Roger Lee Hayden to Ride For Michael Jordan Motorsports in 2011

19 11 2010

CHICAGO, IL – November 18, 2010 – (Motor Sports Newswire) – Michael Jordan Motorsports (MJM) is pleased to announce the signing of Roger Lee Hayden.  Hayden will join new MJM rider Ben Bostrom as the team competes for the 2011 AMA Pro Racing National Guard Superbike championship.

Hayden, the youngest member of the famed Hayden racing dynasty, won the 2007 AMA Supersport Championship and returns to U.S. racing after a season on the World Superbike circuit and a Moto 2 wildcard entry at Indianapolis in 2010.

The 26-year-old Hayden boasts 14 career wins since 2004 and has visited the podium no fewer than 38 times in his professional career. He brings with him a renewed hunger to achieve and a desire to prove that he has what it takes to be a race winner.

“Signing Roger Lee bolsters our 2011 championship campaign,” said Kreig Robinson, MJM’s Vice President of Corporate Relations. “We’re excited to get him testing on our equipment as soon as possible. We know that Roger Lee is going to bring the intensity and our crew is ready to unleash his potential.”

“I’m so excited to be a part of Team Jordan! These guys have a great crew and I’m excited to get on the bike as soon as possible. I’m ready to show what I’m made of… It’s also good to be home, there’s no place like home,” said Hayden.

Hayden is a native of Owensboro, Kentucky.

MJM is continuing to monitor the recovery of Aaron Yates, who has decided to take the necessary time to allow his injured right leg to heal.  After successful bone graft surgery in September, Yates is progressing better than expected, according to his doctors.

ABOUT MICHAEL JORDAN MOTORSPORTS:

Legendary NBA star Michael Jordan formed Michael Jordan Motorsports in 2004 as a result of his passion for motorcycle racing.  His mission is to bring a new level of excellence and style to the motorcycle racing industry.

For more information on MJM, please visit www.23race.com, www.twitter.com/23race and http://www.facebook.com/23race.

Michael Jordan Motorsports is proud to partner with: Jordan Brand (a division of Nike), National Guard, American Suzuki, Upper Deck, Hanes, Gatorade, Bazzaz, MMI – Motorcycle Mechanics Institute, Vortex Racing Components, Gemini Racing, K-Tech Suspension-Orient Express Racing, Maxima Racing Oils, K & N Air Filters, Dainese Leathers, AGV Helmets, Ancra Tie-downs, Chicken Hawk Racing Tire Warmers, Armour Bodies, DID Chains, Factory Pro Dyno, Roclun International, STAR Motorcycle School, Motion Pro Tools, Zero Gravity Windscreens, with transportation provided by Eastside Trucking.

SOURCE: Michael Jordan Motorsports

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American Honda Moto2 Team Indy Test

24 08 2010

TORRANCE, CA -August 23, 2010 – (Motor Sports Newswire) – After two days of extensive testing at world-famous Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the final touches have been made to the American Honda Moto2 team’s Honda Moriwaki MD600 in preparation for the team’s debut at the Red Bull Indianapolis GP on August 27 to 29. Under the leadership of team manager Kevin Schwantz and with the support of Kevin Erion and his Erion Racing crewmembers, Roger Lee Hayden completed two successful days of testing on his Honda-powered race machine.

After two previous tests – one at Chuckwalla Valley Raceway and a second at Barber Motorsports Park – it all came together at the team’s final test on August 19-20. “We’ve continued to improve on our lap times and more importantly Roger is getting more and more comfortable on the bike,” said Erion. “We made some changes to the swingarm and suspension settings and also worked on finding additional grip via changes to the shock and clutch setup.”

“Roger is communicating really well with the team, which has helped us identify exactly where our strengths and weaknesses are, and I think he’s riding the bike really well,” said Schwantz. Because motorcycles have not raced at Indy since the last USGP in 2009, the track was a bit “green.”

“Roger felt the track was pretty green on the motorcycle racing line on Thursday morning,” said Schwantz. “A few of us jumped on bikes at lunchtime and laid down 25 laps or so to put rubber on the racing line. When Roger went back out in the afternoon, the grip on the track was better. It all went well and I think we’re in good shape heading into the race next week.”

Hayden returned home to Kentucky after the team’s Barber test last month where he enjoyed a short break from his hectic international travel schedule. Feeling refreshed, Hayden is ready to make the team’s debut at the Indianapolis race.

“Testing went good,” said Hayden. “We learned that the Indianapolis track is a lot more like the first track we tested at (Chuckwalla) and very different from Barber. It’s actually tricky to gauge how fast we are at this point as the Moto2 class has never raced on this track and we don’t have specific lap times that we can measure our speed against. By looking at past MotoGP and 250cc lap times on this track we are able to get an indication of how fast we think we need to be and we believe we’re just about there. I really like riding this bike because it’s fairly small and in the tight, fast corners you can change direction so fast. It hits lines perfectly and I’m able to carry tons of corner speed through turns, which makes it a lot of fun.”

American Honda wishes the team best of luck at the Red Bull Indy GP. While there, please stop by the Honda display and find out about all the activities Honda has planned for the Indy weekend. Honda staff will be on site to sell Drudi-designed replica team T-shirts and hats with the proceeds benefiting the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation® (PBTF). There will also be a photo opportunity for fans to have their portrait taken with the painted team bike, with the proceeds benefiting the PBTF.

Practice for the Moto2 class begins Friday, August 27, with the race taking place on Sunday, August 29.

Photo courtesy of SPEED.

For more information about American Honda’s involvement in the 2010 Red Bull Indianapolis GP, contact: American Honda Motor Co., Inc. (310) 783-3745.

SOURCE: American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

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American Honda Moto2 Team Tests at Barber

7 08 2010

TORRANCE, CA – August 6, 2010 – (Motor Sports Newswire) – The American Honda Moto2 team has just wrapped up two successful days of testing their Honda Moriwaki MD600 at Barber Motorsports Park in Birmingham, AL, in preparation for the team’s debut at the Red Bull Indianapolis GP, August 27 to 29. The team, including rider Roger Lee Hayden, team manager Kevin Schwantz and the Erion Racing crew lead by Kevin Erion, came together to further develop the Honda-600-powered race machine and they made good progress despite the extremely taxing weather conditions.

It didn’t take long for Hayden to get comfortable and lay down good lap times in testing. “The conditions were really, really hot and very humid but Roger’s work ethic shined through and we achieved a lot,” said Schwantz. “Roger’s not afraid of hard work and that’s part of the reason we chose him to be on this team. He doesn’t shy away from hard work and that showed through as he strung together fast laps in miserably hot and humid conditions. Roger was very fast on the track and even though he had fairly used tires on the bike at the end of the day Thursday, he still managed to put down lap times as fast as he’s ever been on this track.”

“Our test at Barber started out a little slow in the hot temperatures but by the end we’d made some really good progress,” said Hayden. “It’s great to be able to get data from the bike while riding on a real racetrack. It gives the team a good base to work with. Working with Kevin Shwantz is great. It’s great having someone of his stature watching over and advising me, someone who knows exactly what I’m doing as a rider. Sometimes what you think you’re doing is very different compared to what you actually are doing on the track and Kevin sees that. Being critiqued by a World Champion like Kevin means I get amazing riding advice, one rider to another. I think this experience is going to make me a better rider not just for this particular project but for my entire career.”

Erion is likewise pleased with how quickly the team has jelled together and with the wealth of 600cc motorcycle knowledge that’s embedded in the team. “Our team has so much 600cc experience and this bike is fundamentally a 600cc Honda motorcycle. There are a few little things about the bike that are different but they’re all in a positive manner. Moriwaki did a great job building the chassis; it’s easy to work on. Our job now is mainly to get Roger comfortable on it so he can go fast and the Moriwaki platform seems to be working well. I have the utmost confidence in Roger and the crew. They are all working well together and striving for the common goal of achieving great results. The test went well as we didn’t have any issues or problems per se; we just kept moving forward every time Roger took to the track. We definitely leave Barber with a lot of confidence in Roger. Our next test will be at Indy a week prior to the race and we will have two days on the track. We actually have a disadvantage compared to the other teams in the series because they’ve been racing in the series all year and know their set-ups. But with the experience our team has gained here and with two days on the Indy track before the race, we think that experience should level the playing field up quite a lot.”

For more information about the American Honda Moto2 effort, contact American Honda Motor Co., Inc. (310) 783-3745.

SOURCE: American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

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Moto2 Background Information

28 07 2010

TORRANCE, CA – July 27, 2010 – (Motor Sports Newswire) – A new category, one that Honda is very proud to have a unique involvement in, is the 2010 Moto2 World Championship. Moto2 replaces the long-running 250 world championship with updated engines and prototype chassis. This highly anticipated debut season will see Honda as the sole engine supplier for the Moto2 class.

Each Moto2 machine will use a powerplant derived from Honda’s supersport-spec CBR600RR, a machine that has shown itself to be one of the most powerful and popular inline 600s in history. This is the first time in Grand Prix world championship racing that a single manufacturer will supply engines for an entire class; this new category is expected to develop into a stepping stone for the MotoGP and other premier classes.

Moto2 will make only one appearance in the U.S. in 2010–at the Red Bull Indianapolis GP at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on August 29.

Roger Lee Hayden

Roger Lee Hayden is one of three motorcycle racing brothers, and all three have risen to the top of the sport. Its no wonder the Hayden family name has captured the hearts and imaginations of motorcycle racing fans across the United States and around the world. Roger, Nicky and Tommy Hayden are racing royalty, the first family of American road racing.

The youngest of the three brothers, Roger Lee followed oldest brother Tommy and middle brother Nicky from the amateur ranks to the professional racing scene, and dominated championships just as his brothers had done. After winning AMA Supersport and Superbike championships in the USA, brother Nicky entered the world stage, and won the coveted MotoGP crown. Tommy won consecutive AMA Supersport championships in 2004 and 2005, relegating young Roger to the runner-up spot those two years. Roger followed that by taking the 2007 AMA Supersport title while also campaigning aboard an AMA Superbike the same season. That year was made all the more memorable when Roger earned the opportunity to race the USGP as a wild card entry, making his MotoGP debut on a factory Kawasaki and finishing a respectable 10th, the highest-placing American in the race.

Prior to earning a spot in the World Superbike championship for the 2010 season, Roger competed in virtually all of the AMA road racing classes, including Superbike, Formula Xtreme, Superstock and Supersport, amassing 13 national career victories–12 of them on 600cc machines.

An impressive track record indeed, and one that earned Roger a huge fan base in the U.S. Yet sit down and chat with Roger you’re taken in by his homespun, all-American demeanor. It’s no facade; raised in rural Kentucky by parents who hold fast to a tight family ethos, Roger’s solid upbringing contributes to his affable personality and ability to roll up his sleeves and get the job done.

Roger began riding at a young age. “Riding and racing is just something I’ve always done,” says Roger. “I started riding when I was about five years old and we always had a track out behind our house. So after school my brothers and I would go riding, and during summer vacation we’d pack up and the whole family would travel to races. I began flat-track racing when I was six, but like any other kid I also did a lot of other sports.”

Like so many American road racers before him, Roger pursued flat-track racing doggedly during his early teen years and in the process he won the AMA Dirt Track Horizon Award in 1998 in recognition of his blossoming skills. He then began road racing professionally immediately after his 16th birthday (per AMA licensing requirements) even though the 1999 season was well underway. He finished an impressive fifth in his first professional race. He completed the remainder of that AMA season and raced in flat-track events, all while juggling a full-time of high school class schedule. Three years later, while most of his classmates were wondering where to begin the first stage of their adult lives, Roger had already earned the status of a seasoned rider and was competing as a top professional racer in AMA Supersport and Superbike championships.

That dual-class status endured for most of his AMA career, and this wealth of professional racing experience–more than a decade now in a rider only 27 years old–makes Roger one of the most formidable and popular competitors in the world. Having joined Pedercini Kawasaki for the 2010 World Superbike Championship, this youngest of the Hayden clan is now learning the ropes in world competition, riding new tracks all across the globe–a veteran rider meeting new challenges head-on.

Winning championships is a Hayden tradition, one Roger fully intends to continue.

Roger Lee Hayden Statistics:

  • 2010
    World Superbike
  • 2009 (partial season due to injury)
    AMA Daytona SportBike – 12th
  • 2008 (partial season due to injury)
    AMA Supersport – 29th
    AMA Superbike – 22nd
  • 2007
    AMA Supersport – 1st
    AMA Superbike – 10th
  • 2006
    AMA Supersport – 5th
    AMA Superbike – 17th
  • 2005
    AMA Supersport – 2nd
    AMA Superstock – 4th
  • 2004
    AMA Supersport – 2nd
    AMA Superstock – 8th
  • 2003
    AMA 600 Supersport – 8th
    AMA Formula Xtreme – 10th
  • 2002
    AMA 600 Supersport – 5th
    AMA Formula Xtreme – 16th
  • 2001
    AMA 600 Supersport – 12th
    AMA Formula Xtreme – 8th
  • 2000
    AMA 600 Supersport – 13th
    AMA 750 Supersport – 5th
  • 1999 (began racing in June)
    AMA 600 Supersport – 21st
    AMA 750 Supersport – 15th

Born: May 30, 1983, Owensboro, Kentucky
Residence: Owensboro, Kentucky
Began Riding: 1988, age 5
First Race: 1989, age 6
Hobbies: Motocross, flat track, hunting, and fishing
Height/Weight: 5′ 7″/145 lbs.
Marital status: SingleKevin Schwantz

Grand Prix World Champion Kevin Schwantz raced only one way–he raced to win. When he made his move for a pass the world held its breath.

Schwantz showed levels of desire, determination and raw courage that’s never been equaled. His heart-stopping style and charismatic personality won him legions of loyal fans worldwide.

By the time he was done, Schwantz amassed 25 Grand Prix wins, 21 lap records, 29 pole positions and the 1993 500cc World Championship. When he made his tearful retirement the FIM felt the loss to the sport was so significant that they retired his signature competition number 34. It’s the first time in the history of the sport that a rider had been so honored.

Schwantz detail:

At the end of the 1984 season, Schwantz was offered a test ride with the Yoshimura Suzuki Superbike team, who promptly signed the Texan to a contract. In his first race for Yoshimura, he won both legs of the 1985 Willow Springs AMA Superbike National. He would finish seventh overall in the championship despite only competing in half the races. He finished second to Eddie Lawson in the 1986 Daytona 200 on the new Suzuki GSX-R750.

The 1987 Superbike National Championship would be remembered by motorcycle fans as the beginning of Schwantz’s fierce rivalry with Wayne Rainey. The two battled throughout the entire season, often coming into contact on the track. Rainey won the AMA Championship but Schwantz won five out of six races.

Schwantz began 1988 by winning the Daytona 200. He then departed for Europe and the 500cc Grand Prix Championship where he won the first Grand Prix he entered as a full time GP rider at the opening round in Suzuka, Japan. Arch rival, Rainey joined in the GP wars shortly thereafter, and for the next six years, the two would continue their intense rivalry on race tracks all across Europe. The late ’80s and early ’90s are remembered as one of the most competitive eras of Grand Prix racing with a field rich in talent that included Rainey, Wayne Gardner, Mick Doohan, Eddie Lawson and Randy Mamola. Schwantz won the hearts of fans worldwide with his do or die riding style.

Schwantz won his only World Championship in 1993, and after suffering through many crashes in1994, the injuries he had incurred over the years began to take their toll on him, as did the career-ending injuries suffered by Rainey at the 1993 Italian Grand Prix that left him paralyzed from the chest down. Schwantz accumulated 25 Grand Prix wins during his career, but retired early in the 1995 season due to his injuries. In a rare display of respect, the FIM retired his racing number (34) as a testament to his popularity.

In the late 1990s Schwantz ran a couple of seasons of the Australian NASCAR Championship before returning home to the USA where for several years he competed in the NASCAR Busch Series, running 18 races with 2 top tens, and touring car races. He currently owns and operates a motorcycle riding school in Birmingham, Alabama. Schwantz was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1999. The FIM named him a Grand Prix “Legend” in 2000.

Schwantz Racing Career/Stats:

Birthdate: June 19, 1964?
Hometown: Houston, Texas?
Residence: Austin, Texas?
Hobbies: Dirt bike riding, cycling, and golf?
Heroes: My Dad, Jim and Uncle, Darryl?
First Motorcycle and at What Age: 1968 Bonanza mini-bike 3.5HP with a Briggs & Stratton engine, 3 years old?

  • Favorite Track: Donington (England)?
  • Favorite Thing about Racing: Winning?
  • Favorite MotoGP Rider: Wayne Rainey?
  • Favorite Olympic Sport: Cycling?
  • Favorite Movie: Stripes?
  • Favorite Food: Mexican?
  • Favorite Musician: Lyle Lovett?
  • Favorite Place on Earth: Home, wherever it might be!
  • 1993 500cc Grand Prix World Champion
  • 25 Grand Prix wins in eight-year GP career
  • 2005 Winner, Final Round, WERA National Endurance with Jamie James & Ted Cobb
  • 2000 Selected as ‘Legend’ by the FIM/Dorna
  • 1999 inducted into AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame
  • Former Yoshimura Suzuki Superbike rider 85-87
  • 1988 Daytona 200 winner
  • First roadraced in 1984 earned factory superbike ride next year
  • Still holds overall track record at Assen GP track from 1991

Kevin Erion/Erion Racing

Kevin Erion is the owner and manager of the Honda- and HRCA-supported Erion Racing, the most successful support-team in the AMA road racing. Erion Racing was American Honda’s premier support team for more than 15 years, winning 16 national championships–many of them with Honda’s CBR600–in the process.

Born in Buffalo, New York, in 1956, Erion moved with his parents to Santa Monica, California, when he was 3 months old. There were plenty of distractions for a kid growing up in Southern California, and the motorcycling bug didn’t get to him until he turned 16. “My parents never really encouraged me to get involved with motorcycles,” Erion remembers, “but they didn’t discourage me either. I owned a couple of dirt bikes in my teens, but it wasn’t until I bought a sport bike in the early ’80s that I started using motorcycles for more than just commuting.” In 1984 Erion began participating in Reg Pridmore’s CLASS riding schools, where higher speeds and the lure of the race track got him thinking about racing competitively. Two years later he took the plunge.

“I entered the La Carerra race in Baja in ’86,” Erion says. “I won my class and almost won the overall. After that, someone told me I should go club racing at Willow Springs.” He decided to give racing a serious go, and his learning curve took a meteoric rise upward. In 1987 he won the local Battle of The Twins Championship, then won the national BoTT title two years in a row, winning in 1989 aboard a tricked-out Honda Hawk GT®. That season marked the emergence of his relationship with Honda and a solid partnership started two years later.

“To be honest, I enjoy being on this end of it more than I enjoyed being on the bike. It’s very singular when you’re the rider. Now, I can enjoy the win as much as our riders, and I get to share it with so many people.”

A family man with four daughters, Erion understands every aspect of his team’s operation. He’s even been known to drive his own team transporter from coast to coast, just to keep a watchful eye on things.

Ride for Kids®

The Ride for Kids® (RFK) is a motorcyclist’s program that is helping find the cause and cure of pediatric brain tumors. It also serves as an educational support program for patients, their families, and the medical community.

Mike and Dianne Traynor started the Ride for Kids® program in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1984, when a friend’s child was diagnosed with a brain tumor. After watching the tragic deaths of many children, they set out to help find the cause and cure of this childhood killer by soliciting help from their friends in the motorcycling community.

The Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation® (PBTF) is the official charity of the Honda Rider’s Club of America® (HRCA®), which has been the presenting sponsor of Ride for Kids® since 1991. Thanks to the significant support of American Honda Motor Company’s motorcycle division, Honda dealers and other motorcycle industry companies, the program has raised more than $40 million for pediatric brain tumor research.

With the support of America’s motorcyclists, the program began to raise awareness and funds to pay for research in the nation’s leading brain tumor research centers. The success of the first Ride for Kids® event in Atlanta led to the program’s expansion to Chicago in 1989. Mike and Dianne soon decided to devote full-time attention to their advocacy and fundraising efforts, and started the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation® in 1991.

This support has helped make PBTF the largest nonprofit source of funding for pediatric brain tumor research outside of the U.S. government. In addition to research grants to medical laboratories, PBTF funds started the Central Brain Tumor Registry of the U.S., a national database of disease and patient information.

Thanks to the efforts of Ride for Kids®, progress is being made in the search for the answer to this terrible affliction. Each year laboratories worldwide take steps toward new and more innovative treatments for young patients. However, until the cause is isolated the prognosis of these children will continue to cast doubt on their recovery, and for those who survive, their resulting quality of life.

What began in 1984 as one couple’s quest to help these children has now become the target of thousands of caring motorcyclists who work diligently to help these children by raising funds to fight this terrible disease.

Moriwaki

For the last 34 years, Moriwaki Engineering has been competing in professional motorsports and pushing the performance envelope through innovative engineering. Moriwaki is a legendary Japanese tuning firm which is to Honda what Yoshimura is to Suzuki, and it’s probably best know for its Honda V5-powered MD211VF MotoGP bike which campaigned in 2004. In conjunction with Honda, Moriwaki also created the MD250 racebike–a 250cc four-stroke single-cylinder lightweight road racer sold through select Honda dealers in the US.

With the advent of Moto2, Moriwaki has also created the stunning MD600, a purpose-built Moto2 platform that’s available to teams competing within the series. At only the second race of the 2010 season, Moriwaki’s MD600 took its first Moto2 victory in the hands of Gresini Racing’s Toni Elias.

Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Established in 1909, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway has long prevailed as an icon of motorsports excellence. Beginning in 2009, the Speedway celebrates its Centennial Era, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the facility in 2009 and the 100th anniversary of the Indianapolis 500 Mile Race in 2011.

This celebration of two important milestones will span three years and will include several unique and historical events. Visitors to the Speedway during the Centennial Era will see not only a focus on its rich history, but a strong emphasis on looking ahead to the future.

The Indianapolis Motor Speedway is the world’s largest spectator sporting facility. It plays host annually to three events in three major racing series: Indianapolis 500 Mile Race (IZOD IndyCar Series), Brickyard 400 (NASCAR Sprint Cup Series) and Red Bull Indianapolis GP (MotoGP World Championship). The Indianapolis 500 and Brickyard 400 take place on the 2.5-mile oval, while the Red Bull Indianapolis GP is contested on the 16-turn, 2.621-mile road course.

SOURCE: American Honda Motor Co., Inc.

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