Duncan Takes the Good with the Bad in France
Duncan Takes the Good with the Bad in
France
MAY 29,
2017: New Zealand's Courtney Duncan is still on
target to win her first motocross world championship crown
and this is despite her suffering a massive set-back in
France at the weekend.
The 21-year-old
Altherm JCR Yamaha Racing Team rider from Otago crashed out
of her first of two Women’s Motocross World Championship
races at Ernee, in north-western France, the third round of
six in the series, but she bounced back to win the next race
the following day.
It was a case of
damage limitation for the Kiwi heroine after the tragedy of
having another rider clip her while in mid-air in race one,
sending her sprawling to the ground.
She
picked herself up and fought back and was challenging for
second position when she crashed
again.
She was cleared to race the
following day by medical staff and Duncan's response was
inspirational as she battled through traffic to eventually
take a three-second win over the previous day's race winner,
French world champion Livia Lancelot
(Kawasaki).
"I was happy with my
performance in that race," said Duncan
afterwards.
"I learned a lot this
weekend about my race management. It was frustrating to not
finish the first race but it was 100 percent my
fault."
Fellow Yamaha star and Italy's
former world champion Kiara Fontanesi now leads the series
thanks to her 4-3 score-card in the two races at Ernee,
while Lancelot won the day on her home turf with 1-2 results
and she has moved up to second in the championship chase,
just ahead of the luckless Duncan.
With
the series now at the halfway stage and the leading riders
all tightly bunched on the points table, anything is still
possible.
Duncan has slipped from six
points clear at the top of the standings to now be third
overall, albeit just six points behind Lancelot and only
seven behind Fontenesi.
"We are still in
the championship hunt. We are fast enough but I just have to
be smarter with my race craft," said
Duncan.
Duncan will remain at her
Belgian base as she prepares for the next WMX round, set for
the Czech Republic on July 22-23.
Duncan
and her Altherm JCR Yamaha Racing team is supported by
Altherm Window Systems, Yamaha-Motor New Zealand, Monster
Energy, JCR, CRC, Ados, GYTR, Yamalube, Fox Racing, Liv
Cycling, Mazda New Zealand, Hollands Collision Centre, Star
Moving, Ward Demolition, Fulton Hogan, Pirelli, FMF, DID,
NGK, Matrix, Renthal, Motomuck, www.workshopgraphics.co.nz, Motoseat,
Hammerhead, SKF, Vertex Pistons, Rtech Plastics, Etnies,
Biketranz and Fulton
Hogan.