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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October
9, 2008
Contact:
Denny Hartwig
Feld Motor Sports
4255 Meridian Parkway
Aurora, IL 60504
(630) 566-6305
dennyhartwig@livenation.com

Rockstar
Energy Drink U.S. Open Pre-Race Press Conference Quotes
Matiasevich: Basically, I am going out there and
put him on his a$s because payback is a bi$#h
AURORA,
Ill. (October 9, 2008) - Today at the MGM Grand Garden
Arena in Las Vegas Chad Reed, Grant Langston, Damon
Bradshaw and Jeff Matiasevich previewed the Rockstar
Energy Drink U.S. Open at a press conference.
Reed,
who won the Rockstar Energy Drink U.S. Open in 2003
and 2004, discussed the highly anticipated race against
his rival James Stewart. This weekend will be the first
time the two have raced at the Rockstar Energy Drink
U.S. Open.
I
have two races under my belt on the new bike. My performance
at the Motocross des Nations was a career low. I won
the other race back home in Australia. The racing was
good there, and it is always good when you can win your
own race. I started riding this bike about three months
ago. It has been tough getting everything sorted out
because of my schedule. I have different bikes in different
countries and states. Testing is going well. I am looking
forward to this weekend.
Pressure
is good, and I like to rise to the occasion. I carry
a lot of excitement into this event. It is going to
be a good time this weekend. I spent seven years in
the blue corner, and it is different being on a new
team. Even walking into the pits today, I saw my old
team there. This is really my first ride. I had some
great years with Yamaha, and I am excited for the new
challenge with Suzuki. Everyone is great to work with,
and they are all very supportive.
If
you win, the money comes here. A lot of people look
at this race a lot of different ways. Since May, I have
been pretty busy, so I am looking forward to getting
back into race mode. I think I have a shot at this thing.
There is $250,000 on the line this weekend, and last
year I left it on the table.
We
all learned a lot in a short amount of time on the bike.
I grew up on Suzukis, and a lot of the good memories
I have from back in the day are from me on a Suzuki.
I wanted a bike that doesn't bog anymore, and this bike
doesn't bog. The bike suits my style; you can ride it
like a two-stroke. I look forward to testing it out
this weekend.
I
wanted to race on my terms with Roger DeCoster and the
Suzuki team, and I literally just signed my contract
30 minutes ago. I did have a letter of intent, but I
just signed today. I was in a good position because
all of my contracts were up, so I was able to re-evaluate
where I was and where I want to go. Doing supercross
only the last two years, I was able to achieve some
things like my supercross series in Australia.
Langston,
who won last year's Rockstar Energy Drink U.S. Open,
has put his professional racing career on hold due to
a tumor behind his eye. He recently had surgery to help
isolate the tumor during treatments of radiation. Despite
the touchy situation, he was optimistic and hopes to
return to racing if his body lets him.
My
condition changed the past few months, actually the
past year. I had an eye issue and was able to figure
out what the problem was. They determined that it was
a cancerous tumor. I had surgery in my eye, and they
put a plate in my eye to protect me from the radiant
to kill off the cancer. I caught it early, so that is
good news. As far as my eyesight is concerned, there
is a good chance that it can improve. Long term, I may
lose site in that eye. I have my fingers crossed. I
would love to be back here racing next year. I will
get to cheer on my buddies racing this weekend from
the VIP section. You get dealt cards in life and you
deal with them.
Now
it's a waiting game and I will wait it out. As soon
as someone mentions the word cancer, it puts a different
point of view on the situation. I made sure I saw the
best doctors I could. I got a lot of opinions, knowledge
and information to make, what I believe, was an informed
decision. I was dragging my feet when they talked about
radiation. I scratched for a new theory that would not
call for that procedure, but I feel comfortable that
I made the right decision. I feel that the one good
thing is that the tumor is very isolated, and that will
stop it from spreading. If it does spread, it could
be detrimental in the end.
I
really enjoy this race. When I crossed the finish line
last year, I didn't think I won. I knew I was on the
podium, but I did not know I won. This is such a unique
race for all of us because we are in the MGM Grand for
four days. Another interesting thing from last year
was that the top five riders from Friday night were
on the ground on Saturday night. That was pretty ironic.
Everything I touched last year turned to gold. This
is a famous venue and that says a lot for the sport.
When
I was at home thinking about things, I did think about
retiring all together. I was actually going to announce
my retirement today. I laid in bed many nights thinking
about it. My Dad was always a tough guy and the driving
force in my career, but he came to me and said, 'I would
be ok with it if you quit.' Many friends and family
suggested I stop racing, but the problem is that in
my heart. I don't want to say I am going to quit. I
love the sport so much, and I sit here and look at the
track and miss everything. I would love to come back
and race. I have met so many cool people in my career.
Mentally I feel like I need to be out there. I am the
kind of person that sticks to something once I make
a decision. If my eye does not improve, I will not risk
returning to racing. Seeing enough is not good enough
for our sport. You need to be able to see everything.
The simple fact is that I would love to race.
The
long-awaited, mega-hyped legend's rematch race with
Bradshaw and Matiasevich will unfold tomorrow night
for the first of two nights of nostalgic racing. The
two didn't hold back too much when discussing their
rivalry.
Bradshaw:
I have a lot going on with Monster Jam(tm) with the
U.S. Air Force Afterburner. There is not a lot of pressure.
I enjoy it, and just got back from Holland a few days
ago.
Matiasevich:
I took three or four years off, and went to work at
my Dad's produce company. I try and ride once a week,
and I have stepped up my program. It feels good to get
back on the bike. It's the timing that is hard. Your
brain knows how to do something, but then you go off
the track. Some things have come back, but it is the
little things that count.
Bradshaw:
I feel better than I thought. With being so busy, it
is hard to start riding, but I took it slow. The last
few weeks I have been riding supercross. I have been
jumping stuff that I did not want to. I am trying to
get my speed back. As Jeff said, the timing thing is
tough. Things are a lot bigger than what I am used to.
It took me about three times to put a supercross track
together. I am ready to go racing.
Matiasevich:
Out of all of the years that we raced together, we never
sat this close to one another (They were seated next
to one another at the press conference). We both wanted
to win. Neither one of us were looking for a friend
back then, so when the gate dropped, and I had an opportunity,
sometimes things happened. When this race came about,
I figured I would be here watching anyway, so it sounded
all good to me to come here and race.
I
think our rivalry started before I really knew Jeff.
I do not know if it was a East Coast/West Coast deal.
It always seemed like we were rivals. I enjoyed it,
and it really motivated me. Regardless of anyone, I
wanted to win every weekend. I did not really think
about championships. I thought about each race. We both
came up racing on opposite coasts. In Paris Bercy Damon's
throttle must have been stuck because I thrown into
a wall and it hurt. I was up against the wall. They
thought I ruptured my spleen. I was like, 'I am gonna
kill this dude.'
Bradshaw:
What I remember about the crash at Bercy was the sound
of it. I hoped it was his bike hitting the wall, not
him. There were deliberate times when anger took over,
though. My back is starting to sweat right now thinking
about all of this. I can't believe that I am going back
to battle. I was always coming through the pack trying
to pass Jeff. I raced against guys the way I wanted
to be raced against.
Matiasevich:
During the week when you went home and I didn't feel
like riding, Damon helped me get motivated. When we
passed one another we had to get away really quick because
the other one was coming back. It was a little more
physical back then. We took it to another level. I do
not recall even spending time in a room with him. I
do not know if he was good at hiding or I was good at
hiding. It was probably better that we never saw one
another.
Bradshaw:
Tempers would rise in the qualifiers and go into the
main. I wanted to win, and I think the fans liked it.
I remember getting together with Jeff in Atlanta one
time in a qualifier and it got me going. This is going
to be fun racing here. It's going to be a battle. Maybe
there should be a cage down on the floor instead of
a race track.
Tickets
are now available for the 10th anniversary of the Rockstar
Energy Drink U.S. Open at the MGM Grand Garden Arena
in Las Vegas October 10-12, 2008 at www.ussx.com,
www.ticketmaster.com,
by phone at 702-474-4000 or the MGM Grand Garden Arena
box office. Regarded as one of off-road motorcycling's
premier races, the Rockstar Energy Drink U.S. Open is
the final 'major' race of the motocross season. Tickets
are available for as low as $20 through Ticketmaster.com.
All tickets subject to 5% Las Vegas Entertainment tax.
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