I will have the most accurate and complete sat phone relays updating the top bikes' running order and split times from each of 20 BAJA PITS locations starting at 7:20 AM PST on race day. I'll try to post em here but for quick access try checking here: http://www.facebook.com/BreauxmanLIVE BBBRRRRRUUUUUURRRRRRPPPPPPP! LA PAZ, BAJA CA, MEXICO- It really is the Race of the Century and all eyes are on the bikes as the top manufacturers of off-road battle the harsh and unforgiving landscapes of the BAJA wilderness for the coveted 1x plate. Its winner take all because the points race for the season championship is so tight, there is no jockeying for 2nd place to clinch the title. Second place is truly first loser. There is no other title in North America that means more for any off road team due to the rough conditions and mystique of a remote and foreign country. Look it up, its on the Internet-Johnny Campbells multi-decade legacy of HONDA dominance is under attack by the former kings of Kawasaki and now joined by KTM, which is relatively new for the European manufacturer. There are only 3 teams that can win this race and, therefore, the title: Defending 1x champion Colton Udall of JCR HONDA, former 1x champion Robby Bell of THR KAWASAKI and virtual BAJA rookie Kurt Caselli of FMF KTM. The X-Factor is the new course section We took 4 days on the bike to survey as much of the racecourse as possible (as we did in 2010) to find out what the riders are up against. We found that the average speed will come down from 2010 and that the recent storms have dramatically worn the terrain in a bad way. Additionally, SCORE has added an 85-mile section in the midpoint that can only be described as TOTALLY HACKED OUT. The new section will be the X- factor for the bike teams as this is a highly technical area with deep sand and silty s-turns wrapped up by the most gruesome and rocky 5 mi section into San Ignacio. No exaggerating here: it is the harshest 5 miles for bikes in the history of the race. If the wind comes up, as is the custom, the silt beds in the first part will be blinding for the racers who will reach this spot in just an hour after the sun sets. So who will win the race and the title? It is just way too close to call. So here are the factors for each team to consider: This is a night race, period. Due to the geography of the Baja Peninsula and its orientation to the earths longitude, the racers travel toward the southeast and therefore into darkness during the top half of the race. By our calculations, the racers will have only 9 hours of daylight versus 12-13 hours of darkness. When the sun sets, racers will be traveling into it on the way into El Arco. Also, the race cannot be won in the first half, but it can easily be lost by a single mistake. The technical nature of the new section and the possibility of inclement weather (wind, fog and/or cold) means that racers will have to balance speed and endurance with care and efficiency. By default, at least one team will lose the race in the first half by rider error, but quite ironically, can win it back by the misstep of another in the second half. It certainly can come down to the last 50 miles. Fog played a factor in speed during the last 100 miles for Kendall Normans 5th win 2 years ago, although he won the race handily. Starters might not be able to help finish- This is a relay race and, due again, to the particular geography of BAJA and the massive Sierra de San Pedro de Martir, racers who ride anywhere north of San Felipe might not stay ahead of their teammates if they get off their respective bike in the northern section. SCORE rules prohibit racers from being transported by air after they have already raced. THRs Robby Bell for instance, is expected to ride in the north around San Felipe and may let his teammates carry the torch for his effort down south. The same may hold true for FMF KTMs Ivan Ramirez and JCR HONDAs David Kamo. The only conceivable way these riders could race in the north AND make it to an interception point further south is to stay in the race for 325 miles to Cocos Corner and/or to ride a ghost bike as fast as possible down the east side of the peninsula and join the HWY 1 at Chapala dry lakebed. While this is possible it is not so practical. Breaking the teams down, piece by piece: 1x-JCR HONDA: COLTON UDALL, TIMMY WEIGAND, DAVID KAMO Colton Prepares for launch at the last Baja 500 We will start with defending 1x champion Colton Udall and his teammates David Kamo and Timmy Weigand. We now know that Timmy has been staying in La Paz and pre-running many nights (with Caselli ironically) on the final 220 miles. We expect Timmy to finish for Colton, as he did in the last Baja 1000. Our intel sources have spotted Colton pre-running as far north as San Felipe and clear down toward Loreto. Colton looks up to Timmy as a mentor and coach. They are like two peas in a pod and Colton trusts Timmy with everything. Also a factor to consider: while Colton has proven speed on his split times versus former rival Kendall Norman, he has only won 2 SCORE races in his career, back to back San Felipe 250s, both with the late Jeff OX Kargola on his team. Johnny Campbells experienced team and logistical integrity of the pit program are not to be understated. That they only have 3 riders is the weak point versus KTM and KAWI who each have 4 (plus 1 back-up each). Johnny himself is the backup rider for JCR, as is the tradition on that team. There is no question that this is Coltons moment of truth. A win here validates the noble warrior. A loss would be truly devastating. 8x-THR KAWASAKI: ROBBY BELL, STEVE HENGEVELD, DAVID PEARSON, DESTRY ABBOTT THR KAWASAKI's David Pearson passes JCR HONDA's David Kamo moments after Pearson made a costly mistake in the pits at the season finale of the AMA National Hare and Hound series Robby and Henge were both groomed by the late Bruce Ogilvies HONDA dynasty and defected in 2008 when Johnny Campbell disconnected HONDAs off road program from the American HONDA complex in Torrence. Ever since Bells departure, he has worked with Henge to dislodge Johnny from atop his perch in the BAJA arena. In 2009, Bell & Hengeveld came within 2 minutes (after 900 miles) of tackling Johnnys boys, but was rooted by Kendall Norman who stalked Henge in the darkness for 150 miles and finished a minute behind him. THRs has some great strengths: the experience and tenure of Bell and Henge, the logistical prowess and engineering talent of Robbys dad Bob and Precision Concepts, the maturity of Destry Abbot who is now 40 and has only the BAJA 1000 remaining on his list of things he wants to accomplish before retiring. Abbott is considered one of the most accomplished off-roaders of all time, well rounded and humble. KAWASAKI recently cancelled their off-road program and Abbott is ready to retire. Doing so with a BAJA 1000 title will be the icing on his cake. The gentle giant David Pearson is motivation to p a win for THR, especially versus rival Kurt Caselli. Recently, Pearson threw an AMA championship literally onto the ground and figureitivley into Casellis hands in Lucerne Valley when he hastily rode down pit road while fueling his bike before dropping his dump can on the ground. Pearson is ready for redemption. In the past, THR has had several pitting and logistical mistakes which they hope to remedy by enlisting BAJA PITS as the core infrastructure for the pitting needs. It is expected the 8x bike of Bell will stop at nearly all 20 BAJA PITS location and THR personnel will be on hand at each. As for weakness or cracks, THR KAWI has few if any. If someone had to pick a team that is advantaged, THR KAWI would be the one, but it is still way too close to call. FMF KTM: KURT CASELLI, IVAN RAMIREZ, QUINN CODY, MIKE BROWN Like Destry Abbott, Kurt Caselli has won just about everything in off-road and is the successor to filling Abbotts shoes as the most accomplished off road racer ever. The only meat left on that bone, like Abbotts, is the cliché granddaddy of them all. Caselli approached KTM over a year ago to wage a complete war against incumbent JCR HONDA. A natural leader, Caselli is running the show weather or not KTM heads may suggest it. Caselli has been working the graveyard shift in southern Baja for many weeks and has been, believe it or not, sharing pre-running time with JCRs Timmy Weigand. The two are great friends yet they will battle each other like no tomorrow in the greatest motorcycle race ever staged in the western hemisphere, perhaps the world, even rivaling any DAKAR battle. Casellis teammates Ivan Ramirez and Quinn Cody have each crashed this year. Ramirez cash in the BAJA 500 cost Caselli a win there and Codys spill in San Felipe took Mike Browns bike out of that race. Lets talk about Quinn Cody for a moment: The JCR defector, like all others before him, has it out to knock Johnny off the box, but crashes at DAKAR and San Felipe this year have put his total strength in question and he may not yet be at 100%. His experience helping Kendall Norman win as many as 5 BAJA 1000s is not to be understated so we will put a check next to Codys name in the strength column. Another great strength for KTM is BAJA native Ivan Ramirez. We wouldnt be talking out of school to suggest he may have countless cousins and distant relatives who could pitch in to help KTMs entry into southern BAJA. The one question is weather or not KTMs top brass wants to take any chances delegating any logistic outside of its central control. If KTM has a strength, its their bike speed and Casellis work ethic. The weakness would be net inexperience in southern BAJA. Where the Hell is Kendall Norman? The 6 time BAJA 1000 champ has had a number of challenges, some of which have not been widely reported but his abilities have never been questioned. He was released suddenly and unexpectedly from JCR after winning #6 a year ago and has yet to find either a win or a team to call home. Rumors and predictions (even a verbose one by this fallible author) have never materialized. He would give KTM the advantage in this race, or any team for that matter, but he appears absent in this arena, much to the loss of all parties, especially the fans. Random Strategy Factors for spectators and crews to consider: Low moonlight: 6% illumination 9 hrs of daylight 13 hours of darkness Likelihood of inclement weather Guarantee of changing weather Ave speed prediction: 52.5MPH Total time estimated: 21.33 hrs Gets dark around rm475, bikes heading southwest into setting sun Estimated to cross finish at 4:03PST, 5:03 local (1hr 3 min before sunrise)
A little dissappointing that the MOTO's do not run with official trackers/transponders via the IRC Tracking (only trucks/buggies have them this year) which makes for following the Hon/Kawa/KaTooM battle a little less "real time" than it could otherwise be... Guess we'll have to rely on the weatherman and breauxman for as many checkpoint spots as we can...
good point for sure- heres the reason (not an excuse): The top teams have been offered free devices from IRC but they come up with lame excuses like (its unproven, might not work with our handlebars, its extra weight, etc.) I had an epiphany and realized that HON KAWI and KTM do not want each other to know where they are on the course and in relation to one another. If KTM has a bike problem or crash, the news will eventually flow out to the competing crews. but with trackers, the other teams can capitalize on the information sooner- ie back of the throttle, save the bike and take less chances.
Spot on Scotty! I think that the top teams have realized (from the Dakar/FIM irritrack experience) that the "big brother is watching you" thing comes into play as far as tactics goes... not to mention that everything you do/compared to where the competition is is under scrutiny from drop of the flag to the checkers (and a lot of Baja legends have evolved over the years - out of view - so to speak )... so I can understand they may not want to carry them. But they do still run a "GPS logger" yeah ? To keep track of them respecting the route and to check their speed on the tar road sections (limit 60 mph no? ) Will be tuned into your facebook live page, and the weatherman/race dez/SCORE official sites to keep an ear out for all the news that does filter through... Thanks in advance for the great job you do man!
I'm at RM250 near check 2. With bob and Nancy daily. Honda relay. Sent from my GT-S5360L using Tapatalk 2
The only info. cominging out of Baja at the moment is courtesy of Scotty Breauxman on his facebook page. Here is Robby Bell on the 8x THR Kawasaki off the startline in Ensenada... and 7x gets the tires warmed up...
First update sponsored by klim baja pits 1 at race mile 38; 3x 7:22 5x 7:23 ramirez caselli 8x 7:25 robby bell 1x 7:27 colton 6x 7:27 7x 7:28 thanks to klim from sponsoring this
HERES A BETTER LINK http://irctracking.com/2012/Baja1000/North/ THATS PRETTY COOL BUT NOW JOHNNY WILL KNOW THERE EVERY MOVE!
A conversation I had with 5x "mom" over on RDC... Comment From mom: How many of the bikes have the "live tracker" on, does anyone know?? I know 5x has one, what about the others??? Comment From Troy Carpenter: The 5x KTM (Caselli) is the only pro moto with a tracker...? So much for following the race of the century HONDA vs KAWI vs KTM in "real time" Comment From mom: Hey Troy Carpenter, thanks. Yes, that just isn't right that we can't track all the pro bikes. They should be required to use the live tracker . . . My son, Kurt, said the device is kind of heavy (easy to put on a truck). But, I think it makes for a cleaner race and certainly more fun to watch live time. Thanks. Comment From Troy Carpenter: Hi "Mom"... agree with you... all the pro's should run the trackers... same wieght for everyone - no ad/disadvantage to anyone, and everyone can see everyone else... just pure racing, no "card tricks"