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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/146689
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Todd Harrington set an AMA/CCS record with his six wins over two days of racing at Daytona International Speedway.
Harrington sets records at Daytona
By Henny Ray Abrams
Photos by Daytona International Speedway and Abrams
DA¥rONA BEACH, FL, OCT. 16-19
merican Flyers' Todd Harrington set
a new record for the fall AMA/CCS
Race of Champions at Daytona
International Speedway, winning six races
over two days, most by very convincing
margins.
. The 21-year-old psychology major
began his quest with wins Friday in the
Amateur Middleweight Superbike;
Amateur Heavyweight Supertwins,
Amateur Solo GTU, and Amateur Solo
GTO classes aboard a trio of machines
prepared by Four & Six Cycles in
Chicago. The four wins in one day was
also a Race of Champions record. Then,
on Saturday he continued his winning
streak by capturing titles in the Amateur
Lightweight Supertwins and Amateur
Middleweight GP classes. He also took a
second in the Amateur Heavyweight
Supersport race, but ended his record
weekend on a down note, cartwheeling
through the infield after losing the front
end in the dogleg left while leading the
Amateur Middleweight Supersport race.
He escaped mostly unhurt, only a few
A
6
abrasions on his left hand, and his accomplishment was intact.
"That's what we've been working for
all year; to look professional down here,"
the Northwestern Illinois junior said. "1
wasn't sure until the first race of the day
how I was going to do. I got a good start,
.then I started pulling away. "
The stiffest competition for Harrington
came from Georgian Brian Gibbs, the 21year-old winning three titles on a pair of
machines well accustomed to winning.
Gibbs came to Daytona after recently purchasing Scott Russell's 750 Supersport
winning Muzzy Kawasaki ZX7R as well
Mike Smith's Camel Commonwealth
Honda CBR600. He immediately put
them to good use , winning the Amateur
Heavyweight Supersport and Amateur
Heavyweight Superbike races aboard the
Kawasaki, and the Amateur Middleweight Supersport race aboard the
Honda, that win the most exciting nipping David Estok at the line by .333 of a
second.
Harrington's American Flyer's team-·
mate Dr. Bob Meister was another multiple-class winner, though he fell short of
his own expectations. Meister had hoped
to set the new viCtory record embarking
on an ambitious schedule, but the wins
didn't come as easily, though he was still
able to eapture two class titles as well as a
second and a third.
His first win came in Friday's Expert:
Heavyweight Supertwins event, a race he .
led early and led late, but didn't always
lead. Jimmy Adamo took the lead on the
second lap as the went up onto the west
banking, building up a two-plus second
lead before being forced out with ignition
trouble on the fifth lap. Meister Wi\S home
free from then on, winning by 35.380 seconds over Bartels' Harley's Nigel Gale
with Pete Johnson third on a Raceco
Moto-Cuzzi.
On Saturday, Meister won the Expert
Lightweight Supertwins race from the
front, leading all the way to take the
checkered flag 14.831 seconds in front of
Robert Torset. Third went to James
McNulty. All three were Honda-mounted.
Gold Hill Racing's Christian Gardner
also won a pair of titles, taking Friday's
Expert Solo GTO and Saturday's Expert
Heavyweight Superbike races aboard his
Yamaha aWOl Superbike. He also took
his Yamaha FZR1000 endurance bike to a
second place finish behind Yoshimura
Suzuki's Donald Jacks in the Expert
Unlimited GP.
Gerald Rothman Jr. also won two
races, but not by much. In the Expert
Heavyweight Supersport go he beat Tripp
Nobles to the line by .004 of a second, a
finish so close neither knew who won
until they completed their cool-