Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's

Cycle News 1997 04 30

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/127837

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 36 of 81

(Left) Team Green's Donnie Book took his KX250 to third overall and first 250cc Expert. (Right) Team Green's Dana VanStee finished 15th overall and first 125cc Expert after dicing with Dave Ondas, who was riding a borrowed KX125, early in the race. (Below) Paul Ostbo rode to 12th overall at the finish and first Four-Stroke Expert honors after over two hours of racing. Book was just three seconds back in third overall at the start of pit row, and Destry Abbott and KX250-mounted Brian Brown were all tied up for fourth a minute behind the leader. Russ Pearson's KTM 250 appeared two minutes later in sixth overall, just ahead of Vetclass leader Eddie McCoy, and Steve Hengeveld and Jim Gray rounded out the top nine. "I got a bad start and it was really too tight to pass most of the time, and a couple of 500s roosted me real bad, too," Russ Pearson said. "It wasn't all bad, though. At least being back where 1 was there were a couple of tracks to follow. It was easy for me to follow, but I don't know how it was for the leaders. 1 think they could've got lost pretty easily because a lot of it was new ground." One of the tightest races of the day was shaping up just a little further back between Open-class racer Dan Richardson and Paul Ostbo, who was leading the Four-Stroke division. "He's an arch-family-rival," Ostbo explained. "We had a really fun battle most of the way. We were yelling at each other and crashing in the same corner. At one stage when we crashed, the bike landed on my hand - the hand 1 broke in Tecate last week, so 1 limped for a little bit of the second loop, but then I caught Richardson again and we had another heck of a run." One of the biggest surprises at the end of loop one was Dave Ondas, who dashed into the pits aboard a KXl25. "1 had problems this morning with my KX500 and it was too late to fix anything, so 1 just borrowed a bike from John Braasch," Ondas said. "I'm here to get points, so I'm entered in the Open class. I'd forgotten how much work 125s are. I got a lot more tired on this thing then I ever do on a 500." Davis continued to lead the way as loop two unfolded and, the further he got, the more advantage he got from the terrain. "The first loop was great because you had the snow and the mud, which meant really perfect traction most of the time. Then, heading out on the second loop, about.10 to 15 miles into it, we started getting into some really tigpt trees, with really loose rock and virgin ground," Mark Lundgreen said. "If you got behind somebody in that stuff you were really stuck." Pearson chased hard through the tight sections, sticking doggedly to Davis' tail all the way. few obscenities at me to get me to move out of the way," said Richardson, who found the words were just what he needed to get a new burst of energy. "That fired me up. 1 wasn't going to let him go by after that, so whoever was behind me just had to follow me. He was right on my tail "I loved the course-it was awesome," said Pearson. "They got us up in the tight trees - you'd just twist around in there for miles, which was so cool, then they'd put us onto some fast jeep roads and stretch it out, then you'd get back in the tight trees again." But the KTM pilot began to lose his hold on the race leader as the grueling loop started to draw to a close. "We rode together for a long time but when we got into some faster stuff, he kind of pulled on me," Pearson said. "After that, 1 didn't see very much of him. 1 just maintained and tried to keep it upright." The faster terrain near the end of the loop also caused trouble for Book, who was all set to make a move for second overall when disaster struck on a highspeed road. "1 was going to pass Pearson and I just .flipped off the road and cartwheeled through the trees," Book said. "I smashed the pipe real bad and had no horsepower for like the last 10 miles. It was like riding a KDX200 or something, and I was really worried that Abbott was going to catch me." But back in fourth, Abbott had worries of his own. . "Brown had caught and passed me at the end of the first loop and we went out together on the second loop. He hit a bush. and 1 slid out, but 1 got back up a little quicker than he did and from then on 1 rode a really good race," Abbott said. "But things started going wrong right at the end. My bike started dying because it was running out of gas. 1 just made it in on fumes." The exertion of battling through miles of tight trees started to take its toll as the racers neared the end of the loop. "It was really tight - a little too tight for a SOO, I thought, and 1 got really tired about halfway through the loop. 1 know -I had slowed down a bit, but then somebody came up behind me and yelled a for the last 20 miles." When the checkered flag finally dropped after two-and-a-quarter hours of exhausting racing, Davis had captured his third victory in the three-raceold competition, but he knew the battle had gone right to the wire. "That :was close - a tough day," the Kawasaki Team Green rider said. "The course was really tight - the kind of course that makes you wish you were on a 250, not a 500. I really had to work my butt off this time throwing this thing around, but the traction was awesome. All in all, it was a really good course and a good race." Pearson held on all the way to second, less than a minute behind Davis. The young racer was as impressed as Davis with the course, and just as impressed with the performance of his KTM300. "1 had no problems all day. The bike ran great and I didn't even have any flats," said Pearson, a factory-sponsored KTM racer. "1 wish they all went this good." With a crushed pipe robbing him of power, Book was looking over his shoulder all the way to third overall and first in the 250cc division. "1 was just waiting for Abbott to catch me but luckily, everything came together and 1 held onto third. Hopefully this puts me in better shape for the series," Book said." Abbott brought his KTM 360 home close behind Book to take fourth overall and third in the Open Expert class. "1 wish the courses were like this at every race. It was really neat," he said." Brian Brown overcame a lot of bumping handlebars off the start to grab fifth and second in the 250cc division, ahead of KTM 250-racer Russ Pearson. "I got tired and kind of cruised in the second loop," Brown said. "1 got turned around a couple of times, but nothing bad. I just missed a few corners. Abbott got around me when I crashed, but that's about all that happened. 1 tried to catch him for the rest of the loop but 1 couldn't do it." Seventh overall was claimed by Steve Hengeveld, who limped in after crashing just 10 miles from the finish, and Eddie McCoy took a wire-to-wire win in the Vet division in eighth, more than a dozen places ahead of his nearest Over 30 rival. "A woods rider I'm not," McCoy said. "The trees beat me to death but I'm not broke and my bike ain't broke, and that's all tha! counts. It was a tough course for me because I'm not used to the trees but I survived." Dan Richardson and Dave Hamel rounded out the top 10, and were followed home by Jim Gray, Four-Stroke winner Ostbo, Krause, who was hampered by sand-induced vision problems throughout the race, Ady, and 125cc class winner Dana Van Stee. "I diced a bit with Ondas in the first loop but the'n I got down to business and led the rest of the way," 'said Van Stee, who finished 15th overall. "The course was awesome - good dirt, minimal whoops. 1 had a blast and I'm glad 1 came." But nobody was happier than Steve Pitts, who hung on all the way to take the honors in the Over 40 division. "You definitely got your government's recommended daily allowance of trees out there but it was an excellent course and it was marked really well," said Pitts. "The only problem I had was that 1 knocked a few trees down, and 1 had problems working out what some of the turns meant - was it a sharp turn or just a directional arrow? But 1 never got lost and it was an excellent race all around." f~ Jericho National H&H Jericho, ~h Results: April 13, 1997 (Round 3 of 7) Olk 1. Ty Davis (Kaw); 2. Nick Pea""'" (KTM); 3. Donnie Book (Kaw); 4. Destry Abbott (KTM); 5. Brian Brown (Kaw); 6. Russell Pearson (KTM); 7. Steve Hengeveld (Kaw); 8. Ed McCoy; 9. Dan Richardson (Kaw); 10. Dave Hamel (!

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's - Cycle News 1997 04 30