MORE PROBLEMS FOR
CIANICIARULO
The hits just keep on coming for
Adam Cianciarulo as he was anoth-
er rider missing on the main-event
line. AC is riding through a shoulder
injury he suffered just weeks prior
to the season opener and a mistake
through the whoops in practice
looked to tweak his right knee. He
did not finish the heat race or line
up for the main. No word yet from
Adam or the Kawasaki camp.
Briefly...
VOLUME 59 ISSUE 4 JANUARY 25, 2022 P65
in dead last and proceeded to
make quick work of the entire
field. Late in the race, he worked
his way up to fourth behind
Vince Friese and the two ex-
changed nearly a full lap's worth
of stop-and-go block passes.
Craig ultimately made a pass
stick and brought it home for the
final podium spot.
Craig may as well have been a
win. The red-plate holder con-
tinued his qualifying streak and
posted the fastest lap for the
third week in a row. In the main
event, however, he tangled with
Lawrence's rear wheel and set
off a domino effect that left a
number of riders on the ground.
The visorless Craig remounted
pilot started second and stalked
Mosiman for nearly the entire
20-lap main. Lawrence looked to
be faster in the whoops but used
patience and didn't try to rush a
pass. Late in the race he went
for it in the whoops but tangled
with the rear of Mosiman's bike
and went down. A last-ditch
effort just wasn't enough to
seal the deal and the Australian
crossed the line second.
"I wasn't trying to rush any-
thing," said Lawrence. "I was
really happy with the way things
were going, I didn't take into
consideration how bad the lap-
pers would be, as bad as they
were. I could've maybe forced
the issue, but you know, shoul-
da, coulda, woulda."
Hunter is now just six points
out from the lead.
A third-place from Christian
Hunter Lawrence
took second in the
250SX West main.
He wants a win.
San Diego Supercross 450SX Highlights