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Matthes Report

Matthes Report: Unadilla

Matthes on Tomac, the MXoN and Webb.

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The news dropped late Wednesday here in the USA. Despite previously saying he would be in, Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac announced that he’s withdrawing from the upcoming Motocross of Nations. It is a big blow to the USA team that was expected to be Tomac, Yamaha’s Cooper Webb (450) and Alex Martin on the 250.

American fans have a right to scratch their head at a seemingly healthy, mega-fast rider like Tomac saying “no thanks” to one of the most prestigious races of the year and also the injured Ryan Dungey presumably saying no thanks to MXoN yet able to race the SMX Cup in Germany one week later. The American racers do twenty-nine races in thirty-three weeks starting in January and if you peruse the entry list for this weekend’s national, you can see that Dungey, Trey Canard, Jason Anderson, Cole Seely, Broc Tickle, Blake Baggett, Justin Bogle, Christophe Pourcel and probably some more I’m missing aren’t lining up this weekend because of injury. This sport chews them up like no other, there’s no doubt about that. Why are we adding more races?

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Team USA will be missed top talent like Eli Tomac and Ryan Dungey.

Spencer Owens

It’s the sign of the times that the energy drink sponsors and OEM’s determine what is important these days and not, say, the history of the sport. In my opinion, Tomac had enough of essentially being forced to race two meaningless USGP’s and said enough is enough. Team USA is worse off for the decision, but maybe someone at the green claw company gets the memo that the MXoN is perhaps a tad more important than two races where there’s nothing at stake and the rider doesn’t want to be there?

The riders I’ve spoken to that have been forced to ride the USGP’s have made various comments about hoping they have or acquire an injury so they don’t have to go. There’s enough racing in America with the twenty-nine races, the Monster Energy Cup, the Red Bull Straight Rhythm (just so you know that Monster isn’t the only bad guy here) without Youthstream and Monster pushing the GPs onto American fans that, trust me, don’t care.

One top trainer used the word “forced” about going to these races. Another top rider that’s racing the two USGP’s told me the energy drink companies are “out of hand”. It seems that the only people happy about these extra American races are the people who profit and, here’s a hint, it’s not the ones putting on the shows.

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Eli Tomac may not be at the MXoN, but you can catch him at the USGPs!

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Let’s review here. The energy drink companies give the OEM’s money and demand they do “their races” like the Monster Cup or USGP’s, the OEM’s give the riders money and demand they do “their races” like the SMX Cup and the twenty-nine USA races and then the riders want some money so they do “their” races like Lille, Geneva etc. The race that pays basically nothing and is just a pride thing like the MXoN is the big loser here.  Things are changing in this world and I, for one, don’t like it one bit.

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Cooper Webb is moving closer to his first 250MX championship.

Spencer Owens

Yamaha’s Cooper Webb has been on a roll this outdoor series and with just three races left he has got a whole-race lead in the points. It’s nuts when you think about the fact he almost didn’t race the series when a practice crash before Las Vegas caused a broken wrist. The plan was to back down on practicing during the week, get through the first three races and salvage what he can. Then, with the first week off, come back at round four and try to win this title.

It has worked out perfectly really; better than he or his team could’ve possibly thought. I caught up to Webb earlier this week to get his thoughts on a number of topics including his run in with Pro Circuit’s Joey Savatgy at Washougal.

On doing the Charlotte USGP, his hometown race…It’s a home race, yeah, so that’ll be awesome. I’ll definitely have a lot of friends and family and a lot of southeast North Carolina rednecks there cheering me on. That will be pretty exciting.

On the announcement of his new Yamaha 450F deal in 2017… Absolutely. I’m sure a lot of people especially in the industry knew about it a fairly long time ago. I was stoked. I’m stoked with everything and the way it turned out. It was definitely a lot going on at the time, but it was cool because I actually got it done before supercross even started. It was nice to kind of go into the season not having to worry about anything except racing, so that was nice. It was definitely an exciting time.

“I actually enjoyed it, as far as getting to meet some of the people and seeing what other teams and whatnot were about. But I’m stoked with the way it turned out. Having Chad on there will be badass. I think everybody’s motivated.”

On having Chad Reed for a teammate… I would just say his experience and his overall demeanor. He was always my favorite rider growing up, so I’m going to be a little biased, but I think that guy is something special. To still be doing it at this age, I really respect that. I think he looks at it a lot differently than a lot of these guys. I think he has been there and has been in about every situation you could be in. So I think to have a teammate that’s willing to pass on his knowledge and make it a real team effort.

I think he’s not just looking out for himself. Obviously he wants to go out and do the best he can and all that, but I think he’s kind of gotten to that point where he just wants the team to do well.

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Cooper Webb locked horns with Joey Savatgy at the most-recent round.

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On how close he came to signing with another OEM:At the end of 2015 outdoor season I was riding their bike at ‘Nations and stuff like that and there were no talks of the factory team, even then. I was kind of like, ‘well okay, do I go to JGR or whatnot?’ They had just signed Barcia so it was like, ‘shoot.’ Obviously I like all the guys at Yamaha. I’d like to stay but there wasn’t anything really there. Then basically I was talking to some other teams.

At that time, Kenny obviously was up too but nobody really thought much of it I guess for some reason. So there was obviously a lot of talk. Once rumors spread and stuff like that and he was a free agent I think it changed a little bit, but there was still a lot going on and stuff like that.

On riding for Team USA at the MXDN again: “I don’t know how official or anything it is, but I have definitely been contacted. I think, as of right now, that’s the plan to do it again on the 450, which I think will be good. At first I wanted to really do it on the 250 because I just feel honestly really good on my 250 right now and I didn’t want to change anything. But I think it would actually be really good, because I’ll be able to get some initial testing out of the way. Just kind of give me a real new motivation. Obviously I’m motivated, but to try to tackle a pretty big challenge. That’ll be good. It’ll be interesting, though. Obviously I don’t know how true it is or whatever, but I heard (Dylan) Ferrandis got hurt today. I saw they announced their team the other day. I was pretty surprised that it wasn’t actually Marvin.

On his “incident” with Joey Savatgy at Washougal: “I can be open about it. Obviously I pulled the holeshot, which was pretty cool for me. That corner he came in very hot and pretty straight. I felt like if I would have done the corner the way the people were doing the corner every lap I would have gotten t-boned. It’s racing. But the first lap when we’re one and two and felt like maybe that’s not the best way to start it off. I just knew he was going to try to do that just to get in my head. I just said, ‘well, if you want to do that then I’m going to hit you right back’. I don’t know why he left the inside open.

“I went to make the pass and then I wanted to give him a little brake check. I think he wasn’t really expecting it and just hit me. Basically once he hit me I got sketchy. We both really just got sketchy and Jeremy Martin happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Obviously I didn’t want to take anybody out. I meant to just kind of show him what he did to me. He gave me a little brake check. I was going to give him a little brake check and go from there, and that escalated pretty quickly.

Words: Steve Matthes | Image: Spencer Owens

Matthes Report

Matthes Report: Daytona

Predictions from Steve Matthes!

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The 2021 Monster Energy Supercross series riders and teams just had their first week off of the season this past and when the halfway flag gets thrown this Saturday night at Daytona, we’ll officially be halfway through the 450SX series.

Here are some random predictions on some random things in regard to both the 450SX and 250SX classes.

– It’s been a while since we saw anyone not named Cooper Webb or Ken Roczen win a 450SX main event but we may finally get someone different this weekend. Now, don’t hold me to that because the top two riders in the points have been so good. This is Daytona though. This is something different for the guys and we know how good Eli Tomac is down at the speedway. I’m not going to stamp a Tomac win but it says here he will be more competitive this weekend than he has been. Good vibes will be hanging in the air for ET and even if he does not get a start, he can make it work there. I predict a strong performance for Tomac this weekend with either a win or a runner-up ride.

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– Honda’s Chase Sexton makes his return to racing after a crash in Houston while leading the 450SX main. The #23 will be a boost to the series and I think he’ll do something memorable this weekend. I do not know what exactly; maybe win a heat, lead some laps or podium the whole thing? I’m not sure but Sexton will make a splash. You watch!

– Jason Anderson has been getting progressively better since his awful opening round and subsequent finger injury. Now, how much his improvement had to do with the harder packed Orlando track is something we’ll see. I think he’s on the right track to be top five or on the podium at Daytona.

– Marvin Musquin is very good at Daytona – he’s had some hell of good rides there with a couple of 450SX podiums and a win in 250SX. It’s been a hot and cold season for Marv, but he’ll be hot this weekend.

– Dylan Ferrandis was great at Orlando 2 but had just an eleventh to show for it after he had to pull into the mechanics area for mid-race repairs. On this track, with more of an outdoor-ish feel to it, I think Ferrandis really shines. I predict a top five for the Yamaha rider. Yeah, I said it.

– I predict Justin Cooper wins the 250SX West main event. Boring, right? I know. This series is his to lose now with Jeremy Martin out with a shoulder injury. Cooper was not even at one hundred percent at Orlando 2 and he did that. Wait until he gets an extra week of prep for this one.

– I’m not sure what Star Yamaha team owner Bobby Regan said or did to rookies Nate Thrasher and Jarrett Frye in the time since Orlando 2 but I guarantee you it was not good. I’ve heard many stories about how Regan has talked to riders under the Star tent and with both kids underperforming at their first ever supercross, I predict they both come out with better performances than what we saw in Orlando. How much better? I do not know, just better.

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– Garrett Marchbanks does not win this main event like he did last year but he does end up on the podium, which is a good result for him and his team.

– Troll Train will shine this weekend and redeem himself after KO’ing himself last race. That’s what “we” do.

– I think Martin Davalos will fall down at some point in this weekend’s main event. I hate being a negative Nancy here but he’s done it in every single race this year but one. I cannot see how Marty gets through a rough and tumble Daytona track where things change every lap without making a mistake but maybe this is exactly what Marty needs to stay on two wheels!

– I predict that Kyle Chisholm will continue to Chiz, because Chiz will always Chiz. In fact, he might have some extra Chiz happening because he is usually pretty solid at Daytona.

– This one is not tough to predict but Ken Roczen will continue his great season with another great ride. Hey man, I can’t be wrong if I just predict stuff like this!

Thanks for reading!

Words: Steve Matthes | Lead Image: Align With Us

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Matthes on: Alex Nagy

Feel-good story from Orlando.

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There are a lot of cool stories in the pits in the course of a year of Monster Energy Supercross but let’s face it, these days with COVID-19 still affecting everything, things still suck. Although the racing in Orlando was cool, in terms of some fans being there, it’s still not supercross, you know?

In Orlando, we had a cool story going on though. Privateer Alex Nagy made his first ever main event via his third in the 250SX LCQ. Nagy is a privateers privateer, you know? There are guys that are what you would call privateers but they are on teams and sometimes have expenses covered  some guys get everything paid for but not factory help at all and we still call them privateers. The word “privateer” has changed a ton over the years for sure, but there is one thing that’s not in doubt and that’s that Alex Nagy is a privateer.

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Nagy had lined up for 132 races and had made 118 night shows, most of them in the 450SX class. The 250SX East series has been wrecked with injuries so that definitely helped Nagy’s case, but he’s also been riding very well. In Orlando, we saw history!

“I honestly haven’t even kept track of how many night shows or how long,” Nagy told us after the race. “My first year of racing supercross was in 2013, and I did that on a 250. Then every year after, I’ve been in the 450SX class. This is kind of like my first time back in the 250SX class. I’m glad I was finally able to capitalise on a good coast to ride and be able to put it in the main finally.”

Look, once he made the main the rest was gravy, right? Nagy rode pretty well in the 15-minute main event though to end up with a fifteenth on the night. That’s pretty decent for a guy who’s not used to racing that long. Nagy got six points toward ditching his three-digit number and getting one of those two digits that the cool guys get.

Surely Nagy was going to reward himself with some sort of extravagance for his efforts, right?

Nope.

“I’m going to spend the night here. I spent the night here last night. I spent the night in the van the night before, and I’ll probably spend the night in the van tomorrow night too,” he told me. “It’s kind of funny because even in Indy I stayed in the van. I didn’t run it, didn’t use the heat in it and didn’t have a heater. I just had four sleeping bags and I just ground it out.

“Honestly, it sucked. It was cold waking up in the morning. Then when you are kind of cold and then you’ve got to put cold clothes on or cold gear on, that was rough. Like I always say, you don’t even really think about it. It’s just in the past.”

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Nagy spending the time in freezing cold Indianapolis sleeping in his van for rounds four through six is next level. Hey, he loves the sport and it shows!

This is a part of the issue I have with the MXGP series. Yes, there are wildcards out there that some riders can get but it’s not easy to show up at an MXGP and race like it is for riders over here in SX and MX. That’s one of the things, in my opinion, that make motocross great. A guy can get a bike, modify it a bit and line up with the world’s greatest riders. Talent is the separator, not money spent. Nagy has spent time riding in the winter down in California but unfortunately not this year. His program is, how we say, pretty loose!

“I didn’t even have an off-season because I was in Illinois the whole time. All I did was ride. I would ride with a track that was half snow, and then two jumps of dirt. That was all I did. I wasn’t in California. This was the least prepared I’ve been going into a year, and I did the first round on a 450 and was able to get in on it which was sweet. I was stoked on that, to make the night show.

“Then I wanted to do a 250 the whole time, but I didn’t get the bike that I’m riding until the night that I left for Houston. I pretty much just had a brand new 250. I’m like, ‘Okay, I’ll race the 450 at the first one and then switch the suspension over.’ I broke the bike in in the parking lot. The first time it ever saw dirt was the practice at Houston 2, which is pretty funny.”

The thing about that is he broke the bike in around the pits and he hadn’t ridden the bike on a track until the first practice at Houston 2! The bike had stock bars, stock grips, a stock head pipe and suspension modified last year. Yet, somehow, five rounds later he’s in the main!

Nagy’s now going to race the much-more competitive 450SX class while the 250SX East series is on hold and I don’t like his chances to make the main there. However, Alex Nagy will be out there sleeping where he can and practicing where he can. Nagy’s enjoying his life and now he’s got that main event on his record. We need more Alex Nagy’s in the pits.

Words: Steve Matthes | Lead Image: Align With Us

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Matthes Report: Ken Roczen

A look at Ken Roczen’s triumphs.

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It’s not too hard to imagine that, although Honda HRC’s Ken Roczen just grabbed his second win in a row in the 2021 Monster Energy Supercross series, he should actually have four wins. He passed Houston 1 winner Justin Barcia a couple of times in the first main of the year and, of course, we all know that lapper Dean Wilson cost him another win.

It’s not a stretch to imagine Roczen with four wins out of five races to start the season and his current points lead being even bigger, right? He has been amazing and on it right from the first round and it’s cool to see; having Roczen healthy, happy and fast in SX is a good thing for the sport.

One of the things I was wrong about, and boy there’s a lot, was Kenny’s adaption to the all-new 2021 Honda CRF450R. The bike barely shares anything with the 2020 model and I’ve seen plenty of riders and teams at the highest levels struggle to figure out new models. The most recent Kawasaki, for example, wasn’t easy for Eli Tomac and the Team Green guys to get a handle on right away. The 2009 Honda. The backwards-motor Yamaha – there could be a book written about trying to get that bike set-up and working right.

The point is that with data acquisition teams are able to get improvements done to the bike but it usually takes a year. Then of course parts and 2021 Honda 450 bikes themselves were late getting to the USA only adding to my thought that this might be a year where the team and Roczen are constantly learning. The fact that Tim Gajser was on it all last year in the MXGP’s probably helped a bit but SX is quite a bit different from MX as we all know.

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We had Roczen on the PulpMX Show on Monday and I asked him about the bike.

“There’s always little things that could be better, but I think ultimately it comes down to the stock bike has to be good from the get-go to be able to start off and not have huge problems,” Roczen said. “Our previous bike was not quite like that – it was a very difficult bike to set up, especially for all different kinds of conditions. We are in a super good spot.

“My bike is very raceable, especially in the conditions that we have had. It’s been rough. It’s been rutty and tacky. I think it will just be that much better even when it gets a little bit more hard-packed. I think we have had the most difficult conditions. I think everybody would agree with that. We are just solid.”

Honda’s had former SX/MX winner Trey Canard aboard to help with the testing the last couple of years and there’s no doubt that he has been a huge help to the team as far as getting a base set-up down so that the team does not waste a lot of time with Roczen testing. He’s able to just focus on himself.

“I’ve said this a few times; this bike is not a revolutionary bike. Honda has done this in the past with big steps like the dual mufflers or the aluminium frame and, although this bike is different, it’s not so different from the previous model. We were never so far off with this bike; it was pretty good the first day we rode SX. We could race it like this. It gave us a good head start on things

The biggest thing for me is there is less rigidity in this frame. At the end of the mains when the ruts are choppy and bumpy, you have to be perfect. This bike makes a difference and the rider can sustain a hard effort. These guys are going fast the whole time. The power is also more usable in more ways.”

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The new “thing” for the factory teams is having someone like Canard, or Ryan Morais at KTM, who is still a great rider, knows how a bike works and can eliminate some directions that the team wants to try. I’ve been there as a mechanic and spent some long days at the test track trying clamps, bearing races, cams, pistons etc. and trying to get through what works and what doesn’t. The riders themselves don’t really enjoy those days. The quicker you can get the testing over, the better. The riders can then focus on putting in laps and getting themselves ready for the season.

“I think the last three years, I’ve learned a lot. At first we would come up with something and he [Roczen] didn’t like it or he didn’t win. The wins for me as a test rider were hit and miss. I’ve gotten to know him better,” Canard says about specifically testing for Roczen.

Yeah, maybe I was off on my take of him figuring out a new bike or maybe Canard has been such a massive help that they have overcome those usual new bike blues. Either way, Roczen looks as good as ever here to start the series. I wondered if Canard himself was surprised at how good the #94 and the new Honda 450 look so far?

“I’m not surprised at how good he looks. The last year and a half, his health has been a struggle. Even the races he did win, it seemed to me he wasn’t happy with the way he rode. He came a long ways since we started SX – we started a bit late due to the nationals going longer. When he took that time off this past summer, I got a sense he would get things sorted and he did.”

That’s the understatement of 2021 so far.

Words: Steve Matthes | Lead Image: Align With Us

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