Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 10 March 11 2014

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/275014

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 72 of 117

INTERVIEW BLAKE YOUNG P72 out at Yoshimura Su- zuki and found no place to break his fall. Hayden has not since returned to Superbike racing and has effec- tively been retired by circumstance. Of course, Hayden's exit was hastened by the ascent of his up-and-coming Yosh teammate Blake Young, who took over as the team's lead rider. Young also won races in '10 and then proved to be the revelation of the '11 season. That year, the Wisconsin native earned as many victories as the rest of the field combined - each one of them coming in impossi- bly dramatic, last-lap fashion. He led the championship into the fi- nale and was in position to steal away the number-one plate as he negotiated the final few corners of the year. That is, right up un- til Josh Hayes overtook Roger Hayden and Ben Bostrom to fin- ish second to Young in the race, which was just enough to suc- cessfully retain his title. Hayes and Yamaha were bet- ter prepared for the challenge of Young and Yoshimura in 2012. Both man and machine made se- rious gains in the off-season and Hayes enjoyed the greatest sta- tistical season in AMA Superbike history as a result. While Young lost momentum and confidence as he desper- ately sought for a way to retaliate, he far from embarrassed himself with his effort. He added three more wins to his career tally - in- cluding an epic last-to-first win at Road Atlanta - and was quite obviously the second best rider in the nation, some one hundred points better than third place. But then Young replaced Hayden a second time - this time, however, for the more dubi- ous distinction as the poster boy representation of the tenuous existence of a modern-day AMA Superbike rider. Following his '12 runner-up campaign, Young was barely 25, in rarified territory, sandwiched by the likes of Scott Russell, Eddie Lawson, Doug (Right) Young rode for the Crescent Suzuki team in the U.S. round of the World Superbike Championship at Laguna Seca last year. (Far right) Young's outings on the Attack Racing CRT bike in the three U.S. rounds of the MotoGP World Championship proved to be more frustrating than fruitful.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2014 Issue 10 March 11 2014