced a year before the Grand National Championship was first organized as a series in 1954, the KR750 immediately proved the GNC’s dominant mount and didn’t relinquish the throne for years.

The KR stormed to 13 of 16 Grand National Championship titles from ‘54-’69 while racking up a mammoth tally of race wins along the way, including every single one available in 1956.

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But the rulebook was updated in 1969, eliminating the 250cc displacement advantage for sidevalve machines that the KR750 had previously enjoyed. As a result, the gates were kicked down by Harley-Davidson’s more modern overhead valve-armed British rivals and the writing was on the wall.

Gene Romero won the GNC on a Triumph in 1970 followed by Dick Mann aboard a BSA in 1971.

Under factory race manager Dick O’Brien’s watch, Harley-Davidson moved quickly to adapt to the new regulations, Frankensteining the original “Iron XR750” from parts taken from the 883cc Sportster XLR outlaw racebike. In order to meet the 750cc displacement limit, the stroke was decreased while its bore was increased, but the pushrod V-Twin retained the XLR’s cast-iron head and cylinders.

13-time Grand National Championship-winning tuner Bill Werner was already employed in Harley-Davidson’s race shop at the time, kick-starting his long association with the XR750 from its nascent beginnings.

“I don’t think there’s anyone who’s been around an XR750 more than Bill,” Parker said. “He was there from the very beginning and eat, slept, and drank that bike. He loved them.”

Bill Werner in consult with his rider Scott Parker at the Du Quoin Mile Photo Dave Hoenig

Bill Werner in consult with his rider Scott Parker at the Du Quoin Mile Photo Dave Hoenig

Bill Werner in consult with his rider Scott Parker at the 1999 Du Quoin Mile.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

Werner said, “Yeah, I was privileged to be there at its inception and through all its development to its peak era. I was there right for the transition from the flatheads to the XRs, from the cast-iron XRs through the Aluminum XR — engine development, frame development, and all that sort of stuff. Not only was it a thrill, but it’s something you can look back at and say it’s part of your legacy.”

Reflecting on the initial task of bringing the original Iron XR to life for the 1970 season, Werner admitted, “It was a huge process. We had failures converting an 883 Sportster into a 750. We had to destroke it and we had flywheel issues. And then after we got those solved, we had to deal with the things overheating because they made good horsepower but they’d get too hot. We had all kinds of challenges to cooling them off.

“I had the sole task of converting them to dual carburetor kits. I welded up all the heads on the factory conversions, taking a front head and making two front heads and a dual-carb conversion out of it. I had to plug an exhaust port and move it from one side to the other to make the rear head.

“And I spent the better part of a year welding up all the heads, brazing them all up, and sticking them in 55 gallon drums of powdered asbestos to cool for two days because they’d crack through the valve guides if you didn’t do that.”

Harley-Davidson fielded the Iron XR750s for just two seasons while an alloy-based rethink was being readied. While not remembered nearly as fondly as the more refined XR750 to come due to performance and reliability issues, history has given it something of a bum rap.

Mert Lawwill debuted the Iron XR in winning fashion in a non-sanctioned outlaw race at Ascot, and then scored its first official GNC race victory weeks later, still early in the ‘70 season, at the Cumberland Half-Mile. It went on to rack up a combined ten victories during the 1970-1971 Grand National Championship seasons, providing clear evidence that Harley’s KR successor was destined to become a force in its own right from the start.

Werner said, “The cast-iron XR actually won races in its first year. We had failures and it didn’t win the championship, but it won races.

“We ultimately knew it was a stop-gap effort, and we were going to transition to the Aluminum XR. I got in on the ground floor of that too and was part of the dyno testing.”

The transition was more than just a simple elemental matter as the nickname change suggests. Harley-Davidson’s race department took full advantage of its second chance to introduce a new-generation racebike and leaned heavily on the lessons learned by the iron machine.

“Some of the things we learned in the flywheel area we incorporated into the ’72 Aluminum XR, even though it had a different bore and stroke and all that,” Werner explained. “We changed the lubrication system from a timed breather system to a mini-sump system. We changed the cam shaft diameters because the ball bearings closest to the crankcase would fail; we converted them and put in needle bearings on the crankshaft side.

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“Cam development was huge too because the engines were capable of more RPM — they had a bigger bore and shorter stroke than the cast-iron XR. The first heads had ports about the size of your finger, and we had to do all the cylinder flow work… You’re better off casting them with too much material because you can’t put it in and you can always take it out.”

The intensive and radical (re)development paid immediate benefits. With Mark Brelsford at the controls, the Aluminum XR finished as race runner-up in its national debut at the Colorado Springs Mile, won in its second race at the Louisville Half-Mile, and earned the Grand National Championship in its very first attempt.

The rest was record-book obliterating history, as the Aluminum XR750 would go on to win 492 of the XR’s ridiculous 502 premier-class race wins, along with its insane tally of 37 GNCs.

Of course, in order to achieve those results, continual development was required the entire way.

When asked, Werner rattled off various updates, stream-of-consciousness style. “The ports evolved from round to oval over time. The rocker shafts got changed from a clamp-type arrangement that held the adjustment to a nut-type arrangement that tightened it up. The shaft diameters changed. The RPM went up. The spring rates went up. We changed from steel valves to titanium valves.

“The engines used to start at maybe 7800 to 8000 rpm max, and by the end of its transition we were turning at 9500 rpm. We went from quarter-speed oil pumps to half-speed oil pumps to circulate more oil over the engine to cool it better. We went from aluminum cylinders with cast-iron liners to all-aluminum cylinders to nickel-plated aluminum cylinders that were lighter and cooled better.”

Over the years, all of those small improvements added up (and up… and up).

Parker said, “The first XR I got on had like 70-odd horsepower. By the time I was done, it was somewhere around 105. Over just the time that I rode one, that’s the difference we’re talking about.”

But not all of the development work was dedicated to a never-ending quest for more power, nor were they all so small and incremental. A full decade before Honda turned the Grand Prix world on its head with the introduction of the “big-bang” firing order for the NSR500 in 1992, H-D experimented with the same concept and for the same reason — seeking both maximum traction and a more rider-friendly mount.

Werner said, “One of the things we did on the XR was what they called “twingling.” The standard XR fires a 157.5-202.5 degrees… It’s a 45-degree V-Twin — one cylinder fires when the other one is on the exhaust stroke. It’s not symmetrical — it can’t be because it’s a 45, single crank.

“I thought, what if I fired them 45 degrees apart, just 45? All you have to do is turn two camshafts 180 degrees, turn one of the ignition shafts 180 degrees, and it will fire 45 degrees apart.

“It sounded like a big single. Some guys loved it, and some guys couldn’t tell much difference. It depended on the type of rider you were. If you were a real brave, aggressive guy… not that big of a deal.

“While we were first testing them, I was with (three-time Grand National Champion) Jay Springsteen at a dragstrip in California. I ran the “Twingle” down the racetrack, and he asked how it felt. I told him it felt butt-slow. He said, ‘Well, let’s compare it to the other bike.’ So we drag-raced them side-by-side and they were dead equal. We switched bikes and they were still dead equal.

“When you got on the Twingle, the sensation of speed was lessened. You didn’t hear that rush of high RPM. It’s like the difference between riding a single and a twin. So timid riders loved the Twingles because they could go faster than their normal intestinal fortitude would have let them.”

Whether it was actually down to rider temperament or something more tangibly mechanical, the Twingles proved to be serious weapons on more slippery surfaces and remained a popular choice of top riders until they were ultimately prohibited from competition in 2006.

Harley Davidson XR Tank

Harley Davidson XR Tank

Harley-Davidson XR750

A crucial difference motorcycle sport has long lorded over its four-wheeled counterpart — and continues to even in today’s electronics age — is the simple fact that on a bike the human behind the controls remains the ultimate factor determining wins and losses.

For all the decades of developmental work and mechanical black magic behind it, there’s no denying that the historic success of Harley-Davidson’s XR750 is also intrinsically tied to the heroics of a select group of otherworldly riders.

As covered previously, when presented with some novel rulebook hurdles in the late ‘60s, H-D responded with the creation of the original Iron XR750 in 1970 and then further iterated on that design with the superior Aluminum XR750, released just two years later.

The result of that engineering exercise was a well-balanced, rider-friendly package that provided a wide range of flat track artists an outstanding brush with which to paint their masterpieces on oval canvases of dirt and clay.

Harley Davidson XR Scott Parker Jay Springsteen Randy Goss Photo Mitch Friedman

Harley Davidson XR Scott Parker Jay Springsteen Randy Goss Photo Mitch Friedman

Harley-Davidson Racing Team XR750 – Scott Parker, Jay Springsteen, Randy Goss – Photo Mitch Friedman

The ‘72 machine was so good, in fact, it won the Grand National Championship in its first go and positioned itself as an unbeatable machine going forward.

However, as formidable as the XR and its rider line-up may have been, Harley-Davidson was beaten to the throne in ‘73 and ‘74, despite the fact that a full ten different riders claimed at least one victory on the XR750 through the end of that season — each one an eventual AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer, save Dave Sehl, who himself was inducted into the Canadian Motorcycle Hall of Fame.

But even with all of those future HoFers in its corner, H-D and the XR750 were ultimately outdone and outclassed by a truly transcendent talent in Kenny Roberts, despite the Californian being significantly outgunned on his Yamaha XS750.

To overcome Roberts, Harley needed its own ‘King.’ It might have already had one in Gary Scott, who actually beat Roberts for Rookie of the Year honors in ‘72 and then finished as runner-up to him in ‘73.

Scott decked out in the unmistakable Harley Davidson uniform in Photo NASCAR Archives

Scott decked out in the unmistakable Harley Davidson uniform in Photo NASCAR Archives

Gary Scott decked out in the unmistakable Harley-Davidson uniform in 1975.
Photo: NASCAR Archives

H-D signed Scott to the factory team in ‘74. And after notching up a second straight second-place season, he finally delivered Harley another Grand National Championship in 1975… before promptly leaving the squad in a contract dispute following the season.

Desperate to replace him with the most spectacular rider they could unearth — one who could go head-to-head with Roberts and Scott and somehow come out on top — Harley-Davidson turned to a flashy 18-year-old named Jay Springsteen who had just earned Rookie of the Year honors.

Bill Werner, who was fresh of earning his first GNC title as a mechanic, knew that things were going to be quite different within minutes of the first official meeting with ‘Springer’ ahead of the ‘76 season.

One season after winning Rookie of the Year Springsteen earns his first Grand National Championship in Photo NASCAR Archives

One season after winning Rookie of the Year Springsteen earns his first Grand National Championship in Photo NASCAR Archives

One season after winning Rookie of the Year, Springsteen earns his first Grand National Championship in 1976.
Photo: NASCAR Archives

“(Team manager Dick) O’Brien said, ‘Hey we’re going to have Springsteen come over to set up the bike for the Houston TT.’ Springer came into the shop and said, ‘Where’s the bike?’ I asked him if he wanted the rear brake on the right or the left.

And he said, ‘If you put it on the left, I’ll step on it over there, and if you put it on the right, I’ll step on it over there.’

“‘What about the handlebars?’

“‘Wherever they are is where I’ll put my hands.’

“And within two minutes he got on it and said, ‘Yeah, that’ll be okay.’

“Gary Scott was very, very finicky. I was used to working with a guy who had me taking a quarter inch of foam out of the seat because he didn’t feel comfortable on it. I went into O’Brien’s office and told him we were done setting up the bike, and he said, ‘What do you mean you’re done?’

“‘He said he’ll ride it just the way it is, and that’s fine.’”

It was ‘fine’ by even the most outlandish boundaries of the definition.

Springsteen defeated Roberts and Scott to claim the title in ‘76 and then again in ‘77. And for good measure, he added a third straight Grand National Championship to his résumé in 1978.

Springsteen established himself as the winningest rider in series’ history relatively early in his career and continued to build on that tally all the way into the new millennium. To this day, his 43 victories have only been eclipsed by three riders.

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Werner said, “Jay was just a huge natural talent. He didn’t jog or lift weights. He didn’t do any of that stuff. He rode motorcycles in the woods and did normal stuff, but he didn’t have a specific diet or a trainer. And he was always amazed that other people couldn’t do what he did.

“He said, ‘Come on, this isn’t that hard.’ And I was like, ‘You’re only an inch away from the fence all the time, doesn’t that scare you?’ ‘Nah. As long as you don’t hit the fence, you’re okay.’

“I remember at Toledo, Kenny Roberts had set the fast time in time trials, and then Jay went out and went faster. When Jay was coming into the pits, Kenny sat there watching and said, ‘Springer — I’m kind of curious. What’s your shut-off point going into Three? What’s your mark?’

“Jay said, “Shut-off point? I just hold it wide open and try not to crash.’

“Roberts walked away and said, ‘This guy is nuts…’

“He just ran it in there until the front end pushed and then the rear-end came around and he saved it and stayed on the gas. There was no plan, just stay on the gas.

“Jay did refine his skills over time, and he got a little more artful and realized that not every track was just a wide-open thing. He got better on grooves and whatnot, but in his early years his mentality was that the fastest way around was holding it wide open and trying not to crash.”

Guts clearly weren’t an issue for Springsteen, which makes it a sad irony that his stomach actually was his Achilles heel. Over the next few seasons, Springer missed numerous Main Events due to a mysterious ailment that doctors attributed to excessive acid flow brought about by nerves.

That opened the door for others to rush in, and the next five Grand National Championships went to four other riders armed with XR750s (again, each one of them a future Hall of Famer and with no overlap to the ten already referenced).

Despite the XR750’s continued success, Harley-Davidson again found itself searching for a handpicked successor who could rack up victories and string together multiple GNCs the way Springsteen had in the late ‘70s.

And again, it turned to a young rider bursting with talent in ‘79 Rookie of the Year Scott Parker, drafting him up to the works H-D squad midway through the ‘81 season.

Later becoming the winningest rider in the history of the sport Parker swagger and style are unmistakable on the racetrack Photo Dave Hoenig

Later becoming the winningest rider in the history of the sport Parker swagger and style are unmistakable on the racetrack Photo Dave Hoenig

Later becoming the winningest rider in the history of the sport,
Parker’s swagger and style are unmistakable on the racetrack.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

However, the early- and mid-’80s were a tumultuous time for Harley-Davidson in general, putting the factory race effort in dire jeopardy. It was extremely bad timing, as Honda was preparing to introduce a game changer.

Honda followed Yamaha’s playbook to beat Harley-Davidson by hiring a pair of ascending superstars in ‘82 GNC Ricky Graham and the ultra-talented Bubba Shobert, and then took it a full-step further by following Harley’s own playbook on the machinery side of the equation.

After enjoying only limited success with its CX500-based NS750 flat track machine in 1981 and 1982, Honda closely studied the basic design of the XR750 and then added some modern HRC touches to it.

Like the XR750, Honda’s new RS750 featured a four-speed 45-degree V-Twin (right down to identical 79.5mm x 75.5mm bore and stroke numbers) but also four-valves per cylinder and overhead cams as opposed to two valves and a pushrod design.

“Honda was smart,” Werner said. “They bought a couple XRs, and they took them apart because the XRs worked so well. They duplicated the flywheel mass and the V-Twin configuration, but they were pretty sure they didn’t want pushrods or two-valves. So essentially, it had a lot of the plus characteristics of the XR with none of the minuses.

“It didn’t really make any more power than an XR, it just made more RPM. So what’s the advantage? If an XR comes off the corner at six grand and the Honda comes off at seven grand and the terminal velocity is the same, they start up a thousand RPM on the band and just have more power on tap due to the RPM difference.”

The RS750 was tested in action during the ‘83 season (and even won the Du Quoin Mile courtesy of Hank Scott) before being fully unleashed on the series in 1984 with Graham and Shobert at the controls.

It proceeded to rip off four successive Grand National Championships.

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Meanwhile, Harley’s full factory effort had been effectively mothballed with the race department reduced to just a single employee — Werner — whose job at that point primarily consisted of shipping out parts to privateer teams.

However, even if the factory H-D team no longer existed, Parker insisted on having factory-level talent building and wrenching his XR750.

Werner said, “In ’85, the factory disbanded its racing team and gave all their riders their equipment and told them to hire their own tuners and stuff like that. About one or two races into the season, Scott Parker called and said, ‘I’m not happy with the guy I hired. I want to hire you.’ And I told him I was working full time and couldn’t do that. And he said, ‘Well, I’d rather have you working on my bike four hours a day than the other guy 20.’

“I agreed to go to work for him, but Harley-Davidson management didn’t want it to happen. They told Scott, ‘Nope, your contract says we get to authorize anybody you hire to make sure they’re competent.’

“Scott took it to his attorney, and his attorney said to Harley, ‘You’re right. You have the authority to judge whether the guy is competent. And this guy has won four national championships. How can you say he’s not competent?’

“Harley tried to argue that I wouldn’t have the time to do the job correctly, but Scott’s attorney said, ‘That’s not what the contract says. The contract only says competent.’

“So reluctantly, they let me go to work for Scott, and I did it all at home.”

Parker enjoyed his finest campaign as a professional yet that season, including a massive win at the Indy Mile which finally halted Honda’s dominant streak of Mile victories that had stretched into the double digits.

He ended the season ranked third in points and followed that up with a runner-up showing the following year as he and Werner continued to seek out new ways to derail the Honda freight train.

Werner said, “The RS was just a better engine than what the XR was. But it had it quirks too. It hit so hard it burned up tires more than what the XR did.”

Restrictor plates were added to the equation in 1987. Most will tell you the move was done solely to undercut the inherent advantages of the RS750, but Werner argued the Honda’s one weakness, in part, brought the penalty upon itself.

“(Burning up tires) was one of the reasons the AMA instituted the restrictors. They wanted to slow everybody down. There were a couple races in particular where the top riders went right through their tires. Goodyear wasn’t about to make new tires for that small a market. They transitioned to Carlisle tires for a while that were harder, but they’d go through those tires too. They had to keep shortening races from 25 laps to 20 laps to 15 laps and pretty soon the competition committee said, ‘This is nuts. Why don’t we just slow everybody up? You don’t have to go 130 on the straights. Why not just 120?’ It hurt all engines about the same. Having them all close was the key.”

Parker came within seven points of dethroning Shobert in 1987.

If anything, the XR750 platform had been made stronger due to the lessons learned during the race program’s hiatus and Honda’s run of dominance. And just as Harley-Davidson amped its factory program back up to full bore, Honda was gearing down and looking to exit, frustrated with the new regulations that had been put into place.

Werner explained, “Before I brought the program back into Harley-Davidson, I worked with different vendors and developed different cam profiles and other things that made Scott’s bike, I think, better than everybody else’s.

“We had an advantage, and it wasn’t due to the factory giving me s— because they only reluctantly allowed me to do it at all. But rather, I had the freedom to go to any vendor I wanted because I was on my own working out of my own garage. And a lot of those things got transitioned to the official product when I ultimately got to work in the department fulltime and they hired back more staff and a manager and all that other stuff.”

Parker did finally overcome Shobert to end the Honda dynasty in 1988 while starting one of his own; he would go on to claim four consecutive Grand National Championships from ‘88-’91.

Parker collecting the hardware for one of his many victories. Parker currently holds the record for most career wins at Photo NASCAR Archives

Parker collecting the hardware for one of his many victories. Parker currently holds the record for most career wins at Photo NASCAR Archives

Parker collecting the hardware for one of his many victories.
Parker currently holds the record for most career wins at 94.
Photo: NASCAR Archives

Ultimately, the challenge to Parker’s crown would come from within the throne room.

Harley-Davidson had learned to have a worthy heir in place. Just one year after Parker’s reign began, it found one in the gifted 1995 Rookie of the Year, Chris Carr.

Carr’s skillset was a bit different than Parker’s, which worked well in terms of making the factory XRs heavy favorites virtually every weekend, no matter the discipline, year after year.

Parker was the unquestioned maestro of the Mile; he raced the XR750 to an astonishing 55 Mile victories during the course of his career (more than twice as many as the current master of the form, Bryan Smith). Carr, meanwhile, was an unstoppable force at the TTs and the STs. And both riders were among the greatest Half-Milers the sport has ever seen.

Both styles worked equally well at racking up championship points. The next decade saw Parker and Carr engage in several of the greatest title fights in American Flat Track history.

Parker’s ‘91 title win over Carr came down to the tiebreaker, and then Carr struck back with his first Grand National Championship the following season, ending Parker’s run of four straight GNCs by just two points.

Parker left versus Carr right was a clash of titans on dirt Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker left versus Carr right was a clash of titans on dirt Photo Dave Hoenig

Parker (left) versus Carr (right) was a clash of titans on dirt.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

Ricky Graham broke up the epic annual intra-team title fights with an amazing ‘93 season to give the RS750 one final run to glory, before Parker reclaimed the #1 plate in ‘94, this time by four points over Carr.

Carr was drafted into the factory Harley-Davidson AMA Superbike team in ‘95 and would focus the bulk of his efforts hustling the VR1000 around on pavement for the following three years. During that time, Parker continued to stack up titles, the last (his ninth) coming by a scant two-point margin over Carr in ‘98 upon his rival’s full-time return to dirt track racing.

By ‘99, Carr was running his own team, had Kenny Tolbert wrenching his XRs, and had rounded into an all-around dirt track master, Miles very much included. He scored a blowout title triumph in Parker’s farewell season, setting the stage for a run of six dominant GNCs from ‘99-’05. That string was broken up only by Joe Kopp’s 2000 Grand National Championship, earned while Carr was splitting his time winning the short-lived Formula USA National Dirt Track Championship.

Reflecting on the Parker-Carr years, Kopp said, “It was pretty wild. They had some really heated years right before I stepped in. I got in late in their battle, and then Chris and I got to have a lot of battles ourselves over the years. It was really neat to be a part of that. Any time that I got to race Scottie or Ricky or Chris… Gosh, it was a helluva race.

“I remember Scottie’s last Springfield in 2000. Even though I was credited as the winner at the Dallas Mile in ‘99, that race was red flagged and ended on lap nine. So in my mind, I didn’t have an official Mile win at that point and was still looking for my first. Will (Davis) got his first Mile win that Saturday there at Springfield, and I finished second. The next day, sure as s—, Scottie Parker is here — ‘Mr Springfield ’ — and he comes out of retirement and goes and wins the thing and I got second again. I was like, ‘Damn!’ Even though he had been retired for a year or whatever, it was just an honor to race with him in a situation like that.

“I wish I could have been in the middle of more Scottie and Chris battles, but I had my fair share. I got frustrated enough in the few that I was in.”

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Carr continued to race into the 2010s, setting the bar extremely high during what was the formative era for a number of the today’s crop of AFT SuperTwins aces.

Ultimately, the three titans of the XR750 — Jay Springsteen, Scott Parker, and Chris Carr — combined to score a nearly unthinkable 183 GNC Main Event victories and 19 Grand National Championships on the iconic machine.

Previously we covered the genesis and development of Harley-Davidson’s XR750, as well as the outsized contributions to its glorious history made by three titanic talents in Jay Springsteen, Scott Parker and Chris Carr.

However, while those stories of the XR span from the ‘60s into the new millennium and effectively defined the careers of perhaps the three greatest riders American Flat Track has ever known, it’d be a great disservice to the bike to suggest its history ends there.

In truth, the legacy of the XR750 transcends far beyond even those eras, heroes, and the sport of dirt track racing entirely.

To briefly address that last point first, it could be argued that no two-wheeled icon and their equipment have achieved the same sort of celebrity, and been etched so permanently into the public consciousness, as daredevil Evel Knievel and his fleet of red, white, and blue XR750s.

And the XR didn’t only succeed on dirt or in the air. Cal Rayborn was the hero of the ‘72 Transatlantic Match Races on a roadrace-spec Iron XR750 TT, and then gave the Aluminum XR its only two GNC roadrace victories later that year at Indianapolis Raceway Park and Laguna Seca.

Mark Brelsford actually earned the first (and only other) GNC roadrace win for the platform in ‘71 at Loudon on an Iron XR. A couple years later, Brelsford’s #1 Aluminum XR750 TT went up in flames (along with his hopes of defending the Grand National Championship) in a dramatic crash at Daytona International Speedway.

A decade later, that same destroyed bike was pulled from purgatory and re-forged into a pumped-up 1000cc XR-based racer that promptly won the Battle of the Twins race at Daytona with Springsteen at the controls.

If that wasn’t good enough, the resurrected machine was then dubbed “Lucifer’s Hammer,” wrenched by famed H-D tuner Don Tilley, and wielded by Gene Church. The pairing went on to claim the AMA BOTT crown for three years running from ‘84-’86.

But even when taking only the XR’s flat track accomplishments into consideration, there’s so much more to the story. While Springsteen, Parker, and Carr did combine for an astonishing 183 Main Event victories and 19 Grand National Championship, simple arithmetic tells you that still leaves an additional 319 wins and 18 GNCs on the docket.

Digging a bit deeper, 55 riders other than the Big Three won races on the XR750, and 11 of those 55 earned at least one Grand National Championship onboard it.

The full story of XR750’s reign also happens to be very much a modern one. Of those 18 non-Springsteen/Parker/Carr titles, the bulk of them came following Carr’s final Grand National Championship in 2005.

It’s only due to recency bias that it feels like the recent history of American Flat track can be summed up as the rise of the Kawasakis — culminating in Bryan Smith’s 2016 crown — followed one year later by both Harley-Davidson’s full pivot to the XR750’s successor — the production-based XG750R — and the return of Indian Motorcycle with its purpose-built XR killer, the FTR750.

The reality is the XR750 played as the backdrop for all of those monumental developments, leading ubiquity to instantly seem like antiquity.

The all-guns-blazing reemergence of Indian Motorcycle, in particular, had a massive impact on the sport. Indian followed the blueprint utilized so effectively by Honda in the mid-’80s with its once-dominant RS750 and perfected it with the added edge of three decades of technological advancements to call upon.

2000 Grand National Champion Joe Kopp was brought onboard in a testing and developmental role in 2016 and found the FTR to be instantly familiar following a long and successful career campaigning XRs.

Kopp in the midst of his championship hunt Photo Dave Hoenig

Kopp in the midst of his championship hunt Photo Dave Hoenig

Kopp in the midst of his 2000 championship hunt.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

He said, “It has a purpose-built engine like in the XR750… I wouldn’t say they copied it, but there are a lot of the same things, like a four-speed transmission and big heavy flywheels on the crank… a lot of similarities.

“The only thing that’s really different, I’d say, is the modern technology with fuel injection and ignition timing and stuff like that.”

Kopp gave the all-new FTR750 its AFT debut in a shakedown ride at the ‘16 season finale ahead of its impending full-scale 2017 campaign.

The 47-year-old turned some heads with his seventh-place run in the Indian’s maiden performance at the Santa Rosa Mile, but that effort was largely overshadowed by Brad Baker, who gave the XR750 a proper sendoff by winning the machine’s final outing as a full-factory racebike in blowout fashion.

There was no denying Indian Motorcycle the spotlight the very next day, however, when it enacted the next stage of its plan for dirt track domination. Yamaha had beaten H-D and its superior XR750 in the ‘70s thanks primarily to the singular brilliance of Kenny Roberts. Honda had then done the same with its outstanding RS750 and a pair of superstars in Ricky Graham and Bubba Shobert in the ‘80s.

Indian took it one step further. It hired the series’ three most recent Grand National Champions, Smith, Baker, and — the biggest catch of all — Jared Mees, assembling its own version of the “Wrecking Crew.”

By that point, Mees had been well on his way to expanding the exclusive “Titans of the XR750” club to four. Before signing with Indian, he’d already claimed four GNCs on the XR and ranked seventh in the machine’s history with 20 victories to his credit.

Mees seen here running one of many plates this one in Photo Dave Hoenig

Mees seen here running one of many plates this one in Photo Dave Hoenig

Mees seen here running one of many #1 plates, this one in 2015.
Photo: Dave Hoenig, Flat Track Fotos

Since joining Indian, Mees has only accelerated his assault on the record books, storming past Springsteen in all-time wins (now with 48 to Springer’s 43, trailing only Parker’s 94 and Carr’s 78).

And as a result, the perception of his place has likely been forever altered; the same way Ricky Graham, who took the 1982 Grand National Championship on an XR750, is best remembered as the master of the RS750, Mees seems destined to be most closely aligned with the FTR750 after his racing days are done.

Mees clinched the FTR’s first title in its opening attempt with two races still remaining in the 2017 season. With the championship already locked up, he entered the penultimate race of the year in Fort Worth, Texas, riding a run of five consecutive oval wins (a streak that likely would have been eight if not for some uncharacteristic start line mishaps at Lima)

Similar to the situation that helped pave the way for Honda’s overwhelming success in the ‘80s, Indian’s ascent transpired while H-D’s factory race program was most vulnerable, deep in the development phase of the new XG platform.

Yet, despite being “officially” left behind, the XR750 still had some fight left in it yet.

Privateer Jeffrey Carver, Jr., showed up for the Lone Star Half-Mile in a van with just crew chief Ben Evans in tow and a single XR750 loaded up with them.

Carver aboard his XR at the Lonestar Half Mile Photo Scott Hunter

Carver aboard his XR at the Lonestar Half Mile Photo Scott Hunter

Carver aboard his XR750 at the 2017 Lonestar Half-Mile.
Photo: Scott Hunter, American Flat Track

“We actually broke our Kawi the week before,” Carver explained. “We thought we were going to have to ride the backup, but its motor wasn’t as good. We were sitting there at the shop, and Gary Goodwin was there. He had given us an XR, and he was like, ‘What about that bike?’

“’I don’t know… We’d need two of them.’

“‘Welp, you’ve got one good one and that’s all you need. Imagine being the last one to ever win a race on an XR750.’

“Man, I was so fired up. I’m not one to say, ‘Hey, we’re going to go to this race and win. I just let the energy play itself out.”

Even with a field stacked with Indian FTR750s, H-D XG750s, Kawasaki Ninja 650s, and Yamaha FZ-07s, nothing stood a chance against Carver and that XR750 on a slick Texas Motor Speedway surface.

Nine-time GNC Parker said, “When you’re on a track, the XR delivers the horsepower down to the track. When it gets slippery, the XR just has the characteristics to really hook up to the ground. The Yamahas struggled at that in their era and the Hondas struggled at that for a period of time too. That’s the big thing of it. It will hook up to the racetrack where the other bikes would struggle trying to get tires to hook up onto the dirt.”

Carver said, “I had been close — podiums and running up front. At the beginning of that year, I was going to quit and maybe try to find something else to do, at least part time. I didn’t even know if I was going to the West Coast for the races. To come out and have that drive and that grit… I didn’t care — you had the factory Harleys, the factory Indians. To be able to go there and win… It was just amazing. I just had this determination in my eyes that day.”

Only one rider could so much as keep Carver in sight that evening — Mees, who finished over a second-and-a-half back in second.

Carver leading title contender Mees Photo Scott Hunter

Carver leading title contender Mees Photo Scott Hunter

Carver leading 2017 title contender Mees.
Photo: Scott Hunter, American Flat Track

“I tried so hard to gain on him… I couldn’t bridge the gap,” Mees admitted.

Excitedly taking the checkered flag Carver proudly takes the victory lap on his XR Photo Scott Hunter

Excitedly taking the checkered flag Carver proudly takes the victory lap on his XR Photo Scott Hunter

Excitedly taking the checkered flag, Carver proudly takes the victory lap on his XR750.
Photo: Scott Hunter, American Flat Track

As the weekends and seasons continue to add up, Carver’s underdog victory in Texas seems more and more likely to go down as the XR750’s last hurrah. He did wheel it back out at the Atlanta Short Track early in 2018 to score another podium finish, but the series has only further fallen into Indian’s clutches.

Since Carver’s upset, the FTR750 has taken 34 out of a possible 37 Main Event triumphs. Meanwhile, while improving, Harley’s factory XG750R racebike is still looking for its first.

Carver mechanic Ben Evans proudly celebrates the victory Photo Scott Hunter

Carver mechanic Ben Evans proudly celebrates the victory Photo Scott Hunter

Carver’s mechanic Ben Evans proudly celebrates the victory.
Photo: Scott Hunter, American Flat Track

While impossible to predict at the time, Carver did give the XR750 one final bragging right. The FTR750 closed out the decade with 47 wins. And thanks to Carver, the XR750 ended the 2010s with 48.

The XR750 is now largely absent from AFT competition. Danny Eslick did manage to score points on it last season at Lima, but that served as only a fleeting reminder of the potential of its continued relevance.

Kopp said, “Sure, one hasn’t won since 2017. But we really haven’t seen them much on the track since then with a real capable rider. Honestly, there are some tracks… if I was 20 or 30 years younger, I would still choose the XR750 at times over an Indian, honestly.”

Asked if he believed it could still win, Parker said, “I do. I really do. Why would you not expect it? My career ended in 2000. Twenty years later… They kept tweaking it here, tweaking it there… You can have a 1000-horsepower motorcycle, but you’ve still got to hook it up to the ground, and that’s the key issue. Just because you’ve got a faster, more powerful bike, doesn’t mean you can go faster around a circle.”

Kopp added, “I know you could still win on that thing. There are certain tracks where it’s favorable in my mind. A slick clay car track — the slicker the better for that thing — and with a more rounded straightaway, it would be hard to beat still. I’m confident in that.”

Imagine that… For all the obvious reasons laid out in this series and multitudes left unstated, the XR750 is widely considered to be the most successful racebike in motorcycle racing history — perhaps the greatest vehicle in motorsports history. Is there even any competition? What other mechanical wonder boasts a half-century reign spent transforming talents into heroes and heroes into legends? And best of all, this legacy might not yet be fully written.

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Source: MCNews.com.au

2020 MX Nationals will be the last for Kevin Williams and WEM

WEM To Step Down At Conclusion of The 2020 MXstore MX Nationals

After 23 years as the promoter of the MX Nationals, Williams Event Management “WEM” will officially step down as the promoter of the series at the conclusion of the 2020 MXstore MX Nationals season, handing the commercial rights of the series back to Motorcycling Australia. This announcement had been expected and was made official today with this statement from Kevin Williams. 

Kevin Williams – WEM

“First and foremost I would like to take this opportunity to thank Motorcycling Australia and all of the MX Nationals series sponsors, teams, riders and stakeholders that have supported our time promoting the MX Nationals over the past 23 years.

“We began managing the series back in 1997 when there were only two factory team trucks and a handful of full time staff in what was essentially a cottage industry. I am extremely proud to see where the industry sits today at what I would estimate is well over 500 full time employees or small businesses, that includes the teams and their personnel, our event staff and NRGTV crew, independent suspension and motor technicians, media outlets, coaches and fitness trainers, the list goes on.

“WEM has and always will be a family business that provided us with an incredible lifestyle, memories and camaraderie whilst travelling the country with my wife Christine, our children and our small staff running MX Nationals events. Our time promoting MX Nationals is something I will always cherish.

“I’m sure many people are asking why it is now time to step away from promoting the series at the end of 2020? The honest answer is, it is a reflection of the times, where the industry currently sits and the fact that the landscape of sporting events and digital entertainment is changing. Through our various initiatives over the years we have kept audiences entertained both trackside, along with TV coverage and more recently MX Live on the NRGTV livestream, but the expense both to WEM and the industry has to be realistic and in this current environment that is something that as a private promoter I feel we can no longer achieve if we were to proceed into 2021.

“WEM has always prided itself as a company that has been able to pay our bills and remain solvent, whilst many promoters over the years have come and gone, some with great detriment to the industry, our business model has always remained solid.

“This is not a knee jerk reaction, although unfortunately the Coronavirus outbreak has further changed the business landscape of the industry for the foreseeable future, I was honest and vocal about my concerns regarding the 2020 season at the end of 2019. As everyone is aware, Motorcycling Australia has stepped in to ensure the viability of the series for this year, but a new model needs to be established for racing at a National level in Australian Motocross to remain sustainable.

“It is my opinion that a more grassroots model for the Australian Motocross Championship is needed to ensure the long term sustainability of the series and WEM will continue to work with Motorcycling Australia to help establish what that model looks like for 2021 and beyond.”

Australian Supercross Rnd Brisbane KevinWilliams

Australian Supercross Rnd Brisbane KevinWilliams

Kevin Williams


Peter Doyle, CEO of Motorcycling Australia

“This announcement marks the end of an era. On behalf of the Motorcycling Australia Federation, I would like to thank Kevin, Christine and the entire WEM Team for their contribution, dedication and passion over the last twenty plus years.  The last decade has brought a significant amount of change to racing and WEM have always been at the forefront of supporting and creating pathways for Australian Motocross competitors.

“Motorcycling Australia are currently in the process of developing a plan for the future of Motocross and the 2021 National Motocross Season in consultation with Championship stakeholders. As outlined at the beginning of 2020, the objective of Motorcycling Australia was to support the WEM Team throughout their final season. We still hope to do this in the second half of the year, when we are able to go racing once more.”


The 2020 MXstore MX Nationals is scheduled to begin at Connondale, Qld, August 9th

Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto News Weekly | YZ250F Racer | Manji canned | AMA MX

Moto News Weekly Update

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AMA Pro Motocross

The Pro Motocross schedule remains under revision pending confirmation of state re-opening guidelines. The opening round is tentatively set for July 4th with the series concluding on October 3rd. The organisers hope to announce final dates and locations by May 15th.


GNCC

GNCC Racing will tentatively resume May 16/17 at Aonia Pass MX in Washington, GA (same location as round 3) and then on May 30/31 at a location in South Carolina. 


Manjiump 15,000 Cancelled

With no set date to work towards and many many other deciding factors against them, organisers Dirt High Promotions have chosen to cancel the 2020 running of the iconic Manjimup 15,000 event in the south-west of Western Australia.  


Racebike Research – Levi Rogers YZ250F

Let’s take a closer look at will be the YZ250F of Levi Rogers. Rogers will make his debut in the MXD class for 2020 after progressing through the Yamaha Junior Racing program. The majority of his junior racing saw Rogers on basically standard bikes and things won’t change a lot for the 2020 season as he learns more about racing and his needs from the bike.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers PR Corner A

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers PR Corner A

Levi Rogers YZ250F

Starting from the Top

Rogers is a man child. Despite just turning 17, he is over 180cm tall and weighs in at 80kilos so a lot of the ergonomic changes made to his bike are to suit his tall frame. He uses Pro Taper SX High bend handlebars with Pro Taper diamond pattern grips. They are mounted on stock triple clamps with the mounts in the forward / forward position, again to give him more room.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers bike and head

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers bike and head

Levi Rogers YZ250F

The team use standard levers and controls that are greased and lubes regularly to keep them light and airy. He also favours a gripper seat cover to help stay in position on the bike. Since the inception of the 2019 model, the sub frame and general chassis remains standard.

Motor

The 2020 motor on the YZ250F is a great starting point. In fact, since the reverse cylinder was introduced to the YZ250F in 2014, it has been a class leader as far as power placement and output is concerned and has the championship success around the world to prove it.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Motor A

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Motor A

Levi Rogers YZ250F

The head is flowed by Kevin Marshall. Kev is the brains behind the Yamaha Road Racing team bikes and has years of experience both in the road and off road field. He does each head by hand after hours of studying them and working out the angles he needs for the style of power requested. Kev is never about the peak number, he is about rideability and his attention to detail is second to none. The standard cams and standard piston are used with no modifications.

A Rush O2 airfilter is used for better air flow as clean air to the YZ250F motor produces more power. Add to that an Akrapovic exhaust, some ETS MA-3 100 fuel and some mapping via the OEM Yamaha power tuner app and you have all the performance gains you need. GYTR engine covers are fitted to the clutch and the ignition side of the bike for that factory bike look. The final piece of the puzzle is the gearing where Rogers bounces between 13-49 or 13-50 depending on the track.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Motor

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Motor

Levi Rogers YZ250F

Suspension

Levi has worked with Michael Marty of Brisbane Dirt Bike services in recent times and instead of just wasting that relationship, Rogers has continued with Michael and has fine-tuned his suspension to his needs. The valving has been altered, as has the spring rates and oil heights. The forks are coated and use SFK fork seals to reduce as much stiction and increase a smoother action.

Working off a static ride height of around 35mm and a rider sag of 105mm, Marty changes the spring to suit on the rear and then tunes the front similarly to ensure balance remains in the bike and the basic geometry is right.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers PR jump

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers PR jump

Levi Rogers YZ250F

Odds and Ends

Rogers is a huge fan of the Dunlop MX33 and uses it almost everywhere apart from the sandy based tracks where he might match the MX33 front with the paddle like MX12 rear. Wheels are mounted to OEM hubs, spokes and rims apart from supercross, where are stronger Excel rim is used to handle the big impacts. He also adjusting to running mousse tubes for the first time in his career as flat tyres often don’t lead to championship success.

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Rear wheel

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Rear wheel

Levi Rogers YZ250F

The team add a second starter button and position it on the frame to be used as a back up in case of a crash. Learning from experience, a crash can often damage what’s mounted to the handlebars, including the start button, so a spare is made and mounted to the frame.

A GYTR holeshot button is on the bike and apart from a concrete start, you wouldn’t race without one. Most mounts come with a template for heights starting at 65, 85 and 100mm but most riders now go lower than that and often the start button height is anywhere between 115 and 145mm down the fork guard.

Yamalube oils and lubes are ran throughout the bike, from RS4GP in the motor to S1 Suspension fluid in the fork.

The last remaining bits to be added is a skid plate, that the team use from the FX model, as well as the clean and corporate looking sticker kit from Serco.

Spec Check- Levi Rogers YZ250F – #44
  • Mechanic – Nash Ilhe
  • Cylinder head: OEM with YRD flow
  • Piston: OEM
  • Cams: OEM
  • Clutch: OEM
  • Throttle body: OEM
  • ECU: Yamaha Power Tuner – mapped to suit engine mods
  • Exhaust: Akrapovic
  • Airfilter: Rush o2
  • Fuel: ETS MA-3 100
  • Gearing: 13-50
  • Engine Covers: GYTR
  • Fork: KYB with coatings and revalved to suit rider
  • Shock: KYB
  • Handlebars: Pro Taper SX High bend
  • Grips: Pro TaperClamps: OEM in forward / forward
  • Chain: DID ERT3 520Sprockets: JT
  • Tyres: Dunlop MX 33 with Dunlop Mousse
  • Seat Cover: Gripper from Top Line
  • Decals: Serco

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Bike

Yamaha YZF Levi Rogers Bike

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Wilson Todd has ACL surgery

Wilson Todd is recovering from recent ACL surgery, the Aussie taking the opportunity that the break in racing has afforded him to get in, get it done and get on the road to recovery.


AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Marty Smith dies in crash

Marty Smith, a 2000 inductee into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame, died Monday, April 27, from injuries sustained in a dune buggy crash in Southern California. He was 63.

Marty Smith

Marty Smith

Marty Smith

Also killed in the crash was Smith’s wife, Nancy Smith.

A three-time AMA Motocross National Champion, Smith won the inaugural AMA 125cc Motocross Championship in 1974. He successfully defended his title in 1975, and also won the 1977 AMA 500cc Motocross Championship and the 1975 and 1976 125cc U.S. Motocross Grand Prix events. Smith also competed in AMA Supercross for four seasons (1978-1981).

Born in San Diego, Calif., on Nov. 26, 1956, Smith started riding with his father, Al, on a step-through Honda 50 in the California desert. He took part in his first motocross race at age 14. Smith became a regular at Southern California tracks and started winning races on a regular basis. During his formative racing years, he had no professional trainers and learned by carefully observing the fast guys, then applying what he saw.

Smith became known as one of the most precise riders in motocross history. His riding style remained smooth throughout his races and he rarely crashed.

Smith won all of his championships with Honda, and the company featured him in its advertising, using his long hair and youthful good looks as a selling point. He was on dozens of magazine covers riding the legendary Honda Elsinore, donning the famous red, white and blue racing colors. Smith became the first teen idol in motocross and legions of young fans followed his every move.

He retired from racing in 1981 and developed a motocross school called the Marty Smith Motocross Clinic.

Marty Smith

Marty Smith

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Yamaha backed Motocross Coaching Clinics

Yamaha Motor Australia has a vast bank of knowledge when it comes to motocross coaching. Most states have their own coach in place to cater for riders of all levels and across all off road disciplines and Yamaha continue to work with them to ensure they offer the best possible advice and tuition.

What started out nearly 40 years ago with Stephen Gall running his local MX schools in NSW before taking it national and his University of Motocross programs, Yamaha are still actively involved in rider coaching and still want riders to enjoy riding dirt bikes in a safe manner.

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Jades Oates coaching

Cameron Taylor, Shane Metcalfe, Jay Wilson, Jades Oates and Brody Jennings all run Yamaha supported and endorsed riding schools in various regions across Australia. Each of these guys have years of knowledge under their belts, collectively they are close to 100 years, and are more than happy to pass it on to the next generation. Each of these guys run riding schools all over the place and are passionate about safe dirt bike riding.

And all of them are heavily involved in Yamaha Junior Racing program’s and can often be seen working closely with riders on race day but are open to any level rider on any brand of bike.

With the slow-down in activity due to COVID-19, we got some advice from these guys to get their take on the coaching game and what they can do to assist you to become a better rider.


What’s the most important thing you can teach a rider new to dirt bikes?

SM: The basic techniques of controlling your dirt bike which in turn will make you a safer rider. Learning to use your brakes, clutch and throttle are never ending and the better you are at them, the safer rider you will be.

JO: Above all else, a solid foundation in riding technique is essential to becoming a competent and safe rider and also listening to them and understanding their goals so I can help them achieve them.

BJ: Safety and key fundamentals are the two things I think every rider needs to learn and be aware of. Be skilled at riding your bike and be aware that it can be dangerous, and you need to be smart about how you approach things.

JW: The biggest thing we focus on at our school is the basics of riding a motorcycle and teaching the correct technique, to make sure we are creating safer and smarter riders. When a rider is wanting to take the next step forward with their riding we want to give them the correct tools to do it safely, so that when their speed increases they know how to manage it properly.

CT: Body position is key. Starting with a good position on the bike enables everything else to fall in place. Like anything, if the initial set up is wrong, it makes it hard to correct and keep your entire technique in place.

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Jades Oates coaching


What do you offer at your riding schools?

SM: I try to cover as much as possible so everyone from the beginner to the advanced rider will learn something. We start as the basics from body position and bike control through to jumping and scrubbing to help every rider.

JO: I offer a wide range of coaching that covers everything from private one on one tuition through to a full and comprehensive live in style program that covers everything from on and off bike training, nutrition and mental conditioning.

BJ: I cover everything from beginner to advanced and we have a wide variety of riders in Tasmania so is something I constantly monitor. I can share my years of knowledge on riding and racing as well as being part of the industry to hopefully make someone’s motorcycle journey a fun and safe one.

JW: Being a current racer, I’m progressing with the techniques and skills that are currently being used and won with now. When I run a school I’m able to translate what I’m using myself while racing, I believe this is a massive benefit.

CT: I think the platform for any successful athlete is doing the basics well and training them so they become second nature to the rider. So, we work hard on things like body position and bike control at the start of our schools. I also enjoy working with a range of riders as it’s just as rewarding seeing a rider master something basic as it is to see a pro improve a lap time. With my years of experience, I can offer advice and mentoring for juniors to vets, club guys to pros.

Rider Training Cam Taylor coaching

Rider Training Cam Taylor coaching

Cam Taylor Coaching


What has been the biggest change in the way we ride our bikes?

SM: Now days, I see a lot of riders overlook technique for speed. A good technique will allow you to rider faster and also much safer instead of just holding it on and hope it all works out. I see a lot of technique missing from modern riders these days.

JO: For me, it’s been the progression in the way we use our body in riding the bike and the dynamic effect it has. We see riders now ride on the toes more frequently than their heels and we see riders using a far more aggressive technique in clutch and rpm as well as things like scrubbing.

BJ: I think the bikes themselves have played a huge part in how we ride these days. The performance level of the bike and then the amount of knowledge around it – from suspension to motor and then to coaching means riders can access it all easily and make gains quickly.

JW: I think the influence the US has on our riders. Australians have always looked to America and mimicked the way they ride. Honestly our tracks don’t allow us to ride that aggressively, so you are seeing riders looking more to Europe now and trying to mimic that style of riding. Standing on the pegs, lower RPMs and roll speed, allows us to be more efficient in the bike. Especially having raced Supercross in the US now, the way we need to ride here in Australia is completely different.

CT: Riding on the balls of our feet has changed the way we ride. When we were growing up, there was never any discussion about how to place your feet, only about grabbing the bike with your knees. Riding on your toes gives you a light and agile feel on the bike and allows more freedom as you work with the bike.

Rider Training Brody Jennings

Rider Training Brody Jennings

Brody Jennings Coaching


Can you see a young rider who has ‘it’?

SM: I think you can, if you know what you are looking for. You can identify talent and ability but that is only a small part of the equation. I saw Alex Larwood when he was on a 50 and thought he was talented but that didn’t mean he would be successful and still doesn’t. But I could see he had an ability to ride a bike well at a young age.

JO: 100% you can. That never means the rider is a sure thing and will have along and successful career and so many other factors come into it, but you can definitely see talent at a young age. I think the 15-18 year bracket is the hardest for a motocross rider and if they can maintain focus and work ethic through that period, changes are they will enjoy a good career.

BJ: Tough question. The answer is yes but you are never 100% sure. There are a few I work with that I think have the ability to go a long way in motocross but there are so many elements that make a champion.

JW: I think you can see as a rider develops they go through stages. Generally, under the age of 12, the rider who does well is often the one that rides the most and has access to land. From 12- 16 you can identify the talent and ability a rider has and how natural their technique is. Over the age of 17, it comes down to combining that talent with dedication and hard work as there is no-where to hide in a 30 minute moto.

CT: For sure you can. Not just in the way they ride but how they approach their riding and how they dissect a track. Not only to do they have a smooth and fluid style, they clearly think about their racing both on and off the track.

Rider Training Cam Taylor coaching

Rider Training Cam Taylor coaching

Cam Taylor Coaching


How do you deal with parents who think they have the next Chad Reed on their hands?

SM: Firstly, you remind them that everyone can be as good as Chad Reed if they have the work ethic, determination and are willing to make the sacrifices that he and his family did. But you also point out that while there has been a few guys that have come close, there has only been one Chad Reed in our sports history.

JO: I think an honest discussion between myself and the parent is vital here, so we are laying out realistic goals for the rider and the family. I’m massive for confidence in a rider and their supporters but their needs to be a realistic approach and reduce the pressure on the rider to live up to them. And also ensure the fun factor remains with both the rider and family.

BJ: Generally, these are the most passionate parents, just their energies are a little misplaced. I would go for a gentle conversation to bring them back down to earth and try and direct their energy in a positive fashion. If that doesn’t happen, generally the sport tends to weed them out.

JW: Everyone wants to be the next Chad Reed, don’t they? I encourage them to have those goals and dreams but also know that Chad is a once in a lifetime rider who devoted everything he had to become what he did. So, chase those goals, but never lose sight of why you started, the enjoyment and fun factor should always stay with you.

CT: Carefully! I have been a bit too brutal and honest at times and you never want to crush anyone’s dreams or hopes so you have to get a good understanding of what it is they want for the child or from the sport.

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Jades Oates coaching


Can an over 40 year old with a Dad bod and five year old bike still gain something from going to a riding school?

SM: They sure can! Everyone can learn something from a riding school and in fact I continue to learn more from a lot of the schools I do. If you have an open mind and are willing to take on advice, then there is always something to gain.

JO; 100% they can. We have had riders from all ages and skill level say they have gained something from our schools.

BJ: Yes. No question things can be learned and for a lot of those 40 year old’s, it can also be a good time to spend with your child in a shared passion. Riding with my son is amazing and be at a school together would be a great way to spend time with each other.

JW: Absolutely, in fact we have done schools in regional and rural areas where farmers have come along. Riding bikes on properties is part of their day and if they can do it better, then of course it’s worth it. I’m just as happy to work with a guy on his AG bike rounding up the cows if my advice can make his life a little safer and easier.

CT: I have had 60 year old riders at our riding days and they have as got much from it as the younger guys. Most of the older riders grew up when there was very little coaching, so they have years of bad habits and dated techniques. By the end of the day, they have adapted and found a better way to ride and general are both safer and faster.

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Rider Training Jades Oates coaching

Jades Oates coaching

How can people contact you regarding coaching?

SM: Via my website is the best way; https://sm25coaching.com/
JO: I can be contacted via my social media or website; https://oatesmx.com.au/
BJ: Social media channels work best for me; Facebook and Instagram.
JW: I’m available through social media- both personal and Hastie Co.
CT: Call me, hit me up on social media or : http://www.camerontaylormx.com/

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Source: MCNews.com.au

Coppins and Dack on when they chose to hang up their boots and other things…

Josh Coppins and Craig Dack

Both were riders at the highest level. Both have managed race teams to great success. Both have been in racing for over 30 years. One is JCR, the other is CDR. Coppins and Dack. Between them there are countless championships around the world, years of experience and a shared passion of dirt bikes.

They worked together as rider and manager, now they have a close association on running race teams. Let’s get their thoughts on racing, managing and motocross in general.


The moment you knew you were done in racing as a rider?

JC: “I know the exact moment. I was back in the UK visiting my family early in 2012 between some rounds of the MX Nationals. I was doing some riding at Fat Cat Moto Park and it was cold, wet, raining and just a miserable day and sitting there between rides looking out over the track and I knew that I didn’t want to do this anymore. I returned back to Australia and announced my retirement for the end of the 2012 season while at the Appin MX Nationals. I was fortunate enough to win the championship in my final year, but I had done enough. I had no more motivation to race at that level again.”

CD: “It was the winter of 1992 and I had just returned from two broken wrists. I entered a local race at Monza Park, Ballarat to get myself back in to race shape and it was the coldest, windiest, muddiest day and I recall I fell off and drove my hand into the ground and broke my wrist again. As I was getting back to the pits, I made up my mind that this was the end. I finished out the year and never raced again.”

Josh Coppins ImageSrice

Josh Coppins ImageSrice

Josh Coppins retired in 2012 and won the Australian MX Championship that year by 11-points over a young Todd Waters – Image by Shayne Rice


What’s easier, a racer or a team manager?

JC: “A racer is far easier. It’s only about you as a racer, your life is selfish in that you can control how you prepare, how fit you are and for the most part, your result in the race. As a manager, I sit on the side lines and hope that the rider has all that under control.”

CD: “A racer for sure, but in saying that, during my time in racing, the riders were the ones that did the majority of the deals with the sponsors anyway, so there wasn’t a lot of difference. For me, it wasn’t until I returned from Europe in 1991 that I had someone take care of a lot of those things for me. But I think a racer has a lot less to be concerned about and they are generally younger and more carefree in life anyway.”

Craig Dack post race 1988

Craig Dack post race 1988

Craig Dack post race in 1988


Your most memorable moment as a racer?

JC: “For me, the Spanish GP in 2007. I went 1-1 on the day and was leading the world championships. It was a long time coming but a great feeling and something I will always remember.”

CD: “The year 1986 stands out to me the most and the event that always comes to mind is the MXoN in Italy where I finished second in class. It was a day as a rider you rarely get, and everything clicked. I felt amazing and there was 60,000 people there watching. I was racing with the likes of David Bailey, Rick Johnson and all the European riders and to be in the group was something I won’t forget.”

Coppins Spain

Coppins Spain

Josh Coppins went 1-1 in the second round of the Motocross World Championship in Spain in 2007


Your greatest achievement as a team manager?

JC: “2020. Compared to Craig, I’m fairly new to this management game so to win the MX1 and MX2 championships as well as the NZSBK in the one season is a huge reward for myself, Amy and everyone at Yamaha New Zealand who have worked so hard to get this season in place.”

CD: “The first thing I think of when you say that is that fact that this time has been around for 28 years and built long term relationships with people like Yamaha, Fox and Dunlop. It’s a good innings in the racing business and in that time we have been able to run a tight ship, pay our bills and to have continued success.”


Best rider you have had to work with?

JC: “I have a soft spot for Jay Wilson. He listens and you know every time he is on the track he gives you all he has. He doesn’t win every time, but he is 100% a racer and is coachable.”

Jay Wilson with mentor Josh Coppins

Jay Wilson with mentor Josh Coppins

Jay Wilson with mentor Josh Coppins pictured here in 2015

CD: “We have had a lot of riders come though the doors at CDR and naming just one of them is extremely difficult. Jay Marmont has been our most successful rider over the time, and I liked many of the attributes Jay had. He was an old school, tough, determined rider and he worked hard to extract every ounce of talent from his mind and body. But when I look back over the years, there have been plenty of guys I liked working with. Josh Coppins was great to deal with, same goes for Darryl Hurley. Even going back to Lee Hogan who won our first championship or Daniel Milner when we ran the off-road program.”

“I have enormous respect for team owner Craig Dack and the way his team go about running a race team. It bought the best out of me when I raced for them before and I’m confident it will happen again.

“I have enormous respect for team owner Craig Dack and the way his team go about running a race team. It bought the best out of me when I raced for them before and I’m confident it will happen again.

The respect went both ways between Craig Dack and Jay Marmont – “I have enormous respect for team owner Craig Dack and the way his team go about running a race team. It bought the best out of me when I raced for them.”


Best team manager you have had to work with?

JC: “Carlo Rinaldi. He was sympathetic, passionate, understanding and professional. But more importantly, he understood me and got me. He knew what made me tick and how to get the best from me.”

CD: “John Collins was the guy who probably helped me the most during my career and if I had a mentor, then he was it. He was my first sponsor, was involved in getting me back from Europe in 1991 and was there to help or guide me through my racing days.”

Craig Dack, Brian Collins team launch, hosted by Neil Crompton, 1988

Craig Dack, Brian Collins team launch, hosted by Neil Crompton, 1988

Craig Dack, Brian Collins team launch, hosted by Neil Crompton, 1988


Greatest challenge facing our sport?

JC: “As mentioned above, I have only really done this for a short time as a manager, but I think the sport and the world in general has never faced anything like COVID- 19. The unpredictability of it makes it so tough as none of us have any idea of the effects it will have physically or financially going forward.”

CD: “My goal for this sport is to get unity between all the invested parties. That means having the manufacturers, team, riders, importers, promoters and governing body all pushing in the one direction and show casing the sport for how good it can be. It’s the biggest challenge facing us and our biggest hurdle to overcome.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

2020 MX Nationals Schedule Released | August 9th target

MX Nationals looking to start in August

A tentative schedule for the 2020 MXStore MX Nationals series has been released by series promoters WEM, now expected to kick-off in in the second week of August (9th) at Conondale in QLD.

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the MX Nationals’ series was initially postponed from its start date in April due to subsequent restrictions introduced on gatherings and interstate travel.

MX Nationals Rnd Coolum Track

MX Nationals Rnd Coolum Track

Empty venues and no racing have left fans frustrated 

Kevin Williams from WEM has commented on the release of the new schedule.

“It is important that everyone understands the new calendar is a projected series schedule with the current information that we have available to us. We are seeing positive information on the slow down of this outbreak and we can begin to anticipate what a return to some normality in life looks like.

“Following the ease of restrictions will be the projected return to sporting events and ultimately a time for us to go racing. We are putting our best foot forward to give everyone the most time to prepare, including the riders, teams and hosting clubs.

“The major hurdles that will disrupt the projected start of the series in August will be the Government not lifting the interstate travel ban and a continued restriction on the number of people allowed to attend outdoor events.

“We have continually stated that WEM is committed to delivering a full nine round series in 2020 and this is still our goal. As always we will keep everyone updated with the relevant information as soon as it becomes available.”

MX Nationals Rnd Moree MX Pro

MX Nationals Rnd Moree MX Pro

2020 MX Nationals 

The new schedule will see a two week on and two off format,  which is an attempt to minimise both travel time and expense for all relevant stakeholders of the series whilst providing a nine round series in a two month window.

2020 MXstore MX Nationals Schedule
Rnd Venue Date
R1 Conondale QLD Aug 9th
R2 Maitland NSW Aug 15th /16th
R3 Newry Vic Sept 6th
R4 Horsham Vic Sept 12th/13th
R5 Gympie QLD Oct 4th
R6 Coolum QLD Oct 10th/11th

**Subject to change and Government restrictions**

schedule

schedule

MX Nationals Schedule 2020
Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto News Weekly | Matt Moss comeback | August start for MX Nationals

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Matt Moss comeback is happening

After a run of Senior Australian Championship crowns in both Motocross and Supercross the career of Matt Moss came to a screeching halt when he crashed into a Bobcat that had strayed on to the track during a MX Nationals event in Shepparton five years ago.

Matt Moss in hospital, Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Matt Moss in hospital, Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Matt Moss in hospital after crashing into a bobcat that had strayed on track in Shepparton,. This images was taken on Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Things then went from bad to worse for Matt and his twin brother Jake when blood tests taken at the Murray Bridge MX Nationals event the following year tested positive for Ostarine, a prohibited substance due to its steroid effects. 

Matt Moss is on the mend and keen to get back on the bike

Matt Moss is on the mend and keen to get back on the bike

Matt Moss in hospital after the accident in Shepparton

Matt has always protested that his exposure to Ostarine was accidental due to consuming a tainted water bottle that he had shared with his brother. 

MX Nationals 2016 - Round Six - Nowra - Matt Moss

MX Nationals 2016 - Round Six - Nowra - Matt Moss

MX Nationals 2016 – Round Six – Nowra – Matt Moss

The Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority then confirmed a decision of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to sanction Moss with a four year ban, backdated to 15 July 2016 to account for time served under a provisional suspension. 

Matt Moss - MX Nationals 2015

Matt Moss - MX Nationals 2015

Matt Moss – MX Nationals 2015

That suspension expires on 15 July 2020 and Matt Moss is planning to be back on track this year.

Matt Moss - Image by iKapture

Matt Moss - Image by iKapture

Matt Moss pictured in 2016 – Image by iKapture

Matt is still only 31-years-old and could potentially have a good few years left of high-level competition in him. 

Matt Moss

Matt Moss

Matt Moss won the MX Nationals and Australian Supercross Championships in both 2013 and 2014. Matt also scored an AMA Supercross podium in 250 Supercross.

He is currently training hard and has his focus set on a return for Supercross this year but is not ruling out an earlier return to MX Nationals competition should KSF Racing and 102 Motorsport be able to raise the necessary support and secure enough budget to also underwrite a MX Nationals campaign.

Matt and Jake Moss seen here in 2009

Matt and Jake Moss seen here in 2009

Matt and Jake Moss seen here in 2009 – While Matt will definitely return, there are also rumours that Jake is also considering a return to competition


2020 MX Nationals starts in August

MX Nationals promoter Kevin Williams is expected to release an updated 2020 MX Nationals calendar in the next 48 hours.

The calendar will maintain the original nine rounds over six weekend format, and will also retain the originally appointed tracks, but the order of those rounds will be rejigged to form a new schedule of events. 

MX Nationals Rnd Coolum MX Waters Mellross

MX Nationals Rnd Coolum MX Waters Mellross

MX Nationals expects to be on track for round one in August

Williams intends to run a format of two weeks on followed by two weeks off program, commencing with two events in August, followed by two in September and culminating across the remaining two events in October. 

With current travel restrictions expected to be lifted by July this would allow competitors to ramp up their preparation with track time ahead of the season opener in August. 

The series will stage the Victorian events in Horsham and Newry and a single NSW event at Maitland, while the remaining three events will be held in Queensland at Gympie, Conondale and Coolum. 

We expect the order of those rounds and the new dates to be promulgated by Motorcycling Australia within the next 48 hours. 

MX Nationals Penrite Oils Honda Racing Team

MX Nationals Penrite Oils Honda Racing Team

Penrite Oils Honda Racing Team 2020 MX Nationals livery


2020 KTM Australian Junior Motocross Championship Postponed

In response to ongoing developments in relation to COVID-19 (Coronavirus) and Government imposed restrictions on travel, mass gatherings and social distancing, Motorcycling Australia (MA) and Rockhampton and District Motocross Club have made the tough decision to postpone the 2020 KTM Australian Junior Motocross Championship (AJMX).

Initially scheduled to run July 6-11, 2020, MA and Rockhampton and District Motocross Club are now exploring the possibility of holding the event during the term three school holidays. Dates will be confirmed later this year.

“With strict travel restrictions and border closures across Australia both MA and Rockhampton and District Motocross Club felt it would be impossible for teams and riders to properly prepare and attend the event,” said Motorcycling Australia CEO Peter Doyle.

“Together with the club we have made this tough decision, and they should be congratulated for being proactive in looking to hold the 2020 KTM AJMX later this year.”

The judgment to postpone any MA National event is not taken lightly by MA and we take this opportunity to apologise for any inconvenience caused.

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25 years in Trials

This month marks 25 years since the debut of Japanese Repsol Honda Team rider Takahisa Fujinami in Trial World Championship, the Trial rider with most participations, 338. Fujinami is among many under mandatory lockdown due to the CoViD-19 virus, although not being able to go out hasn’t stopped him from keeping in shape at home and remembering how start the ‘Fujigas’ legend.

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

First international Trial race of Takahisa Fujinami took place in Spain, in Navacerrada, in the Madrid region on April 14, 1996. In a freezing trial, that had seen snow at dawn, 16-year-old Fujinami lined up amid 37 other participants. The newcomer went on to finish after two days competition, in nineteenth position. This Trial Marc Colomer would claim victory, going on to win his only world title for Montesa later same year.

What memories do you have of your debut in the Trial World Championship?

“The truth is that I don’t remember many things, but I do remember that it was there, in my first trial, that people nicknamed me Fujigas.”

How did that come about?

“I came to a very difficult section that no rider had been able to overcome on the first lap. It was very steep, so I gave it a lot of gas. A lot! But it was little use as I also ended up with a fiasco, but the spectators started asking, ‘Who is that guy?’ ‘Fujinami’, I answered and they said: “What you are is Fuji-gas!” That’s where it comes from…”

Takahisa Fujinami Bou

Takahisa Fujinami Bou

Takahisa Fujinami with team-mate Toni Bou

It was your first trial among the elite riders…

“Yes, Jordi Tarrés, Tommi Ahvala, Bosis, Colley, Lampkin, Colomer… I had only seen them on video and there I was lining up among them. It was quite exciting for me and I even felt a bit of stage fright in front of so many professional riders.”

This year will be your 25th season in the Trial World Championship. It’s not often that you see such a long sporting career!

“Until now I believe I’m the only one to have done it, but I think many others will attempt to break the same record. Last year’s third place was a surprise for many, but not so much for me. I think I am even better this year both mentally and physically. Twenty-five in the end is just a number. I feel great and I’ve been feeling the same year after year.”

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

As you pointed out, last year you finished third in an extraordinary season finale. Do you consider it to be your best year – apart from the one in 2004?

“Three years ago I also achieved third place in the world championship where I think I had a very good season too, with a win and several podiums. Last year I was in the top five throughout and that was very important towards the final result.”

The TrialGP World Championship this year will have a modified start and Japan will no longer be the most important race in June.

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

“Yes, it is difficult for them to put the calendar together. For me, as I didn’t compete in the indoor championship, it will be a very long wait! The first three trials have been postponed and it will be a bit tough mentally. To think that in two months time the world championship will not have even started. It’s going to be hard.”

In spite of everything, we have seen a very active Fujigas as of late, training at home. Is this your way of preparing and battling against the Coronavirus Pandemic?

“It is what it is. Everyone has to be locked down at home. In the house I try to do as much exercise as I can: the exercise bike, some fitness, etc. I have a trainer who sends me exercises to do at home.”

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

What exercises do you do to stay fit?

“Mainly cardio work on the bike but also some TRX and weights for the chest and legs.”

Do you have a gym at home?

“It is not exactly a gym, but I’m fortunate to have some equipment at home. But it is very difficult to stay focused working alone. Mentally you have to be very strong to train so hard by yourself.”

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Takahisa Fujinami

Do you have time to prepare the bike?

“I have the training motorbike at home so I have amused myself fiddling around with it and making some technical adjustments and try to change the engine… but I haven’t really been able to do much.”

Takahisa Fujinami France

Takahisa Fujinami France

Takahisa Fujinami


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Source: MCNews.com.au

Moto News Weekly | Serco Yamaha 20th anniversary edition

With pretty much absolutely nothing happening in regards to off-road motorcycle racing over the last week, we have decided to use this week’ Moto News Weekly to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Serco Motorspots and Yamaha partnership. 

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Serco Motorsports

In 1998, Serco Motorsports entered the motocross fraternity. With the introduction of the YZ400F and Serco’s history in motorsports dominated by four strokes, namely speedway and drag racing, Serco’s progression to motocross was a natural one and now 22 years later it’s still going as strong as ever.

Serco Wilson Todd MX nats rd E

Serco Wilson Todd MX nats rd E

Wilson Todd won the 2018 MX2 MX Nationals Championship with Serco Yamaha

In those days, Serco Motorsport purchased Yamaha’s and fielded a team as way to promote its own products. As an importer and distributor of several four stroke products, Serco Motorsport were in on the ground floor as the four-stroke boom as it grew around the world.

Serco Harrisono

Serco Harrisono

Brenden Harrison won the MXD Championship with Serco in 2007

Then in 2001, Yamaha Motor Australia entered into a relationship with Serco that is still going strong 20 years later. What started out as a bikes and parts deal in 2001, soon morphed into Serco taking the reins for Yamaha in the Lites class, as it was known then, for the 2004 season. CDR Yamaha become the official 450 or MX1 team and Yamaha Australia paved the way for what is now the industry standard with race teams focusing on the one sized bike and class. So, 2020 marks the 20th year Serco Yamaha and Yamaha Motor Australia have worked together and the combination has plenty of championships to show for their efforts. 

Serco Robbie marshall

Serco Robbie marshall

Robbie Marshall rode for Serco in 2004

Entering the front door of Serco (which stands for Stationary Engine Repair Company) in Capalaba in Queensland, you are met with a range of championship bikes. Six YZ250F’s are lined against the far wall, from championships won by Cameron Taylor, Jake Moss, Luke Styke, Luke Clout, Jackson Richardson and Wilson Todd, while there is a drag bike against the window and a speedway bike that seems to be in a different position every time I walk in the door.

Serco Jake Moss Champ IMG

Serco Jake Moss Champ IMG

Jake Moss won the 2007 Pro Lites Australian Motocross MX2 Championship with Serco Yamaha

At the helm of Serco, both the business and the race team, is Gavin Eales. Eales has been a long time motorsport enthusiast and the drag bike in the window is one the Eales raced himself. Eales continues to invest his company’s money into racing and now at 22 years in the business is the second longest running team in the MX paddock, just a handful of years behind Yamaha stable mate, CDR Yamaha.

Serco Jake Moss DSC

Serco Jake Moss DSC

Jake Moss won the 2007 MX2 Australian Motocross Championship with Serco Yamaha

Gavin, can you recall the first MX race you did as a team and who were the riders?

“When four strokes first came onto the market in a big way, we were actively involved in the Thumper Nats series at the time. Our first rider we had was Mark Avard, who we supported but it is nothing like the amount of support we see riders with today.”

ChrisUrquhart

ChrisUrquhart

Chris Urquhart rode for Serco Yamaha in the 2002 ThumperNats

How did the deal come about for you to become an official YMA supported team?

“After a few seasons of doing our thing, YMA’s Managing Director at the time, Steven Cotterill, approached us about increasing our involvement in Yamaha Racing. Initially we were a team that competed in a range of classes, like CDR Yamaha did, but as the relationship developed, YMA’s direction was for us to focus on the 250cc or Lites class as it was called at the time, while CDR were the dedicated open or 450 team. It allowed each team to concentrate on developing just the one bike and focus on the one championship. It was a decision and direction that the rest of the world has followed.”

Serco Truck p

Serco Truck p

The Serco truck in 2003

20 years is also a long and successful business relationship with Yamaha Motor Australia, what makes it work?

“The combination of both companies being racing focussed and also a determination to win as well as long term sustainability for both parties. YMA and Serco have been in racing for the long haul and the commitment we have to each other and racing has been strong. We see a lot of teams come and go but look at Yamaha’s consistency in racing, each team has been around for some time and built up a good knowledge and infrastructure base that can’t be replicated in just one or two seasons.”

Serco McCoy

Serco McCoy

Danny McCoy rode for Serco in 2003

In 20 years of racing, you must have seen plenty of highs and lows. What is one of the standout memories you have in racing MX and SX?

“Without doubt, the 2019 Brisbane SX round where the team finished 1-2. It had been a trying lead up for everyone in the team, from Jacob being hurt before he came, the mechanics wide open building bikes and I wasn’t well myself so to go out there that night and get a result like that felt like we had just won the championship.”

Australian Supercross Rnd Brisbane HayesSerco

Australian Supercross Rnd Brisbane HayesSerco

Serco Yamaha at the 2019 Brisbane round of Aussie Supercross

You have also seen plenty of change in the sport in that time? What has been some of the things that have changed or had an impact on racing?

“Nothing has ever affected us like Covid-19 is at the moment. It has bought the world to almost a standstill and something like this has never been experienced before. I’m confident we will all come out the other side of it, but it will take some time to recover.”

Serco Cini

Serco Cini

Adam Cini rode for Serco in 2004

Let’s talk about the bikes. The 2001 YZ250F made about 29 HP and weighed over 110kgs. The 2020 model makes over 41HP and weighs around 106kg and now includes EFI and electric start. Things certainly have changed?

Serco Yamaha retro Clout

Serco Yamaha retro Clout

The retro livery run by Serco Yamaha’s Luke Clout in 2015

“Yamaha has done an amazing job with the YZ250F. It has been the dominant bike over recent years, and it seems to just get better year on year. The amount of power it produces now in standard form was something race teams chased for years. I recall when we first got through the 40HP barrier and that was exciting for our guys at the time, this bike starts above that now and only gets better.”

YZF DPBSE AUS ACT

YZF DPBSE AUS ACT

2020 YZ250F

Is there a model or a year bike that stands out to you and the team?

“Probably two bikes for me. The first was the success we had with the 2012-2013 models when they were still carburetted when the other bikes were FI and now the 2019 model. The 2012-2013 model was viewed as outdated, slow and the worst bike in the field, yet we were able to win several championships on the bike and what we didn’t win, we were close to. The 2019 is just a great bike. It has power, it handles, and it just works.”

Serco SX Luke Styke sx rd

Serco SX Luke Styke sx rd

In 2013 Serco Yamaha’s Luke Styke won both the MX2 MX Nationals Championship and the SX2 Supercross Championship

Does racing have an effect on the day to day business of Serco?

“Racing is a huge part of our marketing. Some companies chose to advertise, some go hard on social media, Serco races. A lot of our products are designed and built for racing, so it makes sense to race what we sell and promote via our race team.”

Serco mx nats rd

Serco mx nats rd

Serco Yamaha pits in 2013

Was there a rider you wished you got but never got to work with?

“No, not really. When you look at the list of riders we have had on our books over the years, it’s a pretty impressive line-up of riders. Apart from the riders that went overseas very early in their careers, I think most riders have been part of Serco at some stage.”

Serco cameron taylor

Serco cameron taylor

Cam Taylor won the MX2 Motocross Championship with Serco in 2005

What do you look for in a rider when selecting on who represents Serco Yamaha?

“Talent, determination and work ethic. You need all those things to succeed. Not just one or two, all of them. If a rider doesn’t have all three of those, then his career will never reach its full potential regardless of who he races for and on what bike.”

Serco Gibbs

Serco Gibbs

Kirk Gibbs rode for Serco Yamaha in 2011


Serco Yamaha Riders

1998: Mark Kirkman
1999: Andrew McFarlane
2000: Mark Avard
2001: Michael Cotter
2002: Jye Hervey / Chris Urquhart
2003: Daniel McCoy / Quentin Carroll / Mick Cook
2004: Robbie Marshall / Adam Cini / Wade Thompson
2005: Cameron Taylor / Robbie Marshall
2006: Cameron Taylor / Robbie Marshall / Jake Moss
2007: Jake Moss / Daniel McCoy / Brendan Harrison (MXD)
2008: Lewis Stewart / Damien King /
2009: Mitch Hoad / Matt Ryan/ Kirk Gibbs
2010: Ford Dale / Kirk Gibbs / Kyle Cunningham (SX only)
2011: Ford Dale/ Kirk Gibbs / Jake Moss (MX Only)
2012: Luke Styke / Kirk Gibbs/
2013: Luke Styke / Luke Clout/ Luke Arbon (SX only)
2014: Luke Clout / Jay Wilson
2015: Luke Clout / Jed Beaton
2016: Wilson Todd / Wade Hunter
2017: Jackson Richardson / Mitch Evans
2018: Wilson Todd / Nathan Crawford / Jacob Hayes (SX only)
2019: Nathan Crawford / Aaron Tanti / Jacob Hayes (SX only)
2020: Aaron Tanti / Dylan Walsh


Serco Yamaha Championships

2005: 1st Cameron Taylor – MX2
2007: 1st Jake Moss – MX2
2007: 1st Brendan Harrison – MXD
2013: 1st Luke Styke – MX2
2013: 1st Luke Styke SX2
2014: 1st Luke Clout- MX2
2016: 1st Jackson Richardson- SX2
2017: 1st Jackson Richardson – SX2
2018: 1st Wilson Todd – MX2

Serco mx nats rd

Serco mx nats rd

2013 Serco Yamaha team-mates Luke Styke and Luke Clout x Dunlop Gen Web Banner

x Dunlop Gen Web Banner

Moto News Weekly proudly brought to you by Dunlop
Source: MCNews.com.au

Insights into the dirty minds of Yamaha race technicians

Team Yamaha mechanics reflect on their favourite tools and more

While it’s the riders and team managers who often take the glory for the results, often the hard working mechanic is the man behind the success on race day. They work long hours and devote their lives to building a masterpiece of a race bike that often gets destroyed before their eyes each and every race day.

With the enforced break in racing, let’s meet the men behind the scenes who are the driving force of Yamaha’s Racing Teams. CDR’s Brad McAlpine, Serco’s Paul Teasdale, Yamalube’s Mike Ward, WBR’s Travis Whitten, Yamaha Off Road’s AJ Roberts and YRT’s Kev Marshall. All of them have years of experience and a long list of championship success to their names. Let’s find out more about these weird and wonderful characters.


Favourite tool that you wouldn’t leave the workshop without?

Brad: T-bars Can’t work on a bike without one.

Paul: Torque wrench

Mike: Snap-on Torque wrench

Travis: Everyone will say a torque wrench but let’s be modern and go for a Lap-top these days

AJ: A rattle gun and a grinder. I need them both!

Kevin: Dyno! I know I cant take one to a race meeting, but I would if I could!

#Unfortunately, neither AJ or Kev are joking here!

CDR Yamaha MX Nats rd Medium

CDR Yamaha MX Nats rd Medium

CDR’s Brad McAlpine


Favourite race bike you have built?

Brad: Dean Ferris 2017 YZ450F in the US. Aiden and I built the bike in a car park with just a tool bag we bought from Australia and then Dean raced it to second place in a moto that had the US guys scratching their heads.

Paul: The 2020 YZ250F – the most power we have had and the bike is great to work on.

Mike: The 2014 YZ250F for Jed Beaton. It was a new bike that we had to work out and then I went a bit OCD on the frame with the polish.

Travis: Aaron Tanti’s YZ250F in 2017. We put a lot of effort into it, the bike was quick and not a DNF all season.

AJ: I would say the WR500F we built for Damon Stolkie when he won Finke. It took a lot of time and energy and then for him to win it made it special for all of us.

Kevin: 2007 and 2008 Yamaha R1 Superbike. Good bike to work on and a screamer engine that we found good gains in.

Paul Teasedale ASX rd

Paul Teasedale ASX rd

Serco’s Paul Teasdale


Why become a race team mechanic?

Brad: I was never going to make it as a racer and being a mechanic was the next closest thing to it.

Paul: I Love the sport and when I finished racing it was the next step to take to still be involved

Mike: I raced and enjoyed working on my own bike. There is something special about building a race bike that still excites me.

Travis: Fun to build a nice bike and then show it off with a good rider who can ride it to its limits.

AJ: I grew up in a work shop and was always around people that worked on things. I enjoy that aspect of it and when you are an off road rider, its part of what we do, so it was a natural progression from racing.

Kevin: I was a diesel mechanic and moved over to motorcycles. I have always been interested in not just fixing things, but improving them.

Mike Ward ASX rd

Mike Ward ASX rd

Yamalube’s Mike Ward


Most rewarding part of the job?

Brad: Winning championships.

Paul: Winning championships.

Mike: Seeing everyone on the team succeed.

Travis: When it all comes together, The rider is happy, the bike performed well and the result comes.

AJ: The result. Its not always winning but what you can achieve with the tools and riders at your disposal.

Kevin: Everyone will say it, but winning championships

AJ Roberts MX Nats rd

AJ Roberts MX Nats rd

Yamaha Off Road’s AJ Roberts


Worst part of the job?

Brad: Setting up the truck.

Paul: Repacking exhausts or a mechanical failure

Mike: Repacking mufflers and seeing a new bike destroyed in a mud race, often by the time it gets to the first turn.

Travis: The unappreciated hours behind the scenes that people don’t see. It’s never a 9 to 5 job!

AJ: The clean-up and the pack up. By far!

Kevin: Pack up after a long weekend, everyone is keen to get home.

Travis Whitten ASX rd

Travis Whitten ASX rd

WBR’s Travis Whitten


Favourite event worked at?

Brad: MXoN in Spain in 1996. All my childhood heroes were there racing. Riders like McGrath, Emig, Everts, everyone i looked up to as a kid.

Paul: MXoN in 2008 with Billy Mackenzie in England. We had a great day going until the final lap of the last race when Billy crashed. It was awesome to have the event in my own country and the crowd was huge.

Mike: MXoN in 2015 in France. The crowd was next level. I had been to a couple before, but there were nothing like there were in France that year.

Travis: I did a GP round with Hugh McKay in 2014. First time at a big event like that and it was a real eye opener.

AJ: I will say that A4DE as once the riders take off, they work on the bikes and I like to see them changing their own tyres for a change.

Kevin: We raced at Laguna-Sega in the USA during 2008 and that was a great experience.

Kev Marshall ASBK rd

Kev Marshall ASBK rd

YRT’s Kev Marshall
Source: MCNews.com.au

Coronavirus and motorcycle sport in Australia | Interview with M.A. CEO

Motorcycle Racing State of the Nation


On Friday evening MCNews.com.au editor Trevor Hedge had a long discussion with Motorcycling Australia CEO Peter Doyle.

We thank PD for his candour, time and cooperation in helping us to bring you this detailed explanation of the challenges facing motorcycle sport in this country that stem from the ongoing challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. 


Interview with Motorcycling Australia CEO Peter Doyle


Busy time at HQ this week with pretty much everything getting postponed/cancelled… I guess at this point in time you can’t even really make any solid contingency plans, and can instead only canvas various optional scenarios from this point forward… So far you have stated that the next three rounds of ASBK have all been postponed, Wakefield Park (NSW), The Bend (SA) and Barbagallo (WA).  Depending on how the situation pans out with the spread of the virus, it looks as though the scheduled round five at Morgan Park (QLD) could end up becoming round two…?


ASBK

“It could be, that is what we are looking at right now, it is probable at this stage that the Morgan Park round will become round two.

“I’ve had a discussion in the last 48 hours with CAMS and with V8 Supercars, one of the issues motorcycle sport faces is the differing conditions and requirements around our disciplines. If we take road racing, the problem we have is that most of the tracks are booked up already with clients for the second half of the year, so we have got to try and slot dates in when customers already have bookings.

“The tracks are in the same position, they are having people saying we want more dates, to be selfish perhaps we do have to hope that some of those events are cancelled, and maybe we can slot in. But obviously Supercars are trying to do the same thing, state car championships and state motorcycle championships also, so for us road racing is going to have an availability problem at a lot of tracks.

“And as you know, ASBK, and V8 Supercars for example, as the elite levels of the respective sports, we can’t race on every track out there, we really couldn’t have ASBK at Broadford for example. Sometimes we are limited in our track selection, the reality is that once we know when we might be able to get back on track, then we have to work with all the racetracks to try and put a calendar together for the rest of the year. The plan is to try and run as many as we can.”


What is the worst case scenario for Australian Superbike in 2020?  There have long been stirrings around suggestions that ASBK move to a summer series for decades, that up until now have always ended up being shelved in favour of the status quo. I guess 2020 could end up being a forced test case as to how a summer series would run? Or is that not a realistic option?

“For us, yes it is a realistic option, we could look at that. The biggest issue there, at the professional level, is contracts with riders. And how that sits with riders that may or may not have contracts going into the following year, manufacturers changing direction, so those would be the biggest things to overcome. But for the majority of competitors, it is absolutely an option that we have to consider, and I think many sports are looking at the same scenario.”


MX Nationals

The Australian Motocross Nationals were due to get underway early next month, and then be run and won before the end of August, over six events, three of which were to be double-headers, making for a nine round series.  Do you have much input as to how the MX Nationals might pan out in reflection of the current crisis, or are those plans pretty much down to the discretion of promoter Kevin Williams?

“We will work with Kevin, we have been talking to him every day. At the moment he is trying to have round one, where round four is now, trying to have that as round one. That will obviously be looked at again over the coming weeks depending on where this virus goes. He has got a draft calendar that would see six events take place between June and September, but we are not putting it out there right now, as issues are examined to confirm track availability etc. That should be another week away before we can confirm that his V2 calendar might work, with still trying to get MX Nationals finished by September to allow for Supercross to take place.”

Original 2020 Australian MX National Championship Calendar
  • Round 1 & 2 Horsham, Victoria April 4/5 (postponed)
  • Round 3 Newry, Victoria May 3
  • Round 4 Gympie, Qld May 24 (could be new round one)
  • Round 5 Conondale, QLD June 28
  • Round 6 & 7 Maitland, NSW July 25/26
  • Round 8 & 9 Coolum, QLD August 22/23
  • Rescheduled Horsham Round TBA

Enduro / AORC

Of the major series I would imagine the off-road enduro AORC events would perhaps be the easiest to modify to cater for the separation of people. With measures such as a series of rider briefings or the like to make for smaller groups. But I imagine the tyranny of distance for competitors to try and make it to those venues while minimising exposure risks are also things that need to be taken into account. We have three rounds of the series already run, the next round of the series in Nowra has already been postponed, do you know of any further developments in regards to the following rounds of the AORC?

“They have got a bit of a break after that one that has been postponed, so that is a work in progress. The biggest issue for AORC, and also every other discipline for that matter, and also again for some other forms of sport, is ensuring that adequate medical support will be available.

“And that was one of the issues with us having to postpone the Wakefield Park ASBK, when you have a two or three day event, and you have got to have medical resources there, it becomes a problem if government second all those medical staff, which they essentially have, and whether you can take that out of the community. If we can’t get a guarantee that medical providers will be available to sit at an event for two to three days, due to the coronavirus, then a lot more events are going to be in trouble.”


International Events / ISDE

M.A. have already put out a brief statement in regards to the potential problems with the international team events. The biggest of which for us is generally the ISDE, and that historic enduro event is this year scheduled to be held in what is now the hardest hit area of the globe, Italy. Do you think it likely that the 2020 ISDE might be cancelled altogether, or perhaps moved to a different location, have you heard anything on those fronts?

“We have been in contact constantly with the FIM, and they are in the same situation as us, as you can see they have been madly sending out postponement and cancellation notices on numerous events, we expect a formal response some time in the next week. My current thoughts on the current feedback I am getting, is that it definitely won’t take place on the current date and location as listed, if at all.

“For sure, everybody is looking for a postponement, but one of the issues that people are facing is calendars. If you look at Australia for example, if we got lucky, and the second half of this year we are open to running these events again, everyone is going to be trying to host their events, that were scheduled to run over ten months, and they are going to try and cram it into five or six months, or potentially even shorter time-frames. It is going to be an enormous strain on resources, officials, volunteers, there are just endless massive repercussions coming out of this.”


M.A. Finances

What immediate impact is this going to have on the financial situation of Motorcycling Australia? Are you considering standing down some staff during this period or enforcing periods of paid or unpaid leave? How is this affecting naming rights sponsorship agreements with various companies for the respective championships and classes? Are there any potentially really troublesome flow on effects from the shutdown that I have not already canvassed, but that people should be made aware of?

“It is going to have a major impact on every sporting organisation in the country, with the possible exception of perhaps something like cricket which might be one of the least affected as it is already a summer sport. Some of the summer sports will probably get away with, let’s say a reduced impact, but talking to CAMS and some of the other sporting organisations we converse with, I think you have seen the public response on the NFL, the AFL…. I watched ten minutes of it last night, and all I can say is it is just not football. You don’t realise how much watching a game of football relies on the crowd to make it exciting, it was plain boring. They are running out onto the MCG, a 100,000 person stadium, and there is a few people scattered around the boundary lines, the players playing but there is no noise, I think they had some music in the background to try and make some noise, but on television it just wasn’t even a spectacle. Obviously the AFL clubs are in a much better position than most sports, but they rely heavily on membership and gate takings.

“For us, let’s take speedway, they in are a similar position. Speedway events in Australia, you have only 18-odd riders in reality, but you have a limited amount of riders, and they don’t pay entry fees in speedway, and the promoters rely on gate takings to fund prize money and to run the event. Well, you can’t do it on 500 spectators, which in reality would actually only be 400 once you took into account the competitors, pit crew and officials, so speedway is absolutely spectator reliant.

“Then you have other disciplines like enduro for example, which doesn’t rely on any spectators, it is back gate, competitors and sponsors pay, and they can’t run because they can’t get medical crews, so there are so many reasons across the different disciplines that prevent them from running events.

“So, the financial impact, look it depends on how long it goes… But there is going to be a huge financial impact on all the sports, including motorcycle racing, we are now locked into waiting on what is the next step from the government, do the restrictions get tighter, do they get tougher, and how long does it go for. 

“But I think if it goes any longer than July-August, then I think you are going to see huge, huge issues across all sports. And we are only talking sport here, we are not even talking about business. Without income the sporting administration bodies can’t run. 

“We had a phone hook-up today with the Department of Sport and Recreation, about some motorsports programs that the Victorian government are putting out there, which has been on the table for two years, but we had a discussion with them and of course a lot of the discussion concerned the issue of COVID-19, Eugene Arocca from CAMS was on the call too, a few of the sporting entities were on there, the impact is just massive. CAMS are already making cutbacks, we have already commenced, what I will call it level one restrictions, no staff travel, excess holidays to be taken, that has already started. We could only be a matter of weeks away from level two conditions being put in place, and look everything is on the table…”


Licence extensions…?

While obviously the professional riders that rely on results based bonuses are looking very likely to suffer some financial pain this year, the amateur riders that take out M.A. race licences, but are not able to compete are probably also a little perturbed. Have you considered perhaps an extension of their licence expiry dates to take that into account?

“It has been canvassed, and we have got meetings set-up, as the federated structure we have, we have meeting with managers, meeting with states and the M.A. board are ongoing, I think we have three scheduled next week, and again all those items are on the table. The key here is knowing when… If you jump the gun and put something out now and give everyone a 30-day extension on the licence, and then we find out we have no racing for six-months we have to go through all that process again.”


Summarising…

You’ve got to ask everyone to just be a little bit patient, and everybody is in difficult times, in both business and in sport, and until we get clear direction out of our governments it is very hard to do anything. At the moment the 500 person restriction is in until almost the end of April, depending on who you talk to, people are saying we should be okay by May, and then you talk to others that say we are looking at more like six months…

“We are going to do everything we can to run as many, if not all of our events, in all the disciplines, if we are allowed to do it.

“It is just going to create a very crowded calendar getting towards the end of the year.

“The one fortunate part right now is that people are being a bit creative, and also following guidelines, you know club level events where have 50-100 riders turn up and they only bring one person or two, putting in some recommendations on sanitation, having electronic sign-on, people self-scrutineering, riders briefing done over P.A. systems, so people are getting creative and using the information we have been putting out to the states, and a lot of those club level activities are still taking place.

“We don’t know the knock-on effect throughout the motorcycle industry as a whole as yet.  What are the bigger teams in the paddock in all disciplines, what are they doing their staff, how long can they hang on to those staff etc.”


Thanks very much for your time Pete and good luck with fighting the good fight in getting motorcycle sport back on track.


Motorcycling Australia

Motorcycling Australia

M.A. is the governing body for motorcycle sport in Australia
Source: MCNews.com.au

MXN opener & Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup Postponed

MX Nationals & Oceania Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup effected by coronavirus


Motorcycling Australia has announced that MX Nationals Round 1 and the Oceania Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup will both be postponed as a result of the ongoing concerns rising from the spread of COVID-19 (coronavirus), with travel restrictions also effecting some international entrants.

MX Nationals – Horsham

Both are expected to run in the second half of 2020, however a date is yet to be confirmed. See the full release below:


Motorcycling Australia Official Statement

Due to the ongoing developments and global health concerns in relation to COVID-19 (commonly known as Coronavirus), Motorcycling Australia (MA), Williams Event Management (WEM) & FIM Oceania (FIMO) advises that MX Nationals Round 1 & FIM Oceania Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup is postponed.

As MX Nationals Round 1 at Horsham is a significant major event for the Motorcycling Australia calendar and in 2020 includes an international component with the FIM Oceania Tri-Nations Cup it is not possible for international riders and teams to travel during this time.

Kevin Williams – MX Nationals Promoter

“WEM takes the health and safety of the MX community as its first priority. We also need to make sure that we follow the best advice from the government health departments. This means that postponing is the right call at this time to ensure that our riders, officials and volunteers are protected.”

The Horsham round of MX Nationals and the FIM Oceania Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup will now be rescheduled into the second half of 2020. Further updates on this new date and the adjustment to the 2020 MX Store MX Nationals will be announced in the coming weeks.

Peter Doyle – MA CEO

“The developments of COVID-19 are changing rapidly, and MA is constantly monitoring the situation. WEM, FIM Oceania and MA have been in communication daily over the last week or two to review the situation. However, it is not possible for the international riders to travel to Australia and major events across Australia are under review, so it is better to make this decision now, rather than 24h hours before the race.”

MA has a responsibility to ensure all MA permitted events are conducted in a safe environment for riders, teams, industry and fans. These measures are being adopted in response to an unprecedented situation and the organizers are confident on the understanding of those concerned despite of the inconvenience caused.

The judgment to postpone any event is not taken lightly by WEM, MA or FIM Oceania and we take this opportunity to apologies for any inconvenience caused by this required decision.


2020 Australian Motocross National Championship Calendar

  • Round 1 & 2 Horsham, Victoria April 4/5 (postponed)
  • Round 3 Newry, Victoria May 3
  • Round 4 Gympie, Qld May 24
  • Round 5 Conondale, QLD June 28
  • Round 6 & 7 Maitland, NSW July 25/26
  • Round 8 & 9 Coolum, QLD August 22/23
  • Rescheduled Horsham Round TBA

Source: MCNews.com.au