Cycle News

Cycle News 2022 Issue 07 February 15

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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to select from, and, one would expect, at a lower price point, too. As it stands today, any independent team that hopes to compete up front in Mission SuperTwins has no real option outside of making the very sub- stantial investment of purchas- ing and maintaining FTR750s. Beyond that, any new factory efforts will need teams, riders, and tuners to represent them, providing more opportunities to snare a factory gig and possibly even benefit from a bidding war for their services. And that development would not just be good for the bank accounts of the chosen, it's an absolute requirement in order to properly test the rulebook. Powerful rider-tuner combos are the ultimate decider come race day in flat track racing. And no amount of data can tell you if, for example, Kenny Tolbert and Jared Mees could successfully defeat Indian aboard a Harley- Davidson or a Yamaha until someone manages to hire them to try. You can even make a strong argument that the status quo doesn't do all that much to benefit Indian Motorcycle at this point either. What good does it do to effectively beat themselves in the class, while paying out contingencies nearly guaranteed to max out when riders don't need any additional incentive to select the FTR? In fact, there's a fear ex- pressed by some that, unless something is done to attract real competition in '23 and beyond (ideally Harley-Davidson), Indian might be tempted to pull out at a factory level while reducing its contingency pot substantially. Even so, unless the rulebook changes now being imple- mented prove successful in their aims, the FTR750 could still expect to dominate even under that doomsday scenario— a scenario that has led some to call for the outright banning of Indian's perfect predator. However, Progressive Ameri- can Flat Track's target is to not just avoid the doomsday sce- nario but bring about genuine balance so that Indian, Harley- Davidson and Yamaha—and Royal Enfield, KTM, Kawasaki, Triumph, et al.—all have an equal chance to succeed at the pin- nacle of the sport. FEATURE I STATE OF AMERICAN FLAT TRACK P92 Right now, there's only one bike of choice for SuperTwins privateers such as Brandon Robinson.

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