MotoAmerica: Supersport Race Two Results From Road America (Updated)

MotoAmerica: Supersport Race Two Results From Road America (Updated)

© 2024, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc. By David Swarts.

Precision Track Days brings you the results of this weekend’s events.

Revving Up the Track Day Experience with Precision Track Day!

We’re redefining your motorcycle track day experience! By showing an understanding that every rider has unique needs and deserves a meticulously crafted track day atmosphere. Join us at our next event, where every twist and turn is a chance to outdo yourself, supported by a team fiercely committed to your growth, safety, and passion for riding. Because track days should be more than just riding – they should be a holistic experience that fuels your love for the sport!

 

Tyler Scott won MotoAmerica Supersport Race Two Sunday at Road America, in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin. Riding his Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki GSX-R750 on spec Dunlop tires, Scott went from third to first in the run from the final corner to the finish line and won in a photo finish.

 

Tyler Scott (70). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Tyler Scott (70). Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

 

The official margin of victory was 0.001 second, but MotoAmerica officials said the margin was actually smaller than that.

Strack Racing Yamaha’s Mathew Scholtz drafted past PJ Jacobsen from the final corner to the checkered flag but came up short by the smallest margin imaginable and got second place.

Rahal Ducati Moto w/XPEL rider Jacobsen led out of the final corner but ended getting third place, just 0.010 second behind the winner.

 

The official finish photo. Photo courtesy MotoAmerica.
The official finish photo, or scan, shot at 10,000 frames per second. Photo courtesy MotoAmerica.

 

Maxi Gerardo led a lot of the race on his TopPro Racing Suzuki but could do no better than fourth, just 0.354 second behind Jacobsen.

Stefano Mesa also fought for the lead throughout the race but finished fifth, 1.882 seconds back.

The race was originally started and stopped with red flags twice, and then it was moved to the end of the day and run for seven instead of 11 laps.

 

24_5_RDAMER_SSP_R2_res

24_5_RDAMER_SSP_PTS_points

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by MotoAmerica:

How Close Is Close? Scott Wins Supersport At Road America By .001 Of A Second

Ultra-Close Racing At Road America In All The Support Classes

ELKHART LAKE, WI (June 2, 2024) – Normally, Supersport is not the final race of the weekend at a MotoAmerica event, but a couple of red flags during its initial timeslot dictated that it be pushed ahead to late Sunday afternoon at Road America. Little did anyone know that it would turn out to be the closest three-rider race finish in the 10-year history of the MotoAmerica series.

Supersport – Scott By A Whisker

Sunday’s weather turned out to be ideal compared with the rain-sodden conditions on Saturday, and MotoAmerica’s Supersport class put on an incredible show. “Supersport Next Generation” is the name of the game, which means that motorcycles with engine displacements ranging from the 599cc Yamaha YZF-R6, to the 749cc Suzuki GSX-R750, to the 955cc Ducati Panigale V2 all race in Supersport with balancing measures taken to level the competition.

So, how level is the competition in Supersport? At the finish line, Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki’s Tyler Scott barely nipped Strack Racing Yamaha’s Mathew Scholtz in a photo finish, with Rahal Ducati Moto’s PJ Jacobsen finishing third and just one one-hundredth of a second behind Scholtz.

It was a breathtaking result, and Scott talked about it afterwards. “Our season definitely didn’t start off good at all,” Scott said. “Daytona was good. We finished second. We had a big crash there. Atlanta, we did all right in the rain. Had a big crash out of the lead, and at Barber, too. So, we’ve had a little bit of bad luck. The level in Supersport this year is just a lot higher than in previous years. You’ve got PJ, Scholtz and the new Gerardo kid. They’re all ex-Superbike riders. So, the level just gets notched up. So, we’re pushing to the edge and just over-pushing for my part. The team has done a great job preparing the bike. The team did a great job this weekend. Overall, the goal is to not try and lead the race and pull away because that hasn’t worked the last two weekends for us. I can race and I know how to race well, so the goal was just to stay with the front pack and start racing at the end for the lead. Coming up the hill, I had a plan to at least draft one of them. When they split, the only opportunity that I had was if PJ didn’t go to the wall. If he would have gone to the wall, I wouldn’t have had the opening. I just had enough of an opening to try and see what I could do in the last couple-hundred feet.”

Mission King Of The Baggers – “Must-Win” For Wyman Accomplished

Speaking of close finishes, the penultimate race of the weekend was also nearly a photo finish. Mission King Of The Baggers, which is MotoAmerica’s uniquely American Harley-Davidson versus Indian Motorcycle rival series, came right down to the finish line, as well.

And, with Harley-Davidson’s headquarters located just an hour south of Road America in Milwaukee, plus 91-year-old namesake Willie G. Davidson at the track along with thousands of H-D employees and also fans of The Motor Company, Kyle Wyman, aboard his Harley-Davidson Factory Racing Road Glide Special (signed by “Willie G.” just before the start of the race), rose to the challenge and won the drag race to the checkered flag over S&S/Indian Motorcycle’s Troy Herfoss. The Australian’s teammate Tyler O’Hara completed the podium in third, while Wyman’s teammate James Rispoli finished fourth.

The margin of victory for Wyman was just .039 of a second over Herfoss, and he was more relieved than ecstatic that he won, since he faced the intense pressure and overcame it.

“A hundred percent a must-win today,” Wyman said. “Usually, you have kind of two shots at it. Yesterday, I was not comfortable, so I didn’t feel like I really had a shot to fight for the win. I knew it was all eggs in one basket on Sunday. Troy (Herfoss) found something this morning. I was struggling a little bit. We made a small change for the race, just to try to get me a predictable bike. I knew it was going to be a scrap. I think we all knew nobody was going to get away, so just try to get me something that was comfortable to ride that I could kind of throw around where I needed to. Got a good start. The Gillim train in the beginning was a little erratic. I know he’s doing what he has to do. He’s a little bit down on horsepower, but I had some close calls with him, for sure. Got me sucked into the back-end of him a couple times. I thought we were going to touch wheels. Once Troy came up, he got through on me, and I just latched on. There were a couple areas where he had a little bit of pace on me, but there were other areas where I could kind of reel him back. Like I said at COTA, I love a one-on-one. When I looked back, I guess these guys got kind of separated. I looked back and saw we had a gap to third. I was like, all right. It’s a mano-e-mano type of thing. I love it. I’m having the most enjoyment of my entire racing career, racing these baggers and especially this year racing Troy. It’s a fantastic challenge. It’s a fantastic rivalry, and one with a whole lot of respect. I’m really enjoying it, as he is. I can’t wait to get back with my guys and celebrate because we got the ‘must-win’ done.

“I’m super thankful to the whole Harley-Davidson team. To have Willie G. out here in his homecoming year. They’re going to celebrate him at homecoming coming up here in July in Milwaukee. It’s a pretty special deal. Pretty amazing feeling.”

BellissiMoto Twins Cup – Landers’ Last-Lap Dash

RevZilla/Motul/ Vance & Hines Suzuki’s Rocco Landers couldn’t match the pace of Rodio Racing – Powered By Robem Engineering’s Alessandro Di Mario early in Sunday’s race, but he stuck around, bided his time, and took full advantage of the lack of grip on Di Mario’s Aprilia to make a pass on the last lap and notch victory, his second of the season.

Di Mario had a solid weekend at Road America, following up his second-place finish in the rain on Saturday with another runner-up finish on Sunday. His teammate Gus Rodio, meanwhile, had a weekend to forget with two non-finishes, which has given Landers and Di Mario sizeable leads in the championship.

Landers led the title chase going into Sunday’s race after finishing third yesterday, and he added to that lead with a victory on Sunday. Following his 50th career win across all classes, Landers is nine points clear of Di Mario, 135-126, with Giaccmoto Yamaha Racing’s Dominic Doyle third on 110 points – one point better than Rodio, who slips down to fourth in the championship.

The battle for third was a good one with Doyle vs. Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzuki’s Rossi Moor for the majority of the race. Doyle, however, had a miscue on the last lap while chasing Moor, allowing the Oregonian to secure third and his first Twins Cup podium.

TopPro Racing’s Avery Dreher came out of it all in fourth with Doyle recovering for fifth.

“In the beginning when his tire was fresh, I just had nothing for him, especially on the short chutes,” Landers said. “That’s where I lose most of my time. The long straights aren’t that big of a deal. It’s just until we get to sixth gear. Once we’re at the top of fifth, sixth gear it’s not so bad. I saw his tire start to go off and he kept dropping me. I was pushing so hard that entire race. I was having a little bit of front-end issues. The right-hand side of my tire might have been overheating. But I kind of was hoping Gus (Rodio) would be my ticket back up to Alessandro (Di Mario), but he ended up going down in five on lap two or three. At that point, I was like, just put my head down and see what I could do. I did not think I was going to be able to catch him, because he came across the line at 1.8 something on the last lap. I just pushed as hard as I possibly could. Honestly, going into the chicane on the last lap, I didn’t even think I was going to be able to. I just waited until he got on the brakes and was like, ‘screw it. if I blow the chicane, I blow the chicane and get second rather than settling for it’ and I just sent it. Somehow it worked. I’m very surprised, to be honest with you. But that was a good race. I almost think it topped yesterday’s rain race, but not quite. I think that was my greatest race ever. This is maybe second. It always changes. I couldn’t have done it without my team. They’ve been busting their butts. We’ve been trying to get this bike as good as possible. The thing is handling absolutely phenomenally, especially on the front end.”

Junior Cup – Chapin Does The Double

Junior Cup normalcy returned under the sunny skies of Elkhart Lake on Sunday with some 10-12 riders in the lead pack for most of the race after Saturday’s horrible weather didn’t make for the best racing.

When all was said and done, however, the lead pack dwindled to nine and it was game on with yesterday’s winner in the rainstorm, Matthew Chapin, doing most of the leading and using his diminutive size and a fast motorcycle to somehow make it to the stripe first nearly every time.

Including the one that mattered most – the last one.

The win was BARTCON Racing-backed Chapin’s third and that, combined with Yandel Medina finishing ninth, gave him the championship points lead.

Second place today, and just .346 of a second behind Chapin, was Barber’s doubleheader winner Logan Cunnison on his Speed Demon Racing-backed Kawasaki Ninja 400 with Fernandez Racing’s Jayden Fernandez taking the final podium spot.

Six riders crossed the line in quick succession with Karns Performance’s Levi Badie fourth, Bad Boys Racing’s Avery Dreher fifth and BPM’s Issac Woodworth sixth.

“My bike has been really, really fast all weekend,” Chapin said. “I’ve been pretty fast, and I was feeling confident. I knew if I stayed out front, I could maybe pull a gap. I knew I could hold the lead. I just put my head down the whole race. I wanted to lead the whole time because I didn’t want to get shuffled back.”

Royal Enfield Build. Train. Race. – She’s Back

The mice got their chance to play in yesterday’s first of two Royal Enfield Build. Train. Race. battles as defending series champion Mikayla Moore sat it out with a thigh injury. Today, the cat returned, and she was at the top as always with Moore taking her third win of the year by a whopping 23.937 seconds.

Behind her came a battle for second between Aubrey Credaroli and yesterday’s winner Cassie Creer with Credaroli getting the spot at the line by just .243 of a second. Creer was third, a day after earning her first-career MotoAmerica podium and victory.

Camille Conrad backed up her podium finish yesterday on a soaking wet racetrack with fourth today under bright sunshine. Kira Knebel rounded out the top-five finishers.

Fortunately for Moore, she was able to swap helmets prior to the race after realizing she couldn’t see out of her faceshield.

“I went over to the Arai tent, and I told them I needed my helmet and make sure it’s good, since it was the same helmet that I crashed in,” Moore said. “He said it was all checked out, but at the last minute I went to go put it on and I put the visor down and I could not see no one in front of me. It was super blurry. I had Kendall with K Tech come over and I was like, ‘I need that other helmet ASAP, because I’m blind right now. I can’t see nobody.’”

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Rahal Ducati Moto:

ROAD AMERICA RACE 2

SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 2024 | WARM UP & RACE 2

Today’s activities started with the morning warm up, which solidified the team’s confidence in their machines heading into the race. With PJ Jacobsen topping the charts with a time of 2:17.734 and Kayla Yaakov nearly matching her qualifying times, finishing the session in 12th.

The sunny skies and dry track conditions provided a picture perfect setting for today’s Race 2 at Road America. The race ran just over two laps before the first red flag was waved for an expired engine. With the red conditions, both XPEL bikes made their way back to the hot pit for adjustments. Due to the first red coming out within the first three laps, the riders took the restart from their original starting positions.

During the first lap of the restarted race, an incident occurred near the tail of the field that immediately brought out a second red flag. The field made their way back to pit lane and were soon told the remainder of the race would be postponed until after the Superbike and King of the Baggers races.

Once Race 2 resumed, it was seven laps of determination to get to the end. Yaakov got an amazing restart but was caught in the field  which eventually became distanced from the leading five. Jacobsen moved through the top four, making a pass for the lead out of Canada corner, but ultimately finishing third at the finish line in the closest-ever finish in MotoAmerica history (0.001 seconds between first and second and 0.009 seconds between second and third). 

The team heads to Brainerd, MN for Rounds 7 & 8 of competition Friday, June 14 – Sunday, June 16. More information on the participation of Corey Alexander and the Roller Die machine at the Brainerd course will be provided as the event nears. 

PJ JACOBSEN

No. 15 XPEL DUCATI PANIGALE V2

STARTED: 4th

FINISHED: 3rd 

CHAMPIONSHIP: 1st (131 pts., 12 pt. lead)

NOTES:  Has collected a podium finish at every race so far this season // Remains the championship leader heading into Rounds 7 & 8 of 18

WHAT HE’S SAYING: “Going into the dry race today, I was a bit optimistic. I think walking out of here with a podium is a good result. I tried everything I could to lead the end of the race and end up in first, but we got passed at the finish line. I don’t think I had enough to draft those guys if I was sitting behind them, so I had to lead out of the last corner and try my hardest. I want to thank the entire Rahal Ducati Moto / XPEL team for doing a great job this whole weekend. We are leaving with another podium finish which has me confident going to Brainerd. I like that track – I had my first Superbike win there, so hopefully the adjustments we make to our bike should provide us a good result.”

KAYLA YAAKOV

No. 19 XPEL DUCATI PANIGALE V2

STARTED: 12th

FINISHED: 12th

CHAMPIONSHIP: 11th (35 pts., -1 position) 

NOTES:  The rain in Saturday’s race hindered Kayla’s forward progression in learning the Road America track on the Supersport bike //  Yaakov was making big gains each session throughout the weekend and could have utilized the dry race yesterday to progress further and translate data to be used for today’s race

WHAT SHE’S SAYING: “Today was a very tough race. After so many restarts and not many full laps completed, it was very hard to find a flow and balance that worked for me and the bike. In the second restart, I was in a very good position and hanging onto the lead group, but unfortunately the race was red flagged and I wasn’t able to get the same jump on the third restart as I did in the second. I was struggling quite a bit without a draft, and was shuffled back even though I was strong in the infield sections. Really unfortunate, but I’ll put this race behind me and focus on Brainerd.”

BEN SPIES

TEAM PRINCIPAL

WHAT HE’S SAYING: “We always want more, but it wasn’t a bad day for the Rahal Ducati Moto team. PJ got really good points, and in my opinion, he rode a pretty perfect race. We were just down a little bit of top speed, but he put in a pass on the last lap, led out the last corner, and went back to third place. There’s not much he could’ve done different. Kayla also rode a really good race. She’s still adapting to the big bike on the bigger tracks with bigger breaking zones, so there is still a lot to learn but she is showing a lot of growth each week.  Overall, it was a  good weekend resulting in good points.  I want to congratulate Tyler Scott on his win – he’s had a couple pretty hard weekends and a couple pretty hard crashes. We will move forward to Brainerd and try to get back on the top of the box.”

Latest Posts

KTM Says It’s Here To Stay, Despite Parent Company’s Woes (With Video)

RISING THROUGH ADVERSITY: KTM PLOTS A PATH TO THE...

AMA Racing Hires Supercross & Motocross Veteran Jeremy Albrecht As Technical Manager

The American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) announced the addition of...

MotoAmerica: Stock 1000 Champion Hayden Gillim

We Are The Champions: MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Champion Hayden...

AMA Celebrates Its 100th Anniversary Year

AMA Looks Back On Its Successful 100th Anniversary Year Celebrates...