Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 16 April 22

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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PARTS UNLIMITED OFF-ROAD MOTORCYCLE AND ATV NATIONALS VOL. 51 ISSUE 16 APRIL 22, 2014 P119 a break, so I put my head down and tried to really get a bit of a gap on him, and it worked out." At the finish, Whibley had less than 14 seconds over Thomas, 2:07:23 to 2:07:37. "I think I led every lap but the one that paid the money!" Thom- as said. "I tried to get away, but I couldn't get far enough ahead. I missed a hill back there; Jimmy [Jarrett] was stuck in the line and he pointed at a good line, but I didn't see it and those guys did and they got around me. I was able to get Stew, but I wasn't able to get back to Paul. "Second is better than third, but it was a good day, a good start to the series." FMF/KTM Factory Off-Road Racing Team's Baylor ran into a problem when he pitted, costing him some time, and he ended up pitting a second time after not seeing the white flag. "I had a couple little things go wrong," Baylor said. "I was gas- sing myself and the quick-fill got stuck to the stand. I was trying to jerk it out and just struggling all day. "I could catch them in the woods and just didn't have any- thing for them in the fields." Baylor completed 10 laps in 2:08:05 with Adam Bonneur an- other five minutes back in fourth and Pro 2 winner Mark Heresco rounding out the top five overall, all completing 10 laps. Pro 2 runner-up Tyson Emery headed the short list of those do- ing nine laps, followed 52 seconds later by Spencer Burke who took third Pro 2 less than a second ahead of Cody Bollinger, who was three seconds ahead of Derek Spangler. Logan Housenga was both the first A overall and the Lite A winner at 10th overall. CN Briefly... many ruts," desert specialist Jared Schlapia said. "From the looks of it, at first it looked like it was going to be fast, but that changed once I hit the trees. I went down a couple times; the throttle stuck right off the start so I was pretty much dead last. There were people going down ev- erywhere, but it was still trying to find the right lines." And YZ250-mounted Schlapia decided line selection was even more important in the woods compared to Idaho desert races. "Back home, you've got to trust your suspension to hit stuff. Here, you've got to make sure you hit the right line or else you're going to get stuck or go down." On his chances of winning a record- extending sixth OMA series cham- pionship, Paul Whibley said, "It's going to be, obviously, a really tough year. I wouldn't say this is going to be a runaway by any means. It was a battle right down to the end today; there's three of us on the podium here and any one of us could've won the race. I was just fortunate that I got away at that mud hole. I'll take the win, but I don't think it's going to be an easy season. There's four or five of us that could win the champi- onship this year." (Top left) Nick Fahringer ran up front until his gamble on fuel mileage backfired. (Above) Lite A winner Logan Housenga completed eight laps faster than any other A rider. (Left) Cody Barnes overalled the Minibike race on his KX100 and, not long after, rode the morning race on his YZ125, overalling that by almost two minutes and topping Lite B in the process.

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