Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 50 December 15

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. 52 ISSUE 50 DECEMBER 15, 2015 P119 but as soon as I moved in with him, my level started going up and up. He was the best in the sport. Literally anything he'd do, he'd go to win it. Just learning from the best, I feel like you can get a bit of that and carry it with you. He taught me a lot of stuff and showed me how to accomplish things. He wasn't afraid to give all his secrets up; he would always help and give anything. What was the main thing you think you learned from him? Just being more serious about the sport. He was really, really serious about his racing. Anything he'd have to do to win, he'd do it. He wouldn't second- guess it; he'd just go do it. If it was training or go- ing to ride or whatever, being really organized and focused on racing, that was the main thing. How much did you have to change your program to match his? Completely, 100 percent. I jumped on his full program, from riding, cycling, gym and swim- ming and everything, and the way I was eating. I was on a diet for a long time. I believe whatever worked for him had to work for me—and it did, for sure. Changing your diet must've been really hard! Yeah, coming from [Ensenada], the food's really good! And I was chubby back in the day and I was happy. I'm happy now, too! But I had to cut a lot of food from my diet, for sure, and at the same time I feel really good on the bike now, and feel better and better. It's just the first step. Once you've done it for a couple months, you're fine. When you first started racing here full-time, did you imagine yourself getting to this level? No, not really. I wanted to be a top guy, for sure, but I never thought it would be this soon. I just worked really hard. I believe working hard is the way you've got to go and it's the same in any business or in life. If you don't work hard, you might not get what you want. I've been working really hard and training and believing in myself. It all worked well. What was the most difficult thing to learn, coming from Mexico to racing here? The level up here is way higher than in Mexico. Once I did the national enduros down there, Homero Diaz, he's at the top level and he's fast, but if I wanted to be on the next level, I had to move up here and learn from the best riders and get that intensity and that level. Just like in my whole career, all I've been wanting to do is take it step by step in improvement and not just take a big step forward and go two back—just be- ing smart. I want to have a long career and take everything step by step. Moving to another country presents a lot of challenges, with simply communicating be- ing one of them. Since English isn't your first language, how difficult was it to learn? When I first moved up here, I didn't know any English. I learned the basics in school a little bit; I'd learn a little bit here and there as I spent more time here. I wasn't able to communicate that well with the mechanics at first and all the KTM guys. It was hard for me. Just writing e-mails, it was a big change for me. It's a different way to live life Ramirez represented his home country of Mexico in the ISDE in Slovakia.

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