New Riders to Handle Winning Aprilia at Homestead

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 10, 2007) -- The winning team
from last month's opening round of the SunTrust MOTO-ST Series
will feature a couple of new faces as it goes for two in a row
at Homestead-Miami Speedway April 13-14.
The Aprilia Tuono 1000 of the Aprilia USA team scored a stunning
victory in the DAYTONA USA 300 with Italian riders Federico
Aliverti and Giancarlo De Matteis handling the riding duties.
Although the pair had never raced at Daytona before, they
claimed a 20.2-second victory over the RoadRacingWorld.com
Suzuki SV1000S ridden by Chris Ulrich of Lake Elsinore, Calif.
and Lee Acree from Greenboro, N.C. Aliverti passed Acree for the
lead just nine laps from the end of the 106-lap race.
At Homestead, however, the bike will be in the hands of Henry
Wiles and John Francis. Wiles and Francis were due to ride the
whole season for the Aprilia USA squad, but Wiles broke his
wrist in a SuperMotard racing accident and had to give Daytona a
miss. That led to the last minute arrangement that saw Aliverti,
a journalist for the Italian magazine Motociclismo, and De
Matteis called in as replacements.
"The magazine wanted a story on the bike, so the riders were
talking about coming over anyway," said David Lloyd of Lloyd
Brothers Motorsports, which runs the two-bike effort for Aprilia
USA. "It all came together pretty late. I guess we nailed it
down in February."
Lloyd said that Wiles, whose background is in flat track racing,
and Francis should be set to go for this weekend's second round
at Homestead.
"Henry's been down to Texas and we're getting up to speed,"
Lloyd said.
Based in Johnstown, Ohio, Lloyd Brothers Motorsports is fairly
new to motorcycle endurance road racing. The team's background
is in flat track, and last year it ran an Aprilia-powered bike
in the AMA Grand National series, with Wiles handling the
riding.
The team's second entry, shared between Ty Howard and Troy
Green, suffered an unlucky outing at Daytona when its dry break
refueling system broke and the crew had to replace the gas tank
on the Tuono. Despite that setback Howard and Green placed
eighth overall.
If the Aprilia USA outfit is going to make it two wins in a row,
it will have to contend with the RoadRacingWorld.com Suzuki crew
that placed second at Daytona. Despite running with a stock
engine in its SV1000 and having to call in Acree as a
last-minute partner to Ulrich, the team almost snatched victory
in the season opener. The bike had been mixing it up with the
leaders all race and took over the top spot when the San Jose
BMW R1200 of Brian Parriott and Nate Kern retired with a broken
cam chain sprocket just 14 laps from home.
Team owner John Ulrich also faces a rider dilemma. He hopes to
have Venezuelan Robertino Pietri partner son Chris on the
Suzuki. Pietri was unable to make it to Daytona to race in the
season opener.
"The problem is Robertino needs time to learn the track," said
Ulrich, arguably the most successful motorcycle endurance racing
team owner in North American history. "Lee can't go, so we will
have Michael Barnes as a back up."
Barnes rode with Chris Ulrich and Geoff May to second place in
last October's inaugural SunTrust MOTO-ST Series event at
Daytona.
The San Jose BMW team will also have revenge on its mind after
its setback at Daytona last month. Parriott and Kern led all but
18 of the 92 laps the bike completed, and seemed poised to claim
a second straight Daytona MOTO-ST victory. Parriott, Kern and
Belgian Stephane Mertens won last October's inaugural
eight-hour.
As for last month's Daytona winners Aliverti and De Matteis,
Lloyd is hoping to have them come back for this year's
season-ending eight-hour and try for a repeat at the fabled
Speedway.
In addition to Homestead-Miami Speedway, the SunTrust MOTO-ST
Series will also include the VIR 500K, April 27-29 at Virginia
International Speedway, the Road America 500K, July 7-8 at Road
America, the Iowa Speedway 500K at Iowa Speedway July 12-13,
2007 and the 8 Hours at Daytona Finale, October 19-20 at Daytona
International Speedway.
MOTO-ST is organized and sanctioned by Professional Motorsports
Productions (PMP) of Toronto, Ontario, Canada and the Grand
American Road Racing Association, based in Daytona Beach, Fla.,
provides the series with administrative and commercial support.
The MOTO-ST advisory board features some of the most respected
individuals in the world of motorsports, including Hall of Fame
members, respected motorcycle racing journalists and renowned
officials from various forms of road racing. Learn more about
MOTO-ST at www.moto-st.com.
Tickets for the Homestead 500K can be purchased at the Speedway
Back Gate. Admission is free on Friday and admission on Saturday
is $10.
|