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Out of the final comer on the 24th lap,
Yates nearly highsided. Hacking closed up as
the pair went deep into tum three on the
25th lap, Hacking taking the lead as they
entered the infield. Yates hit back in the next
tum, his strongest on the track, but Hacking
never relented and he kept the point.
"I knew once I made the pass, I knew I
could hold him off the rest of the race,"
Hacking said. "The rest of the race I was
just sliding to the finish and that was it."
Hacking won his first 5uperstock race
of the year by a scant .210 of a second.
Hayden was another .218 of a second
behind in third.
The heat and attendant lack of grip
contributed to a less than record pace.
Hacking completed the 29-lap, 38.135mile race at an average speed of 83.834
mph. Last year, Hacking won the race at
an average speed of 84.369 mph.
"You ask any of the top four guys, and
I don't think they could say they had a
really good bike. We had just all average
bikes," Hacking said.
Jason DiSalvo
In the first tum of the first lap, the
leaders were already smoking their tires.
"I was like, 'This is going to be a long
race,''' Hacking said.
The pace was slower than it had been
in the morning, and Hacking knew Yates
wasn't comfortable.
"Every time we went around turn two,
he was looking back. He knew he wasn't
pulling any gap on me, so I was like, 'Okay,
I'll just sit here,''' Hacking said.
Yates made a few mistakes that
Hacking couldn't capitalize on. Then
came the bobble in the final turn, "and I
was able to get a good run on him [Yates]
down there on the brakes and was able to
make the pass," Hacking said.
Yates knew he had a more important
Superbike race later in the afternoon.
"The 1000s, just getting around here,
them things are big and heavy, and you
just want to make it to the end," he said.
With about eight laps to go, Yates was
trying to go a little bit harder and trying to
inch away a little bit, "and the thing went
Sideways a couple of times and actually
4th
Graves Motorsports Yamaha's jason DiSalvo got
the jump on the field, banIed Yoshimura Suzuki's
Aaron Yates for the lead on the fIrSt lap, then settled into second - but not for long. By the third
lap, he was back to third and would be passed by
Kawasaki's Tommy Hayden in the infield righttum horseshoe on lap 10. DiSalvo struck back,
but Hayden wasn't having it and kept the spot. "I
was figllting for grip the whole race," DiSalvo
said. "You could see that right from the beginning. Kind of what got me was I was trying to kind of go with those guys, but I just couldn't do
anything the first couple of laps. Once their tires went off, I started to bring them back in a little
bit, but it was a tough day for sure." DiSalvo ended up about fIVe seconds behind the winner.
134 Michael Barnes
5th
This was the second race of the day in which
Mkhael Barnes was riding the Team M4
EMGO Suzuki in place of the injured Vincent
Haskovec. "I think about Vincent every
moment, even when I'm on the bike," he said.
Barnes was the top-ranked rider on Pirelli
tires. Others had problems as the race went
on. Not Barnes. "The bike was flawless, just
absolutely flawless," he said. "The tires were
just incredible. I did nothing but abuse them
the entire race." Barnes said his biggest concern was his physical fitness. Since Daytona, he's
been caring for his ailing mother. "It really didn't come into play until say maybe fIVe laps to
go or something," Barnes said. "And then I kind of dug deep and got past it, and (Jason] DiSal·
vo ran wide, and I ran wide as I saw him run wide. Then I caught up to him and I thought
about settling, then I was like, 'No, something's possible here.' Then I charged some more. I
really ran out of strength. I've been doing nothing for two months. My mother's ill, and I've
been taking care of her back home. Literally, I haven't done anything since Daytona. Getting
this good workout this weekend and having a little bit of time to get prepared for Elkhart will
help me out a lot."
15
Steve Rapp
6th
Jordan Motorsports Suzuki's Steve Rapp bumped into Kawasaki's Roger Lee Hayden on the
fourth lap. "I just thought I could get underneath him because he was running wide in that
corner a little bit, squaring it off," Rapp said. "It's so hard to pass here. You can't be waiting
lost ground, and it kind of hurt me, and
we just did what we could," Yates said.
Knowing that he'd lost the front
midcorner a few times, he settled for
secane. Followihg for 29 laps was the
frustrated Hayden, who was never able
to make a pass. He had moved by
Graves Motorsports Yamaha's Jason
DiSalvo for third on the 10th lap, but
that's as far as he got.
"My bike was really good in some places
and not so good in others, and just - I struggled all day passing," Hayden said. "I wasn't
very good at all. Couldn't get through people, but overall, I guess it was a good day."
Hacking ended the day with a twopoint lead on Yates and DiSalvo, fourth
today, at the midpoint of the la-round
series. Hacking has I S6 points to I 54 for
Yates and DiSalvo, with Tommy Hayden
fourth at 142.
DiSalvo settled into fourth in the race
after being passed by Hayden, then fended off Team M4 EMGO Suzuki's Michael
Barnes to the finish.
eN
PIKES PEAK INTlRNAnONAL RACEWAY
FOUNTAIN, COLORADO
RESULTS;
MAy 22, 2005
(ROUND
5
OF
10)
REPSOL LUBRICANTS SUPERSTOCI(, I. J""le
HiKking (Yam): 2. Aaron Yates (Suz); 3. Tommy Hayden
(Kaw); 4. Jason O;5a/vo (y",,); 5. Michael Barnes (5u,); 6.
SteVe Raw (Sm); 7. Roge.. Lee Hayden (Kaw); B. John
Han.. (Sm); 9. GeoIl May (Sm); 10. Jacob Holden (Su,);
II. Aaron Goben (y",,); 12. Iln>nt Geo

