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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/128122
International Six-Day Enduf"'O
Tf"'Ois Pf"'Ovince Hall
out trying. Back at the parc ferme
after washing his bike, he noticed he
had a little hole in his magneto cover,
which ruined the stator pickup, killing
the ignition. John Bennett also had
bike problems when his countershaft
sprocket sheared off the splines, and
without assistance he went over his
hour.
The Swedish team had lost one of
their riders on day four, and on day
five another rider, Peter Bergvall, who
had been winning the 250cc FourStroke class all week, suffered engine
problems and lost 38 minutes making
repairs. The problem knocked Sweden out of second place and into
eighth. With all the shuffling, the Italians, who had given up hope for even
a podium finish, found themselves in
second place, with Spain right behind
them. The U.S. Trophy team jumped
up to seventh. On the Junior team,
U.S. riders John Beal and Ben Hale
had trouble with the course, and the
extra time pushed the Juniors down
to 11th.
The grass tracks were all new for
the day, which meant slick, green
grass to race on, at least for the first
lap. Many of the riders were having
trouble, but the American riders
seemed to take it all in stride. All
three of the Pearson brothers were
putting in good times - very credible
for guys from Nevada who rarely ride
in the rain.
"I was really happy with everyone's
intensity today," said Smith. "We had
some really competitive times today,
and everybody looked like they were
out there on the track, stretching the
wire on their throttle cable. That's
what I want to see. We have some
more work to do as far as finesse,
technique, you know, training for
sprints and aII that. That's okay, but
when we're all here giving this thing
110 percent, that's when I can say
we're here making this thing work the
best we can for what we have now.
We can go back and improve our
qualifier series, improve our training,
and we'll improve our chances for
next year. We're going to come away
fror;n this thing a couple spots better
than we were last year, and I'm going
to consider that a victory."
Though the Trophy team riders
made it through fine, it wasn't an
easy day for everyone. At the second
grass track of the day, Shane Watts
brain-faded and hit a jump wide
open. He was pitched over the bars
and knocked himself silly, losing six
or seven minutes before getting going
again. The official doctors had heard
he was injured and went off looking
for him, one of the doctors arriving at
one of the Australian checkpoints and
announcing, "I am a doctor, I am
here to examine Shane Watts." In
their usual dry fashion, the check
crew looked up and one of them said,
"He doesn't need a doctor mate, he
needs a psychiatrist!"
That wasn't the end of trouble for
the Aussies. Stefan Merriman had his
Husky rumble to a stop for reasons
that weren't specified, but it took him
55 minutes to get it going again.
Since only five team members are
counted, his score was thrown out for
the day, but with Watts' extra seven
minutes, the boys from Down Under
were knocked down to fifth in the
team standings.
"Looks like him and me scored the
day-five maggot," Watts said afterward.
Junior team member Craig Wesner
ran into trouble after the third special
test when his rear axle nut decided to
disappear. He nursed it to the next
check but didn't find his chase rider
there. With zip ties and a cotter pin,
he held it together to the next check,
where he scored a new nut and fixed
the problem. Club rider Kevin Bennett
crashed in some rocks and couldn't
get his bike restarted, and he houred
42
SEPTEMBER 19, 2001
•
cue
DAY SIX
With a 40-mile (mostly road) ride
to the final motocross, it was hoped
the last day would be problem-free,
but it wasn't for everyone. Kevin Bennett and John Bennett (not related)
weren't allowed to ride that morning
under the re-impound rule (where riders are allowed to repair and ride
without possibility of a medal), so
their week was done.
Paul Edmondson made a tactical
error that ruined his chances of anything other than a plane ride home.
Arriving at the final motocross, he
mounted new tires and put a non-FIM
tire on the front of his Kawasaki. He
was just a little too close to the star
French riders for something like this
to go unnoticed, and when he tried to
start with that tire, he was excluded
on the spot.
The fmaJ motocross was set up on
a track that was neither tight nor wide
open, but the most distinguishing feature was that most of the jumps had
no landings, unlike most modern
motocross tracks these days. Some
of the jumps were launchers that
could catapult riders 75 feet or more,
but the landing was flat and brutal.
Care would be necessary.
In the very first moto, Junior Trophy rider John Beal brought glory to
the States right away, looking perfectly comfortable on the motocross
track and pressuring for second place
through the whole 20 minutes. Each
race seemed to have an American up
front, but the competition was fierce
and we went without a win until the
second 250cc Two-Stroke moto,
when Trail Riders of Houston club
rider Mark Faulk jumped out front
and never backed off until he took the
checkers.
•
•
ne"'s
"First time I've been on a
motocross track in a year and a half!"
he proudly declared.
The highlight of the final
motocross had to be watching Shane
Watts and Stefan Merriman in their
individual races. Both started back in
the pack and worked their way out
front within a lap, and then absoLutely
walked away with the win. Watts
moved so far out front that he wasn't
even visible to the second-placed
rider, and he drew massive cheers
from the French audience. Merriman
put it in overdrive and never backed
coff, until he was tapping riders as if
they weren't on the track. The
Kiwi/Aussie who won last year's Six
Days overall lapped up to 10th place
in the race before the time was up.
Both put on an amazing display, both
won their classes for the day, and their
low scores helped ensure the Aussie
team fourth place in the Trophy competition.
Good race times by all the Americans helped give the team one last
boost, and we finished the week in
sixth place. Good enough? Not for
Trophy rider Brian Garrahan, but he
was philosophical about the event.
"My week was pretty disappointing, actually," he said, "I crashed
every day - I think day five is the only
day I didn't crash. I've never crashed
so many times in all my life. I don't
know, my goal here was to get top 10
in my class, and going into day five I
was 11 th, so we'll see where it comes
out for me.
"I had a good time, though. To me,
this is the funnest race of the year. You
get to go to a different country and you
get to race the whole countryside. It's a
dual-sport ride - you get to ride down
the highway and into all the little
towns. It's a good time. A lot of the
guys don't corne because they don't
Though Jeff Fredette was listed on the
official roster as a KTM rider (hIs
signature Kawasaki barely showed up
In time and had to ba Impounded late),
the Six Days legend ended up taking
his KDX to a 60th-place ftnlsh In the
250cc division.
get paid, or they don't get paid enough
if they do good, or whatever the reason
is. Me, I do it because I like to ride
motorcycles and it's a fun event, and
I'll pay the money and do it."
eN
Troll Pnnrince Hall
lrive .. &.Im.rde, France
Results: August 27-SepteIDber 1,2001
TROPHY TEAM: 1. France (Mere Germain,
Olivier Rebufie, Eric Bernard, David Fretigne,
Sebastien Guillaume, Cyril Esqulrol); 2. Italy (Fausto
Scovolo. Jamo 808no, Mlltteo Rubin, Mario Rinlllldi,
Alessandro Botturi, Giovenni Sllla); 3. Spllin (Isidre
Esteve, Xacob Agra, Miki Arpa. Xllvier Colomer,
JOlin Roma, Mllrc Comll); 4. Austrlllla (Demien
Smith, Shllne Watts, Brlld Williscroft, Damien
Grabham, Ben Grabham. Stefan Merriman); 5. Czech
Republic (Zdenek Gottvald. Martin Malat, Roman
Michalik. Milen Baros, Martin Gottvllld, Mllrtin
Macek); 6. United Stlltes (Nick Pellrson, David
Pearson, Russ Pellrson, Fred Hoess, Brian Garrahan,
Patrick GalT8han).
J

