| 
					Red Bull Unadilla National - results and photosSunday 10 August 2014:  Dungey continues late season surge. Christophe Pourcel becomes fifth different winner in 250 Class. Round 10 of 12. Jen Kenyon reports for MX Sports Pro Racing.
  
Following
 its final break in action for the 2014 season, the Lucas Oil Pro 
Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing, began its stretch 
run on Saturday with the 10th round of the summer from 
Central New York's legendary Unadilla with the Red Bull Unadilla 
National. With just two rounds and four motos remaining, Red Bull KTM's 
Ryan Dungey made another major jump in the 450 Class title fight by 
earning his third win in the last four rounds and closing to within 
single digits of his teammate Ken Roczen atop the standings. In the 250 
Class, Valli Motorsports Yamaha's Christophe Pourcel became the fifth 
different winner this season in the division, signifying the Frenchman's
 first victory on U.S. soil since the 2010 season.
      Dungey (5) continues to close in on his teammate Roczen (94). Photo: Simon Cudby   For
 the third consecutive moto, Toyota/Yamaha/JGRMX's Justin Brayton put 
himself out front of the start to earn the Motosport.com Holeshot Award 
in the first 450 Class moto, bringing his JGRMX teammate Phil Nicoletti 
with him. Not far behind them was Dungey, who wasted little time is 
making his march to the front and passed both Yamaha riders to assume 
control of the lead on the opening lap. Roczen kept pace with his 
teammate and fought his way from a start outside the top five to move 
into second. From there it became a two-rider battle for the moto win 
between the KTM duo.   Dungey
 kept Roczen at bay throughout the entirety of the moto, with mere bike 
lengths separating the teammates for the bulk of the race. However, in 
the closing laps Dungey extended his advantage and ultimately posted a 
wire-to-wire victory to put him in the drivers seat for the overall. 
Behind this pair, GEICO Honda's Eli Tomac quietly rode to a solid and 
consistent third-place finish. Team Honda Muscle Milk's Trey Canard, who
 was fastest in practice, fought his way forward from a start outside 
the top 10 to finish fourth. BTO Sports KTM's Andrew Short rounded out 
the top five.   With
 all eyes on Dungey and Roczen in Moto 2, it was once again Brayton who 
emerged with the Motosport.com Holeshot Award for the fourth straight 
time, but his time out front was short lived as both Tomac and Canard 
moved to the forefront and ultimately steal the spotlight. With the 
Honda duo out front, both Dungey and Roczen were forced to fight their 
way from starts outside the top five. When the jockeying was complete on
 the opening lap it was Tomac leading, followed by Canard, Dungey and 
Roczen.   Tomac
 and Roczen opened a significant gap over the rest of the field, but 
then started to engage in an exciting battle for the top spot that 
lasted several laps. The two riders traded positions multiple times on 
the track, which allowed Dungey to close the deficit to a matter of bike
 lengths and make it a three-rider fight for the win. Eventually Canard 
logged consistent laps to assert himself in the lead, leaving Tomac and 
Dungey to fight for second, with Roczen a distant fourth. 
       Canard (41), Tomac (3) and Dungey (5) did battle in Moto 2.  Photo: Simon Cudby   Dungey
 made his way past Tomac with four laps remaining and pushed to close in
 on Canard. About a second separated the two riders throughout the 
closing laps and Dungey moved within striking distance on the final lap,
 but the Honda rider held on to earn the first 450 Class moto win of his
 career. Tomac followed in third, with Roczen finishing off the podium 
for just the second time this season in fourth.   Dungey's
 1-2 results ensured him of the overall, his third at Unadilla. He now 
has four wins this season, tying him for the most in the division with 
Roczen.   "It
 was an awesome day. We just wanted to make the most of the day and not 
get sidetracked [with the championship]," said Dungey. "There's a lot of
 racing left still with two rounds to go, but things are going good. It 
feels great to get another overall, but I made it hard on myself in the 
second moto and let those guys [Tomac and Canard] get away. Maybe a 
couple more laps we could have got Canard, but he was riding really 
good."   Canard
 earned his best finish of the season in second (4-1) thanks to the moto
 win, with Tomac (3-3) edging out Roczen (2-4) for third overall via a 
tiebreaker. It marked the first time this season that Roczen failed to 
finish on the overall podium.   "I
 can't tell you how good that feels," said Canard after his moto win. 
"I'm not going to sit here and cry about what's happened [in the past 
with injuries], but I am just so thankful to have the opportunity to be 
here [on top of the podium] again. I'm just so happy to be up here and 
I'm looking forward to the next two races."   Dungey's
 win marked another seven-point swing in his favor, bringing his deficit
 to Roczen atop the championship standings to just seven points. Dungey 
has gained 17 points on Roczen the past two rounds. Canard sits third, 
74 points behind, with Monster Energy Kawasaki's Brett Metcalfe fourth 
(-167) and Tomac jumping up all the way to fifth (-195) despite missing 
the first four rounds of the season with injury. 
       Canard's first career moto win was an impressive one.  Photo: Simon Cudby 
 450 Class (Moto Finish) 
	
	
	
	Ryan Dungey, Belle Plaine, Minn., KTM (1-2)Trey Canard, Shawnee, Okla., Honda (4-1)Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Honda (3-3)Ken Roczen, Germany, KTM (2-4)Justin Brayton, Fort Dodge, Iowa, Yamaha (6-7)Andrew Short, Colorado Springs, Colo., KTM (5-8)Weston Peick, Wildomar, Calif., Suzuki (10-5)Phil Nicoletti, Bethel, N.Y., Yamaha (7-9)Brett Metcalfe, Australia, Kawasaki (12-6)Fredrik Noren, Sweden, Honda (8-10) 450 Class Championship Standings 
	
	
	
	Ken Roczen, Germany, KTM, 447Ryan Dungey, Belle Plaine, Minn., KTM, 440Trey Canard, Shawnee, Okla., Honda, 373Brett Metcalfe, Australia, Kawasaki, 280Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Honda, 252Andrew Short, Colorado Springs, Colo., KTM, 247Weston Peick, Wildomar, Calif., Suzuki, 244James Stewart, Haines City, Fla., Suzuki, 226Josh Grant, Riverside, Calif., Yamaha, 218Fredrik Noren, Sweden, Honda, 159 
 250 Class: Throughout
 the 2014 season, Pourcel has proven to be one of the fastest riders in 
the 250 Class, consistently posting the fastest lap of practice and 
regularly earning the Motosport.com Holeshot Award. At Unadilla, he 
earned his fifth straight holeshot to begin Moto 1 and used that to his 
advantage to pace the field for the entirety of the moto. While fellow 
Frenchman Marvin Musquin ultimately challenged him late aboard his Red 
Bull KTM, Pourcel was able to break through for his first moto win of 
the season with relative ease.   While
 the action up front was under Pourcel's control, the battles behind him
 were captivating. The Yamalube/Star Racing Yamaha duo of Cooper Webb 
and Jeremy Martin slotted in behind Pourcel early, but Musquin was on a 
mission, moving past both riders from his fourth-place starting spot 
before closing in on Pourcel. A late crash by Webb while battling his 
teammate for third dropped the sophomore rider several spots back, which
 allowed Martin to finish third. Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki's 
Dean Wilson finished in fourth, with GEICO Honda's Justin Bogle fifth. 
Webb dropped to seventh. 
      Pourcel was the rider to beat all afternoon at Unadilla.  Photo: Simon Cudby   The
 start of the second moto resulted in more of the same for Pourcel, who 
captured his sixth consecutive Motosport.com Holeshot Award to put 
himself in position to earn the overall. Martin began the moto in second
 with Bogle following in third. Musquin had to fight his way forward 
from a fifth-place start, while Webb was mired in ninth.   Pourcel
 dominated the first half of the moto but slowly began to lose ground to
 Martin. On Lap 6, the championship points leader took over the lead 
from the Frenchman and quickly pulled away. The pair maintained their 
large gap over the rest of the field, while Bogle maintained his hold on
 third for the whole moto.   In
 the end, Martin raced to his class-leading eighth moto win, with 
Pourcel second and Bogle third. Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki's 
Blake Baggett was fourth just ahead of Musquin. Webb suffered an 
apparent bike issue and was forced to retire, finishing 36th.   After
 a three-year hiatus from full time competition in America, Pourcel was 
back on top of the podium thanks to his 1-2 moto results. It was the 
seventh win of his 250 Class career and his second at Unadilla.   "The
 first moto was good and we got a good start in the second moto," said 
Pourcel. "I love the track here [at Unadilla] and it really works for my
 style. I'm just really grateful to be back up here [atop the podium] 
and want to thank everyone for the support they've given to me. Jeremy 
was riding great in that second moto, so I had to give it to him." 
      Martin maintains his hold over the field in the 250 Class.  Photo: Simon Cudby   Martin's
 3-1 results landed him second overall and extended his double-digit 
points lead to an even greater margin. Musquin rounded out the overall 
podium in third (2-5). "I
 got off to a great start [in Moto 2] and battled with Christophe 
[Pourcel] for a while, then I chipped by tooth after getting hit by a 
rock," said Martin. "After that I realized I needed to make my move. I 
haven't won a moto in a while so it felt good to get back out front. I 
did make a few mistakes out there today, so I'll do some work during the
 week to come back stronger next weekend."  Martin
 moved to 66 points over Baggett, who jumped into second following 
Webb's misfortune. Webb sits third, 74 points back. Musquin sits fourth 
(-93), while Pourcel rounds out the top five (-101)   The
 2014 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship hosts the penultimate round 
of the championship next Saturday, August 16, with the 11th 
round of the season and the inaugural event from Ironman Raceway in 
Crawfordsville, Indiana. 
   250 Class (Moto Finish) 
	
	
	
	Christophe Pourcel, France, Yamaha (1-2)Jeremy Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha (3-1)Marvin Musquin, France, KTM (2-5)Justin Bogle, Cushing, Okla., Honda (5-3)Blake Baggett, Grand Terrace, Calif., Kawasaki (6-4)Dean Wilson, Scotland, Kawasaki (4-6)Joey Savatgy, Thomasville, Ga., KTM (9-9)Chris Alldredge, Powell Butte, Ore., Kawasaki (13-8)Alex Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha (12-10)Shane McElrath, Canton, N.C., Honda (10-13) 250 Class Championship Standings 
	
	
	
	Jeremy Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha, 422Blake Baggett, Grand Terrace, Calif., Kawasaki, 356Cooper Webb, Morehead City, N.C., Yamaha, 348Marvin Musquin, France, KTM, 329Christophe Pourcel, France, Yamaha, 321Justin Bogle, Cushing, Okla., Honda, 310Jason Anderson, Edgewood, N.M., KTM, 243Cole Seely, Newbury Park, Calif., Honda, 225Jessy Nelson, Paso Robles, Calif., Honda, 200Dean Wilson, Scotland, Kawasaki, 176Alex Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha, 176 |