On The Pegs May 2018 - Volume 3 - Issue 5 | Page 33
On The Pegs
What is it about the World Enduro
Super Series that essentially enticed
you out of retirement for 2018?
“To be honest I’ve been waiting for a
championship like this for years. I think
WESS is the real enduro series I’ve been
looking for. Personally, I feel that this
is what Enduro needs — this is what
our sport needs to advance. Enduro
has so many individual disciplines, so I
think this will be a series for the real all-
round off-road racer. It fits a rider who
can ride technical terrain or go sixth
gear flat out down a beach. I first heard
about WESS six months after I retired,
and when I was told the series would
be a reality for 2018 I had to get back
racing. I was still riding for fun then
and felt competitive. I’m still willing to
go out on the race track and give it 100
per cent to win”
What appeals to you about the
World Enduro Super Series?
“I love the concept. The calendar offers
a varied mix of events starting in rocky
Portugal and ending on the beach in
The Netherlands with Classic Enduro,
Hard Enduro and Cross-Country racing
in-between. Of course, I’m known for
Superenduro and Hard Enduro but I
would like to see more Classic Enduro
events added as the series progresses.
I’ve done a lot of Classic Enduro events
over the years and I love the discipline.
Vol. 3 Issue 5 - May 2018
P 33
I think WESS will be a massive series.
We’ve seven rounds this year but it has
potential to grow.”
For many, Classic Enduro sits at the
heart of Enduro. What makes it spe-
cial for you?
“It’s the pure sprint aspect of timed
special test racing that makes Clas-
sic Enduro special for me. In all other
disciplines you race your competitors
side-by-side on the track at the same
time, whereas with Classic Enduro it’s
head-to-head against the clock. You
are basically riding with 100 per cent
commitment to go as fast as you can
during each special test. It’s a cool
way of racing that has so much history
attached to it — it’s something that
shouldn’t be forgotten about.”
This will be your first time competing at
the Trèfle Lozérien AMV, what do you
know about it?
“The Trèfle Lozérien AMV is a big event
and means so much to the French
fans. It’s going to be hard competing
against some of the grass track spe-
cialists but that’s also the challenge of
WESS — adapting to different disci-
plines as best you can. I haven’t really
raced outdoors in France for a number
of years, so I’m looking forward to do-
ing that again.”