GS Trophy Competition Underway!
October 15-24 in Tunisia
After four months of build-up and many more months of organisation and
preparation, the inaugural GS Trophy is just days away. The trucks have
been unloaded, the teams have unpacked their bags and the competitors
are currently on location in Tunisia, ready for the action to get under
way.
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For those of you who have managed to avoid the hype in the lead-up to the
event, the details are simple. For this inaugural year, teams from five
countries (Germany, Italy, Spain, Japan and the USA) will have a chance
to test their riding skills against each other in Africa, specifically
the sand dunes of Tunisia. The event will witness some of the best amateur
off-road riders from around the globe participate in a week of adventure
riding, special tests, teamwork challenges and problem solving. Far from
being a race, the GS Trophy is about the experience to be gained, the new
friends to be made and the memories to be drawn from taking part in this
landmark occasion.
For the riders who will go down in history as the first ever GS Trophy
participants, it's been a long road to this point. To have made it this
far, the riders have had to prove their skills during an arduous
qualifying campaign. They will be joined by a selection of journalists
from each team who were lucky enough to be selected by BMW Motorrad.
Although slightly different in each country, qualification consisted of
a host of potential GS Trophy heroes - typically customers who are
actively part of the BMW lifestyle - demonstrating their riding skills
to the judges and instructors in attendance. Simulating the types of
challenging conditions the finalists would encounter, the qualification
rounds identified the very best amateur riders who would thrive in the
conditions expected in Tunisia.
The participants are:
Germany: Dirk Remmel, Alexander Mtayer, Karl-Heinz
Fetschele, Thomas
Wolf, Timo Grosshans (press), Guido Bergmann (press).
Italy: Giacomo Algisi, Ennio Bragagni, Claudio
Guerrini, Stefano Berton,
Davide Nicoloso (press), Carlo Tenconi (press).
Japan: Takeshi Hara, Mamoru Kaji, Ikuo Hirano, Jun Yamada
(press), Tsutomu Matsui (press), Katsuhisa Mikami (press).
Spain: Miguel Angel Galn-Ruiz, David Borcha-Mateos,
Jordi Arnau-Vidal, David Palacios-Iglesias (press), Eduardo Cuesta-Garca
(press), Alejandro Medina-Herreros (press).
USA: James Stoddard, Brad Hendry, Jason Adams, Jimmy
Lewis (press), Jonathan Beck (press), Ryan Dudek (press).
Florian Baumeister, Marketing Manager for BMW Motorrad Germany, reveals
that preparations are going according to plan. "All the preparations have
gone well. On Monday all the bikes were delivered to Milan, where the
Trophy was officially started," he says. "All the bikes were prepared by
Touratech and fitted with tyres from Metzeler - ready to go for the
desert. By Tuesday evening all the participants had arrived and had
received a briefing. They also received their material for the trip which
consisted of BMW Rallye 2 Pro suits, bags containing a tent, sleeping bag,
a `therm-a-rest' mattress, a compass and a head torch, and most
importantly, their personal bike for the next 10 days. They were then
informed about the first day on the bikes which involved a ride from Milan
to the harbour of Genova, where the ferry to Tunis awaited."
According to Florian, although the preparations have run smoothly, there
have been challenges to overcome. "The organisation and logistics of the
bikes and all the material has been very tricky," he says. "Getting the
teams together within all the national recruiting events, mainly the GS
Challenges - in Japan, Spain and Germany - has also been a challenge."
As Florian suggests, the scale of the event is staggering. First, a
truck packed with Touratech-prepared BMW F800GS motorcycles arrived in
Milan, before being unloaded and the cargo distributed to the waiting
participants. Then on the morning of departure, a 4x4 jeep led the group
on the start of the journey, followed by the first of two large desert
trucks that will carry all the essential spare parts and provisions
required to sustain the participants and the support crew for over a week
in the desert.
Although the final schedule will not be unveiled to the participants until
they are deep in the Tunisian Sahara Desert, they can expect some of the
most difficult off-road riding on the planet. They will also experience a
variety of physical and mental challenges including orienteering, team
and mechanical tests. Sleeping under the stars and avoiding hotel
accommodation altogether, their endurance will be put to the test during
an event they will never forget.
For Florian, the GS Trophy is an event that offers an opportunity to riders
who might never get the chance to experience a life-changing motorcycle
adventure. "Our vision is for the GS Trophy to be one of the most popular
events in the Enduro world and an established event every year," he says.
"People should dream of being part of that adventurous world and BMW
Motorrad is preparing the basics for that." He also suggested that the
event is already set to grow over the coming years. "This year's GS Trophy
is just the start of the GS Trophy series, continuing next year. It will
become bigger as more countries have already expressed their wish to join
in," he concludes.
Thanks to sponsors Touratech, Metzeler and BOSCH, and to all those who have
committed to the project, the 2008 GS Trophy is bound to be an event to
remember.
Visit www.bmw-motorrad.com for
the latest news relating to the GS Trophy.
This feature originally appeared in October 2008 - Updated: 03/13/10
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Updated on: 03/13/10 at 19:25 CST
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