Horowhenua Chronicle

Double focus for Woodville event

Motocross GP now counts towards the national series

- Andy McGechan

There will be so much more than meets the eye with this year’s edition of the famous New Zealand Motocross Grand Prix at Woodville.

Now celebratin­g its 60th year, the iconic event is set this year for the weekend of January 30-31 and will have double the significan­ce, as it is also recognised this time as the opening round of the New Zealand Motocross Championsh­ips.

It’s the first time that the Honda-sponsored Woodville event, the largest standalone event on the New Zealand motorcycle racing calendar, has been afforded this honour and certainly appropriat­e when considerin­g that the event already enjoys the status as the premier motocross event in this part of the world.

New Zealand’s elite motocross racers will again flood into the Tararua town for the New Zealand Motocross Grand Prix, with more than 700 riders, along with support crews, families and supporters, expected to arrive for the twoday event in search of GP trophy honours — also coming to hunt down valuable points towards national titles.

The host Manawatu Orion Motorcycle Club president Brad Ritchie said he was thrilled the club had been granted hosting rights to the nationals.

“We are excited to be running round one of the senior motocross championsh­ips at Woodville in January, an event that also incorporat­es the Women’s Cup,” he said.

“The club is looking forward to hosting a truly world class motorcycle event and I am sure motorcycle fans will be hungry for Woodville, especially considerin­g the year we have had with the Covid-19 pandemic.”

He said the 2021 Honda New Zealand Motocross Grand Prix will be live-streamed on the Sky Sport Next platform, also be a first for the event, allowing bike fans from across the country and around the world to watch live on television, laptops, cellphones or tablets.

The race programme will be bulging with the names of topgrade entrants from as young as four years old, to senior men and women in their 40s and 50s.

While plenty of internatio­nal visitors have won the event in the past, it is worth noting that Kiwi riders are world-class, too, and it is homegrown talent that has tended to dominate at Woodville over the years.

There have been 31 different overall winners there over the past 59 years and only 12 riders have won more than once since the inaugural event in 1961.

Multi-time national MX1 champion Cody Cooper is a three-time winner at Woodville — the top man there in 2007, 2014 and again in 2019 — and he’d like nothing better than to win it again.

In addition to his Woodville GP crown bid, the 37-year-old Cooper, from Mount Maunganui, will be focused on capturing the national MX1 title at the three rounds of the nationals that follow, in Rotorua on February 21, Pukekohe on March 20 and, finally, at Taupo, on March 28.

A predominan­tly young man’s sport, it’s uncertain how many more years Cooper will have at the top level and the high-risk sport can be unforgivin­g and brutal at times, but Cooper is not ready to hang up his helmet and winning the Grand Prix at Woodville is definitely the first on his “to do” list for 2021.

Pre-sale tickets are available via the events website at www.woodvillem­x.com. On the day gate sales available — cash or eftpos.

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