Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1980's

Cycle News 1986 08 13

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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Privateers Dan Chivington (53) and John Ashmead hooked up early in Superbike action, finished third and fourth. Team Honda's Flyin' Fred Merkel (1) caught and passed teammate Wayne Rainey (6) and set a new lap record; Rainey crashed in pursuit. Second-place Kevin Schwann (34) uses his Yoshimura Suzuki to lap Carry Andrew late in the race. AMA/Camel Pro Road Race Series: Round 8 Merkel wins and takes points lead; Rainey crashes By John Ulrich Photos by John Ulrich and Randy Marrs LEXINGTON, OH, AUG. 3 Team Honda's Fred Merkel won the Superbike race at Mid-Ohio, beating Yoshimura Suzuki's Kevin Schwantz and Yamaha 10 FZ750-riding privateer Dan Chivington, and LOok over the points lead in the AMA/Camel Pro Road Race Series, which will combine points from Formula One and Superbike races to crown a single AMA Road Race Champion in 1986 instead of separate Superbike and Formula One Champions; Merkel's victory also gave him an almost-unbeatable points lead in theseparately-kept, non-Championship Superbike Point Standings. After the race, Merkel celebrated that points lead as being his third AMA Superbike Championship nonetheless. Merkel's success came at the expense of teammate Wayne Rainey's misfortune; Rainey crashed while running a close second to Merkel after leading early stages of the race, and didn't finish. Rainey led the Superbike and Camel Pro Road Race points going into Mid-Ohio; Rainey is now second in both tallies, with 124 to Merkel's 130 points in Camel Pro points and with IlILO Merkel's 130 in Superbike. Tires played a big part in the race on the twisty, 2.4-mile road course with non-abrasive, almost-slippery pavement. Rainey chose the softer of two available bias-ply Michelin rear slicks; the harder available Michelin slick was too hard for conditions. But the tire Rainey chose overheated and started sliding and chewing up its tread surface during the race, forcing Rainey LOslow justas Merkel mounted a strong charge that brought him the lead and a new absolute Mid-Ohio mOLOrcycle lap record of one minute, 35.40 seconds. Merkel rode on a biasply Dunlop rear slick, a 639, one of three compounds available at the track. When Rainey tried LO stay with Merkel exiting the second-LO-Iastturn on the 13th of 25 laps, his bike's rear end stepped out and slid like a dirttracker's, the bike leaning over and catching the right foot peg, levering the wheels up off the ground; the bike hit a bump, the wheels LOuched pavement and caught and threw Rainey over the highside. He hit hard, chest and face first, but stood up and walked away immediately, leaving his Honda for corner workers LO pick up and roll away. Rainey had charged inLO the lead right away with one of his usual hard-and-fast starts, with Merkel losing time while he got around Team Yamaha's Jimmy Filice. By the fifth lap Rainey had four seconds on Merkel, having turned a string of I :36s and a 1:35.95 LO Merkel's I :37s and II :36s. But starting with the sixth lap Merkel put LOgether a string of three laps at 1:35s and gained on Rainey, the fastest of the three being a 1:35.67. Laps II and 12 saw Merkel right on, then past Rainey with a I :36 and a I :38 in traffic to Rainey's 1:37 and I :39, and then came that fateful moment when Rainey £lew over the bars and Merkel mOLOred on, finishing the 13th lap of the race at that record 1:35.40. With Rainey out, Merkel had 17 seconds on Filice, who had run strings of I :37s LO leave Schwantz behind; Schwantz complained that his bike was slower than at Laguna and didn't handle right, and that it was plainly inferior LO the Yoshimura Japan Suzuki he rode the weekend before at Suzuka: SchwanlZ turned mostly I:39s and some 1:38s. Filice would hold a secure second until his bike broke on lap 19, with probable big-end bearing failure. Filice's teammate, John Kocinski, had already retired with a slowing and noisy engine, after getting into the main via the last chance qualifier (he crashed in practice just before the heat races) and working his way from last to eighth. Doug Polen was sixth on another Yoshimura Suzuki, picking off guys one-by-one, charging a little harder with each lap, running behind, with, then in front of Rueben McMurter, John Ashmead and Chivington, then crashing on the last lap while third; Polen, whose ride was a tryout for the U.S. Suzuki-supported Yoshimura team, would say he hit a piece of debris in the track; eyewitness McMurter would say he saw nothing other than Polen lose the front end; trackside observers also couldn 'tdetect any debris. but Polen was adament, and the results - a crash - were the same anyway. The way Polen saw it, he could I:!ave gone faster with a Yoshimura engine in his own, mostly stock GSXR 750. Chivington, Ashmead and McMurter went at it for fourth, then third with Polen's crash, McMurter closing back up after losing distance and the three running one-two-three, like three links of a chain, across the finish line. Well behind them, Peter Lusby got the best of a great baule with Kosar Racing's Ouis Lance, Jim Tribou and Jeff Farmer. They ran most of the race in a clump, in rapidly mixing order, but finished Lusby-Lance-Tribou-Farmer. Merkel finished more than 45 seconds ahead of SchwanlZ, who was another 15 seconds ahead of SchwanlZ. "Wayne rode a lot beuer than I did at a lot of race tracks," said Merkel after the finish. "I think he's a beuer rider than I am. This is the only race I won this year and I won it fair and square. I caught him, passed him and then he fell down. So I can have the credit for this one. "I didn't know he crashed or what, but he did and made my season a liule easier. It's never over until it's over, it's nOLOver until next weekend." Merkel thanked sponsors Arai, Fox, Dunlop, Cycle Racer, SuperTrapp and American Honda, mechanics Mike Velasco and Merlyn Plumlee and mentor and road racing manager Udo Gietl. . Schwantz was subdued but sarcastic. "Second place. I'm just as happy as I cau Id be." Chivingwn was happy he had put his GV Performance Yamaha FZ750, tuned by George Vincensi, into the winner's circle, and thanked sponsors including Shoei, Michelin, Wiseco, Lectron carburewrs and ND. Polen was dejected. "I couldn't believe it. I rode conservatively, a steady, fast pace and I thought it would payoff in the end. The really bad thing is that it's the wrong time to have that happen." • Results SUPER81KE: 1. Fred Mer1

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