Cycle News

Cycle News 2013 Issue 44 November 5 2013

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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VOL. 50 ISSUE 44 NOVEMBER 5, 2013 P61 Carmichael can't do it all, so he recruits instructional help from other champs, such as Jeff Emig, who worked with students and their starting technique at RedBud. when I was 10-12 years old, it would have been a dream come true. It's cool that they're doing this, to get these guys out here and teach the kids how to ride. Just get out here and have a good time." MOTO >> Ultimately, though, it's about moto. It truly is a school, after all. But if you ever paid attention to Ricky Carmichael's riding style, it's easy to wonder how useful his lessons would be to most racers. It's something that Carmichael is aware of, though. "That's why you'll never hear me giving advice on style," Carmichael says. "I'm giving them advice on how to get the job done. Like, this is what you need to do to go faster. Never about style. Braking points, gas points, stuff like that. Where to look, what to look for. I'll never tell them style stuff, unless I can see that it's a problem. Not basing it off my riding style, basing it on what I've been taught and what I know is right, even if I couldn't ride like that. That's the only time I'll give them points on, 'Hey, put your body position like this.' I don't stress on like elbows and stuff like that because it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that if you're a taller guy, it's going to be easier for you to keep your elbows up. If you're a little guy like me, and I always used to use high-rise bars, it's impossible to keep your elbows up. And at the end of the day, if they have a decent amount of talent and can ride the bike, their style will be okay to get the job done. I'm more interested in helping these people mentally and giving them advice on how they can make themselves better all-around faster riders. I'm not too worried about the style, unless they just have really horrible style." At the RedBud RCU event, Jeff Emig was teaching starts, Jeff Stanton was teaching in the ski jump and downhill braking section, Ivan Tedesco was teaching the sand whoops, Grant Langston was teaching in a muddy roller section followed by a left-hand turn and a muddy uphill, and Ricky Carmichael was teaching in some sandy switchbacks. Emig was the only instructor not riding at RCU, as he was still recovering from some injuries from a crash a few months earler, and that had as much to do with him getting the "starts" section of the school as anything, as it's perhaps easiest to teach starts without demonstrating it yourself. It doesn't hurt that he was always a really good starter, either.

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