San Bernardino, Ca. – The GEICO Powersports Honda team rolled
into Glen Helen for the opening round of the 2009 Lucas Oil AMA Pro
Motocross Championships last Saturday with high hopes, and they
delivered, with all four of the team’s 250cc riders finishing in the
top 10 on the day.
One of the highlights of the day for
the team was the phenomenal rookie performance of Justin Barcia in his
first professional race. Groomed through his latter amateur years by
the Factory Connection Racing team before graduating to FC’s GEICO
Powersports Honda team, everyone had high hopes for Barcia, but few
could’ve expected what he actually did.
In the first moto – after the first attempt at the moto was red-flagged
and the race was restarted – Barcia started right behind his teammate
Trey Canard, but quickly passed his more experienced teammate and took
over the lead. Barcia led the first half of the 14-lap race before
succumbing to arm-pump and falling back to an eventual ninth-place
finish. In moto two, after starting about third, Barcia again busted
out to an early lead, but this time he pulled out nearly 10 seconds on
second place. Barcia ended up leading 10 of the 13 laps in the moto
before being passed by 2009 Lites West Supercross champ Ryan Dungey and
2008 MX2 World Champion Tyla Rattray. Barcia finished third despite
again running into issues with arm-pump.
“Coming in, I definitely wanted to be in the top 10, and I was happy
with my finishes,” Barcia said. “In the first moto, I wasn’t very
happy, honestly, because I wanted to be up front further, but I got
some pretty bad arm-pump. But the second moto, I was really happy with
my finish because I got third, and that was awesome for me. I was
pumped. Coming in, I felt like I had the speed, but I didn’t know how
aggressive those guys would be and everything. I was comfortable where
I was, and I didn’t feel like I was riding over my head or anything, so
it was a good start.”
His 9-3 finishes were good for sixth overall, just behind his aforementioned teammate, Trey Canard.
Canard got the holeshot in the first moto before it was red-flagged,
then got the holeshot a second time on the restart and ran second to
Barcia for quite a few laps but couldn’t pass his teammate. Meanwhile,
he had Dungey and Christophe Pourcel on his tail, and the two 2009 SX
champs passed Canard on the sixth lap, then passed Barcia barely more
than a lap later. Canard followed them by his teammate and eventually
finished third in the moto.
“I was pretty bummed [about the restart] because Ryan [Dungey] and I
had a pretty good distance, I think, already built up, so that’s always
a bummer, and when you have a good start like that, you want to take
advantage of it, but to do it again was awesome,” Canard said of moto
one. “Whenever someone’s down like that, you hate to see them hurt, and
you don’t want to see anybody else injured. They did the right thing in
red-flagging it, and to get the holeshot again was good for my
confidence in my starts, so I can’t complain.”
In the second moto, Canard started just inside the top five and slid little by little to eighth, which he was not happy with.
“That’s the roughest motocross track I’ve ever ridden, so that’s
probably going to be the toughest race of the year,” Canard said. “I
didn’t feel like myself really all day, and in the first practice, I
was like 12th, and I know I’m better than that, and I know I’m better
than the way that I rode, so if that’s a bad day for me, then it looks
like we’re on the right track.”
Canard finished up with fifth overall.
Brett Metcalfe, in his first race back since injuring himself in
Atlanta, still isn’t completely healed up, but despite a very sore
wrist that kept him from doing even one full-length moto prior to the
opener at Glen Helen, he had a strong showing.
In moto one, Metcalfe started outside the top 10 and began moving
forward, eventually finishing a strong seventh after running as high as
sixth. In moto two, Metcalfe started fifth and then fought it out
around that position for the rest of the race, eventually finishing a
strong sixth.
“The only thing I was expecting was to finish two motos,” Metcalfe
said. “I knew coming in that my pace was okay, but I didn’t know how I
was going to shape up for two 30-minute motos, and I didn’t know how I
was really going to finish the motos as far as results are concerned.
My main goal was just to get out there and race two motos and finish.”
All things considered, Metcalfe was happy with his performance.
“I was really happy after the end of the day when I could reflect on my
finish, and I started looking at what I need to improve on and where I
feel like I can be right now,” Metcalfe said. “I just need more bike
time more than anything. That was definitely a positive day and I got
some good points for the championship. I’ve got to continue to work
forward now and get better. I think Glen Helen was the roughest I’ve
seen it for a long time – maybe ever – so I thought it was awesome. The
track was really good and I wish I was in a better position physically
to race there. I thought the track was good. But knowing that I just
probably raced the toughest track, it should make the next few a little
easier for me, so we’ll see what happens. I actually prefer to ride
those rough tracks because it’s a slower racetrack, and when the speeds
are higher, that’s when things get more difficult for me. I liked it
being rough.”
Metcalfe was seventh overall.
And finally, Blake Wharton, also in his first Glen Helen National (like
his teammate Barcia) rode strong all day, but had a couple of mistakes
cost him. In moto one, Wharton started out seventh and ran sixth for
much of the race before falling. Still, he recovered for a strong
eighth. In moto two, he started 11th, fell back to 12th, then moved up
to ninth before he stalled his bike. He still recovered for a strong
10th by moto’s end, though.
“Glen Helen was definitely new for me as far as the national is
concerned,” Wharton said. “It was good for me, and I thought the track
was good. I felt I did pretty good, but I made some mistakes – I fell
one moto and stalled it one moto – and my starts weren’t very good. But
overall, for the first round, it wasn’t too bad. I want to improve at
the next round and stay consistent. I felt like my speed was good,
though. The first moto, I was in sixth before I fell, and the second
moto, I stalled, but I felt my speed was up there with the fast guys, I
just need to change some things, get some holeshots, bring it all
together, and run up front.”
Wharton finished up 10th overall.
In the 450cc class, Dan Reardon took to the track for the GEICO
Powersports Honda team. He started sixth in the first moto, but a fall
on lap two put him back in 16th. Still, he worked his way forward to an
eventual 10th-place finish. However, he dropped out of moto two with a
bent front-brake caliper carrier, ending the day with 17th overall.
From here, the GEICO Powersports Honda team heads north to Prairie City
SVRA for the Hangtown Motocross Classic, round two of the Lucas Oil AMA
Pro Motocross Championship.
Team Sponsors: GEICO Powersports, Honda, Planet Fitness, Unbound
Energy, AM/PM, Factory Connection, Fox, Shoei, Gaerne, DVS, Amsoil
Lubricants, Cycra Plastics, Dunlop Tires, EK Chains, Filtron Air
Filters, Hinson Clutches, Leatt Brace, One Industries, Pro Circuit,
Renthal, Shock Doctor, Showa, TAG Sprockets, Vortex Ignitions, VP
Fuels, and Works Connection.
Glen Helen 250cc Overall:
1. Ryan Dungey Suz
2. Christophe Pourcel Kaw
3. Tyla Rattray Kaw
4. Tommy Searle KTM
5. Trey Canard GEICO Powersports Honda
6. Justin Barcia GEICO Powersports Honda
7. Brett Metcalfe GEICO Powersports Honda
8. Jake Weimer Kaw
9. Austin Stroupe Kaw
10. Blake Wharton GEICO Powersports Honda
Glen Helen 450cc Overall:
1. Ryan Villopoto Kaw
2. Mike Alessi Suz
3. Josh Grant Yam
4. Chad Reed Suz
5. Davi Millsaps Hon
6. Tommy Hahn Kaw
7. Mike Brown KTM
8. Cody Cooper Yam
9. Weston Peick Hon
10. Andrew Short Hon
17. Dan Reardon GEICO Powersports Honda