Roadracing World began this unique particular function recognizing probably the most promising younger highway racers as a solution to pessimists who claimed North America had no new, up-and-coming younger racers. This version of the Roadracing World Younger Gun Awards marks the twenty seventh consecutive yr of showcasing what is definitely an abundance of recent expertise.
Roadracing World Younger Weapons have received:
FIM MotoGP and FIM Superbike races and World Championships;
MotoAmerica and AMA Professional races and Championships, together with 12 MotoAmerica/AMA Professional Superbike Championships;
A KTM RC Cup World Remaining race;
The Daytona 200 (12 instances);
WERA Nationwide Endurance Championships and WERA Nationwide Problem Championships;
ASRA/Method USA Grand Nationwide and CCS Nationwide Championships;
USGPRU Nationwide Championships;
Many regional and native titles.
The competitors has regularly develop into extra intense as extra — and youthful — racers with greater ranges of accomplishments are nominated, and the extent of accomplishment required to make the grade retains getting harder.
We’ve spent the final a number of months accepting nominations and evaluating highway racers between the ages of 10 and 18 (as of the beginning of the 2023 season) who’ve, at a minimal, received Knowledgeable-level highway races and/or Championships or had excellent outcomes as an Novice/Novice. A lot of the riders included right here have accomplished way over the minimal.
The younger riders acknowledged listed here are probably the most promising younger highway racers in North America. All have earned the title of Roadracing World Younger Gun.
We are going to function one Younger Gun per day, presenting them in alphabetical order.
Your complete Roadracing World Younger Weapons, Class of 2023 is featured within the April 2023 difficulty of Roadracing World & Motorbike Know-how journal.
Joseph LiMandri Jr.
Age: 18.
Present house: Backyard Metropolis, New York.
Present top/weight: 5’7”/130 kilos.
Present faculty grade degree: 12th grade.
Started driving at age: 5 years.
First highway race: 2012, Millville, New Jersey, NJminiGP, Spec 50 Class, 4thplace.
Present racebike: Yamaha YZF-R7.
Present tuner/mechanic: Altus Motorsports.
Main race collection: MotoAmerica Twins Cup.
Prime sponsors: Altus Motorsports, Yamaha bLU cRU, The House Jammit, CyberSafe Options, Moto Liberty, RS Taichi, Arai Americas, Evolve GT Trackdays, TracksidePartsClub, N2 Observe Days, Southern Satisfaction Efficiency.
Current racing accomplishments: 2022 season, positioned 4th in MotoAmerica Junior Cup Championship (2 wins, 10 whole podiums in 18 races); 2021 season, completed 10th in MotoAmerica Junior Cup Championship (3 podium finishes), completed 4th in CCS Mid-Atlantic Regional General Championship (positioned within the prime 5 of 4 CCS Mid-Atlantic class Championships); 2020 season, completed 10th in MotoAmerica Junior Cup Championship (finest race outcomes was 2nd at NJMP); 2019 season, completed 5th in MotoAmerica Junior Cup race at VIR, injured for many of 2019 season; 2018 season, received 3 CCS Regional Championships, positioned 2nd in 3 different CCS Regional Championships, 21 race wins, 29 podium finishes.
2023 racing aim: Win MotoAmerica Twins Cup races.
Racing profession aim: To compete in Superbike World Championship.
Racing hero: Valentino Rossi.
Favourite monitor: Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Favourite interest: Motocross.
If I wasn’t racing I’d be…: Wishing I used to be racing.
A number of the riders who’ve graduated from Roadracing World Younger Weapons and gone on to racing success in Nationwide or Worldwide collection embody:
2017 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Champion Jason Aguilar (R.I.P.);
2013 AMA Professional SuperSport East Champion and 2022 MotoAmerica Inventory 1000 Champion Corey Alexander;
AMA Professional Daytona SportBike race winner Tommy Aquino (R.I.P.);
2008 Crimson Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup Champion, two-time MotoAmerica Supersport Champion, and AFT SuperTwins race winner J.D. Seashore;
five-time MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Cameron Beaubier;
MotoAmerica Twins Cup race winner Jackson Blackmon;
former Canadian Sport Bike Champion Tomas Casas;
three-time Canadian Sport Bike Champion and 2014 Canadian Superbike Champion Jodi Christie;
former AMA Professional SuperSport East Champion and MotoAmerica Superstock 1000 race winner Josh Day;
2011 Daytona 200 winner Jason DiSalvo;
2014 AMA Professional SuperSport Championship runner-up and present MotoAmerica workforce proprietor Dustin Dominguez;
2018 MotoAmerica Junior Cup Champion, 2019 MotoAmerica Twins Cup Champion, and 2021 Canadian Superbike Champion Alex Dumas;
four-time Pikes Peak Worldwide Hill Climb race winner and former bike monitor report holder Carlin Dunne (R.I.P.);
Canadian Superbike race winner Bodhi Edie;
two-time AMA Professional Daytona SportBike Champion, two-time AMA Professional XR1200/Harley-Davidson Champion and four-time Daytona 200 winner Danny Eslick;
2019 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion and MotoAmerica Superbike race winner Bobby Fong;
2010 Crimson Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup Champion, 2014 AMA Professional Daytona SportBike Champion, 2015 MotoAmerica AMA/FIM North America Superstock 1000 Champion, and two-time MotoAmerica Superbike Champion Jake Gagne;
two-time MotoAmerica Supersport Champion and World Superbike podium finisher Garrett Gerloff;
2017 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Championship runner-up Michael Gilbert;
2014 AMA Professional SuperSport Champion, 2018 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship runner-up, and 2022 MotoAmerica Inventory 1000 Championship runner-up Hayden Gillim;
2002 AMA Superbike Champion and 2006 FIM MotoGP World Champion Nicky Hayden (R.I.P.);
2007 AMA Professional 600cc Supersport Champion, 2014 AMA Professional Superbike Championship runner-up, and 2017 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship runner-up Roger Hayden;
eight-time AMA Professional Superbike race winner and two-time AMA Supersport Champion Tommy Hayden;
2013 AMA Professional Superbike Champion, 2016 MotoAmerica Superstock 1000 Champion, 2022 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion, and two-time Daytona 200 winner Josh Herrin;
MotoAmerica Supersport front-runner Teagg Hobbs;
AMA Professional Superstock race winner Jake Holden;
2011 British Superbike Championship runner-up and former MotoGP and World Superbike common John Hopkins;
2015 Supersport World Championship runner-up, 2019 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship runner-up, and MotoAmerica Superbike podium finisher Patrick “P.J.” Jacobsen;
2021 MotoAmerica Supersport Champion and present Moto2 World Championship competitor Sean Dylan Kelly;
Canadian Superbike race winner Kevin Lacombe;
two-time MotoAmerica Inventory 1000 Champion Andrew Lee;
2021 MotoAmerica Inventory 1000 and Superbike Cup Champion Jake Lewis;
MotoAmerica Supersport race winner Sam Lochoff;
MotoAmerica Superstock 600 race winner Nick McFadden;
AMA Professional SuperSport race winner and MotoAmerica Supersport race winner Stefano Mesa;
Elena Myers, the primary and solely lady to win AMA Professional Supersport races;
AMA Professional XR1200 race winner, multi-time Loudon Basic winner, and two-time BRL Champion Shane Narbonne;
2012 Canadian Superbike Championship runner-up Andrew Nelson;
2016 MotoAmerica KTM RC Cup Champion, 2019 British Motostar (Moto3) Champion, MotoAmerica Supersport podium finisher, and two-time Daytona 200 winner Brandon Paasch;
2012 Daytona 200 winner and 2010 AMA Professional Supersport West Champion Joey Pascarella;
2016 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Champion, MotoAmerica Supersport podium finisher, and present powersports dealership proprietor Bryce Prince;
AMA Professional and Canadian Nationwide race winner and multi-time N2/WERA Nationwide Endurance Champion Chris Peris;
two-time AMA Professional SuperSport Nationwide Champion, British Supersport podium finisher, 2020 AFT Manufacturing Twins Champion, and MotoAmerica King Of The Baggers race winner James Rispoli;
2015 MotoAmerica Superstock 600 Champion, MotoAmerica Supersport race winner, and Moto2 World Championship race winner Joe Roberts;
former Crimson Bull AMA U.S. Rookies Cup Champion and former FIM Moto2 European Championship competitor Benny Solis, Jr.;
three-time AMA Professional Superbike Champion, 2009 Superbike World Champion, MotoGP race winner, and AMA Motorbike Corridor of Famer Ben Spies;
multi-time AMA Professional race winner and four-time total WERA Nationwide Endurance Champion Chris Ulrich;
MotoAmerica Supersport podium finisher and former World Superbike competitor Jayson Uribe;
2017 MotoAmerica KTM RC Cup Championship runner-up, 2018 MotoAmerica Junior Cup Championship runner-up, and MotoAmerica Supersport podium finisher Cory Ventura;
Canadian Superbike race winner Alex Welsh;
former AMA Professional Superbike Rookie of the 12 months, Chinese language Superbike Championship race winner and MotoAmerica Supersport podium finisher Cory West;
MotoAmerica Junior Cup and Superbike Cup race winner Ashton Yates;
and two-time AMA Professional Superbike Championship runner-up Blake Younger.










