This one's
not going to be easy to write....
Let me start off
with some good news. The new Racer X landed on our desks this morning,
and it's a good one: 382 pages worth of really cool stuff, including Anaheims
1 & 2, the San Francisco mudder, a joint profile on Kyle Lewis and Ryan
Villopoto, and an explanation as to why all of those energy-drink cans are lined
up down on the starting gate.
There's also
an absolutely bitchin' cover photo of Jeremy McGrath throwing out
maybe his last two-stroke nac-nac at the Phoenix Supercross (okay, this Chris
Tedesco shot was on the parade lap, but close enough). This cover comes
just as Jeremy signs off from his Part-Time Showtime 2006 Tour, and his presence
on the track for the rest of the Amp'd Mobile AMA Supercross Series will
be missed by fans and competitors alike.
Okay, maybe James
Stewart won't miss him, but that's only because he and Jeremy
got into it a little bit at San Diego. Granted, McGrath felt like Stewart had
it coming after James dropped him in his frantic charge to the front, but Stewart
was pretty much racing for the championship at that point, and it was take-no-prisoners—not
even the King. So depending on who you ask, either Stewart had it coming or
didn't, though since it was Jeremy, well, that changes matters. Remember
the batter who charged the mound after Nolan Ryan hit him with a pitch?
Either way, wow!
What James did after he got bumped off the track was simply amazing. I have
seen at least one guy come from dead last to win his heat race in supercross—David
Bailey did it in '83 after getting dropped in the hairpin first turn
at Daytona—but what Stewart did in shredding that "easy” San
Diego track to blow past everyone and win was absolutely incredible.
 | | Jeremy's
payback moment on James at San Diego | | Copyright Stephan
"Lebig" Legrand/Moto Verte |
|
| And the next time
someone says the tracks are too easy or not challenging enough, pull out your
videotape of that heat race and show them how Stewart made mincemeat out of
those guys (and that main event wasn't exactly a yawner, either).
Injuries are down
in supercross this year, at least during the actual races. While a lot of guys
are getting hurt on private supercross tracks—Broc Hepler, Ben
Townley, Troy Adams, Andrew McFarlane, Jay Marmont,
Jeff Alessi—race injuries have been way down. We've seen
close races almost every time, and all of the top guys are still out there.
Whatever they are doing to the tracks, I hope they keep doing it—it's
working.
But not for James
Marshall, which leads me to the first tough thing to write today. As you
are probably aware by now, the all-around great privateer kid was severely injured
in his heat-race crash at San Diego. He had a good start, got out of shape in
a rhythm section, and went down hard right in front of Ernesto Fonseca.
He broke his back and may never walk again.
 | | James Marshall | | photo courtesy of HelpJames.org |
|
| Needless to say,
the motocross industry wrapped its arms around him immediately. From the Asterisk
Mobile Medics' Unit to the Wonder Warthog, from Road 2 Recovery to the
Women's Motocross/Supercross Foundation, to ordinary fans and fellow privateers
like Ryan Clark and MXSponsors.com, Marshall got their full attention.
They started auctions, foundations, donations, and just did their best to make
what will be a long road to recovery seem a little shorter for James and his
family.
If you want to
help, a good place to start is any of the above organizations, or maybe just
click on www.HelpJames.org.
What is it about
San Diego? It's become the single biggest race in the sport, with nearly
70,000 fans bursting out of Qualcomm Stadium. It's the conclusion of the
"California Supercross season" and usually just a blast to be at.
But three of the really terrible incidents in recent supercross history all
happened there in the last six years: Jimmy Button's career-ending
practice crash, the tragic death of Jason Ciarletta, and now James
Marshall. It's a sad legacy for a really great event, though each
of these accidents seemed like just that—accidents.
Here's a
note about James I got from Allison Kennedy of Racer X Canada:
"I just wanted
to take a second to let you know that we've been pretty shaken up by James Marshall's
accident here too. James rode the Canadian nationals in 2004, in the Western
Region with the Riverside Yamaha team. From the first time we met him, we were
blown away by his enthusiasm, personality and his positive attitude. Virtually
everyone on the series loved having him here, and he even called last summer,
just to let me know he was missing it and that he'd like to come back up. I
ran into him at Anaheim 2, actually he stopped in the infield after his day
qualifier to hug me from on his bike, he and I have been in touch since then
as Yamaha Canada was interested in hiring him for the 250 class. He was so flattered
that we'd put in a good word for him. I just talked to him Friday about it,
and wished him luck in San Diego. We are already sending cards and letters to
him, and will be in touch. He really is an absolutely awesome kid and we
are all thinking of him."
 | | The St. Louis track. |
|
| Last Sunday night,
I went to the viewing for Kevin Crine down in Owings, Maryland, right
up the road from Budds Creek. Crine lost his life in a car accident, and his
family and friends were trying to make the best of a very tragic situation.
Friendly old rivals like Ty Wallace, Jeff Yentzer and Tom Welch
were there, along with folks like Mike Rossini, Robert Pastrana,
and Jonathan Beasley. There was a slideshow of Kevin's racing career,
his life as husband to Stacy and father to Brett, and just a lot
of people there to pay their respects. His father got a phone call from Tim
Ferry that day, and Ricky Carmichael also sent his best wishes along.
Number 574 will be missed by all.
The next morning,
I drove out to Budds Creek and took a walk around the snow-covered facility
with Beasley. While nothing is official yet, it's looking real good right
now that the facility just might host the 2007 Motocross des Nations. (Racer
X reader Tom Miley let us know that he's hearing similar words
down there about an ‘07 MXdN date). We'll keep you posted as things
develop.
And speaking of
keeping posted, don't forget that the East Region kicks off tomorrow night
in St. Louis, but that's only the preliminary bout. The real fight will
come afterward when Ricky Carmichael and James Stewart line up
for Round 7 of their 16-race title fight (or Round 9 of 17 if you're following
the WSXGP). You can listen to the Supercross Live! webcast beginning at 8:00
p.m. EST and five for those of you out west). Also don't forget to click
on AMAMotocross.com for @TheWire Live! for constant scoring and lap times all
day long.
 | | James
will be looking for his first two-in-row in AMA Supercross this weekend | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| The race will also
be aired the very next day on CBS (12:30 p.m. EST/9:30 PST), which has been
a bonus all season long ...
... well,
for most of us. Here's a note from one disgruntled fan who may be in one
of those no-show zones:
Dear Racer X,
According to my on-screen
Comcast cable-TV guide there is no St Louis SX scheduled for Nashville on Sun,
2/19 at 11:30am CT. Instead is scheduled the Stellar Gospel Music Awards. Help!
I've left a recorded message at (615) 248-5242, the Nashville area CBS affiliate
programing dept.! Make 'em stop!!!
Thank you,
Scott Lorenz
Just a reminder:
The 2005 Motocross des Nations, starring Team USA's Ricky Carmichael,
Kevin Windham and Ivan Tedesco, is supposed to air on Speed on
Tuesday, February 28 at 12 pm EST.
Earlier I mentioned
Stewart's amazing last-to-first ride in his heat race, but what about
Grant Langston's last-to-first ride? We gave Grant the business
last year for adding an East Region SX crown to the AMA National crown he won
after starting with a World MX crown—he was going the wrong way! But now
the class is so star-packed that we can't (and won't) give Langston
grief over trying to add a West Region title to his unique title collection,
especially when he's battling the likes of Team Honda's Andrew
Short and Red Bull KTM's Nathan Ramsey.
 | | Grant's
stock is rising quickly | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| Langston will have
to move up in 2007 come hell or high water—Steve Whitelock says
you get to defend (or switch coasts) for one year after a championship and then
you must move up. But the way he's been riding has certainly given a lot
of folks a new outlook on his supercross potential. He used to be practically
a liability out there. Now he's become one of the smoothest SX Lites riders.
He's back with his old representative firm (Fred Bramblett's
OMS) and will command a good factory ride on a 450 on '07 and beyond.
By the way, the
lap times of both San Diego Lites winner Short and runner-up Langston were right
around top-five all night—in both classes.
It's going
to be a busy off-season. Unofficially, these riders all should be at the end
of their current contracts: Stewart, Chad Reed, Michael Byrne,
Travis Preston and Heath Voss. Add in the fact that Mike LaRocco
is going to finally call it quits—and we're still not quite
sure what Ricky Carmichael is going to do—and you have quite a
silly season coming up.
 | | The Rock and Showtime: We may never see them race together again | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| And no, I don't
think the Mac will be back in 2006, even if Honda asks. It was really cool last
Saturday night when Jeremy said on the podium, "I want to especially thank
my wife. We have a brand-new baby and she wasn't giving me any trouble
about going riding or training. So thank you, babe.”
Let me turn this
over to Ping with some West Coast notes...
With
the California portion of the supercross series concluded, I can't help but
think that I may have seen Ricky
Carmichael
ride supercross for the last time in the
Golden
State.
The word being whispered around the pits is that he may hang up his boots at
the end of the 2006 season.
It
seems like just yesterday he was competing in his first supercross race at the
L.A.
Coliseum.
It was actually
1997
and we were teammates at Pro Circuit. Although we were both riding the East
Region series that year, the rules allowed us to race on the opposite coast
for the initial races, as long as we weren't in the top ten in points
when it was time for the East to start up (or something like that). Ricky looked
like a different rider back then. When he hit a triple, he would stiffen up
and lean way out over the front of the bike.
 | | Ricky's come a long way from his 1997 rookie SX season | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| Carmichael
was more fast and furious than Paul Walker back in those days. If he
wasn't knocking Tuff Blox off the track on every section then he didn't think
he was going fast enough. He figured things out, though, and he's got a bazillion
race wins and more championships than the Harlem Globetrotters to show for it.
It drove me nuts when I had to race against him, but now it is just a pleasure
watching him ride as a fan.
Chad
Reed
doesn't have shoes. Well, if he does,
they aren't from his former shoe sponsor Etnies.
Reed was seen at last years X
Games Supermoto
event wearing an experimental cooling vest created by Nike.
The vest is worn underneath your gear and plugs in to a small AC unit while
you are off the bike. Is Reedy working on a deal with Nike? Only his agent really
knows, but he has been wearing Nike shoes to the races.
Speaking
of Supermoto,
the 2006 AMA schedule is finally out. According to team owner/rider/sport supporter
Troy
Lee,
good things are coming. "We had a few stumbling blocks there for a while
but now the ball is rolling and we have some awesome events lined up,”
Lee said. Many of the rounds are held in conjunction with AMA road racing
events and we are even going to race at a CART event or two. The final race
at the Queen Mary [Sister ship of the Titanic, moored in Long Beach Harbor]
is going to be absolutely amazing. Also, the X Games is back and I'm sure that
race will continue to be the biggest draw at Summer X. So the sport is headed
in the right direction and we're pumped about it."
 | It's time for Chad Reed to pick up the pace.
| | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| The
2006 AMA Supermoto Championship Schedule is as follows:
April 29 California Speedway - Fontana,
CA
June 3 Road America Elkhart Lake, WI
June 10 USA International Raceway Shawano, WI
June 17 Miller Motorsports Park Tooele, UT
July 8 The Palace of Auburn Hills Detroit, MI
August 26-27 TBA (double-header) Denver, CO
October 14 Music City Motorplex Nashville, TN
November 4 Queen Mary Long Beach, CA
If
there was ever going to be a reality
show
about a house full of motocross guys, then I have a candidate. Freestyle champ
Nate
Adams
recently moved into Brian
Deegan's
old house in the Temecula hills. The former Mulisha
compound
will now be Nate's own personal training ground.
But
he's not alone. Staying in the house with "The
Donkey"
(as we like to call him) are four other motocrossers. Ryan
Morais, Andy
Bakken,
Logan Darien
and freestyle rider Jimmy
McGuire
will all occupy rooms there. If that doesn't
reek of bachelorhood enough, there is even a resident ghost
living in one of the rooms.
 | | The lovely Erin Bates is not the ghost in Nate Adams' new house | | photo: Ping |
|
| Nate explained:
"Deegan told me that there is a ghost living here. He said that one of
his buddies was outside smoking a cigarette, and when he turned around, he was
startled to see someone in a hooded sweatshirt (with the hood up) sitting in
a chair next to him. He was so surprised, he stammered, ‘Hey, what's up?'
as he walked back into the house.” Bakken is the lucky roommate who has
the haunted room. The 'ghost' has been seen in his room by others. Andy saw
him the first night in the house.
"I was sleeping,
and I kind of woke up and looked over," he explained. "I
was sure I saw Nate sleeping next to me, which didn't surprise me because his
bed wasn't in the house yet and we had talked about him sleeping on my
bed. So I went back to sleep. The next morning, Nate told me that he had slept
on the couch all night. It kind of freaked me out."
That's it
from Ping, who is getting ready to go try to claim the Costa Rican championship
from Adrian Roberts.
Here's a
new site to check out.
Quick
note from EJ: Kevin Windham
was cleared by his doctor today to begin riding - albeit trail-riding.
Simon Cudby
checked in from a Mechanix Wear photo shoot at the NASCAR events in Daytona
today. Clint Bowyer was running in the top four early in the first Gatorade
150 qualifier on Thursday. Clint is running in the #07 Jack Daniels car and
ended up finishing 21st after a couple of rain delays. The 07 car lines up 37th
for Sunday's Daytona 500.
 | | That's Andy "Rev-Up” Bowyer's brother in the #07 car | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| Here's a
note from Andy with more on Clint's racing so far down in Daytona:
"He was kicking major ass till the right front tire went away after 20
laps. His car won't turn (too tight) so when he tries to put the wheel to it,
the car goes up the track and wears out the right front. His pit crew lost a
lug nut on his pit stop and he lost six positions there. Then, he came thundering
back through the pack to 12th, when there was a crash. He ran over debris, cut
down his left front, had to pit, then restart on a green-white-checkered with
three flat-spotted tires. They should have changed all four.
"It was a bummer
to what had been an amazing beginning to his Daytona Speedweek. They have two
practice sessions today to work out the bugs and he should be ready to knife
his way through the pack come this Sunday afternoon.”
Carmichael, by
the way, is planning on flying directly to Daytona after the St. Louis SX to
visit with Boywer, as well as some other new friends. Stay tuned....
 | | Cheer for Loretta Lynn's MX grad Clint Bowyer on Sunday in the 500 | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| Do you miss Jamie
Little? Check this out for a quick
refresher course.
In
more Daytona news, the gang over at Municipal Stadium is getting stoked for
Travis Pastrana to show up and do some sliding with them (Travis plans
on doing the GNCC race, the dirt track, the Alligator Enduro, and then the Daytona
Supercross, in case you haven't heard). Road Racer X contributor
Miriam Dietrich added the following into the RRX
version of Racerhead today:
Ever
since I learned that Travis Pastrana was planning to run the Daytona
Short Track, I've been wondering what number he'll run. He can't
run his trademark #199, because he hasn't earned an AMA Flat Track national
number. He can't run 199s (s is the letter that follows the number
of racers from Maryland who haven't earned a national number) since AMA
Pro's computer system can't accept four digits. So what's
TP to do? Look for 19s on Pastrana's Suzuki at Municipal Stadium.
I also couldn't resist asking the top flat
track racers what they think of Pastrana racing Daytona.
J.R.
Schnabel: "Any time we can get someone with a reputation of Pastrana
come and ride one of our races, it's a big shot in the arm for dirt track.
We need that. I hope it inspires more guys to come out and try it.”
Henry
Wiles: "It'll be good for our sport, and it'll be pretty
cool to see him out there.”
Smith:
"If he's still walking then, it'll be good. It'll draw
a lot of much-needed attention to our sport. It'll be good for someone
like him to come in there and hopefully make people realize that it's
a little tougher than it might look. Having him there will be interesting. It'll
make us feel a little more superstar-ish.”
Shaun
Russell: "I think it's cool. He gets tons of media attention
everywhere he goes, and flat track definitely needs that. Plus, it's pretty
cool that someone like him—who could do whatever they want—looks
at flat track as something they want to do.”
Jared
Mees: It's awesome. It's really good for our sport. It'll
be really good when Pastrana goes out there and sees that it's a lot tougher
than what it looks.”
 | | The all-around racer is going to add to his resume at Daytona | | photo courtesy of DCShoes.com |
|
| Daytona
is an interesting place for Pastrana to make his flat track debut. More riders
show up to Daytona than any other AMA Flat Track race all year long, which means
the competition is fierce. More than 100 riders come out for 60 spots in the
evening program and just 16 in the main event. There's a good chance he'll
make the 60-rider cut, but it'll be really tough for him to make the final
16 since short track mains are outrageously hard to make; a rider needs to finish
first or second in his heat race or win his semi in order to qualify. It's
commonplace for top riders to watch the main from the sidelines. How
does TP's competition think he'll fare?
Schnabel:
"It's tough to say. He rides Supermoto really well, and that's
a little bit like dirt track. The thing that'll be tough is Daytona's
one of those tracks that's tricky. The first time you go to Daytona, you
could've dirt tracked all your life and you get to Daytona you just feel
like a fish out of water.”
Wiles:
"I think he'll do pretty good. His name should get him on some pretty
good equipment, and he'll probably get someone good to do his setup. I
think he might high-side. At Daytona you can win one night and be watching the
next. It's a pretty tough main event to make.”
Smith:
"It depends on whether he's been preparing for it. If he's
been riding a little bit, then I'd expect him to make the [60-rider] night
program and be in contention to make the main. If he hasn't been doing
anything and just shows up, I doubt he'll even make the 60-rider cut.”
Russell:
"It depends. If he's had any kind of practice, he should fare okay.
It's Daytona, anything can happen. I think it'd be cool if he made
the main. There'd be a lot of people pretty excited about that.
Mees:
"The guy's got a lot of talent, but dirt track racing is definitely
something a little different and Daytona's the toughest main event to
make. I haven't been on the Grand National circuit for that long, but
I've never made that main event.”
 | | Weege spotted this last week in California at an AM/PM store: the Reed Unbound display | | photo: Jason Weigandt |
|
| Congrats to Graham
Watanabe, the son of Scott Watanabe from Scott USA. Scott was a last-minute
addition to the U.S. snowboard team for the Winter Olympics over in Turin,
Italy. Watanabe is a snocross racer, by the way.
Okay, time for
something from Jason Weigandt of Supercross Live! on www.supercross.cc.com:
Whitelock and
the Media
Every three weeks,
AMA Pro Racing Supercross Series Manager Steve Whitelock holds a roundtable
discussion with the motocross media to make sure everyone is kept in the loop.
After a conference at Phoenix to discuss new track designs, Whitelock held another
in San Diego. This time many of the questions centered on the management changes
at AMA Pro Racing, as it appears Whitelock is moving upward in the ranks. Whitelock
said he likes his current title and likes doing what he is doing – which
is going to the races every weekend. He may have to add additional responsibilities
such as keeping an eye on road racing, dirt track and hillclimb, but he will
not leave his current post as AMA Supercross and AMA Motocross Series Manager.
 | | The tracks
are easier but the racing is better, as guys like Ivan Tedesco will attest | | photo: Simon Cudby |
|
| Talk then turned
to a review of the tracks, which have gotten notably easier since Phoenix. Whitelock
denied the rumor that all supercross tracks will use a "standard”
whoop size, but he admitted the whoops and the rest of the obstacles will continue
in the direction they are going – which is easier. "We have race
tracks where racers can race each other now,” said Whitelock. "We're
not holding high-speed trials demonstrations where we see what obstacles everyone
can get over.”
Since the racing
has been good this year and injuries haven't been a huge factor, everyone
found those points hard to argue. But you can always go back to fighting about
the new class names. A few journalists mentioned that now that AMA Pro Racing
is going through changes, perhaps the names will, too, but Whitelock said the
names are what they are. "We have to get away from having the displacements
determine the name of the class,” said Whitelock. "This way, if
I have to reduce capacity of the bikes in a few years, we can do that.”
Whitelock actually
admitted that the AMA may have gone too far with the current four-stroke displacement
limits, saying 200 and 400 were good targets. "But we let sales and marketing
people decide that 250 would work better than 200,” he said. Whitelock
has no plans to increase the two-stroke displacement limits.
Talk then turned
to other rules, such as the rising costs of staying competitive in the Lites
horsepower wars. Whitelock said he's keeping an eye on the situation and
may eventually have to make some changes to keep that class even. "Do not look
for a ban on works suspension though in any class. They say it's
a safety issue, allowing riders to have the best suspension available,”
he says, apparently referring to talks with factory race teams.
 | | Highland Motors' new offering |
|
| Thanks, Weege.
Now this note from Robin Fisher of Salco:
Re: the quizzical
reference to Highland Motors' new 450 four-stroke MC bike by DC in the current
RacerX
column,
it's a new model being brought out by the Swedish manufacturer of high-end,
specialized off-road, motard, and dual-sport bikes (other models based
on super-lightweight 950 c.c. V-twin; see www.highland.se).
Single cylinder 450 c.c., 58 hp., more torque over a wider rpm range than current
Japanese offerings, 212 lbs., world-class balance & dynamics; will
be competing in selected FIM European events in '06....maybe some U.S.
races if we find a suitable rider.”
Godspeed to the
father of Eddie Cole, who passed on this week.
And finally, the
hard part.
The best and the
worst news of the week, unfortunately, involved the Baileys. On Tuesday, David
Bailey rode a motorcycle for the first time since January 11, 1987. Bailey
was able to ride Lake Elsinore on a specially bike built for Ricky James,
the promising young star who was paralyzed at a race in Texas last spring. It
was a very emotional moment for David and his wife, Gina, whom he had
married just three months before his career-ending crash at Lake Huron twenty
years ago, and their son Shawn, who got to ride dirt bikes with his father
the legend for the first time ever.
There is some great coverage of the moment over on www.davidbaileymx.com,
and Guy B put together a nice video over at the Transworld site. When
I spoke to David about it, he sounded just like the old pro he is: "I
felt like I had some good style, and I even over-jumped a few spots, but for
the most part I felt real smooth.” Twenty years off a bike and now without
the use of his legs, and the Icon still has style....
But as David and
his family were enjoying that day in the sun, another story was developing down
in Florida, where his stepfather, Gary Bailey, was getting ready to build
the Daytona SX track for what would be the 36th year in a row. What
seemed like an impossibly cruel rumor turned out to be true: Gary Bailey had
been arrested for lewd and lascivious conduct. Details were sketchy for a few
days, and the story seemed to be hovering above reality like a bad dream that
couldn't find a place to take hold.
Then we saw the
police bulletin: Gary Thomas Bailey, 62, Axton,
Va., lewd and lascivious behavior on a five-year-old child.”
Impossible.
Not the Professor. Not the man who has easily taught more kids how to race motocross
than anyone else on earth. Things like this only happen on police shows, right?
So
I called Gary Bailey on Thursday morning and asked him just what the hell was
going on. Free on $10,000 bail, Bailey took my call, and he sounded absolutely
miserable, confused, and just plain upset. He couldn't say much, on lawyer's
orders, but he did assure me that it was not as it seems, that it was false
allegations by a lady, and that he would be exonerated in due time.
Then,
this morning, a
story came out in a local newspaper that spelled out more of what the charges
are about. The details, according to what the aforementioned lady says happened,
are there. The good news—if there is any here—is that the child
in question was apparently just a witness to what the woman says she saw, and
was never physically touched.
At any rate, it
all belongs in the hands of the detectives now. Bailey will not build the Daytona
SX track after all; it looks like the Dirt Wurx crew will be filling in for
him. But he does plan on the truth coming out and the whole sordid affair being
resolved and his name and character cleared.
I wasn't
there, so I don't know anything about this case, who the woman is, or
whether Gary Bailey knows her or not. What I do know is that Gary is the last
man I would ever to expect to hear such a charge filed against, and I hope and
pray that this is all a misunderstanding and that Bailey can go back to being
the Professor. He's spent a lifetime promoting motocross—through
good times and bad. It can't possibly end like this.
Gary, say it ain't
so.
 | | photo: Jeff Kocan |
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