AMA Daytona SportBike Finale Decided By 0.063 Second At New Jersey Motorsports Park

AMA Daytona SportBike Finale Decided By 0.063 Second At New Jersey Motorsports Park

© 2009, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Categories:

AMA Pro Daytona SportBike Presented by AMSOIL New Jersey Motorsports Park Millville, New Jersey September 6, 2009 Provisional Race Results (all on Dunlop tires): 1. Josh Herrin (Yam YZF-R6), 23 laps 2. Jake Zemke (Hon CBR600RR), -0.063 second 3. Tommy Aquino (Yam YZF-R6), -8.087 seconds 4. Chris Peris (Hon CBR600RR), -8.230 5. Jamie Hacking (Kaw ZX-6R), -16.326 6. Roger Hayden (Kaw ZX-6R), -24.282, ran off track 7. Danny Eslick (Buell 1125R), -24.283, ran off track 8. Jason DiSalvo (Suz GSX-R600), -33.987, ran off track 9. Clinton Seller (Yam YZF-R6), -35.030 10. Ricky Parker (Yam YZF-R6), -37.678 11. Leandro Mercado (Kaw ZX-6R), -37.681 12. Taylor Knapp (Buell 1125R), -43.706, ran off track 13. Michael Beck (Yam YZF-R6), -45.332 14. Kyle Wyman (Yam YZF-R6), -47.551 15. Christian Cronin (Yam YZF-R6), -63.924 16. Fernando Amantini (Kaw ZX-6R), -86.664 17. Huntley Nash (Yam YZF-R6), -87.192 18. Michael Barnes (Buell 1125R), -87.340 19. Josh Galster (Kaw ZX-6R), -87.811 20. Mike Selpe (Suz GSX-R600), -1 lap 21. Ryan Patterson (Yam YZF-R6), – 1 lap 22. Alex Lazo (Yam YZF-R6), -1 lap 23. Nadr Riad (Yam YZF-R6), -1 lap 24. Michael Morgan (Suz GSX-R600), -1 lap 25. Abe Stacey (Suz GSX-R600), -1 lap 26. Larry Karpinsky, Jr. (Yam YZF-R6), -1 lap 27. Dennis Espinosa (Duc 848), -2 laps 28. Bobby Fong (Yam YZF-R6), -10 laps, DNF, crash 29. Chaz Davies (Apr RSV1000R), -13 laps, DNF, crash 30. Steve Rapp (Yam YZF-R6), -14 laps, DNF, crash 31. Chris Fillmore (Yam YZF-R6), -16 laps, DNF, crashed twice 32. Dane Westby (Yam YZF-R6), -23 laps, DNF, crash 33. Aaron Gobert (Apr RSV1000R), -23 laps, DNF, crash 34. Garrett Carter (Yam YZF-R6), -23 laps, DNF, crash 35. Marcos Reichert (Yam YZF-R6), DNS 36. Robertino Pietri (Yam YZF-R6), DNS 37. Martin Cardenas (Suz GSX-R600), DNS 38. Josh Day (Yam YZF-R6), DNS 39. Russ Wikle (Suz GSX-R600), DNS 40. Chris Clark (Yam YZF-R6), DNS 41. Santiago Villa (Suz GSX-R600), DNS 42. Reese Wacker (Suz GSX-R600), DNS 43. Eric Haugo (Yam YZF-R6), DNS Provisional Championship Point Standings (after 20 of 20 races): 1. Eslick, 387 points 2. Herrin, 382 3. Martin Cardenas, 340 4. Hacking, 299 5. DiSalvo, 283 6. Zemke, 258 7. Peris, 244 8. Aquino, 235 9. Davies, 219 10. Rapp, 200 11. Knapp, 178 12. Hayden, 164 13. Beck, 121 14. Fong, 119 15. Barnes, 118 16. Cudlin, 92 17. Fillmore, 90 18. Westby, 83 19. Parker, 72 20. Higbee, 70 More, from a press release issued by Buell: ESLICK CLINCHES 2009 AMA DAYTONA SPORTBIKE CHAMPIONSHIP West Finishes Sixth in American Superbike, Knapp Takes 12th Millville, NJ (Sept. 6, 2009) Bruce Rossmeyer’s Daytona Racing/RMR/GEICO Powersports rider Danny Eslick made history today by clinching the 2009 AMA Pro Road Racing Daytona SportBike championship at New Jersey Motorsports Park, his own and Buell Motorcycle Company’s first professional AMA road racing championship. Coming into today’s race, the second of the double-header weekend at NJMP, with a 22-point lead over Graves Yamaha’s Josh Herrin, his only remaining title rival, Eslick needed to secure at least a 12th place finish to hold off the fast-charging Herrin. Herrin needed to sweep both weekend races to have a chance at catching Eslick, including today’s thriller that featured a dramatic Lap 1, Turn 1 three-rider incident that forced both Herrin and Eslick to ride off track. As Herrin worked his way to the front, battling with Erion Honda’s Jake Zemke for the eventual victory, Eslick settled into a comfortable pace inside the top ten and spent much of the race dicing with Attack Kawasaki’s Roger Lee Hayden. The pair traded positions several times and crossed the finish line a mere 0.001-second apart, with Hayden nipping Eslick for sixth place. Eslick’s seventh place finish gave him 387 points on the season, good for a five-point margin over Herrin and the Daytona SportBike championship. “I went down into Turn 1, and I’m not sure who it was, [but he] just nailed me,” Eslick said. “I saw somebody come flying by me and wasn’t slowing down at all and T-bone Josh pretty good. I thought “Alright!” About the time I said that, I got hit [too] and we both ended up in the dirt. I tried to gather my stuff back up, and a few other guys went off. I knew where I needed to be to seal the deal. Me and Rog had a nice little battle and it made the race go by fairly fast, especially when you’re riding with somebody you can trust and you know won’t do anything crazy.” Eslick celebrated his first AMA championship in style, with a burnout-laced, flag-waving victory lap around the 2.2-mile circuit. Eslick’s Daytona SportBike championship is also the first for an American manufacturer since the AMA split road racing and dirt track racing into separate competition disciplines in the early 1970s. “Going all the way back to three weeks before Daytona, I didn’t have a ride, so it’s been an amazing season. Just those first couple of wins, we would’ve been happy with that. My crew guys have worked so hard all year long and never gave up. It’s been a long hard fight the whole way and this weekend’s been no different,” Eslick said. “We had some tough times here about a month ago [with the death of team sponsor Bruce Rossmeyer], but we made it through.” For Erik Buell, Chairman and Chief Technical Officer of Buell Motorcycle Company and a former privateer AMA racer who founded Buell in 1983 as a racing motorcycle manufacturer, Eslick’s championship is literally the culmination of a lifetime’s dream. “It’s an amazing moment. It’s been an incredible racing season. I’ve gotten to see the AMA turned around from boring racing to the most exciting racing I’ve seen in years. I’d have been happy to just be part of it, but it’s incredible that we won our class championship. Danny is an incredible rider. I’m so proud to be part of a privateer team that can show what a rider like that can do,” Buell said. “It’s very emotional. I appreciate so much all the people over the years who helped us get to where we are. That’s the big perspective I’m looking at, not just this moment.” In other Daytona SportBike weekend and season results, Eslick’s teammate Michael Barnes finished today’s race in 18th position and 15th position overall in the final championship standings with 118 points. Latus Motors Racing’s Taylor Knapp finished 12th today and 11th overall in championship with 178 points. Bartels’ H-D/Buell/Higbee-racing.com’s Shawn Higbee finished 20th in the championship with 70 points. In the final race of the weekend and the 2009 AMA Pro Racing season, Cory West finished seventh in the American Superbike class, improving on his eighth place start and eighth place finish in yesterday’s race to cap a successful debut weekend aboard the Buell 1125RR superbike. “Immediately I felt the [rear] tire was not as hooked up as yesterday. I didn’t know if it just wasn’t up to temperature because it was overcast and the track temperature was lower, but I was hoping it was going to come in, and all of a sudden I got passed by three guys,” West said. “I didn’t quite have the grip off the corners I had yesterday, and it seemed like everybody did their homework last night so it was a little harder today. The last two laps my [rear tire] was sliding going in and sliding coming out, so I just tried to hold my position. I’ve got to thank Erik Buell for giving me the opportunity to ride this weekend, I had a really good time.” Latus Motors Racing’s Taylor Knapp’s race went from bad to worse after he was involved in a Turn 1 incident that caused a red flag on the American Superbike race’s original start and was later penalized for jumping the restart and speeding in pit lane after serving a stop-and-go penalty for the jump start. On the initial start, Knapp was forced off track and crashed after making contact with the Ducati of Larry Pegram, who was trying to avoid Factory Yamaha’s Ben Bostrom after he high-sided in Turn 1. “When Ben high-sided, [Larry] Pegram stood his bike up and hit me, and then I just crashed,” Knapp said. “I can’t believe they called a jump start [on the restart]. I thought I was black-flagged for something falling off.” After the stop-and-go penalty, Knapp recovered to finish in 12th position, including the 10-second post-race penalty. Bartels’ H-D/Buell/Higbee-racing.com’s Shawn Higbee finished 17th. Founded by visionary motorcycle designer and former privateer racer Erik Buell in 1983, Buell Motorcycle Company, a subsidiary of Harley-Davidson, Inc., produces sport motorcycles, motorcycle parts, accessories and apparel, including the 1125R superbike, 1125CR café racer, and air-cooled XB-series Ulysses, Firebolt, and Lightning. To learn more about Buell motorcycles, or to locate the dealer nearest you, log onto www.buell.com.

Latest Posts

WERA Releases 2025 Race Schedule

WERA Motorcycle Roadracing has released its 2025 schedule, including...

WorldSBK: Superbike Fuel Flow Restrictions Set For 2025

The Superbike Commission, composed of MM. Gregorio LAVILLA (Dorna,...

MotoAmerica: Petersen Leaving Attack Yamaha

Cameron Petersen is leaving the Attack Performance Progressive Racing...

ASRA Announces Award Banquets For Midwest And Atlantic/Mid-Atlantic Regions

It's Party Time! Midwest Region Banquet January 11th 2025 Lakelawn Resort 2400 E....

MotoGP: Test Results From Barcelona

Alex Marquez was quickest in the post-season MotoGP test...