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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Bay of Plenty riders battle four seasons at Woodville Motocross Grand Prix

Rotorua Daily Post
27 Jan, 2019 11:29 PM3 mins to read

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Rotorua riders Mel Patterson (No 52) and Letitia Alabaster (No 881) lead the way into turn one at the start of the women's race at the Woodville MXGP. Photo / Andy McGechan, BikesportNZ.com

Rotorua riders Mel Patterson (No 52) and Letitia Alabaster (No 881) lead the way into turn one at the start of the women's race at the Woodville MXGP. Photo / Andy McGechan, BikesportNZ.com

Riders had to deal with four seasons in one weekend at the annual New Zealand Motocross Grand Prix in Woodville.

The Honda-sponsored 58th edition of the event, held on Saturday and Sunday, is the largest on the Kiwi motocross calendar.

From burning sun and stiff breezes during junior racing on Saturday, to drizzle, interspersed with patches of sunshine, and gale force winds during senior racing on Sunday, riders had more to contend with than the usual ruts, jumps and bumps.

With rider safety the priority, organisers adjusted Sunday's programme to feature just two races per class, instead of the planned three, which was still enough for true champions to be determined in each of the separate categories and for the FIM Oceania Challenge Cup to be played out.

The event's main winner was Mount Maunganui's Cody Cooper. The six-time former national MX1 champion won both premier MX1 races on Sunday, earning him his third Woodville crown. He had previously won the coveted trophy in 2007 and 2014.

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Runner-up to Cooper on Sunday was visiting Australian Kirk Gibbs, with Taupō's Cohen Chase rounding out the MX1 podium.

The FIM Oceania Challenge Cup featured two squads of riders who had been nominated to represent New Zealand and Australia in the special transtasman clash and the race-within-a-race battles see-sawed over the two days, with Australia's squad eventually winning the cup by a solitary point.

"What a day ... but the patience shown by the host club in dealing with the weather paid dividends in the end," Motorcycling New Zealand motocross commissioner Ray Broad said.

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"We got two races completed for each class on Sunday and the spectators were happy. I think the results today were pretty fair and I think they reflect similar results to what they would have been if we'd had three races (per class).

"As for the FIM Oceania Challenge Cup, at the start of racing on Sunday, the Australians led by just 2.5 points from the Kiwis. After race one on Sunday, Cody Cooper's first MX1 race win cleared that deficit. But then Australian Wilson Todd won the first MX2 race and the Aussies were back in front," he said.

"The Oceania clash was a great success and the Australians were naturally thrilled to be able to win it."

Meanwhile, other individual class winners on Sunday were Takapuna's Hamish Harwood (MX2 class and senior 125cc class); Tauranga's Brodie Connolly (Roddy Shirriffs Memorial trophy, top rider aged under 21); Hamilton's Amie Roberts (women's class); Whakatāne's Darren Capill (veterans' class); Waipukurau's Steve Sergeant (river race class); Taupō's Jake Tomblin (vintage motocross).

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Individual class winners on Saturday were Australia's Brad West (14-16 years' 250cc class); Pukekawa's Jack Dunlop (15-16 years' 125cc class); Rangiora's Cobie Bourke (12-14 years' 125cc class); Hamilton's Dylan Westgate (14-16 years' 85cc class); Invercargill's Jack Symon (12-13 years' 85cc class); Leeston's Kobe Thoms (8-11 years' 85cc class); Leeston's Kase Thoms (8-11 years' pro 65cc class).

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