Why this title is bigger than any other for Ken Roczen
Sunday, May 10, 2026 at 5:06PM
Some championships are won with composure, others develop into a mental battle right up to the final. The first AMA Supercross title of [name omitted] falls squarely into this latter category. Ken RoczenA season with highs, setbacks, pressure – and a finale that remained open until the very end.
Because what happened in Salt Lake City wasn't just winning an AMA Supercross title. It was the culmination of a journey many had long since written off. Ten years after his last major US title win in 2016, Roczen is suddenly back on top. Not somewhere in the background as a fan favorite. Not as someone who's "made a strong comeback." But truly at the very top.
Champion.
And in a way that perfectly suits this entire career: not smooth, not dominant, not without drama.
The pressure was there long before the final.
What's particularly interesting is how openly Roczen now speaks about the mental aspect. You probably would never have heard him say something like that before. Now you do. After the race, he explained that he had imagined this moment for months. Over and over again. Sometimes so intensely that he became emotional at home, withdrew from his children, and mentally rehearsed the situation. That clearly shows just how significant this title had become for him.
From a sporting perspective, one could have argued: Roczen has already achieved everything. World Champion. Motocross Champion in the USA. Countless race wins. A successful career. But that was clearly no longer the point. It was about this one title. The title that had always eluded him in his career.
And the closer they got to Salt Lake City, the greater the mental pressure apparently became. Roczen spoke of barely sleeping. Of the days becoming extremely long. Of getting up at six in the morning and then having practically no time left but to think.
This is the side that's often overlooked from the outside. While everyone else is focused on points and standings, the driver sits there all day, alone with his own thoughts.
The final started anything but perfectly.
The day started off badly. A crash in the heat race. A worse starting position. No real confidence on the track. The whoops, in particular, caused him problems. And that's exactly where the race could have turned at any moment.
Nevertheless, the decisive moment came immediately after the start of the main event. Roczen knew he had to act instantly. No waiting. No "let's see what happens." That would have been especially dangerous against Hunter Lawrence. So he made the decisive move early.
Curve two.
Aggressive. Determined. Perhaps indeed the most important overtaking maneuver of his entire career. And from that point on, the real battle began. Not against Lawrence. But against himself.
Roczen later made it quite clear that he never had complete control of the race. He deliberately didn't ride at the limit. No blind pushing. No "all or nothing" approach. Instead, he tried to ride methodically fast while remaining calm.
That sounds simple, but under this pressure it's brutally difficult. Especially when you know there's a driver right behind you who could snatch the title away at any moment.
Things got critical four laps before the end.
Then came the moment when the race could have completely turned around. Roczen developed severe problems with a stitch in his right side, under his rib cage. It was so intense that he could barely breathe. By then, the track was brutally rutted; every bump sent shockwaves straight into his body.
And that's precisely where the calculations suddenly began. How big is the gap? Where is Hunter? How much risk can I still take? The interesting thing is that Roczen, at that moment, was clearly no longer thinking about winning the race. It was simply a matter of somehow bringing it home.
That's why he let drivers pass. That's why he slowed down. From the outside, it almost looked controlled. In reality, he was completely at his physical limit. And that somehow fits perfectly with this whole story. Even winning the title wasn't a clean sweep. Even there, things got complicated again.
The story with Suzuki makes the title even bigger
What makes this title even more special is the surrounding context. HEP Suzuki. To be honest, most people would never have associated this project with an AMA Supercross title a few years ago. Too small. Too little budget. Too little "factory" development. Plus, an RM-Z450 that had been the butt of jokes for years. Kickstarter. Old platform. Hardly any development.
And now this very motorcycle is suddenly at the top. That alone is a story in itself.
Roczen spoke very openly after the race about how difficult the first few years after Honda's demise really were. He got into motorcycling late, had hardly any preparation, and was basically just trying to become somewhat competitive again.
No need to think about titles. Just to be relevant again. That's how this project gradually came about. First podium finishes in 2023. After that, slowly more stability. More confidence. More speed. Interestingly, he stated that the greatest progress in the end wasn't physical at all, but mental.
Roczen used to experience these extreme highs and lows. Today, things seem much more controlled. Calmer. Almost more mature.
The fans made this evening truly special.
Then there was the atmosphere in Salt Lake City. Several journalists later described never having experienced such a consistent volume at a Supercross final. Not just cheers after crossing the finish line, but lap after lap, throughout the entire race.
"Kenny" shouts the whole time. And even Roczen later said that drivers usually hardly notice such noises – unless they get extremely loud.
This time, that was clearly the case. According to him, every round felt like a final championship round. And perhaps that best describes the evening. It wasn't a typical title win. Not a classic dominance story. It was more the feeling that an extremely long story was finally coming to an end.
Probably the most important title of his career
The comparison to his earlier successes was particularly interesting in the end. Roczen won his first world championship title in 2011 as a teenager. Back then, much of it was instinctive. Emotional. Uncontrolled. Today he sounds completely different. More reflective. Significantly more deliberate. Almost exhausted by everything he's achieved.
And that's precisely why he ultimately categorized this title so clearly: his first AMA Supercross title was the most important of his entire career.
Not because of the statistics. Not because of the number. But because of the journey. Ten years after his last major US title, Ken Roczen is back on top.
And perhaps that is ultimately the real punchline of this story: The most spectacular driver of his generation had to completely fall apart in order to finally win the title he had always lacked.











