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/127831
five more hard rounds in Europe and
the competition's gonna be tough there
too. I'll be back next year."
Sugai continued to lose ground and
was overtaken by Michael Gage on the
1997 Triumph T595 on the 12th lap. He
ended up fifth, Gage fourth, about seven
seconds behind Cathcart.
Earlier Cathcart had led a breakaway
in the Superrnono class where he was
campaigning the 1996 MZ Skorpion. He
led a seven-rider pack, the group of
seven dropping to five in quick order.
Soon they were joined by 1G-K Racing's Michael Barnes as he made his
way from the seventh row on his 1995
Ducati Supermono. He was up to fourth
by the end of the second lap, then third
on the back straight.
The next lap he went through to second in the International Horseshoe and
roared past Cathcart on the banking. At
first his lead was slight, then, as the laps
wore on, he turned it on, ending the race
about six seconds in front.
Cathcart had a pair of riders keeping
him honest - 1994 Ducati Supermonoequipped Eric Wood and 1997 RotaxYamaha-mounted Aaron Turner - up
from the last row, fighting it out for~
third. Until Barnes joined the front, the
pair h.ad second and third to themselves, then Barnes dropped them and
they started swapping the spot. Wood
last had a definitive grasp on the spot on
the fourth lap. After that, though he was
close, he wasn't ever decisively in front.
Fourth wasn't a bad place to be- on
the final lap and Wood tried to make the
most of it. In the end, he came up about
a bike length short, the Rotax-Yamaha
outmuscling him to the line.
Craig McLean, on a 1995 Ducati
SUpeJ:ffiono 570, took fifth from Dutchman Lex Van Dijk on the final lap.
The first Sound of Singles race went
off in three waves - Formula 2, then Formula 3, then Two-Stroke. At the finish,
the order was scrambled with a twostroke winning and a Formula 3
machine finishing second overall.
Jim Struke rode his 1993. Honda
RSl25 to the win in his class and managed to beat all three fields in the
pro.cess. Even starting in the third
waves, with about a 1G-second penalty,
Struke knifed his way through the pack
and took over the lead on the seYenth of
eight laps. He went on to win with
Randy Smith second, on a 1991 Honda
RS125.
Struke had passed 50S F-2 winner
Chuck Davis for the lead. Davis, aboard
a Honda 500, was about seven seconds
behind leader Norman Lastovica, on a
1997 Rotax-Yamaha, when Lastovica
dropped out on with fewer than three
laps to go and handed him his shortlived lead.
Erik Myhre ended up second in the
Formula 2 class on a 1992 Wood-Rotax
with Chuck Campbell third on a 1978
Yamaha TTSOO.
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~'A P':i';G:.::E:~~~
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