MRA Race 5: High Plains Raceway
6/6-6/7
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
LOR 1st of 9
Novice GTU 3rd of 37
Amateur GTU 4th of 34
Novice GTO 5th of 45
Amateur GTO 8th of 32
Aaron Fisk MRA #125
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
Novice GTU 12th of 37
Amateur GTO 10th of 32
Novice GTO 12th of 45
Amateur GTU 18th of 34
This weekend gave me ups and downs. I podiumed twice and set a new track record for the Ladies of the Rockies class, I also dropped my personal best laptime by a second. I really enjoyed racing LOR at this event, it was a designated “Women of the West” round and we had a group of SMRI racers on the grid with the locals. Edda Tully, a much respected liter bike racer from that club, finished 3rd to me and Donna.
Unfortunately I struggled with difficult tire tearing problems that sent me backwards in my classes. I don’t have a lot of experience racing on green tracks but I understand this is a common problem when tracks are new. HPR’s asphalt seems to be evolving every time we ride there, hopefully it will be more stable by the next event in July. Our last race of the weekend Amateur GTO was red flagged after 2 laps due to funnel clouds in the area, we shoveled the pit into the trailer and raced out of the paddock! I was also frustrated that this race was cut short, as I had already worked my way back up to 6th (with more in my sites) when the red flag came out and we reverted to the end of the previous lap for final positions. Oh well, sometimes things happen in my favor, sometimes not—that’s racing. On to Pueblo for the next round! --WJ
www.AandWracing.com
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
MRA Race 3 & 4 Doubleheader: Motorsports Park Hastings
MRA Race 3 & 4 Doubleheader: Motorsports Park Hastings
5/23-5/25
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Finishes race 3:
LOR 1st of 4
Amateur GTO 2nd of 20
Novice GTU 2nd of 23
Amateur GTU 3rd of 25
Novice GTO 3rd of 26
Finishes race 4:
LOR 1st of 4
Novice GTU 2nd of 24
Novice GTO 3rd of 25
Amateur GTU 6th of 22
Amateur GTO 8th of 18
Aaron Fisk MRA #125
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes race 3:
Novice GTU 6th of 23
MW Endurance 7th of 13
Amateur GTO 11th of 20
Novice GTO 7th of 26
Amateur GTU 24th of 25
Finishes race 4:
Novice GTU 9th of 24
Amateur GTO 11th of 18
Novice GTO 10th of 25
Amateur GTU 10th of 22
This was a tough but rewarding weekend, 4 full days of hard riding plus 10 races was a lot. Some highlights: Getting on the podium 8 out of 10 races at a track I’d never been to before. Breaking the track record for the ladies class on Saturday—unfortunately Donna re-broke it chasing me on Sunday, but I won both races anyway. 10 races in one weekend, ugh I don’t know how some of these guys do it. And I thought 5 races a weekend was a lot!
Aaron also picked up speed and started getting really aggressive in his passing—then as he got even faster he experienced his first crash. It was a small fall, in thick alfalfa, very minor. But it caused him to reset for the rest of his races. He was frustrated with this mental slowdown, but isn’t this the way we all deal with a crash? I do. Both Aaron and I had some of our best finishes to date in Hastings, and going to this away doubleheader maintains our positions in the points battle. A successful weekend! Now back to High Plains Raceway in June….
WJ
5/23-5/25
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Finishes race 3:
LOR 1st of 4
Amateur GTO 2nd of 20
Novice GTU 2nd of 23
Amateur GTU 3rd of 25
Novice GTO 3rd of 26
Finishes race 4:
LOR 1st of 4
Novice GTU 2nd of 24
Novice GTO 3rd of 25
Amateur GTU 6th of 22
Amateur GTO 8th of 18
Aaron Fisk MRA #125
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes race 3:
Novice GTU 6th of 23
MW Endurance 7th of 13
Amateur GTO 11th of 20
Novice GTO 7th of 26
Amateur GTU 24th of 25
Finishes race 4:
Novice GTU 9th of 24
Amateur GTO 11th of 18
Novice GTO 10th of 25
Amateur GTU 10th of 22
This was a tough but rewarding weekend, 4 full days of hard riding plus 10 races was a lot. Some highlights: Getting on the podium 8 out of 10 races at a track I’d never been to before. Breaking the track record for the ladies class on Saturday—unfortunately Donna re-broke it chasing me on Sunday, but I won both races anyway. 10 races in one weekend, ugh I don’t know how some of these guys do it. And I thought 5 races a weekend was a lot!
Aaron also picked up speed and started getting really aggressive in his passing—then as he got even faster he experienced his first crash. It was a small fall, in thick alfalfa, very minor. But it caused him to reset for the rest of his races. He was frustrated with this mental slowdown, but isn’t this the way we all deal with a crash? I do. Both Aaron and I had some of our best finishes to date in Hastings, and going to this away doubleheader maintains our positions in the points battle. A successful weekend! Now back to High Plains Raceway in June….
WJ
MRA Race 2: High Plains Raceway
MRA Race 2: High Plains Raceway
5/9-5/10
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
LOR 1st of 7
Amateur GTO 2nd of 26
Novice GTU 3rd of 41
Amateur GTU 3rd of 32
Novice GTO 4th of 48
Aaron Fisk MRA #125
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
Novice GTU 9th of 41
MW Endurance 9th of 31
Amateur GTO 10th of 26
Novice GTO 11th of 48
Amateur GTU 13th of 32
Our first event at the new High Plains Raceway was huge fun, and as a bonus I got to try rain slicks for the first time, oboy.
Friday practice was much colder than expected, I swear I watched the weather channel all week and it was supposed to be hot. Shivered in the pits all day cause we didn’t bring warm clothes. I worked my times down to just above the 2 minute mark, which I’d thought would put me at the front, but the fast novices were already starting to ease into the high 50’s. Dangit, I have more work to do.
Saturday morning was cold but looked like it could warm up a bit. I debated tire compounds and finally went with the greens. Couple of light warm up sessions and we were ready for the first race, Novice GTU. It’s a 15 row 2 wave grid, glad I’m starting front row!
As the light goes off I get a mediocre launch. A couple guys pass me on the start, and I put my head down to get around them in the first couple corners. I’m back in 3rd place now, my starting position, and the 2 leaders are dicing ahead of me. I tell myself to focus on putting in faster laps and catch them but it doesn’t happen. We circulate like that, me watching the two in front of me but slowly losing ground, and 4th place trailing further behind. We’re into the back of the second wave by lap 3 and I keep an eye on the guys behind me as I work through traffic, then the race is red flagged on lap 5. Overall an uneventful race, I finish 3rd out of 41.
Race two on Saturday is Novice GTO, I’m starting second row on a ginormous 17 row 48 bike grid. Another mediocre start, I’m 5th into turn 1 behind two 1000s. Same two guys from NovU are leading, followed by an R1, a GSXR1k, and me. All I can think as we exit 3b onto the big straight is “don’t lose touch with the liter bikes”. I’m planted on the back of 4th place that’s slowly slipping away from the 3 front runners, and I’ve got to get around this guy and make that time back up. He’s riding hard, making some mistakes, and I slip past him at the end of lap 1. Focus on catching 3rd! I make up time on the leaders, but we’re quickly into lapped traffic and I’m not making passes as fast as I should. I lose some ground and can see that the two front guys are starting to gap 3rd. I need to catch this guy and take over 3rd, why can’t I ride faster and do it?? Need more gas less brakes I think, lol. Although I close the gap some I don’t catch him. I finish 4th of 48, no sign of 5th place. At the end of Saturday I’m pleased to see I’ve been doing 1:58’s in both races, my weekend goal was to be under the 2 minute mark so this is a win. J
Sunday we wake up to rain. But by the time we arrive at the track it’s dry, cold but dry and maybe there’s hope it will stay dry? No, no hope. It starts raining before first practice and continues to rain off and on all morning. We hustle to get the rain wheels mounted, we’re not that fast as mechanics so it’s slow going. Sunday morning is stressful throughout the pits, the rain keeps stopping, then starting, then stopping, prompting everyone to sweat tire choice. My first race is Ladies of the Rockies and I’ve opted for rain slicks. It’s still wet and puddly, but the rain has stopped again.
I pull up to LOR pregrid and 5 bikes show up. Two of the other entered women lack rain tires and have elected to sit the race out, that leaves 3 of us on rains, one gal on DOTs, and the last brave soul on slicks. Donna, my main competition in the ladies class, leans over to tell me she’s never ridden on rains before—oh good, me either, this could be a slow race, lol! I decided beforehand to holeshot the start and control the speed of the race—I do just that and start to control the tempo. It’s slow going as we figure out our new tires and grip. Since it’s not raining and some corners have a dry line I’m riding off line through puddles to preserve the tires. Donna is hanging not far behind and I slowly dial in speed each lap to try and gap her. By lap 3 she’s a lot further back but not gone, and it’s starting to rain again. At this point I say screw it and decide to push for a few fast corners and down the big straight. That does it, I can’t see her anymore and I ride around the last few laps in the puddles until the checkered. Yay, I won the race!
I think that painfully slow rain win did me good, because when I grid up for Amateur GTU I’m feeling fast. Mike from Faster steps up to me at pregrid and tells me to be aggressive with these guys, and for some reason that sounds like a really good idea! The track is now mostly dry so we’re back on slicks. I note there’s a big crowd gathered to watch this race even though it’s cold and overcast, how cool!
I’m gridded front row and once again my start is kind of lame, I’m 5th into turn 1. But this time I accelerate hard out of 1 and drive right up the inside into turn 2, diving under 2 bikes at once. Wow, I’m carrying good speed and rush up the backside of 2nd place going into 3a, passing him on corner exit. All of a sudden I realize I’m on the wheel of the leader entering the straightaway. I suck into his draft and pull up close, sling out at the end of the big straight and pass him into super fast turn 4. I just passed into the lead of Amateur GTU!!! Whoohoo! I keep leading for the rest of the lap, back into turn 1, and around onto the big straight again. This time he drafts me and slings by fast and close into turn 4. I tuck in right behind him and we ride fast around the next lap. Up the hill to the corkscrew, the blind left downhill section before the shorter front straight. I’m all over him in the corkscrew, and as we exit the bottom I jump back into his draft and head down the short straight in front of the crowd. I pop out in the brake markers for turn 1 and have time to wonder, am I actually outbreaking him into turn 1? Wow, I am! Back into the lead of AmU!! I lead out of turn 2 and the 3’s, but this time at the end of the big straight TWO guys come blazing by me on the brakes. They’re so late on the brakes they’re both blowing the corner, I wonder if they’re going to run off and hand the lead back to me? In hindsight I should’ve spent less time watching them and more time passing them during this error, but I didn’t. They gather it back up and chuck their bikes over into turn 5, I’m running up the back of them but don’t make the pass. Over the course of the next couple laps they’re really pushing each other and I’m starting to lag. I check behind me and 4th place is gapped back, no sign of 5th. As much fun as the first few laps were I’m back to negotiating lappers and riding around to the finish without racing anyone else. I finish 3rd, but feel energized by having diced for the lead. Mmmmm, and I’ve got another race coming up. J
Last race of the day, last race of the weekend—Amateur GTO. I’m fired up for this race. I get a slightly better launch, into turn 1 in 4th place, then I make a couple passes down the big straight and I’m right behind the leader again. This time we’re in a train, Erik, me, Steve, and two liter bikes on the back. I’m all over the leader again, I know I’m going to make a pass. At the end of lap 2 I slip up the inside at the top of the corkscrew—that was a good pass! What I don’t know is happening behind me –as we come around for the third lap the guy in 4th loses the front in turn 1 and takes 5th place with him. There’s now a significant gap between us and 3rd, and 3rd and 4th place. Erik and I are dicing hard, he comes barreling by me into turn 1 and puts his head down. I’m chasing but not making up ground, and 3rd place is slipping away behind me. I stay focused on catching Erik for the last few laps but don’t, and settle for 2nd. 2nd place finish! I passed for the lead again and finished 2nd, woot!!
Great weekend all around, after 2 rounds I’m in 1st, 2nd or 3rd in four of my championships, 4th place in the last class. Next up the Hastings double-header round. Wish me luck! --WJ
www.AandWracing.com
5/9-5/10
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
LOR 1st of 7
Amateur GTO 2nd of 26
Novice GTU 3rd of 41
Amateur GTU 3rd of 32
Novice GTO 4th of 48
Aaron Fisk MRA #125
Kawasaki ZX6R
Finishes:
Novice GTU 9th of 41
MW Endurance 9th of 31
Amateur GTO 10th of 26
Novice GTO 11th of 48
Amateur GTU 13th of 32
Our first event at the new High Plains Raceway was huge fun, and as a bonus I got to try rain slicks for the first time, oboy.
Friday practice was much colder than expected, I swear I watched the weather channel all week and it was supposed to be hot. Shivered in the pits all day cause we didn’t bring warm clothes. I worked my times down to just above the 2 minute mark, which I’d thought would put me at the front, but the fast novices were already starting to ease into the high 50’s. Dangit, I have more work to do.
Saturday morning was cold but looked like it could warm up a bit. I debated tire compounds and finally went with the greens. Couple of light warm up sessions and we were ready for the first race, Novice GTU. It’s a 15 row 2 wave grid, glad I’m starting front row!
As the light goes off I get a mediocre launch. A couple guys pass me on the start, and I put my head down to get around them in the first couple corners. I’m back in 3rd place now, my starting position, and the 2 leaders are dicing ahead of me. I tell myself to focus on putting in faster laps and catch them but it doesn’t happen. We circulate like that, me watching the two in front of me but slowly losing ground, and 4th place trailing further behind. We’re into the back of the second wave by lap 3 and I keep an eye on the guys behind me as I work through traffic, then the race is red flagged on lap 5. Overall an uneventful race, I finish 3rd out of 41.
Race two on Saturday is Novice GTO, I’m starting second row on a ginormous 17 row 48 bike grid. Another mediocre start, I’m 5th into turn 1 behind two 1000s. Same two guys from NovU are leading, followed by an R1, a GSXR1k, and me. All I can think as we exit 3b onto the big straight is “don’t lose touch with the liter bikes”. I’m planted on the back of 4th place that’s slowly slipping away from the 3 front runners, and I’ve got to get around this guy and make that time back up. He’s riding hard, making some mistakes, and I slip past him at the end of lap 1. Focus on catching 3rd! I make up time on the leaders, but we’re quickly into lapped traffic and I’m not making passes as fast as I should. I lose some ground and can see that the two front guys are starting to gap 3rd. I need to catch this guy and take over 3rd, why can’t I ride faster and do it?? Need more gas less brakes I think, lol. Although I close the gap some I don’t catch him. I finish 4th of 48, no sign of 5th place. At the end of Saturday I’m pleased to see I’ve been doing 1:58’s in both races, my weekend goal was to be under the 2 minute mark so this is a win. J
Sunday we wake up to rain. But by the time we arrive at the track it’s dry, cold but dry and maybe there’s hope it will stay dry? No, no hope. It starts raining before first practice and continues to rain off and on all morning. We hustle to get the rain wheels mounted, we’re not that fast as mechanics so it’s slow going. Sunday morning is stressful throughout the pits, the rain keeps stopping, then starting, then stopping, prompting everyone to sweat tire choice. My first race is Ladies of the Rockies and I’ve opted for rain slicks. It’s still wet and puddly, but the rain has stopped again.
I pull up to LOR pregrid and 5 bikes show up. Two of the other entered women lack rain tires and have elected to sit the race out, that leaves 3 of us on rains, one gal on DOTs, and the last brave soul on slicks. Donna, my main competition in the ladies class, leans over to tell me she’s never ridden on rains before—oh good, me either, this could be a slow race, lol! I decided beforehand to holeshot the start and control the speed of the race—I do just that and start to control the tempo. It’s slow going as we figure out our new tires and grip. Since it’s not raining and some corners have a dry line I’m riding off line through puddles to preserve the tires. Donna is hanging not far behind and I slowly dial in speed each lap to try and gap her. By lap 3 she’s a lot further back but not gone, and it’s starting to rain again. At this point I say screw it and decide to push for a few fast corners and down the big straight. That does it, I can’t see her anymore and I ride around the last few laps in the puddles until the checkered. Yay, I won the race!
I think that painfully slow rain win did me good, because when I grid up for Amateur GTU I’m feeling fast. Mike from Faster steps up to me at pregrid and tells me to be aggressive with these guys, and for some reason that sounds like a really good idea! The track is now mostly dry so we’re back on slicks. I note there’s a big crowd gathered to watch this race even though it’s cold and overcast, how cool!
I’m gridded front row and once again my start is kind of lame, I’m 5th into turn 1. But this time I accelerate hard out of 1 and drive right up the inside into turn 2, diving under 2 bikes at once. Wow, I’m carrying good speed and rush up the backside of 2nd place going into 3a, passing him on corner exit. All of a sudden I realize I’m on the wheel of the leader entering the straightaway. I suck into his draft and pull up close, sling out at the end of the big straight and pass him into super fast turn 4. I just passed into the lead of Amateur GTU!!! Whoohoo! I keep leading for the rest of the lap, back into turn 1, and around onto the big straight again. This time he drafts me and slings by fast and close into turn 4. I tuck in right behind him and we ride fast around the next lap. Up the hill to the corkscrew, the blind left downhill section before the shorter front straight. I’m all over him in the corkscrew, and as we exit the bottom I jump back into his draft and head down the short straight in front of the crowd. I pop out in the brake markers for turn 1 and have time to wonder, am I actually outbreaking him into turn 1? Wow, I am! Back into the lead of AmU!! I lead out of turn 2 and the 3’s, but this time at the end of the big straight TWO guys come blazing by me on the brakes. They’re so late on the brakes they’re both blowing the corner, I wonder if they’re going to run off and hand the lead back to me? In hindsight I should’ve spent less time watching them and more time passing them during this error, but I didn’t. They gather it back up and chuck their bikes over into turn 5, I’m running up the back of them but don’t make the pass. Over the course of the next couple laps they’re really pushing each other and I’m starting to lag. I check behind me and 4th place is gapped back, no sign of 5th. As much fun as the first few laps were I’m back to negotiating lappers and riding around to the finish without racing anyone else. I finish 3rd, but feel energized by having diced for the lead. Mmmmm, and I’ve got another race coming up. J
Last race of the day, last race of the weekend—Amateur GTO. I’m fired up for this race. I get a slightly better launch, into turn 1 in 4th place, then I make a couple passes down the big straight and I’m right behind the leader again. This time we’re in a train, Erik, me, Steve, and two liter bikes on the back. I’m all over the leader again, I know I’m going to make a pass. At the end of lap 2 I slip up the inside at the top of the corkscrew—that was a good pass! What I don’t know is happening behind me –as we come around for the third lap the guy in 4th loses the front in turn 1 and takes 5th place with him. There’s now a significant gap between us and 3rd, and 3rd and 4th place. Erik and I are dicing hard, he comes barreling by me into turn 1 and puts his head down. I’m chasing but not making up ground, and 3rd place is slipping away behind me. I stay focused on catching Erik for the last few laps but don’t, and settle for 2nd. 2nd place finish! I passed for the lead again and finished 2nd, woot!!
Great weekend all around, after 2 rounds I’m in 1st, 2nd or 3rd in four of my championships, 4th place in the last class. Next up the Hastings double-header round. Wish me luck! --WJ
www.AandWracing.com
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
MRA Race 1 2009 PMP
MRA Race #1: Pueblo Motorsports Park
4/25-4/26
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Finishes:
Novice GTU 3rd of 39
Novice GTO 4th of 42
LOR 2nd of 5
Amateur GTU 9th of 35
Amateur GTO 6th of 28
What a great start to the 2009 season! Saturday morning we woke up to cold overcast weather, it was in the low 40’s as we drove into the pits. Since we rode Friday practice, we opted to skip the early practice sessions on the cold track and pulled wheels for new tires, then went to check preliminary grids. The MRA had a near record New Racer School this year, 75 students, and there had already been talk of needing heat races to thin the grids in novice. Thankfully we were just under the entry limit, so no heat races but big grids. I’m novice #145 running a ZX6R.
My first race: starting 4th row of the 1st wave of Novice GTU—14 rows total in a 2 wave start. On pre-grid I was looking around to see if I knew any of these guys. Hmmm, I know almost no one, I guess I’ll just go aggressive into T1 and see how the pack settles out. Off for the warm up lap and around to the starting grid for my first race! It’s here! I’m starting 11th of 39 riders
I get a pretty decent launch out of my new bike, going through guys ahead of me, and I make some more passes into big fast T1—I think I’m up to 6th place on the exit of 1?! I see the 3 lead bikes already starting to gap the guys in front of me, I need to make these passes in a hurry and catch up to the leaders. Head down. I get the first guy into T4, an overtaking entrance pass, then start closing on the next guy. He’s all over the place, riding hard and blowing his entries. I know I can get by quickly cause he’s pushing too hard. I watch him pick up his back tire into T9, then close up in the short shoot to T10 and tuck in behind him for the draft down the straight. Maybe ¾ of the way down I pop out and sling by very close, passing into the entrance of T1. Now I think I’m in 4th but not sure. I see a green bike up ahead and push to catch him—is he from the lead group or is this already the back of the 2nd wave? Ok, I’m catching him but not super fast, I think he’s a rider from in front of me, could this be 3rd place?? We go past the crossed flags and I need to get him soon, some lapped traffic would really help about now. Yes!, we’re into the back of the 2nd wave and he’s not getting through well, I know I’m going to overtake him in traffic. As a lapper, the green bike, and I pin it down the back straight I watch green bike close up behind the lapper entering T9. He’s blown his drive and is bunched up with the lapper. I enter T9 hard and drive out into the short shoot before T10, I’m going to outbreak both of them into 10. Green bike starts to drift out to go up the inside of the lapper and suddenly realizes I’m there—I fly under both of them and put my head down for one more fast lap. Yes, checkered flag! I come in and I’ve finished on the podium for my first race of 2009! 3rd out of 39
After a short break Novice GTO is my next race, this class has 15 rows in 2 waves and I’m starting on the 5th row, 15th out of 42 riders. Unfortunately we have a nasty starting grid crash on the first try, ala Scott Russell at Daytona. Clean up and re-grid. I kind of bog the bike off the second start and guys are passing me down the straight, dangit! This is the liter bike class but many 600s ride up like myself, so it’s hard to know whether I’m chasing fast 600 guys or big bikes down the straight, we’re all mixed together and go flying into the first turn. T1 is really crowded and I can’t see the lead group, I have no idea where I am in the pack. Head down, start working through traffic. Halfway through we’re into the back of the second wave and I’m trying to keep my rhythm as I flow past people. I’m having trouble with one last bike I want to pick off before the end of the race, this guy was in GTU so I figure he’s riding up like me, but he’s running a lot better in this race. His drive onto the front straight is killing me and I’m pushing deeper into T1 to run him down. I don’t remember exactly where I catch him, somewhere on the back side cause my crew said I popped out into spectator view suddenly in front. We race through the last few corners and I throw the bike into T10 to drive hard to start/finish—yeah! I held onto my position and it turns out I’d made it up to 4th place! I’m even more pleased when I find out that last bike was a GSXR1000, no wonder he was out driving me onto the straight. 4th out of 42 this go round
BTW, this is Aaron’s first time ever racing, he finished 8th in NovU and 10th in NovO. I’m so proud of him, you rock babe! Aaron was going to race MW Endurance Saturday afternoon, but we realize after NovO that his radiator is holed and leaking, probably hit with from debris from the NovO grid pile up. We spend the rest of the afternoon pulling the radiator and getting it fixed trackside by Dennie Burke, super fast expert and owner of Brighton Radiator. Thank you Dennie, you saved our weekend.
On to Sunday’s races, I head out first for our women’s class, Ladies of the Rockies. I’m a little disappointed to have only 5 gals on the first weekend’s grid, but I hear more will be coming to the next event. This is a great class to showcase the women racers in the club, not to mention get some more contingency $! So I have to be honest, I went into this race all wrong. The reigning LOR champion is Donna Turner, an expert middleweight rider. I looked at her times from yesterday’s Middleweight Supersport race and she was not running well, I was doing faster times in my novice races in traffic. So I roll up to our women’s grid over confident, thinking I’ve already got this race won. Lesson learned! J I holeshot the start and drive into T1 first, leading the first lap, I don’t hear anyone and I don’t look back. Then as I exit T1 for the second lap and start to tip into 2, who pops under me smooth and collected but Donna. And she’s really moving, she’s got her head down and she’s putting in fast laps. Donna dropped her times significantly from Saturday and took the LOR win, it was a great ride. I finish in 2nd, my second podium of the weekend, yay! Interesting that my slowest times of the weekend were in the women’s class, in retrospect I believe I went into the girl race thinking it would be cake and didn’t focus. I got second place because of it, but next time I’ll attack this class more seriously.
On to Amateur GTU, another big grid with 13 rows, 35 riders, I’m starting from the 5th row. The MRA’s Am classes are comprised of any novice plus the experts who don’t run the premier classes. Amateur GTU is a fast, hairball class and these guys are not going to scare off their lines like the novice class did. I get a decent launch but I bet wrong on the entrance to T1, going up the inside. EVERYONE tries to go up the inside and I’ve got guys leaning in on the outside and guys showing me a wheel on the inside. Let’s all get out of turn 1 alive and I’ll be happy! Again I can’t see the leaders; I’m caught up in the pack and have no idea what position I’m in. I make a few passes and suddenly break out into a gap in traffic, up ahead I see Donna dicing with another expert and a novice, all 3 of them started ahead of me on the grid so this is a good sign. I give chase. Suddenly going into T2 a white plate sneaks under me, #60. I’ve been doing the passing this weekend, I haven’t been getting passed much—I don’t like it! I go after the guy and get back by him, but he comes right back around me and starts to pull a small gap. I’ve been distracted by my battle with #60, and as I look up I see that one of the guys with Donna is gone, the other guy is fighting to get around her. #60 and I are closing on them both but we just saw the white flag! Dangit, I want to catch that group but I’m running out of time. The second guy gets by her at the last minute, putting #60 right behind her and me behind him. We cross the finish line in that order, I’ve come in 9th in AmU. 9th of 35, not bad for a fast class, and I’ve improved my starting position by 2 rows for next race. Woot!
Last class on the weekend schedule is my final race, Amateur GTO. I’m tired and I don’t want to race this stupid class! Why did I sign up for the last race of the weekend? Again this is a liter bike class but lots of 600s ride up. I’m back on row 5 again, 28 riders starting on this 2 wave grid. I get a KILLER start this time, and drive hard down the front straight, I’m moving by people so smooth into T1 and then suddenly I realize I’m the tail end of the lead pack! They’re right there, strung out neatly in front of me middle of T1, I’m tucked in on the end of the train. The leader pack is flowing fast and I start looking for how to get around the guy ahead of me, I’m probably in 8th or 9th position in the group. I pass one guy going into T4 and refocus on the next guy in line, they’re really cooking up the hill into 5. Pretty soon I’m right behind Steve, one of the guys I was chasing in AmU, but I’m catching him this time, I’m going to pass him. Suddenly who should pop by on the brakes but my new friend #60. Dangit! Hmmm, he makes nice passes I have to give the guy credit. I chase through T10 and draft him down the straight, passing him back into T1. He comes right back by in 2 and although I show him a wheel in 3 he sticks his line and I don’t get through. He quickly runs down Steve in front of me and I’m trying to do the same, but then another guy shows me a wheel! I stick my line and the challenger gives way, tucking in behind me. We’ve only got a lap and a half, I’m not giving up a position and I’m determined to get one more spot! We’re in lapped traffic and I’m close, Steve’s riding hard defensive lines and I should just bull past but I hesitate cause it’s going to be ugly. I don’t want to squish Steve! Into T9 and I’m right on top of him but I can’t quite beat him in the short shoot to 10. Oh no, he’s driving hard to the finish line, he gets it with me right on his butt. Nice race Steve, way to hang on! I hold off the guy behind me as well and finish in 6th place. 6th of 28, my final finish for the weekend.
I’m really pleased with the first weekend results, I rode well, kept improving and had zero ‘moments’. Now I’ve got good grid position in every class for race #2, our first race at High Plains Raceway, the brand new technical track. I think I’m going to do awesome at that course, I’ll find out in 2 more weeks. --WJ
4/25-4/26
Wyeth Jackson MRA #145
Finishes:
Novice GTU 3rd of 39
Novice GTO 4th of 42
LOR 2nd of 5
Amateur GTU 9th of 35
Amateur GTO 6th of 28
What a great start to the 2009 season! Saturday morning we woke up to cold overcast weather, it was in the low 40’s as we drove into the pits. Since we rode Friday practice, we opted to skip the early practice sessions on the cold track and pulled wheels for new tires, then went to check preliminary grids. The MRA had a near record New Racer School this year, 75 students, and there had already been talk of needing heat races to thin the grids in novice. Thankfully we were just under the entry limit, so no heat races but big grids. I’m novice #145 running a ZX6R.
My first race: starting 4th row of the 1st wave of Novice GTU—14 rows total in a 2 wave start. On pre-grid I was looking around to see if I knew any of these guys. Hmmm, I know almost no one, I guess I’ll just go aggressive into T1 and see how the pack settles out. Off for the warm up lap and around to the starting grid for my first race! It’s here! I’m starting 11th of 39 riders
I get a pretty decent launch out of my new bike, going through guys ahead of me, and I make some more passes into big fast T1—I think I’m up to 6th place on the exit of 1?! I see the 3 lead bikes already starting to gap the guys in front of me, I need to make these passes in a hurry and catch up to the leaders. Head down. I get the first guy into T4, an overtaking entrance pass, then start closing on the next guy. He’s all over the place, riding hard and blowing his entries. I know I can get by quickly cause he’s pushing too hard. I watch him pick up his back tire into T9, then close up in the short shoot to T10 and tuck in behind him for the draft down the straight. Maybe ¾ of the way down I pop out and sling by very close, passing into the entrance of T1. Now I think I’m in 4th but not sure. I see a green bike up ahead and push to catch him—is he from the lead group or is this already the back of the 2nd wave? Ok, I’m catching him but not super fast, I think he’s a rider from in front of me, could this be 3rd place?? We go past the crossed flags and I need to get him soon, some lapped traffic would really help about now. Yes!, we’re into the back of the 2nd wave and he’s not getting through well, I know I’m going to overtake him in traffic. As a lapper, the green bike, and I pin it down the back straight I watch green bike close up behind the lapper entering T9. He’s blown his drive and is bunched up with the lapper. I enter T9 hard and drive out into the short shoot before T10, I’m going to outbreak both of them into 10. Green bike starts to drift out to go up the inside of the lapper and suddenly realizes I’m there—I fly under both of them and put my head down for one more fast lap. Yes, checkered flag! I come in and I’ve finished on the podium for my first race of 2009! 3rd out of 39
After a short break Novice GTO is my next race, this class has 15 rows in 2 waves and I’m starting on the 5th row, 15th out of 42 riders. Unfortunately we have a nasty starting grid crash on the first try, ala Scott Russell at Daytona. Clean up and re-grid. I kind of bog the bike off the second start and guys are passing me down the straight, dangit! This is the liter bike class but many 600s ride up like myself, so it’s hard to know whether I’m chasing fast 600 guys or big bikes down the straight, we’re all mixed together and go flying into the first turn. T1 is really crowded and I can’t see the lead group, I have no idea where I am in the pack. Head down, start working through traffic. Halfway through we’re into the back of the second wave and I’m trying to keep my rhythm as I flow past people. I’m having trouble with one last bike I want to pick off before the end of the race, this guy was in GTU so I figure he’s riding up like me, but he’s running a lot better in this race. His drive onto the front straight is killing me and I’m pushing deeper into T1 to run him down. I don’t remember exactly where I catch him, somewhere on the back side cause my crew said I popped out into spectator view suddenly in front. We race through the last few corners and I throw the bike into T10 to drive hard to start/finish—yeah! I held onto my position and it turns out I’d made it up to 4th place! I’m even more pleased when I find out that last bike was a GSXR1000, no wonder he was out driving me onto the straight. 4th out of 42 this go round
BTW, this is Aaron’s first time ever racing, he finished 8th in NovU and 10th in NovO. I’m so proud of him, you rock babe! Aaron was going to race MW Endurance Saturday afternoon, but we realize after NovO that his radiator is holed and leaking, probably hit with from debris from the NovO grid pile up. We spend the rest of the afternoon pulling the radiator and getting it fixed trackside by Dennie Burke, super fast expert and owner of Brighton Radiator. Thank you Dennie, you saved our weekend.
On to Sunday’s races, I head out first for our women’s class, Ladies of the Rockies. I’m a little disappointed to have only 5 gals on the first weekend’s grid, but I hear more will be coming to the next event. This is a great class to showcase the women racers in the club, not to mention get some more contingency $! So I have to be honest, I went into this race all wrong. The reigning LOR champion is Donna Turner, an expert middleweight rider. I looked at her times from yesterday’s Middleweight Supersport race and she was not running well, I was doing faster times in my novice races in traffic. So I roll up to our women’s grid over confident, thinking I’ve already got this race won. Lesson learned! J I holeshot the start and drive into T1 first, leading the first lap, I don’t hear anyone and I don’t look back. Then as I exit T1 for the second lap and start to tip into 2, who pops under me smooth and collected but Donna. And she’s really moving, she’s got her head down and she’s putting in fast laps. Donna dropped her times significantly from Saturday and took the LOR win, it was a great ride. I finish in 2nd, my second podium of the weekend, yay! Interesting that my slowest times of the weekend were in the women’s class, in retrospect I believe I went into the girl race thinking it would be cake and didn’t focus. I got second place because of it, but next time I’ll attack this class more seriously.
On to Amateur GTU, another big grid with 13 rows, 35 riders, I’m starting from the 5th row. The MRA’s Am classes are comprised of any novice plus the experts who don’t run the premier classes. Amateur GTU is a fast, hairball class and these guys are not going to scare off their lines like the novice class did. I get a decent launch but I bet wrong on the entrance to T1, going up the inside. EVERYONE tries to go up the inside and I’ve got guys leaning in on the outside and guys showing me a wheel on the inside. Let’s all get out of turn 1 alive and I’ll be happy! Again I can’t see the leaders; I’m caught up in the pack and have no idea what position I’m in. I make a few passes and suddenly break out into a gap in traffic, up ahead I see Donna dicing with another expert and a novice, all 3 of them started ahead of me on the grid so this is a good sign. I give chase. Suddenly going into T2 a white plate sneaks under me, #60. I’ve been doing the passing this weekend, I haven’t been getting passed much—I don’t like it! I go after the guy and get back by him, but he comes right back around me and starts to pull a small gap. I’ve been distracted by my battle with #60, and as I look up I see that one of the guys with Donna is gone, the other guy is fighting to get around her. #60 and I are closing on them both but we just saw the white flag! Dangit, I want to catch that group but I’m running out of time. The second guy gets by her at the last minute, putting #60 right behind her and me behind him. We cross the finish line in that order, I’ve come in 9th in AmU. 9th of 35, not bad for a fast class, and I’ve improved my starting position by 2 rows for next race. Woot!
Last class on the weekend schedule is my final race, Amateur GTO. I’m tired and I don’t want to race this stupid class! Why did I sign up for the last race of the weekend? Again this is a liter bike class but lots of 600s ride up. I’m back on row 5 again, 28 riders starting on this 2 wave grid. I get a KILLER start this time, and drive hard down the front straight, I’m moving by people so smooth into T1 and then suddenly I realize I’m the tail end of the lead pack! They’re right there, strung out neatly in front of me middle of T1, I’m tucked in on the end of the train. The leader pack is flowing fast and I start looking for how to get around the guy ahead of me, I’m probably in 8th or 9th position in the group. I pass one guy going into T4 and refocus on the next guy in line, they’re really cooking up the hill into 5. Pretty soon I’m right behind Steve, one of the guys I was chasing in AmU, but I’m catching him this time, I’m going to pass him. Suddenly who should pop by on the brakes but my new friend #60. Dangit! Hmmm, he makes nice passes I have to give the guy credit. I chase through T10 and draft him down the straight, passing him back into T1. He comes right back by in 2 and although I show him a wheel in 3 he sticks his line and I don’t get through. He quickly runs down Steve in front of me and I’m trying to do the same, but then another guy shows me a wheel! I stick my line and the challenger gives way, tucking in behind me. We’ve only got a lap and a half, I’m not giving up a position and I’m determined to get one more spot! We’re in lapped traffic and I’m close, Steve’s riding hard defensive lines and I should just bull past but I hesitate cause it’s going to be ugly. I don’t want to squish Steve! Into T9 and I’m right on top of him but I can’t quite beat him in the short shoot to 10. Oh no, he’s driving hard to the finish line, he gets it with me right on his butt. Nice race Steve, way to hang on! I hold off the guy behind me as well and finish in 6th place. 6th of 28, my final finish for the weekend.
I’m really pleased with the first weekend results, I rode well, kept improving and had zero ‘moments’. Now I’ve got good grid position in every class for race #2, our first race at High Plains Raceway, the brand new technical track. I think I’m going to do awesome at that course, I’ll find out in 2 more weeks. --WJ
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
The beginning
October 11-12, 2008
Pikes Peak International Raceway
MRA final round 2008
I can't remember if I told you I used to race. Mostly back in the '90's, but getting back into the track scene this year I got asked regularly when I'm coming back. I'd managed to dodge the "come back" pressure until the last track day, when a friend who's been encouraging me to try out his ZX6R racebike finally wore me down. I agreed to ride it at the PPIR Chicane Trackdays on Oct. 5th.
Although I was nervous about being back on a racebike it was also a lot of fun. After almost 8 years of being away, I realize I miss racing. I was rusty and the bike wasn't set up for me, but I was riding ok. The bike's owner wanted me to race it the following weekend, the last MRA event at PPIR. The more I rode that bike the more I wanted to enter and race it. By the end of the trackday I was still saying I was undecided, but really it was too late, I was in.
I spent the next week getting my license together and getting the 03 ZX6R prepped. I was at first irritated that I'd be coming back on a Novice license (anyone who doesn't hold a competition license for more than 3 years is bumped down), but once I got out in the MRA practice sessions I knew it was appropriate. I'm way too slow to get thrown into the expert classes, Novice is the right place for me.
On Friday we drove down to PPIR and I went out in the club practice. Holy cow, sessions with the MRA are a lot different than a trackday session! I needed to get up to speed and get aggressive. I was frustrated that my lap timer was on the fritz, I was getting passed a lot more than I was doing the passing, and I couldn't tell if my adjustments were bringing my times down. Oh well, I was signed up for the weekend, no going back now I thought.
But I did have a moment of just forget it. Aaron and I were watching turn 1 when Aaron Clark the #1 plate lost the front and hit the wall on the outside of the banking. It was a horrible crash and the track was shut down for more than an hour while the ambulance took him and they cleaned up the crash. I seriously questioned wanting to go back to racing, this is the reason I quit. But we started to get better reports of his condition, and I decided to press on with my weekend.
Saturday morning was coooold, 37 degrees when we got to the track. And then it started to rain lightly. I skipped the first couple of warm up practices in the morning, conditions were poor and I didn't figure I was going to have any more epiphanies in a crappy practice. I went out in the last practice and FINALLY got some times off my club transponder. Slow, low 1:04's, but still better than what I'd done at the track day the previous weekend. I was encouraged a bit, conditions were poor and I'd picked up my pace a little. Right before my first race, Novice GTU, it started to rain, then stopped. Everyone was sweating it, me included. I was on slicks on a borrowed bike on a damp cold track. Blah.
Since I haven't been racing I had no points and was gridded dead last in every class. For my first race back, NovU, I was on the back row, 25th to start. I'd practiced 2 launches off the hot pit lane in Friday's sessions--the bike launched really well. I focused on the starting light tree and my tach and when the light went off I got a monster start! I don't know how many people I passed on that start, but I had holes opening up like magic in front of me and I was flying through the pack. It was an awesome start from the last row! I worked on riding fast and picking off guys in front of me, one, then two, then slowly catching up to another and another. I don't know how many people I passed in the race, it started to rain again about midway through and I was fairly terrified of crashing that bike in the wet. I was still passing people but all I could think about was "don't crash Bart's bike, don't crash Bart's bike". I just kept going until I got to the last lap and ran down one more guy right before the start/finish line. Thank God I finished the race without falling down! Later when I saw the results I was pleased to find I'd worked my way up to 7th from last place. :)
The next class was Novice GTO, and this time I got to start in the last row of the 2nd wave. Ugh, I was on row 11! And we'd have to wait until the entire 1st wave cleared turn 2 to get our start. Oh well, focus on the start... I got another good start but missed a gear in my upshifts, I think one person holeshot me into turn 1 but I drove right around them and was leading the 2nd wave out of turn 2. Yippee! I proceeded to run down the back of the first wave and start picking people off. By the end of the race I'd made it to 10th. Not bad for an old lady come back on a borrowed bike.
On Sunday I had 3 races, Ladies of the Rockies, Amateur GTU and Amateur GTO. People were very excited to see me in LOR, the MRA's ladies class, even if it was lightly gridded. I was last again, but this time last was only row 3. One woman holeshot me from the front row as I missed another upshift, but I drove around her in turn 1 and took off in the lead. I pulled about a 1/3 track lead in 2 laps, was signaled to kick back by my crew, and just tooled around for the rest of the race. And I won LOR! It was a fun comeback and the class is a crowd favorite.
By the time I got to Amateur GTU I was getting a bit tired and losing some focus. I was at the back of the 2nd wave again, and this time I didn't pay good attention to my start. It was pretty average, and I didn't make up many places. I rode well and turned my fastest lap in this race but only managed 13th. Still, this is a much faster class than the novice or women's classes, so I'm happy with a 13th from the back of 2nd wave.
Amateur GTO, my last race and I'm tired and it's cold and the wind is really blowing...at least it's a one wave start. I was NOT paying attention to this start, I think I was looking down at my tach, and completely missed the light. Of course this is the start that Aaron gets on video...lame! As I scramble to catch up to the back of the wave, a guy loses his chain right in front of me and I take evasive maneuvers to dodge it. That slows me down even more than my start and now I'm trailing the field. Oh well, I manage to run down a couple of guys, then right after the halfway flags there's a huge crash at the front and the race is red flagged. Since we're just past halfway they call the race, finishing positions shall be the end of the previous lap. Dangit, and I'd just managed to catch a guy, that should count! Oh well, I started at the back of this grid and finish close to the back. I think I technically get 13th again, but there were less entries in this class. I don't care I'm out of motivation anyway. Meh. End of my come back weekend.
And just like that, one week later I've bought another racebike. A nicely prepped 2008 ZX6R, which I'll be campaigning as a novice in 2009 unless I come to my senses before April. I'm going to sell the 848, as sad as that will be. I'd love to keep it but running a full season is expensive, and I probably won't do much street riding anyway. I don't feel so bad about swapping the street bike for the racebike, at least I should get some $ for the duc. Aaron also wants to go racing, so I told him we can sell his 999 and find a prepped bike for him too. He doesn't like that idea so he's still considering his options. We'll see.
I can't believe I'm getting back into this, it sure did suck me in fast. On Sunday I got to bicycle around the new track that's been built here, High Plains Raceway. It's an amazing track, lots of elevation changes and both fast and technical sections. It reminds me slightly of Pahrump, and I think I'll do well there. I can't wait to ride it, the MRA has 5 races booked for next year. Wow, I'm going racing again, wish me luck! :)
Wyeth
To see more race results go to the MRA website www.mra-racing.org
Pikes Peak International Raceway
MRA final round 2008
I can't remember if I told you I used to race. Mostly back in the '90's, but getting back into the track scene this year I got asked regularly when I'm coming back. I'd managed to dodge the "come back" pressure until the last track day, when a friend who's been encouraging me to try out his ZX6R racebike finally wore me down. I agreed to ride it at the PPIR Chicane Trackdays on Oct. 5th.
Although I was nervous about being back on a racebike it was also a lot of fun. After almost 8 years of being away, I realize I miss racing. I was rusty and the bike wasn't set up for me, but I was riding ok. The bike's owner wanted me to race it the following weekend, the last MRA event at PPIR. The more I rode that bike the more I wanted to enter and race it. By the end of the trackday I was still saying I was undecided, but really it was too late, I was in.
I spent the next week getting my license together and getting the 03 ZX6R prepped. I was at first irritated that I'd be coming back on a Novice license (anyone who doesn't hold a competition license for more than 3 years is bumped down), but once I got out in the MRA practice sessions I knew it was appropriate. I'm way too slow to get thrown into the expert classes, Novice is the right place for me.
On Friday we drove down to PPIR and I went out in the club practice. Holy cow, sessions with the MRA are a lot different than a trackday session! I needed to get up to speed and get aggressive. I was frustrated that my lap timer was on the fritz, I was getting passed a lot more than I was doing the passing, and I couldn't tell if my adjustments were bringing my times down. Oh well, I was signed up for the weekend, no going back now I thought.
But I did have a moment of just forget it. Aaron and I were watching turn 1 when Aaron Clark the #1 plate lost the front and hit the wall on the outside of the banking. It was a horrible crash and the track was shut down for more than an hour while the ambulance took him and they cleaned up the crash. I seriously questioned wanting to go back to racing, this is the reason I quit. But we started to get better reports of his condition, and I decided to press on with my weekend.
Saturday morning was coooold, 37 degrees when we got to the track. And then it started to rain lightly. I skipped the first couple of warm up practices in the morning, conditions were poor and I didn't figure I was going to have any more epiphanies in a crappy practice. I went out in the last practice and FINALLY got some times off my club transponder. Slow, low 1:04's, but still better than what I'd done at the track day the previous weekend. I was encouraged a bit, conditions were poor and I'd picked up my pace a little. Right before my first race, Novice GTU, it started to rain, then stopped. Everyone was sweating it, me included. I was on slicks on a borrowed bike on a damp cold track. Blah.
Since I haven't been racing I had no points and was gridded dead last in every class. For my first race back, NovU, I was on the back row, 25th to start. I'd practiced 2 launches off the hot pit lane in Friday's sessions--the bike launched really well. I focused on the starting light tree and my tach and when the light went off I got a monster start! I don't know how many people I passed on that start, but I had holes opening up like magic in front of me and I was flying through the pack. It was an awesome start from the last row! I worked on riding fast and picking off guys in front of me, one, then two, then slowly catching up to another and another. I don't know how many people I passed in the race, it started to rain again about midway through and I was fairly terrified of crashing that bike in the wet. I was still passing people but all I could think about was "don't crash Bart's bike, don't crash Bart's bike". I just kept going until I got to the last lap and ran down one more guy right before the start/finish line. Thank God I finished the race without falling down! Later when I saw the results I was pleased to find I'd worked my way up to 7th from last place. :)
The next class was Novice GTO, and this time I got to start in the last row of the 2nd wave. Ugh, I was on row 11! And we'd have to wait until the entire 1st wave cleared turn 2 to get our start. Oh well, focus on the start... I got another good start but missed a gear in my upshifts, I think one person holeshot me into turn 1 but I drove right around them and was leading the 2nd wave out of turn 2. Yippee! I proceeded to run down the back of the first wave and start picking people off. By the end of the race I'd made it to 10th. Not bad for an old lady come back on a borrowed bike.
On Sunday I had 3 races, Ladies of the Rockies, Amateur GTU and Amateur GTO. People were very excited to see me in LOR, the MRA's ladies class, even if it was lightly gridded. I was last again, but this time last was only row 3. One woman holeshot me from the front row as I missed another upshift, but I drove around her in turn 1 and took off in the lead. I pulled about a 1/3 track lead in 2 laps, was signaled to kick back by my crew, and just tooled around for the rest of the race. And I won LOR! It was a fun comeback and the class is a crowd favorite.
By the time I got to Amateur GTU I was getting a bit tired and losing some focus. I was at the back of the 2nd wave again, and this time I didn't pay good attention to my start. It was pretty average, and I didn't make up many places. I rode well and turned my fastest lap in this race but only managed 13th. Still, this is a much faster class than the novice or women's classes, so I'm happy with a 13th from the back of 2nd wave.
Amateur GTO, my last race and I'm tired and it's cold and the wind is really blowing...at least it's a one wave start. I was NOT paying attention to this start, I think I was looking down at my tach, and completely missed the light. Of course this is the start that Aaron gets on video...lame! As I scramble to catch up to the back of the wave, a guy loses his chain right in front of me and I take evasive maneuvers to dodge it. That slows me down even more than my start and now I'm trailing the field. Oh well, I manage to run down a couple of guys, then right after the halfway flags there's a huge crash at the front and the race is red flagged. Since we're just past halfway they call the race, finishing positions shall be the end of the previous lap. Dangit, and I'd just managed to catch a guy, that should count! Oh well, I started at the back of this grid and finish close to the back. I think I technically get 13th again, but there were less entries in this class. I don't care I'm out of motivation anyway. Meh. End of my come back weekend.
And just like that, one week later I've bought another racebike. A nicely prepped 2008 ZX6R, which I'll be campaigning as a novice in 2009 unless I come to my senses before April. I'm going to sell the 848, as sad as that will be. I'd love to keep it but running a full season is expensive, and I probably won't do much street riding anyway. I don't feel so bad about swapping the street bike for the racebike, at least I should get some $ for the duc. Aaron also wants to go racing, so I told him we can sell his 999 and find a prepped bike for him too. He doesn't like that idea so he's still considering his options. We'll see.
I can't believe I'm getting back into this, it sure did suck me in fast. On Sunday I got to bicycle around the new track that's been built here, High Plains Raceway. It's an amazing track, lots of elevation changes and both fast and technical sections. It reminds me slightly of Pahrump, and I think I'll do well there. I can't wait to ride it, the MRA has 5 races booked for next year. Wow, I'm going racing again, wish me luck! :)
Wyeth
To see more race results go to the MRA website www.mra-racing.org
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