Haiden Deegan needed a good start badly in Philadelphia's 250SX East main event. He chose the gate on the outside of the starter's box, often a good spot from a position standpoint, but risky with a bad, crooked rut beyond the gate. Deegan let it fly, but couldn't get the drive, and got shut down from his right by Triumph's Jalek Swoll.
When the 450 riders then had their chance to pick gates, Jett Lawrence was left picking seventh after a heat race crash. Jett took his chances. Good spot next to the box, but could he make something happen in that rut?
“The rut wasn’t a perfect one, I think Jason [Anderson] next to me had a bit of a nicer rut, but we just really executed a good start and managed the first turn well,” said Lawrence to Steve Matthes after the race.
Even with the bad rut, Lawrence nailed his jump and got ahead of Anderson. With no one on his left (thanks to the space created by the box) he had a clear path to turn one. Eli Tomac, who had lined up on the other side of the box, held the gas on longer and out drag raced Lawrence into turn one. This left Lawrence in a tough spot. He could try to get on the brakes and cut underneath…but he also tried that in the heat race and crashed.
About that heat race:
“I was wanting to turn, I could see a little window I could probably maybe sneak into and just went to go turn and, and my body turned, but the front wheel pushed out and, I couldn't save it,” Lawrence said.
For the main event, he made an adjustment.
“Yeah, I think on the heat race, I know exactly what went wrong,” he told Matthes. “I think I popped the clutch too much. In the first turn [of the heat] the bike just didn’t want to turn on me. It just kind of pushed in that loose stuff. For the main we went with a lower holeshot device, executed a good start and then tried to steer with the rear wheel more in the first turn.”
In the exact spot where Lawrence pushed the front and went down in the heat, he managed to get the front to stick in the main, and then steered with the rear to get inside of Tomac.
“We just really executed a good start and managed the first turn well,” said Lawrence. “Eli came in a little hot and I was able to cut underneath of him and then from there it was just trying to get a bit of a gap, maintain my lap time, trying to keep the same pace. It was good.”
That was it. Lawrence has proven he can bring it home once he has the lead. Outside of Arlington this year, he’s made it happen each time. The heat crash, bad gate and first turn put his day in Philadelphia in jeopardy. When he needed to execute the most, he came through.