Dungey, Martin Claim Glen Helen National MX Wins

Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey and Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha’s Jeremy Martin make the Land of 10,000 Lakes proud at the Red Bull Glen Helen National.

Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey and Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha’s Jeremy Martin make the Land of 10,000 Lakes proud at the Red Bull Glen Helen National.

Ryan Dungey (5) capped off an excellent day of racing at the Red Bull Glen Helen National with a dramatic last-lap, second-moto pass on Red Bull KTM teammate Ken Roczen (94) to claim the second moto and  overall win in the 450cc class. ALL PHOTOS BY STEVE COX.
Ryan Dungey (5) capped off an excellent day of racing at the Red Bull Glen Helen National with a dramatic last-lap, second-moto pass on Red Bull KTM teammate Ken Roczen (94) to claim the second moto and overall win in the 450cc class. ALL PHOTOS BY STEVE COX.

If every round of the 2014 Lucas Oil AMA Pro Motocross Championship could be decided the way it was at the series-opening Red Bull Glen Helen National, there’s no question that the series is poised to have a banner year. Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey won’t mind that one bit as long as he finishes atop the final standings like he did at Glen Helen Raceway today.

After finishing a solid third in the first 450cc moto, Dungey’s second-moto win was a dramatic highlight on a dramatic day of racing at Glen Helen in which both 450cc motos were decided by less than a second. Dungey’s Red Bull teammate, Ken Roczen of Germany, figured prominently in both motos by leading or battling for the lead in both. He would fail to win either one, but he still capped a rock-solid second overall via 2-2 moto finishes. If the second moto had been one lap shorter, Roczen would have been the overall winner.

But it’s always a race to the checkered flag, and Dungey’s thrilling pass on Roczen just a few turns from the finish got the job done against a tough field that featured three former series champions along with numerous contenders battling for the Lucas Oil Pro 450cc Motocross number one plate vacated by the injured Ryan Villopoto.

In the 250cc class, Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha’s Jeremy Martin snapped a 10-year long overall win dry spell for Yamaha in the 250cc class with a dominant two-moto sweep. Minnesota motocross fans also had a reason to be happy with series opener, as both Dungey and Martin hail from that state.

The first 450cc moto of the 2014 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship season gets underway with JGR Yamaha's Josh Grant (33) grabbing the holeshot.
The first 450cc moto of the 2014 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship season gets underway with JGR Yamaha’s Josh Grant (33) grabbing the holeshot.

450cc
Moto 1

Dungey served notice that he was ready for battle by posting the fastest 450cc qualying time in the morning timed practice sessions, but when the gate dropped for the first 450cc moto of the year, a pair of JGR Yamahas emerged from the 40-rider field, with Josh Grant grabbing the $500 Motosport.com holeshot award, followed by his teammate, Phil Nicoletti. Roczen got away third, followed by Dungey, with Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Brett Metcalfe, Muscle Milk Honda’s Justin Barcia, with Yoshimura Suzuki’s James Stewart in a tight bunch to lock down the first seven spots.

Grant pulled away early while Nicoletti was able to keep Roczen at bay for the first two laps, and that allowed Dungey to pull closer to both of them. Roczen finally got past Nicoletti just before the sand section to take over second place, about 6 seconds behind Grant.

Further back, Stewart had worked his way to fifth place by the halfway point in the moto, and he was dogging Barcia relentlessly for the fourth spot, but Barcia managed to repel Stewarts advances. Stewart finally made an aggressive pass stick through the track’s famous high-banked, high-speed Talladega turn.

Roczen worked hard to cut into Grant’s lead, and he had it whittled down to about 2 seconds with 9 minutes left in the moto, the pair’s torrid pace pushing them more than 6 seconds ahead of Dungey. Muscle Milk Honda’s Trey Canard was the real man on the move, however, passing Barcia and Stewart to take over fourth place.

Stewart would have none of it however, and he went right back after Canard. Stewart ran into the back of Canard after Canard had to get on the brakes for a lapped rider at the end of the and section, and both riders crashed. Stewart remounted in 9th position, behind fellow former Lucas Oil 450cc Champion Chad Reed, with Canard 10th. Stewart was able to get past Reed for ninth place with just over 3 minutes left on the clock. Barcia dropped out of the moto while running fourth after losing a chain with just over two laps to go.

Josh Grant turned in a stunningly strong ride in the first 450cc moto, leading every lap en route to his first National motocross win since 2010.
Josh Grant turned in a stunningly strong ride in the first 450cc moto, leading every lap en route to his first National motocross win since 2010.

After maintaining a 2-second gap behind Grant, Roczen waited until the last lap to close in on the leader, and the two riders left nothing on the table as they battled around the track on the last lap. Grant nearly threw away his chances for the win with a huge bobble in one of the left-hand corners on he Mount St. Helens side of the course, but he managed to gather it back up and hold onto the lead. Roczen pulled to Grant’s rear wheel with two turns to go and took a fateful shot at the win by diving to the inside of Grant in the last corner, only to come up short. Credit Josh Grant with the first Lucas Oil Pro moto win of 2014 by .4 of a second.

“It has been since 2010 since I win a moto, and I really wanted here, you know,” Grant said. “This is my hometown race, and my family and everybody is here, so I put it out on the line or them, and that’s why I’m here.”

Roczen may have finished second, but he knew that he had still put himself in a good position to claim the overall win.

“That corner is a bit sketchy so there wasn’t really anything I could do, but overall it was a good race,” Roczen said. “I got off to a good start, and we’ve basically been together the whole time. The fans were awesome out there, I mean, so much fun to ride here. They’re cheering us on. Man, I’m pumped for that moto, and I can’t wait for the second one.”

Dungey, likewise, was pleased with his third-place finish in the first moto.

“Overall the moto went really well, you know,” Dungey said. “We got a good start, and Josh Grant getting that holeshot really helped. A big shout out to him, getting that win. That was really good. I’m really happy for him. That was a good ride. All in all, we kind of got behind a little bit, trying to catch second place. But we’ll take this and get ready for the next one.”

450cc
Moto 2

Dungey got off to what looked like a sure holeshot as the 450cc field rounded the Talladega turn to start moto two, but Roczen snuck up the inside and stole away the lead before they hit the stripe that marks the Motosport.com Holeshot Award. Barcia, Nicoletti and RCH Soaring Eagle Suzuki’s Ivan Tedesco slotted into the top five. First-moto winner Grant was mired deep in the pack and would crash in the sand on the first lap. Grant would finish the moto in 15th place.

After finishing third in the first moto, Dungey turned in a brilliant two laps in the second moto to run down Roczen for the win.
After finishing third in the first moto, Dungey turned in a brilliant two laps in the second moto to run down Roczen for the win.

Canard was off to another solid start, and he quickly charged past Tedesco and Nicoletti to claim the fourth sport. Monster Energy Kawasaki teammates Jake Weimer and Brett Metcalfe were also running inside the top 10 early, along with TwoTwo Motorsports/Discount Tire Kawasaki’s Chad Reed and James Stewart, who got past Reed just before the finish line to run ninth.

Roczen tried to set sail, but Dungey was still within striking distance. Canard, meanwhile, passed Barcia to grab third place. Stewart passed Metcalfe just before the sand section to claim fifth place.

Lapped riders began to play a part in the battle for the lead, as Roczen appeared to have a more difficult time getting by them than Dungey did, and Dungey quickly cut Roczens lead two under two seconds, setting up a Red Bull KTM battle for the moto and overall win.

Meanwhile, reigning Canadian National Champion Metcalfe was having a stellar race as he powered past Stewart on the short hill before Mount St. Helens to snatch away the fifth position at the 20-minute mark. Stewart was clearly sticking to his pre-race plan of riding solid motos to give himself a solid start to the series.

Out front, Roczen was once again slowed by another lapper, Swedish rider Nicklas Gustavsson, and Dungey used it to pull closer to his German teammate. Dungey was clearly riding faster than Roczen at that point, but he was also taking wider lines through some of the sections, which made setting up Roczen for a pass difficult, especially when Roczen appeared to gain back a little advantage on the flatter infield sections of the course. Dungey clearly had Roczen in his sights, however, and a confrontation for the overall win seemed inevitable.

With just a few laps remaining, Dungey went on the attack, running side by side with Roczen as they climbed to the top of Mount St. Helens. Roczen gained a little more breathing room again just before the two-lap board was shown to the field, and it appeared that the race may have been decided, but Dungey once again gathered it up and mounted a challenge on the last lap of the race. Dungey passed Roczen by using the inside line in the left-hander that led up Mount St. Helens, but Roczen got the superior drive and retook the lead just as quickly.

Third place overall finisher Trey Canard (left) joined winner Dungey (center) and runner-up Roczen (right) on the 450cc podium.
Third place overall finisher Trey Canard (left) joined winner Dungey (center) and runner-up Roczen (right) on the 450cc podium.

Dungey knew that he would need to force the issue in the flatter section where Roczen was faster, and with the Glen Helen crowd urging him on, he crowded Roczen and forced the German rider wide to take the lead just three turns from the finish and steal the moto and overall win.

“From the gate drop all the way to the end, we were pushing each other,” Dungey said. “Ken came out of the gate pretty strong, you know, so I tried to maintain that. But, like five laps to go there, I tried to make a move and some lappers got in the way, and I didn’t think I was going to get back to him that last lap. I just pushed everything I had. I didn’t throw it all in there, but I definitely took a little bit of a chance, and it worked out. So, 3-1 on the day, I can’t thank the whole team enough. It was an awesome start to the season, but we’ll keep thing rolling. This track is nasty, but it was good to be back to Glen Helen, back to the roots.”

Roczen admitted that he was frustrated to not come away with a moto win at Glen Helen, especially when the second-moto win would have meant the overall.

“I’m not happy,” Roczen said. “I don’t think my line choice was as good. It could’ve been better. But, leading, if you take a different line and he takes a different one it’s kind of a gamble. I’m really, really mad that he got me there towards the end. You know, all that suffering, and then he got me there. But I learned from that—take it as motivation. Overall, I think I did good today. I’m in a good position, and we’ll take it from here.”

When all was said and done, Canard salvaged his day with a third-place finish in moto two, landing third overall via a 7-3 moto tally. The second moto left no question that the popular Honda rider has fully recovered from the injuries that sidelined him for most of the supercross season.

“That first moto wasn’t too fun,” Canard said. “It really was a bummer to crash with James [Stewart]. Starting the bike just wore me out, and I kind of gathered it up at the end, but… Kind of not an ideal day, but it was good to end up here on the podium. I’m grateful to leave Glen Helen, and looking forward to this long series. It should be good.”

250cc
Moto 1

GEICO Honda’s Zach Bell pulled the holeshot at the start of the first 250cc moto of 2013, followed by Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha’s Jeremy Martin, with GEICO Honda’s Matt Bisceglia coming through in third place. Unlike the 450cc race, however, Martin wasted no time in taking over the lead as he jumped past Bell over the Canyon Jump. Meanwhile, other major contenders such as Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha‘s teammate, Cooper Webb and Rockstar Energy KTM’s Jason Anderson were outside the top 10. Red Bull KTM’s Marvin Musquin and 250cc fast qualifier Christophe Pourcel on the Valli Motorsports Yamaha were outside the top five. Meanwhile, Troy Lee Designs Honda’s Cole Seely battled his way past Bell and Bisceglia to take over second place five laps into the moto.

Yamalube/Star Racing Yamaha's Jeremy Martin was unstoppable in the 250cc class at Glen Helen, scoring a 1-1 moto sweep by huge margins to earn his first career Lucas Oil Pro Motocross overall win.
Yamalube/Star Racing Yamaha’s Jeremy Martin was unstoppable in the 250cc class at Glen Helen, scoring a 1-1 moto sweep by huge margins to earn his first career Lucas Oil Pro Motocross overall win.

While Martin streaked away from the field, Webb and Anderson began pushing their way toward the front from 11th and 12th place respectively. Webb caught up to GEICO Honda rider and newly crowned AMA 250cc East Supercross Champion Justin Bogle, who was running in fifth place, before the halfway point in the moto, and the pair diced for two laps. Their momentum then allowed them to catch the third- and fourth-running Bell and Biscegla, creating a four-rider freight train for third place. Bogle and Webb moved into third and fourth place, respectively, two thirds of the way into the moto.

Webb then passed Bogle for third place before Anderson caught Bogle and dropped him to fourth place over the Red Bull double jump. Webb and Anderson were still showing amazing speed as they both caught up to Seely and passed him just before the two-lap board was shown to the field.

No one was able to catch Martin, though, as he handily won the moto with a 15.4-second margin of victory over Webb, while Anderson was about 2.7 seconds behind Webb.

“It feels really good,” Martin said. “I’ve been struggling at the beginning of the supercross season—everyone knows that, and I was able to turn things around at the end of the year. We have one more moto, so I can’t celebrate just yet.”

Cooper Webb came from behind to make his way to second place in both 250cc motos and finish second overall.
Cooper Webb came from behind to make his way to second place in both 250cc motos and finish second overall.

Webb put together a fantastic ride from down in the field, as did Anderson.

“It was gnarly,” Webb said. “This is Glen Helen. The track is unreal, and it’s definitely a man’s track out there. It was kind of cool. Me and Jason [Anderson] came through the pack. We were, like, 20th in the first turn, so it was kind of cool to come through and make our way up front. I thought I was like, eighth—I didn’t know. So, second is good for me.”

Anderson’s third-place finish was a good way to start what may be his last season on a KTM, as it was announced late yesterday that his Rockstar Energy Racing team will receive full factory support from KTM’s sister brand, Husqvarna, in 2015.

“I’m really happy with that result,” Anderson said. “The start wasn’t what I wanted, but I made it through the pack, and I kind of followed Cooper and ended up working out being on the podium. We’ll see if we can come out swinging next moto and I a get a better start.”

250cc
Moto 2

The second 250cc moto had to be red-flagged for safety reasons after a multi-rider pileup left several riders on the ground and needing possible medical assistance.

The second 250cc moto had to be red-flagged after this multi-rider pileup off the start.
The second 250cc moto had to be red-flagged after this multi-rider pileup off the start.

Jeremy Martin left little to chance once the second 250cc moto did get underway, however. After grabbing the holeshot in the aborted start, he attacked the restart with same vengeance, running second behind Justin Bogle through the first turn before the two traded the lead in the hilly sections of the track. Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s Blake Baggett was off to a better start, running third, ahead of Christophe Pourcel and Monster Energy/Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s Dean Wilson. Martin quickly began to build another lead, while Pourcel passed Baggett for third place and Cooper Webb got underneath Wilson for fifth place.

Bogle crashed out early in the race, handing second place to Baggett and third to Pourcel, but Webb was flying, and he quickly reeled-in Pourcel and passed him in the last banked corner before the entrance to the flat infield section. Wilson then tagged onto the back of Pourcel, the two battling for fourth place. Jason Anderson quickly crept into the picture, as well, having gotten off to a better start than he had in the first moto.

Martin was clearly the fastest rider on the track, having amassed a 10-second lead by the halfway point in the moto. Baggett was still second, followed by Webb and Anderson. The best race on the track was between Pourcel and Wilson for fifth. Wilson made a clean pass on the Frenchman, who was riding in his first race in over a year, with about 7 minutes remaining in the race, but then Wilson’s day would turn sour when he crashed hard on one of the downhills and was out of the race.

Webb passed Baggett at about the same time to put the factory Yamahas in first and second place on the track, but by then Martin was over 21 seconds out in front of Webb. The finishing order appeared to be all set, but Anderson crashed on the short uphill before Mount Saint Helens, and he was unable to continue.

Martin (center) and teammate Webb (right) celebrate on the podium along with third overall finisher Cole Seely (left), who went 4-4 in the 250cc motos.
Martin (center) and teammate Webb (right) celebrate on the podium along with third overall finisher Cole Seely (left), who went 4-4 in the 250cc motos.

Martin slowed right at the finish, but it didn’t matter, as he easily crossed the line for the moto and overall win. Webb finished second overall with 2-2 finishes, while Cole Seely was third overall with 4-4 finishes. Afterward, Martin explained how he had prepared for Glen Helen.

“I had a really good break between St. Louis and New Jersey [supercross rounds], and I rode nothing but outdoors, and I felt really good,” Martin said. “I got a chance to go back to the Carmichael farm for a little bit and ride, and I was feeling really good. You know, I kind of flew in under the radar. No one really talked about me a whole lot, but I knew what I was capable of. I knew what I was going to do, and it feels good to do it.”

The series continues next weekend with the Hangtown Motocross Classic outside of Sacramento, California.

Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship
Glen Helen Raceway
San Bernardino, CA
Results: May 24, 2014 (Round 1 of 12)

450cc
1. Ryan Dungey-KTM/3-1
2. Ken Roczen-KTM/2-2
3. Trey Canard-Hon/7-3
4. Brett Metcalfe-Kaw/4-5
5. Josh Grant-Yam/1-15
6. James Stewart-Suz/6-6
7. Malcolm Stewart-Hon/8-8
8. Jake Weimer-Kaw/10-7
9. Weston Peick-Suz/5-13
10. Chad Reed-Kaw/9-10

Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship 450cc Series Points Standings (After 1 of 12 rounds)
1. Ryan Dungey-45/1 win
2. Ken Roczen-44
3. Trey Canard-34
4. Brett Metcalfe-34
5. Josh Grant-31
6. James Stewart-30
7. Malcolm Stewart-26
8. Jake Weimer-25
9. Weston Peick-24
10. Chad Reed-23

250cc
1. Jeremy Martin-Yam/1-1
2. Cooper Webb-Yam/2-2
3. Cole Seely-Hon/4-4
4. Blake Baggett-Kaw/8-3
5. Christophe Pourcel-Yam/7-5
6. Justin Bogle-Hon/5-9
7. Matt Bisceglia-Hon/11-7
8. Marvin Musquin-KTM/10-8
9. Jessy Nelson-Hon/15-6
10. Jason Anderson-KTM/3-31

Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship 250cc Series Points Standings (After 1 of 12 rounds)
1. Jeremy Martin-50/1 win
2. Cooper Webb-44
3. Cole Seely-36
4. Blake Baggett-33
5. Christophe Pourcel-30
6. Justin Bogle-28
7. Matt Bisceglia-24
8. Marvin Musquin-24
9. Jessy Nelson-21
10. Jason Anderson-20

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