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2008 AMA Toyota Motocross Championship
Souvenir Yearbook LAGUNA NIGUEL, Each year, in coordination with the NPG, the staff at
Racer X Illustrated produces the official Souvenir Yearbook
of the AMA Toyota Motocross Championship Presented by FMF. Available for
$5 at each race, the Souvenir Yearbook is the ultimate fan guide, packed
with 164 pages of articles, rider bios, photos, event information,
series stats and records. The following is an article from the ’08 Souvenir
Yearbook, written by Supercross LIVE! announcer Jason
Weigandt: The AMA Within a generation, that
would change. Since those humble beginnings, the series has grown by
leaps and bounds. With a huge assist from the American invention known
as Supercross (which coincidentally was born on July 8 of that same year
in the The credit goes to the great riders—from Bob Hannah
to Ricky Carmichael—who have led the way, as well as the enthusiastic
fans and motocross industry that supports AMA Toyota Motocross. And then
there are the organizers of the series, a collective group of 12 race
promoters known as the National Promoters Group (NPG). Since 1998, these
promoters have worked together with the American Motorcyclist
Association (AMA) to present a unified series, with a consistent look
and feel to all of the races while also preserving what makes each event
unique.
Before 1998, the series worked well, but not with the same consistency
it has now. The calendar of events was subject to change every weekend,
and the learning curve was steep, as new promoters and race tracks came
in and out of the loose fold. For example, of the eight rounds that were
on that inaugural 1972 schedule, only one—the Hangtown Motocross
Classic—is still on the schedule, though the Dirt Diggers Club now holds
the race at a different location outside Sacramento, CA.
Now there is great consistency to the series, but not without some
changes. In the last four years both Colorado and Texas – two states
that held AMA Motocross races in the seventies and eighties 1980s –
returned to the schedule (and word has it that the Southeast, sight of
that very first national 36 years ago, will also be back on the schedule
within the next year or two). David Clabaugh’s Thunder Valley, on the
side of a mountain in Lakewood, Colorado, and Tony Miller’s Freestone
County MX below Dallas have both been welcomed with open arms by the
riders, the industry, and their new associates in the NPG.
Looking at the 2008 schedule, you obviously see some big changes as far
as dates are concerned. For instance, Glen Helen jumped from being the
grand finale in September all the way to being the series-opener in May,
and the new race in
Why all of the changes? Working together with the teams and the AMA, the
NPG decided to work on the travel pattern, making it easier and less
expensive for the teams; they also hoped to shorten the length of time
it takes to get all 12 races in, as everyone is already taxed by the
grind of the 17-round Monster Energy AMA Supercross Series, which is
squeezed in between the first Saturday of January and the first of May.
Beyond that, each of the 12 tracks have spent the last couple of years
on upgrade mode, trying to make the experience of attending the AMA
Toyota Motocross Championships as comfortable and enjoyable as possible.
The series not only has the best motocross racers in the world, but the
best fans as well. And the next few years promises even more changes as
the AMA welcomes the Daytona Motorsports Group (DMG) to all of their AMA
Pro Racing disciplines.
All of the members of the NPG are loyal members of the AMA, some from
Day One, like the Robinson family at Unadilla, the Ritchies of Red Bud,
the Huffmans at Washougal, the Coombs family (High Point and Steel
City), and the Motocross 338 club of Southwick—all of whom also host a
considerable amount of local and regional events at their national
facilities. Others, like Jonathan Beasley (Budds Creek), Bud Feldkamp
(Glen Helen) and John & Greta Martin of Spring Creek in
Add up all of the members of the NPG and you have a solid group of
proud, competitive promoters who enjoy trying to one-up the rest every
year, whether it’s adding new amenities to their facilities or cool new
track features to challenge the riders. They work at outdoing one
another, while also working closely together by attending their fellow
promoters’ events and pitching in wherever they might be needed (so
don’t be surprised to see Tim Coombs out working on lights in The 2008 AMA Toyota Motocross Championship Presented
by FMF begins on May 24-25 in Interview opportunities are
available to the media by contacting AMA Toyota Motocross Championship
media coordinator Brandon Short via email at
Media@MXNationals.com or by
phone at 951-203-2605. For more information on the AMA Toyota Motocross
Championship, presented by FMF, log on to
www.amamotocross.com for live
timing and scoring at @theWireLIVE!. Racer X Illustrated will host a new
and improved webcast on
www.motocross.com, with live racing action hosted by Jason Weigandt.
The Racer X Motocross Show on Motocross.com has also been added on
Saturday night of each race weekend, featuring practice footage and
interviews taken earlier in the day. |
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