TE PUKE IS THE PLACE
Wellington’s Jake Whitaker will need to step up the pace if he is to follow through and win the annual KTM Extreme Enduro series this season.
That may sound like a harsh view of the Husaberg rider’s chances because he currently leads the standings after three of five rounds, but nothing is certain in this sport and even less so in a series such as this.
The riders head to round four, the penultimate event on the calendar, at Te Puke this weekend with everything still left to ride for at the unique man-made venue inside the A&P Showgrounds.
Riders must discard their one worst result of the series, with points from only four of the five events to be counted, and that puts a whole new spin on the scoreboard analysis.
After the standings have been adjusted to take account of the discard rule, Whitaker is not really the top dog in the Pro grade.
Whitaker’s worst result is the fifth placing he achieved at round two. He finished runner-up at round one and fourth at round three and, if he counts only these two results, discarding his result from round two, he is left with 40 points.
Auckland’s national enduro champion Chris Birch (KTM) will obviously discard the zero points he received from his no-show at round two, but Birch won both the two rounds he did attend, giving him 50 points and therefore the series lead on count-back.
However, on adjusted points, the third, fourth and fifth ranked riders also stand a good chance of winning the Pro class outright.
Tokoroa’s Sean Clarke (KTM), Auckland’s Liam Draper (Husaberg) and Taupo’s Greg De Lautour (Beta) must therefore fancy their chances, especially if they can produce a win in Te Puke on Saturday.
“Last year the Te Puke course was very demanding, probably too demanding, and we have made it a little more free-flowing this year. It’ll be a real crowd-pleaser,” said Clarke, the event organiser as well as one of the leading competitors.
“The series will come down to the last round, which is good. We didn’t want any rider simply walking away with it,” he said.
The dominant rider in the women’s grade this season is Thames rider Natasha Cairns. She has been unbeaten in the series thus far and another win, or even just a top-five result, would give her an unassailable lead in the competition.
The Expert grade has developed into a battle between Cambridge’s Dylan Yearbury (KTM) and West Melton brothers Hamish MacDonald (Gas Gas) and Angus MacDonald (KTM), while Tokoroa’s Vince Steiner (KTM) is heavy favourite to win the Clubmans’ grade.
The fifth and final round of the series is the No Way In Hell Extreme Enduro at Oparau over the Easter Weekend, April 20 and 21.
The series is sponsored by KTM New Zealand, Motorex, Kiwi Rider, Dirt Guide, Michelin Tyres, Satco, Forest Trail Events and Maungapapa Angus.
2013-14 KTM Extreme Enduro Series calendar:
Round 1: September 28 – Nut Buster Hard Enduro
Round 2: November 17 – Riverhead 100
Round 3: December 7 – Tokoroa Enduro X
Round 4: February 8 – Te Puke Enduro X
Round 5: April 20 and 21 – No Way In Hell
© Words and photo by Andy McGechan, www.BikesportNZ.com
Find us on Facebook HERE

