AMA Supermoto Championship
Category | |
---|---|
Last Constructors' champion | KTM |
Official website | www |
The AMA Supermoto Championship was an AMA Pro Racing-sanctioned Supermoto motorcycle racing series that ran from 2003 through 2009.[1] AMA Pro Racing was a wholly owned subsidiary of the American Motorcyclist Association. An amateur national championship, known as AMA Supermoto and sanctioned by the American Motorcyclist Association as AMA Sports,[2] was launched in 2013 with USA Supermoto as the new promoter.[3]
Classes
Main classes consisted of Supermoto (also later known as Supermoto Premier) for 400-450cc, four-stroke, single-cylinder motorcycles, and Supermoto Unlimited, open to two-stroke, single-cylinder motorcycles 490cc and greater, four-stroke, single-cylinder motorcycles.[4] Support classes included the Honda Junior Supermoto Challenge with riders on identically prepared Honda CRF150Fs,[5][6] and, beginning in 2005, Supermoto Lites for 200-250cc, four-stroke, single-cylinder motorcycles.[7]
Course design
Racecourses were designed with approximately 80% pavement and 20% dirt, with jumps, whoop sections, and a flat-track-style turn. Courses were between .6 and 1.1 miles in length.[8] Tabletop and Kicker "Urbancross" jumps were designed, fabricated, and then built on-site by ASD (a subsidiary of All-Access Staging and Productions) and these added an extra Motocross dimension to the paved portion of racecourses.[9]
Venues
Unique to the AMA Supermoto championship were the use of temporary race venues in addition to traditional, purpose-built courses. Temporary venues such as
2003 Championship Format
The 2003 Red Bull AMA Supermoto Championship (6 rounds) was structured in a winner-take-all format in order to attract riders from other motorcycle racing disciplines who may not have otherwise been able to compete in the new series. The first five rounds were used as qualifying rounds for the final round, the Red Bull Supermoto-A-Go-Go held at the
2004–2009
In 2004 and subsequent years, the Supermoto Championship was a traditional cumulative points championship with points from each round contributing to the championship.[13]
Television
The series was broadcast tape-delayed on the
AMA Supermoto champions
Year | Supermoto | Supermoto Unlimited | Supermoto Lites | Junior Supermoto |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | 1) Ben Bostrom (Honda) 2) Doug Henry (Yamaha) 3) Jeff Ward (Honda) |
1) Grant Langston (KTM) 2) Benny Carlson (KTM) 3) Kurt Nicoll (KTM) |
N/A |
1) Mike Alessi (Honda) 2) Jamie Siever (Honda) 3) Aaron King (Honda) |
2004 | 1) Jeff Ward (Honda) 2) Jürgen Künzel (KTM) 3) Doug Henry (Honda) |
1) Kurt Nicoll (KTM) 2) Micky Dymond (KTM) 3) Benny Carlson (KTM) |
N/A |
1) Chad Cose (Honda) 2) Justin Hanna (Honda) 3) Taylor Clemons (Honda) |
2005 | 1) Jürgen Künzel (KTM) 2) Jeff Ward (Honda) 3) Chris Filmore (Honda) |
1) Micky Dymond (KTM) 2) Darryl Atkins (KTM) 3) Troy Herfoss (Husqvarna) |
1) Mark Burkhart (Yamaha) 2) Brandon Currie (Kawasaki) 3) Joel Albrecht (Kawasaki) |
1) UNK (Honda) 2) UNK (Honda) 3) Michael Johnson (Honda) |
2006 | 1) Jeff Ward (Honda) 2) Doug Henry (Yamaha) 3) Chris Filmore (Honda) |
1) Benny Carlson (KTM) 2) Micky Dymond (KTM) 3) David Baffeleuf (KTM) |
1) Cassidy Anderson (Honda) 2) Brandon Currie (Yamaha) 3) Alex Thiebault (Husqvarna) |
N/A |
2007 | 1) Mark Burkhart (Yamaha) 2) Jeff Ward (Honda) 3) Troy Herfoss (KTM) |
1) Benny Carlson (Aprilia) 2) Kurt Nicoll (KTM) 3) Robert Loire (Husaberg) |
1) Brandon Currie (Yamaha) 2) David Pingree (Honda) 3) Adam Cini (Husqvarna) |
N/A |
2008 | 1) Troy Herfoss (KTM) 2) Chris Fillmore (KTM) 3) Cassidy Anderson (Honda) |
1) Steve Drew (KTM) 2) Darryl Atkins (Aprilia) 3) Josh Chisum (KTM) |
1) Brandon Currie (Yamaha) 2) Matt Burton (Yamaha) 3) Joel Albrecht (Kawasaki) |
N/A |
2009 | 1) Sylvain Bidart (Honda) 2) Mark Burkhart (KTM) 3) Brandon Currie (Yamaha) |
1) Kurt Nicoll (KTM) 2) Steve Drew (KTM) 3) Justin Ross (KTM) |
1) Danny Casey (Honda) 2) Matt Burton (KTM) 3) Dustin Hoffman (Honda) |
N/A |
References
- ^ Assoc, American Motorcyclist (August 2003). "Supermoto Gains Momentum". American Motorcyclist. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on April 21, 2015. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "AMA Supermoto". Archived from the original on August 24, 2016. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
- ^ "New 2003 Supermoto Championship series announced". Motorsport.com. March 7, 2003. Archived from the original on July 14, 2015. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ "Honda Red Riders Junior Supermoto Challenge Begins Its Third Year". SupercrossKing.com. April 6, 2005. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ DiSanto, Ralph. "Honda Junior Supermoto Program Discontinued for 2006". Retrieved November 24, 2013.
- ^ "2005 AMA Supermoto schedule announced". Motocross Action Magazine. March 24, 2005. Archived from the original on December 13, 2013. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ "AMA Launches Super Moto Series". RoadracingWorld.com. March 6, 2003. Retrieved November 21, 2013.
- ^ Hoffman, Scott. "All Access Portable Supermoto Ramps" (PDF). SMR. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 5, 2008. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
- ^ Pak, Mark (November 11, 2004). "Veteran Ward ready to cap amazing Supermoto comeback". USA Today. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ "Hiemer wins AMA Supermoto Championship debut". ESPN. June 11, 2006. Retrieved November 21, 2013.
- ^ "Who Qualified For AMA SuperMoto Final". Roadracing World Magazine | Motorcycle Riding, Racing & Tech News. November 11, 2003. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
- ^ "AMA Pro Racing Announces 2004 Supermoto Schedule, Details". Roadracing World. May 26, 2004. Retrieved November 22, 2013.
- ^ "AMA Supermoto Championship To Air on OLN Starting in August". Retrieved November 21, 2013.