AMA Pro Road Racing
News
Westby Racing Wins AMA Pro SunTrust Moto-GT 8 Hours At Daytona After Near Perfect Day
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (October 17, 2009)
- The No. 13 Westby
Racing Yamaha YZF-R6 of Dane Westby, Dustin Meador, Jeff Wood and
all-star
addition Josh Hayes prevailed in a race-long duel with the No. 18 Team
Roadracingworld.com Suzuki GSX-R600 of
Chris Ulrich, Martin Cardenas and Jason DiSalvo to win Saturday's
fourth annual AMA Pro SunTrust Moto-GT 8 Hours At Daytona. The victory
was
the third in a partial season of just five races for the new Westby
team that
raced in SunTrust Moto-GT for the first time just this past June at
Mid-Ohio.
"It's a great
feeling to win at Daytona," said Westby, who had the honor of riding the No. 13
Yamaha for the final 11 minutes of the race.
"I thought it was going to be a battle until the end but we'll take it
this way. I'd like to thank the addition
of the 'J's' - Josh Hayes and Jeff Wood - they really helped us out. I
don't think we could have done it without them."
After swapping the
lead repeatedly with the No. 18 Suzuki for most of the first half of the race,
the No. 13 Yamaha team and riders steadily opened up in the final hours of the
event. They put the No. 18 one lap down
with two hours remaining and all but wrapped up the victory when the
Roadracingworld.com team was forced to replace a right foot peg on its Suzuki
in an extended pit stop just over 50 minutes from the finish. The Westby team went up two laps and Hayes
got on the Yamaha for a final stint to seal the victory with 45 minutes
remaining before handing off to Westby.
"Everybody seemed
pretty excited to have me on the team and I was excited I was able to come out
and ride with these guys, but this was not by any means about me," Hayes said.
"We had four good racers today and everybody did their fastest lap within a
half a second of each other. So many
people that were part of the crew came together for this event. Eight hours is a long race and everybody on
the team did a fantastic job."
Team Roadracingworld.com came up just short in its
bid for a third-straight 8 Hours At Daytona victory but has never finished
lower than second in each of the four races run to date. The team led 67 laps in the first half of the race
but began slightly losing ground to Westby in the final four hours.
"The Westby team ran
a mistake free race, they did a fantastic job and their rider line up was
great," said Ulrich, who is the only rider to finish on the overall podium in
all four runnings of the 8 Hours At Daytona since 2006. "We made mistakes
that got us behind but, no matter what, those guys rode so well today. They
beat us, they beat us fair and square and, you know what, it is actually kind
of fun to have some competition. Who knows, maybe next year we can come back
and see if we can regain the crown. I
feel good and I am proud of Team Roadracingworld.com Suzuki. To be on the podium at Daytona for four years
straight in the eight hour is pretty good.
It was close today but not close enough."
The final overall and GT1 podium spot went to the
debuting No. 49 Touring
Sport Ducshop Ducati 848 of Ryan Elleby, Hawk Mazzotta and Matt Lynn that crossed
the line nine laps behind the winners. The
team ran in third place for nearly the entire race and the solid first-time
result was just part of the Touring Sport Ducshop team's great day. The team also clinched the GT2 Championship
with the No. 77 Touring Sport Ducshop Ducati PS1000LE that scored a
series-leading fifth win of the year with riders Pete Friedland, Brad Phillips
and Corey Rech.
"It
feels great, and I'll tell you, I've been racing with the Touring Sport Ducshop
team for four years now and we couldn't have a better group of guys and gals,"
said Friedland, who also scored a class win with the team in the 2007 8 Hours
At Daytona. "This race tonight was very
nerve wracking. After we had a little
problem with the 38 bike, we knew the 77 would have to take it home. We were pretty nerve wracked right down to
the end."
The
No. 77 ran in second place behind its sister No. 38 Touring Sport Ducshop
Ducati PS1000LE for most of the race but moved up to the front when their
teammates were forced to the pits for an extended stop with one hour to go. The
No. 38 fell from the lead and lost 10 laps before a faulty ECU was discovered.
The
No. 23 KRM Racing by Motocorse Ducati PS1000LE of Chris Boy,
Barrett Long and Fernando Ferrer finished second after slipping past the
stricken No. 38 in the final hour.
Despite the late disappointment, team owner/rider Frank Shockley, Dario
Marchetti and Brian Stokes recovered to finish third on the No. 38 Ducati as
the Italian manufacturer swept all three podium spots in GT2.
"With this race, it's not over until it's over," said Shockley, who was
on the No. 38 on Saturday. "We had the issue where the ECU went bad,
but
we were able to win the race and the title with the 77 so it all worked
out
good in the end. We've won a championship
three years in a row, right here at this race in Daytona. It always
comes down to the end, in 2007,
2008 and 2009. Three-peat!"
The No. 9 Pair-A-Nines Kawasaki EX650 of Jay Springsteen,
Scott Ryan and Taylor Knapp came into the race as the only other team still
alive in the GT2 championship battle.
The team overcame an early-race spill and was beginning to mount a
challenge on the leading Ducatis only to have its Kawasaki slow with engine trouble just before
the five-hour mark. The Pair-A-Nines team
replaced the engine in less than 45 minutes and came back to finish fourth in
GT2 despite never really being able to mount a challenge for the championship
in the finale.
"It was great racing with the Ducati guys all year long,"
Springsteen said. "They had the pressure on us and we had the pressure on
them. It made it exciting throughout the
whole year. We had fun and it was great
racing with those guys all year long. Our guys did a great job today, we didn't
quite get it done, but we just love being able to race."
The Touring Sport Ducati team and the GT1 championship winning Crozier Motorsports team were honored for their respective championships in post-race ceremonies. Crozier and his team clinched the GT1 title one race ago at New Jersey Motorsports Park and finished a solid fifth in the 8 Hours with teammates Scott Jensen, David Estok and Michael Barnes.
"It was a less stressful weekend, for sure, because we didn't have to worry about a championship," said Crozier. "We already had that taken care of, so we were here to do the best we could and try to win but it just didn't work out. The season started out really slow, but it worked out halfway through and we prevailed. We were consistent on the podium. We won two races, but we were on the podium almost every weekend so that helped out for the championship. I'm absolutely looking forward to next season. We've got a lot of new things coming, new bikes, new sponsors, a lot more to come."
Complete 8 Hours At Daytona results, news and final AMA Pro SunTrust Moto-GT point standings can be found at www.amaproracing.com. Return to Top