South Waikato News

No operation too big for Lamont

- By ANDY MCGECHAN

Here’s the short story . . . South Waikato’s Kayne Lamont won the MX2 (250cc) title at this season’s New Zealand Motocross Championsh­ips’ final round in Taupo on Saturday.

The long version reads more like a fairytale.

Lamont and his Husqvarna Red Bull WIL Sport race team arrived at Taupo’s fourth and final round of the 2014 New Zealand Motocross Championsh­ips with more than an entire race win up his sleeve.

The BikesportN­Z. comsupport­ed rider had done enough at the previous rounds to amass a massive 38- point advantage over his nearest rival, Dargaville’s Hamish Dobbyn (KTM), and so the plan was to wrap up the title on Saturday with two good results in the early part of the day.

Lamont managed fourth and third placings early in the day, but it was a far cry from the convincing hat-trick of wins he’d produced at the previous round at Pukekohe.

The crowd were asking questions despite the fact that those two result were enough for him to seal the MX2 crown for 2014.

The answers came when he peeled off his race shirt after that all-important second race, revealing a mass of medical bandaging across his chest and abdomen.

Lamont had kept it very quiet, but he had been on an operating theatre table at Rotorua Hospital just two days earlier for key-hole surgery to remove his appendix.

‘‘I had just finished playing a round of golf on Thursday when I was driving home and had to stop by the roadside and vomit. I went to the doctor and he rushed me to hospital,’’ Lamont explained.

‘‘I was taken straight in for surgery at 9.30pm. The doctor said it would be okay for me to ride, so I just had everything strapped up.’’

Heavily strapped and dosed up only with aspirin, he withstood the pain to achieve his results on Saturday and then opted out of the series’ final battle.

‘‘My legs felt like jelly in the second race on Saturday because I was trying to stand up a lot. I had to put a pretty hard pass on Jay Wilson in that race to push through for third place, to ensure I had enough points not to have to ride the final race. I went over and apologised to him afterwards for that.

‘‘I was in a lot of pain and really glad I didn’t have to endure another 20-minute race.’’

Australian visitor Jay Wilson finished third overall in the MX2 championsh­ip, 27 points behind Dobbyn.

The second incredible feature of Lamont’s title win is that it signified the Husqvarna brand’s first New Zealand title win in 14 years. Not since Hamilton’s Darryll King won the national 250cc title on a Husqvarna in 2000 has the brand finished on top of the podium.

However, the ease with which Lamont won the title this year suggests it might happen a little more frequently in the future, Lamont obviously hoping he can maintain the winning momentum and also enjoy success in Australia this season.

The New Zealand champion is kicking off his 10-round Australian Motocross Championsh­ips campaign next weekend.

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 ?? Photo: BY ANDY MCGECHAN, BIKESPORTN­Z.COM ?? Success debut: Mangakino’s Kayne Lamont (Husqvarna Red Bull WIL Sport BikesportN­Z.com TC250), who won his first senior motocross title with a race to spare on Saturday.
Photo: BY ANDY MCGECHAN, BIKESPORTN­Z.COM Success debut: Mangakino’s Kayne Lamont (Husqvarna Red Bull WIL Sport BikesportN­Z.com TC250), who won his first senior motocross title with a race to spare on Saturday.

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