Press Release

Canard Leads GEICO Powersports Honda Team to Historic Podium Sweep



NEW BERLIN, N.Y.
-- Trey Canard led the GEICO Powersports Honda team in a historic sweep
of the podium Saturady in the first 250cc moto of the AMA Unadilla
Nationals while simultaneously closing in on the wheel of points leader
Christophe Pourcel.


The team earned industry-wide accolades after claiming the top four
spots in the first moto. Canard was victorious, with teammates Blake
Wharton, Justin Barcia, and Eli Tomac close behind.


"Sweeping the podium with my teammates was awesome," Canard said. "I am
so excited for everyone, and it was a great day for our team. Hopefully
we can keep this going."


Canard has bolstered his status as a crowd favorite after winning the
overall title at the last three tour stops, and he gained even more
fanfare in Unadilla when his runner-up finish in the second moto earned
him a fourth-straight overall title.





"I feel like I’m on right now," Canard said. "I try not to think too
much and just go out to do my thing. I see what I can do at each race,
and I’m so happy I’ve been able to keep this momentum. Hopefully I'm a
contender for the overall title."





Pourcel crashed in the first moto and finished 38th, allowing Canard to
gain a lot of ground in points. Pourcel rebounded to win the second
moto, but is now just 16 points ahead of the hungry Canard.





New York native Barcia raced in front of a sea of friends, family and
fans, and finished second in the event after finishing third and fifth.





"I have so much support here," Barcia said. "Not only do I have my
family and friends around, but there are so many fans cheering for me.
Unadilla is such a great track, but it really wouldn’t matter where we
were racing because I’ve been working so hard and want to keep posting
top results each race."




Barcia maintained fifth place in points and is eager to continue
improving until he is consistently on the podium with Canard. The wild
rider was aggressive on the course, crashing twice, but still pulled
out his overall podium finish.



 

"The first moto was huge for me," Barcia said. "I was so excited to be
a part of the sweep. Being here and racing with this team is great. I
know I still have a lot to improve on, and I even crashed twice today,
but I was able to make up some spots and I’m really happy."


Wharton wrapped up the day in fifth after contributing to the sweep by
finishing second in the first moto and ninth in the second.







"First moto was really good," Wharton said. "I felt great, although I would have liked to have won. I felt really comfortable."





Wharton struggled in the second moto and was tangled in a pileup before hitting a hay bail and breaking his front brake.





"My brake was locking up on me but even so I think I could have caught
up better," he said. "I need to focus on the next race now because I
know I can keep getting better."




Rookie sensation Tomac could taste the podium as he battled teammate
Wharton for third in the first moto, but finished on his wheel to
finish just out of the top three in fourth.



 

"I had a lot of fun," Tomac said. "It was awesome to get fourth in that
first moto. I need to keep improving because next time I actually want
to be on the podium. I was so close."







Tomac was a close sixth in the second moto, and wrapped up the event sixth overall in points.




Brett Metcalfe finished third overall in the 450cc after putting
together fifth and third place performances. Metcalfe spun his wheel
out of the start in the first moto and had difficulty out of the start
in the second moto but rode aggressively through the speedy course to
move into podium position.





 

"Those were definitely tight races," Metcalfe said. "I was able to make
up some time in the first couple of corners and move up in both motos
but I made some mistakes. A few guys almost caught me but I was able to
hold on. I was disappointed because I knew I could have ridden better
but it was still a good finish."




Kevin Windham made his return to motocross last season at Unadilla, but
was unable to finish the first moto this time through after
encountering trouble on the course.



 

"I spun out of the gate, so I didn’t start the race well," Windham
said. "I was fighting to make some passes and then had one of the
craziest falls I’ve ever had. When you crash, time stands still. I knew
I was about to take a hard hit but I managed to come out pretty well
with just some road rash and a hurt elbow. I felt well enough to come
out and perform again and I’m definitely grateful for the opportunity
to be racing right now."


Windham was able to recoup during the break and powered through the course for a fifth-place finish in the second moto.





"I’m glad I was able to redeem myself," Windham said. "I still didn’t
have the start I wanted but I was able to make some passes and stay
strong."





 

The 32-year-old legend is one of the most respected riders in the field
and a mentor to the team. Despite not having his best result, Windham
was ecstatic about the 250cc podium sweep.




"That was unbelievable," Windham said. "That doesn’t happen often. The
entire team is strong, and it takes a good program like GEICO
Powersports Honda to create that kind of result."


The GEICO Powersports Honda team will continue their quest for the
podium on August 28th at Moto-X 338 in Southwick, Mass., for round 11
of the Lucas Oil AMA Pro Motorcross Championship.

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