ROUND 4 / JUNE 26-28, 2026
RIDGE MOTORSPORTS PARK / SHELTON, WASHINGTON
ROAO RACE I MOTOAMERICA AMA/FIM NORTH AMERICAN ROAD RACING CHAMPIONSHIP
P86
DiBrino finished second ahead
of Pietri.
Sunday's rematch featured
another intense multi-rider
battle. Alexander again led the
opening lap ahead of OrangeCat
Racing's Josh Herrin aboard
the electric Lightfighter V3-RH,
while DiBrino and teammate
Bryce Kornbau kept BPR Racing
Yamaha firmly in the fight.
Herrin briefly took the lead
on lap two before the front-
running quartet
bunched together,
allowing Rispoli
and Rodio Racing
championship
leader Gus Rodio to
join the battle and
create a six-rider
fight for victory.
With three laps
remaining, DiBrino
made the decisive
move entering turn
14 and steadily
pulled clear over
the closing laps.
The Yamaha
Rispoli looked set for victory
until a mistake at turn 8a with
three laps remaining handed the
lead to DiBrino.
Alexander, however, charged
back into contention and made
a decisive pass at turn 15 with
two laps to go before defending
perfectly to secure his first
Mission Super Hooligan win and
the first victory for an air-cooled
machine and the inaugural race
win for Arch Motorcycle Racing.
with Corey Alexander and Andy
DiBrino each claiming break
-
through wins.
Saturday
began with Alexander
making history by putting the
Arch Motorcycle Racing 2s-R on
pole position for the team's first-
ever top qualifying result. The
damp race one saw Alexander
lead early ahead of Saddlemen
Race Development's James
Rispoli and teammate Jeremy
McWilliams before the race was
turned upside down
on lap three.
McWilliams
crashed heavily,
forcing Alexander to
take evasive action
to avoid his fallen
teammate. The
incident dropped the
New Yorker to fourth
while promoting
BPR Racing
Yamaha's DiBrino
and CoatzyMoto-
Latin WE's Robertino
Pietri into podium
contention.
Kelly (center) put everyone on notice he's up for the title thanks
to his dramatic race-two win. Scholtz (left) had to console
himself with leading "99.7 percent" of the race, just not the
0.3 percent that mattered.
At one of his favorite hunting grounds,
Josh Herrin (2) walked away clear with
two masterful wins in Supersport.