
Originally Posted by
SWERVE
[ How many moto3 / moto 2 and soon moto gp riders came through Red Bll rookies..... a few.
EJC is just a WSBK replica class....but you dont have to be a "pedrosa clone"
Bucket racing and MX is where I would be training my young fella if he wants to ride
I think that they both have their place, Rookies Cup and EJC. The major difference between the two (other than the bikes and the venues) is that Rookies Cup is fully sponsored and EJC is a paying gig. Albeit a fairly good value one.
But the proof is in the pudding as to which one the market values the most, but one must acknowledge that EJC has run only one season, so seasons 2 and 3 will be the proof of whether the market values it. Over 100 people were invited to Rookies Cup selection this year from, who knows, 3 times that number of applicants maybe? I don't know.
But in any case, clearly there is room for them both and hopefully the WSBK/WSS teams really are looking there for fresh faces. But they would be foolish to not also be looking at Rookies Cup would they not?
It will be tough for a Kiwi rider to get into Rookies Cup. I don't buy the market/political thing too much as a South African rider gets in almost every year and their market/history is crap compared to ours. But we must understand that it might be there. But I just cannot help but thinking that we must just keep trying. There must be some value in just exposing our kids to the thing at all. I also can't buy into the 'but we are just setting them up for disappointment' arguement. Hell, life is one disappointment after another, but if you never try then you can never win. Protecting kids from disappointment is guaranteeing that they will continuously be disappointed. What do we do when they lose a race or they crash?
I think that the PureBlack racing model is the one we need to study. The model is there, the parallels are exact and the builders of it are here in NZ ready to tell all because they are entrepreneurs who want to grow the pie, not functionaries who want to carve up an ever decreasing one. Bicycle racing is no more popular in NZ than motorbike racing, not really. Sure, lots of people ride bicycles for pleasure and training etc, but very few race competitively or professionally. (Round Lake Taupo doesn't really count. The true racers there are a fraction of the entrants. Some of them are motorbike racers too).
So, yeah, I can see the future where "we" set up an NZ team that slots straight into the EJC with a group of kiwi riders, which is all set up ready to go, then graduates onto Moto3 or Superstock 600/1000 after learning the ropes and the circuits and in 10 years time maybe WSBK or whatever. What I am thinking though is that too many people miss in all of this, that it takes money, and most of that money comes from the riders, in one way or another. Be it in direct fees or in personal sponsorship (the same thing I guess), in the vast majority of cases, the rider pays, full stop. My mate Simone (Phonica Racing) is not racing at the moment (he did hurt his hand) mainly because he could not find the full budget for the full season. It is not easy. So, the NZ team would require that the riders pay, at least a major contribution. I think some people think that all riders in world champs get paid or something. The truth is far from that. From time to time even MotoGP riders don't get paid.
And just note of caution. There are any number of stories, as Shifty Shirrifs pointed out, of people with great expectations getting to Europe, paying big money and being shafted while they look you straight in the eye and do it. Europeans do not play by the same rules we do.
There are teams in the UK and USA who take paying riders. Maybe that would be a better place to get a grounding in the ways of international racing (at the higher levels I mean).
As for current and partime 2011 riders in MotoGP/Moto2/125 from Rookies Cup/Red Bull Academy/Rookies precursors (and these are only the ones I can spot from memory):
Zarco (first Rookies Cup champion 2008)
Folger
Fagerhaug
Kent
Salom
Kornfeil
Stafford
Binder
MacKenzie
Ajo
Calia
Hook
Oliviera
Savadori
Sebestyen
Not sure how many of the Spanish riders might have gone through the system.
Smith
Redding
Marquez
Pedrosa
Midge Smart!!!
A reasonable stable I would think.
"Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." John Ono Lennon.
"If you have never stared off into the distance then your life is a shame." Counting Crows
"The girls were in tight dresses, just like sweets in cellophane" Joe Jackson
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