Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's

Cycle News 2005 04 27

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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out of the event early. Hawkins, who is a new father of twins, was only riding his second race this season. Riders from the sanctioning East Coast Enduro Association are very familiar with the lay of the land at the Greenbrier, and National competitors are becoming more aware of the way things are done. The riding is extremely tight, and in order to do well, riders need to be on their toes. Unlike many of the National enduros now, there is no place on the Greenbrier course to sit down and take a leisurely look at roll charts. Instead, riders find themselves looking intently ahead, trying to find a spot to take a second's break while sawing back and forth on the handlebars like one of those Amish lumberjack windmills. Although there are bits of sand road and resets along the way, it's just never enough. By the first gas available, 37 miles into the course, many of the riders were already displaying the glazed-eye look of a person wanting to be somewhere else, trying to drink Gatorade slowly enough to keep it down. By the time the second gas was available, the riders, along the side of the road, might have been mistaken for a funeral procession if it weren't for their bright clothing. Riders were given 129 miles on the route sheet to negotiate. After resets, this worked out to 97 ground miles. The B and C riders were taken off the course after 6B ground miles, and then an Mand A-rider only loop followed. In all, the loop was an additional 2B miles. There was much talk before the event about that final 28 miles, and the club even had some B riders complaining, saying they wanted to ride the whole thing. After the event, the talk was all about how used up everyone was by 6B miles, and it is doubtful that any B riders found the need to run the last section for fun. The final section was 28 miles of tight but fast trail, with a check in the middle to keep everyone honest. Michigan's David Lykke finished sixth overall with a total of 43 points. Lykke is the other KTM rider at all the Nationals, and for this event, the KTM riders had jack Penton and jack's father, john Penton, on hand to lend moral support and help out, as well as the KTM big rig from the canceled North Carolina GNCC. Seventh went to Wally Palmer, riding a Gas Gas this year and happy to get into the top 10. With the respectable finish, he broke a bad-luck streak his team has been suffering so far in 'OS. Throttlehead.com/Kawasaki's Steve Hatch finished eighth overall with a total of 48 points dropped. He was lucky to finish at all follOWing problems with bad fuel during the day and a Kawasaki that would barely run. NETR.A:s enduro champion and Mason Racing KTM pilot Anthony Geraci finished ninth overall after dropping 50 points, and ECEA rider Brian Carden rounded out the top-10, dropping 51 points. The High Point A trophy went to Bobbitt, and the High Point B went to Suzuki rider Gerald Ringler III, who dropped 27 points over a shortened B course. The next event on the AMA National Enduro tour is the Leadbelt National Enduro, on May 23 in Park Hills, Missouri. eN O'k I. M,ke Wfeny (KTM) 28; 2. RKhanl Lafferty (KTM) ~ 3. Russel Bobbitt (KTM) ~O; ~. K..,;., Bennett (Hon) ~ I; 5. Fred Hoeu (GG) ~2; 6. D.YMl Lykke (KTM) 43; 7. WaJla

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