MDK Report
MDK/WARTHOG RACING SWARM THE MAINS IN
INDY
March 4th,
2009
Newbury Park, CA.
The 2009 AMA Monster Energy Supercross series headed due north-west up to the
Indianapolis Lucas Oil Stadium. It was a red letter day for all that is
MDK/Warthog, as the Warthog Nation set records on qualifying riders into the
mains. Of the 15 members of the Warthog Nation that hit the track in Indy,
eight of them made their main events. Never before in AMA racing have so many
riders from one organization staked their claim to the final races of the
night.
The new Lucas
Oil Stadium was impressive -- very high tech and functional -- as was
the Mike Larocco/DirtWurx designed and built track. The throng of
MDK/Warthog riders took to the track like pigs to mud. Riding for
the Warthog Racing Academy (WRA) on big bikes were #917 Eric
Sorby and #71 Justin Sipes. In the small engine class,
WRA was represented by #336 Dennis Jonan, #374 Cody
Gilmore, #96 Tyler Wharton, # 831 Ryan
Smith, #198 Jacob Saylor, #566 Logan Martin,
and #309 Spencer Dally. Rounding out Warthog-mania
was the Warthog Racing Team Captain Heath Voss, and our major
Warthog Nation partner MotoConcepts Racing, who provided #979
Ben Coisy, #911 Tyler Bowes, #651 Daniel
McCoy, and #719 Vince Friese to the Warthog Line-up. Last
but not least was the Warthog Nation rider who has the most years of seniority
as member of the Warthog Racing program, renaissance rocking man #125
Daniel Blair.
All 15 riders made
timed qualifying look easy. Despite a deep field of over 60 riders in the Lites
class, all 10 riders qualified for the 40 man night show. Another way to look
at it is that riders from the Warthog Nation made up 25% of the Lites class,
quite an impressive feat for the team. In the Supercross class, all five riders
made it to the show, comprising 15% of the heat race. Top qualifiers from our
group included Ben Coisy, Tyler Bowers, Eric Sorby, Heath Voss, Daniel Blair,
and Vince Friese, Dennis Jonon, and Cody Gilmore.
Lites heat #1 saw
Jacob Saylor put on a solid ride to finish 6th and punch his ticket
to the main. Tyler Wharton and Cody Gilmore weren’t so lucky; each crashed
while battling for a qualifying position and were relegated to the always brutal
LCQ.
The second Lites heat
saw Daniel Blair score an excellent 5th place finish after battling
with Vince Friese, who finished 6th. Ryan Smith put in the ride of a
lifetime to capture the final transfer position. This would be Ryan’s first
main event ever in Supercross, not counting the drubbing he put on Travis
Pastrana in Puerto Rico a few weeks back.
The first heat for
the big bikes didn’t go well for the team. Only Justin Sipes was in the race
and after a strong start on his lone KTM that put him in position for a
qualifying spot, Justin through it away with an unfortunate crash. It would be
on to the LCQ for Justin and his KTM.
The next heat was
stacked with Warthogs, as there were 4 riders from the Warthog Nation in the
heat. In turned out to be a great heat for the team, as Coisy placed a season
high 4th, Tyler Bowers a season high 6th, and Heath Voss
took 8th place, making it three for four. Aussie Daniel McCoy, the
odd man out, put in a determined ride to finish 11th, but in the
sport of Supercross, much like with boomerangs, a miss is as good as a
mile.
It was on to the Last
Chance Qualifiers for seven of the boys. In the Lites class, Tyler Wharton made
the most of it, motoring into the final transfer spot, flambéing such talent as
Jason Thomas and Matt Goerke. Good job Tyler, you long haired hippie-freak!
The rest of the guys weren’t so lucky – bad starts ruined the day for Dennis
Jonon, Cody Gilmore, Spencer Dally, and Logan Martin.
The mains on the
planes were clearly for the most insane, as the Mike Larocco-designed track was
not built with small yamsquatches (paging Chris Parsons) in mind. No, indeed
this track would take every ounce of testosterone one could muster to navigate
quickly and correctly.
The Lites main first
start defined the term “cluster….” Only seven riders made it out of the first
turn in one piece, which quickly led to a Nico Izzi lead annulling red flag.
Then debate can go on forever as to the necessity of the red flag, given that
waylaid corner was cleared in less than 30 seconds. We trust AMA Official
Jeff Canfield completely so we’ll stick with his decision on it,
although Nico Izzi may not be feeling quite so magnanimous about
the situation.
The restart led to
drastically changed fortunes for most everybody. Pourcel and
Stroupe led the way with Izzi now mired in the pack. Warthog
Nation member Daniel Blair was putting on a riding clinic, and worked his way
from outside the top ten into an eventual 7th. Vince Friese gated
reasonably well, battled strong the whole time, and wound up in 11th
place. This was Vince’s second main since graduating up to the
MotoConcepts/Warthog Nation team. WRA riders Tyler Wharton and Jacob Saylor
didn’t fare all that well after taking a few breaks to inspect the quality of
the Indy dirt, up close and personal. Ryan Smith, racing his first main gutted
out a 14th place finish, which is very respectable for his first time
out.

The big bike main was
outstanding as James Stewart and Chad Reed put on a
great show. Meanwhile back further in the back where the Warthogs roam, Ben
Coisy was putting on the ride of his life. The MotoConcepts/Warthog Nation
rider rode a brilliant race to finish 6th place, that against a very
stacked field. Bravo for Ben. Heath Voss lived up to his number while
finishing 13th after an almost last place start. Heath still leads
the Privateer of the Year race over Nick Wey and Ben Coisy, who
after his stellar run at Indy, is trailing Heath by only 8 points. Seventeen
year-old Tyler Bowers, a recent graduate of the Warthog Racing Academy,
continues to impress, again making the main and showing flashes of brilliance.
Look for Tyler to break the Top Ten before this season is
over.
DeCal
Works and the Motorcycle
Mechanics Institute (MMI) deserve big kudos, as Ron
Joynt and his team worked tirelessly to get the WRA graphics complete in
time for the race and Terry Emig and the gang at MMI keep sending
us outstanding students and graduates, without who we would never be able to
display the technical excellence WRA and its racers aspire to.
This season would not
be possible without our committed and actively engaged sponsor/partner group.
For 2009, we have teamed up with the following entities: MDK Motorsports, MDK Speed, DeCal Works, Smooth Industries,
Motorcycle Mechanics Institute (MMI), P-LoK, MotoConcepts, Transworld Motocross,
LocoMX.com, Vanquish MX, DT1 Air Filters, MXResultz.com, Devol Engineering,
Liquid Performance,
LongShot
Racing, CP Pistons, VP Fuel, Dunlop, The Plumber Inc., MB2 Raceway, Edgile
Consulting, MX Sports, Vortex, MotionPro, Dana K Business Parks, The Whitaker
Wellness Institute, Atlantic Promotions, NXTAgency, Kardy Photography,
Relentless Media, MotoTees, RacerX Illustrated, Dirt Rider Magazine, Motocross
Action Magazine, MartialMoto, Honolulu Hills Raceway, L&M Racing, and Fire
and Police MX.
With this fine group,
anything is possible. And special thanks to Feld
Motor Sports. Because of their full support, dozens of
privateers get the opportunity to live their dreams.
Take care and we’ll
see you at the races!!