Mladin
carries momentum into Cal Speedway

(AMA Pro Racing Release)
After relinquishing the title to Yoshimura
Suzuki teammate Ben Spies last year, six-time AMA Superbike Champion Mat
Mladin vowed to come back with renewed vigor in 2007. The 35-year-old
Australian has been true to his word. As the AMA Superbike Championship
presented by Parts Unlimited comes to the AMA Suzuki Superbike Challenge
at California Speedway in Fontana, Calif., on April 27-29, Mladin is
coming off an impressive doubleheader sweep this past weekend in
Birmingham, Ala., and has moved from 10th to second in the standings and
drawn within eight points of series leader Spies.
Fontana’s doubleheader could provide an important barometer on what
direction the rest of the AMA Superbike season will take. Spies, the
22-year-old champ from Longview, Texas, calls California Speedway one of
his favorite circuits. He scored his very first career Superbike win
there in 2005, his rookie season in the class. He also scored a sweep of
last year’s Superbike twin bill on the Speedway’s 2.3-mile road course.
“He's definitely stepped up from last year,” Spies said of teammate and
rival Mladin. “In Alabama he did exactly what he had to do and I couldn't
get my rhythm. The only good thing I take from last week’s race is even
though we didn't win we had the pace. We didn't get outright smoked like
we did in '05. I'm happy with that. We're going to some good tracks that
I like and tracks that he likes too. I'm sure it's going to be like this
all year.”
For Mladin the story so far this year has been one of sheer
determination. Not only the resolve it took to push his 35-year-old body
to the limits in training this off-season, but also the fortitude of
racing most of the first round at Daytona International Speedway with a
tire that was rapidly deteriorating. Picking up his bike after a crash
caused by the chunked front tire, Mladin scored a 10th-place at Daytona
when most riders would have pulled into the pits and called it a day.
“Going 190 miles per hour around the banking with pieces of rubber flying
off and hitting me wasn’t the most fun I’ve ever had on a motorcycle,”
Mladin deadpanned. “Of course Daytona was a little bit disappointing.
But, you know, those things happen. It certainly didn't put a damper on
what I felt I could achieve this year.
“I wasn't pleased about losing the championship last year, but as I said
a number of times, I don't think I deserved to win the championship. My
head and my heart weren’t in it. And as I said earlier in the year, the
best rider's going to win this year and we'll see who that ends up being
because I'm not going to leave anything out there.”
While many see the Superbike series as a two-rider battle, veteran Miguel
Duhamel continues to feel encouraged with the steps forward he and the
Honda team are making. Duhamel is determined to break up the Suzuki
domination.
“I think Fontana is a place where we can definitely do well,” said
Duhamel, the third ranked rider who won the AMA Superbike title in 1995.
“I think our bike is good. I'm not going to Fontana to get third. I want
to get first. If we're going to win the championship, we've got to make
some points on these guys. It's going to be tough. Ben's riding great and
Mat's riding great. I think we're going to start seeing a three-rider
tussle and it will be great for the fans and I'm looking forward to it as
well.”
Only 13 points separate the top three riders in the championship.
A host of other top riders will be trying to make it to the podium at
California Speedway. Tommy Hayden is ranked fourth in the series coming
into the race, having made a smooth transition from Kawasaki to Suzuki.
Jake Zemke is still trying to find the combination that brought him a
victory last year at Utah’s Miller Motorsports Park aboard the factory
Honda. Aaron Yates is bringing Jordan Suzuki unprecedented success. He
barely missed a podium finish in Alabama last week.
Yamaha is back in the series with a factory team for the first time in
five years and the R1s ridden by Eric Bostrom and Jason DiSalvo have
shown flashes of their potential. The team would love nothing better than
to have a breakthrough this weekend. Kawasaki’s Roger Lee Hayden and
Jamie Hacking are hoping to find their way to the front of the field as
well.
This race will also be the first opportunity for West Coast fans to see
the striking new Ferracci MV Agusta Superbikes. This year marks the first
time the exotic Italian maker has competed in the series. Matt Lynn and
Luca Scassa ride the high-dollar machines.
Both rounds four and five of the AMA Superbike Championship presented by
Parts Unlimited from Fontana will be telecast nationally on SPEED. The
races will be shown back to back on Sunday, April 29 starting with
Saturday’s race at 5:00 pm Eastern followed by Sunday’s race broadcast
live at 6:00 pm.
Tickets for the AMA Suzuki Superbike Challenge are available online at
www.californiaspeedway.com. Admission is free for ages 12 and under
with a paid adult General Admission.