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Showing posts with label Laguna Seca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laguna Seca. Show all posts

Thursday, July 28, 2011

I'm still here in MotoGP! Lorenzo, Pedrosa, Spies, Stoner are too!

Since March and my last update, we've had wins by Jorge Lorenzo, Dani Pedrosa, Casey Stoner and Ben Spies!
Cadiz
That said, I suppose you could call this an update, a recap, or perhaps an admission that I've neglected this blog or as of today I finally realised that I have gotten to the end of July and I'm still covering MotoGP.....something that at the beginning of 2011 wasn't looking too promising. It's still not as financially lucrative as I'd like and by no means perfect, but I do believe in looking forward, being optimistic and for me, I feel I still have a lot more to tell about this sport, the people, the travel and of course, the food...this update isn't going to be a long winded philosophical waffle about nothing, I'm simply going to fast forward through the past four months of racing, race travel and location/lifestyle..and I'm going to really, really try to at least make a concerted effort over the upcoming race weeks and races that I attend to add at least something that doesn't exist on the Andrew Wheeler-AutoMotoPhoto facebook page, but do feel free to sign up and join in the fun.

Since March, I have traveled to Spain (twice), Portugal, UK and Italy. In an attempt to balance work/life, I skipped Assen in Holland (much to my chagrin as Ben Spies won) and the Sachsenring in Germany. The most recent race at Laguna Seca is a home race. It's so close to home I can sleep in my own bed each evening and is always a good weekend.

Jerez in Spain is one of my favourite places to visit for a race weekend. It is also considered the "first MotoGP race" as it's the first race on European soil. Qatar always feels somewhat like an exhibition race, or rather a novelty event and even though I enjoy going there, it's nice to arrive back in Europe. Jerez is beautiful city, wonderful people and the climate is perfect. Warm days, warm evenings and vibrant. Aside from a little run in with the Guardia Civil following an errant u-turn, and then cop thinking we were going to do a runner (which was sort of ridiculous considering both David Emmett (of Motomatters.com) and I had our Dorna passes and our parking banner visible in the car) that little indiscretion cost me €100 and about 40 minutes of standing around on a roundabout about 5km from the track. The weekend wasn't as warm as it had been in the past and we had rain on race day. Cold rain, which is becoming a "feature" of a race weekend.
Jorge Lorenzo
Jorge Lorenzo would go onto to win the MotoGP race. Many of the fans in attendance came to get their first glimpse of Valentino Rossi on the Ducati...but his fans are going to have to find some resolve and patience as the year rolls on.
Valentino Rossi
..With the massive earthquake in Japan causing the postponement of the race at Motegi, Dani Pedrosa would head back to hospital to fix a previous "fix" that was causing some issues as it would be almost a month until the next race in Estoril. I would head back to California.

Time travel is great. Back to Portugal for the race at Estoril a month later. I'm always tickled by the variety of rental cars I end up with on these junkets. I only ever rent from Hertz. I've had Mercedes, Volvo's, BMW's, Lancia's and Audi's. So this upgrade was a new Mini Clubman estate! After a last minute suggestion of "why don't you join me for the race weekend" I was joined by Canadian motorcycle racer Vicki Schouten. It's nice having some company when I'm away from home. We spend a day just whizzing around in the Mini and we end up visiting the castles at Sintra.
Castelo dos Mouros
There is a Moorish castle (Castelo dos Mouros) on one outcrop of rock, and on the opposing outcrop of rock the Pena National Palace....so we did a good hike around the old remains (until lightning and an approaching thunderstorm made us think twice about being so exposed...) and then took a swift drive of about 500m to the Pena National Palace and had a nice afternoons walk around this funky looking castle.
Pena National Palace
Again the weather played it's part in the weekend. Dani Pedrosa returns to the "pack" and is swamped by journalists asking, no, pestering him about his fixed collarbone and to whether or not he'll be fit enough to race over the weekend. What's even funnier is that I have been working with Don Emde and Parts Unlimited Europe and we decide to put together a feature on Dani Pedrosa for an upcoming magazine that Don edits. I decide to take a different approach with the interview and simply go with asking Dani about himself, the words and pictures can be viewed here. What was really cool was that Dani would go onto win the race at Estoril. Saving himself for a last gasp pass on Jorge Lorenzo. Never under estimate how these chaps deal with pain!
Dani Pedrosa
.I would not go to Le Mans due to a number of reasons. Mainly because I wanted to have some time at home with Emily, but time does fly again, and it's back to Barcelona and the race at Montmelo!
Segrada Familia
I love this town. With my good friend Bonnie Lane, and my super cool amigo, and talented Catalan Abel Cruz Ayuso we go looking for dongles, we spend the day after the race weekend having a diggy diggy moment driving around Barcelona, which only added to another wonderful race weekend at another favourite track of mine!
Montmelo
Not the most exciting of races but nonetheless, always some entertainment but for me, the track is loaded with photo opportunities and colour. It's a track where a scooter is handy, especially for race days. But it's also a track where walking can produce some exciting images as well
Casey Stoner
But for me this weekend was even more exciting as it would be the first time that Ben Spies would get onto the podium.
Ben Spies
So for me, and the fact that I have followed him through the AMA, WSBK and now MotoGP it was a good thing to see. I also know how happy it made "Maio", Tom, Woody, Gavin and the entire team happy as well it was onto Silverstone. Personally, I wish that Catalunya had come after Silverstone as I prefer to leave from Spain vs leaving from the UK..but there you. Silverstone wasn't the happy trip I usually have as my mother was moved from the UK to France just before I arrived, which in part was the only reason I would visit the UK, otherwise I would've skipped this race and gone to Assen instead..but there you you.
Country Cottage
That said the week was good, the company was excellent as I shared this house with Bonnie Lane, her hoosbund Chris and their friend Tim (who I had met on a previous trip to the UK). So it did turn out to be a good week, even if I was a little gloomy and cranky but of course, the weekend would turn out to be wet aside from the Saturday....
Jorge Lorenzo
It's funny how one's moods affect how one sees things. i really did feel cranky, gloomy whatever. In part because it's the one trip a year I have the chance to see my mum and that didn't happen. It costs enough as it is to travel to cover these events from the other side of the globe vs how my peers cover the races with a hop skip and a jump from a European airport. So it's a good thing when I can get to do things such as visiting my Mum which is nigh on impossible to accommodate and include it as a business trip any other time of the year.
Herve Poncheral - Colin Edwards
Race day was miserable. Wet, cold..wet and cold..windy. But for me the man of the match, or of the race was Colin Edwards. Being yet another victim of the now trendy "Broken Collarbone Club" along with Pedrosa and with fellow Tech3 rider Cal Crutchlow buying his membership the day before during an off, he stuck it out and finished third.
Casey Stoner
Casey Stoner won the race, but for me Colin won the weekend. We won't go into too much chatter about my non attendance at Assen. Factor in the fact that my trip to the UK didn't go as usually planned, and then Ben Spies ended up WINNING his first MotoGP race and I wasn't there to witness it. If I had skipped Silverstone and had plumped for Assen I'd have witnessed it. Instead, I simply sat on the sofa next to my wife and was miserable all day Sunday. Happy for Ben though, but felt sorry for myself as a result. Oh well, as they say. That's racing. Next. Italy and the madness that is Mugello.
Tuscany
This was the view from our little villa in a tiny village near Corella in the Tuscan hills. 2200' above sea level and a nice 25 minute drive to the track. The owners were wonderful, the house was superbly comfortable and even though we (David Emmett and I) had some fun and games with the Internet our hosts were extremely helpful in trying to find a solution for us. So much so, Emily and I are going to head back there next year and have a holiday after the race weekend. Oh, and speaking of race weekends, this is one of the craziest on the calendar. Close to Bologna, (about an hours drive) and only 30 minutes or so from Florence.
Duomo - Florence
The racetrack is located in some of the most beautiful countryside on the planet. It is also home to some of the finest FOOD on the planet
Butchers - Bologna
...and of course home to one of the finest motorcycles on the planet...can I add any more planets? It's why it's worth working hard to try and include some of this magnificent landscape into the race images for example..
Valentino Rossi
It's also another track that can pay you dividends in just simply walking vs having a scooter. I would like to add that on race days a scooter is pretty much essential and so when I'm not able to obtain one (for example, Maio Meregalli, who is the race team manager for the Factory Yamaha team, is always kind enough to see if there is a way for me to borrow a scooter, but at Mugello, with an Italian based race team and Italian sponsors/guests to keep happy makes it nigh on impossible for me to be allowed to have one) I am grateful for Andrew Northcott and his kindness in shuttling me around the track for the GP race..other than that, it's a great track to walk. As is now a tradition on each Saturday morning at Mugello. Valentino Rossi showcases a new "paintjob" that is done specifically for this race. Last year the helmet didn't really get much of a showing because it was here where he had a huge crash and broke his leg. This year, was pretty much dram free and it was the "evil eye" helmet that made an appearance.
Valentino Rossi
We had the obligatory rain over the weekend but the Sunday was lovely and aside from Jorge Lorenzo winning the what was to be a good race for him, it was local lad Andrea Dovizioso who also put on a good show and came in second with Honda rider Casey Stone coming third
Andrea Dovizioso
No Valentino Rossi on the podium, so the madness was a little more subdued until he decided to come out and visit the crowds. Speaking of crowds. You do not want to get stuck within these crowds...hot sweaty people doing daft things with scooters, motorcycles and fireworks. Plus there is the claustrophobia aspect of it all, and yes, I got stuck in this crowd, but after 20 minutes or so of working my way out through the crowd I was able to make it into the media centre and snag this picture of Rossi (in the open space area) heading back from his crowd visit)
Fans
. Monday would be spent packing up and having another little drive around the countryside following a trip back to Bologna to drop of David Emmett. Tuesday morning it would be back on a plane to spend the night in Amsterdam with Gavin and his fiance Floortje..a nice dinner at a funky restaurant near their apartment
Vegas!
The following day it was back on a plane, back home. I would skip the MotoGP race at Sachsenring and plump for some decent time at home with my wife, and with MotoGP being at Laguna Seca that would mean a nice long break at home.
Tom
Laguna Seca is always a fun race weekend. Thursdays are a great day to meet folk as it's "laid back day" and there are many promotional images being shot on the pitlane.
Factory Yamaha Team
I get a chance to spend time with Emily at home, I also get the opportunity to catch up with many of the fine people who work within the AMA where I started out. I'm glad I started my motorcycle and motorsport photography within the AMA verses simply going straight to MotoGP or World Superbike as it allowed me to be able to create images at race tracks that aren't all as pretty or as photogenic as many of the race tracks on the GP circuit. If anyone is thinking of starting out in the business, I'd say shoot the national series first before trying to make it in the GP world. You'll not only develop a greater understanding of your subject, but you'll develop the ability to be able to deal with less than perfect vistas...I mean, I'd like to think even I can make Fontana look pretty!
Gorls
The weekend went well for me, aside from a small scooter mix up the weekend was warm once the fog burned off, the crowds were rather large especially on race day and of course Casey Stoner won again.
Casey Stoner
Following a huge highside on Saturday Jorge Lorenzo not only took pole but finished a healthy second. Dani Pedrosa took third.
Dani Pedrosa
I'd also like to say a huge thank you to Nic Coury at the Monterey County Weekly. A few weeks prior he interviewed me for the paper and the feature was published on the Thursday of race week. The online version of the interview can be viewed here and the in print version looked like this...
"in print" pdf version
Well, that's it for this update (or rather story...)..and so I will try to keep this a little more current that it has been for the past four months. I leave you all for now with this shot of a group of people who came to the "Great Laguna Seca Meetup" on the Saturday evening. This was the highlight of my weekend as it's so nice to put a face to a name. Thank you to all...until the next one at Brno perhaps?
Friends
Ciao for now!

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Short but sweet. Back to the track. Back to the drama. Valentino Rossi. Did he or didn't he?

Sunflowers say summer to me.
Three weeks home is a sufficiently long enough break from travelling to ruin my ability to avoid getting jet lag. Since February I have been travelling and covering motorcycle racing. No jet lag, just maybe a bit weary of travelling through airports, but in general, it has been good. You find a rhythm, a week or ten days at home (USA), then it's off to some other destination again. But I find that I have avoided jet leg and have done quiet well.
Being home allows all the fibres of your mind and body relax, settle into the time zone with which you are familiar and you suddenly feel stress free. No counting down days until you fly again, leave home and every comfort within. So tomorrow (August 8), I leave for Prague and the last half of the MotoGP season begins in earnest next weekend from Brno.
The Laguna Seca weekend was a blast. Even more so because that rather talented lanky Italian motorcycle racer was back on track and we had four Americans in the line up, someone to cheer for. Nicky Hayden, Ben Spies, Colin Edwards and that wild card guy Roger Hayden who was standing in for an injured Randy De Puniet. The carnival atmosphere had returned. Much to the delight of everyone. Lorenzo would win the race, with some entertainment being provided by the Italian National Anthem being played for the winner, instead of the Spanish Anthem or Lorenzo's country , whether planned or in error it was taken in good humour by everyone.
For me, the highlight of the weekend at Laguna was taking some time to actually catch up and meet people in the AMA I hadn't seen all year. Mechanics, riders, friends, my entire family! People with whom I spent so many years and who always have time for fans, people, photographers you name it. It was brilliant. I'm pleased the racing has started to climb back from the darkness of 2009, and hope that fans come out and support the racing. Else it'll go away, and we can't have that in America.
With that in mind, I have to finish packing and do some odds and ends. Thanks to Mo and Randy for you know what...!
My main website, AutoMotoPhoto is now up to date. As time allows I am also updating my Facebook Fan page with archives of race images I have taken over the last five years so please invite others to join and have some fun with others! Last but not least, if you really have nothing better to do and want to read more verbiage, I'm also on Twitter, so why not follow me for some rapid fire wit!
Thanks to everyone at Yamaha for the support and continued interest in using my work for advertising too. More updates, food and pictures from the Czech Republic next week!
Adios Amigos!

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Rossi is back, Laguna Seca is here, Catalunya, Lorenzo and AutoMotoPhoto have an update!

I promise, I'll get this together and add more meat and potatoes after each weekend.
But for now, I'm home, at home, in my own house, for Laguna Seca. The treat for me is being able to simply drive to the racetrack, and come home each evening.  At home.
AT HOME!
So many people think this job is glamorous, or "living the dream" as some like to say, but in all honesty it's a job like any other job, but one of choice, or maybe it is necessity.  For example, Tom Houseworth and Gregg Wood, who are Crew Chief and super sexy guy in the garage respectively, haven't been home for over 52 days.  Now in a military sense, that's nothing, but in civvy street, that can be a long time.  Thankfully we have so many ways to communicate with the ones we love, but nothing beats being there.
Catalunya, was a hoot.  With David Emmett from Motomatters
(and we'd be joined at the weekend by his lovely wife).  Nadia and Katerina from Intramoto, a Russian motorcycle racing new website, throw in a lovely house in Badalona, some funky German transport (an E Class Mercedes) and some (sometimes too) warm weather, we had the perfect week.
So this little blog update is for those who miss home, be they racers or those who look after the racer, their families, military folk, whoever, trust me it's nice to be home, and I'm really looking forward to being able to cover a race weekend, and then come home to my own bed.
To round off this blog, picture #11 of #11 of my limited edition print is being auctioned off for the Day of Stars at Laguna Seca tomorrow at 4pm, at turn 4. There are still 3 more copies left to buy, and then that it's..just go here. On a cool fun note, and not that it's anything important on the grand scale of things, but I'm very grateful that over 2000 people think I'm worthy of their support.  For that I am very grateful, and I hope to add more value to your "like-ship" in the weeks to come. To see more visit Andrew Wheeler - AutoMotoPhoto "Like" page on Facebook.
Again, my apologies for the brevity.  I have a pork loin that's roasting.  Stay tuned….

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The Crowds Roared - A Laguna Seca MotoGp USGP Update!

Apologies for the delay in updating this corner of the world. What with one thing or another I needed a little break. Finally AutoMotoPhoto has been updated. The race weekend was interesting. Fog played a major part in the events, causing delays to the AMA schedule. However, as MotoGP is tied very heavily to TV schedules worldwide, it runs when it's supposed to. Overall the weather during the weekend was pleasant and maneagable, the crowds were a little down on last year but it made moving around considerably easier and well, the GP race on Sunday certainly gave everyone their money's worth.For once in my crazy motorcycle racing photography career I was in the right place at the right time an was fortunate enough to capture the entire pass Valentino Rossi made on Casey Stoner by following the tried and tested Alex Zanardi route through the dirt. You had to be there, with a full house of racing fans behind me, each time riders appeared air horns blasted and cheers went up! This time, as Rossi passed Stoner on the dirt, it was like David Beckham scoring a goal for England (Eng-a-land)....as soon as the they had passed every photographer grappled with the rear of their cameras to check (or "chimp" )their review screens to see if they caught what would turn out to be the "shot of the day"....

To think, just a moment before I was going to walk a little further down the hill for another vantage point but thought to myself, "nah, I'll stay here for one more lap" and for the first time ever it paid off. After working my way down to the hill to hopefully catch a chequered flag shot I arrived at the first gate into the paddock and I was turned away, sadly by the time we had got to the second gate I missed Rossi triumphantly wheelie his Yamaha across the finish line. That's life I suppose, however, not to be too downhearted I was fortunate enough to get to the barriers in parc ferme right next to Rossi's team and was able to witness his jubilation and joy of winning the race. This is the second time I have been able to witness a Rossi win up close and personal, the first was at Phillip Island a couple of years ago and his (Rossi) exuberance and just plain excited boyishness is infectious. Smiles all round...a big well done to AMA Superbike riders Ben Spies and Jamie Hacking who put on a cracking performance as wild cards in the GP race and a big well done to Ben Bostrom and Mat Mladin as well. It gave me some folks to cheer for. With that in mind, I'll leave you with an aerial view of Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca with a big thanks to Michael for getting me up, up and awaaaay.
Off to Mid Ohio tomorrow. It looks like it won't rain....PHEW!

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Cold Hands and Woolly Jumpers - Testing Sheep

Onto testing...
Sonoma is one of those areas that is into the alternative resource lifestyle, be it organic produce, meats, dairy and of course beer and wine. It is also close to the home where Yamaha riders Eric and Ben Bostrom grew up.With that in mind, how cool is it when a racetrack allows animals to clear grasses that grow abundantly around the racetrack. That's what they do at Infineon Raceway near Sonoma. Yes they use sheep! How truly wonderful. It also makes for a pleasant lunch break, simply unwrap your packed lunch, sit up on the hills and let the bleating surround you. Wonderful. At Laguna Seca (above), Suzuki, Yamaha and Kawasaki were in attendance. At Infineon, all the factory teams bar Erion Honda were there. As is the case the weather at Laguna was wonderful, albeit very windy and cold. At Infineon, it was a bit muddy weather wise. Fortunately dry but the sun couldn't make up it's mind.Sometimes I do forget how far Infineon Raceway is from my home in Capitola. However, I never ever get tired of driving over the Golden Gate Bridge. You would never think that, especially as I have lived here in California for 18 years this coming September. But each time I drive the bridge I'm reminded of the opening sequence of the "Streets of San Francisco", the TV show with Michael Douglas and Karl Malden.  With similar nostalgia, I'm also reminded of how my grandmother could never cook fish fingers properly, as we would always watch "The Streets of San Francisco" at her house at tea time on Saturday afternoons when I was a little boy growing up in the UK.  They'd be still frozen in the middle.  Sort of like a modern day fish popsicle.  I'd still eat them though, not wanting to be ungrateful.

Oh...and for something different, here's some video shot with a Canon G9 from the Laguna Seca test.


That's all from me for now. AutoMotoPhoto® is updated with some images from testing. Next week I'm off to Barber Motorsports Park near Leeds in Alabama. Looks like there's going to be a race a happenen'