In a startling turn of events, the Western Regional AMA Supercross
Lites class’ championship has changed hands and was taken over by
Yamaha of Troy’s Jason Lawrence, of Carlsbad, Calif., last Saturday
night at San Diego’s Qualcomm Stadium. Lawrence captured his third
consecutive AMA Supercross Lites class win and removed Rockstar Makita
Suzuki’s Ryan Dungey, of Belle Plaine, Minn., from the enviable
number-one position. This Saturday night for as low as $10, fans can
watch this epic duel go down at Houston’s Reliant Stadium. The AMA
Supercross class race will air on CBS Sports Sunday, February 17 at
Noon, and the AMA Supercross Lites class race will air on SPEED Friday,
February 22 at Noon.
As Dungey, who had a 22-point lead earlier this season, proved last
weekend, the lead can change with one bad race. He left Anaheim 1 with a
three-point lead over Jason Lawrence. He went into Anaheim 2 nine points
ahead of Lawrence. Heading into San Francisco, he was 22 points ahead of
Broc Hepler. He led Dan Reardon by 19 points heading into Anaheim 3, and
at San Diego he left two points behind Lawrence.
“I was keeping tabs on where Ryan (Dungey) was during the main
event,” said Lawrence after last weekend’s race. “He crashed for
the third weekend in a row. He cracked under the pressure. We have two
more races to go, and I am up by two points. I am trying to win this
championship. I can have the target on my back for the rest of my life
because I do ok under pressure.”
Media day is Thursday from Noon-2:00 in the press box at Reliant
Stadium. Current Western Regional AMA Supercross Lites points leader
Jason Lawrence be on hand for interviews and photo opportunities.
Joining Lawrence will be his teammate Zach Osborne and the Cernic’s
Kawasaki team, featuring Jeff Gibson.
Tickets are available at Reliant Stadium, all Ticketmaster locations
or by phone at 713-629-3700. Extreme and Club level tickets are
available for $40 adults/kids (2-10 years old); Gold Circle tickets $25
adults/$10 kids; Treadhead Seats $10. Free pit passes are available at
Texas Yamaha dealers.
In the AMA Supercross class, Team San Manuel’s Chad Reed, of Tampa,
Fla., brings a solid, yet vulnerable 35-point lead in the championship
points race to Houston. Reed is a two-time AMA Supercross class winner
at Houston.
Reed was challenged by Red Bull Honda’s Davi Millsaps, of Cairo,
Ga., last weekend in San Diego where the two traded positions throughout
the AMA Supercross class main event.
“I was glad to get my first holeshot in the AMA Supercross
class,” said Millsaps. “Chad (Reed) and I were dicing back and forth
in the main event, and it was good to ride his pace. He was going fast,
and I have to give it up to him.”
On lap 16, Reed secured the lead and rode to his fifth win of the
season and his fifth win at Qualcomm Stadium.
“I am happy to get the win here tonight in San Diego,” said Reed.
“I won every race in California this year, and I have never done that
before. Now that we are leaving the west coast, I get to go home to
Florida and sleep in my own bed. I have to take each race one at a
time.”
Equally impressive was Monster Energy® Kawasaki’s Tim Ferry, of
Dade City, Fla., who staged a late-race comeback and passed Millsaps on
lap 13. It was Ferry’s first second-place finish of the season.
Millsaps finished third.
“I felt good after the Anaheim 3 race, and the momentum carried
over here to San Diego,” said Ferry. “I hope it keeps going into
Houston. I am adapting better each race, and I am closer than I have
ever been to getting a win. I hope that day comes soon.”
As the historic Monster Energy® Supercross returns to Reliant
Stadium this weekend, it will mark the 42nd time the gate has dropped in
Houston. During last year’s AMA Supercross class main event, Ferry
carried the lead through turn one before being passed by Honda’s Kevin
Windham. Kawasaki’s James Stewart, of Haines City, Fla., worked his
way through the pack after starting in sixth place. By the sixth lap,
Stewart moved into the lead and rode to victory.
“I had a big crash earlier in practice and knew that this track
could come back and bite me,” said Stewart from the podium last year.
“I have a points lead but can’t afford to back down because things
can get bad when you start to let up.”
En route to winning his first-ever Western regional AMA Supercross
Lites class title, Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto, of Poulsbo, Wash.,
started the main event by winning the Holeshot Award narrowly edging out
the Yamaha of Jason Lawrence, of Carlsbad, Calif. Villopoto held the
lead for the opening five laps before a crash on lap six handed the lead
to Lawrence.
Lawrence held down the top spot until being chased down by Villopoto,
who regrouped and held on to take the win, his fifth of the season.
Lawrence finished second while Honda’s Josh Grant, of Riverside,
Calif., was third.
“(A lapped rider) just jumped right off the table top, hit a tuff
block and went down right in front of me,” said Villopoto in reference
to last year’s crash on lap six. “I had nowhere to go and ran right
into him. I got back up and chased (Lawrence) down for the win.”
Since 1974 Houston has been on the AMA Supercross class schedule.
From 1974-2002 the Houston Astrodome hosted the race, and in 2003, the
race was moved to Reliant Stadium. The first AMA Supercross class race
in Houston was on March 15, 1974 where Jim Pomeroy earned the inaugural
race win. In AMA Supercross Lites competition, Eddie Warren won the
first lites race held in Houston on April 20, 1985. Jeremy McGrath, the
all-time winningest supercross rider, shares the all-time win record
along with Mark Barnett with five.