Ryan Villopoto Wins Houston Supercross

Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto earns his fourth win of the season in Houston and tightens his grip on another series championship.

Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto earns his fourth win of the season in Houston and tightens his grip on another series championship.

Monster Energy Kawasaki's Ryan Villopoto overcame three crashes during the race action at Reliant Stadium to claim his fourth 450cc main event win of the season and extend his series points lead. Villopoto is rapidly closing in on a fourth consecutive Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.
Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto overcame three crashes during the race action at Reliant Stadium to claim his fourth 450cc main event win of the season and extend his series points lead. Villopoto is rapidly closing in on a fourth consecutive Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.

Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto didn’t get to be a three-time consecutive Monster Energy AMA Supercross Champion without making the best of bad days. After enduring two crashes in practice and another in his heat race when round 14 of the series visited Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas, tonight, Villopoto could have simply cruised in the main event, secure in the knowledge that simply remaining upright would be enough to maintain his substantial series points lead and edge him closer to a fourth consecutive Supercross title.

Instead, Villopoto did as he often does. He gutted it out, transferred into the main event through a semi and then promptly stole the lead in the 20-lap race and ran away to notch his 38th career Monster Energy AMA Supercross victory and his fourth win of the year. Rather than worry about mitigating the damage to his points lead, he extended it, and now sits a comfortable 45 points—more than two race wins—ahead of the new second-place man, Yoshimura Suzuki’s James Stewart, with just three rounds to go.

The red hot James Stewart (7) came to Houston after battling an illness all week. It derailed his consecutive race win streak, but Stewart still managed to finish fifth in the main event and move past Ryan Dungey (5) for second place in the series standings.
The red hot James Stewart (7) came to Houston after battling an illness all week. It derailed his consecutive race win streak, but Stewart still managed to finish fifth in the main event and move past Ryan Dungey (5) for second place in the series standings.

Villopoto’s win also marked an end to the brilliant win streak that Stewart has enjoyed over the past three rounds. In a bit of a role reversal, Stewart, who struggled with an illness all week, had to take what he could get at Houston. And while he looked fast as usual while winning the second heat race, his energy was depleted by the middle of the main event. His fifth-place finish was still solid, and it also moved him past Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey into second place in the series standings, but that didn’t come without a little help.

Things got a little too close for comfort as RCH Soaring Eagle Suzuki’s Josh Hill locked bars with Stewart and crashed through the Tuff Blox on the start straightaway just after the main event gate dropped. Stewart didn’t crash, but he was slowed up just enough to get stuck outside the top five through the first corner while Villopoto grabbed the holeshot ahead of BTO Motorsports KTM’s Andrew Short, MotoConcepts Suzuki’s Mike Alessi, Muscle Milk Honda’s Justin Barcia and Red Bull KTM’s Ken Roczen.

The complexion of the race changed quickly as Muscle Milk Honda’s Trey Canard quickly moved inside the top five and teammate Barcia pushed all the way to second as the field blitzed through the first whoop section on the opening lap. There was also more carnage as Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey and Motosport.com Suzuki’s Weston Peick made contact over a jump. The contact forced Peick into JGR Yamaha’s Josh Grant, and all three riders crashed hard, with Grant getting the worst of it.

As he often does, Villopoto set a torrid pace up front, with Barcia, Roczen and Canard running close together in the second, third and fourth positions. Villopoto had a 4.3-second lead over Barcia by lap five. Barcia then began to put a lot of time on Roczen and Canard, the duo still clicking off steady laps in third- and fourth-place respectively.

Stewart, meanwhile was cruising in sixth place, behind Short, and he didn’t put up much of a fight when GEICO Honda’s Eli Tomac dropped him to seventh place on lap five. Stewart’s illness was clearly affecting him as he posted lap times as much as 1.8-seconds slower than Villopoto. Tomac then made a mistake and nearly crashed when he tried to pass Short for fifth place on lap 12. The mistake dropped him to 10th place. Stewart was able to pass Short and move into fifth place.

But no one could catch Villopoto, who had settled into a rhythm that would sustain him all the way to the finish. Villopoto’s final margin of victory over Barcia was a whopping 13.669 seconds.

“It was a little bit tough, but we were able to get a great start,” Villopoto said. “We’re closing down here, and we’re just looking forward to getting this overwith.”

That’s a real possibility as early as next week. Villopoto could mathematically clinch the season championship at round 15 in Seattle.

“I feel good, but we have two critical rounds coming up,” Villopoto said. “As a rider you need to stay on your game and show up every weekend. If something doesn’t go as planned, like it did today, you have to bounce back and recover.”

Justin Barcia manned up over some of the Reliant Stadium jump sections and rode a confident and calculated race to finish second in the main event. Barcia now has three consecutive podium finishes.
Justin Barcia manned up over some of the Reliant Stadium jump sections and rode a confident and calculated race to finish second in the main event. Barcia now has three consecutive podium finishes.

Although Villopoto got away from him, Barcia still looked extremely strong and confident in the main event. He was one of just a few riders who was able to make a quad jump out of one of the seconds on the racetrack, and it paid off with his third straight podium finish.

“I’ve been very comfortable with the bike…so I am comfortable with that,” Barcia said. “The track was extremely tough tonight. I didn’t bust out the quad all day, but I busted it out in the main event, so that was pretty intense. But I did a few things out there that cost me some time. Ryan rode a great race. I’ve just got to keep on working. I’m getting better every weekend. I just have to keep on pushing.”

Houston marked a return to the podium for Ken Roczen (94) after a four-race absence. Trey Canard (51) finished fourth in only his second Supercross appearance all-season.
Houston marked a return to the podium for Ken Roczen (94) after a four-race absence. Trey Canard (51) finished fourth in only his second Supercross appearance all-season.

Roczen, meanwhile, lost sight of Barcia early in the main event, and he finished the race pretty much just as he started it, in third place. However, there was reason to be happy is the finish marked the German-born rookie’s first podium finish in four rounds.

“It feels awesome to be back up here,” Roczen said. “Obviously, I never grew a pair on the quad. If I could have done that, then I think I could’ve stayed a little closer to Justin. But the track was really tough out there. I went through the whoops pretty decent the whole race, and then just started jumping that with a couple laps to go. The riding was okay, nothing too good and nothing too bad. It was just another solid race, and I’m actually happy to be back on the podium. I’m going to California now, and I think I’m going to get in a couple of surfs next week and be back strong on the weekend.”

Canard also put together another excellent performance in just his second Supercross round all season, coming in fourth, ahead of Stewart and Short. Dungey, whose chances at running down Villopoto were effectively ruined when he crashed early in the main event, managed to salvage seventh place. Alessi was eighth, with Tomac ninth and N-Fab Honda’s Chris Blose 10th.

Jason Anderson (foreground) picked up right where he left before the long layoff of the AMA Western Region 250cc Supercross Series, earning a narrow win over Dean Wilson (background) at Houston. Anderson now has four wins in seven rounds and is the odds-on favorite to bring home the West crown.
Jason Anderson (foreground) picked up right where he left before the long layoff of the AMA Western Region 250cc Supercross Series, earning a narrow win over Dean Wilson (background) at Houston. Anderson now has four wins in seven rounds and is the odds-on favorite to bring home the West crown.
Fireworks were anticipated between AMA 250cc Western Region title combatants Jason Anderson and Cole Seely. With the West series resuming in Houston after its long week layoff, race fans had every reason to expect that the pair would square off in a desperate attempt to secure the advantage heading into the final round of the series in Seattle next week. In the end, however, Rockstar Energy KTM’s Anderson prevailed in a last-lap battle over Monster Energy/Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s Dean Wilson while Lucas Oil/Trouy Lee Designs Honda’s Seely finished fourth, putting his title hopes in serious jeopardy.

Lucas Oil/Troy Lee Designs Honda’s Jessy Nelson pulled the holeshot, but Anderson immediately blitzed past him in the first whoop section to assume the lead, followed by Monster Energy/Pro Circuit Kawasaki teammates Dean Wilson and Justin Hill. Wilson dropped to fourth, just ahead of MAVTV/Troy Lee Designs Honda’s Malcolm Stewart. Seely was stuck back in eighth place off the start, but he passed his way to fifth place, behind Stewart, by lap four.

Out front, Anderson rode a smooth and mistake-free race, and he moved out to a 2.3 second advantage over Wilson by lap five. Hill would crash out of the top five in the whoops on the same lap, handing third place over to Stewart.

Seely was fourth, behind Stewart, and he simply wasn’t able to run the kind of lap times necessary to move past Stewart and Wilson to challenge the fleeing Anderson. However, as the laps ticked off, Wilson began to draw close to Anderson, and he latched onto Wilson’s rear tire with one lap remaining. Wilson gave the Houston fans a thrill as he attempted to outmaneuver Anderson through the final whoop section just before the finish line, but Anderson got to the checkered flag first, securing his fourth-win of the season. Wilson was second, followed by Stewart who landed his third podium finish of the season as well. Seely was fourth, and GEICO Honda’s Zach Osborne was fifth.

“I feel good,” Anderson said. “I feel like I used my brain really well and picked up on some things that I’ve been watching those [450] guys do during the races. It has been a good day, and I can’t thank my team enough.”

Wilson’s finish moved him to third in the points, but it didn’t come without a hard knock when he crashed earlier in the day.

“I’m actually in a lot of pain,” Wilson said on the podium. “That race was really difficult for me. In my crash through the whoops [earlier in the night], I almost had it saved, but it just slammed me into the ground. When I got going again there was just something feeling funny in my shoulder, and it really hurt. I gave it my best go. I mean, it was pretty painful. There’s a little bit of a separation. We’ll be okay. I gave it my best go. It’s pretty disappointing because I wanted that win.

Malcolm Stewart’s podium finish also advanced him in the series standings. He is now fifth.

“I’m definitely happy with the way I rode,” Stewart said. “This track has been beating me around. I had a couple bad practices. I’m just so glad to be ending on a podium. I’m speechless right now.”

Monster Energy AMA Supercross Series
Reliant Stadium
Houston, Texas
Results: April 5, 2014 (Round 14 of 17)

450 Main
1. Ryan Villopoto-Kaw
2. Justin Barcia-Hon
3. Ken Roczen-KTM
4. Trey Canard-Hon
5. James Stewart-Suz
6. Andrew Short-KTM
7. Ryan Dungey-KTM
8. Mike Alessi-Suz
9. Eli Tomac-Hon
10. Chris Blose-Hon
11. Nick Wey-Kaw
12. Josh Hill-Suz
13. Nick Schmidt-Hon
14. Cody Gilmore-Kaw
15. Jimmy Decotis-Hon
16. Ronnie Stewart-Suz
17. Jimmy Albertson-Hon
18. Kyle Regal-Hon
19. Ben Lamay-Yam
20. Weston Peick-Suz
21. Vince Friese-Hon
22. Josh Grant-Yam

Monster Energy AMA Supercross Series Points Standings (After 14 of 17 rounds)
1. Ryan Villopoto-293/4 wins
2. James Stewart-248/4 wins
3. Ryan Dungey-247/1 win
4. Ken Roczen-235/2 wins
5. Justin Barcia-198
6. Justin Brayton-196
7. Andrew Short-181
8. Broc Tickle-126
9. Wil Hahn-122
10. Josh Hill-112

250 Main
1. Jason Anderson-KTM
2. Dean Wilson-Kaw
3. Malcolm Stewart-Hon
4. Cole Seely-Hon
5. Zach Osborne-Hon
6. Cooper Webb-Yam
7. Shane Mcelrath-Hon
8. Jake Canada-Hon
9. Justin Hill-Kaw
10. Jessy Nelson-Hon
11. Zack Freeberg-Yam
12. Dakota Tedder-Kaw
13. Michael Leib-Hon
14. Scott Champion-Yam
15. Topher Ingalls-Hon
16. Preston Mull-Yam
17. Brandon Scharer-Suz
18. Chris Howell-Yam
19. Ruben Alanis-KTM
20. Cheyenne Harmon-KTM
21. Colton Aeck-Hon
22. Mark Weishaar-Yam

AMA Western Region 250cc Supercross Series Standings (After 7 of 8 rounds)
1. Jason Anderson-113/4 wins
2. Cole Seely-109/1 win
3. Dean Wilson-97/1 win
4. Cooper Webb-86
5. Malcolm Stewart-82
6. Justin Hill-74/1 win
7. Zach Osborne-69
8. Jessy Nelson-58
9. Shane Mcelrath-56
10. Dakota Tedder-41

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