Race Day
Spring Creek MX Park
in Millville, Minnesota is the home of monster whoops and the Whoop
Monster. Imagine, if you will, the longest, deepest, sandiest whoop
section on the entire AMA Outdoor circuit. Then add a tight sandy berm at
the end of the section and add another section of brutal whoops going back
the other way. Okay, now imagine a crazy guy dressed in a camouflaged
gilly suit running back and forth with a chainsaw motor revved to the
moon, amping up the screaming fans that line the track and pushing the
riders to go faster and take just a few more chances through what is
arguably the most difficult section of track in all of America. Now you
have a bit of an idea what Millville is all about.
|
The
Millville Whoop Monster
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
This year there was
a new addition to the nastiest whoop section in all of motocross. Just to
give the guys a little bit more motivation, a speed trap was put in place
for this year's event so that everyone could see how fast the riders are
going through the whoops. Basically, this amounted to a trackside radar
gun, but it gave both the fans and riders a new way to look at what
happens in the notorious Millville whoop section.
In addition to nasty
sand whoops, there are a couple of jump sections at Millville that are
notorious. The first is the Holy Schmit tabletop, named after Donny Schmit,
which is the longest table in the series and has yet to be jumped in
competition. The other is a triple section that was intended as a double
to single until Ricky Carmichael cleared the whole thing. It is now called
the RC triple.
Millville was also
the home track to Donny Schmit, who succumbed to a rare disease, Aplastic
Anemia, just a few years after retiring from motocross. Donny will always
be remembered in this part of the world and the local AMA District
continues to raise money to help fund research for Aplastic Anemia.
|
Carmichael
pays homage to John "The Junkyard Dog"
Dowd?.and he's a sponsor
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
The expectation for
this weekend is that it would mark the return of Kawasaki's James Stewart
to competition after his high-speed crash with RC at Unadilla.
Unfortunately a practice crash at Glen Helen did more damage to Bubba and
he will not be racing this weekend. This comes two weeks after Yamaha's
Chad Reed had a season-ending practice crash at Glen Helen. This puts two
of the fastest four guys in the 250 class out of the contention and opens
up the third podium position, which should result in some very good racing
between the other fast guys in the class.
With Bubba and Reed
out of the action there is sure to be some jockeying in the points in the
next few weeks. With David Vuillemin and Ernesto Fonseca running within
seven points of each other in 4th and 5th overall, there will surely be a
battle to inherit 3rd place overall in the point standings to fill the
slot currently held by Chad Reed.
In the 125 class,
the excitement continues. Pro Circuit Kawasaki's Ivan Tedesco has become a
dominant force in the last few races and has established a clear lead in
the point's standings. Mike Brown, who had controlled the points through
the first seven rounds, continues to slip back, but still holds on to 2nd.
3rd through 6th in points are separated by a miniscule eight points and
everybody in the class seems to be having a strong season. Another poor
finish by Brown could drop him out of 2nd, and a slip by Tedesco could
tighten up the class standings once again. At this point in the season
Tedesco is the only top-ten rider in the 125 class that has had consistent
top-ten finishes in every Moto.
125 Moto 1
The start of an AMA
Outdoor National is like nothing else on earth. The sound of 40 bikes
pinned to the rev limiters and blasting off of the line is pure controlled
chaos. The first few people through the first turn have an incredible
advantage, and those unlucky enough to go down in a first turn pileup have
lots of ground to make up if they have hopes of a decent finish.
|
Ryan
Mills takes the holeshot in 125 Moto 1
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
As 125 Moto 1 came
off the line it was KTM's Ryan Mills with the holeshot. He was followed
closely by Tommy Hahn, Mike Alessi and Andrew Short. Stuck back in the
first turn in a huge pileup was the Suzuki of Broc Hepler. Hepler's luck
continues to be bad. Once he got his bike untangled from the first turn
mess, he found that his bars were bent, which would leave Hepler
struggling throughout the Moto.
|
Josh
Grant throws an impressive scrub
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
As the lead pack
made its way around the Millville circuit, Andrew Short showed that his
recent showings are no fluke as he made his way from 4th to 1st before the
finish line jump. At the end of the first lap it was Short, Mills, Alessi,
Laninovich, Matt Walker, Ivan Tedesco, Josh Grant, Grant Langston, Jesse
Casillas and Ryan Hughes in the top ten. Mike Brown had suffered another
less-than-spectacular start and came around in 13th position, with the
Suzuki of Davi Millsaps running 18th.
As the second lap
got underway, Ivan Tedesco began to show his speed and make his move on
Pro Circuit teammate Matt Walker. Tedesco got by Walker, but then bobbled,
allowing Walker to retake 6th position. Further towards the front Mike
Alessi made clear his desire to push towards the front by out-jumping Ryan
Mills to make a pass.
As the field continued
to dice, the next lap saw Ivan Tedesco catch back up with
|
Millsaps
can't seem to find a good start, but continues to charge
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Walker and remount his
challenge. The third member of the Pro Circuit squad, Grant Langston, was
also putting pressure on Josh Grant in a bid to take over 8th place. The
harder Langston pushed, the harder Josh Grant fought, as he managed to
continue to hold Langston.
Ryan Hughes, in his
first race since Round 5 at Red Bud, was bitten early by a mechanical
failure and had to drop out before finishing the second lap.
As things began to
settle out and the running order stabilized, it was the Amsoil Chaparral
Honda of Tommy Hahn that was the real surprise. First he managed to get by
Ryan Mills, then he passed Mike Alessi to grab 2nd place. Hahn would
manage to hold on to 2nd through the eighth lap, despite massive pressure
from the KTM of Mike Alessi.
In the eighth lap it
turned into a game of musical chairs as Alessi finally got back by Hahn,
then the freight train of Matt Walker, Ivan Tedesco and Josh Grant all
pushed past Ryan Mills. Then in lap nine, Billy Laninovich would also get
past Mills.
In lap ten, Mills
went down and dropped back to 8th position, while lap eleven saw Hahn
suffer the same fate and drop back from 3rd to 8th. With the door open for
3rd position, Josh Grant took the opportunity and blew by both Tedesco and
Walker in the whoops. While Walker did his best to keep pressure on Josh
Grant, Ivan Tedesco bobbled and Laninovich took the opportunity to pick up
another spot.
With all of the
craziness going on from 3rd place back, both Short and Alessi were able to
put some gap between themselves and the rest of the pack. Short had
already established a nine second gap between himself and 2nd by the ninth
lap, and he was able to keep this gap right up to the end of the Moto.
|
Alessi
continues to improve from his early season shoulder
injury
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
On the last lap
Laninovich began putting massive pressure on Walker and was able to
finally get by, but Walker wasn't about to settle for this and fought
back. Just before the finish Walker was able to reclaim 4th place.
At the finish it was
Short, Alessi, Josh Grant, Matt Walker, Billy Laninovich, Ivan Tedesco,
Ryan Mills, Tommy Hahn, Jeff Alessi and Grant Langston. Mike Brown had
managed an 11th place finish and Davi Millsaps had made his way up to
12th.
The Moto 1 win by
Short marks the tenth different Moto winner in the 125 class this season,
while the battling going on in the lead pack was enough to keep everyone
on the edge of their seats. The 125 class of 2005 is perhaps the most
competitive class ever in the history of AMA Outdoor Motocross.
250 Moto 1
With both Stewart
and Reed out of the running in the 250 class, the top two finishers are
almost a foregone conclusion. Ricky Carmichael has been nearly unstoppable
this season, and unless he has some sort of mechanical problem it is
unlikely that anyone is going to touch him once he finds his way to the
front. This weekend, RC was nearly four seconds a lap faster than anyone
else in practice, which didn't bode well for the competition.
|
Chris
Gosselaar is adapting to his new ride
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Kevin Windham is
also in his own class this season. While he is one to two seconds slower
than Carmichael each lap, he is really the only guy that has consistently
run anywhere near Carmichael's speed this season. Kevin continues to
improve his speed and push the edge, but Carmichael always seems to take
it up another notch before Windham can catch him.
Aside from the
incredible show of speed and finesse being put on by Carmichael and
Windham week after week, the real show in the 250 class is now the battle
for 3rd through 10th positions. While RC and KW run away with each Moto,
there is some very good battling happening further back in the field, and
several people are really starting to shine.
As the pack neared
the first turn it was once again Ernesto Fonseca with the holeshot.
Ernesto is coming off of his first 250 podium finish two weeks ago at
Washougal and it is sure to bolster his confidence. Close behind Fonseca
was RC, with Matt Goerke, David Vuillemin, John Dowd and Kevin Windham in
tow.
|
Fonseca
takes the drive on the outside at the start of 250 Moto
1
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Carmichael quickly
made his way around Fonseca and began charging away from the field. Matt
Goerke also managed to get by Fonseca, and then Fonseca went down and
dropped back to 10th. RC was charging so hard that he was a full
straightaway ahead of Goerke on the first downhill, before the first lap
was even complete. RC had so much distance on second that he was able to
set up and jump the Holy Schmit jump on the first lap.
As the first lap
came to a close, RC had a nearly seven second lead on Goerke. Meanwhile,
Kevin Windham had managed to pick his way through the field and was
pressuring Goerke. KW was followed by Vuillemin, Dowd, Brad Smith, Robby
Reynard, Jeff Dement, Travis Preston and Ernesto Fonseca.
Early in the second
lap Windham made his way around Goerke, and as everyone suspected,
Carmichael and Windham both left the rest of the field far behind, with
Carmichael slowly building his gap on Windham with each passing lap.
David Viullemin was
not so lucky as he went down on the second lap and ended up back in 14th
position. This opened the door for Fonseca, who was charging back through
the pack. Ahead of him Travis Preston was pressuring Dowd to try and take
away 4th position. Preston hounded Dowd and managed to get past him on the
third lap. No sooner had Preston gotten by than Dowd began feeling the
pressure from Fonseca.
|
Fonseca
looks for a way around Dowd
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
By the end of the
fourth lap Fonseca had gotten by Dowd, but Dowd was not giving up and
began pressuring Fonseca on the downhill sections. This would continue for
the next several laps.
On the sixth lap
Travis Preston was able to get past Matt Goerke, who was impressively
holding his own and running at speeds that we have not seen from him
before.
The real battle was
further back in the pack as the riders in 8th through 11th place were
running within five seconds of each other in a tight pack. This included a
charging David Viullemin, who was trying to gain back positions that he
had lost, as well as Michael Byrne on the Kawasaki two-stroke.
By lap eight, the
battle further back had caught up to Fonseca and Dowd as Nick Wey began to
pressure Dowd. This quickly became a three way battle. While Dowd and Wey
swapped positions, Fonseca was unable to shake them. Wey managed to get by
Dowd on the ninth lap and began to put pressure on Fonseca. Dowd slowed a
bit after letting Wey by and was quickly under pressure from Vuillemin
until Vuillemin did a hard swap and lost him momentum.
|
Travis
Preston showed impressive speed in both 250 Motos
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Fonseca continued to
be pressured by Wey. Wey even cleared the RC triple in an attempt to get
past Fonseca, but Fonseca continued to slam the door on Wey turn after
turn. Wey continued to push the inside and finally found his way past
Fonseca on lap twelve.
At this point
Carmichael had a twenty second lead on Windham, who had a forty-five
second lead on Preston. The gaps started to open up at this point and the
top ten held steady for the last three laps.
At the finish it was
Carmichael, Windham, Preston, Goerke, Wey, Fonseca, Dowd, Vuillemin,
Byrne, and Kyle Lewis, who finally seems to be getting his health and
equipment sorted out and is starting to show better results on the Moto
XXX Honda.
125 Moto 2
With all of the
tight racing in both 125 Moto 1 and 250 Moto 1 the crowd at Millville was
hyped up and ready for more. 125 Moto 2 would not be a disappointment. At
the start it was Mike Alessi with the holeshot. Alessi seems to be getting
better each week as he continues to recover from a shoulder injury early
in the season. We are finally starting to see Alessi get back to his usual
ways, which are consistent good starts.
|
The
Alessi trademark holeshot in 125 Moto 2
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Boost Mobile Yamaha
of Troy teammates Brock Sellards and Kelly Smith were 2nd and 3rd, with
Joaquim Rodriquez in 4th. Midway through the first lap Andrew Short
managed to catch and pass Rodriquez, while Grant Langston, Josh Grant and
Ivan Tedesco worked through the front pack.
|
Hepler's
string of bad luck continued at Millville
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
By the end of the
first lap it was Alessi, Sellards, Short, Langston, Josh Grant, Kelly
Smith, Billy Laninovich, Tedesco, Carpenter and Rodriquez in the top ten.
Alessi had already sprinted to a nearly six second lead while Short looked
for a way around Sellards. Midway through the second lap Short got past
Sellards and began tracking down Alessi. KTM's other consistent fast guy,
Ryan Mills, dropped out of Moto 2 due to mechanical problems.
In lap two Langston
would get past Sellards, then in lap three Tedesco would do the same. At
this point Langston was also starting to put pressure on Andrew Short and
both of them were gaining on Alessi by about a second and a half per lap.
Makita Suzuki's Davi
Millsaps was having a much better ride in Moto 2 having come from a 13th
place start and moved up to 7th by the end of the fifth lap. Further back
Mike Brown was having more problems as had gone down early in the Moto and
dropped all of the way back to 28th and was struggling to work his way
back up. He would only make it to the end of the tenth lap before dropping
out of the Moto. Suzuki's Broc Hepler continued his unlucky streak and
dropped out of the Moto in the seventh lap.
|
Andrew
Short dominated the 125 class at Millville
|
Photo:
Hal Kennedy
|
|
By the end of the
sixth lap Andrew Short had caught Alessi and begun to pressure him. Alessi
can be notoriously hard to pass and Mike did his best to hold off the
hard-charging Short. Short repeatedly bumped Alessi's rear tire. Alessi
holding up Short allowed Langston to catch them both and it turned into a
three-way battle.
In the ninth lap
Short had finally gotten side-by-side with Alessi and the two tore through
the whoops and put some distance between themselves and Langston. As the
two cleared the end of the whoops, Short was finally able to make the pass
stick and began to put a gap between himself and Alessi. Langston mounted
another charge and began to close on Alessi in the hill sections.
In the tenth lap
Langston continued to put pressure on Alessi, but couldn't find a way
around. Short took this to his advantage and opened up a nearly five
second gap. In the eleventh lap it was Langston and Alessi going
side-by-side through the whoops. Alessi was able to hold his position this
time, but Langston found a way around on the outside several turns later.
As 125 Moto 2 wound
down Langston began to closing on Short, but lappers got in his way and he
was unable to get close enough to mount a real challenge.
At the finish of
another barn-burner of a 125 Moto it was Short, Langston, Alessi, Josh
Grant, Davi Millsaps, Tedesco, Laninovich, Kelly Smith, Matt Walker and
Ryan Sipes for the top ten.
|
Matt
Walker drops in
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
|
Andrew
Short celebrates his first overall win
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
The 125 class
continues to be incredibly competitive as Andrew Short became the 10th
different person to win a Moto on the season and the 6th different person
to win an overall in nine rounds.
250 Moto 2
After three incredible
Motos it was time for the 250 class to take their final turn for the day.
Kevin Windham pulled one of the best starts that we have seen in a while
and took
|
Windham
owned 2nd at Millville
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
the holeshot. Windham
was able to hold off Carmichael until they got into the sand section,
where Carmichael blew past him and never looked back. Carmichael was being
clocked at 44 MPH through the whoops, while the best that anyone else
could do was closer to 41 MPH.
At the end of the
first lap it was RC, KW, Dowd, Fonseca, Reynard, Vuillemin, Sean Collier,
Kyle Lewis, Jeff Dement and Nick Wey in the top ten. This order would hold
until Dowd went down in the whoops in the third lap and lost three spots.
Travis Preston was also making a charge from mid-pack and managed to find
himself in 9th by the end of the third lap.
Dowd's tip-over in
the whoops seemed to inspire him as he began to pressure Reynard in the
next lap. Dowd eventually got past Reynard and pulled Nick Wey along with
him.
|
Fonseca
continues to impress
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
By the end of the
fifth lap RC and Windham were long gone. RC had a six second lead on
Windham and Windham had a nearly thirty second lead on Fonseca. While the
racing at the front of the 250 class may not be all that exciting, the
display of speed and ability that both Carmichael and Windham are putting
on is truly something to be witnessed. They both carry an unbelievable
amount of speed through all sections of the track and are consistently
clearing things that are truly sketchy and put them in another class from
the rest of the field.
|
Vuillemin
almost spoiled the day for Fonseca
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
Back in the field
the battle for third overall waged on. Vuillemin closed on Fonseca in the
sixth lap and continued pressuring him, while Travis Preston showed his
speed and continued working his way up through the pack.
As the laps clicked
off, Vuillemin continued to hound Fonseca. DV would catch Fonseca, try
everything possible to get by, then bobble and fall back. This happened
several times until the 12th lap where Vuillemin finally found a way by.
But Fonseca wasn't having any of this and pressured Vuillemin until
finding a way by on the last lap.
Further back in the
pack, Travis Preston had gotten by Dowd and was steadily putting pressure
on Wey. Dowd gathered himself back up and battled back to retake the
position from Preston, while Wey took advantage and managed to gain a
small gap.
At the end of 250
Moto 2 it was RC, KW, Fonseca, Vuillemin, Wey, Dowd, Preston, Reynard,
Collier and Byrne.
Wrap-Up
Andrew Short finally
got his first Moto win and his first overall win in 2005. Mike Brown had a
horrible day and ended up scoring zero points. Tedesco had a good day, but
|
Fonseca
makes it two 3rd overalls in a row
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
other than making
ground on Mike Brown, he lost ground to the rest of the contenders at the
top of the standings. There are now only ten points separating 2nd through
5th in the standings. Tedesco still has a commanding lead, but as we have
seen, nothing can be taken for granted in this class this season.
In the 250 class RC
now has an 89 point lead over Kevin Windham, who has a 71 point lead over
Vuillemin. So unless something terrible happens to either Carmichael or
Windham the top two in this class is a foregone conclusion with three
complete races to go. From third place back, however, there is still a lot
of room for the standings to change.
Ernesto Fonseca has
now claimed two third place overall podiums in a row and is only three
points behind Vuillemin in the standings. Chad Reed holds on to fifth, but
because
he is out for the season he will continue to slide. Behind Reed, Preston
and Dowd are separated by only nine points.
Dowd is also
receiving a lot of attention lately as it is his last full season of AMA
Motocross and he is getting sweet sponsorship deals from the likes of
Ricky Carmichael. It also looks like the folks on Mototalk are looking to
raise money to possibly sponsor Dowd and others for a round. With all of
this positive attention, Dowd has to be feeling very good about himself
and should continue to be fast.
Next week we head
back to New York for Round 10 at Broome-Tioga. With only three rounds left
the top five guys in the 125 class are going to have to pull out all of
the stops in order to have a chance to hold on to a podium finish for the
season. And with third place sitting wide open in the 250 class it is
anybody's guess what will happen in the next three rounds.
With the end fast
approaching and Glen Helen already having taken down both Chad Reed and
James Stewart in practice crashes, you would be crazy not to try and make
it to see the remaining rounds in person. We are closing out an epic
season and it only gets better as each round clicks off.
|
It
seems like everybody gets their own Mule these days
|
Photo:
Carl Stone
|
|
?
2005 Roost Productions
|