Archive for Januar, 2007

Enduro Förderung, bisher 28 Anmeldungen

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 31 - 2007

Bisher sind 28 gültige Anmeldungen eingegangen! Ich werde vorraussichtlich am 10.3. oder am 17.3. ein Sichtungstraining in Flöha auf der MotoCross Strecke durchführen. An diesem Tag möchte ich nicht nur das Fahrtalent testen, sondern auch die Fitness der 40 Teilnehmer.
40 Fahrer werden maximal eingeladen und in zwei Gruppen geteilt (Altersgruppen), danach werden verschiedene Trainings absolviert und die besten 15 bekommen eine Förderung für das ganze Jahr !

Bisher unterstützen mich ehrenamtlich: Steffi, Uwe, Rene und meine Freundin Nicole

Weitere Helfer sind erwünscht!

Enduro DM 2007

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 31 - 2007

Und hier die Termine für die Deutsche Enduromeisterschaft und Enduro Pokal!
Int. Deutsches Enduro-Championat
Deutsche Enduro-Meisterschaft
Deutsche Enduro-Mannschaftsmeisterschaft


  • 04.03. Uelsen
  • 25.03. Dahlen
  • 11.08. Burg
  • 12.08. Burg
  • 26.08. Waldkappel
  • 09.09. Dachsbach
  • 30.09. Streitberg
  • 13.10. Zschopau

Deutscher Enduro-Pokal
Deutscher Enduro-Mannschaftspokal


  • 04.03. Uelsen
  • 25.03. Dahlen
  • 05.08. Sulzbach-Rosenberg
  • 11.08. Burg
  • 12.08. Burg
  • 19.08. Hassloch
  • 26.08. Waldkappel
  • 09.09. Dachsbach
  • 16.09. Bad Windsheim
  • 30.09. Streitberg
  • 06.10. Tuchheim
  • 28.10. Kempenich

Quelle: www.enduro-dm.de

Amp’d Mobile World Supercross – 4th round San Francisco, CA – Lites West
After a somewhat rough weekend at Anaheim 2 everyone was looking for things to go a lot smoother in San Francisco.

The threat of rain had the first set of qualifying sessions cancelled, but when they finally pulled off the plastic the track looked great.

Heat one saw Josh Hansen once again suffer from the bad luck that has seemed to follow him this year. An early crash meant he would get a little extra track time during the LCQ, which he easily qualified out of by finishing second behind Josh Grant.

In heat two Martin Davalos grabbed the holeshot aboard his KTM 250 SX-F against a stacked field that included series points leader Ryan Villopoto. Davalos would eventually get passed by Villopoto, but would follow him to the checkered flag in second.

The main event started out great for Davalos as another amazing start had him battling for the second place early on. Having to go through the LCQ left Hansen with an undesirable gate pick that saw him complete the first lap in 20th place. Unfortunately, Davalos’s race was effectively over when Chris Gosselaar slid out in front of him and left him with no place to go. For Hansen the main event was all about passing people. By race end he moved all the way up to 8th place.

Lites West

POS. RIDER MANUFACT. NAT.
1 51 Ryan Villopoto Kawasaki United States
2 24 Joshua Grant Honda United States
3 73 Jake Weimer Honda United States
4 58 Joshua Hill Yamaha United States
5 338 Jason Lawrence Yamaha United States
6 74 Kyle Partridge Honda United States
7 141 Steve Boniface Kawasaki United States
8 100 Josh Hansen KTM United States
9 138 Michael Lapaglia Yamaha United States
10 630 Matthew Lemoine Yamaha United States

Find pictures on www.ktmimages.com – US Racing.

Hole Shot – Martin Davalos
Josh Hansen
KJSC

Training Alanya direkt am Strand

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 25 - 2007

alanya1 094, originally uploaded by MarkoBarthel.

Heute war wieder ein toller Tag, 20Grad, Sonne und Meer ;-)
Ich habe eben neue Fotos auf meinen flickr geladen (einfach aufs Foto klicken), viel Spaß beim ansehen!!!

Bis bald, Marko

Fotomontage ;-)

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 25 - 2007


sprung, originally uploaded by MarkoBarthel.

Besten Dank an R.Pairan !!

Clean sweep of Dakar podium for KTM

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 22 - 2007
Despres, Casteu and Blais ride to glory in world’s toughest rally.

KTM Factory riders made a clean sweep of the podium at the conclusion of the Dakar 2007 Rally Sunday when Cyril Despres (Gauloisses KTM) came home safe and sure in the final stage to finish overall leader by 34.19 minutes. The rally, which started on January 6 in Lisbon has taken riders 8696 gruelling km to the finish line at Lac Rose near Dakar to live up to its reputation as the world’s toughest rally for both man and machine.

The 32-year old Frenchman finished ahead of fellow Gauloisses KTM team-mate David Casteu with American rider Chris Blais (Red Bull KTM), 52 minutes behind the leader, finishing third.

“I am really happy with the victory,” Despres said. “ I approached it day by day and I tried not to look forward too far. I have never doubted that I could win the Dakar again. I knew I could do it. I know my skills and I had faith in myself, my team and my bike. “

Despres won the event in 2005. His latest victory was a tribute to his superiority on his KTM machine but also a touch ironic. His arch rival and friend Spaniard Marc Coma (Repsol KTM) had a commanding lead going into the final stages and seemed certain to secure his second consecutive Dakar victory when navigation problems and a crash dashed his hopes on Friday. The door was then opened for Despres to ride home steadily to seize the 2007 title. Ironically the situation was the complete reverse of what happened in the closing stages of the Dakar 2006. Then Despres looked a sure winner in the final stages only to crash out and retire with a broken collarbone, leaving the glory to Coma. The Spaniard, hospitalized and badly shaken after his crash Friday, was already back in the paddock with fellow KTM riders on Saturday afternoon.

KTM 690 Rally proves its worth

The three podium places for KTM continue the company’s winning streak in the world’s toughest rally, which they won for the first time in 2001 and have continued to dominate ever since. Above all the 2007 victory confirms the dominance and reliability of the new KTM 690 Rally race bike, the first time it has been used in the Dakar. Further developed and refined over the last year with significant input from factory riders, the 690 was also extensively tested in other world class rallies during the 2006 season by Marc Coma.

New neck brace helps protect riders

True to its reputation as the world’s toughest rally, the Dakar this year claimed its share of non-finishers. Coma had prophetically remarked in an interview on Thursday that despite a commanding lead he didn’t consider himself the winner until Sunday. His dream went up in a cloud of dust the following day. Four of the other eight KTM factory riders also did not finish. Thankfully, although they were taken out of contention through a series of crashes over the eight stages, all of them escaped serious injury. This was a testament to the effectiveness of the new KTM Neck Brace protection system that all KTM factory riders wore for the Dakar 2007.

Hans Trunkenpolz, Overall Team Manager expressed his satisfaction with both the result and his entire team.

“As always the Dakar is very, very tough,” he commented. “Apart from the great effort from Despres, Casteu and Blais I am really satisfied with the performance of the entire team and with the new 690 Rally race bike. I would like to extend my thanks to every single team member for their dedication and their hard work.”

Results Dakar – Dakar

Rank Rider Nation Bike Time
1 VINTERS LAT KTM 00:08:42
2 ULLEVALSETER NOR KTM 00:08:49
4 DE AZEVEDO BRE KTM 00:09:10
6 CASTEU FRA KTM 00:09:14
25 BLAIS USA KTM 00:10:09
56 DESPRES FRA KTM 00:11:04

Final overall results

Rank Rider Nation Bike Time Gap
1 DESPRES FRA KTM 51:36:53 00:00:00
2 CASTEU FRA KTM 52:11:12 00:34:19
3 BLAIS USA KTM 52:28:59 00:52:06
4 ULLEVALSETER NOR KTM 53:14:50 01:37:57
5 RODRIGUES POR YAMAHA 54:07:34 02:30:41
6 VINTERS LAT KTM 54:21:14 02:44:21
7 MARCHINI FRA YAMAHA 54:37:20 03:00:27
8 BETHYS FRA HONDA 55:03:26 03:26:33
9 KATRINAK SLQ KTM 55:17:03 03:40:10
10 CZACHOR POL KTM 56:00:57 04:24:04
11 KNUIMAN HOL HONDA 56:14:32 04:37:39
12 PLANET FRA KTM 56:51:11 05:14:18
13 STANOVNIK SLO KTM 58:11:41 06:34:48
14 VINTERS LAT KTM 58:44:46 07:07:53
15 MACEK CZE YAMAHA 59:16:38 07:39:45
16 PAIN FRA YAMAHA 59:18:50 07:41:57
17 ALGAY FRA YAMAHA 59:55:25 08:18:32
18 CLASSEN AFS KTM 60:14:50 08:37:57
19 BERGLUND SUE KTM 60:34:26 08:57:33
20 KATAI HUN KTM 60:37:25 09:00:32
21 FLOIRAC FRA KTM 60:42:50 09:05:57
24 DABROWSKI POL KTM 60:58:02 09:21:09
25 DE AZEVEDO BRE KTM 61:21:38 09:44:45
26 LEPAN FRA KTM 61:24:30 09:47:37
27 CARILLON FRA KTM 61:27:58 09:51:05
30 ESTEVE PUJOL ESP KTM 61:42:25 10:05:32

Cyril Despres: glorious victory

Cyril Despres had his bad moments in the 29th Dakar. He needed the help of his friends to move on. He crashed, he struggled, he fought. But in the end, on the podium at the borders of the Lac Rose near Dakar, Despres was the glorious and excited winner of the Dakar. Three days before his 33rd birthday the trophy was the best gift the KTM Gauloises rider could imagine.It is the second time Despres has won the Dakar. He did it before in 2005. But this time it was different. ‘I am a different person than two years ago. My priority is having fun, enjoying riding my bike instead of racing. I have been through a difficult time. I have lost dear friends, people who were very close to me. They have been on my mind for the whole rally. This made me realise racing is not the most important thing in life. I have learned about the relativeness of life. It made me a better, stronger and also a more balanced person. What I can tell now, at this moment, this victory means a lot more to me.’

Despres didn’t have the best imaginable start of the Dakar. On the rest day in Atar, after 7 stages, he was in fourth position, 44.56 minutes behind Marc Coma. Although the difference after stage 8 was ten minutes bigger, Despres moved up to second.

‘I approached it day by day, tried not to look forward too far. I have never doubted that winning the Dakar again was possible. I knew I could do it, I know my skills and had faith in myself and my bike. I was happy almost every day at the finish line, knowing I did a good job.’

Only after the crash of Coma, on stage 13 from Kayes to Tambacounda, Despres moved up to first, but in fact it was the worst day of the Dakar for him. ‘I did not know what had happened to Marc,’ Despres tells. ‘All I knew in the beginning is that he was far behind. At the tank stop David Castera (race director) told me Marc had crashed, but he didn’t know how serious it was. The last 30 minutes of that special, I was really, really scared. We have lost too many friends in the desert in the past. The thought of that, was too much. I prayed for Marc, wishing he was alright.’

At the finish Despres – he won that stage – heard Coma was alive and well and the Frenchman had to sit down for a while to think things over. ‘I needed some time for myself. I have had some unlucky and unhappy moments myself in the rally, with a crash in Portugal and one in Morocco and I had a bit of trouble with my bike. But being sad and scared is much worse than being unhappy. After arriving in Tambacounda I went to see Marc and I was impressed. He wished me luck.’

Getting the leading position only two days before the finish was not too bad for Despres, although he preferred to be in the lead from the beginning. ‘It didn’t make me nervous, but it is a different pressure, not very easy. When you are in second you feel the need to put push harder and take more risks. It is easy to make mistakes then. I had to stay very concentrated. I was able to do that thanks to training and being very fit. That was the secret of this victory.’

‘It wasn’t too difficult,’ Despres admitted. ‘But on the other hand, it is never difficult when you’re winning. To be honest, every Dakar is difficult. We didn’t have any big dunes, which made it easier physically. But every stage had something interesting, in navigation, in speed, in soft sand, whatever.’

Being on a bike and enjoying the ride also helped to stay focussed. Despres is not thinking of swapping his KTM for a car, as other winners in the bike catergory did before him. ‘No, no, not at all. I love the desert but I also love my bike, a lot. I want to do keep doing this, as long as I can. A car is not my thing. Normally I fall asleep after 100 kms in the car.’

Published by KTM Sportmotorcycles AG, Mattighofen, Austria, www.ktm.com

Podium
Winner – Cyril Despres – Gauloises KTM
2nd place for David Casteu – Gauloiese KTM
3rd place for Chris Blais – Red Bull KTM

Training

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 22 - 2007


ROB_2167, originally uploaded by MarkoBarthel.

Die erste Woche im NEUEN Jahr wieder in der Türkei!

Warming up for a tough motocross season

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 18 - 2007
KTM’s MX Factory Teams discover a place in the sun.

KTM MX1 and MX2 factory teams have had a dynamic launch into their 2007 professional activities with a special training session in Spain. There they could enjoy temperatures of 20 degrees and get down to business on one of the best MX training facilities around.

The four factory team riders for 2007 – David Philippaerts and Johathan Barragan for MX1 and Tyla Rattray and Tommy Searle for MX2, along with mechanics and other team members gathered at Stephan Evert’s Motocross School 80 km north of Valencia for three weeks of activities. Everts, MX supremo and 10-times world champion, ended his amazing 18-year active career in 2006 and has now joined KTM as the Motocross Race Director.

Stephan said the pre-season gathering had been a good start to the season and that the team spirit was very positive. “Of course being the race director is still a learning experience for me after ending my active career,” the MX maestro said. “I will try to give the team 100% and to help them as much as possible. I have some good expectations but I always take the down-to-earth approach at the beginning of the season. I am quite relaxed about it.”

Pit Beirer, KTM Motorsport Director also said it was an excellent pre-season launch and one that KTM will pursue in the future. As well as creating the perfect opportunity for the entire team to get to know and work with each other, Evert’s facility presents everything they need to prepare for the racing season. Team members were not only able to get better acquainted with team boss Stephan; they could revel in the comprehensive facilities that include a training circuit, water systems, full fitness facilities, a pool and excellent accommodation.

“This was a perfect base for the pre-season,” Pit Beirer said. “The guys could do their training but also relax, have fun and get to know each other. It was a great opportunity for riders and mechanics to work together and to learn more about each other’s responsibilities.” This builds trust and team spirit, according to Beirer, both essential components of any successful KTM factory team.

The training session was also a perfect chill-out time before the season gets underway with the accompanying stress of continual travel and a demanding race program that Pit says is getting tougher and tougher.

“As always we set our sights on a world championship title,” Pit commented looking ahead to the motocross season. “But it is a very tough competition. Let’s say we want to be competitive and we want to fight for the title.”

Published by KTM Sportmotorcycles AG, Mattighofen, Austria, www.ktm.com

Setting work
Fitness test
KTM Red Bull Racing Team

Going into the final stages of the Dakar Rally, Marc Coma has a 54 minute lead on his arch rival and fellow KTM rider Cyril Despres in this classic that truly tests man and machine.

But with just days to go, the Spanish rider is far from confident saying he has not won until he climbs onto the top podium spot in Dakar. With just three days and 700 km to the finish, Coma (KTM Repsol) still looks fresh.

KTM: Are you still not getting tired?

Coma: ‘I am, but it doesn’t show. Tiredness tends to be internal with me. But in general I do feel fit. I have had a lot of training before and that helps me to keep up my fitness. Besides that, I’m really in the best team possible and everybody knows their task. That helps a lot in getting rest and sleep; if I need it.’

KTM: Don’t you miss Giovanni Sala and Jordi Viladoms as supporting riders?

Coma: ‘Losing Gio and Jordi is a real pity. They were very important to me. Together with my team manager Jordi Arcarons I try to find the best solutions for me without the help of back up riders. On the other hand: in the end you are on your own anyway.’

KTM: You are not very far away from your second victory. Are you thinking about that?

Coma: ‘No, not at all. I’ll only think of myself as the winner if I am on the podium in Dakar. Not an hour earlier. Of course I am happy with my leading position in the general standings, sure. Everything is going according to plan. But I have seen too much to think that I have won already. Too much can happen in the days we have left. I admit that 54 minutes is quite an advantage, but it would be possible for someone to catch me. Anything can happen. I have not won yet, I can still lose.’

KTM: What you think of the Dakar so far? It doesn’t seem the toughest one in years.

Coma: ‘The Dakar is always tough. A few of the stages at the beginning were more difficult than before. And Mauritania is never easy. The organisation has taken out one extremely hard stage, which normally would have knocked out many competitors and due to the safety measures more people can stay in the race. For me it is a matter of staying concentrated and not making mistakes. But that’s the case in every Dakar, in every race.’

KTM: How about the remaining days?

Coma : ‘As I said, it is not over yet. It doesn’t seem far anymore, but the last three days are always difficult. Not in concentration and motivation – that is no problem for me at all – but the circumstances will be completely different from what we’ve experienced so far. There will be trees, people, villages, animals, holes, rocks, water. A cow crossing the track can ruin everything and there is nothing to do about that. That is also why I consider 54 minutes in front of Cyril Despres not yet a safe margin.’

Published by KTM Sportmotorcycles AG, Mattighofen, Austria, www.ktm.com

Bike cleaning – Marc Coma

Marc Coma, Repsol KTM

Amp’d Mobile World Supercross – 2nd round Phoenix, AZ – Lites West

Posted by Marko Barthel On Januar - 15 - 2007
Round two of the AMA Supercross series in Phoenix, Arizona started out with a bang as both Factory KTM riders Josh Hansen and Martin Davalos easily qualified for the main event straight out of their heat races.

In fact the only scare of the day happened during timed qualifying when after setting some fast times and blitzing through the whoops arguably faster then anyone else in the class Josh went down hard. Luckily he was able to continue and set the fifth fastest time.

You couldn’t ask for a better start to the Supercross Lites main event with Martin Davalos and his KTM 250SXF with the holeshot and teammate Josh Hansen right in tow. A few small mistakes and caused Davalos to slip back right away, but he would later regain his composure and finish just inside the top ten. Hansen used his good start to battle for a spot on the podium but a small mistake in the second whoop section left him with a sore left wrist that almost cost him any points as he considered pulling out of the race. Instead he soldiered home for a fifth.

Next event 20/01/07 – Anaheim, CA

Published by KTM Sportmotorcycles AG, Mattighofen, Austria, www.ktm.com

 

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