Newbury Park, CA
- The series went from cold to hot as the travelling circus that is
the 2009 AMA Monster Energy Supercross series rambled from
Indianapolis, Indiana, to the famous Dayton International Speedway in
Daytona, Florida. In what is generally regarded as the toughest SX
event of the year, it didn't disappoint as the MDK/Warthog Racing
Academy and the Warthog Nation had both times of success and times of
disappointment.
As always, the Daytona International Speedway
presented a demanding track; one that would soon separate the best from
the rest. The track was long and sandy and strength sapping. The
weather was just perfect, a complete reversal from last year’s deluge.
The pack of MDK/Warthog riders were there ready to strut their stuff. Riding for the Warthog Racing Academy (WRA) on big bikes was the lone #71 of Justin Sipes.
Justin is sacking up and racing in the Premier Class, which is stacked
to the gills with talent. He certainly isn’t afraid of the steepest
competition in the world. In the small engine class, WRA was
represented by #336 Dennis Jonan, #374 Cody Gilmore, #96 Tyler Wharton, # 831 Ryan Smith, #198 Jacob Saylor, #566 Logan Martin, and #309 Spencer Dally. Joining WRA this week is the highly talented #811 Josh Lichtle, beginning what we believe will be a very successful comeback. Also, old WRA hand #80 Tyler Bright and his Arenacross teammate #445 Chad Wages joined the WRA Sounder for the rest of the year. Special guest and legend Barry Carsten also rode for MDK/Warthog Racing after DeCal Works
turned around graphics in a jiffy (In case you’re wondering, a jiffy is
the time it takes for light to travel one fermi, which equals the size
of a nucleon; One fermi is 10−15 m, so a jiffy is about
3 × 10−29 seconds). DeCal Works is that fast.
Plenty of recent and older Warthog Nation graduates were also on
hand to do battle in the name of the Warthog and Power to the Privateer
racer. As always, Warthog Racing Team Captain Heath Voss and Leader of the Privateer of the Year race was on hand, as well as our sister team and our #1 Warthog Nation partner MotoConcepts Racing, who represented the Warthog movement with graduates #979 Ben Coisy, #911 Tyler Bowes, #651 Daniel McCoy, and #719 Vince Friese.
A big Warthog hug and kiss to veteran #125 Daniel Blair,
who has been an integral part of the Warthog Nation since its very
inception. He was witness to the Warthog Racing equivalent of the Big
Bang in 2003. And Daniel’s perseverance, hard work, and talent have
finally landed him a factory-supported ride on the Geico Powersports Honda. Daniel, it must feel great to prove all the naysayers wrong and that your supporters were indeed right.
Of the 18 riders of the Warthog Nation, 16 made it through timed
qualifying, some just barely. It wasn’t pretty, but we’ll take it!
Like last week in Indy, there was a deep field of over 60 riders in
the Lites class; 10 of 12 riders qualified for the 40 man night show.
For the second week in a row, the Warthog Nation made up 25% of the
Lites class, which is mind-boggling in some respects. In the
Supercross class, all five riders made it again to the big show; they
ended up comprising 15% of the heat races. Top qualifying
Warthogs included Tyler Bowers, Heath Voss, Josh Lichtle, Daniel Blair,
Vince Friese, Spencer Dally, and Jacob Saylor.
Lites heat #1 saw Josh Lichtle lay wood to the tough Daytona track
and qualified 4th in his first race back. Wow!! Dennis Jonon, working
on his own comeback, just missed with a 10th. The Warthog himself
predicts the main for Dennis in New Orleans. The rest of the gang
struggled, thus punching their ticket to the toughest race of the
night, the Lites LCQ.
The second Lites heat saw Daniel Blair score an excellent 4th place
finish after battling for awhile with Vince Friese, who finished 7th.
The rest of the guys from WRA would be relegated to the LCQ.
The first heat for the big bikes didn’t go half bad for the Warthog
Nation riders, as Heath Voss finished 6th and Ben Coisy, who placed
9th, grabbing the final transfer spot after holding off Timmy Ferry,
Davi Millsaps, and Nick Wey. Justin Sipes didn’t have his best race
ever so he too was destined to the LCQ.
Heat #2 was stacked with talent, which made qualifying extremely
difficult. 17 year-old vunderkind and recent WRA graduate (now on
MotoConcepts Racing) Tyler Bowers was more than up to the challenge, as
he held off the likes of Broc Hepler and Mike Brown to qualify 6th. The rest of the Warthog riders prepared for loaded LCQ.
It was on to the Last Chance Qualifiers (LCQ) for 12 of the modern-day Warthog-inspired Gladiators. The LCQs turned out to be the Warthog Nation equivalent of Napoleon’s Waterloo, as the guys went 0 for 12. They’ll have better results next week for sure.
In the Lites main, Daniel Blair finished 11th, Vince Friese 14th,
and Josh Lichtle 17th. Lichtle was well up in the top ten before
getting caught up in the Austin Stroupe
imbroglio, which saw Josh in last place before he got going again.
However, Josh showed us more than flashes of brilliance; he’s the real
deal!! The big bike main saw Bowers and Voss get great starts after
bypassing the carnage of the now infamous James Stewart
crash. Coisy was not so lucky as he ended up at the back of the pack.
They finished 14th, 15th, and 17th, respectively. And still a great
performance for a bunch of Warthog-loving privateers against factory
riders and resources. ’Taint easy to make the big bike main nowadays,
no sir!!
It is with a heavy heart that Warthog Racing announces the retirement of Eric Sorby from full-time racing. Eric, who answers to the nickname of “Soreballs”,
has been a favorite of both Warthog Racing and the fans alike, as he
always left everything he had on the track. Known for his “take no
prisoners” riding style, Eric has been racing in the US since 2002,
this after winning the French Supercross Championship in 2001. During
his career in the US, he rode for the world-famous Pro Circuit
team, he regularly made the podium in the Lites class, and he made more
main events in the Supercross class than anyone can count. He even led
many laps of main events in the Supercross class, an accomplishment
that only a handful of riders can claim. Eric was always fun to talk
to in the pits and wholeheartedly supported the Warthog Racing program
from the beginning. The sport will miss Eric Sorby without a doubt. A
tip of the Warthog’s tusk to Eric “Soreballs” Sorby. So next time you
do a tank slapper and wonder if you can still sire children, remember
the French phenomenon named “Soreballs” that gave it all he had to
excel in the World’s best motorsport.
Said Scott Kandel, Chief Altruistic Officer, Warthog Racing,
“Soreballs” was a breath of fresh air for US motocross. He definitely
did it his way, which is something Warthog Racing has always
respected. It was an honor to help him during his final year. If he’d
ever like to come back, he has a lifetime home with Warthog Racing.
Eric Sorby, we salute you!!”
This season would not be possible without our committed and actively
engaged sponsor/partner group. For 2009, we have teamed up with the
following entities: MDK Motorsports, MDK Speed, DeCal
Works, Smooth Industries, Motorcycle Mechanics Institute (MMI), P-LoK,
MotoConcepts, Transworld Motocross, LocoMX.com, Vanquish MX, DT1 Air
Filters, MXResultz.com, Devol Engineering, Liquid Performance, LongShot
Racing, CP Pistons, VP Fuel, Dunlop, The Plumber Inc., MB2 Raceway,
Edgile Consulting, MX Sports, Vortex, MotionPro, Dana K Business Parks,
The Whitaker Wellness Institute, Atlantic Promotions, NXTAgency, Kardy
Photography, Relentless Media, MotoTees, RacerX Illustrated, Dirt Rider
Magazine, Motocross Action Magazine, MartialMoto, Honolulu Hills
Raceway, L&M Racing, and Fire and Police MX.
With this fine group, anything is possible. And special thanks