Josh Grant - it's time
Friday 21 December: JGR's UNIT moto athlete Josh Grant has faced his fair share of challenges in life, and heading into Anaheim 1 on January 5, 2013, he will face one of his biggest to date.

After a few seasons fraught by injury Josh Grant will line up in the
450 class against one of the strongest contested fields seen in AMA
Supercross racing history. Is he ready to challenge for the 2013
championship? Is he fit and healthy, mentally and physically prepared?
Does he like the new JGR YZ450F Yamaha and the new team? Where’s his
head at? We sat down with Josh Grant to ask him all these questions and
more.
Josh, how do you see the 2013 supercross season playing out,
and where do you hope to see yourself come the final round in Vegas:
I don’t really know how it’s going to pan out as there are so many
rounds. For me I think the biggest thing is to get through the first few
rounds healthy, build a good base, and bring more momentum in towards
the end of the season to have a good ending result. I know a lot of
guys are going to go wide-open from the first round, something I usually
do, but I’m going to step back as I’ve always gone hard for the first
couple of years and its bitten me in the arse. I’ll ease into it and
hopefully by Vegas I’ll be sitting in the top three. That’s my goal.
Your attitude, has it changed:
I think I have a
different outlook on things now due to obviously having a family with my
wife Ashley and son Whyatt, whereas before I didn’t care as much and
had the attitude of sending it until I ended up on my head. Sometimes
that paid off and other times it didn’t, and this past season has been
tough knowing I couldn’t contend for race wins because I wasn’t healthy.
Even though I wanted to do good and knew where I should have been
running the focus was more about having the right people around helping
me build back into the rider I was. Having good people in my corner
saying, ‘Hey you don’t need to go out and win’, really took away the
pressure and let me enjoy riding my dirt-bike and focus on getting
better.
How does the Yamaha you’re riding now compare to previous models:
It’s a lot different to the Joe Gibbs ’09 model that had nine years of
development and endless hours of testing on it. Then when they switched
to the new complete redesigned 2010 model I felt I was riding good on
it, but I got hurt at the start of the season and missed supercross,
which led into a streak of more injuries, and it’s only now I’m starting
to feel great again. I’m working my butt off trying to get 100 per cent
healthy, and although I’m not fully there yet I know the JGR guys are
doing a great job developing the current bike and have learned a lot
from having riders like James Stewart and Davy Millsaps riding it this
past season. It’s changed quite a bit.
How’s your confidence level right now with the JGR team compared to any of the teams including JGR in the past:
I feel like we’re the best we’ve ever been. It showed a lot when Coy
Gibbs called and asked me to come back and ride for them. I feel we
share a special bond, especially after that Anaheim win (2009), and I
don’t like to toot my own horn or whatever you call it, but I don’t
really complain a lot about bikes and certain stuff so I think the team
is really stoked to have a rider who is able to adapt easily to new
stuff and not complain about it. I think that brings a lot of positive
vibes for me and the team.
How about physically and mentally:
Physically I feel
good. I’ve had a couple of months to work out where as the last two
years I couldn’t do a thing; not ride my bicycle, or run, or even lift
because of my shoulders, it was impossible. So to get the results I did
feeling like that has definitely made me stronger knowing I’m now
healthy, and because I’ve been through so much shit in my life it almost
feels like nothing that happens in racing will affect me mentally
because it won’t come close to what I’ve been through. I feel the
strongest I’ve ever felt riding a dirt-bike!
In the spotlight or out of it:
I like a little bit
of both because being in the spotlight keeps driving you to maintain
that position so having it here and there is good, but in saying that
I’m not a guy that loves to eat it up. I like to separate myself from
all the BS and be my own dude, one that everyone can talk to and not
that spotlight superstar guy!
What’s left to prove:
I feel like I have a lot left
to prove, like being a pro rider for eight years is kind of tough, hard
to keep going. You see guys come in for a couple of years then they’re
pushed out. I want to be a guy that sticks around like K-Dub (Kevin
Windham), someone who sticks around past 30 and keeps on going strong,
the old dude in the sport. Longevity is my goal.
Last time you were impressed by a rider:
When we
recently went out to Beaumont for a photoshoot I would never have
expected or thought that Scott Champion had the bike skills he had on a
dirt-bike until he started hitting the big jumps. He was just getting
after it and I was really shocked, which is cool because going out there
for a while now I haven’t ridden with a lot of guys who can handle that
stuff, and have style doing it. I was impressed with Champ!
At 25-years-of-age and eight years into your pro career do
you feel like you’re one of the elder statesmen with more experience
that gives you the edge in the 450 class:
Yeah a little I
think, like you have that older mentality, been there and done it type
deal, but at the same time there’s a bunch of 18-year-olds with an
abundance of energy and nothing to lose right now because they’re so
young. I’m at the stage where I need to keep proving myself to keep
going, but I do have that advantage of being older and having been
through the up and downs of many seasons and know what to expect and how
to deal with it.
When you’re on the track do you look at every rider the same or take each one differently:
I think you have to take every rider differently because they’re
obviously different in their own way. Like Chad Reed is a very
methodical rider who can pick apart the track and set his bike up really
well, whereas Villopoto just goes out and sends it so you have to have
that in the back of your head knowing what they’re going to do to even
make a pass or race the guy. That’s why studying videos or watching a
rider on the track is really important so you understand what they’re
going to do on the track when you’re around them.
Rate the competition in the 450 class for 2013:
Dude
I think it’s the gnarliest year ever. I look at all the old videos with
McGrath and Carmichael etc. It was a deep field back then, but the top
20 guys now collectively talent wise are the baddest dudes on dirt-bikes
ever, like you got Reed, Stewart, Dungey, Villopoto, Barcia, myself,
Windham, Short, Millsaps, the list goes on, and it’s going to be the
gnarliest racing field you’ll ever see … EVER!