FIM Snowcross World Championship Preview

When Tucker Hibbert arrives in Russia it's like the Beatles stepping off the plane in 1964.

The 2012 FIM Snowcross World Championship is set to take place this coming Saturday, February 25 in Semigoryie, Russia. Information has been slow in coming and we’ve been trying to track down a complete rider list. Two riders we do know who will be there are Tucker Hibbert and Iain Hayden.

Why Russia? If you’ve been paying attention, Russia has been steadily trying to put itself on the cultural map and has been making plays to get major sporting events. The 2014 Winter Olympics will be held in Sochi, Russia and a Russian group has locked down the FIM Snowcross World Championship for the foreseeable future.

This year’s event is being held at the Seven Hills Racing Club in Semigoryie, Russia.

The schedule of events begins on Friday, February 24, with the World Championships taking place on Saturday.

Fans can watch the race live here or here.

Nr Name First name Nationality FMN Snowscooter
1 1 Öhman Emil SWE SVEMO Lynx
2 2 Narsa Petter SWE SVEMO Lynx
3 3 Hibbert  Tucker USA AMA Arctic Cat
4 7 Pihlaja Aki FIN SML Arctic Cat
5 8 Lehtisalo Ville FIN SML Lynx
6 9 Renheim Adam SWE SVEMO Lynx
7 10 Herten Viktor FIN SML Lynx
8 12 Eriksson Peter SWE SVEMO Polaris
9 12 Toppala Hannu Petteri FIN SML Lynx
10 13 Evensson Marcus SWE SVEMO Polaris
11 17 Lindback Magnus NOR NMF Arctic Cat
12 18 Honka Jussi FIN SML Ski-doo
13 20 Ylianttila Ville FIN SML Ski-doo
14 23 Shalnov Alexander RUS MFR Lynx
15 24 Tsukov Dmitry RUS MFR Lynx
16 25 Spirin Dmitry RUS MFR Polaris
17 26 Nikishkin Alexey RUS MFR Arctic Cat
18 27 Pekhterev Artem RUS MFR Polaris
19 28 Yuferev Sergey RUS MFR Lynx
20 29 Grachev Nikolay RUS MFR Lynx
21 30 Ryzantsev Denis RUS MFR Lynx
22 31 Martyushenko Evgeny RUS MFR Lynx
23 32 Bykov Alexey RUS MFR Polaris
24 33 Zakharov Pavel RUS MFR Lynx
25 34 Butler Lee Alfred CAN CMA Polaris
26 35 Dahlgren Johan SWE SVEMO Lynx
27 36 Eriksson Olof Johan SWE SVEMO Polaris
28 37 Josefsen Andreas Meszaros NOR NMF Lynx
29 38 Puhakka Pieti FIN SML Arctic Cat
30 66 Kjellmann Kato NOR NMF Arctic Cat
31 93 Hayden Ian CAN CMA Polaris
32 123 Nakkalajarvi Lisko-Matti Andaras FIN SML Arctic Cat
33 935 Sklyarov Dmitry RUS MFR Lynx

Map of the venue and track for the FIM Snowcross World Championship. Click to make big.

2012 FIM Snowcross World Championship is ready to start at Semigorje

SEMIGORJE (RUSSIA), 23 February 2012 – Ivanovo hosted the official presentation of the 2012 FIM Snowcross World Championship. Mr. Daniele Rizzi, CEO Youthstream Organization, Mr. Didier Henriod, CEO Youthstream Media, Mr. Mikhail Men, Ivanovo Region Governor, Mr. Vladimir Gudkov, the Chairman of the Management Board of the OJSC “Investtradebank”, Mr. Maxim Shevchenko, Chairman of the Commission for Snowcross at the MFR, Mr. Victor Ivanov, Head of the Semigorje Technical Centre, and Mr. Tomi Ahmasalo, Clerk of the Course, welcomed the media, the riders and the fans to Russia for the celebration of the 2012 FIM Snowcross World Championship.

An outdoors ceremony took place afterwards in one of the main squares of the city and the crowd could see the Snowcross riders on the snowmobiles while the Moscow orchestra was playing some of the most emblematic pieces of Russian music.

Tomorrow, 24th February 2012, all the action will take place in Semigorje’s Technical Centre, which is located in one of the richest areas in Russia in terms of natural landscapes and forest resources. On MX-life.tv there are updated clips available with images of the region and exclusive content on the track which will host the 2012 FIM Snowcross World Championship. During the whole weekend MX-life.tv will provide a wide coverage of the event.

Reigning champion Emil Öhman from Sweden is determined to claim his third World Title in Semigorje this weekend, but American Tucker Hibbert, who got with the Title in 2010, is focused on riding a smart race to take the victory back to the States on his third appearance at the FIM Snowcross World Championship.

Swedish Petter Narsa succeeded in being on the second step of the podium last year in Tuuri, Finland, so his goal for the weekend is to measure his skills once more with the best Snowcross riders in the World and fight for what it would be his maiden FIM World Title. However, Ian Hayden from Canada is another clear favourite to battle for the victory this weekend in Semigorje, as well as Finnish Ville Ylianttila and the three-times FIM Snowcross World Champion Peter Eriksson.

It is the first time that Russia hosts the FIM Snowcross World Championship and for such remarkable event for the history of the country there will be up to twelve Russian riders taking part in the FIM Snowcross World Championship. Their goal is to fight for the top positions and they will all count with the unconditional and warm support from the Russian fans to achieve their goal.

2011 FIM SNOWCROSS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS:
1. Emil Öhman
2. Petter Narsa
3. Tucker Hibbert

Below are the details on how to follow Saturday’s event. Note: The race venue is located in the MSK timezone, which is +9 hours from EST.
LIVE, free online streaming: http://vefire.ru/channel/HDeXtreme/
For your convenience, the race times are listed below as EST.
1 – 2:45 a.m. – Qualifying
3:30 a.m. – Race 1
4:50 a.m. – Race 2
6:30 a.m. – Race 3
Edited highlight videos: http://www.mx-life.tv/
Two videos are already posted. The complete 52-minute program will be available within a couple days.
Tucker’s Twitter: http://twitter.com/hibbert68
Official Event Website: http://worldsnowcross.com/
Look for a photo report on Tucker’s blog later today! http://www.tucker-hibbert.com/blog

Soo Kids

Rick Tiede jetted from the Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado, where Joe Parsons competed in Snowmobile Freestyle and Best Trick with a Woody's-sponsored sled to the Soo. No big deal.

Some local school kids from the Sault Ste. Marie area got to tour the pits and talk with the racers on Wednesday at the Soo I-500. We present to you the team who got voted “Best Tour” by the kids, the DL Racing team of Shane Felegy and Joey Fjerstad. Photos are courtesy of Rick Tiede/Woody’s Traction and Joey Fjerstad. Those guys were feeding me photos and posting these on Facebook all morning and it made my day on so many different levels. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The DL Racing team qualified 4th and 11th on Tuesday.

Wednesday morning the kids showed up to learn a little bit about racing sleds. That's Joey Fjerstad on the left and Shane Felegy on the right. Nice hoodie Joey! Is there a future Soo rider in this bunch?

Time to try on some gear. One of the kids gets to snap on Shane's neck brace.

Tryin' on the goggles. Cute kid!

Protective gear is important when racing sleds!

All geared up! It looks like Joey's having more fun than the kids. I can tell you both Joey and Shane are great with kids, my two rugrats love both of them. And Rick Tiede? Well he's pretty much a kid himself. These kids probably had a ball in the DL Racing trailer.

Ya, he's not gonna share that.

The team took the kids outside to show them how things are done on the sled. Nice turn form Shane!

Lotsa questions. Hey Shane, is it fast?

Now for some seat time!

Makin' snowmobile sounds.

You're gonna need that shield when you're chasing down the No. 3 sled kid.

Some happy kids here! Joey said they cried when it was time to leave. Rick Tiede is in the middle, right in between the trailer doors. Like Joey, he looks like he had more fun than the kids! They all got DL Racing beanies to take home.

Back to business. Warm weather means rocks in the pits. Not good for keeping carbides sharp.

And back on the sled. Shane and two-time Soo winner Jeff Luenberger talk things over before heading out onto the track. Wednesday was Rookie day, so Joey got his first taste of the Soo oval.

Eagle River: 10 Years On

Snocross staging on Saturday morning. It was a pretty strong field and all the top National riders (excpet Tucker Hibbert) were there.

The last time I traveled to Eagle River for the World Championship Snowmobile Derby was 2002. I kind of wanted to go back because I had seen some great racing there, but my schedule was always full that weekend with other races or events. I saw P.J. Wanderscheid’s first WC win that weekend in 2002 and wrote the story about it in Snow Week. It was a hell of a race. The year before I’d seen Phil Moulton cry tears of joy after making the field for Sunday’s World Championship final. It’s truly a storied racing venue, probably the most historic in all of snowmobile racing. Anyway, this year I found myself with nothing on my schedule for the Derby weekend, so I called Todd Achterberg, scored some media credentials and made plans to be there. Here’s some of the stuff I saw.

With Levi LaVallee out with injury Bobby LePage is carrying the flag for Team LaVallee.

Christian Brothers Racing was there but without Logan Christian. He was on his way to Sweden to race Stadium Cross.

Shortly after I got there Champs were lining up to run the qualifier heats for Sunday's WC race. That's Andy Fjerstad sitting on the Tommy Lipar Racing Ski-Doo. He's one of Joey Fjerstad's crew.

That's Mike Houle sharing a laugh with someone. Mike's a former World Champion and is now crew chief for Malcolm Chartier.

Joey Fjerstad scored a ride on the Tommy Lipar Racing Ski-Doo just days before Eagle River. The team's regular rider, Joel Diamond, couldn't make the Derby due to personal reasons. The team's crew chief is George Sherrard.

That's Tommy Lipar, the guy behind the TLR Cup. He's doing good things for ice racing.

Champ riders come off the track after the first round of practice. To my eye the Derby Track seemed a bit wider, a little lolnger and somewhat less bowl-shaped than it did the last time I was there.

No ATVs were allowed in staging, probably because there wasn't much space there, so each crew had the pull their sled to and from the pits by hand. Here, Nick VanStrydonk's crew begins to pull his sled back to the pits.

Dustin Wahl heads back to the pits with his sled. The Wahl team had three sleds at the Derby - Jordan Wahl, Dustin Wahl and Brandon Johnson. All three made it into the WC.

Ryan Kniskern showed up to Eagle River with a used Champ. He surprised everyone when he took fourth in the World Championship final.

Gary Moyle gets ready to run his practice heat. He's a former World Champion (2005, 2007) and was one of the favorites to win. He runs a pretty trick Champ that features a cantilever rear shock setup.

Jordan Wahl is the newest member to the Wahl race team. Like all Wahls he's pretty fast. I was at Dustin's first race on a Champ at Beausejour in December 2001 so he still seems like the "new" Wahl to me. Am I old?

Gary Moyle's crew pulls his sled back to the pits as he watches. Last time I was here Gary was on Polaris and he burned down in the LCQ. He's come a long way since then.

Dustin Wahl demonstrates the correct way to ride a Wahl chassis into a turn.

Had to take a picture of this guy because he looked so freakin' cool.

Matt Schulz won the WC in 2010 on a Polaris. He led the entire race this year but lost the race in the final turn. That's gotta sting like crazy.

Anyone with a mohawk has got to be badass. Think about it.

Kody Kamm cleaned up in the Pro Lite class at the Derby. He's the next big thing!

I don't know what class this was, but this guy was racing a Yamaha triple. Some other guy was on a ZRT. Both sounded mint. One thing I noticed at the Derby is, other than Champ 440, there really wasn't much in the way of ice racing. Of course, last time I was there people were still racing stock sleds.

Justin Broberg waits for Pro Open racing to begin. He finished third in the snocross Pro Open World Championship race on Sunday. Like ice ovals, snocross numbers weren't near what they were ten years ago.

Ross Martin is always fast, but he seemed a little off at Eagle River. He was Top Qualifier for Sunday's WC final though so something was going right for him.

Robbie Malinoski was really fast all day Saturday and looked like a sure pick to win Sunday's WC final, but he got taken out in the first corner. The Scheuring Speed Sports sleds might be the best sleds on the track. They sure seem to work.

Malcolm Chartier won the Factory 600 Champ World Championship final. The class uses a stock single pipe 600cc race engine in a champ chassis. The sleds were pretty much as fast as a Champ 440, just as loud and the racing was exciting. This is where I see Champ racing going in the near future and I give credit to Ski-Doo for supporting the class.

Joey Fjerstad waits in staging for the first round of Champ qualifying to begin.

Spencer Graff waits in staging as the sun gets low behind him in Turn 1.

Dustin Wahl leads Joey Fjerstad and Dusty Gehrke out of Turn 2 during Champ 440 heat racing.

We went along for the burn. Everyone had 19B stickers supporting Curtis Boivin. Boivin was injured in a crash at Beausejour back in December.

Jordan Wahl leads P.J. Wanderscheid out of Turn 2 in another heat. P.J. was looking to win his fifth WC. He ended up fifth.

Travis MacDonald leads Malcolm Chartier and Cardell Potter out of Turn 2. Potter and Chartier made the WC. Chartier finished 7th, Potter DNF'ed. MacDonald crashed hard in the WC on Sunday.

The Wahl buggies looked pretty cool. Jimmy Johns is a big sponsor of the WC race.

Fjerstad crashed in the second round of heats when his track derailed. He got hit by another rider and knocked off his sled. His left arm is hanging down because his shoulder got dislocated in the crash. He popped it back in and raced the LCQ the next day.

Moyle's buggy in staging. The Arctic Insider sticker is good for 3-4mph on the straights.

If you go ice racing you're going to end up in the bales at some point. Jordan Wahl went into the bales while leading a heat during the second round.

Wahl popped right up and once the field had slowed he went to work getting his sled out of the bales.

No doubt with a ton of adrenaline flowing, he muscled the 350-pound Champ out in just a few seconds.

The sled looked good to go. Rules say if your sled is safe to ride you can re-start at the back, which is what he did. He made the WC.

Steve Scheuring used to race twin trackers here. Now he fields a snocross team.

That's Paula Warnert, Mark Warnert's wife. As part of the Warnert Racing team she's seen more snowmobile racing than most guys out there.

One of the Wahl mechanics warms up Jordan Wahl's sled, listening to the engine. Those ear muffs probably just knock the edge off the angry sound of that Champ engine.

Malcolm Chartier stands next to his sled. His team built a replica of the Derby Track to test on. It's such a unique track that's really the only way to do it. Mercury also did this back in the 1970s. I've ridden on the old Mercury track and it might be the right dimension but it's not the right shape.

Matt Schulz brought some smoke to the Derby, but his mistake in leaving the bottom open in the last turn cost him the WC.

Watching P.J. Wanderscheid in staging you would think he was racing any old ice race and not the World Championship. He seemed relaxed and more than confident. And why not? Who else has four World Championships?

Brian Bewcyk won the World Championship in 2008 and backed it up in 2009.

In my mind Nick VanStrydonk was the rider to beat. He set a blistering fast qualifying time on Thursday and during heat racing he rode away from the pack in both races. Plus, his crew had really cool retro Polaris gear which scores huge points if you ask me.

Terry Wahl has a World Championship to his name.

The tweaking on a Champ never stops. Here, one of Matt Richie's crew members makes some adjustments before he goes out for the second round of heats.

Even the Slednecks showed up to Eagle River.

Tim Tremblay won the Pro Open snocross World Championship.

Nick VanStrydonk became the 49th World Champion when he took advantage of a mistake by Matt Schulz on the last lap of the race. Coming out of Turn 4 Schulz went high, opening the door for VanStrydonk to get underneath him and steal the win.

 

 

USCC Pine Lake In Pictures

It was the first USCC cross-country race of the season and the first cross-country lake race in over a decade. It was also the answer to the question: Where do you race sleds if there’s no snow? Read on as we block our shocks, sharpen our studs and carbides and slam it down for the ice at the USCC Pine Lake event.

The riders meeting is always interesting.

After the main riders meeting USCC Race Director Jesse Strege asked the Pro riders to stick around. He threw out the idea of starting the Pro 600 final heads-up. Reception was lukewarm.

The only place you might actually need your headlight is at an early season USCC parade lap.

Rick Strobel was busy all week helping people with shocks so they could lower their sleds.

Hangin' out in the Christian Brothers Racing rig. Joe Lesmeister, Corey Berberich and Brian Rust talk with Roger Skime, Arctic Cat VP of engineering. Joe said he and Brian got in about one day of testing before Pine Lake.

The pits. 230 entries for the race, not bad. When is the last time Pine Lake saw that?

Yamaha is back racing and one of their Semi-Pro riders is Jake Jorgenson. He was telling us about the broken nose he suffered when he traveled out West a few weeks ago.

That's Jolene Bute and Mike Carver of Carver Performance. Jolene rules the USCC Women's class.

Pro and Semi-Pro riders in staging. Seeing as how it was the first race of the season (and a lake race at that) the mood was surprisingly laid back.

D.J. Ekre warms up while his sled warms up on the stand. Ekre's been to Pine Lake before, but the last time he raced here he was probably on a ZR.

Gabe Bunke gets ready to ride. Bunke has a lot of experience on the ice and he was one of the favorites going into the weekend.

Ryan Simons stretches out while Corey Berberich warms up his sled. Simons no longer races snocross, he's strictly cross-country. He's also reigning USCC Pro 600 points champ.

Lined up in Semi-Pro is Chase Nordstrom. Chase has risen through the USCC ranks and has a lot of talent. He flies planes too. The guy on the far left is Tom Kallock.

This warm up stand has been to Pine Lake before for sure. Heck, it's probably older than some of the kids who were there racing.

Some guys busted out the old sit-down iron hoping to have an advantage. I thought for sure there would be some ZRs or XCRs there, but nope.

A 10-mile lap goes by surprisingly fast and the Pros were already into the lower classes on their second lap. This is why you always need to be looking over your shoulder.

With almost no snow, the lake became a maze of course markers. It was difficult for the riders to figure out where to go until a groove got established.

Dillan Dohrn's track came apart on one of the two 1-mile straighaways. Corey Davidson's sled spit out a track too making for a wild ride for the No. 3 sled. Corey wasn't hurt but the sled was junk.

Bobby Menne and Ryan Greening talk about how it was easier for them to win last year in Semi-Pro. Both of them bumped up to the Pro class this year.

Aaron Christensen talks with some of the other Pro riders after they have a second riders meeting.

So much goodness here. The beauty of the USCC is you can race a sled like the Sno Pro 500 and have fun all day. The beauty of the Sno Pro 500 is you don't need a new one to go racing as demonstrated here by Tom Clement who is riding a 2010.

Ice racing is fun until...

Roger Skime again, this time with Paul Dick (L), Brian's dad and partner for the Iron Dog this season. Paul has raced Cain's Quest the past couple years and he's raced and finished more I-500s than probably any other rider so don't think he's the weak half of the pair.

Nathan Titus with Eric Josephsen, Yamaha's Race Manager. Titus just got a job with Western Power Sports. Josephsen holds an AMA Pro license. They're lined up waiting for the Pro qualifying lap.

Davidson was able to get a buggy together to run the Pro qualifying lap, but it was pretty much a stock sled so he was at a disadvantage since it wasn't lowered.

That's Cale Anseeuw. His uncle Jamie used to race for Team Arctic and was manager for Blair Morgan Racing Team. Cale finished 4th in Semi-Pro 600.

The Semi-Pro 600 race got pretty crazy a couple times. Here Spencer Kadlec leads two other riders into a corner. With this many sleds you run out of room quick!

That's Arctic Cat Snowmobile Product Manager Joey Hallstrom showing off his '79 Cross-Country Cat he used to win the USCC Vintage I-500 last year. The guy sitting on the sled is Tom Lawrence, Ski-Doo Race Coordinator.

The lady in the Ski-Doo jacket is Sharon Dyrdahl-O'Brien. Ya, she's Bryan, Chad and Brady's mom.

Brian Dick sez: "Well, let's run it!" You can see the start chute into the first corner behind him. Hey Brian, didn't Team Arctic get you any 2012 race gear?

Hey, it's Dan Ebert. Dan messed up his elbow during the snocross race at Canterbury and will be out for a few weeks. The guy behind him is Mike Kloety, Team Arctic Race Manager.

Your Top 3 qualifiers - Brian Dick, Ryan Faust and Ross Erdman. Erdman was fastest.

Erdman was blazing fast all day and looked like a good bet to win the Pro 600 final. The guy in the black and blue FXR jacket next to him is his long-time mechanic, Terry O'Brien.

Front row, ready to go. At this point it was getting a little tense.

Rumored to give you 2-3mph on the straights and/or a ski length on the start, Justin Tate wasn't taking any chances on not running a sledracer.com sticker on his buggy. Oh, by the way, this is a sure way to get a picture of your sled posted in a story.

Sure enough, Tate got the holeshot in the final. You're welcome.

Next time around Dick had gotten by Tate and was out front ahead of D.J. Ekre.

Tate, Faust and Erdman were on the gas trying to catch Dick.

Simons, Bunke and Chad Lian were also looking to get to the front.

Faust made up a ton of ground and within a lap was on Ekre's bumper.

It took a couple laps but Faust would eventually get by Ekre. Ekre was definitely feeling the heat here.

Aaron Christensen, who has ice racing experience and missed winning the Pro 600 points championship last year by just 12 points, was a ways back.

Faust and Ekre switched roles and Ekre chased Faust trying to get back second place for about the last half of the race.

Tate settled into 5th place but moved up to 4th just before the final lap when Erdman went out with a cracked oil tank.

With two laps left Brian Dick comes into view with no other riders near him.

Soon Faust and Ekre come into view, Ekre still chasing. Ekre took the second place spot back on the last lap. I don't know what happened, but I think Faust must have spun out in a turn or something.

Erdman comes around for the last time before going out of the race. He said his sled was losing power for some reason even before the oil tank cracked. Once the system lost oil the sled shut itself down to save the engine. These are the things you learn when you go racing.

Dave Dirkman's an old school ice racer and he's also not afraid to wear his duck hunting camo when he goes racing. He said getting his sled ready to go lake racing was "a lot of work."

We haven't seen Re Wadena in the Pro class on the USCC circuit since 2006. He finished second in the Red Lake I-500 one year.

Wadena pins it down one of the straights on Pine Lake. A lot of riders were complaining about how sketchy their sleds felt going down these straights. Fastest speed I heard of on the radar gun was Ryan Simons at 97mph.

Brian Dick heads into the final turn before the finish line. Safe to say he put on a clinic on how to go lake racing at Pine Lake.

2012 Cross-Country Rider Rankings

On the eve of the first USCC cross-country race of the 2011-2012 season its time for sledracer.com to do its 2012 Cross-Country rider rankings. We picked ten riders and ranked them 1-10, but this list could easily have been longer. To do some of the rest of the talented field justice we have to name some of the riders who didn’t make the list including rookie Pro riders Bobby Menne and Ryan Greening, Cody Kallock and Garth Kaufman. OK, now, on to the rankings!

Ross Erdman will be back on Yamaha for the 2012 season.

10. Ross Erdman
The 2007 Red Lake I-500 winner, Ross Erdman has bounced back and forth between Ski-Doo and Yamaha for the past few seasons and is back with Yamaha for the 2012 season. A tall, strong rider, Erdman has proven he is one of the few riders that can handle the big 4-stroke in cross-country and was on his way to setting fast time of the day with the sled on Day 1 of the 2010 Red Lake I-500 before the primary clutch exploded on his Nytro. He also put in some fast rides in the Pro Open class aboard a modified Nytro that season. Erdman combines technical knowledge with a fearless riding style and when things fall into place he is one of the fastest cross-country riders out there.

 

 

Gabe Bunke is a veteran cross-country racer.

9. Gabe Bunke
Much of success in cross-country comes from experience, and Gabe Bunke probably has as much or more than any other rider in the Pro class with the exception of Corey Davidson. Son of famed Polaris racer Jerry Bunke, Gabe is also an accomplished enduro racer and has won the Soo I-500 twice. Bunke has been close to winning the USCC I-500 more a than a few times, finishing second as recently as 2010. While he does better in longer races and the best bet is for him to win the Red Lake I-500, he is a savvy racer and can win at any given event.

 

 

 

Alaskan Tyler Aklestad is Ski-Doo's top cross-country rider.

8. Tyler Aklestad
A seasoned Iron Dog racer, Tyler Aklestad proved his versatility when he traveled south for the USCC race in Grand Forks last season and won Pro Open his first time out. Aklestad fought an injured heel most of last season as well as handling the stress of pulling double duty bouncing between racing the Iron Dog in Alaska and USCC events. A fire at a fuel stop put him out of last year’s Iron Dog after he had a good initial run going. While Aklestad will see more support from Ski-Doo this season on the USCC circuit, he will miss the Red Lake I-500 because he is scheduled to race the Iron Dog. Wherever he is, he will be amongst the leaders on the time charts.

 

 

No one has more experience in the Pro class than Corey Davidson.

7. Corey Davidson
Headed into last season Corey Davidson seemed all but washed up. He hadn’t won a USCC race since 2006 and seemed to be struggling. But back-to-back wins at the first two races proved he was not done with cross-country just yet. A three-time cross-country I-500 winner (including a win in 1997 during what was arguably one of the most competitive eras in cross-country) and eight-time Soo I-500 winner, Davidson can safely be ranked among the greatest snowmobile racers of all time. With low snow and some ice races on the schedule this may be the year Davidson makes one last push at a Pro points championship.

 

 

Justin Tate should be a stronger threat to win this season.

6. Justin Tate
A former stand out Pro on the National snocross circuit, Justin Tate has a Winter X Games Hillcross medal and a handful of National wins on his resume including having won Pro Stock at the prestigious Duluth National Snocross in 2001. Tate has evolved into a sort of journeyman snowmobile racer and now races Pro snocross, cross-country and enduros. He chalked his first USCC season last year up as a learning experience but even as he learned he logged a USCC Pro 600 win at the Red Lake 75. Tate has yet to show that he can be a threat every weekend, but when the pieces fall into place for him he will be a definite threat to win.

 

 

Aaron Christensen is Polaris' best chance to win it all.

5. Aaron Christensen
Arguably Polaris’ top cross-country racer, Aaron Christensen was just 11-points behind the Pro 600 points winner at the end of the 2011 season. Technically savvy and super-talented, Christensen is also a conservative rider and will err on the side of caution before he risks his body or machine. While this may not add up as sure a winning formula as some other riders who accept more risk, it makes Christensen dangerous because you know he is going to finish and finish with a competitive time. He took one USCC Pro 600 win last year at the Warroad 75. With a proven machine and tons of experience, his chances of winning it all are better than ever.

 

 

Cory Davis is one of the fastest cross-country riders out there.

4. Cory Davis
While Cory Davis couldn’t be considered a cross-country regular, when he does show up to any given USCC event he’s typically a threat to win. And, as he proved last year, he is also a threat to win the Iron Dog. On the last day of the Iron Dog he and his partner (his dad Scott) got stuck in waist deep snow. They spent a good 10 minutes getting the sleds out and they finished third, 9 minutes back. They don’t get stuck, they win. Davis is fast, he’s smart and he has all the instincts of a great cross-country racer. Put your money on him when he shows up.

 

 

 

D.J. Ekre is overdue to win the Red Lake I-500 as well as the USCC Pro 600 points championship.

3. D.J. Ekre
A veteran cross-country rider who cut his teeth on “old school” style racing, D.J. Ekre has matured into a master of terrain racing. Ekre is often the rider who sets the pace at any given USCC event and last year he won three USCC Pro 600 races, more than any other racer. For the past few years he’s been on the cusp of winning the Pro points championships but history shows that bad luck at the Red Lake I-500 usually kills his championship chances. For example, last year his carburetors iced up and the year before his track came apart while leading (by a good margin) on Day 3. The key to Ekre winning the points is the I-500 – if he does well there, he wins.

 

 

Ryan Simons won the USCC Pro 600 points championship in just his fourth season on the circuit.

2. Ryan Simons
The 2011 Pro 600 points champion, Ryan Simons is a relative newcomer to cross-country. Having only raced since 2008, Simons has caught on fast and has adapted so well from snocross that he is now a cross-country only rider for Team Arctic. While Simons is better in the rough, he has proven a fast learner and has gotten on the pace on just about every aspect of terrain. His biggest weakness is his propensity to crash, but he has reduced that as well. If Simons continues down the path of progression he is on watch for him to stay at the top of the heap for years to come.

 

 

 

Brian Dick is the top cross-country rider in the world right now.

1. Brian Dick
While his season was cut short last year at the race in Walker after he crashed and hurt his shoulder, Brian Dick was on his way to one of his best race seasons ever. Even with the injury-shortened season, Dick made a statement at the Red Lake I-500, setting a blistering pace on Day 1 in flat light and continuing that pace on Day 2 despite bitter cold on his way to the win. The advantages on his side and weapons in his arsenal are many. Perhaps the biggest is he is riding a new Procross chassis Arctic Cat, a sled he helped design and engineer so no one is more familiar with it than him. He has no weaknesses and is equally fast no matter the terrain. Though Dick may miss this year’s I-500 because he is scheduled to be racing the Iron Dog in Alaska, there is no doubt he is at the top of his game right now and is hands down the rider to beat.

Bunke Racing: Lake Race Testing

With the first lake race in over a decade just one week away, the Bunke Racing team was holed up at a secret location in Northern Minnesota dialing in its USCC cross-country sleds to run on ice. The high-sprung, snocross-derived Polaris IQ600R machines are definitely not made with lake racing in mind, but the sled proved surprisingly adaptable to the new venue. We hung out with them for a day and even got to burn some laps with them. Here’s some stuff that happened in no particular order.

You'd think testing would be just a lot of fun and riding with your buddies. Really, it's just a lot of work. Here the guys take orders from Gabe as he figures out how to get the race trailer level.

To quote the great Formula 1 racer Michael Schumacher, "To find the limit you must go over it." Gabe wrecked a sled the day before after he found the limit.

Ice testing means lots of extra work. Keeping studs and carbides sharp is a pain in the butt and ski-boots are a must.

Bobby Menne is multi-talented. Here he applies graphics to Gabe's backup sled. He put the graphics on all the sleds.

The team rolls the rest of the sleds out of the shop. It looked like a great start, but later on they'd all have to come back apart.

Gabe is a professional. Do not try this at home.

Here's Bobby showing off more of his sled prep talent.

Not sure if that buggy would pass tech at a USCC race.

Gabe had to transfer all the settings from his wrecked sled to his new sled so he could start where he left off the day before. It would prove a challenging day for him and at one point he said, "I don't know what to do." He figured it out though and was fastest in the group by day's end.

Gabe pitches it into a chicane while Bobby chases him. With no ice racing experience Bobby and Spencer Kadlec followed Gabe all day.

Right-hand turns are not as fun (or easy) as left-hand turns.

At one point Gabe and Bobby parked their sleds and just looked at them, checking ride height and how they sat. More discussion ensued.

And more adjustments. The team tested with and without swaybars. The Walker Evans shocks have a trick cupped piston that preloads the shims making the shock stiff as the piston starts to move and then getting softer as the shock starts to stroke. The setup ultimately proved better than a swaybar.

Spencer Kadlec is jumping way in the deep end with lake racing. He had never even ridden a sled before he started racing cross-country last season. He made a ton of changes and kept up with the team no problem. He's a crazy fast dirtbike rider so he knows how to race.

Even with these new snocross-style sleds some cross-country setup stuff never changes. Pass the caulk, please.

The 35-degree day was nice for wrenching. This is what snowmobile racing is all about.

Gabe even busted out his Soo sled and burned a couple laps. With the race only a month away he wanted to check some stuff with the engine.

Kadlec comes in hot. His confidence went from almost zero to almost 10 in one day. That's what a successful test session can do.

Spencer and Gabe talk setup. Starting to see a pattern here? Gabe, Spencer and Bobby all admitted they were nervous about the coming lake race. I'm betting they're not the only ones as there's an entire generation of cross-country racers who have never had to go lake racing before.

That'll be worth money someday.

If you've never heard a 600cc race engine going across a lake at full smoke you're really missing out. Sounds like a jet engine. Two of them sound even better. Those Polaris engines are thirsty buggers though.

The sun was getting low when the team decided to bring the sleds back to the trailer and start prepping for the next day. They had a long list of stuff to do ahead of them.

DL Racing: Chasing The Soo 2.0

There's nothing like unwrapping some new buggies to put a smile on a guy's face.

For DL Motorsports and team owner Don LaBean, two must be a lucky number. Or at least he’s hoping it is. You see, 2012 will mark DL Racing’s second attempt at wining the Soo I-500, the team will run two sleds and they have two new riders. Yeah, you could say two is a pretty critical digit for Don and the team right about now.

With the 44th Soo I-500 a little over a month away, the DL Racing crew has already been hard at it for a few months getting everything situated for this year’s race. From taking delivery of new buggies, meeting with sponsors, attending Haydays, and making the plan to not enter 1 but 2 (2!) sleds in the SOO I-500 this year, there’s definitely been a lot going on.

“After a pretty successful launch into enduro racing last season, why not expand and put two sleds in every race” Says owner Don LaBean “We have the resources, man power, and a list of sponsors that totally support our team. The biggest hurdle for us this year was sorting through the resumes from racers who wanted to be a part of our team this season.”

All new and shiny, they almost look ready to ride.

DL Racing will have the same three riders back on board with the team this season, but with a few changes. With two sleds, Justin Tate will be switching over to the new No. 28 sled, while Shane Felegy and Joey Fjerstad will team up to ride the No. 29.

The team will also welcome Soo veteran and multi-time champion Jeff Leuenberger. Jeff brings a ton of knowledge and strategy to the team and a few new helping hands to pit row. Jeff will throw a leg over the No. 28 with Justin this season.

Also new to the team will be Grant Lynch. Grant spent a fair amount of time last season bouncing between cross-country racing as well as racing the Soo I-500. The DL Racing team is expecting big things from him this year.

The shop has been buzzing with activity getting sleds ready to race.

Not quite. The DL crew goes to work immediately, tearing down the sleds to the bare chassis to get them ready for the Soo.

“Sleds have been delivered and completely disassembled already, said LaBean, “The front ends have been tweaked and modified from what we learned last year and some subtle changes have been made to make adjustability a little easier.”

With the race looming just a month away it makes what little test time is left really critical.

“ The team is working really hard to make sure we are ready for the first test session in a few weeks and we plan on holding nothing back with either sled come the Soo,” said LaBean.

Stay tuned to sledracer.com for more updates from DL Racing and Chasing the Soo 2.0

Sponsors: DL Racing, Woody’s, Polaris, Tiede2 Motorsports, Wahl Bros., Camoplast, Fox Shocks, Fly Racing, HMK, Klotz, Straightline Performance, XLT Engineering, EVS, 139 Design and Weiss Equipment.

Cutting into the brand new tunnel? I can't watch! A Soo sled is a different animal and the list of mods needed to endure (and win) 500 laps on an ice oval is long. And yes, some require a steady hand with a cutting wheel.

Returning Team Members:
Don LaBean – Owner
Rick Tiede – Sponsorship Coordinator
Larry Tiede- Crew

Rich Felegy- Crew
Bill Foner- Crew

Dana Hribek- Crew
Shawn Rosenbrock- Crew

Colby Campbell- Crew
Brad Weaver- Crew

Mike Floyd- Crew

LaVallee Goes 412-Feet At Red Bull: New Year. No Limits.

Photo: Garth Milan/Red Bull

San Diego, Calif. (December 31, 2011) – Just after midnight on the East Coast (9 p.m. Pacific) Levi LaVallee and Robbie Maddison soared over 300 feet of water, and when they safely landed, both established new world records for distance jumping on a snowmobile and motorcycle, respectively, at Red Bull: New Year. No Limits. The event was telecast live from San Diego, Calif., on ESPN, ESPNHD and ESPN3.

LaVallee, a 29-year-old native of Longville, Minn., who was slated to jump in the same event last year before a testing accident derailed his New Year’s plans, redeemed himself in a big way – by breaking his existing certified world record of 361 feet with a leap of 412 feet 6 inches.

Maddison, a 30-year-old Aussie now living in Temecula, Calif., also achieved history by breaking his existing certified world record of 351 feet 3 inches by more than 30 feet, landing 378 feet 9 inches from his take-off ramp.

Soon after the fog blanketing the event site cleared, the two athletes blasted toward the take-off ramps on the North park at Embarcadero Marina Park in the downtown area of San Diego Bay, and launched across the 300-foot water gap, touching down on the massive landing ramp on the South park. A capacity crowd of thousands packed the park and got an early jump on their New Year’s Eve celebrations.

“I’m as excited as I think a person can be,” said LaVallee. “I just landed an over 400-foot jump. I’m not sure how the sled’s doing, but I’m OK, so it was good. It’s an amazing feeling. You have no idea how pumped I am.”

“It’s a cool feeling to do what I do and have the backing I do,” said Maddison. “I was confident we were going to go a long way tonight and we’re going to come back and go even further.”

Photo: Rich Van Every/Red Bull

WORLD-CLASS ATHLETES
Maddison boasts an accomplished freestyle motocross career, with an X Games silver medal in 2010 in Moto X Best Trick and two wins on the Red Bull X-Fighters World Tour (Calgary 2009 and Madrid 2010). He also has a successful history of record-breaking achievements and globally captivating feats. Among them are backflipping across the Tower Bridge in London and clearing the Corinth Canal in Greece, to go with his previous New Year’s Eve successes, beginning in 2007 when he jumped his motorcycle 322 feet over a football field in Las Vegas and followed it up in 2008 by jumping onto – and off – the 96-foot-tall Arc De Triomphe at Paris Las Vegas.

LaVallee is a seven-time Winter X Games medalist (four golds) and champion snocross racer. He is widely known for becoming the first person to double backflip a snowmobile in 2009 at the Winter X Games. Despite the temperate climate in San Diego, LaVallee used artificial turf on his run-up path, which provided the necessary grip for his snowmobile’s track to ensure maximum speed as he hit the take-off ramp.

Red Bull’s annual New Year’s Eve celebration highlights extraordinary athletes pushing their physical, mental and technical limits to break boundaries and records. Leading up to their big night, LaVallee and Maddison worked with Red Bull’s athlete performance experts, physicists and engineers, in addition to their core teams, in an effort to get the most out of their bodies and machines. Valuable information has been attained with the goal of integration into future technological and athletic development.

After last year’s unfortunate cancellation, this was the fourth Red Bull: New Year. No Limits. event in the last five years. In 2008, the year Maddison went up and off the Arc de Triomphe, Rhys Millen backflipped an off-road truck. In 2009, Travis Pastrana jumped his rally car a staggering 269 feet over water, landing on a barge in Long Beach’s Rainbow Harbor.

Mystik Lubricants, title sponsor of LaVallee’s race team, is excited to partner with Red Bull in showing support for Levi during his record-breaking achievement.

2012 SHOF Inductees

Joey Hallstrom

Joey Hallstrom
DATE OF INDUCTION: February 18, 2012
CAREER SPAN: 1979 – Present
BRANDS REPRESENTED: Arctic Cat
AGE AT INDUCTION: 51

Combining a deep passion for the sport with the competitive heart of a racer, Joey Hallstrom built the Team Arctic Racing Program into a winning powerhouse; helped launch the iconic Jeep 500 cross-country race; and strongly influenced several pioneering Arctic Cat snowmobiles. The many accomplishments during his 25-plus-year career at Arctic Cat reflect his strong vision, persuasiveness and force of will.

An independent Arctic Cat terrain racer beginning in the late 1978, Hallstrom’s career with a reborn-Arctic Cat began first as a racer then as Race Manager in 1987. Recognizing the talent of racers and technicians and leveraging both in equal measure, Hallstrom built Team Arctic into a dominant force whose success defined the 1990s. Recognizing Arctic Cat’s need for race-focused snowmobiles, Hallstrom strongly influenced the creation of the iconic 1990 EXT Special and the legendary ZRs. He was intent to grow the sport of racing, spearheading the “boy racer” Jag Special in 1990 and launching a unique program that offered beginners the opportunity to freely compete on such machines in snocross. He dedicated similar support to Formula III and Mod class oval racing by commissioning small production runs of such chassis by T/S Racing beginning in 1989.

Hallstrom’s vision to grow the sport included helping launch the Jeep 500 cross-country snowmobile race in 1987 and initiated the first NHRA snowmobile asphalt drag exhibition in 1994. He played key roles at magazine photo shoots and helped produce two books on Arctic Cat’s history. Hallstrom transitioned to Arctic Cat Product Manager in 1999, where he continues to influence the success of Arctic Cat snowmobiles now and in the future.

Toni Haikonen

Toni Haikonen
DATE OF INDUCTION: February 18, 2012
CAREER SPAN: 1983 – 2002
BRANDS REPRESENTED: Ski-Doo, Polaris, Lynx, Arctic Cat
AGE AT INDUCTION: 41

An international racing legend whose raw talent intersected with the rebirth of North American snocross, Toni Haikonen catapult himself and the sport into new heights beginning in the mid-1990s. Haikonen’s fluid style and blazing speed would produce historic wins at nearly every venue, while his easy-to-like personality made him fan favorite throughout the world.

With a snocross career that began at age 12, Haikonen scored a Finnish National Championship, Scandinavian Championship and hundreds of victories prior to his introduction to North American snocross in 1993. His success in the U.S. earned him a sponsored ride with Ski-Doo/FAST beginning in 1994. In a history-making night at Canterbury Park in Shakopee, Minn., in 1995, Haikonen began double-jumping the course’s massive jumps to score a monumental victory that simultaneously launched the high-flying era of snocross.

In 1998 Haikonen notched another historic first by winning the inaugural ESPN Winter X Games snocross in Crested Butte, Colo., setting the stage for another period of snocross popularity. During his eight years of racing in North America, Haikonen scored dozens of National snocross wins, European Snocross Championships, MRP Championships and was a top finisher in select cross-country events. His last victory came in 2000, and he retired from the sport after the 2002 season.

Marcel Fontaine

Marcel Fontaine
DATE OF INDUCTION: February 18, 2012
CAREER SPAN: 1970 – Present
BRANDS REPRESENTED: All
AGE AT INDUCTION: 63

From racer to mechanic to race director, Marcel Fontaine lived, loved and dedicated himself to the sport of snowmobile racing for more than four decades. Most often cited for his undying passion for oval racing in Quebec, Fontaine masterfully guided Eastern Canadian oval racing for 30 years. His influence extended to nearly all forms of competition as he added snocross, drags, hillcross and watercross to his palette of offerings, while simultaneously building both relationships and coalitions that have preserved and expanded snowmobile racing during good times and bad.

An oval racer from 1970-1976, Fontaine would transition to mechanic, then to race director for CCMQ beginning in 1983. It was as a race director and sanctioning body that Fontaine would fulfill his greatest achievements and lasting contributions. He founded SCM and Eastern Pro Tour, worked with ISR and Quebec race rules committees and raised the professionalism of snowmobile competition throughout North America. In particular, Fontaine’s efforts to improve safety and fairness made him a standout race director who was recognized by racers, peers and industry as one of the great leaders of the sport.

Fontaine’s honest embrace of the snowmobile racing world as his “family” fostered a deeply loyal base of competitors and officials, and his unyielding professionalism leaves a legacy of success that will be felt for future generations of competitors.

Larry Bosacki

Larry Bosacki
DATE OF INDUCTION: February xx, 2012
CAREER SPAN: 1967 – Present
BRANDS REPRESENTED: All
AGE AT INDUCTION: 79

By embracing and nurturing the sport of snowmobiling during its formative years, civic-minded people like Larry Bosacki transformed winter recreation and the Wisconsin north woods. The third-generation owner of Bosacki’s Boathouse eatery on Minocqua Lake in the town of Minocqua, Larry understood that the fledgling sport was about people, experiences and hospitality. For more than three decades Larry gave from his business and himself to foster those key elements.

By partnering with snowmobile clubs, grooming local spur trails at his own expense and promoting snowmobile tourism at every turn, Bosacki helped grow the winter economies of an entire region. To expand his local business and the opportunity to ride, he operated a Ski-Daddler dealership from his boathouse in the late 1960s. Bosacki also leveraged his many statewide political relationships to help forge important trail accesses and routes that would come to define the north woods snowmobile experience. Two breakthrough efforts included saving railroad trestle bridges for snowmobile trail use, as well as spearheading the first dedicated snowmobile trail crossing of an active railroad track.

His love of snowmobile competition took many forms, including supporting and working on several race teams, and helping launch (and fund) the Snowmobile Hall of Fame. Bosacki’s accomplishments over three decades are testament to the power of people who act locally.

Ice Oval Testing In December

Any place to test or ride these days is a pretty hot commodity. The past two weekends there have been a ton of guys ripping around the race track in Strathcona, Minn. The track is maintained by a guy named Armand Westlund and is right in the middle of town. So much so, the guys had to wait til church was out on Sunday before they could fire up the sleds. We hung out with Joey Fjerstad and Shane Felegy as they put down some laps. Follow along as we run through some of the photos from the weekend.

Testing starts early. Here Joey Fjerstad waits for his chance to ride while Shane Felegy's sled is prepped by Bill Foner.

Joey fires up his sled. He runs a Felegy engine and a Wahl chassis.

Gotta warm it up a little before you hit the track.

Crew member Andy Fjerstad comes out to help get the sled rolling.

And its off to spin some laps. The Wahl team was there along with a handful of various other racers. There were enough riders there so the track started to get some braking bumps - real testing!

Felegy's new champ, built by Rick Bates, the guy wearing the Polaris jacket. Rick's been out in California helping Levi LaVallee test for his distance jump set for New Year's Eve. The guy in the Woody's hoodie is Rich Felegy.

While Shane raced the Soo last year, he took the year off from Champ racing because this sled wasn't finished in time. It's a huge process to shake down a totally new chassis, but these are three highly-experienced minds.

Shane was comfortable on the sled right out of the box. It was a very positive test session and the team set to work trying to make it go faster. This is a one-off sled, but Bates has jigs for all the parts and is working on spares so the team is ready for its debut in Amherst, WI.

Jordan Wahl waits for his turn to ride. He's the newest member of the Wahl Racing team. He can rip too - he set top speed at Beausejour laying down a 104.9mph number on the radar.

Hey, there's Brandon Johnson, Jordan Wahl's teammate. He's messing with the clutch on his No.22 Champ.

Here's a look at the track in Strathcona. Armand maintains this track out of love for the sport. They have some vintage races every year here too. That's Rick Bates, Rich Felegy and Bill Foner (with the camera) watching Shane spin test laps.

While it might sound fun and glamorous, testing is really just plain work. Most of the time is spent swapping parts and taking the same things apart over and over.

There are lots of trips to and from the trailer.

And lots of working on the sled with numb fingers.

For the rider there's usually a lot of hurry up and wait. Oh, see that ADHUE logo? They stepped up support for the JF16 program this year so some thanks has to go out to them.

It was certainly busy on the pond! Oh, and see that vintage racer? Those are no joke. That's pretty much the stepping stone to the Champ class these days. It's the only thing close in the power-to-weight department.

Bill Foner messes with Felegy's sled. Felegy is supported by Aggressive Hydraulics, DL Racing, Woody's, HMK and Apparelfreaks.com.

Another look at the sled. It's certainly different!

I might be biased but that hood looks pretty darn good...

A look under the hood of Joey's sled as Andy Fjerstad makes some changes. Those Champs are amazing machines.

And the long drive home. Careful with those peppers, Joey!