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Smith, Kinkelaar, Steunkel
lead the way at Fox Valley Off Road.
MSR, Answer, Pro Taper, FVOR Series
Rnd. 1
by Joe Lanute Photos by Mandy
Lanute
May 7th, 2006
was
a perfect day for racing as over 200 riders showed up to tackle the usually
a shorter, but challenging course. Mid 70’s and perfect weather just
shouldn’t happen on Hare Scramble race days, you know, where is the
challenge? The course had some easy sections, then of course rock creek, the
now infamous ravine with one line in and one line out., anything else is
dicey at best.

Then we have the hat. Hats. Major League
Baseball players wear hats. NFL had Tom Landry, “The Man in the Hat”.
Hockey has a Hat Trick. NASCAR fans all wear a hat and most every one in Wedron has a Cat or Deere hat.
On Sunday in Wedron, there was one hat that had
everybody’s attention.
The Quads were lined up at eleven minutes past 9
AM when that hat dropped signaling the start of the first group into the
three -mile long woods loop.
Thanks to a unique course set-up the quads were
sent off and then the 50’s were launched moments later with the same drop of
a hat.
Two different starts sending numerous classes
into two challenging and technical races.
While the little bikes were winding through their
track, the quads were sent on a journey through the best Fox Valley had to
offer, tight trails, slippery up hills, a pass over the Super Cross Track
and not one but two logs.
The finish line log always offers the riders a
way around if they are willing to give back several seconds, but not so with
a simple little twelve inch fallen tree at the bottom of a sweeping down
hill, set on just enough of an angle, that if the quad did not hit it
straight on, it became a cursed teeter-totter. You know teeter-totters don’t
work well with only one participant.
Thumpers received the hat treatment on the West
course, while 65 beginners tackled the center. 80’s, 65 seniors and Woman
took to the East.
Thanks to a unique course set-up the quads were
sent off and then the 50’s were launched moments later with the same drop of
a hat.
Two different starts sending numerous classes
into two challenging and technical races.
While the little bikes were winding through their
track, the quads were sent on a journey through the best Fox Valley had to
offer, tight trails, slippery up hills, a pass over the Super Cross Track
and not one but two logs.
The finish line log always offers the riders a
way around if they are willing to give back several seconds, but not so with
a simple little twelve inch fallen tree at the bottom of a sweeping down
hill, set on just enough of an angle, that if the quad did not hit it
straight on, it became a cursed teeter-totter. You know teeter-totters don’t
work well with only one participant.
Thumpers received the hat treatment on the West
course, while 65 beginners tackled the center. 80’s, 65 seniors and Woman
took to the East.
The 65 beginners had several changes for second
place, Cole Evans, Billy Anderson, and Kurt Harper ran strong from hat to
finish followed by Jimmy Lanute and Hall’s Cycle’s Jared Hall. Jacob Damron
took 6th. Kelly Chrisman entered her first scramble and her first encounter
with the hat. Kelley took her eye off of the hat and the hat won, we know
she will be back and she will be carrying a grudge, look out Jimmy.
The finish line log took its toll on a few of the young riders willing to
gamble. Many made it over, some in a textbook maneuver, some by dragging the
bike over and some by dumb luck, but always a crowd pleaser and a place to
get some great action shots. For some reason today the “sally” trail got a
good work out, must be to early in the season for log crossin.
Jeremy Smith, we are not sure if he is
the “fast one”, but he was the fastest on this day, of course Rick Kinkelaar
kept him honest all afternoon. Steve Stuenkel just a little bit back stayed
in ear shot waiting for a mistake that never came.
Some consider the big bikes the main event, while
the quads were given the best Fox Valley had, the big bikes received the
full treatment. Super Cross track, three logs, off chamber up hills, tight
turns, Rock Creek and for at least one rider we know an unexpected head over
heels trip into a ravine.
The pace was quick in the first two laps but as
the riders wore in ruts coming out of rock Creek and up the hills, it
quickly became a test of conditioning, muscling big two strokes and heavy
thumpers through the four mile loop.
At the end of the day while waiting for the
results and plaques, you could hear the colorful conversations of the riders
comparing hardships and feats. The mood was up beat and positive. During the
various interviews, every one enjoyed the day, complemented the course lay
outs and expressed an eagerness to return for round two.
“Nobody had anything nice to say about the
hat.” Click on photo to enlarge |