Stewart, Reed vie in last-lap battle for supercross title

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LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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In the shadows
Stewart, Reed vie in last-lap battle for supercross title

If you live in Las Vegas, I know the MGM and Coast Casinos have had lines on this race in the past, I would take Stewart over Reed. And if you are in LV, go to the race, Stewart is an unbelievable rider ! Chad Reed is no slouch himself

AMA crown on line at Sam Boyd Stadium


The high-flying, dirt-throwing AMA Supercross riders have ended their season at Sam Boyd Stadium the past 19 years, but on Saturday night there's a rare addition to the sold-out event: drama.

It will be one of the few times when the series championship hasn't been locked up before the riders arrive in Las Vegas.

James Stewart will start the 17th race of the year with a four-point lead over reigning and two-time season champion Chad Reed.

Stewart can clinch his second Supercross title by finishing fourth or better Saturday night regardless of how well Reed does on his Suzuki.

It's apropos that it comes down to Stewart and Reed. They are the only ones to win the Las Vegas finale since 2005; Reed won last year and in '05, Stewart in 2006 and '07.

Stewart, 23, of Haines City, Fla., has needed each of his 11 wins this year to climb out of the rut he dug for himself when he didn't finish January's season opener in Anaheim, Calif. Stewart's bike developed a mechanical problem after he crashed for a second time early in the race, and he went on to place 19th.

Reed, 27, was involved in one of the crashes and placed third, behind one-time winner Josh Grant of Riverside, Calif.

Reed, an Australian living in Tampa, Fla., has three titles this year. He has been runner-up to Stewart 10 times but has only one finish below third.

Stewart has dominated the year when he's kept his Yamaha upright. He has led a series-best 194 laps; Reed is second best with 60.

The rivalry between the two became heated Saturday at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City when officials kicked Stewart's L&M Racing teammate Kyle Chisholm out of the race for an "unsportsmanlike" move that prevented Reed from challenging Stewart, who eventually won.

On Tuesday, the AMA, which governs American motorcycle racing, disqualified Chisholm from the Salt Lake round, suspended him from competing Saturday and fined him $5,000.

? BULLRING DOUBLE -- The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway will feature two days of racing this weekend, including a unique Sunday afternoon show.

Racing at the three-eighths-mile paved oval begins Saturday night with its regular NASCAR All-American Series featuring the Super Late Models division.

Beginning at 1 p.m. Sunday, racing will include a 121-lap SRL Southwest Tour stock car series feature and national qualifying races for Legends Cars, Thunder Roadsters and Bandoleros.

Among those entered in the Southwest Tour race is Las Vegas resident Bear Rzesnowiecky, who turns 17 on May 10. Rzesnowiecky is focusing on racing at Toyota Speedway in Irwindale, Calif., this year, and he was runner-up at the Southern California track in an April 18 race.
 

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AMA SUPERCROSS SERIES: Reed rides absent rival

AMA SUPERCROSS SERIES: Reed rides absent rival

AMA SUPERCROSS SERIES: Reed rides absent rival

2008 champ, second in points, irked by leader Stewart prior to finale

When Chad Reed says of Supercross rival James Stewart, "We've never respected each other," he's not kidding or parroting a script to hype an event that doesn't need hyping.

A day before the climax of one of the nastiest points battles in AMA Supercross history, Reed was irritated Friday when series-leading Stewart didn't bother to attend the morning news conference at Sam Boyd Stadium.

"As a rider he's amazing, but he has some flaws. When he pulls stuff like he did today ... I don't know," Reed said.

Stewart and Reed will go footpeg to footpeg on the stadium's dirt course tonight to decide the season champion. A sellout crowd of about 38,000 is expected for the 17th and final race of the season.

Stewart has 11 victories and Reed, the reigning champion, has three victories and 11 runner-up finishes. Stewart leads him by six points, and a fourth-place finish will give Stewart the championship in what race promoters say is the closest points race in the series' 19-year history.

Not that Stewart felt like talking about it Friday. One of his representatives notified event officials late Thursday that Stewart would not attend the news conference for undisclosed reasons.

When Reed learned Stewart wouldn't be joining him on the podium, he smiled as though he had just gotten out of a bad blind date.

"I think you're very influenced by the people around you, and I'll leave it at that," said Reed, who rode the past two seasons for the San Manuel Yamaha team that Stewart joined before this season.

"It seems weird that you would miss the final press conference of the year. As mad as I was about something or at some people, I never had it in me not to show up. The sport is far bigger than any one rider. Athletes come and go."

Another reason Stewart played hooky might have been to avoid discussing sanctions this week against teammate Kyle Chisholm for intentionally running into Reed last Saturday in a race at Salt Lake City. Chisholm was thrown out of the race, suspended for this week and fined $5,000.

After leading early at Salt Lake City, Reed dropped to second. Then Chisholm, a lap down to Reed and Stewart, clipped Reed's rear wheel with five laps to go, briefly slowing Reed.

"I felt I was in a great position. I was feeling really, really good and strong," Reed said.

Stewart went on to his 11th victory of the season, and Reed finished second. Their clash continues tonight.

"This is cool," Reed said. "I've got nothing to lose, and pretty much, in NASCAR terms, (it's) checkers or wreckers."

Because Stewart has finished lower than second only twice this year -- both times after crashing -- the race could become a two-wheel demolition derby.

"I'm going to race James Stewart the way he has raced me and everybody else," Reed said. "A lot of people watched last week's race and were a little disappointed, so if (riders) take things into their own hands, that's beyond anything I can control.

"I want to win the championship, and I'll do whatever it takes for me to be the champion."

Stewart, presumably, has no comment.
 
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