Road Atlanta VIP Magazine

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E X P E R I E N C E

GUEST SPEAKERS

Kyle Wyman, Jake Gagne, Jeremy McWilliams, Josh Herrin, Bradley Smith, Blake Davis, Aaron Yates, David Aldana, Corey Alexander, Greg White, Jason Pridmore. Larry Meyer, Jason Kingham, Dr. Carl Price, and the group from Abbott Laboratories

Slicer’s Corner

What an unforgettable weekend! MotoAmerica’s thrilling race series brought the twisty, challenging Road Atlanta circuit to life, delivering top-tier entertainment across five championship classes. With close to 200 rider entries, this was a motorsports event like no other, rain or shine!

From the premier Superbike class to the crowd-favorite Mission King Of The Baggers, along with Motivation Supersport, Stock 1000, and the Mission Super Hooligan National Championship, each class showcased incredible skill and determination, leaving fans with memories that will last a lifetime.

Celebrating with Legends and Soon-To-Be Legends!

We hope you enjoyed the exceptional views and hospitality from the Michelin Tower suite, whether you were mingling with our special guests or catching the electrifying straightaway speeds.

Who could not appreciate the interactions with the likes of Kyle Wyman, Jake Gagne, Jeremy McWilliams, Josh Herrin, Bradley Smith, Blake Davis, Aaron Yates, David Aldana, and Corey Alexander? Let us not forget visiting with MotoAmerica TV Commentators Greg White and Jason Pridmore, and MotoAmerica Medical Director Dr. Carl Price and the group from Abbott Laboratories, who introduced us to their innovative, new concussion protocol equipment. Other highlights included joining our Mission King Of The Baggers riders on the podium after Loris Baz got his first hard-fought KOTB victory over Kyle Wyman on Saturday. Sunday was just as thrilling with five races and closing out the weekend by celebrating with the Superbike and Mission King Of The Baggers stars during the pre-grid activities and on the podium!

All these amazing moments, and more, are captured in this VIP Superfan magazine, featuring Brian J. Nelson’s epic race images and Sean Bice’s profile about Georgia’s first family of motorcycle road racing, as well as his Duly Noted recap of the weekend’s best action.

It was a remarkable weekend, and thank you for joining us and sharing in the excitement of MotoAmerica at Road Atlanta. Don’t forget to dive into the new features in our VIP Superfan magazine and spread the word with your friends.

Next stop: Road America, May 31–June 2, 2025. We can’t wait to see you there!

Ride fast and stay passionate!

Warm Regards, Best Regards, Ron “Slicer”Heben

The Superbike grid was electric on Sunday! First, a group photo, then Richie Escalante, Cameron Beaubier, Bobby Fong, and Hayden Gillim happily posed for pictures with our thrilled VIP Superfans.

What a special day! First, a group photo, then being on the Superbike grid beside legends like Sean Dylan Kelly, Jake Gagne, Richie Escalante, and Josh Herrin, or even squeezing in with our MA brand ambassadors!

Cameron Beaubier absolutely delivered with back-to-back Superbike victories— what thrilling performances! And with Bobby Fong and reigning champ Josh Herrin putting in solid rides, the podium was special. The energy from the racers and our VIPs made the celebrations even sweeter!

An incredible experience—having a suite full of heroes was truly special. The VIPs’ energy and appreciation, evident in these images, tell the story.

Duly Noted

Random notes, comments, statistics, musings, and bits of trivia from the MotoAmerica Superbikes at Road Atlanta event:

Eight is Enough

Well, it finally happened. While lap records continue to fall every year in virtually every competing race class at virtually every round of the MotoAmerica Championship, there was one record that just wouldn’t surrender. Garrett Gerloff set the Supersport lap record at Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta eight years ago when he circulated the 12-turn, 2.54-mile, North Georgia road course aboard his Monster Energy/Yamalube/Y.E.S./Graves Yamaha YZF-R6 in 1:27.860 during Supersport race two on Sunday, April 30, 2017.

On Saturday, May 3, 2025, during Supersport Qualifying 2, Mathew Scholtz ripped around Road Atlanta aboard his Strack Racing Yamaha YZF-R9, and did a fastest lap of 1:27.746, which eclipsed Gerloff’s previous lap record by just 114 milliseconds. For reference, humans blink their eyes in anywhere from 100 to 400 milliseconds.

So, it took eight years for Scholtz to break Gerloff’s record in the blink of an eye. You blinked your eyes after you just read that, didn’t you?

Below are the other lap records that were set at Road Atlanta this past weekend:

Stock 1000: Jayson Uribe, 1:25.986 – Lap Record & Race Lap Record – Race 1 (5/3/2025)

King Of The Baggers: Kyle Wyman, 1:28.914 – Race Lap Record – Challenge (5/3/2025)

Super Hooligan: Cory West, 1:29.554 – Lap Record & Race Lap Record – Race 1 (5/3/2025)

Mr. Smith Goes To The Top Five

For as long as MotoAmerica has existed, Benjamin Smith has been racing in our series. He has steadily climbed the development ladder from the KTM RC Cup where he won the class championship in 2017, to Supersport, to Stock 1000, and finally to Superbike. This season, he’s aboard a FLO4LAW/SBU Racing Yamaha YZF-R1, and on Saturday in Superbike race one at Road Atlanta, he notched his first career top-five finish in MotoAmerica’s premier race class. Smith’s result in Sunday’s race two was not too shabby, either. He followed up his P5 with a very respectable P7. Props to Mr. Smith for reaching another superlative in his professional road racing career.

Let’s Hear It For The Velociraptors

What do you do when you’ve got the number-one plate on your Superbike? Well, you’ve just got to go faster than everybody else. And, that’s exactly what Warhorse HSBK Racing Ducati’s defending Superbike Champion Josh Herrin did on Sunday in Superbike race two, Aboard

his Ducati Panigale V4 R, Herrin achieved a highest trap speed of 188.3 miles per hour on the opening circulation of the 19-lap race.

In Stock 1000 competition, OrangeCat Racing’s Andrew Lee went 183.5 miles per hour on lap four of Saturday’s eight-lap literbike race one.

Tyler O’Hara rode his S&S/Indian Motorcycle Challenger to a highest trap speed of 170.0 miles per hour on lap two of Sunday’s Mission King Of The Baggers race two.

Supersport rider Cameron Petersen had a tough weekend at Road Atlanta (more on that in a moment), but he recorded the highest trap speed in MotoAmerica’s middleweight class when he went 168.0 miles per hour on his second lap aboard his Celtic/Economy Lube+Tire/Warhorse HSBK Ducati Panigale V2 during Sunday’s 18-lap Supersport race two

And, finally, in the Mission Super Hooligan National Championship, KWR Harley-Davidson’s Cody Wyman achieved a highest trap speed of 161.3 miles per hour, and he did it not once, but twice: on the opening goaround of Saturday’s five-lap race one and once again on the first of Sunday’s six-lap race two.

Karma Chameleon

Adversity certainly plays a major role in road racing, there is absolutely no doubt about that. It’s caused many a hapless rider to ask “Why me?” either quietly and to themselves or out in the open with arms raised to the sky pleading to the cosmos, to the Creator, or to whatever karmic forces seem to be messing with their juju.

Two riders who just seem to be continually getting tested by the fates are Cam Petersen and James Rispoli. How many tipovers, how many bike problems, and how many unfortunate injuries does the exceedingly likeable Cam P. have to sustain before his fortunes take a turn for the better? Already suffering from a host of physical maladies due to crashes, some of which were not his fault, Petersen, who is racing for two different teams on two vastly different bikes and in two different race classes, now reportedly added a shoulder injury to his challenges as a result of another incident that wasn’t caused by himself.

And, yet, Cam P. toughed it out again, somehow, some way. He focused all his energy and courage on Supersport and rode his Celtic/Economy Lube+Tire/Warhorse HSBK Ducati Panigale V2 to an incredible, fourth-place finish in Saturday’s race one, then he followed that up with a fifth-place result in Sunday’s race two, while also achieving the aforementioned highest trap speed in the class. Petersen is proving that you can overcome bad karma through pure guts, determination, and a whole lot of racing talent.

Superbike rider Benjamin Smith’s fifth- and seventh-place finishes at Road Atlanta showed the positive effects of years of hard work and determination. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
He’s back, baby. It was an emotional win for two-time Stock 1000 Champion Andrew Lee and his OrangeCat Racing team. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

James Rispoli also seems to be currently stuck on the bad side of the yin and yang of life. So far this season, Rispoli has DNFed in three of the four Mission King Of The Baggers races. He also DNFed in both Mission Super Hooligan National Championship races at Road Atlanta. On the bright side, however, Rispoli did notch a fourth-place result, finishing just off the podium in the Road Atlanta event-concluding KOTB race two. With the Harley-Davidson x Dynojet Factory Racing team heading to their home round at Road America at the end of this month, here’s hoping that JR43 can turn things around at America’s National Park of Speed.

One rider who had been suffering for far too long in some kind of negative-karma, alternate universe was Andrew Lee. We’re certain he didn’t make a pact with some pitchfork-wielding beelzebub in exchange for the two consecutive Stock 1000 Championships he won in 2018 and 2019. It was his obvious talent and racecraft that garnered him those two titles. But, talk about a rider who has paid his dues. The past few years have not been kind to road racer Lee other than the fact that he did land a nugget of a GF in Mallory Dobbs. But, this year, he signed with OrangeCat Racing, a team that really has things figured out. Already highly successful in MotoAmerica for the past couple of years, OrangeCat brought Lee into the fold as a teammate to incumbent team rider Jayson Uribe, who is a long-time friend of Lee and they have raced against each other since they were little kids growing up in NorCal.

Armed with a fast motorcycle prepared by a solid crew, Lee came into Road Atlanta with a new outlook and a promise to reward his team for believing in him. On Saturday morning, Lee earned the pole for the weekend’s two Stock 1000 races and then proceeded to win Saturday afternoon’s race one over his teammate Uribe, who finished second. It was Lee’s first MotoAmerica victory since September 22, 2019, at Barber Motorsports Park. On Sunday, the order flipped, and Lee finished second to Uribe, which makes OrangeCat’s two riders tied at the top of the Stock 1000 Championship with four rounds and eight races left in their season.

That sounds like some really good karma to me.

Falling Down

Road Atlanta was a rough one for quite a few of MotoAmerica’s riders. Along with the aforementioned Cameron Petersen, others who crashed and suffered injuries (thankfully, none of them life-threatening), included CJ LaRoche, Corey Alexander, and Rocco Landers. Landers got caught up in the incident when Kyle Ohnsorg crashed out of Mission King Of The Baggers race two through no fault of his own.

To the above riders, as well as to any others who I didn’t mention, we extend our best wishes for a speedy recovery, and we look forward to seeing you at the next round where your class is scheduled to compete.

What An Adventure For Ventura

It’s been almost exactly two years since Cory Ventura last raced in MotoAmerica. The Californian, who now lives in Missouri, suffered a badly broken left leg in 2023 from a crash at Barber Motorsports Park, and this past weekend, Ventura made it all the way back to the series as the featured rider on the PS Squared Racing team owned and led by MotoAmerica Medical Director Carl Price.

And, to add even more goodness to the feel-good story, Ventura debuted the Aprilia RSV4 1100 in MotoAmerica competition.

After displaying impressive pace in Friday’s Qualifying 1 session, Ventura’s bike had a mechanical issue during Saturday morning’s Qualifying 2. The issue caused Ventura to crash, and he was thankfully unhurt. The same couldn’t be said for the bike, however, which sustained significant damage that could not be repaired, and that led to Ventura being unable to compete in Saturday’s race one.

Ventura’s crew chief Brandon Cole (co-owner of the team with Dr. Price) and lead mechanic William Luce sourced an RSV4 1100 demo bike that had been ridden on the street earlier that day and, like a couple of college kids cramming for their final exams, they pulled an all-nighter transforming the streetbike into a fully race-ready Stock 1000-spec machine.

On Sunday morning, Ventura was able to participate in the Stock 1000 Warm Up session in order to shake down the freshly prepared motorcycle, and then, in the afternoon, he took to the starting grid for Stock 1000 race two. Lapping several seconds faster than he qualified, Ventura was running a pace that would have put him in contention for a top-10 finish. Unfortunately, however, a minor mechanical gremlin forced him to retire from the race.

“Now, we have something to work with,” Ventura said, while reflecting on his weekend.

He and his team are excited to continue developing the RSV4 1100 and carry the momentum from this past weekend into Road America for the next round of the Stock 1000 Championship at the end of this month.

It’s a good thing Supersport rider CJ LaRoche is an experienced airplane pilot because he took flight at Road Atlanta. Thankfully, he was not seriously injured. Photo by Nicole Paulich Photography.
Cory Ventura is in his happy place on the Stock 1000 starting grid after his long journey back to MotoAmerica competition. Photo courtesy of PS Squared Racing.

Enjoy this drone footage of Travis Wyman taking a lap around Road Atlanta

And this aerial view of the track

From

The MotoAmerica paddock is filled with happy people who love being at the races.
the MotoAmerica Tech staff (with rider Owen Williams second from right), to the Crawfords from Sage Tailoring, to Cori Maynard (front, far right) and the Dunlop Tires crew, to Track Marshal Rose Hawley with photographers Mary Sue & Brian J. Nelson, to the Real Steel Honda team, they’re all good people!

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