Showing posts with label AMA Flat track. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMA Flat track. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2011

Great photo of Slammin' Sammy at Daytona 2011

Great shot by Andrea Wilson seen on Cycle News, of AGV Dainese Sammy Halbert during his successful Daytona weekend. Sammy scored two wins back to back at the season opener.

Congrats Bud!

Sammy is wearing his AGV AX-8 motocross helmet in the Kaleidoscope graphics

AGV Dainese’s Sammy Halbert does it again at Daytona



Costa Mesa, CA – March 15th, 2011

Always know for charging and never giving up, Slammin’ Sammy goes for a double-header at Daytona Short Track for the 2011 season opener.

It is in dominant fashion, even winning with a 5 seconds lead on the second night, that et Halbert and his Woody Kyle Racing/Fredericktown Yamaha took victory on both nights at the AMA Pro Grand National singles championship.  Sporting his new AGV AX-8 Kaleidoscope, Sammy looked comfortable all weekend, confirming the speed he displayed last year on this track.

When the series return to the track at round 3 in Du Quoin, Illinois, on April 16th, the AGV Dainese rider will try to confirm his lead in the series and position himself as a contender for the 2011 title.


Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Halbert Does It Again At Daytona

Nobody Can Stop Sammy Halbert by Cycle News



DAYTONA BEACH, FL., MARCH 11 - From the time a wheel was turned in anger at the Daytona Short Track this year, if your name wasn't Sammy Halbert then you were racing for second place. If that wasn't a certainty after last night's victory, it most definitely was tonight as Halbert made it look easy in completely dominating qualifying, his heat race, the Dash For Cash and the National. And when the 25 laps were in the books, Halbert had half a lap lead on second place and he did it without breaking a sweat.
"This is what we expected," Halbert said. "We had so much speed at this track last year. I know how to set up my bike and I know how to ride this track."
Halbert and his Woody Kyle Racing/Fredericktown Yamaha crossed the finish line some five seconds ahead of Johnny Lewis, the former Supermoto racer having the best flat track weekend of his young career with the second place tonight bettering his third from last night.
But even that was nothing compared to the weekend that Halbert had: Two heat race wins, two Dash For Cash wins and two National wins. It all adds up to a 16-point lead in the championship after two races. Not a bad weekend if your name is Halbert.
Third place tonight went to Brad Baker, the rookie earning the first Expert podium of his career in just his second race as an Expert. Baker finished fourth last night.
Fourth tonight was Jake Johnson, the defending AMA Grand National Champion almost seven seconds behind Halbert and barely ahead of former Grand National Champion Kenny Coolbeth Jr.
Matt Weidman was sixth with Jared Mees seventh. Chad Cose had his best Expert-class finish in eighth and Henry Wiles and rookie Jeffrey Carver Jr. rounded out the top 10.
Short Track Final
1. Sammy Halbert (Yamaha)
2. Johnny Lewis (Honda)
3. Brad Baker (Honda)
4. Jake Johnson (Honda)
5. Kenny Coolbeth Jr. (Kawasaki)

Friday, April 9, 2010

Team Dainese 2010 riders

On the eve of the first MotoGP of the 2010 season, here's a quick recap of who are the Dainese racers:

Moto GP
Jorge Lorenzo
Marco Simoncelli
Valentino Rossi

Moto 2

Stefan Bradl
Yannick Guerra
Simone Giorgi Grotzkyj
Fonsi Nieto

125 cc
Marcel Schroetter
Luca Vitali
Lorenzo Salvadori

National Championships

Europe: Danilo Dell’Omo, Marco Borciani (Italy); Maxime Berger (France); Guy Martin (UK); Michael Ranseder (Austria); Joan Lascorz (Spain); Niklas Ajo (Finland)
USA: Geoff May, Aaron Yates, Blake Young, Steve Rapp, Chris Ulrich, Martin Cardenas, James Rispoli, Tray Batey, John Jacobi, Steve Atlas, Mark Junge, Sammy Halbert

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

AGV Dainese Sammy Halbert Leaves Daytona with great results

After winning the first night of the Daytona 2010 Short Track, taking his brand new AGV motocross helmet on the podium for the first time, Sammy had a difficult night on Day 2. Despite a great qualifiers race the start of the twenty five lap National saw Johnson on the point with Sammy Halbert right on his heels. As Halbert tried to shoot under Johnson exiting turn two he hit a slick spot starting and started a slow spin right in front of the entire field. Somehow everyone missed him and with the engine still running Halbert rejoined the chase.
While Johnson was cruising, the large crowds attention was riveted on the # 7 as Halbert caught the back of the pack by lap night and started working his way to the front, by lap fourteen he was in tenth place and still working forward. That was where the fairytale ended however as his Yamaha gave up and Sammy's night was over too soon.

In the GNC Dash Sammy Halbert showed the same speed and determination as he had with last night's win. Halbert stayed glued to the bottom while Joe Kopp had his # 3 American Agip / Latus Harley-Davidson backed Honda riding the rim.

GRAND NATIONAL POINT STANDINGS: 1. Jake Johnson (42 pts / 1 win); 2. (TIE) Henry Wiles / Joe Kopp / Johnny Lewis (34); 5. Sammy Halbert (33 / 1 win); 6. Kenny Coolbeth (32); 7. Jethro Halbert (29); 8. Jared Mees (25); 9. Bryan Smith (18); 10. Don Mullen (17).

PRO SINGLES POINT STANDINGS: 1. Jeffery Carver (42 pts / 1 win); 2. JD Beach (35 / 1 win); 3. James Rispoli (32); 4. Stephen Vanderkuur (31); 5. Brad Baker (30); 6. Mikey Avila (29); 7. Mikey Martin (19); 8. John Long (14); 9. (TIE) Cory Strickler / Mike Poe (13).

AGV Dainese James Rispoli update From Daytona

The long awaited season opener for the AMA Pro Singles Flattrack season has come and gone. I had such an awesome time the last two weeks and while I feel I could of done better, I was able to achieve a couple of podium finishes for the week and got out of there in 3rd place overall for the championship which was much better than last years start.  My highlight of the week was making the podium and getting a second place finish on the new short track on its inaugural night at the famed Daytona Speedway in front of a sell-out crowd of more than 5,000.  The only thing better was winning at the famed Daytona Stadium in 2009, the last time anyone will get a chance to do it again.  Cool stuff for sure!!!

My trip started out a bit sketchy.  Like every Daytona, you prepare all winter long yet some how it always comes down to the last minute for everything to come together. This year was no different.  We managed to get it all covered with our new 2009 Cycle Dynamics CRF 450 getting prepped with components from RHC, Boughner Racing, K&N, Motion Pro, Spectro Oils, DP brakes, Engine Ice, Vortex gears and D&D pipe.   My trusty Bettencourt Suzuki which I used last year to take a win at Daytona was also prepped with a full rebuild from top to bottom.  I was ready for racing.  I couldn't have done all the prep work without the support and sponsorship help from my crew chief Dustin Say. Dustin put in a ton of hours stripping my bikes down to the bare frames and rebuilding them back to mint race condition.

On the trip down I stopped off at Neeses SC to get some testing in since I have never ridden  a fuel injected dirt tracker before.  I changed suspension companies and also wanted to see how well my new Boughner Racing suspension was going to work.  The tests went well and the Honda was hooked up and handled better than I expected.  The Suzuki felt great too and it was really hooked up as well.  I left Neeses and made my way to Savannah, GA for some half mile testing.  I sat out the first two nights because I didn't want to put too much time on my new engines.  I waited to Saturday night so I could make some money.  During the evening it was clear the guys who raced the previous nights had their set ups dialed and already knew which lines were good on the track.  It took me a while to get adjusted to the new 09 CRF too, since the fuel injection made throttle control quite a bit trickier. I took my time getting up to speed, qualified fine and was ready to race.   In the race I had a problem with my bike really hooking up. I worked the entire track looking for a good line but ended up taking 5th overall.  While I wasn't particularly happy I made a few bucks to offset some fuel costs.  Later the next day working with Kenny Tolbert we discovered my tire gauge was reading 6 lbs off.  That meant I was running like 21lbs in my front Goodyear and 26lbs in my rear.  And I wonder why I couldn't get any grip.....

The next day we had a race at Barberville.  I made sure this time the air in the tires was correct and went out for practice.  The track was really rough, but I like it when the track is challenging like that.  I ran pretty good but wanted to slow the bike down a little for the heat race so I added a tooth to the rear gear.  I managed to win my heat and got ready for the main event.  In the main my bike was working really good and I felt strong. I managed to take a second place finish and collected a few more bucks and continued to learn about the new bike.

I finally made it to the short track at Daytona for a practice day.  When I got off the track the first time I was convinced it was not very good and it stayed not very good the entire day.  I knew that anything we did to set up the bikes to work in these conditions was going to be useless for the next days race and that was very true.  The next day was race one and it started around 10AM with the first free practice.  The next two practices would be timed and they would count for the qualifying positions.  I had a first good run and was fifth but on the second timed run I ended up eleventh.  I was not happy but since I still got a front row start I knew I could do something in the heat . I was on the outside of the front row but got an awesome start. We ended up with a red flag because a couple of riders got into each other.  On the restart I nailed it again and managed to run up front chasing Carver as we broke away from the pack.  I was catching Carver a little bit at a time but was making little mistakes here and there.  We both did, but in the end I had to settle for second place.  It was way cool and I really wanted to get up there on the podium the first night and thank all the great people who have been supporting me.

After a little celebration from the night before we knew things were going to be tougher on day two.  By now everyone was getting a feel for the track conditions and I expected it to be harder to qualify well too.  The track unfortunately was nothing like the night before.  Whatever set up worked on Wednesday was not working on Thursday.   Mike Boughner came over and worked on the suspension and things go a little better each time but I was really spinning up the rear tire.  It was too late but I knew half way through the practice that I should have used my Suzuki instead.  The Suzuki has less power and the day before I didn't use it because it hooked up too much!  I was committed now and had to make it work.  I ended up qualifying like eight and that was a little better than the day before. In the heat I felt confident I could make it work and end up either first or second but I got stuck behind a rider and couldn't get enough grip to make the pass.

In the final I initially got a great start but the race was red flagged.  On the restart I got pinched out and had to fight for every position.  I just couldn't get a lot of forward motion out of the bike and was forced to settle for a 6th place finish. I was not a happy camper about that. After I had a chance to cool down I reviewed the night with Dustin and realized some things we would do differently.  I got out of Daytona by making the main events on both nights out of 75 riders. I made it on the podium in the most prestigious of all short track races and came away with enough points to put me into third place in the championship.  Now all I have to do is find the funds to be able to make the west coast rounds so I don't fall behind in the points too much.

I want to thank all my sponsors for all their help.  To David Ashi for letting me crash in the RV at Daytona and to all the support, grub and everything.  I couldn't do it without friends like you.  To my bud Scott Rosey for being the man.   To my crew chief Dustin who flew down on his own dime to work with me, I couldn't of done it without you. To Rhonda and Dave Waters thanks for all the help down there I hope I made you laugh, the same to my good friend Broc, who had a tough Daytona but let me crash with him in Savannah.

James"the Rocket" Rispoli