ISL 06 #5-7web.qxd - Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association
Transcription
ISL 06 #5-7web.qxd - Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association
June 2006 Issue 5 CENTRAL MOTORCYCLE ROADRACING ASSOCIATION Hallett Highlights The Paddocks Central Motorcycle Roadracing Association PO Box 123888 Fort Worth, TX 76121 (817) 377-1599 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President - Norm McDonald - info@knmotorcycles.com Vice President - Harry Tomlinson - gmanracing@gmail.com Jesse Johnson - jester@frenzy.com Chris Kotowski - n8079x@gmail.com Lindsey Leard Frank Newman - ndanger243@gmail.com Chris Rankin - chris.s.rankin@gmail.com Contingency Coordinator - Bill Syfan contingency@cmraracing.com Race Management - Nancy Selleck nancy@cmraracing.com Race Director - Walter Walker walter@cmraracing.com Cornerworking - Barry & Roxana Nichols cornerworking@cmraracing.com Track Chaplain - Fred Chapman cmratrackchaplain@gmail.com Newsletter - Shan Moore shan@trialscomp.com 2 First Turn BoD Nominations It is once again time to make nominations for the 2007/2008 Board of Directors election. Nominations are open and they must be in by August 15th. The seats currently held by Norm McDonald, Chris Rankin and Frank Newman will need to be filled in the upcoming election. You will find a nomination form at the bottom of this page. Cut it out and send it to the CMRA office by the deadline. Address: CMRA PO Box 123888 Fort Worth, TX 76121 CMRA Daytona Competitor When we did our coverage of CMRA racers competing at Daytona we accidentally missed David LaRue. LaRue competed in the AHRMA races during speed week and finished an excellent fourth place in two different Production Singles races. LaRue was riding on DOT tires and was the top finishing Honda in each case. ON THE COVER: Greg Abbott of Northwest Honda. Photo by Irwin Arnstein. REMAINING CMRA SCHEDULE JUNE 9-11 MOTORSPORT RANCH Cresson, Texas JUNE 30-JULY 2 OAK HILL RACEWAY Henderson, Texas JULY 28-30 HALLETT MOTOR RACING CIRCUIT Hallett, Oklahoma AUGUST 18-20 MOTORSPORTS RANCH Cresson, Texas SEPTEMBER 8-10 OAK HILL RACEWAY Henderson, Texas No wet rats here. Photo by Irwin Arnstein. OCTOBER 6-8 TEXAS WORLD SPEEDWAY College Station, Texas BANQUET NOVEMBER 11 RIVER RANCH 500 NE 23rd St Fort Worth, TX News items, tid bits and anything of importance to the CMRA or roadracing in general can be e-mailed to shan@trialscomp.com for inclusion in The Inside Line. - Shan Moore/editor Nomination for 2007-2008 Board of Directors Nominations for the 2007-2008 Board of Directors are now open and must be recieved at the CMRA office by August 15th. Person being nominated must be a CMRA member in good standing. I Nominate ___________________________________________ as a BoD for a 2 year term. Date of Nomination ____________________________ __________________ has agreed to this nomination YES____ NO____ Person making nomination______________________________________ Send nominations to: CMRA PO Box 123888 Fort Worth, TX 76121 Nomination submissions must be postmarked on or before August 15, 2006. After receiving nominations, Nancy Selleck will send a letter to the person being nominated for their acceptance to serve on the BOD for the 2 year term or their right of refusal. Nominee’s pictures and statements will be included in the newsletter mailed after the Motorsport Ranch race in August. Ballots will also be included in that newsletter. Ballots must be postmarked on or before October 15th and only current CMRA members in good standing are eligible to vote. The BOD will notify the nominees and then post the results. 3 Interview bobOERTLE Bob Oertle talks about Drag Racing, street riding in Texas and the Hog Man . Most of you know Bob Oertle as our track announcer. However, you may not know much about his background or just how involved has been in the sport of motorcycle racing over the years. Well, we had Bob give us the scoop during a recent interview. 4 Bob, I know that you have been involved in motorcycle racing for most of your life. Let's give the readers a little bit of background on you. I began life in the motorcycle business in the late 1960's as mechanic for Curly Sutton at Custom Cycles at 41st and Peoria. Curly was a Norton and British Bike repair shop. He owned and sponsored riders on his two Norton 750 Dirt Trackers. I started for Curly as mechanic, and flagged turn one at the John Zink ½ Mile Dirt Track in Skiatook, Oklahoma on Sundays. Curly had many special tools he and Denny Moore had built. Between Curly and Denny, I had two of the best instructors of power mechanics anyone could every have asked for. Curly had grown up in Ohio, and worked at the Indian Factory for years before moving to Oklahoma with his wife's family. Moore worked a couple of blocks down the street at the John Zink facility. Moore was crew chief for Zink's Indy Cars, and if he didn't have a special tool or the equipment to make something he got it in less than a week. Zink's cars won several times at the Indy 500 races. Moore was the first person I ever saw that had four individual scales to set up the suspension on a race car. I raced for Curly on a Norton Commando 750 at Tulsa International Raceway and won many pro purse races at that racetrack aboard that Norton motorcycle. Then I opened my own AJS motorcycle dealership in 1971. We sold and serviced AJS and did a ton of work on Honda 750s. In 1973 I moved to Dick Lane's Kawasaki Village in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, as Service Manager and campaigned a new Z1 Kawasaki in road racing, then on to the drag strip. Tell us about some of the racetracks you raced on back in those days. I raced at Dallas International Motor Speedway (DIMS) from 1968 to 1973. I also raced at the Texas International Road Race and Drag Strip track that was located north of Dallas in Lewisville, Texas. It had a road race track, Limestone 1/2 mile and an NHRA 1/4 mile drag strip. Think I got 4th behind Jon Manano, Hog Man Stephenson, and some other guy on a Kawasaki H2 Triple. A very young Freddie Spencer rode that day in three or four classes. They held a big concert at that racetrack right after Woodstock with some of the same bands there. It was Labor Day weekend, 1969, two weeks after Woodstock, and thousands of hippies and lovers of peace and music converged on the small town of Lewisville, just north of Dallas, at the Texas Pop Festival, which featured B.B. King; Janis Joplin & Big Brother and the Holding Co; Canned Heat; Chicago; Delaney & Bonnie & Friends; Feetwood Mac; Freddie King; Grand Funk Railroad and Herbie Mann. Plus the Incredible String Band; James Cotton; Johnny Winter; Led Zeppelin; Nazz; The Quarry; Rotary Connection; Sam & Dave; Santana; Shiva's Headband; Sly & the Family Stone; Space Opera; Spirit; Sweetwater; Ten Years After and Tony Joe White. Wow, you've got quite a memory. You were also a very good mechanic. I took second place in the National Kawasaki Service contest in 1973. A fellow from Oklahoma City won the contest. Jim Corpe, Orvis Smith, Chester Hudspedth and Virgil Davenport were in charge of the Regional service department for Kawasaki then. You got pretty involved in the drag racing scene in those days. Yeah, I won the National at Green Valley Raceway in 1974 and set a new National 1/4 mile record for A class with the Z1 Kawasaki. I got road racing slicks to use for drag racing from Phil McDonald. But the secret was this magic dust we got from Marsh Racing Tires out of Arkansas. It was the same rosin they make the rubber for tires from and it softened up a tire like an eraser. Talk about a launch. I set a few National Records with the McDonald "wore out" tires and the Marsh "Magic Dust." Chuck Butler got the "Magic Dust" from Marsh for me. I won a few Pro Stock races, as well. One that stood out was in Kansas City against a Honda rider named Terry Vance. However Bowling Green, Kentucky is still my favorite drag strip. You built bikes as well. Yeah, I built a few Drag Bikes using Sandy Kosman chassis, and engines that I built with machine work provided by Red Daley, Danny Myers and Dick Moritz. Each had their specialties. Cylinder head porting was done by Jerry Branch out of California. One was a Turbo Charged Kawasaki with a 1,300cc engine. Another was an A Gas Dragster ridden and owned by Jerry the Bear Dixon. Tulsan Chuck Butler tuned the Dixon entry to a win at Green Valley at a National held there in 1976. Then I moved to Dallas, Texas, and managed a Kawasaki Dealership there for 2 years. I rode motorcycles around Dallas with Marc Smith of Tucker Rocky, Hog Man Stephenson, Jon Manano out of Big D Triumph, and a bunch of way crazy guys. We rode on Stemmons Freeway when it was two lanes on each side. They had a game called "Wolf Pack" where we got in front of traffic, slowed down blocking the entire highway. Then someone honked 3 times and away we went, racing up to the next "Wolf Pack" of cars. But it did not stop there, Hog Man rides his Honda 750 up on the side of the concrete wall and passes all the cars! Road racing is sometimes mild compared to those guys. Hoo Doo Howard, who owned a large Kawasaki dealership in Tulsa, contacted me to work in sales for him and I moved back to Tulsa. I held positions of Sales, Sales Manager and Service Manager at Action Cycles Kawasaki for the next 15 years. Chuck Butler was heavy into Sprint Car racing. The team he worked for, whose driver was Jeff Sikes, was killed at Tulsa Speedway. Chuck continued on to work building engines and performance work then took a position for Craig Rogers, building single cylinder Honda 450 and Rotax engines for the Rogers/Lake entry of Custom Chrome rider GNC National #53 Gary Rogers. For two seasons, I drove the Custom Chrome hauler on the AMA GNC Dirt Track National tour along with Garry Baheler at Performance Vehicle Services out of Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the Rogers/Lake race team out of San Jose, California. All the money I earned working for them, I invested in my Winter Indoor Dirt Track Race Series. In a way it was co-sponsored by Craig Rogers and Rod Lake of California. You have a lot of cool bench racing stories. Tell us a couple of your favorites. At Del Mar, me and past champion Bubba Shobert, who was working for the Rogers/Lake team as their Rider Consultant, took off to Wendy's for burgers. Del Mar Fairgrounds wanted $9.00 for a hamburger and I could see the Wendy's sign from where we were standing, so to save nine bucks, off we went in Bubba's Mustang. Bubba was the Race Grand Marshall for Mike Kidd's FUSA race that weekend. However when we got back to the Fairgrounds we were met by a parking official and charged $9.00 to park! Burger cost us nine bucks anyway. Never forget Bubba showing the parking attendant his official credentials complete with hologram. The dude looked at him and said "I don't care if your name is Jimmy Durante, ya got ta pay $9.00 to park." The street leading into Del Mar Fairgrounds is Jimmy Durante Drive. Another cool Bubba story was when we were in Michigan during the Harley Davidson 100th Birthday Bash. At the racetrack, Motorcycle Jumper Bubba Blackwell shows up. Then there were two famous Bubbas together at the same place. I have a few photos of that meeting of the Bubbas. Okay, one more story. Sandy Kosman was at Lakeland International Raceway in Memphis during a National Drag Race. He stepped out of his motel room to a Bench Race Session going on outside. In the Bench race was Terry Vance, Byron Hinds, Mike Bruso, Floyd Tweedle, Sonny Rout, and a few others. Sandy had a jar of Peter Pan in one hand and the motel key fob in the other, and was scooping peanut butter onto the green key fob and eating it. I said, "Sandy, do you know how many hands have held that key fob?" He just laughed and started talking about the Chinese and Mexican lunches he eats in California. 5 The Paddocks Motorcycles Unlimited www.cmraracing.com 6 Northwest Honda Racing’s CBR1000RR According to Ronnie Lunsford, the secret to success in endurance racing, especially in the big class, is to keep the bike as stock as possible for reliabilty and then setting it up to suit four or five riders. We took a look at Lunsford’s CBR1000RR at Hallett to see just how stock it was. Here is a list of the hardware: > MICHELIN TIRES > LEO VINCE SBK EXHAUST > MARCHESINI WHEELS > NISSIN 954 BRAKE CALIPERS > 2000 929 FORKS > OEM BRAKE PADS > OHLINS STEERING DAMPER > OEM REAR SETS > PENSKE REAR SHOCK > SIX GALLON CUSTON TANK > DYNOJET POWER SHIFTER > BREMBO MASTER CYLINDER > CUSTOM REMOTE FT BRAKE ADJUSTER > SHARKSKINZ BODY > POWER COMMANDER > EK “RED” CHAIN 7 Sprints CMRA CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES SPRINT SERIES: ROUND 4 HALLETT MOTOR RACING CIRCUIT HALLETT, OK MAY 20-21, 2006 BRYAN WEST (955) AND TYLER MCDONALD (20) SCORED UPSET WINS OVER TY HOWARD (1) AT HALLETT. 8 Round four of the CMRA Championship Series kicked off on Saturday at Hallett Motor Racing Circuit with record high temperatures moving into the area just in time for the endurance race. However, on Sunday for the Sprint races, the weather was much more comfortable. The Provisional Novices got the racing action underway and Tim Chason, riding a CBR600RR, pulled away from the start and was over five seconds clear of second place finisher Jeremy White (YZF-R1) at the finish. Billy Lee, also riding a CBR600RR, was third, while Landon Talley and Michael Ditty rounded out the top five. Race two was the Roadracingworld.com Formula 2 Expert/ Formula 2 Novice/ Unlimited Super Motard race, which pays $150 purse to the top five finishers in the Formula 2 Expert class, and in the F2 class, Dane Westby took a runaway win on his SV650, finishing over 15 seconds ahead of a tight battle between Zac Chapman and Chris Romeo over second. At the finish, Chapman edged Romeo for the runner up position, with Alex Welsh finishing fourth. In the Unlimited Motard division, Chase Vivion took first in class and fifth overall, while Robert Bradlaw and Brad Tinker finished second and third in class and seventh and eighth overall. The top F2 Novice was Frank Newman in 11th overall. The Racing Performance Services B Superstock Expert and Novice race, which pays a $150 purse, was a Ty Howard benefit as the GSX-R750 rider topped Tyler McDonald, riding his YZF-R6, by seven seconds. Third went to Dustin Dominguez on a GSXR600, with Kansan Larry Denning in fourth on a ZX-6R. Danny Kelsey took the first of his five wins on the day in the B Superstock Novice race. Oklahoman Michael Harrell finished second, with Tony Moore of Arkansas in third. Cody Kitchen and Todd Fleeman, both also from Arkansas, rounded out the top five. Dane Westby and Dustin Dominguez continued their year-long battle in the red flag-shortened Lightweight Twins Expert and Novice/ Unlimited Classic race, with Westby coming out on top at the finish, two seconds ahead of Dominguez. Chris Romeo and Eric Falt also had a good fight over third, with Romeo edging Falt at the checkers. Fifth place went to Zac Chapman. In the Action Kawasaki of Mesquite Clubman / Super Motard race, which pays $100 in store certificates to the top five finishers on Kaw EX250s, Aprilia RS250-mounted Clayton Schutz led Robert Bradlaw (CRF450) to the checkers, while Brad Tinker, on a KTM 525 was third. The top placing Kaw EX250 rider was Eric Falt in seventh overall. Chuck Ergle came next in eighth overall, just ahead of Gregory Workman in ninth. Tyler McDonald passed Ty Howard on the second lap of the Komodo Racing C Superstock Expert race, which pays a $250 purse, and then pulled away to an easy win. Larry Denning moved up from a back row start and passed Larry Myers for third, while Dustin Dominguez finished fifth, just behind Myers. Danny Kelsey continued his winning streak by topping Tony Moore in the Moto Liberty C Superstock Novice race. Jeremy Hunt, Ronald Weaver Jr. and Todd Fleeman claimed the third through fifth positions. Bryan West got the first of his two wins in the RaceworX A Superbike Expert and Novice, which pays a $150 purse. West moved up from the fourth row and took the lead on lap one, eventually finishing eight seconds ahead of Larry Denning. Kevin Pate finished third, with Bill Drake ABOVE: DANNY KELSEY HAD FIVE NOVICE CLASS WINS AT HALLETT. BELOW: JOSEPH TOLARO (123) LEADS GARY GIARRATANO OUT OF BUS STOP. 9 Sprints ABOVE: ANDY GALINDO (46) BATTLES WITH LARRY DENNING (360). BELOW: SCOTT WHITE IN TURN 1. 10 and Brian Cox in fourth and fifth. Nathan Gardner was top Novice in 14th, with Cody Kitchen next in 16th. In the South Central Race Center D Superbike Expert and Novice, which pays a $150 purse, Dane Westby and Dustin Dominguez again battled over the lead, however Westby dropped off the pace after an off-track excursion, leaving Dominguez with the easy win. Eric Falt passed Zac Chapman on the final lap to take second with Chris Romeo and Robert Bradlaw coming home in fourth and fifth. Frank Newman won the Novice division in eighth overall, with Joseph Tolaro and David Taylor taking second and third in the Novice division with eighth and ninth place finishes. Ronnie Lunsford took a flag-to-flag victory in the Heavyweight Twins Expert and Novice race on his Ducati 999, finishing 12 seconds ahead of runner up Zac Chapman, who was riding an SV650. Yamaha TZ250mounted Mike Wright was third. Landon Talley was fourth overall and first in the Novice division, riding a Honda RC51. Bryan West passed Ty Howard on lap two of the Pace American Trailers Formula 1 race, which pays a $1000 purse, and then held on to take a six second victory. West posted the fastest lap of the day on the third lap of the race, a 1:17.467, and by doing so, claimed the Island Racing Fast Lap of the Weekend award, which pays $150 for the fastest transponder-timed lap. Howard ended up second with Tyler McDonald, Andy Galindo and Kevin Pate rounding out the top five. Danny Kelsey took win number three on the day in the WINN Racing Formula 1 Novice race. Kelsey topped Nathan Gardner by 19 seconds for the win, while Jeremy Hunt, Bryan LeMaire and Michael Harrell finished third through fifth. In the Northwest Honda 125 GP race, which pays a $150 purse, Alex Welsh waited until the final turn of the eight lap race to pass Derek Wagnon and take the victory. Dustin Dominguez moved up from the second wave to finish third overall and first in the D Superstock Expert class, ahead of Eric Falt and Zac Chapman. Clayton Schutz was top finishing Novice in the D Superstock class with a 13th overall. Ty Howard avenged his defeat earlier in the day to Bryan West by beating West by 13 seconds in the Sum of all Parts A Superstock Expert and Novice race, which pays a $150 purse. West took second ahead of Larry Denning, while Andy Galindo and Kevin Pate were fourth and fifth. Danny Kelsey was the top Novice in seventh, while Bryan LeMaire was second Novice in 11th. Ronnie Lunsford held off a late charge by Shane Stoyko to win the Avteq Formula 40 Lightweight Expert and Novice/ Formula 40 Expert and Novice race, which pays a $150 purse. Brian Cox finished third, while Michael Rochester, who ran second early in the race finished fourth. Eric Falt won the Lightweight division with an 11th overall finish, while Roy Eder was first in the Heavyweight Novice class in 12th. Frank Newman was the top Lightweight Novice in 14th. Ty Howard beat Tyler McDonald and Larry Denning to win the Motorcycles Unlimited C Superbike Expert race, which pays a $150 purse. Dustin Dominguez was fourth and Brandon Spradling was fifth. Danny Kelsey took his fifth and final win of the day in the C Superbike Novice race, topping Tony Moore and Nathan Gardner in the process. Todd Fleeman was fourth, ahead of Ronald Weaver Jr. The final race of the day, the B Superbike Expert and Novice race, was won by Dustin Dominguez. Daniel Sinclair finished second with Chase Vivion coming home in third and William Guthrie in fourth. The Novice division was won by Nathan Gardner in fifth. In Saturday's mini sprint action, Kent Moffitt won the Formula 4 race DAVID LARUE BILL UNDERWOOD (654) AND DANIEL SINCLAIR (221) over Ryan O'Donnell and Stephen Guynes. Dustin Dominguez won the Formula 6 class, beating Richard Desmond and Conner Blevins, while Derek Wagnon took the win in the Formula 5 division over Chris Kotowski and Mark David. Jason Keene topped all entries in the Formula 7 class, with Ismel Camacho finishing second and Chris Holderness finishing third. The Junior Motard race was won by Chris Haesemeyer, with Luca Chatham in second and Dallas King in third. TY HOWARD 11 Larry Myers goes off-roading . 12 Endurance NW Honda Wins! SHOGUN MOTORSPORTS CMRA ENDURANCE SERIES: ROUND 3 HALLETT MOTOR RACING CIRCUIT HALLETT, OK MARCH 20, 2006 PHOTOS BY IRWIN ARNSTEIN Northwest Honda Racing capitalized on an error-free performance to claim their first win of the year at round three of the Shogun Motorsports CMRA Endurance Series, held at Hallett Motor Racing Circuit, near Hallett, Oklahoma. The Houston-based team took the lead during the fifth hour of the six hour race, and by the finish were two laps clear of second place finishers Junk Yard Dog. The win moved them into the lead in the series standings, ahead of Desert-Rats.net, and entitled them to a lion's share of the $1125 purse. "It was just one of those perfect days," said Ronnie Lunsford of Northwest Honda Racing. "All the pit stops went well; we only had to do one rear tire (change) and the bike worked good all day." By the end of the fourth hour, Team Ridesmart (Craig Clark, Jeremy Keller, Shannon Ball), Desert-Rats.net (Brad Thomas, Derek Thomas, Stephen Guynes, Troy Green) and Junk Yard Dog (Dane Westby, Dustin Meador, Chris Romeo) had each taken a turn at leading the race, while Northwest Honda Racing (Ronnie Lunsford, Matt Maschmann, Greg Abbott, Rusty Allen) kept their Honda CBR1000RR within striking distance in fourth. Northwest Honda Racing's quest for their first win of the year got a little easier when Desert-Rats.net started to develop an overheating problem on their YZF-R1 midway through the race. A record high temperature of 96 degrees only complicated the problem, and it eventually cost the "Rats" any chance at the win. A crash by Team Ridesmart during the final hour put them on the sidelines as well, leaving only Northwest Honda Racing and Junk Yard Dog to do battle. However pit stops kept the "Dogs" out of contention eight long stops, to be exact. The Junk Yard Dog GSX-R600 could only make 55 minutes on a tank of gas and their one tire change took over a minute. After six hours of racing, Northwest Honda Racing crossed the finish line with two laps to spare over Junk Yard Dog, with DesertRats.net limping home for third. The runner up finish gave Junk Yard Dog their first podium of the year and reinforced their third overall status in the series standings. "We stayed real consistent for the whole race," said Dustin Meador of Junk Yard Dog. "Marcus (McBain) put together a good sus- 13 Results pension package for us and the Michelins worked really well. We just had a good run and we're happy about it." 2Wheelz.com (Gabe McClendon, Andy Galindo, Frank Shacklee, Mark Niemi) finished fourth overall and first in the C Superstock division, after battling for most of the race with Lone Star Track Days (Jeff Grant, Jody Hudson, Brandon Spradling, Ronnie Hay). At the end of the fourth hour, Lone Star Track Days held a two lap advantage over 2Wheelz.com, but a bad pit stop and various problems put them in a hole that they couldn't recover from, however they still finished fifth overall and second in class, just 14 seconds behind 2Wheelz.com. Team Penetration (Joseph McCamish, Mark Delano, Nathaniel Orona) finished sixth overall and third in the C Superstock class, while Faltless Racing (Eric Falt, Robert Bradlaw, Chuck Ergle, Bill Erzal) claimed the win in the Formula 2 class with a seventh overall. Faltless Racing took the lead in the division from the drop of the flag and never relinquished it, though Fireball Racing (Luke Conlin, Danny Mosley, Chris Vinson) moved onto the same lap with Faltless Racing during the fourth hour and were gaining on the 2004 class champions. However, a crash ended Fireball Racing's chances and Faltless Racing came home with their second win of the year. "Last year we had a lot of bad luck and a lot of weird stuff happened, so this year we have been hoping that all the bad luck is behind us," Eric Falt of Faltless Racing said. "This race we chose some different tires and the Michelins really worked excellent. Some of the guys were a little scared because the tires went off at Texas World, but they all went out there and ran great times and it ended up being a great day for us." Lone Gunmen, with only Jesse Johnson and Ken Ervin sharing the riding duties, won the C Superbike class in ninth overall. 14 ABOVE: LONE STAR TRACK DAYS (7), HERE LEADING TEAM ANVIL, FINISHED SECOND IN C SUPERSTOCK. BELOW: FC RACING (85), SINCLAIR RACING (48) AND JUNK YARD DOG (36). ABOVE: DESERT-RATS.NET (2) LEADS NORTHWEST HONDA RACING (1). LEFT: 2WHEELZ.COM (5) AND D2 CYCLES RACING (98) LOOK TO THE EXIT. 15 Endurance ABOVE: DESERT-RATS.NET (2) LEADS INFINITY GP RACING (88). LEFT: JUNK YARD DOG (36) AND BIG AIR RACING (21) GO AT IT. 16