Thursday
Dec052019

Omeo back on the Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship calendar in 2020


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The Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship (AORC) returns to Omeo in Victoria for the second last weekend of the 2020 championship, September 19 and 20.

The AORC kick starts the 2020 season off in Queensland before heading to NSW, SA, and then Omeo in Victoria for the second last round.

Motorcycling Australia Off-Road Events Manager, Matthew Falvo said the 2020 Yamaha AORC was shaping up to be the best year yet.

“With the recently crowned World Champion Junior Team and overall second placed Australian ISDE team returning for action in 2020, we will have the best riders in the world competing in the Yamaha AORC at Omeo,” Mr Falvo said.

“We are very excited for the 2020 Yamaha AORC to be returning to Omeo, having held very successful events there in 2017 and 2018.

“We have a very positive working relationship with East Gippsland Shire Council who are partnering with us to deliver a sensational racing event next year.

East Gippsland Shire Council Mayor, Cr John White, said the return of the event to Omeo in 2020 would provide a great boost for the region.

“Events such as these are vitally important to East Gippsland as they directly and indirectly provide economic benefits, along with continuing to promote East Gippsland as a place to visit, live, work and invest,” Cr White said.

“Council is pleased to again support the championships in Omeo and will be contributing $6,000 towards the event. I am sure it be another success and will be well supported by locals turning out to see some of the sport’s best in action. Omeo is fast becoming an adventure tourism hive and I trust all competitors, crews and spectators will enjoy the event and take the time to enjoy our region, its attractions and support our small businesses.”

AORC will continue to reveal the remainder of the year’s locations for the twelve round 2020 championship once relevant planning approvals have been met.

The 2020 Championship will continue to use a double-header format, which will see six weekends make up twelve rounds of the AORC for 2020.

2020 AUSTRALIAN OFF-ROAD CHAMPIONSHIP CALENDAR
Round 1 & 2: Toowoomba, QLD 22 – 23 February 2020
Round 3 & 4: Dungog, NSW 14 – 15 March 2020
Round 5 & 6: Nowra, NSW 18 – 19 April 2020
Round 7 & 8: SA 1 – 2 August 2020
Round 9 & 10: Omeo, VIC 19 – 20 September 2020
Round 11 & 12: TBC 17 –18 October 2020

Thursday
Dec052019

JGRMX Suzuki Factory Racing reveal remaining team riders for 2020

Wednesday
Dec042019

Max Anstie To USA

Analysis: The Anstie Deal


Max Anstie exits the Grand Prix scene

 

It is going to shock a lot of people that Max Anstie is moving back to the United States and will be tackling the full Monster Energy Supercross series, but this was inevitably going to happen at some point. Anstie stated on multiple occasions that he has a burning desire to return to the bright lights of Southern California. The most shocking thing would have been if he finished his career in Europe and never dabbled in the American stuff again.

It is a surprise that he is jumping straight into the 450SX class, as most would think that 250SX would be a comfortable spot to start. The premier-class deal with H.E.P Motorsports was the best package on the table though and there are actually many positives to racing all seventeen rounds of Monster Energy Supercross. Anstie would have been guaranteed success in the 250SX category – that is a safe assumption based on his experience and past results – but then an eight-round series is such a small sample size.

 

There would not have been much time to grow and build, something that will be necessary with a relatively late start. By competing in all seventeen rounds in the 450SX class he has an opportunity to show what he can do on a bigger stage and take advantage of knowledge gained in race situations. Would podium finishes be easier to obtain in the regional series? Yeah, sure. There is almost no doubt that he would have collected some silverware on either coast. Perhaps top-ten finishes in 450SX will do more for his stock though?

There are some who probably think it is insane to think Anstie would fight for the podium finishes in 250SX right off the bat, but that is based on what history has taught us. Anstie last lined up in the Monster Energy Supercross series as a sixteen-year-old and logged a fourth-place finish in San Diego with Star Racing. There was a pretty stacked field in 250SX West that year as well as he battled with the likes of Jake Weimer, Cole Seely, Wil Hahn, Trey Canard, Broc Tickle and Josh Hansen. It is easy to forget where he came from.

Is Anstie going to be missed in the FIM Motocross World Championship? There is absolutely no doubt about it, both on and off of the track. Losing a personality like that is always going to be tough on promoters. This is an especially bleak period for British fans as Tommy Searle has also stepped away from the world stage. It is a bit of a blow but there is almost more of a reason to root for Anstie now. There has not been a British rider who has taken on the American scene since, well, he did it in 2010 (Dean Wilson is in his own category).

 

If Anstie never returns to the Grand Prix scene, which is obviously a possibility at this point, then a cool stat to fall back on is that he won the very last race he completed in the premier class. Very few guys exit on a note like that. The fact is both baffling and intriguing though, as it really shines a light on the fact that he is deserving of a factory-supported seat. Anstie never should have got to September without a deal in place, let alone December, but that rocky road has led him to an exciting opportunity that has made him genuinely happy. Every cloud and all of that.

There is another interesting point to think about here, not that it is relevant or really matters in the grand scheme of things. Pulling guys over from the United States has been a touchy subject for Team Great Britain at the Motocross of Nations in the past. Even if the budget is in place to get Anstie across at the end of the season, there is no Suzuki team in Europe to lend him equipment or give him a base to work from. Is it too early to rule him out of that race? Does anyone even care at this point? Probably not.

Back to the topic at hand: This is going to be an extremely intriguing subplot to follow throughout the new season. The only thing to remember is that he may not set the world alight right out of the gate at Anaheim 1 – it will take time for him to get his ducks in a row. The thought of where he could be by the time that the series hits Salt Lake City is really a mouth-watering prospect though.

Words: Lewis Phillips | Lead Image: Ray Archer

 

 

Wednesday
Dec042019

Bad Brad Speaks Up!

Brad Lackey Interview

 

 

The history of the FIM World Motocross Championships is a long one, and colourful characters are littered through the sports folk-law. One of those characters was America’s first ever World Motocross Champion “Bad” Brad Lackey.

Nearly a decade ago I was lucky enough to sit down with Lackey and while it is a quick look at some parts of his career, it is an amazing story of a young man taking a chance and really doing it tough. Lackey hung in there when times were difficult until he finally reached his dream.

When I got the chance to interview 1992 World 500cc Champion Brad Lackey I felt a great anticipation, like meeting royalty. Lackey was always something of a free spirit in my eyes, a rider who came to Europe in a time when coming to Europe was really a huge challenge for a non-European and in a time that Motocross in Europe and the rest of the World was owned by Grand Prix racers.

He didn’t have leading Australians, South Africans or New Zealanders racing in the FIM series in the 1970s; it was Russians, East Germans, Swedes, and Belgians who ruled the European Grand Prix series.

 

As America’s first ever World Motocross Champion Lackey can feel proud of his success. It came from hard work and years of travelling through countries where the English language didn’t exist, and the culture of Northern California was a million miles away. Lackey scored nine Grand Prix wins in his 10 years in Europe, doesn’t seem a lot, but that just makes his 1982 World 500cc Championship all that more impressive. Lackey was a worker and never gave up on his dream to be the best in the World.

Now some 40 years after his Championship winning year Lackey might be older, slower and a little broader, but the former World 500cc Champion is very much a lot wiser. Having arrived in Europe some 50 years ago, the now 66-year-old Lackey can rest easy knowing he will always be the only America racer to come to Europe and win a 500cc Championship.

In his first full season in Europe Lackey finished 13th in the World 500cc Championship, scoring just 26 points, Roger De Coster the man who won the 500cc title that year finished with 161 points, and was a mile faster and his racing craft was in another league to the young American. Lackey though slowly built on those 26 points and a year later 10th, although this time with 60 points. 1975 and this time the California moved into 6th place and scored 102 points. Still though De Coster, Heikki Mikkola, Gerrit Wolsink, Ake Jonsson and Jack Van Velthoven were still too strong.

A place higher in 1976 and Lackey finishes fifth behind De Coster, Wolsink, Weil, and a young British rider Graham Noyce. A Grand Prix victory made his year worthwhile and he continued to improve his technique. Another year and another place higher in the end of season results as he finished fourth, then in 1978 he moved a step closer as he finished second to Mikkola and finally beat his friend and training partner De Coster. Lackey also won two GP’s, taking victory in Austria and England.

Unfortunately, injury stopped him from racing the final two GP’s of the season, handing the title to Mikkola. 1979 and he dropped to fourth in the World as he rode for the Kawasaki factory. One GP win in France and six moto wins. 1980 and he came very close to winning his first World title, winning the GP of Austria and finishing second to Andre Malherbe, 235pts to 221pts.

A change to Suzuki in 1981 and it seemed like Lackey might have missed the boat in a World title. He dropped to sixth place as Malherbe won again. Lackey wouldn’t come close to winning a Grand Prix and

many were starting to write the American off.

 

 

Victory would finally come Lackey’s way as he finished with the 1982 World 500cc Championship, just beating Andre Vromans 228pts to 217pts. The two went into the last round of the series with Lackey just four points ahead of Vromans, fortunately for the American he was able to go 2-3 as Vromans capitulated.

MXlarge: I remember you racing the veteran’s race at Namur in 2001. How was that experience after so long?

Lackey: They had the race at Namur, and they had a practice, Eric Geboers organized it, and we got to ride around the GP circuit. I came over with some friends who had always wanted to race that circuit, and we rode it, although I must say they changed the circuit a little and I was a bit disappointed with that.

MXlarge: You never got on with Namur in your racing career, did you?

Lackey: Namur was always a problem race for me, I knew there were always problems with the Belgian fans there, but it was totally different with big jumps and jumps in the woods, you can never go back to how Namur was in my day, it’s just changed, everything does.

MXIarge: What made you want to come to Europe in the first place all those years ago?

Lackey: The first time De Coster, Hallman and Robert came to America, like in 1967, we thought we were fast guys, but they showed us that we weren’t really that fast. I mean back then those guys had factory bikes and we just had scramble bikes, like BSA’s and stuff like that. Watching those guys ride and seeing how fast they were I figured I was only going to learn if I went to Europe. I came to Europe to get to a different level in riding skills. I got a little lucky and went to the CZ factory and did some testing and racing and after that they offered me a Grand Prix bike, and I could ride half the 250cc series in 1971, so I came over for that.

MXIarge: How did that first experience of being in Europe go?

Lackey: I got an 11th place in one race, and one Grand Prix point, at that time that was a big deal. I also rode a 500 GP in Czecho, and that was a good experience. I then went home and won the National Championship in 1972, I won every race. That was pretty easy, so I thought I am not going to get any better staying in America, so I went back and did the GP’s from 1973 until 1982 when I won the Championship.

MXIarge: It took you a long time to get that 500cc Championship didn’t it?

Lackey: Yes, it took me ten years, but I had a couple of close seconds, so bad luck and some things, normally I should have come away with two or three World Championships, but one is better than nothing.

MXIarge: For a young man from California it must have been a totally different experience to laying on the beach in California?

Lackey: You have to understand; when I came out, I lived in Czech Republic, in the CZ Factory housing and with 50-year-old guys when I was just 17 years old. They didn’t speak one word of English and there was no McDonalds, no gas stations, there was nothing, it was the height of communism, trust me that was different. Every day I would just ride my bike and try and forget about it, I worked at the factory in the morning and then would ride in the afternoons. I got to leave to go to those 250cc Grand Prix’s, so I went to Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, beautiful countries. I was just concentrating on learning my trade.

MXIarge: I’ve talked to many riders who have come to Europe from Australia, South Africa or New Zealand and really struggled in those early times in Europe. How did you survive the tough times?

Lackey: I had a small cassette player and I had one tape and it was California Dreaming by the Mamas and the Papas, and I can tell you I wore out some batteries listening to that song.

MXIarge: Any interesting stories of your first years here?

Lackey: I was your typical dumb Californian kid; you never heard about autobahn and didn’t even know what that was. So, I would be driving along in the middle of the night with my car and trailer and my and Gaston’s bikes in the back. I would pass a big truck and then look in the mirrors and see some guy flashing his lights like miles behind. I would think what is wrong with that guy, then I would pull over to the side and a Porsche would go by at 200 miles an hour.

 

 

 

Wednesday
Dec042019

Dakar - The Course


 

 

The route of the 42nd edition of the Dakar, which will start in Jeddah on 5 January 2020 and conclude 12 stages later in Qiddiyah near the Saudi capital of Riyadh, was announced this morning at the Arab World Institute in Paris. With an overall distance close to 7,900km, the competitors will battle over 5,000km of special stages. In addition to discovering the Saudi Arabian dunes, which will be featured in the second-half of the rally, the first-half of the Dakar will take the crews through a labyrinth of tracks where navigation skills will be essential.

 

 

 

The change of continent will come with rule changes aimed to stay true to the founding principles of the rally raid, a discipline that allows amateurs to rub shoulders and sometimes battle with professionals. The new roadbooks and the new marathon stages will help reduce the gaps.

The official entry list for the 2020 Dakar includes 351 vehicles (vs 334 in 2019): 170 bikes and quads, 134 cars and SSVs and 47 trucks.

Direction Jeddah... This fishing village dating back to the 7th Century has become one of the busiest ports in the world, as well as the gateway for pilgrims to the holy places of Mecca and Medina. This coming January 5th, the second largest city in the country will be the starting point of the Dakar and will more importantly signify the immediate entry into the difficulties of the rally. The first third of the rally will test the navigation skills of the riders and crews. The direction choices will be made more complicated by the multitude of tracks. Near the Red Sea or the Jordanian border for the stages around Neom then towards Al Ula, it will be the navigators who will lead the way. With more and more sand, the course will pose major challenges in the dunes between Ha’il and the capital Riyadh, where there will be a rest day. The rally will continue and intensify with the discovery and exploration of the vast “Empty Quarter” desertic portion of the Saudi territory where the all-important Shubaytah and Haradh stages will be contested. But the general classification will not necessarily be set in stone heading into the final Qiddiyah stage, where navigation could catch out even the best.

In these unexplored regions of the rally raid universe, another wrinkle of the 42nd edition also comes from the desire to rebalance the parameters in favour of the less professional entries. New colour-coded roadbooks will be handed out just minutes prior to the start of the timed sector on several stages to precisely deprive the competitors with the biggest teams of a competitive advantage. Similarly, the introduction of a "Super Marathon" stage for motorcycles (only top-pilots) where only 10 minutes of work on the machines will be allowed, making vehicle management crucial, as well as the more traditional marathon stage (imposed on all vehicles) that will conclude the day before the finish. In order to allow the less experienced to continue their learning process, a “joker” will be granted (in all categories) to competitors forced to retire. They will be permitted to re-join the rally in the “Dakar Experience” classification.

The call of the East has been overwhelmingly answered by Dakar competitors, with 351 vehicles expected in Saudi Arabia, which is a 5% increase from the start in the Peruvian capital of Lima last January. While the proportion of South American entrants has logically decreased, there are still 42 vehicles representing South America on the list... while there were just 12 during the last African edition in 2007! Among the 557 competitors entered, 53 nationalities are represented, with a leading trio dominated by the French delegation (258), followed by Spain (77) and the Netherlands (53). The most significant increase is from host country Saudi Arabia that will be represented by 18 raiders (13 drivers/riders and 5 navigators), with the most awaited being Yazeed Al-Rahji, who will be a contender for victory in a Toyota Hilux 4x4. The best Saudi motorcycle competitor entered in the Dakar, Michal Alghuneim, will also garner the attention of his countrymen. And finally, 13 women are entered for the 2020 Dakar, including the female tandem of Camelia Liparoti and Annett Fischer.

Adventurers of the world’s deserts

The Dakar attracts travellers in quest of the extreme. And a number of them have become faithful to the rally. Some took part in the 20th Century, while others discovered it in the early 2000s then followed it to South America and are present at the dawn of chapter III. 65 competitors on the entry list will have taken part in this very special world tour, which will give them the opportunity to have raced in four continents. Among them, four have won in Africa then in South America: Stéphane Peterhansel and Joan « Nani » Roma, who have both won on two and four wheels, Marc Coma on two wheeels, while Czech Republic’s Joseph Machacek dominated the then emergent quad category in Africa before winning the first Dakar in South America in 2009. However, the oldest winner in Saudi Arabia will be Italy's Giulio Minelli, who in 1986 accompanied driver Giacomo Vismara, to take the truck category laurels in Dakar. Also in contention for the win as a supplier for many riders and crews for more than 20 years, BF Goodrich is also the only official partner to have been associated with the Dakar since 2007.

 

 

Tuesday
Dec032019

MOTOCROSS ACTION INTERVIEW: ROGER DECOSTER ON THE CYCLES OF LIFE

 

Check out this very good interview from MXA. DeCoster has been so much more than just a great champion.

 

https://motocrossactionmag.com/motocross-action-interview-roger-decoster-on-the-cycles-of-life/

Tuesday
Dec032019

JS63 MX Facility Tour...Wow!!

SoCal's Milestone MX may be closing its doors forever this weekend, but a new and exciting new facility is being built only a few miles away! The JS63 MX Facility will be a state-of-the-art motocross park with multiple tracks and first-class amenities. We can't wait!

Wednesday
Nov272019

Cairoli Trys 4 Wheels

Antonio Cairoli - Italian Rally

Posted on November 27, 2019

 

The tenth edition of the Rally Tuscan Rewind, the last round of the Italian Rally Championship, which was held on the legendary dirt roads around the famous village of Montalcino, in the province of Siena, had Tony Cairoli among its protagonists. The prestigious appointment, the last stage of the CIR, saw the best specialists of the discipline compete against each other over the weekend to win the tricolor titles of the different specialties.

Cairoli, present at the start of the rally at the wheel of a Skoda Fabia R5 of the racing team PA Racing, flanked by the co-pilot Anna Tomasi, gave yet another demonstration of pure talent on four wheels, facing the debut on the dirt road without awe, but with a careful and as prudent as possible race conduct, which allowed him to bring his car to the finish line, despite the treacherous race conditions, made difficult by the abundant rainfall of the days preceding the event.

The performance of the "wild card" was excellent and even if not new to the rally experience, the nine-time World Motocross Champion, carried out in great style his debut on the white roads with an exciting tenth place overall, two just seconds from the ninth. Constantly among the best in every single test, Tony ran into a road exit during the fourth race and a smear during the sixth, errors that caused him to lose precious seconds in the overall standings, when he was close to the top five.

Tony Cairoli: "It was a very positive race even if I made some mistakes due to the lack of practice before the rally, but it was a fantastic experience. Finally I faced a real rally, with real drivers, on fantastic roads, my debut on the dirt could not be better. I thank everyone, my sponsors, the organizers and my crew that made this wonderful adventure possible. "

Photo Edoardo Sport Photography & Veronica De Angelis

Wednesday
Nov202019

How Do You Get A Good Start?

The Perfect Start – The world’s best racers reveal their secrets on nailing the perfect start

Tuesday
Nov192019

Can You Say Balance...Incredible Balance!

Toni Bou opens the indoor season with a victory on Réunion Island