Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127666
Great.
.
After checking in with the gals at registration, I turned over my borrowed
Suzuki GSX-R75D to the Team Suzuki
endurance mechani cs. In order to make
the bike race-track sa fe, they rem oved
. the mirrors and taped over the headlight, taillight and turn signals, so that
glass and plastic lenses wouldn't be littered across the track in case (or when) I
crashed.
To my surprise, the first classroom
session calmed my nerves a grea t deal.
Aldana was lively and showed a great
deal of enthusiasm. And tho ugh the
school is dubbed "advanced", I was
excited to find that I was not the only
motocrosser wi th no stree t experience in
the class. Including myself, there were
three "moto heads" signed up.
A few of the students had attended
the class before, but the majority of them
we re simply street riders who were taking advantage of the class. As Paul and I
looked a ro und the classroom (yes , he
di d show up after all), we began to pr edict how fast each of our classmates
wou ld be. "Hey, there 's ano ther Japanese gu y," whispered Paul. "Hey, maybe
yo u can at least be the fastest Asian in
the class."
That's just what I needed. Now not
only would I have to worry about not
crashing, I had to worry about beating
the Japanese guy in the blue leathers.
Well, at least he didn't look that fast. As
a matter of fact, he looked even more
nervous than I was.
In our first classroom session, Aldana
introduced himself and explained the
various flags that we would be seeing
while we were out on the track.
Throughout the class sessions, Aldana
frequently entertained us with stories
about his past racing experiences. Five
classroom sessions and fou r on-track
sessions filled the day's agenda, and to
my surprise, I never caught my mind
wandering in class. Aldana does a great
job of keeping things interesting.
After being warned over and over to
take our' time, we suited up and got
ready for our first practice session. Since
the school was held in conjunction with
an AMA National, our practice sessions
were mixed in with the racers' Thursday
practice sessions.
"Hey, there's your buddy Mike
Hale," said Paul, as he pointed to the
d irt tracker-turned road racer. "Here, I'll
call him over."
After slapping down Paul's waving
arms, I flipped my tinted face shield
down and hoped that Hale wouldn't
notice me sitting in the staging area . The
last thing I needed was one of the racers
whom I report on critiquing me. After
watching me take a spin on a HarleyDavidson 883 dirt tracker at the Pomona
Half Mile, Hale had heckled me for me
hours about the way I had downshifted
and stuck my leg straight out in the corners.
The first few laps around .the course
were no t what I expected. instead of the
all-ou t race like the motocross pre-race
pra ctice sessions I'm accustomed to, the
school staff sep arated the students into
three grou ps - advanced, interm edi a te
and beginner. Paul was placed in the
advanced group, whil e I was more than
happy to ta ke to the trac k w ith the
beginners. With Team Suzuki Endurance
riders David Stanton and Chuck Graves,
125cc GP support class rider Chris
Rogers, Nancy Delgado and Aldana
serving as instructors, each student was
treated to a personal teacher at one point
or another during the first session. I was
fortunate enough to ha ve Aldana lead
me around my first few laps around the
course. No ego here - Aldana resists the
temptation to gas it and roost away, and
instead takes time to mak e sure that you
are following his lines.
. At firs t, I felt odd taking the enterwide, cut-inside lines that are used on a
road racer, and had a hard time resisting
th e tempta tio n to d ive in tight, brake
hard, and square the turns. I did make it
through the firs t practice session
unscathed, though, and by the end of
the 3D-min ute session, was thoroughly
enjoying myself.
In the second classroom session,
Aldana reviewed the track , a n d the
th in gs that he, himse lf, had lea rned.
Since the Pomona Fairpl ex course was
all-new, "Professor " Aldana was as new
to the course as we were. I was amazed
at his ability to remember the entire
course, from each turn to each little
bump and ripple on the course. In only
3D minutes, Aldana had figured out
where all the good lines w e re, and
memorized each of them.
One by one, Aldana drew each corner - and the best lines - on his chalkboard . He d iscussed the numerous
bumps and holes on the track, and how
to avoid - or negotiate - each of them.
Being a motocrosser, the bumps on the
track didn't reall y bother me, and it was
entertaining to see how they unnerved
some of the others.
When we suited up for th e second
track session, I was full of confidence
and ready to go. Gone was the fear of
cra shing. Gone was the desire to rid e
motocross lines. Aldana had showed me
where to go... now all I had to do was
find that guy in the blue leathers. This
time , I took to the tra ck with the int ermediate bunch, and felt more at horn e
riding with the faster riders. Sure, they
ma y have been passing me, but I was
more at ease being passed than ha vin g
to do the passing.
In the first session, I'd spent a number of laps cha sing another on e of the
motocrossers - and boy, was he wild .
Decked out in a set of ren ted leathers
and a fanc y, motocross-style painted
helmet, this gu y was death on wheels.
As a matter of fact, I was expecting the
track to magically turn into a big basket
- he was doing an awful lot of weaving
out there. But, hey - so was I, and the
class is for ri ders with minimal 'track
time.
Anywa y, back to the second practice
session. By the third lap, I found myself
going much faster than I was in the first
ses sion, and actually bega n to ca tch
some of the riders who were ah ead of
me. I eyed each rider as I made my way
past, hoping that one of them wo uld be
my oriental rival. No such luck.
Suddenly, the yellow caution flags .
began to fly as I appro ache d a set of
tight turns in the infield a rea . In
between the tw o turns was on e of the
nastier bumps in the course, and Alda na
(Above) The
students await an
on-track practice
session. Riders
wera divldad Int o
three groups,
according to the ir
experlence levels.
(Left) David
Aldana In action.
had warn ed us to be particularly careful
in that section. Then I saw him - the blue
bandit. See in g tha t he was unhurt, I
couldn't help but chuckle'as I rode pas t.
He stood there, looking at his machine
and shaking his head in disbelief as if it
were the bike ' s fa u l t that he had
crashed.
Paul wa s an u p-close witness to the
spill. "That guy carne ripping past me
on the inside an d just locked it up and
threw it away," he said. "Th e gu y was
totally ou t of control."
In the first classroom session, Team
Suzuki Endurance Captain John Ulrich
had warned us to take it easy out there,
and to reme mb er that we weren't racing. "If you crash , you won't grad uate,
and you 'll lose your track pri vileges as
well," he said.
Needless to say, the b lue band it
wasn't back for the third classroom session. Later, I learned that he even had
the gall to sue the school for the damages to his mo torcycle. Because the professional racers claime d that the track
was unsafe and nea rl y bo ycotted the
event that wee kend, the blue bandit reasoned that as a novice, h e shouldn' t
have even been let out on the course .
Wrong. A triple jump isn't dangerous
for a beginner, if he's smart enough to
roll over each jump, and the same held
true for the track at Pomona . The other
students in the class were sma rt eno ugh
to take it easy in the more challengin g
sections of the racetrack. It was his fault,
and his fault alone, that he crashed and
scra tched his shiny new GSX-R. And
besides, if he filled out the same registration forms that I did, he should have
been well aware of the risks he was taking.
But, on the oth er hand, maybe Paul
had whispered the same "Fastest Asian"
challenge in his ear. .
I continued to learn more and more
during the remaining classroom and
practice sessions, and my confidence
gre w with each lap I made around the
track. Each one of my ignorant questions was answered, and Aldana made
me feel qu ite comfortable about asking
each of them . "There's no such thing as
a dumb qu estion," he assured me.
By the day's end, I felt about 95%
comfortable on the ne w motor cycle.
Heck, I had even stopped brake sliding
and slipping the clutch! Though I was
presented a nice, fit-for-framing certifi cate of completion by Ulrich at the end
of the da y, my real souvenir came in the
final practice session when I scraped my
left knee in the last tu m. I'll save that
knee puck, thank you.
Oh, and yes, Hal e d id even tually
spot me. " Man, Don n, you're elbows
were Iookin' a Iittlehigh out there.
Yo u're not on a motocrosser, y o u
COl
know..."
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