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The inevitable has happened!

Joined Dec 2006
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Orlando, Florida
It was bound to happen! Read Below.


Bombshell: New US Superbike Series Announced
by staff
Wednesday, September 10, 2008

This just in from the MIC:

Motorcycle Industry Council
To Launch The USSB Championship

Factory Riders Offered a New National Series

IRVINE, Calif., Sep. 10, 2008 - The Motorcycle Industry Council, the national trade association representing top motorcycle manufacturers and 300-plus other members, will launch a new professional road racing series next year in the United States.

The MIC has formally established USSB, Inc., and already is at work creating a national championship for 2009 that will take place at major racing facilities, feature factory superbike teams and rules similar to those now in place - rules encouraging technological development that advances motorcycle engineering.

The USSBSM Championship is being designed to carry on America's tradition, spanning more than two decades, of world-class superbike racing that showcases the nation's best riders on the best motorcycles in the country. The premier class, U.S. Super Bike, will invite teams running the highly developed, factory-backed, fan-favorite racing motorcycles (1,000cc fours and larger-displacement twins) that have long been the basis for superbike racing. The inaugural USSB series will include U.S. Sport Bike, a 600cc category similar to the World Supersport Championship and others.

"We initiated USSB because next year it will offer the only racing series in America for unrestrained factory superbikes and their teams, as well as those who aspire to join their ranks and compete with them," said MIC President Tim Buche. "We recognize the strong support for this level of racing, among enthusiasts, among manufacturers and among riders. With the other series set to abandon superbikes as we've come to know them, USSB will fill that void."

Buche said the MIC engaged in a development process for USSB that takes into consideration the various needs of industry members, manufacturers, track owners, sponsors, racing fans and riders, as well as the desire to grow the sport of road racing. In particular, there is a need to allow manufacturers to use road racing to advance research and development and improve future production motorcycles available to consumers. Buche said that the MIC possesses the resources, the capabilities, the access to talent, and the ability to contract with various groups and firms, to meet all of those needs and wishes.

"This is America, a big country with a big motorcycle market that deserves a world-class championship with full-on factory bikes raced by star riders," said Ty van Hooydonk, USSB managing director. "The USSB Championship is our answer. We want to steer away from engine restrictors, away from mandated power-to-weight ratios, spec tires and spec ECUs. We want to set the stage for racing teams to compete, on the track, in the R&D shops, in the way they develop their bikes and help develop production bikes, in how they develop their engineering staffs and crews, and their riders, too. Let them do what they do best and go racing."

Organization
The not-for-profit MIC has established USSB, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary, to be the owner-operator of the series. As the sole shareholder for the subsidiary, the MIC board will appoint the USSB Board of Directors that will then function independently and guide the series.

To maintain the integrity of the competition, USSB, Inc. also will establish an affiliated, but independent sanctioning body, USSB Sanctioning, Inc., which will employ the series commissioner, a racing CEO who will have ultimate responsibility for all competition-related aspects of the series. USSB, Inc. will serve as the series promoter responsible for developing series sponsors, managing series communications and partnering with stakeholders and others to present the series.

Four stakeholder groups will each have a voice and participate in series governance: riders, manufacturers, sanctioning and promoters.

USSB will help establish a riders association that will then operate independently as it represents all of the on-track competitors in the series. Participating manufacturers will form their own committee through the MIC and represent factories. Sanctioning will oversee tech inspection, rules and regulations and will manage race organization and administration. Promoters will include individual promoters and a racetrack association in collaboration with USSB, Inc.

Marketing and Communication
"We're going to have a compelling story to share," van Hooydonk said. "The USSB Championship will feature the nation's top level of motorcycle racing, with phenomenal riders capable of competing in any league, and high-tech superbikes that are among the fastest on Earth. We have a great deal of experience with marketing the story of motorcycling, and we will apply all of it to road racing." USSB news and updates will be available 24/7 at USSBCHAMPIONSHIP.COM. The site will be live Friday September 12, 2008.

USSB, Inc. will establish a communications campaign to improve visibility and interest in road racing, include all types of media, and bring in new fans while maintaining its enthusiast base. For 20 years, the MIC has generated major mainstream media coverage through Discover Today's Motorcycling. DTM promotes responsible riding by generating positive print, broadcast and online coverage, and through a responsive news bureau that annually fields thousands of inquiries from journalists nationwide.

DTM staff regularly work with national media, based in New York and other key markets, on dozens of motorcycle stories every year. Recent DTM placements include coverage with "Good Morning America," the New York Times, USA Today, Popular Mechanics, Maxim, Playboy, and even La Opinion, the nation's largest Hispanic newspaper. DTM generated major media for the landmark "Art of the Motorcycle" exhibit at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, and hosted its own "Rockefeller Center Motorcycle Shows," seen by tens of thousands of visitors in Midtown Manhattan.

ENDS

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USSB? Will it just be a new name for AMA Superbike?

Sounds like 1000's inline fours, and larger twins (1200cc's???) will race here again. I just hope they don't bend rules in Harley Davidson's favor like AMA always have.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Traverser @ Sep 11 2008, 12:04 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>USSB? Will it just be a new name for AMA Superbike?

Sounds like 1000's inline fours, and larger twins (1200cc's???) will race here again. I just hope they don't bend rules in Harley Davidson's favor like AMA always have.

We all expected this..well any production bikes.,1000; - Four: inline or V, Tripple - 1200cc, V-twin 1500cc
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Well it seems the pendulum has swung to the beginning. ...., why can't anybody get it right? Well I don't think these USSB cats got it right, it sounds like more of the same. Why can't people just look at WSBK and do the same .... here? Is it that ....... hard? If the .... is like this and the last years, we are in for the most boring racing on the planet as usual. As it is, AMA superbike is unwatchable.

So will DMG still have their series??? I say lets have both, and we decide what is better. The ultimate decider will be in the form of ticket sales and viewership rating. Free market eh Lex?
 
Having a breakaway series didn't seem to do indycar racing much good so i don't expect good things from this scenario to be honest. My biggest concern is which of the two series' will be televised over here (if either are) and if it could possibly be worse than this years AMA series.
 
I think DMG underestimated the resolve of the factories to maintain their influence on the racing series. They have invested millions of dollars into the American market. The problem I have with DMG's new series is that from the description the bikes on the track would be slower than bikes I can buy on the showroom floor. Any rule changes that will make Harley and Buell competitive cannot be good for the spectator. NASCAR for all of the bilions of dollars they bring are using carburetors for crying out loud. Who knows, maybe MIC will get it right. I wonder how many bottles of scotch Roger Edmondson went through last night?
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Tom @ Sep 11 2008, 03:43 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Having a breakaway series didn't seem to do indycar racing much good so i don't expect good things from this scenario to be honest. My biggest concern is which of the two series' will be televised over here (if either are) and if it could possibly be worse than this years AMA series.

No it didn't. And it essentially killed the sport. And I compare it to that also in that the IRL was based around Indy, whereas CART was not. Indy was the American Open Wheel Racing capital. Same with AMA. Daytona is the key. While the racing sucks and is not a good track at all, it is the key and the track most know the series from.

I need to see a schedule to see how this will work.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Hayden Fan @ Sep 11 2008, 01:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>I need to see a schedule to see how this will work.

Over hear it always seemed that CART was the big deal and IRL didn't get the same attention, but i can understand that the 500 is a pivotal event and carries most/all of the prestige in american racing. Do you feel there is a similar event in American bike racing? Which series for example will support the GP at Laguna?
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (BigAl @ Sep 11 2008, 10:32 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>wonder if this is Spies "exciting news"?

<


Yep....that is it alright...staying put cause he's the best they got....

In other words, the manufacturers are saying we like doing things our way and we don't want to change...we will continue with same silly scoring system, and allow Yosh to continue to win by cheating....yet another triumph for American motorcycle racing....

If they are smart they will go to controlled Pirelli's and use the same rules and scoring system as WSBK and BSB are on....then we can find it if all those great AMA stars are up to world class levels...
 
Well The is WSBK, BSB, and now USSB. Finally the U.S. will have a series that is like the other series around the globe. This bodes well for the expansion of our sport in the U.S. and also creates the chance for young riders to be on par with those around the world. The series should be very scary for those at DMG since they thought they could dictate a series to the manufactures. Guess they were dead wrong. The AMA should now be a club racing series at best.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (ROCKGOD01 @ Sep 11 2008, 10:44 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>The series should be very scary for those at DMG...

Actually, I think the series should be equally afraid of eachother. DMG might face the issue of selling previously mid-pack riders to the public, while USSB will have to figure out a way to attract decent-sized grids in the face of prize money and sponsor hand-outs from the NASCAR folks.

This will be interesting, even if a little sad.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (ROCKGOD01 @ Sep 11 2008, 08:44 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Well The is WSBK, BSB, and now USSB. Finally the U.S. will have a series that is like the other series around the globe. This bodes well for the expansion of our sport in the U.S. and also creates the chance for young riders to be on par with those around the world.

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No it doesn't.

It is a carbon copy of what they do in Europe only with less talent on much worse venues. If it's truly unlimited it will lead to great disparities amongst the machines and once again American riders will be unknown quantities to other major forms of motorcycle racing.

The only hope for USSB is it evolves into something completely different than what they do throughout the rest of the world. Is it not obvious that the similarities between USSB and the other production classes are a direct result of the manufacturers refusal to do anything different?

They aren't about fans, riders, or racing. They are about sales and winning. That's why manufacturers shouldn't run or organize series'.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (MigsAngel @ Sep 11 2008, 05:10 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Yep....that is it alright...staying put cause he's the best they got....

In other words, the manufacturers are saying we like doing things our way and we don't want to change...we will continue with same silly scoring system, and allow Yosh to continue to win by cheating....yet another triumph for American motorcycle racing....

If they are smart they will go to controlled Pirelli's and use the same rules and scoring system as WSBK and BSB are on....then we can find it if all those great AMA stars are up to world class levels...

Yeah, I will wait until after Indianapolis but I think Spies is staying put. I was sitting around asking myself why it was so important that Spies make the "exciting" comment about his plans. I decided that American marketing techniques and the ambiguity surrounding his move necessitated him telling everyone how to feel.

Pile that on top of his morbid fear of flying, his outrageous salary demands, and it became clear to me that he was probably staying put for somewhere in the neighborhood of 2 million.

Jumk, yes. I think dual series is a good idea. It would be even better if they ran during the same weekend so people could watch both. In theory, "stock" racing and unlimited production bikes shouldn't have a lot in common. Let the people decide maybe they will decide on both.

If they fight it will be ugly for everyone. DMG has the deep pockets and the media connections to smother the USSB (NASCAR practically owns Speed TV). They also have the power to drive the nail into the coffin of American motorcycle racing out of sheer vengeance.

The manufacturers are really setting themselves up for a brutal ... whooping and the fans are going to suffer as well. I hope things work out in meetings with the AMA. Hopefully, USSB will say they are just trying to prove there is still a market for superbike racing like they have in Europe.

P.S. Jumk, the USSB rules are a ruse. The Japanese have no interest in entertaining participation from other companies, this is just an olive branch extended to other manufacturers so they don't support the AMA. It seems like it's extended to Ducati but it's not. KTM, Aprilia, Buell, etc. are who they are trying to persuade. Ducati relies too heavily on America to roll the dice with the AMA. Although, I would have huge respect if they did.

Keep in mind this entire thing could be bull. DMG were planning on running this class but you could tell it was to keep the manufacturers from revolting. Maybe he allowed it to be spun off into a new series so it quells the dissent from the peanut gallery. Maybe they are planning on cooperating. Is it just me or does it look like the USSB will be running Superbike and FX while DMG run supersport and superstock?
<
 
This is BS. The manufacturer's, specifically Suzuki and Honda, are throwing a tantrum. The USSB will be lucky to ever see the light of day. Who's going to watch three cheated up Suzukis race two or three slow-... Hondas and maybe a couple of Yamahas and Kawasakis? If it does, by some miracle, ever get off the ground it will be a continuation of the ...... racing we have now - only without privateers filling the field.

All the privateers will be racing with DMG, because that's where the opportunity and money is. I fully expect teams like Jordan and Attack to race with DMG as well. Why would they continue to play second fiddle to the factory teams, with absolutely no chance of winning? Erion might go with USSB, but knowing Honda's machinations they may stay with DMG to ensure Hondas are winning in Daytona Superbike.

Any way you look at it - Suzuki and Honda are screwing American road racing up, IMHO.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Tom @ Sep 11 2008, 07:46 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Over hear it always seemed that CART was the big deal and IRL didn't get the same attention, but i can understand that the 500 is a pivotal event and carries most/all of the prestige in american racing. Do you feel there is a similar event in American bike racing? Which series for example will support the GP at Laguna?

CART was the big deal, but the owners killed the series because they kept thinking that the Indy 500 was bigger than the whole series, so when they head honcho at the IRL came to Champ Car with only 10 million dollars a free cars, the leaders of the series sold out. Not either series will get any attention as no one cared about the IRL. It was that one race that people cared about. Nothing else. I was a CART/ Champ Car fan. I want to burn the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to the ground and build a strip club.

I think the same can be similar to the CART/IRL split. But depends. What is the USSB's package? Television. Teams. Riders. I see even teams like M4 Suzuki going to the USSB series. Corona Honda, most of the top teams in the AMA SB and SS will move to the USSB, as it is factory backed. Money might not be there in terms of winning, but the factories are there and they are the one's people want to see. Is Speed broadcasting the races?

Michael Jordan's team will remain in the DMG Spec Racers and win dominate like Yoshimura did. They will have no factory backing, as either will any of the teams in the series. Scott Jensen, the mid packers of AMA SB for a decade now, will take wins and podiums. There will be at the most 20 bikes on the grid with over a 10 second gap, and they will not enforce the 107% rule, as that would put a quarter of the field out.

I see this working out well for the USSB. If they get a series like WERA, which worked with AMA the past few years to get them on board, then there is more potential teams and riders. For the DMG to work, it would need to have more than Daytona. That is what the DMG series is. It is the IRL of motorcycle racing in the US. It has one major race, Daytona and nothing else. I do see Laguna running the factory based series. I see Road America switching. I see Brainard on the schedule. I see the DMG series turning into a series based around oval track road circuits. Fontana, Phoenix, Pikes Pike (reopened under new ownership) as being the basis of the series. The circuit at Iowa Speedway.


Question to throw out. In Superbike racing, who do you follow, the riders or the teams? Do you follow Honda/Yamaha/Suzuki/Kawasaki or do you follow Mladin/Hayden/Zemke? Ask that at a US Supebike race and I bet most will saw the teams. They follow the factory teams. They are Honda people, Suzuki people. Not a Mladin fan. Not a Hayden fan.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Hayden Fan @ Sep 12 2008, 04:09 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>CART was the big deal, but the owners killed the series because they kept thinking that the Indy 500 was bigger than the whole series, so when they head honcho at the IRL came to Champ Car with only 10 million dollars a free cars, the leaders of the series sold out. Not either series will get any attention as no one cared about the IRL. It was that one race that people cared about. Nothing else. I was a CART/ Champ Car fan. I want to burn the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to the ground and build a strip club.

I think the same can be similar to the CART/IRL split. But depends. What is the USSB's package? Television. Teams. Riders. I see even teams like M4 Suzuki going to the USSB series. Corona Honda, most of the top teams in the AMA SB and SS will move to the USSB, as it is factory backed. Money might not be there in terms of winning, but the factories are there and they are the one's people want to see. Is Speed broadcasting the races?

Michael Jordan's team will remain in the DMG Spec Racers and win dominate like Yoshimura did. They will have no factory backing, as either will any of the teams in the series. Scott Jensen, the mid packers of AMA SB for a decade now, will take wins and podiums. There will be at the most 20 bikes on the grid with over a 10 second gap, and they will not enforce the 107% rule, as that would put a quarter of the field out.

I see this working out well for the USSB. If they get a series like WERA, which worked with AMA the past few years to get them on board, then there is more potential teams and riders. For the DMG to work, it would need to have more than Daytona. That is what the DMG series is. It is the IRL of motorcycle racing in the US. It has one major race, Daytona and nothing else. I do see Laguna running the factory based series. I see Road America switching. I see Brainard on the schedule. I see the DMG series turning into a series based around oval track road circuits. Fontana, Phoenix, Pikes Pike (reopened under new ownership) as being the basis of the series. The circuit at Iowa Speedway.


Question to throw out. In Superbike racing, who do you follow, the riders or the teams? Do you follow Honda/Yamaha/Suzuki/Kawasaki or do you follow Mladin/Hayden/Zemke? Ask that at a US Supebike race and I bet most will saw the teams. They follow the factory teams. They are Honda people, Suzuki people. Not a Mladin fan. Not a Hayden fan.

Interesting points, but I don't agree. CART was dead, virtually bankrupt, which is why they accepted the IRL offer.

Say you owned a race team, like M4 or Attack. You have factory support, which is good. With precious few exceptions, you never win races, which is bad. These exceptions are the areas where the factories themselves do not compete directly, i.e. Formula Extreme. Why, if you truly have your team's best interest at heart, would you follow the factories to a new series where the status quo would be maintained? Particularly a series where the only concrete evidence of its existence is a press release!

M4 is owned by John Ulrich - just look at the editorial tone over at roadracingworld.com, and you'll see which way he's headed. Jordan already has a case of the ... about not being competitive in the current situation. Attack is a private team with Kawasaki support, so my feeling is they will contest the DMG series where they have a strong chance of actually making money and winning races, and it would not suprise me at all if they continued to get Kawasaki support to ensure a green presence in the DMG series. Don't know about Erion.

ALL the privateers will run DMG.Why? Money, pure and simple. Let's see, $5000 to finish 20th in a DMG race, or $4000 to WIN a current AMA Superbike race. Think the manufacturers are going to pay any better than the current structure? And absorb all the costs of a startup series? Not likely.

KTM has signed on with DMG. Ducati NA head Micheal Lock stated in an interview with roadracingworld.com that they will support Daytona Superbike with equipment (848s). Infineon Raceway just responded, again on roadracingworld.com, that the USSB is vaporware, and at this point there is only once choice, that being DMG.

The USSB is nothing more than the petulant rantings of American Suzuki and American Honda. DMG offered them Factory Superbike, basically a continuation of the current class, and they stomped their feet, stuck their bottom lips out and ran off like children. Good riddance.
 
The USSB is nothing more than a temper tantrum thrown by American Suzuki and American Honda. I can understand the position of Suzuki, to a point. They rule the roost and don't want to lose that advantage. God only knows what Honda is thinking - they haven't won .... in years.

Anyway, DMG has the money, and will soon have the tracks. They will have full grids, because they have the money. They may not have Mladin, DuHamel a few of the other riders, but so what? I fully expect Jordan, Attack, M4 and Graves to run DMG races. Why? Because they are private race teams hungry for wins, and DMG will pay handsomely for those wins. And all those other privateers will be there trying to finish in the top 20 to take home $5000. That's more than winning a Superbike race currently pays. Simple economics.

It will be a miracle if USSB runs a single race next year, much less a season. And even if they do, who wants to watch a bunch of cheated-up Suzukis spank a few slow-... Hondas? I don't, and I own a Suzuki, for cripes sake!

I'm not particularly a fan of spec ecu's and limited power, but DMG holds most of the cards in this deal, and will probably win the fight.

YMMV
 
dkm,

Do you think DMG has more money to spend than Honda and Suzuki? Remember, this sport represents Honda and Suzuki's bread and butter.

Will DMG pick up the bill for sponsoring events like the factories have?

I do agree, however, that DMG seems to have the upper hand with grid prospects. Hopefully the product won't be of the despicable nature that NASCAR and Grand-Am are.
 

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