Just 66 days after undergoing surgery for a thumb injury, Team Honda HRC Progressive rider Jett Lawrence turned in an impressive overall win during playoff 1 of the SuperMotocross World Championship at North Carolina’s zMax Dragway, giving the 2025 CRF450R its first-ever overall victory in U.S. professional racing. The success was earned via 2-1 finishes, the moto 2 result coming after a late pass on moto 1 winner Eli Tomac, and it showed that Lawrence—the defending SMX 450 champion—has lost none of his trademark speed or competitiveness during his recovery process. Hunter Lawrence rode to 3-6 finishes for fourth overall in the same class, while Jo Shimoda notched a steady 3-5 tally for fourth overall in the 250 ranks. Chance Hymas suffered from poor starts and ended the day 18th overall, determined to improve at playoff 2.
Aboard their twin 2025 CRF450R race machines, Jett and Hunter emerged from the split start second and third in the first 450 moto, and Hunter quickly moved by Jett to assume second place. After trailing his older brother for several laps, Jett eventually got back around, and the brothers went on to finish in second and third. Jett was again second off the moto 2 start and was quickly passed by Eli Tomac. He powered by Justin Cooper early in the race to retake second and began dogging Tomac, eventually taking over the lead heading into the sand section and going on to the moto and overall wins. Hunter rode the entire race just a few spots back, finishing sixth in the moto and fourth overall.
After a red-flag restart of the first 250 moto, Shimoda emerged from the split start in third place, then quickly advanced to second. RJ Hampshire got by him in the sand, and Haiden Deegan moved by shortly after. After regaining a position due to a Hampshire crash, the Japanese rider finished a comfortable third. Meanwhile, Hymas was buried in the pack after the start but managed to work his way up to 13th by the finish. Shimoda was fifth after the moto 2 start, lost a couple of positions early on, and then regained them back, finishing a close fifth for eighth overall. Once again plagued by a poor start, Hymas finished the moto in 20th, for 18th overall.
Photocredits – Align Media