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Ed Allingham Interview – Reset!

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Professional motocross isn’t easy, the sacrifices you have to make at young age can take their toll and eventually in some form or other you need a release -but sometime that release can come at the expense of your motocross career. When work your whole childhood chasing your dream then, get sidetracked right at the final hurdle, it can have disastrous consequences.

Twenty two year old Edward Allingham has experienced both sides. In 2009 he came second to Michael Leib at Lorretta Lynns, in 2010 he scored points at the Mantova MX2 GP riding for Steve Dixon’s GP team, everything was going well and he had good people behind him. Then, just when he was ready to make his mark, Ed lost interest in motocross. For the next year and a half, he wasn’t sure if he wanted to really put his heart into it any more, he got sidetracked by life and he virtually fell off the radar at a professional level.

Thankfully the stylish and talented Allingham is back, and back in a big way having signed for Roger Magee’s HM Plant KTM team to race the British and European Championships for 2013.

Allingham has is first love back, he wants it more than ever, and he knows this is probably his last chance to make it in professional motocross – he has to make it work.

Ed has an interesting story to tell, and for the first time he reveals what really happened in the last two years.  It takes strength to be so honest and admit your mistakes in public, Ed has done that and with his renewed determination and focus, he could well be the surprise package of 2013.

You have signed for KTM UK and you are back in top team you must be pleased to get back to that level again?

Yea I am really pleased that Roger has given me another chance at it. There is a boy Keith Reid that was looking out for a ride for me in the European series and he spoke to Roger and he was really interested, he gave me a call and we got it sorted.

Have you ridden the bike yet?

I rode Elliott’s bike at Elsworth in England, it was the 2012 bike and it gave me a feel of what they can do to the bike from standard. It felt good the only thing we need to do is some suspension testing it as it was a bit hard for me.

The European championship has really grown, that will be a good step for you to get back into GPs

I really wanted to go back to Europe and I thought the Grand Prix was a bit of a big step, and the Europeans might be a bit more of a my level at the minute, before I go back to Grand Prix

In the British I was sort of hoping to be in the top five now that I have got my head straight, I should be in that pace somewhere.

You haven’t been on a bike in a while, didn’t you get injured earlier in the year?

Yea I was leading the Irish Championship but got injured in the Ulster at Desertmartin when a boy crashed over the step up and I landed on his bike, I done my ACL again so that was me out again.

Talk about signing with Steve Dixon, working with Mike Brown in 2010, and what happened after that…

I have always worked with Brownie, I have always known him but it was in 2007 I started working with and he has always helped me, when I was over there (in the USA) he helped.

I got points at the Mantova GP that year and then it all went pear shaped then over a woman.

That was the key turning point, I thought I was in love and nothing else mattered then.  That is basically then why I stopped riding for Dixon.

I thought I was missing out having a girlfriend and partying, I thought I was missing out on what everyone else was doing.

You had been running a high intense pace from when you were young, then going to America and doing Lorretta Lynns, was that almost a consequence of having that much focus, when you came home all that temptation was there, and you had never experienced it?

When I started taking it serious at around 15/16, I had never done any of that at all, no partying or running about with my friends – it was just all bikes.

I think then when I got a bit older I thought I was missing something, but once I had that for half a year or so I realised there was nothing there and I had just had thrown everything away that I had worked for. It started eating into me big time the more I thought about it.

It was hard on everybody, it nearly broke the whole family up, because everyone had put so much work in.  It wasn’t just me, the whole family had put so much in and that is part of the reason my brother David quit motocross and went to short circuits.

Is that all behind you now?

When I stopped I realised that all that partying and stuff just wasn’t for me. It was just eating me up big time, I started doing real work and I realised I had just thrown everything away.

Before the start of this year I was realising I needed to do something, Graeme Vigors was the only man that would give me a chance. I knew there was no way I was getting back into the British after it all and even the British Championship people wouldn’t give me a chance because I had quit twice.

Graeme and Niki Adair gave me the chance and they looked after for this year, but then that knee injury unfortunately stopped that.

You spent a lot of time in the USA and rode at Loretta Lynns, you almost won the B stock class against Michael Leib and it came down to the last couple of laps.

How I ended up there was, I had won that MXY2 in 08 for PAR Honda and I was supposed ride for them in the adults but they gave that ride to Scott Elderfield. So Steve Dixon offered me a ride and I was going to ride for Steve at the British and maybe even the Grand Prix. I stayed at Zach Osborne’s house and was riding the 09 Yamaha but it just wasn’t happening for me on that bike – I was absolutely terrible on it!

Me and dad sat down and said this isn’t going to work, so we talked to Brownie and he sorted me a deal with Kawasaki out of his local shop, Jims. He thought a year in the amateurs in America would do me no harm, we done all them events at Vegas, and I was running in and around the top ten. We had a lot of problems with the Kawasaki so we switched to Honda with the same shop.

I had qualified for Lorretta Lynss and all that, but my dad came out because he knew I just wasn’t riding right, he had just left me to myself over there and Brownie was helping me but he was off racing himself a lot too.  So dad came out for about  two or three months and we went out riding everyday and I went to Lorrettas then and finished second, I lost by one point to Leib.

Seeing what Leib has got too, with getting a podium in GPs, he has progressed on, is that frustrating to see that he is able to do that you haven’t got there yet?

It is frustrating, but in my head I know exactly why I never got there because it was all the way I went about it. If I had of kept in the line I was going in, I had got points in the GPs and I wasn’t riding close to my potential at all but then it all went to pieces over that other situation I got into. That all started in 2010 then at the start of 2011 Steve tried to talk me in to coming back, because he knew I was wasting my talent, but I just went half heartedly at it in 2011, I had hurt my knee before that at the Belfast Supercross. I had just had that sorted  and came back, but my mind was just wanting to be at home I wasn’t really wanting to be at the racing.

I had all that in my head and it wasn’t working for me, so I just took a year racing home. I wasn’t taking it seriously then, I was just riding at the weekend and having a bit of fun.

Was that good for you in a way, to have a bit of a rest from bikes and do it as a hobby like everyone else?

I am not going to say it was good for me. At that time that is what I wanted to be doing in my mind but, deep down as it went on I realised it wasn’t what I wanted to be doing. At the end 2011 I realised that at that wasn’t me at all and I had thrown it all away.

How was your family when you were with Watt Kawasaki just riding at home in 2011?

They just stepped back then, gave me a bit of space and just let me do my own thing. David had started road racing then and he was coming on at that big time so they focused on him. They just let me be, he knew the desire had to come from me, and he let me tear away myself. At the end of the year I told him I realised I had made a big mistake and that I wasn’t happy, and he knew it had come from the heart.

Going into this winter are you making changes to get back to the level you were at and are you are going to doing the arenacross series as warm up?

I was wanting to do the Supercross but Roger wasn’t really too keen on me doing them.  He thought that because I am just back I need to put a lot of work in and try and stay injury free and try and be concentrated on what I am there to do.

I was out with Harry Everts on Wednesday and he was assessing my riding and stuff so I think I am going to go that road with him.

I remember he came to do a coaching day at the time of the Irish GP in 05/06, you were there and you were listening to every word he was saying and he was impressed with you at that point. Are you back to that point now where you are just totally focussed on racing and trying to get better?

Yea that is all I want now, it is just bikes and nothing else really matters at all. Harry actually had come back over again that year, about three weeks later, to the house and he was going to set up a European team, he watched me ride a 250f and he was wanting to put me in his European team on a three year development deal, but then it fell through when he went to run a KTM GP team.

Jumping back to when you were in America, what was the racing like and how did you adapt back to the racing over here?

It took me probably half a year to get used to racing the way the Americans race, at home we would have a lot more time to get settled in and then pick the pace up, whereas there you get out of the gate and, if you’re not there on the first lap you may forget about it, because the race is finished four laps later. They only have five lap races except for Lorreta Lynns. Fitness wasn’t a big thing over there it was more just outright speed. Them wee boys over there are downright fast and a lot more aggressive. If you make a mistake it was two or three that pass you in the one corner, it wasn’t just the one person. It came as a bit of shock but then I got used to it and I think it helped me when I came home.  I came home and I think the first race I did was a race for Philip McCullough on a Suzuki it definitely helped come on from the year before a lot.

The pressure the kids are under seems to be massive in the US, did you notice the difference in intensity over there from the teams and the riders than it was in the British Schoolboy series?

Aw the Americans are just fully committed, as soon as you wake up in the morning it is bikes until you go to sleep at night. The families are putting everything into it, every penny they have. It is crazy when you think about it – they are putting in some serious work. That wee fella Adam Cianciarulo, his dad doesn’t work at all, every day they are at the track from 8 in the morning.  It is just bred into them, even the boy back in nearly last says he is going to the line to win – even if they have no hope! That is just the way they are brought up.

Does that make it harder to maintain your career as an adult, the GP guys seem to last longer in their career than the AMA guys?

I think that has a bit to do with it alright. They are under so much pressure, they have been at it so long. They have been at it full time from very young for maybe ten years longer than the guys over here have, which is probably half the reason they don’t last as long.

It is similar to your situation as well, that you just need a break at some point?

Yea that seems to happen a lot of those guys, you look at Stroupe and guys like that, they have all went off the rails at one stage. Those boys have been at it from they were on 50cc every day. It starts then, they are at the track every day with their dads telling them what to do.

How would you compare the tracks? It seems a lot more loamy and suits that aggressive riding?

The tracks just suit how the Americans ride. Everyone you go to there are no stones, they are just ripped up as deep as they can get them, There wasn’t on hard packish track, nearly everyone of them is ripped up and set up because they rode aggressive, I think that helps their speed too.

Do you think that is why some of them struggle  when they come to GPs, because they aren’t used to the variety of tracks then?

I think that is half the problem, it is a lot different out there compared to if you go to Italy or somewhere, Americans are just set in their own ways really.

How did the Americans take to you over there, were you taken in well?

No, I don’t think they took me in well. They didn’t like me being at the front at all, boys were spitting at my gate, pushing me on line and even my dad at most of them races, If you weren’t American they didn’t like you.

I actually got offered a deal from Geico Honda to ride the A class the next year (2010)which would have been a similar deal to what Justin Bogle has been on there, but I thought maybe going to Steve’s for the GPs would have been better. In hindsight now I sort of regret not staying, because I had done all the work to get there and I just needed to give it one more year and I would have been there. (Pro in the USA)

Had you planned to race supercross there, or had you always planned to come back home?

That was the plan to stay there, but then the offer from Steve came up and I thought it would be better.  With hindsight maybe the American one would have been better because it would have kept my head straight but sure it is easy to look back and say now.

Lorretta Lynns is a massive race, what is it like to ride in? Do you feel the industry and everyone watching you there?

If you finish in the top three there you are basically onto a pro team. That is just a massive race, I have never been to anything like that in my life. There are so many people driving golf karts that there are police directing the golf karts!

At night there was a full on concert,  everything was massive and just interview after interview with Vurbmoto. The media that was there was crazy, and every gear company was there, it was just a massive deal.

Every round they go to they class that as a championship, if you race two or three classes, you could have two or three championships. By the time Dean Wilson was pro he had 30 championships behind him. They have maybe ten amateur events but each round is a different championship run by different people  you start on the Monday morning and finish on the Sunday night.

Does that make it a long week?

It actually goes in fairly quick, you get a good bit of practice and the races are the easy bit -you maybe wouldn’t be out one day at all because there are so many classes and races going on. There is always plenty to do at the races too. I thought they were good fun.

You have experienced a lot of things will all that experience help you in your comeback because you have already been thrown in at the deep end before so to speak.

I think I gained a lot of experience from there, I felt like I did pretty good there, if you look when Roczen went to America he didn’t break the top 8 in the B class. I got second the next year so it was a good achievement.

If you are racing with them boys you are kind of racing the fastest in the world, if you look at Zach Bell, he was just out of the B class he was top five in the pros. I don’t understand why that is, but it doesn’t really happen over here, it seems to be different way of going about it. I think it is maybe the intensity those boys over there are doing it.

The European stuff at the Grand Prix should help to bring the young guys on a lot, they can see what it is like, I think that will take away the shock factor.

I would be happy enough if I was running around the top ten (in the Europeans).

Was it good to get the points in the Grand Prix at Mantova in 2010, were you surprised to get them that early?

I wasn’t really because when we were practicing I could keep up with Mike Brown , we knew it was going to take time to settle in but we also knew there was a lot more to come.

Is Mike Brown still involved with your program?

Yea I speak to Mike almost every day, he sort of classes himself as my second dad really. He is still busy with his own racing, but any chance he gets he comes over or I go over to him. I was there last year when I was injured pit boarding him and helping him out.

He is a pretty down to earth and humble guy…

Yea Mike, you couldn’t really get any nicer than Mike really. He is so down to earth and he is not really big headed about his success. I don’t know what made him different from the other riders really. It is maybe where you come from, his mum and dad are real down to earth people too, I think if he had got out of line they would have pulled him back in.

Mike has been a massive part of my racing career, he put a lot of work into me as well as dad, they both put a lot of work in.

 We haven’t seen the best of Ed Allingham yet then?

No, not really at home anyway. In America it was starting to happen but here I didn’t really get going at it. I think now that my head is straight, that was 90% of the problem, so it is just getting my base fitness and getting back to where I was on the bike.

I would like to say a big thanks to Graeme Vigors and Nicki Adair for their help last year for giving me a chance again, to my family and Mike Brown for still sticking by me and of course Roger Magee for giving me this massive chance, without him it wouldn’t be possible, it is a massive opportunity. Also thanks to Phil Coulter as well he has been behind me in a big way as well.

With those people behind you it must give you the belief in yourself again?

It does give me confidence, because everybody I still speak to thinks I can do it. I have a lot of people to prove wrong and I want to prove to my dad that I can do it, he is in two minds as to whether I can do it or not but he gave me a chance and I would like to show him that I can still do it.
Article by Jonathan McCready

Pics by Paul McCrea and Nigel McKinstry

Pro Motocross

The MX Vice SMX Review Show Episode #22 – Lars Lindstrom

HRC Boss talks about their amazing 2023 season

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In 2023, MX Vice is running a regular SMX Review show, where we talk all things AMA, frequently with a star guest or pundit. This time Ben & Brad are joined by Honda HRC USA Team Manager Lars Lindstrom, talking about the red team’s amazing 2023 season, his time as Chad Reed’s mechanic, and his riders’ plans for the Motocross of Nations!


Images: HRC Honda


Lars (crouching with his arm on the front fender) has enjoyed a great year with his team in 2023

Massive thanks to Lars for joining us and we wish you and your team all the best for the rest of the year!

This podcast was recorded prior to the Washougal National, so apologies for the delay and for the few sound issues.  None of these were caused by Lars or his systems. Enjoy the podcast!



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Live Results – AMA Pro Motocross Round 6 – Southwick

Practice Times & Race Results from The Wick

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The action is underway at Southwick for round six of the AMA Pro Motocross series. Will Jett Lawrence dominate again, and how will Hunter fare after his issues at RedBud?

Featured Image: HRC Honda

This page will have all of the results from The Wick. The results are posted in an easy-to-view fashion, with the latest results at the very top of the page. If you do not immediately see the most recent results, hit the refresh button in the top-right corner and then the issue should be rectified.

450 Updated Championship Classification

450 Overall Results

450 Moto Two

250 Updated Championship Classification

250 Overall Results

They said the sand might suit him! Tom Vialle takes his first overall win in the USA, and the 250 wildness continues through the pack as the red plate changes hands for the first time in either class this summer!

250 Moto 2

450 Moto 1

250 Moto 1

450 Consolation Race

Just for British fans, SC Sporthomes Husqvarna rider Charlie Putnam finished 19th in the Consolation Race after not making the cut in Qualifying.

250 Combined Qualifying Times


450 Combined Qualifying Times



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British Championship

Michelin MX Nationals – Race Report, Rnd 2 – Monster Mountain

Full report from packed event in South Wales

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Last weekend the new Monster Mountain facility staged its first event, round two of the Michelin MX Nationals powered by Milwaukee, and what an action-packed weekend it was! With almost 300 hundred riders keen to get on the new track and a tremendous crowd for the MX Nationals, both enjoyed the two days of fast and hot motocross action.

Words: Dick Law for Michelin MX Nationals | Featured Image: Michelin MX Nationals

If you haven’t seen the images and videos on social media, Monster Mountain is a USA- styled track set on top of a Welsh mountain. With months and months of hard, back-breaking work that involved moving hundreds of tons of earth with machines the size of a small house, the Monster Mountain track was born, and the scale of the project was mind-blowing. Once you have climbed up the mountain’s side to the peak, you enter a landscape that could be easily mistaken for Pala or even the moon.

The Leatt Pro MX1s were mainly about three riders, the Crendon Fastrack Honda pairing of Conrad Mewse and Josh Gilbert and Cab Screens Crescent Yamaha rider Harri Kullas. The winner would come from one of these riders, who have dominated the home racing scene all year.

Kullas got the holeshot at the start of the first combined MX1 and MX2 pro race but was quickly passed a quarter of the way around the opening lap by Mewse and then his teammate Gilbert, who had gated third, slipped by Kullas before the end of the lap. While this happened, John Adamson (ASA United GasGas) got cross threaded in one of the deep ruts and dropped from fourth to tenth.

Adamson’s teammate Ivo Monticelli, who was making a comeback from an injury he suffered at round one of the Revo series, took full advantage of his teammate Adamson’s problems and took over his fourth place as Jason Meara (JM 10 Moto-cycle Racing Honda), Tom Grimshaw (Chambers Racing), Charlie Putnam (SC Sporthomes Husqvarna), Jamie Carpenter (Cab Screens Crescent Yamaha), and Dan Thornhill (Chambers Racing) all moved up a place at Adamson’s expense.

The leading four riders of Mewse, Gilbert, Kullas, and Monticelli stayed in the same running order to the end of the race as Meara and Grimshaw fought over fifth place. The two riders changed position many times till, on lap eight, Meara suffered a mechanical failure, leaving Grimshaw to make fifth all his own.

Adamson was on a charge after his crash and fought back to sixth at the end of the race, while Putnam came off his machine, relegating himself back to thirtieth place.

The immense new track, with its long start straights and big jumps, and even an adverse camber turn, was always going to disadvantage the smaller Apico MX2 machines over the power of the Leatt MX1 machines, with Glen McCormick (Chambers Racing) being the first of the MX2s around turn one, followed by Jamie Wainwright (WPH/SBE/Redline KTM) and Carlton Husband (Phoenix EvenStrokes Kawasaki) as race favourite Charlie Cole (Blades Bikes Kawasaki) suffering a mechanical problem that saw him at the back of the pack with a lot of work to do.

Wainwright had passed McCormick to lead the MX2s by the end of the first lap as Husband slipped back three places. But, as the race continued, Husband upped his pace and repassed six other riders on his way to tenth in the race, but first MX2 home.

McCormick put on a last-lap charge and snatched a place from the hands of Wainwright as the pair finished eleventh and thirteenth on the track but second and third in the MX2s, as for the unlucky Cole. He regrouped and fought his way back from thirtieth to finish fifteenth in the race but fourth MX2 and the last person on the lead lap.

Kullas once again got the holeshot at the start of race two, and once again, Gilbert found a way past him by the end of the lap. Behind them, it was Grimshaw, Meara, Monticelli, Mewse and Carpenter.

Grimshaw took his time in the opening laps and slipped back to sixth. Mewse slid past Monticelli on the second lap to take over third place, with Meara relegated to fifth.

While Grimshaw and Carpenter fought over sixth place, the running order of Gilbert from Kullas, Mewse, Monticelli, and Meara stayed the same till the very last lap when Mewse used the backmarkers to snatch second place from Kullas, and with it second overall for the meeting. (MX Vice was witness to the incident that cost Kullas second place, where two MX2 riders fell in a rut that Harri had already committed to, leaving the Yamaha man to haul his bike out of the massively deep inside rut as Conrad tiptoed around the outside of them, probably laughing his head off!).

On the Apico MX2 side of race two, Cole had gated tenth but had Wainwright in his wheel tracks and McCormick two places further back as they battled for the MX2 lead amongst the bigger MX1 machines.

Wainwright & Cole battle for MX2 supremacy in race two. Cole won the event, but Wainwright leads the series!

After changing the lead with Wainwright several times, Cole established himself eighth on the track but first of the MX2s. Wainwright finished in tenth place for the second MX2, with McCormick third. Unfortunately, Husband didn’t get the start he wanted and didn’t seem to get going as he finished sixth MX2, behind Joe Brooks and Charlie Heyman (Tru7 Honda).           

With three race wins and a second place, Ben Edwards won the RFX expert MX1s from race one winner and wildcard rider Josh Waterman. Jayden Ashwell (AJP Geartec Husqvarna) was third, with Jay McCrum missing a podium position.

Ashley Greedy (Darjen Contractors Gas Gas) won his first three races in the RFX MX2s, but while in the lead of his fourth and final race of the weekend, he was passed by Jimmy Margetson (AJP Geartec Husqvarna) on his way to second overall, with Mathew Bayliss (Darjen Contractors Gas Gas).

Ash Greedy had a great weekend on home territory.

Wildcard rider Scott Elderfield won three out of his four races on his way to the Motoverde amateur MX1 overall, with race four winner Sean Wainwright (Fasteddy Racing Honda) second. Josh Greedy (Darjen Contractors Kawasaki) tied in third with Luke Mellows (Forty-Four Honda).

Wildcard riders took three out of the top four places in the Motoverde amateur MX2 class as Ben Clarke, with two wins and two third places, took the overall from race two winner Raife Broadley (723 Race Bikes Gas Gas) while the winner of the last race Wal Beaney was third, just five points behind the winner.

Tallon Aspden (LA Groundwork KTM), with three wins and a second place, won the Worx clubman MX1s from Darren Manning-Coe, who was second in all four of his races as Daniel Chapman, the winner of the last race of the weekend was third as Drew Lane just missed out on the podium by two points.

Sam Ongley (Fantic) won all four Spiral GFX clubman MX2 races from Matt Tolly and Charlie West.

In the youth Fly Futures MXY2s, Billy Askew (GTCi Revo Kawasaki) won all four races and remains unbeaten this year. Behind him, Domonic Newbury (426 Motorsport KTM) and Mackenzie Marshall (DK Offroad KTM) were separated by just three points as they finished the weekend in second and third overall.

Billy Askew (441) already has his nose in front of Domonic Newbury (404), Mackenzie Marshall (555) and Jak Taylor (22, WM Tatchell Husqvarna).

Reece Jones (SJP Moto Husqvarna) was third in his first race of the weekend, but from then on won the other three for first overall in the Fly MXY125s. Jake Walker (Mr T Racing KTM), who didn’t finish out of the top four all weekend, was second, with a race-three low score pushing Tyla Hooley (Fantic) down to third.

Josh Vail (SJP Moto Husqvarna), with two race wins, a second and a third place, took the overall win in the Syntol Big Wheel 85s with Jamie Keith (MBR X&P KTM), who didn’t finish out of the top three all weekend, second and Charlie Richmond third.

Josh Vail took the overall win in the Syntol Supermini Big Wheel class

With a couple of wins and two-second places, Joel Winstanley-Dawson (Techsource Racing KTM) won the Syntol small wheel 85s from race one winner Lucas Lee (Husqvarna) and Ollie Truman.

Top ten results

Leatt Pro MX1:

1 Josh Gilbert (Crendon Fastrack Honda) 22 + 25 = 47

2 Conrad Mewse (Crendon Fastrack Honda) 25 + 22 = 47

3 Harri Kullas (Cab Screens Crescent Yamaha) 20 + 20 = 40

4 Ivo Monticelli (ASA United Gas Gas) 18 + 18 = 36

5 Tom Grimshaw (Chambers Racing) 16 + 15 = 31

6 James Carpenter (Cab Screens Crescent Yamaha) 14 + 14 = 28

7 John Adamson (ASA United Gas Gas) 15 + 13 = 28

8 Dan Thornhill (Chambers Racing) 13 + 10 = 23

9 Callum Green (Tru7 Honda Academy Honda) 10 + 11 = 21

10 Stuart Edmonds (S Biggs Commercials Honda) 12 + 9 = 21

Apico Pro MX2:

1 Charlie Cole (Blades Bikes Kawasaki) 18 + 25 = 43

2 Jamie Wainwright (WPH/SBE/Redline KTM) 20 + 22 = 42

3 Glen McCormick (Chambers Racing) 22 + 20 = 42

4 Carlton Husband (Phoenix EvenStrokes Kawasaki) 25 + 15 = 40

5 Charlie Hayman (Tru7 Honda Academy Honda) 16 + 16 = 32

6 Joe Brooks (GRT Impact KTM) 13 + 18 = 31

7 Calum Mitchell (Lexa MX Husqvarna) 15 + 14 = 29

8 Bailey Johnston (Verde Shiloh KTM) 11 + 13 = 24

9 Ben Franklin (Chambers Husqvarna) 12 + 12 = 24

10 Lewis Hall (Fantic) 14 + 10 = 24

RFX Expert MX1:

1 Ben Edwards (KTM) 22 + 25 + 25 + 25 = 97

2 Josh Waterman (KTM) 25 + 22 + 22 + 20 = 89

3 Jayden Ashwell (AJP Geartec Husqvarna) 18 + 20 + 20 + 16 = 74

4 Jay McCrum (Honda) 15 + 15 + 15 + 18 = 63

5 Richard Bird (Allmoto Megabikes Yamaha) 16 + 16 + 16 + 14 = 62

6 Corrie Southwood (Langmead Kawasaki) 5 + 14 + 12 = 22 = 53

7 Ryan Thomson (Drysdale MC Gas Gas) 14 + 13 + 13 + 7 = 47

8 Josh Canton (Concept CCF KTM) 13 + 9 + 11 + 13 = 46

9 Josh Peters (Jim Aim KTM) 20 + 0 + 18 + 0 = 38

10 Aaron Patstone (Gas Gas) 9 + 8 + 10 + 10 = 37

RFX Expert MX2:

1 Ashley Greedy (Darjen Contractors Gas Gas) 25 + 25 + 25 + 22 = 97

2 Jimmy Margetson (Husqvarna) 15 + 20 + 15 + 25 = 75

3 Mathew Bayliss (Darjen Contractors Gas Gas) 20 + 22 + 14 + 13 = 69

4 Uldis Freibergs (Lexa MX Husqvarna) 16 + 15 + 16 + 20 = 67

5 Kieran Banks (Yamaha) 18 + 13 + 18 + 18 = 67

6 Henry Siddiqui (Husqvarna) 13 + 14 + 20 + 16 = 63

7 Josh Colman (Holeshot MX KTM) 22 + 16 + 22 + 0 = 60

8 Aaron Ongley (723 Racebikes Gas Gas) 10 + 12 + 9 + 14 = 45

9 Niall Cregan (CCM Motorcycles Husqvarna) 5 + 9 + 11 + 15 = 40

10 Callum Murfitt (Southside MMX KTM) 7 + 11 + 10 + 12 = 40

Motoverde amateur MX1:

1 Scott Elderfield (Kawasaki) 25 + 25 + 25 + 22 = 97

2 Sean Wainwright (Fasteddy Racing Honda) 20 + 18 + 20 + 25 = 83

3 Josh Greedy (Darjen Contractors Kawasaki) 22 + 20 + 18 + 20 = 80

4 Luke Mellows (Forty Four Honda) 18 + 22 + 22 + 18 = 80

5 Jamie Dixon (P&S Yamaha) 14 + 16 + 12 + 16 = 58

6 Joshua McCorkell (McCorkell Racing Husqvarna) 16 + 13 + 11 + 14 = 54

7 Ryan Osborn (Evotech KTM) 11 + 14 + 15 + 13 = 53

8 Callum Gordon (MX Revive Gas Gas) 12 + 15 + 13 + 10 = 50

9 Brad Thornhill (LMC Plant KTM) 9 + 12 + 14 + 12 = 47

10 Jacob Bowden (VMX Motocross Club KTM) 10 + 11 + 10 + 15 = 46

Motoverde amateur MX2:

1 Ben Clark (Gas Gas) 25 + 20 + 25 + 20 = 90

2 Raife Broadley (723 Race Bikes Gas Gas) 18 + 25 + 22 + 22 = 87

3 Wal Beaney (KTM) 22 + 18 + 20 + 25 = 85

4 Jayden Murphy (KTM) 16 + 22 + 16 + 18 = 72

5 Shaun Springer (Gas Gas) 20 + 16 + 18 + 16 = 70

6 Charlie Palmer (Apex Gas Gas) 14 + 15 + 13 + 15 = 57

7 Dan Brough (Rutzz Yamaha) 12 + 12 + 7 + 14 = 45

8 Alex Buchanan (Mace Tech Tuning KTM) 11 + 14 + 12 + 8 = 45

9 Jonathan Rodrick-Evans (KTM) 7 + 7 + 14 + 12 = 40

10 Leon Ongley (Fantic) 15 + 8 + 6 + 11 = 40

Worx Sports Insurance Clubman MX1:

1 Tallon Aspden (LA Groundwork KTM) 25 + 25 + 25 + 20 = 95

2 Darren Manning-Coe (Fabrican KTM) 22 + 22 + 22 + 22 = 88

3 Daniel Chapman (KTM) 15 + 18 + 18 + 25 = 76

4 Drew Lane (Lanes Construction Gas Gas) 20 + 20 + 16 + 18 = 74

5 Kalem Hicks (British Army MX Team Husqvarna) 16 + 16 + 15 + 15 = 62

6 Billy Saunders (WMS Commercials Honda) 18 + 0 + 20 + 16 = 54

7 Ryan Davis (KTM) 10 + 12 + 14 + 12 = 48

8 Ashley Senior (Honda) 11 + 14 + 9 + 13 = 47

9 Josh Young (KTM) 14 + 10 + 11 + 11 = 46

10 Josh Bailey (Chris Bailey Landscaping KTM) 6 + 7 + 10 + 14 = 37

Spiral Clubman MX2:

1 Sam Ongley (Fantic) 25 + 25 + 25 + 25 = 100

2 Matt Tolley (426 Motorsport KTM) 20 + 22 + 22 + 16 = 80

3 Charlie West (Tim Feeney KTM) 11 + 16 + 16 + 22 = 65

4 Bradley Johnstone (Moto Connection Kawasaki) 16 + 15 + 20 + 9 = 60

5 Chris Corthorn (Kawasaki) 10 + 20 + 9 + 20 = 59

6 George Boyce (Design Scaffolding KTM) 12 + 13 + 13 + 18 = 56

7 Matthew Pocock (MGP Steel Erection KTM) 0 + 18 + 18 + 15 = 51

8 Richy Roberts (Rutzz Racing Yamaha) 9 + 6 + 15 + 14 = 44

9 Max Flint (Planet Moto KTM) 14 + 9 + 15 + 14 = 44

10 Jordan Ambler (City Wide KTM) 18 + 12 + 0 + 11 = 44

Fly Racing MXY125:

1 Billy Askew (GTCi Revo Kawasaki) 25 + 25 + 25 + 25 = 100

2 Domonic Newbury (426 Motorsport KTM) 20 + 15 + 20 + 20 = 75

3 Mckenzie Marshall (DK Offroad KTM) 22 + 10 + 22 + 18 = 72

4 George Hopkins (HJA Motorcycles Gas Gas) 18 + 14 + 16 + 14 = 62

5 Jak Taylor (Lexa MX Husqvarna) 9 + 20 + 10 + 22 = 61

6 Fin Wilson (Husqvarna) 16 + 16 + 14 + 15 = 61

7 Bayliss Utting (Trell Contractors Honda) 14 + 22 + 18 + 4 = 58

8 Liam Bennett (Apico GMR Husqvarna) 4 + 18 + 15 + 16 = 53

9 Kayde Rayns (Scott Motorsport Yamaha) 15 + 13 + 12 + 12 = 52

10 Kyron Carron (LC Construction KTM) 12 + 8 + 11 + 13 = 44

Fly Racing MXY125:

1 Reece Jones (SJP Moto KTM) 20 + 25 + 25 + 25 = 95

2 Jake Walker (Mr T Racing KTM) 18 + 20 + 22 + 22 = 82

3 Tyla Hooley (Fantic) 22 + 22 + 10 + 20 = 74

4 Freddie Gardiner (Matt Gardiner MX KTM) 25 + 11 + 12 + 18 = 66

5 Wesley McGavin (KTM) 13 + 18 + 18 + 16 = 65

6 Harrison Greenough (Simpson KTM) 14 + 16 + 16 + 12 = 58

7 Chester Hyde (Matt Pope MC Gas Gas) 15 + 15 + 13 + 13 = 56

8 Shane Jones (KTM) 16 + 14 + 14 + 10 = 54

9 Ollie Bubb (3 Flo Yamaha) 11 + 13 + 15 + 14 = 53

10 Jack Meara (Honda) 0 + 12 + 20 + 15 = 47

Syntol Big Wheel 85:

1 Josh Vail (SJP Moto KTM) 25 + 22 + 20 + 25 = 92

2 Jamie Keith (MBR X&P KTM) 20 + 25 + 22 + 22 = 89

3 Charlie Richmond (KTM) 22 + 20 + 25 + 20 = 87

4 Lewis Spratt (KTM) 16 + 18 + 15 + 16 = 65

5 Alfie Geddes-Green (Matt Pope MC Gas Gas) 18 + 8 + 18 + 18 = 62

6 Harry Lee (GRT Impact KTM) 14 + 16 + 13 + 15 = 58

7 Blake Ward-Clarke (GRT Impact KTM) 13 + 14 + 16 + 14 = 57

8 Reegan Rogers (Husqvarna) 8 + 13 + 10 + 13 = 44

9 Finlay Pickering (Mr T’s Racing KTM) 12 + 5 + 14 + 11 = 42

10 Maison Jones (Paul Green Tyres KTM) 9 + 11 + 9 + 12 = 41

Syntol Small Wheel 85:

1 Joel Winstanley-Dawson (Techsource Racing KTM) 22 + 22 + 25 + 25 = 94

2 Lucas Lee (Husqvarna) 25 + 15 + 22 + 22 = 84

3 Ollie Truman (KTM) 16 + 20 + 18 + 18 = 72

4 Archie Butterfield (KTM) 18 + 16 + 20 + 16 = 70

5 Charlie Ward (KTM) 15 + 14 + 16 + 15 = 60

6 Author Moore (3 Flo Yamaha) 20 + 18 + 0 + 0 = 58

7 Tyler Cooper (KTM) 0 + 0 + 15 + 13 = 28

8 Chad Prince (SC Sporthomes Husqvarna) 0 + 13 + 0 + 14 = 27

9 Olly Waters (Matt Gardner MX KTM) 0 + 25 + 0 + 0 = 25



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