
E X P E R I E N C E VIRGINIA - AUGUST 1-3, 2025









E X P E R I E N C E VIRGINIA - AUGUST 1-3, 2025
Thank you for joining us at VIRginia International Raceway!
We appreciate that you entrusted us to deliver another unforgettable VIP Superfan Experience. While I’ve always known what a special place VIR is, I’ll admit I was a bit nervous about the VIP Pagoda room. But, once on site and introduced to the remarkable staff, the nervousness quickly faded. It was refreshing to see so many familiar faces among our returning VIPs, and the lineup of guest speakers was nothing short of phenomenal. For many racers, VIR truly feels like home—and it was great to be “back home”.
One of the most rewarding parts of this experience is meeting incredible people from all walks of life, united by a shared passion for racing and MotoAmerica. At VIR, we hosted six championship classes competing across Saturday and Sunday. One standout was Royal Enfield’s Build.Train.Race. (BTR) program. Speaking of “all walks of life”, the BTR program certainly embraces that sentiment.
Over 70 women from around the world, including Brazil, submitted resumes to be considered for two seasons in MotoAmerica’s BTR program. As their final races of the 2025 season unfolded, we welcomed them into our VIP suite. Many of these racers didn’t grow up riding motorcycles, unlike many of their peers. They come from vastly different backgrounds and lifestyles, yet they share one thing: an unwavering commitment to becoming racers. With three-time World Champion Freddie Spencer as their mentor and riding coach, and Royal Enfield’s support behind them, they’ve been given a life-changing opportunity.
As Sunday’s race concluded, we were honored to celebrate on the championship podium with Kira Knebel (1st), Miranda Cain (2nd), and Shea MacGregor (3rd). Eight of the twelve racers will be graduating from the program, and eight new women will be selected for the 2026 season, tentatively kicking off at Barber Motorsports Park.
We hope your time at VIR was as memorable for you as it was for us. Many of the weekend’s highlights are captured in this VIP Superfan E-Magazine—please enjoy and feel free to share it with friends.
Next up: Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on August 16 through 17 in Mansfield, Ohio. Catch all the action on MotoAmerica Live+ or now streaming on Peacock.
Best
Regards, Ron “Slicer”Heben
The Pagoda Suite was an ideal setting for the likes of Tommy Hayden, Benjamin Smith, Jake Gagne, Chris Kimball, Blake Davis and Phillp Tonn to meet up with our Superfans!
Everyone loves being able to go to the pre-race Superbike activities on Saturday afternoon. After the start of the race, everyone had the thrill of experiencing the amazing speeds of the Superbikes on the front straightaway.
Always an exciting time to have Bobby Fong, Cameron Beaubier and Josh Herrin enjoying the
Superbike post-race podium celebration with our VIP Superfans.
Sunday morning was filled with several meet and greets. Always a plus to get into MotoAmerica’s race control, or Timing & Scoring, being entertained by Greg White and Jason Pridmore, or stepping into the Vance and Himes Transporter or checking out what makes the Beaubier’s Tytler BMW tick!
Motovation Supersport Race 2 allowed our VIPs to get up close with several of the “best of the best” before the start of the race.
Strack Racing Yamaha’s Mathew Scholtz may be getting on a roll, taking wins in both races and taking over the points lead! Here we enjoy the celebration with Mathew, PJ Jacobsen and local hero Blake Davis!
Random notes, comments, statistics, musings, and bits of trivia from MotoAmerica Superbikes at VIRginia:
There were 12 races held over the past weekend at VIRginia International Raceway, and seven riders won those races.
Alessandro Di Mario led the way with wins in SC-Project Twins Cup races one and two, and he also scored a victory on Sunday in Parts Unlimited Talent Cup By Motul race two. The 16-year-old sensation would have had a perfect weekend with four wins out of four races, and across two race classes—not to mention that he wrapped up the 2025 Twins Cup Championship—but a renegade quick-shifter linkage decided to find out how things would go for Di Mario with his bike stuck in fourth gear.
As the late, great Marvin Lee Aday (AKA Michael Lee Aday, AKA Meat Loaf) used to sing, “Two Out Of Three Ain’t Bad,” so three out of four, as in race wins for Di Mario, is pretty darn good.
Bobby Fong, JD Beach, and Mathew Scholtz each swept both races in their respective classes, with Fong notching two more Superbike race wins to bring his winning streak to four, while Beach showed total dominance in Stock 1000 with his two impressive wins, and Scholtz won both Motovation Supersport races to take over the Championship lead by seven points over PJ Jacobsen.
The other three riders, Hank Vossberg (Talent Cup race one winner), Camille Conrad (race one winner in Royal Enfield Build.Train. Race.), and Kira Knebel (BTR race two winner) all completed the septet of riders who stood on the top steps of the podium at VIR.
Knebel, by the way, was awarded the number-one plate and trophy for winning the 2025 Build.Train.Race. Championship. The Texan, who now lives in Iowa, will next race her Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 during the Barber Vintage Festival at Barber Motorsports Park on October 3 through 5. Knebel will be joined by some of the other BTR racers, including Championship runner-up Miranda Cain and third-place BTR Championship finisher Shea MacGregor.
Since MotoAmerica hadn’t raced at VIR since 2022, it seemed fairly certain that lap records would be broken in all five of the race classes that were in action over the past weekend. Not only that, but the Superbike lap record and Superbike race lap record that Ben Spies set way back in 2008 would certainly be eclipsed.
Nope, it didn’t happen. “Elbowz” still holds both Superbike lap records at VIR. It’s a different era for Superbike racing in America. Not to cast aspersions on Spies—after all, he’s a World Superbike Champion and MotoGP race winner—but the fuel used in MotoAmerica doesn’t quite pack the same punch as the fuel, and associated bike tuning, that Spies enjoyed in AMA Superbike racing back in the late 2000s.
No new lap records were set in Stock 1000, either (what is the deal with these literbikes?), but that doesn’t mean that no lap records were toppled.
On the contrary, in Supersport, the aforementioned Mathew Scholtz did a fastest lap of 1:25.964 in Sunday’s race two, which was both a new lap record and race lap record.
Also aforementioned, Alessandro Di Mario set a new race lap record in Twins Cup race two with a 1:30.544 that didn’t quite break Jody Barry‘s blistering class lap record of 1:30.082 that he set during Twins Cup Qualifying 2 back in 2022.
Notice a pattern here? Aforementioned Hank Vossberg set the lap record and race lap record in Talent Cup during Sunday’s race two when he did a fastest lap of 1:34.858
And, finally, Miranda Cain wrapped up her two-year stint in Build.Train.Race. by setting a new lap record and race lap record of 1:46.428 in Sunday’s BTR race two.
Alphonse & Gaston
What exactly were Alessandro Di Mario and Hank Vossberg doing on the final lap of Sunday’s Talent Cup race two, anyway? Neither rider wanted to lead coming out of the final turn on the final lap, so their racecraft ended up looking like an old comedy routine.
“After you, kind sir.”
“No, my good fellow, please, after you.”
It reminded me of Frederick Burr Opper‘s ages-old comic strip, “Alphonse & Gaston,” which was later mimicked by Warner Bros. with their “Goofy Gophers” cartoons. Whether it’s two overly polite Frenchmen, a pair of excessively courteous rodents with British accents, or Ale & Hank, I’d seen that show before, and it was just as comical to watch play out on the racetrack as it was on Saturday morning TV when I was a kid eagerly shoveling milk-laden spoonsful of Apple Jacks into my mouth while partaking in Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies.
Hammer Time
I don’t think there was anyone in the paddock or among the fans, save for possibly a couple of competitors, who wasn’t absolutely thrilled to see Sean Dylan Kelly and Richie Escalante both make the podium in Sunday’s Superbike race two.
The pair of teammates went at it “Team Hammer & Tongs” during that race aboard their Vision Wheel M4 ECSTAR Suzukis, and Kelly barely pipped Escalante for the runner-up spot on the podium.
We held our breath for a bit at the beginning of the post-race press conference, anticipating that the two hot-blooded Latinos might continue their on-track battle with a few jabs back-and-forth on the microphones. But, it was all sweetness and light between the two fan favorites. They raced each other hard, but fair, and they were both overjoyed to share the podium with each other and make history for Team Hammer
Parrish The Thought We had a fair number of crashes at VIR, and of course, even one is too many. Our best wishes go out to those riders who suffered tipovers or worse and hurt themselves as well as their bikes. It’s a part of racing that we really hate to see, but kudos to the track marshals, the Roadracing World Action Fund, and the motorcycle safety gear manufacturers for helping to protect MotoAmerica’s most important assets: the riders.
One of those riders who had a mishap (was it ever) and suffered injuries was 2018 Twins Cup Champion Chris Parrish, who is still mixing it up with the young guns while constantly doing development work on race bikes and motorcycle bodywork.
Parrish led SC-Project Twins Cup practice on Friday, giving him proof of concept that his Ghetto Customs Aprilia RS 660 is fast. Unfortunately in Saturday morning’s Qualifying 2 session (Friday afternoon’s Qualifying 1 session was canceled due to weather), Parrish lost rear grip on a stilldamp section of the track and had a stratospheric high-side that did not feel good on the man’s sprightly, yet 48-year-old, body.
With a badly banged-up shoulder and a ballooned-up left hand, the tough Tennesseean lined up for Saturday’s race one with his teeth clenched and his mind focused. He advanced from 24th on the starting grid to ninth place on lap two. Then, suddenly, his bike had a technical issue, which forced him to pull off the track and end his day. He wasn’t ready to end his weekend, however.
But, a fitful Saturday night’s sleep and time for his injuries to fully manifest themselves led to him making the right decision to skip Sunday’s racing in favor of heading home to heal up and try again, hopefully at New Jersey Motorsports Park for the final round of the 2025 Twins Cup Championship on September 26 through 28.
“Broken rib, cracked collarbone, plus old-man soreness,” Parrish wrote on Facebook. “The roadside doctor prescribed ‘whiskey and do nothing’ for a couple days.
“I believe I created a monster in my little garage. The dyno told me what I had, but the racetrack told the truth. Sum bitch is a rocket! I rode it like it was stolen until the bastard spit me into next Tuesday! But, it’s a good baseline for the future of the (Ghetto Customs race) program and maybe a full season in 2026.
“Thank you to all of you who reached out with messages, texts, and phone calls. So glad I had (partner) Beth (Braun) and her mom with me plus everyone else who helped me get loaded up for the ride home. Plus, (Dr.) Carl (Price) and his guys for the evaluation.
“Old man is fine, and to those (to whom) I owe parts, gimme a few extra days to heal. Cheers!”
Cheers, indeed. “Cheers” and thank you to all the fans who turned out in person for our MotoAmerica Superbikes at VIRginia event. We had a huge crowd who clearly enjoyed the racing and the perfect racing weather. Also, thumbs-up to everyone who streamed us on MotoAmerica Live+.
It was easy to see by all of the smiling faces that it was great to be back at VIRginia International Raceway, especially for local racers, Blake Davis, Brianna Cutler and Benjamin Smith.
Enjoy these videos from VIRginia International Raceway