VOL. 51 ISSUE 28 JULY 15, 2014 P93
py with the way we got
the bike for the race,"
Hayden said. "But the
first eight laps killed me.
I just have to do better."
The Rest
The race was most pro-
cessional. A rather dull
parade, so to speak.
Hayes led for the duration;
Beaubier moved into second on
the fifth lap; and once Hayden
disposed of Cardenas, the
running order was mostly set.
Hayden made his run at Beau-
bier, who in turn tried to chase
down Hayes. None of that came
to fruition.
HMC KTM's Chris Fillmore
rode totally alone in fifth place
– 12 seconds behind Cardenas
and some 10 seconds ahead of
sixth-placed David Anthony, the
Aussie having an off-weekend
after a season full of promise
that includes two runner-up fin-
ishes thus far.
Then came Team AMSOIL
EBR's Cory West, the Arkansas
Briefly...
and Tomas Puerta to Great Britain
to contest the final two rounds of
the British Superbike Series. "We're
going to do Silverstone and Brands
[Hatch]," Walker said. "We have no
idea what's going on here for next
year. We keep hearing things, but we
need somebody to come in here and
do something."
Walker said not much has to be
done to the team's Daytona Sport-
Bike-spec Yamaha R6s to compete
in the British Supersport Series.
"There won't be a lot of work," Walk-
er said. "Mostly motor stuff because
it's a little upgrade to what they use
and it will mostly be with their Motec
spec 880-Series ECU. We plan on
doing some testing with it before we
go over there." The British Supers-
port Series, for the most part, cop-
ies the World Supersport rulebook,
Walker said.
David Anthony (25) wasn't as
strong as he has been of late and
the Australian ended up sixth. Cory
West (13) rode his EBR to seventh.
continued on next page
(From left to right) Cam-
eron Beaubier, Josh Hayes
and Roger Lee Hayden
take to the podium at
Laguna Seca.