Jett Lawrence Sweeps
Motos at High Point
for Third Pro
Motocross Championship Win
in Four Races
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Ty Masterpool Earns
Breakthrough 250 Class
Victory
and 300th Win for Pro
Circuit Race Team
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MT. MORRIS,
Pa. (June 15,
2024) – An evening of
scattered thunderstorms
gave way to
picture-perfect weather
conditions and an
ever-changing racetrack
on Saturday as the
Pro Motocross
Championship,
sanctioned by AMA Pro
Racing, kicked off its
East Coast swing with
the annual Father’s Day
weekend tradition from
legendary High Point
Raceway. The 47th
running of the High
Point National Presented
by Sustainable Yard
Management represented
Round 4 of the 2024
season, where the
“Country Club of
Motocross” welcomed a
massive crowd that saw
reigning 450 Class
Champion Jett Lawrence
pilot his Team Honda HRC
machine to a 1-1 effort
for his third win of the
season. In the 250
Class, Monster Energy
Pro Circuit Kawasaki’s
Ty Masterpool prevailed
with a breakthrough
maiden victory that also
signified an
unprecedented 300th
victory for the most
successful team in the
history of the sport.
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Moto 1
The Honda-mounted
Lawrence brothers led
the field through the
first turn to open Moto
1, with point leader
Hunter Lawrence inching
ahead of Jett to earn
the MotoSport.com
Holeshot and hold onto
the early lead. Behind
them, Phoenix Racing
Honda’s Dylan Ferrandis
battled his way into
third. The Frenchman
held the position for
just over a lap until
Monster Energy Yamaha
Star Racing’s Justin
Cooper made the pass. A
little more than seven
minutes into the moto,
Hunter Lawrence lost
traction coming out of a
turn and stopped
briefly, which allowed
Jett Lawrence to assume
the lead. Moments later,
Cooper endured a similar
hiccup, which allowed
Red Bull KTM Factory
Racing’s Chase Sexton to
move into third.
As the moto wore on, the
Lawrences increased
their advantage over the
field as some miscues by
Sexton allowed the lead
to grow to nearly 20
seconds entering the
final 10 minutes of the
moto. The distance
between Jett and Hunter
hovered around two
seconds, with some ebb
and flow as the pair
navigated lapped riders.
With three laps to go
the intensity picked up,
with less than a second
between the siblings.
They mirrored lap times
and took the white flag
with eight tenths
separating the
teammates. Hunter
Lawrence went on the
attack and looked for
alternate lines to
attempt a pass, but it
was too little too late.
Jett Lawrence captured
his fourth moto win of
the season a mere
seventh tenths ahead of
Hunter, while Sexton
followed in a distant
third, 36 seconds back.
Cooper finished fourth,
with Red Bull KTM
Factory Racing’s Aaron
Plessinger in fifth.
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Jett Lawrence (1-1)
earned his third win in
four rounds
with his second moto
sweep of the season.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Moto 2
The final moto of the
afternoon started with
the Muc-Off/FXR/ClubMX
Yamaha of Phil Nicoletti
leading the field to the
MotoSport.com Holeshot
before he gave way to
Monster Energy
Kawasaki’s Jason
Anderson. Jett Lawrence
then slotted into third,
with Hunter Lawrence
following into fourth.
The Lawrences were quick
to pass Nicoletti and
take over the remaining
podium positions. Sexton
followed through into
fourth and pressured
Hunter Lawrence for
third. Sexton made quick
work of the points
leader to slot into the
top three five minutes
into the moto.
Sexton continued his
push and pressured Jett
Lawrence for second,
which saw the champ
close in on Anderson for
the lead. A battle for
the top spot ensued and
as Anderson looked to
fend off Lawrence, it
allowed Sexton to make
the move past both
riders and jump from
third to first. Lawrence
completed the pass on
Anderson and quickly
worked his way around
Sexton to seize control
of the lead 10 minutes
into the moto. From
there, Lawrence and
Sexton settled into
their respective
positions through the
heart of the moto.
With a little more than
10 minutes to go Sexton
mounted an attack on
Lawrence and made an
easy pass to move into
the lead. Lawrence gave
chase and passed Sexton
back, only for Sexton to
do the same and put his
KTM back out front.
Sexton kept a patient
Lawrence at bay and as
the moto dipped into its
final five minutes
Sexton lost traction
with his front tire and
tipped over, which
handed the lead back to
Lawrence. Sexton
remounted in second, but
found himself under fire
from Hunter Lawrence in
third.
Sexton dug deep to get
Jett Lawrence back
within his sights but
the Honda rider managed
the lead through to the
finish to wrap up his
second sweep of the
motos this season. He
crossed the finish line
3.7 seconds ahead of
Sexton, with Hunter
Lawrence in third.
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Chase Sexton (3-2)
finished in the
runner-up spot
and chipped away at his
deficit in the
championship.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Overall
Jett Lawrence’s second
1-1 effort of the summer
resulted in his third
overall win in four
rounds and the 14th
victory of his 450 Class
career and provided
back-to-back wins to
follow up his worst
outing in the premier
class in which he
crashed and suffered
minor injuries. Sexton
(3-2) earned the
tiebreaker over Hunter
Lawrence (2-3) for the
runner-up spot, while
the elder Lawrence, who
is the championship
leader, remains the only
rider to finish on the
overall podium at each
round thus far.
With his four straight
podium results to start
the season, Hunter
Lawrence remains atop
the championship
standings. He holds a
six-point lead over
Sexton, with Jett
Lawrence in third, eight
points out of the lead.
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Hunter Lawrence
(2-3) maintained his
points lead
with a fourth straight
podium effort.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Jett Lawrence,
Team Honda HRC
“Chase had some good
lines [in Moto 2]. It
was a bummer to see him
go down. It was his race
for sure. My shoulder
was a bit more fatigued
today. I struggled a
bit, so it’s good to get
the overall and head
into the break.”
Chase Sexton,
Red Bull KTM Factory
Racing
“I felt a lot better
in the second moto. My
speed was much better.
Just too many dang
mistakes. I just need to
be better. We'll go back
to work over the next
two weeks and come back
stronger. We were better
in Moto 2 than Moto 1,
which is good, so we’ve
got to keep grinding.”
Hunter Lawrence,
Team Honda HRC
“It’s pretty gnarly
out there. In the second
moto I just didn’t have
the explosive fire like
I had in Moto 1. I think
that was pretty clear.
It was good to minimize
the damage [in points]
and not do anything
silly.”
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450
Class Overall
Results (Moto
Finish //
Points)
-
Jett
Lawrence,
Landsborough,
Qld.,
Australia,
Honda (1-1
// 50)
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Chase
Sexton, La
Moille,
Ill., KTM
(3-2 // 42)
-
Hunter
Lawrence,
Landsborough,
Qld.,
Australia,
Honda (2-3
// 42)
-
Aaron
Plessinger,
Hamilton,
Ohio, KTM
(5-5 // 34)
-
Justin
Cooper, Cold
Spring
Harbor,
N.Y., Yamaha
(4-6 // 34)
-
Jason
Anderson,
Edgewood,
N.M.,
Kawasaki
(7-4 // 33)
-
Dylan
Ferrandis,
Avignon,
France,
Honda (6-7
// 31)
-
Justin
Barcia,
Monroe,
N.Y., GASGAS
(10-8 // 26)
-
Malcolm
Stewart,
Haines City,
Fla.,
Husqvarna
(9-9 // 26)
-
Shane
McElrath,
Canton,
N.C., Suzuki
(8-10 //
26)
450
Class
Championship
Standings (Round
4 of 11)
-
Hunter
Lawrence,
Landsborough,
Qld.,
Australia,
Honda - 171
-
Chase
Sexton, La
Moille,
Ill., KTM -
165
-
Jett
Lawrence,
Landsborough,
Qld.,
Australia,
Honda - 163
-
Justin
Cooper, Cold
Spring
Harbor,
N.Y., Yamaha
- 143
-
Aaron
Plessinger,
Hamilton,
Ohio, KTM -
134
-
Jason
Anderson,
Edgewood,
N.M.,
Kawasaki -
130
-
Justin
Barcia,
Monroe,
N.Y., GASGAS
- 121
-
Dylan
Ferrandis,
Avignon,
France,
Honda - 120
-
Malcolm
Stewart,
Haines City,
Fla.,
Husqvarna -
113
-
Freddie
Noren,
Lidkoping,
Sweden,
Kawasaki -
82
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450 Class Highlights - High
Point National /td>
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Moto 1
The opening moto of the
day got underway with
Monster Energy Yamaha
Star Racing’s Nick
Romano out front for the
MotoSport.com Holeshot,
but he was quickly
passed by Troy Lee
Designs/Red Bull/GASGAS
Factory Racing’s Ryder
DiFrancesco and the
Kawasaki of Masterpool.
However, the rider to
watch was Team Honda
HRC’s Chance Hymas, who
clawed his way into the
lead before the
completion of the
opening lap. Well behind
was point leader and
Monster Energy Yamaha
Star Racing rider Haiden
Deegan, who started the
moto outside the top 20.
As the moto wore on,
Hymas, Masterpool, and
Team Honda HRC’s Jo
Shimoda settled into the
top three and all three
remained within striking
distance of one another
as they navigated tricky
track conditions. Just
as the moto surpassed
its halfway point, Hymas
had a slight bobble
while attempting to
navigate lapped riders.
With the Honda’s
momentum halted
momentarily, both
Masterpool and Shimoda
were able to get by and
drop Hymas to third.
Behind them, Deegan was
on an impressive
comeback and managed to
claw his way into the
top four.
Deegan’s charge forward
brought him within reach
of Hymas, which forced
the Honda rider to
respond. With the moto
winding down, the battle
for second became a
three-rider affair
between Shimoda, Hymas,
and Deegan. A savvy move
allowed Deegan to pass
Hymas and move into the
top three. Deegan then
went on the attack
against Shimoda. Deegan
took advantage of a
lapper to make the pass
for second and then had
two laps to track down
Masterpool.
DDeegan closed in and
took advantage of his
first opening to make
the move on Masterpool
just before the white
flag. The Kawasaki rider
battled back and kept
the fight tight through
the finish, but Deegan
completed an impressive
come-from-behind effort
by 2.6 seconds over
Masterpool. Shimoda
followed in third, with
Hymas fourth and
DiFrancesco fifth.
Deegan posted his
fastest lap of the moto
on the final circuit, to
put the finishing touch
on a statement ride.
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Ty Masterpool's
(2-1) margin of victory
for his first career win
was a mere 0.3 seconds.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Moto 2
The second moto saw the
trio of
Muc-Off/FXR/ClubMX
Yamaha riders at the
head of the pack, with
Coty Schock earning the
MotoSport.com Holeshot
over teammates Jett
Reynolds and Mark
Fineis. As they jockeyed
for position it was the
rookie, Fineis, who
emerged with the lead
for the first time. Red
Bull KTM Factory
Racing’s Tom Vialle was
also in the mix and made
quick moves to jump into
second and give pursuit
of Fineis. Behind the
top two, Masterpool was
also pushing forward to
slot into third. Deegan,
meanwhile, found himself
on the ground and
started outside the top
20 for the second
consecutive moto.
Vialle was patient and
waited for his
opportunity, which he
capitalized on to seize
control of the lead just
over five minutes into
the moto. While leading,
Vialle landed off-kilter
and went down, which
handed the lead back to
Fineis and dropped the
Frenchman to fourth.
Fineis’ lead was
short-lived as
Masterpool made a quick
pass to grab the top
spot, while Hymas
followed from third.
With a comfortable gap
on the field Masterpool
went down and gave the
lead back to Fineis, but
quickly remounted in
second. Fineis then
crashed out from first a
short time later, which
allowed Hymas to slip
past Masterpool and
become the moto’s fifth
different leader right
as it reached the
halfway point. Hymas was
able to quickly
establish a multi-second
lead on Masterpool, who
settled into second.
Behind the leaders,
Vialle ran third but
faced pressure from a
hard-charging Deegan,
who once again marched
his way into the top
five. Deegan bided his
time and eventually took
advantage of a bobble by
Vialle to move into
third.
Back up front,
Masterpool mounted a
charge for the lead with
less than four minutes
to go and forced a
bobble out of Hymas,
which allowed the
Kawasaki rider to
reclaim the lead. With
pressure coming from
Deegan, Hymas was able
to erase the deficit to
Masterpool and make it a
three-rider battle to
the finish. Deegan got
by Hymas and was on
Masterpool’s rear fender
in the final turns, but
the Kawasaki rider held
off the threat to secure
his first career moto
win by a mere three
tenths of a second.
Hymas finished in third.
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Haiden Deegan (1-2)
was impressive with a
pair of come-from-behind
climbs through the field
en route to a runner-up
finish.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Overall
With the moto win,
Masterpool (2-1) and
Deegan (1-2) finished
tied atop the overall
classification, but
Masterpool earned the
second-moto tiebreaker
to capture the first
overall win of his
professional career. He
became the 175th rider
in Pro Motocross history
to earn a 250 Class
victory, which also
signified the milestone
300th win for the
decorated Pro Circuit
race team led by Mitch
Payton. Hymas secured
his second straight
podium result in third
(4-3).
With three wins and a
runner-up finish through
the first four rounds,
Deegan’s lead in the
championship standings
sits at 32 points over
Hymas. Vialle, who
finished fifth (8-4),
sits third, 38 points
behind Deegan.
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Chance Hymas (4-3)
now has back-to-back
podiums
and sole possession of
second in points.
Photo Credit: MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.
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Ty Masterpool,
Monster Energy Pro
Circuit Kawasaki
“It’s been a rough
three to four years. I’m
lucky to have a great
team around me and just
keep my head down. This
is proof hard work pays
off. I believed in the
team around me and in
God’s plan and it all
worked out.”
Haiden Deegan,
Monster Energy Yamaha
Star Racing
“I’m super proud of
Masterpool [for the
win]. He’s been through
a lot of highs and lows.
It was a battle and we
took it down to the
wire. I made things hard
on myself today, but we
still showed a lot of
speed and extended the
points lead, so it was
still a good day.”
Chance Hymas,
Team Honda HRC
“I felt good on the
bike all day. I just got
to be better. I’m super
glad to be on the podium
again and show some
consistency. Now I’ve
got second all to myself
[in the point standings]
and I’m ready to come
out swinging after the
break.”
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250
Class Overall
Results (Moto
Finishes //
Points)
-
Ty
Masterpool,
Paradise,
Texas.,
Kawasaki
(2-1 // 47)
-
Haiden
Deegan,
Temecula,
Calif.,
Yamaha (1-2
// 47)
-
Chance
Hymas,
Pocatello,
Idaho, Honda
(4-3 // 38)
-
Jo Shimoda,
Suzuka,
Japan, Honda
(3-5 // 37)
-
Tom Vialle,
Avignon,
France, KTM
(8-4 // 32)
-
Julien
Beaumer,
Lake Havasu
City, Ariz.,
KTM (6-8 //
30)
-
Ryder
DiFrancesco,
Bakersfield,
Calif.,
GASGAS (5-13
// 26)
-
Pierce
Brown,
Sandy, Utah,
GASGAS (13-6
// 25)
-
Levi
Kitchen,
Washougal,
Wash.,
Kawasaki
(10-9 // 25)
-
Jordon
Smith,
Belmont,
N.C., Yamaha
(9-10 //
25)
250
Class
Championship
Standings (Round
4 of 11)
-
Haiden
Deegan,
Temecula,
Calif.,
Yamaha - 191
-
Chance
Hymas,
Pocatello,
Idaho, Honda
- 159
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Tom Vialle,
Avignon,
France, KTM
- 153
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Levi
Kitchen,
Washougal,
Wash.,
Kawasaki -
144
-
Jo Shimoda,
Suzuka,
Japan,
Kawasaki -
136
-
Ty
Masterpool,
Paradise,
Texas,
Kawasaki -
116
-
Jalek Swoll,
Belleview,
Fla.,
Triumph -
116
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Pierce
Brown,
Sandy, Utah,
GASGAS - 109
-
Julien
Beaumer,
Lake Havasu
City, Ariz.,
KTM - 103
-
Jordon
Smith,
Belmont,
N.C., Yamaha
- 82
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250 Class Highlights - High
Point National |
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The 2024 Pro Motocross
Championship will
observe its first off
weekend of the season
before a return to
action on Saturday, June
29, with the fifth round
from the sands of
Southwick,
Massachusetts’ legendary
The Wick 338. The
Crestview Construction
Southwick National will
provide arguably the
toughest challenge of
the summer and will
feature a full day of
live coverage
exclusively on Peacock.
Streaming coverage will
begin with Race Day Live
Presented by
MotoSport.com at 7 a.m.
PT / 10 a.m. ET.,
followed by
uninterrupted moto
coverage at 10 a.m. PT /
1 p.m. ET.
###
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For information
about the Pro
Motocross
Championship, please
visit ProMotocross.com and
be sure to follow
all of the Pro
Motocross social
media channels for
exclusive content
and additional
information on the
latest news:
Available for
download for both
Apple and Android
devices is the
official Pro
Motocross App. Fans
of American
motocross can have
access to the
world’s most
prestigious off-road
motorcycle racing
series right at
their fingertips on
their mobile
devices. Developed
by AMA Pro Racing,
the Pro Motocross
App provides users
with the most
important
information
surrounding the Pro
Motocross
Championship, from
series news to
schedule and ticket
information, as well
as broadcast
schedule details and
live timing &
scoring. Download it
now via the App
Store or Google
Play.
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MX Sports Pro
Racing
MX Sports Pro Racing,
Inc., manages and
produces the world's
premier motocross racing
series - the Pro
Motocross Championship,
sanctioned by AMA Pro
Racing. MX Sports Pro
Racing is an industry
leader in off-road
powersport event
production and
management, whose
mission is to showcase
the sport of
professional motocross
competition at events
throughout the United
States. Through its
various racing
properties, partnerships
and affiliates, MX
Sports Pro Racing, Inc.,
organizes events for
thousands of racing
athletes each year and
attracts millions of
motorsports spectators.
Visit
www.mxsportsproracing.com
for more information.
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Pro Motocross
Championship
The Pro Motocross
Championship features
the world's fastest
outdoor motocross
racers, competing aboard
homologated bikes from
one of eight competing
manufacturers on a
collection of the
roughest, toughest
tracks on the planet.
Racing takes place each
Saturday afternoon, with
competition divided into
two classes: one for
250cc machines, and one
for 450cc machines. MX
Sports Pro Racing, the
industry leader in
off-road powersports
event production,
organizes the Pro
Motocross Championship
series.
More information can be
found at
www.ProMotocross.com.
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SuperMotocross
World Championship
The SuperMotocross World
Championship™ is the
premier off-road
motorcycle racing series
that combines the
technical precision of
stadium racing with the
all-out speed and
endurance of outdoor
racing. Created in 2022,
the SuperMotocross World
Championship combines
the Monster Energy AMA
Supercross Championship
and the Pro Motocross
Championship, sanctioned
by AMA Pro Racing, into
a 31-event series that
culminates in a
season-ending two round
playoff and
SuperMotocross World
Championship Final.
Visit
SuperMotocross.com
for more information.
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AMA Pro Racing
AMA Pro Racing is the
premier professional
motorcycle racing
organization for North
America, operating a
full schedule of events
and championships for a
variety of motorcycle
disciplines. It serves
as the sanctioning body
of the Pro Motocross
Championship.
Learn more about AMA Pro
Racing at
www.amaproracing.com.
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