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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/128380
characteristics of the Esplanade (the area
in front of the Cittadelle
of1umental
stan s and the presence of the starting
section of the motocross course. the
supermoto track featured more off-road
segments (a total of four) than usual.
which made for muddy going.
Some of the riders where happy with
that. such as'"2004 S Supermoto World
Champion Thierry van den Bosch.
"I like racing and riding, so anything is
fine to me," VDB said. "I go to Namur
trying to do my best, as usual."
Some were less positive, such as 2005
S2 Supermoto World Champion Jerome
Giraudo.
''There is too much off-road," he said.
"We train hard for the asphalt. We're not
ready for this,"
Either way, the rain made it really hard
for everybody. Obviously among those
who loved both the lots of dirt and the
heavy rain were the riders coming from
motocross, so it's no wonder that Belgians
Delepine in the SI class and Godfroid in S2
prevailed in what turned out to be some
really wild supermoto racing.
51
The Supermoto races took place partly
on Saturday (moto one) and partly on
Sunday (moto two), with the timed practices for both classes on Friday.
In the SI class, the timed session was
dominated by VDB, who had to work
hard through the traffic in order to find
his good lap. He was followed by firstround winner Delepine, local new entry
Gilles Dejong and Husky's Ivan Lazzarini.
The next day it was all Delepine, however, who won SuperPole. Delepine would
start first on the grid. ahead of VDB,
Dejong and Lazzarini.
As the opening moto was about to
start, the rain fell. Dejong grabbed the
early lead, with VDB and Delepine right
behind him. Lazzarini got stacked up in
the inside of the first corner while waiting
for a rider in front of him to separate two
bikes that had collided. Some said that
Delepine jumped the start, but nobody
apparently protested, and the FIM official
didn't penalize him.
The race continued with Dejong leading and van den Bosch follOWing him very
close. The French star never attempted a
real attack because the slick, watery track
had his rear tire sliding too much, and he
didn't feel comfortable with taking such a
risk. Instead, it was Delepine who would
break Dejong. The Belgian appeared to
be comfortable with all the water and the
lack of grip. He passed behind VDB then
started yelling at Dejong to make room
for a pass. The intimidation worked perfectly. Dejong got distracted and Delepine
passed him.
From there, Delepine ran away and
hid. Van den Bosch finally passed Dejong
for second, and the race finished with that
order. Fourth went to KTM's Berndt
Hiemer, who had crashed pretty hard during timed practice, hurting a little bone in
his knee. Lazzarini came up 13th from dead
last. Frenchman emd l'hieaault (w a
sig
a new contract just a few days
before the race) debuted on the new version of the Terra Modena and finished 17th.
The second moto, raced on Sunday
afternoon, saw a really strong Delepine
grab the lead right away and contro
e
race easily. VeB wen

