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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127565
AMAlCCS Endurance Challenge: Round 3
ROADRACE;
American FI ers takes GIll win
!
By Henny Ray Abrams
DAYTONA, FL, MAR 4
ith less than two laps to go in the
Daytona GTU Team Challenge,
American Flyers' Mike Murphy
couldn't believe his eyes. Just ahead oI
him, Southwest Motorsports' Chris
Taylor had to take his right hand off the
brake and throttle to search for the
reserve switch on his fuel petcock. He'd
run out of gas in the chicane. In traffic.
"1 was having all sorts of problems
with the wind and I started watching the
leader board closely. I was gaining on
Chris. Once that happened, all hell broke
loose," Murphy said. "He had to switch
the gas tank to reserve and I went
around him. I got kind of lucky there."
Murphy teamed with Todd
Harrington to win the first-ever AMA
GTU Team Challenge, a win that was
also a first for the American Flyers
team. The pair completed 30 laps of the
3.56-mile road course at an average
speed of 103.340 and won by 5.310 seconds.
"1 went aut and tried to run a decent
pace," Harrington said of his first 30minute stint on the American Flyers
Honda CBR600. "1 knew he was out at
the end and you can't hold him back.
When he goes, he goes. I'm just glad we
finally won one. We've had plenty of
seconds."
Southwest Motorsports' Chris
Taylor, who teamed with Danny
Walker on a Yamaha TZR25O, held onto
second, nearly a minute in front of
Hornblower Racing's Bill Hornblower.
Jonathan Cornwell had ridden the first
leg on the Hornblower Honda CBR600.
After three rounds of the EBC Brakes
Endurance Series, Hornblower leads the
GTU point standings with 97 points,
four better than American Flyers.
Southwest Motorsports is tied with
Moto Liberty / Nankai II for third with
61. The Moto Liberty /Nankai II team
finished fourth today, Tatsuhiko lino
and Takahiro Mori riding the Honda
CBR600 that Moto Liberty /Nankai rode
to last year's GTU championship.
Harrington and Murphy split the
$1000 top prize from the $3500 GTU
team purse, Southwest Metorsports'
Walker and Taylor earning $700, and
Hornblower and Cornwell pocketing
W
$500.
Cornwell led the 37-rider field for
the first lap, but Danny Walker sped by
going into turn one of the second lap
and Cornwell knew there wasn't a lot
he could do.
"I got a halfway decent start, but I
could barely draft him on the banking
and I couldn't do anything in the
infield," Cornwell said. "I decided to
just do the best with what I had and just
let him go."
The pace Walker was running, lap
times in the 2:02 range, was unmatchable and he quickly built up a lead that
was nearly eight seconds on the 10th
lap, right about the 20-minute mark.
The team pitted to change riders and
add fuel just past the halfway point,
Taylor replacing Walker aIter Walker
had struggled with the wind.
"The wind is a monster, it's really
bad," Walker said. "It really blows this
little bike around. That's what I told
Chris. To be careful of the wind. I was
doing a Colin Edwards with my butt
up on the back of the seat on the front
straight. If I didn't get a good drive out
of four it would only pull 11,500 rpm. If
1 didn't get a good drive I had to go
down the front straight in fiIth."
Cornwell was replaced by
Hornblower on the same lap, but he'd
been forced in a lap early when he
began to run out of fuel.
"1 think with the wind, and at that
pace, I actually got three less laps than
we thoughf (we would). When I realized I was on reset'W!, I had to indicate
to them that I was coming in early,"
Cornwell said.
Hornblower and Taylor exited the
pits at about the same time. and the
pair took to the infield just as they
were being passed for the lead by
Moto
Liberty/Suzuki's
Doug
Carmichael, the team waiting two
more laps to pit, then relinquishing
their lead.
"I'm running wide on all of the exits
because of the wind," Carmichael said
after handing the Moto Liberty/Suzuki
GSXR600 to Mike Himmelsbach. "All
of us in the front group ran onto the
grass in the chicane a t one time or
another. I did it on about the third lap.
I could make the left, but I couldn't
make the right."
But when Himmelsbach took over
he found the setup which suited
Carmichael didn't suit him and he
gradually fell back to a. 10th-place finish.
"Until we can get the bike set up to
where the suspension works for both
of us, we're going to struggle. Now we
can get it where it won't shake him on
the banking, but for me it's too loose,"
Carmichael
said.
The
Moto
Liberty/Nankai 1I team was faring better. At the halfway point they were up
to sixth place, behind Semoff Brothers
Racing, and getting ready to move up a
spot when Team Holiday had fuel
problems.
"For some reason we didn't have
enough fuel on board for the wind,"
Robin Holiday said after handing off to
co-rider John Weiss. But their race
would only last about a lap longer, the
team retiring on the 16th lap.
Murphy had taken over for
Harrington just about at the halfway
point and setting off for Taylor, though
he wasn't sure of his position.
"I didn't know where I was.
Actually, it got kind of confusing. I
was probably fourth or fifth when I
jumped on it. I was gaining on Chris
and when I got him in my sights I
turned it up," Murphy said. As Taylor
began to sputter and misfire in the chicane, Murphy pounced and raced to
the checkered flag.
"I'm too excited to talk right now,"
Murphy said after beating Taylor
across the line for the team's first win.
"Unfortunately we don't have all
the bugs worked out just yet," Walker
said after joining his Southwest
Motorsports teammate in the Winner's
circle. "We may have a thirsty twostroke, but these guys (American
Flyers) have a pretty fast bike. Our
strategy was to go for it from the start
and get away from everybody. I know
a lot of teams were thinking we could
break like we did on Sunday. We
didn't."
Third, nearly a minute back, came
Hornblower, happy to have picked up
the points in a race format that he
doesn't feel suits his team.
"I didn't realistically think we could
get up here on the podium in a short format race" Hornblower said. "In the
three-hour I can'race like an old man at a
American Flyers (46) won the inaugural GTU Team Challenge at Daytona.
Second-place finishers Southwest Motorsports leave the pits after taking on fuel
leisurely pace. When the other guys ran
away, I couldn't keep up. I had Jon start
because he's better in heavy traffic."
Behind the leading trio lino, having
taken over for Mori, moved up into the
top five in the fmal 15 minutes when
AGV Sport Group was held on pit row
by AMA officials for having been on the
track too long. In the GTU format, the
longest a rider can stay on the track is 40
minutes and either AGV's Michael
Taylor or Woody Deatherage was over
the limit. They would finish 16th.
Moto Liberty/Nankai II's lino and
Mori moved up to finish fourth, one
better than Team Norway's Thorvald
Saeby and Jan Olav Noteng, the
Norwegians racing a Kawasaki 600.
Next came Team Raceco who finished sixth, Pete Johnson and Ronald
McGill taking advantage of the rule
allowing big-bore twins by using a
Moto-Guzzi 992.
I:N
Results
GTU
P~OVlSIONAL RESULTS,
1. Am.dean
F1yora (Hon); 2. Southwest Motoraports (Yam); 3.
Homblower Racing (Hon); •. Moto uberty /NonIcol
(Hon); 5. Tum Norway (lCaw); 6. Racoco (MG); 7.
Xtroom Porformanco (Hon); 8. Go_ Ho.lin (Hon); 9.
Koytsone Racing U (Suz); 10. Moto Liberty/Suzuki
(Suz); 11. Team Hanson (Yom); 12. Apocho RacingToam
(Hon); 13. Motor

