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This Week in SuperMotocross: Supercross Round 1

January 3, 2024

450SX Class Storylines: Anaheim 1

Chase Sexton: Chase is looking to go back-to-back for just the 17th time in 450SX Class history and become only the seventh rider to do so (Bob Hannah x2, Jeff Stanton, Jeremy McGrath x5, Ricky Carmichael x3, Ryan Villopoto x3, & Ryan Dungey x2). He has a tough road ahead of him as he looks to compete with up to 19 other Championship winning riders (including SX/MX/GPs/WSX). Sexton (7 450SX Class wins) can move into the top-25 all-time in 450SX Class wins with just one more. Five would put him in the top-20. His 20 SMX victories pull him into the top-40 all-time in that category.

Jett Lawrence: When adding up MX, SX, and SMX titles across all classes of racing Jett is already in the top-10 of ALL-TIME with six. Jett has won everything he could have won (he will never have a shot at the 250SMX or 500MX Championship) other than a 450SX title. Only Ricky Carmichael, Ryan Villopoto, Jeremy McGrath, Ryan Dungey, Eli Tomac, Rick Johnson, Jeff Ward, and James Stewart have more titles than this 450SX Class rookie. He is also the greatest non-American Champion other than the Scotland born Jeff Ward who has seven titles. Even excluding his SMX title, Jett sits 12th all-time in titles. Jett is also already 17th in all-time SMX victories with 39.

Eli Tomac: Coming off a terrible injury in the 450SX Class finale that tanked his title hopes and left an entire world of Supercross fans speechless, Tomac made an equally impressive recovery and is set to compete in 2024. With a fresh Achillies, Tomac is looking to prove he can hang with the likes of the Lawrence brothers, Sexton, and other title competitors. Tomac’s list of accomplishments is incredible, starting with his eight titles that place him fifth all-time only behind Carmichael, Villopoto, McGrath, and Dungey. His 107 total victories are good for third all-time only behind Carmichael and Stewart. He is looking to become just the second rider in history with 100 AMA wins (AMA W’s do not include 250SX Class). With a full 2024 season Tomac would move into seventh all-time in 450SX Class starts and would move into third in podiums with six on the year. Tomac could become the first rider to ever win three titles but none of them being in back-to-back seasons.

Cooper Webb: Joining back with his original 450SX Class team, Webb is also coming back from a scary injury that he sustained in Nashville. He was a title-contender up to that point and would have won the 450SX title last season if he hadn’t gone down, assuming Tomac’s injury in the final round still occurs. Webb’s two wins moved him into the top-10 all-time in the 450SX Class list with 21. He is 16th in all-time wins with 40 and could move into the top-15 with only two victories. Webb and Tomac have finished inside the top-three together four times since Webb jumped into the 450SX Class in 2017, so having them on the same team will be extremely interesting.

450SX Class: Anaheim Historical Facts

Tenure: On December 4, 1976 Marty Smith won the first ever 450SX Class round in Angel Stadium on a Honda. The race did not count for the point-standings but was considered the “American MX Finals” for that season and counted in the 450SX Class record books. It was the first time the Heat Race system was implemented, and it was used to qualify 80-riders into a 24-rider Main Event. Supercross has returned to Angel Stadium every year since excluding 1980, ’88, ’97, ’98, & 2021. This will be the 82nd 450SX Class race held in Angel Stadium and 25th season Angel Stadium will host multiple rounds on the Supercross schedule.

Openers: Angel Stadium is set to host their 33rd season opener in 51 seasons of Supercross. Camping World Stadium (formerly known as the Citrus Bowl) is second on the list with only six openers hosted. Eli Tomac won the Anaheim Opener last season and joins Ken Roczen, Justin Barcia, and Jason Anderson as active riders with an Anaheim Opener victory going into 2024. Jeremy McGrath’s five season-opening victories lead the way in 450SX Class history with Roczen’s four a lone second-place, with a shot at tying McGrath.

Slow Start: The eventual series champion has not fared well in 450SX Class season openers only winning 17/50 (34%). The number drops in Anaheim Openers to 6/32 (19%) and plummets to 0% in the previous 11 seasons (2013-2023). Eventual Champions have averaged fifth place in the season opener in that time span. Ryan Villopoto is the last rider to win the opener and the title (2012 Anaheim, Kawasaki). Last season Tomac became the first defending Champion to win an opener since Villopoto in the aforementioned 2012 opener.

Race of Champions: The 2016 Anaheim Opener broke a 450SX Class record with 15 former 250SX Class Champions in the Main Event. The 2024 Anaheim Opener is on track to tie this record with the likes of Tomac, Roczen, Barcia, Anderson, Cooper Webb, Chase Sexton, Jett Lawrence, Hunter Lawrence, Justin Cooper, Aaron Plessinger, Christian Craig, Malcolm Stewart, Justin Hill, Dylan Ferrandis, and Colt Nichols. Riders like Dean Wilson, Shane McElrath, and Adam Cianciarulo were close to winning 250SX Class titles but fell just short. However, Wilson and Cianciarulo do have 250 Class Motocross titles.

450SX Class: Winners

Manufacturer Wins in Anaheim (Last Win) (Last Opener Win if Different)

  • Yamaha: 24 (‘23)
  • Honda: 22 (’23) (’22)
  • Kawasaki: 17 (’22) (’12)
  • Suzuki: 10 (’15)
  • KTM: 7 (’19) (’18)
  • Husqvarna: 1 (’16)

Top Winners in Anaheim

  • 1) James Stewart: 8 (’06, ’07 x3, ’09 x2, ’10, ’11)
  • 1) Chad Reed: 8 (’03, ’04 x2, ’08 x3, ’14 x2)
  • 1) Jeremy McGrath: 8 (’93-’96, ’00 x2, ’01 x2)
  • 1) Ricky Carmichael: 8 (’01, ’02, ’03 x2, ’05 x2, ’06 x2)
  • 5) Ryan Villopoto: 5 (’10, ’11, ’12 x2, ’13)
  • 5) Ryan Dungey: 5 (’10, ’13, ’15, ’16, ’17)
  • 5) Ken Roczen: 5 (’14, ’15 x2, ’17, ‘22)

450SX Class: First Time Winners in Anaheim

  • 1978: Gaylon Mosier, Kawasaki
  • 1979: Kent Howerton, Suzuki
  • 1982: Donnie Hansen, Honda
  • 1983: David Bailey, Honda
  • 1984: Johnny O’Mara, Honda
  • 1990: Damon Bradshaw, Yamaha
  • 2003: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2009: Josh Grant, Yamaha
  • 2014: Ken Roczen, KTM
  • 2016: Jason Anderson, Husqvarna

450SX Class Past Winners in Anaheim

  • 1976: Marty Smith, Honda
  • 1977: Bob Hannah, Yamaha
  • 1978: Gaylon Mosier, Kawasaki
  • 1979: Kent Howerton, Suzuki
  • 1981: Kent Howerton, Suzuki
  • 1982: Donnie Hansen, Honda
  • 1983: David Bailey, Honda
  • 1984: Johnny O’Mara, Honda
  • 1985: Broc Glover, Yamaha
  • 1986: David Bailey, Honda
  • 1987: Jeff Ward, Kawasaki
  • 1989: Rick Johnson, Honda
  • 1990: Damon Bradshaw, Yamaha
  • 1991: Jeff Stanton, Honda
  • 1992: Damon Bradshaw, Yamaha
  • 1993: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1994: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1995: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1996: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1999: Ezra Lusk, Honda
  • 1999: Ezra Lusk, Honda
  • 2000: Jeremy McGrath, Yamaha
  • 2000: Jeremy McGrath, Yamaha
  • 2001: Jeremy McGrath, Yamaha
  • 2001: Jeremy McGrath, Yamaha
  • 2001: Ricky Carmichael, Kawasaki
  • 2002: David Vuillemin, Yamaha
  • 2002: Mike LaRocco, Honda
  • 2002: Ricky Carmichael, Honda
  • 2003: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2003: Ricky Carmichael, Honda
  • 2003: Ricky Carmichael, Honda
  • 2004: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2004: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2004: Kevin Windham, Honda
  • 2005: Kevin Windham, Honda
  • 2005: Ricky Carmichael, Suzuki
  • 2005: Ricky Carmichael, Suzuki
  • 2006: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2006: Ricky Carmichael, Suzuki
  • 2006: Ricky Carmichael, Suzuki
  • 2007: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2007: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2007: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2008: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2008: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2008: Chad Reed, Yamaha
  • 2009: Josh Grant, Yamaha
  • 2009: James Stewart, Yamaha
  • 2009: James Stewart, Yamaha
  • 2010: James Stewart, Yamaha
  • 2010: Ryan Dungey, Suzuki
  • 2010: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2011: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2011: James Stewart, Yamaha
  • 2012: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2012: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2013: Davi Millsaps, Suzuki
  • 2013: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2013: Ryan Dungey, KTM
  • 2014: Ken Roczen, KTM
  • 2014: Chad Reed, Kawasaki
  • 2014: Chad Reed, Kawasaki
  • 2015: Ken Roczen, Suzuki
  • 2015: Ken Roczen, Suzuki
  • 2015: Ryan Dungey, KTM
  • 2016: Jason Anderson, Husqvarna
  • 2016: Ryan Dungey, KTM
  • 2017: Ken Roczen, Honda
  • 2017: Ryan Dungey, KTM
  • 2018: Marvin Musquin, KTM
  • 2018: Eli Tomac, Kawasaki
  • 2019: Justin Barcia, Yamaha
  • 2019: Cooper Webb, KTM
  • 2020: Justin Barcia, Yamaha
  • 2020: Eli Tomac, Kawasaki
  • 2022: Ken Roczen, Honda
  • 2022: Eli Tomac, Yamaha
  • 2022: Jason Anderson, Kawasaki
  • 2023: Eli Tomac, Yamaha
  • 2023: Chase Sexton, Honda

250SX Class: Anaheim Historical Facts

History Lesson: The first 250SX Class round held in Anaheim was on February 2, 1985 and Mike Healey won the Main Event on a Suzuki. He won by a bike length over Honda’s Brian Manley in just the second 250SX Class round ever. 2024 will be the 74th time the gate will drop for a 250SX Class Main Event in Anaheim.

Opener: Anaheim has hosted 28/39 250SX Class season openers, and ten times has the winner won the Western Regional 250SX Class Championship (36%). This includes last season when Jett Lawrence won the opener and the Championship.

Swept: Christian Craig joined Ernesto Fonseca, Ivan Tedesco, Josh Hansen, Cooper Webb, and Villopoto as the only riders to sweep Anaheim in the 250SX Class when he went 3/3 in 2022. Villopoto is the only rider to sweep Anaheim in both classes. Last season Jett Lawrence and Levi Kitchen split in Anaheim and there are only two races again this season. Webb is the last rider to pull off a two-race sweep of Anaheim (2016).

Stepping Stone?: Every 450SX Class Champion in the previous 15 seasons won at least one 250SX Class race in Anaheim during their 250SX Class career except for Chase Sexton who primarily raced in the Eastern Regional 250SX Class Championship. However, none of the previous nine 250SX Class winners in Anaheim have gone onto win a single 450SX Class race. Could Jett Lawrence change that?

250SX Class: Winners

Manufacturer Wins in Anaheim (Last Win) (Last Opener Win if Different)

  • Kawasaki: 27 (’18) (’11)
  • Yamaha: 17 (’23) (’22)
  • Honda: 12 (’23)
  • KTM: 9 (’19)
  • Suzuki: 8 (’09) (’08)

Top Winners in Anaheim

  • 1) Ivan Tedesco: 5 (’04 x3, ’05 x2)
  • 2) Jake Weimer: 4 (’09 x2, ’10 x2)
  • 2) Cooper Webb: 4 (’15 x2, ’16 x2)
  • 4) Damon Huffman: 3 (’93-’95)
  • 4) Ernesto Fonseca: 3 (’01 x3)
  • 4) Ryan Dungey: 3 (’08 x2, ’09)
  • 4) Eli Tomac: 3 (’12, ’13 x2)
  • 4) Ryan Villopoto: 3 (’07 x3)
  • 4) Shane McElrath: 3 (’17-’19)
  • 4) Christian Craig: 3 (’22 x3)

250SX Class: First Time Winners in Anaheim

  • 1985: Mike Healy, Suzuki
  • 1986: Tyson Vohland, Kawasaki
  • 1987: Jeff Matiasevich, Kawasaki
  • 1990: Mike Craig, Kawasaki
  • 1993: Damon Huffman, Suzuki
  • 1999: Casey Johnson, Yamaha
  • 2002: Travis Preston, Honda
  • 2015: Jessy Nelson, KTM
  • 2017: Shane McElrath, KTM
  • 2020: Justin Cooper, Yamaha
  • 2023: Levi Kitchen, Yamaha

250SX Class Past Winners in Anaheim

  • 1985: Mike Healey, Suzuki
  • 1986: Tyson Vohland, Kawasaki
  • 1987: Jeff Matiasevich, Kawasaki
  • 1989: Jeff Matiasevich, Kawasaki
  • 1990: Mike Craig, Kawasaki
  • 1991: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1992: Jeremy McGrath, Honda
  • 1993: Damon Huffman, Suzuki
  • 1994: Damon Huffman, Suzuki
  • 1995: Damon Huffman, Suzuki
  • 1996: Kevin Windham, Yamaha
  • 1999: Casey Johnson, Yamaha
  • 1999: Nathan Ramsey, Kawasaki
  • 2000: David Pingree, Suzuki
  • 2000: Tallon Vohland, Kawasaki
  • 2001: Ernesto Fonseca, Yamaha
  • 2001: Ernesto Fonseca, Yamaha
  • 2001: Ernesto Fonseca, Yamaha
  • 2002: Travis Preston, Honda
  • 2002: David Pingree, KTM
  • 2002: Brock Sellards, KTM
  • 2003: Travis Preston, Honda
  • 2003: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2003: James Stewart, Kawasaki
  • 2004: Ivan Tedesco, Kawasaki
  • 2004: Ivan Tedesco, Kawasaki
  • 2004: Ivan Tedesco, Kawasaki
  • 2005: Nathan Ramsey, KTM
  • 2005: Ivan Tedesco, Kawasaki
  • 2005: Ivan Tedesco, Kawasaki
  • 2006: Andrew Short, Honda
  • 2006: Grant Langston, Kawasaki
  • 2006: Grant Langston, Kawasaki
  • 2007: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2007: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2007: Ryan Villopoto, Kawasaki
  • 2008: Ryan Dungey, Suzuki
  • 2008: Ryan Dungey, Suzuki
  • 2008: Jason Lawrence, Yamaha
  • 2009: Jake Weimer, Kawasaki
  • 2009: Ryan Dungey, Suzuki
  • 2009: Jake Weimer, Kawasaki
  • 2010: Jake Weimer, Kawasaki
  • 2010: Jake Weimer, Kawasaki
  • 2010: Trey Canard, Honda
  • 2011: Josh Hansen, Kawasaki
  • 2011: Josh Hansen, Kawasaki
  • 2012: Cole Seely, Honda
  • 2012: Eli Tomac, Honda
  • 2013: Eli Tomac, Honda
  • 2013: Eli Tomac, Honda
  • 2013: Ken Roczen, KTM
  • 2014: Jason Anderson, KTM
  • 2014: Cole Seely, Honda
  • 2014: Dean Wilson, Kawasaki
  • 2015: Jessy Nelson, KTM
  • 2015: Cooper Webb, Yamaha
  • 2015: Cooper Webb, Yamaha
  • 2016: Cooper Webb, Yamaha
  • 2016: Cooper Webb, Yamaha
  • 2017: Shane McElrath, KTM
  • 2017: Justin Hill, Kawasaki
  • 2018: Shane McElrath, KTM
  • 2018: Joey Savatgy, Kawasaki
  • 2019: Colt Nichols, Yamaha
  • 2019: Shane McElrath, KTM
  • 2020: Justin Cooper, Yamaha
  • 2020: Dylan Ferrandis, Yamaha
  • 2022: Christian Craig, Yamaha
  • 2022: Christian Craig, Yamaha
  • 2022: Christian Craig, Yamaha
  • 2023: Jett Lawrence, Honda
  • 2023: Levi Kitchen, Yamaha