2017 Moto Mayhem Promoter Review
The sacred Shawnee Indian grounds on which CTMX holds its annual races has been put to bed for yet another winter. The season closer, the 7th annual Moto Mayhem weekend did not disappoint. This event once again outperformed its younger self and also, for the first time in ctmx history, whooped up on big brother, the Battle for Ohio round. Undoubtedly, we knew this day was coming, it just needed all the ingredients to hit its numbers.
So for all of the other promoters reading this, we'll share our recipe for this event. Although not everyone likes our Chilli, 771 entries came out to try the weekends batch!
1. Promotions: started last year, we took notes from 16', made plans for this and that. You can argue many things about our Chilli, but this is one debate you will not win. Joe Easter leads up this department and pushes the limits each and every time. The month leading up to this event is full of promotions, this event gets all the pre-race attention it needs.
2. Presentation: our team slaved over the stove, I mean track, the weeks leading up to this event. We strive to have a glimpse of the "national" feeling when you first arrive. It has always been our hope that you feel like you got your money's worth while at a Chilli weekend.
3. Execution: at ctmx, we get the large majority of our staff, spectators, vendors, racers and families on Friday night. They come from near and far to secure a spot for the weekend. Once we have our main ingredient (people), we load up and start the workable part of the event. We had one heck of a time Friday night under the lights for the "Shelly and Sands Moto Limbo" contest.
Saturday started very sluggish, we had the track pretty soft (which we need to do to lengthen the integrity of the soil moisture sustainability), the first whole session must of still been hungover. The 2nd and 3rd practice sessions were habanero hot man, I mean hot. Things are due to change for the structuring of open practice, it's too out of control. Our wait staff, the lovely gals at the sign up trailer were on top of their game and were able to move us swiftly from practice mode directly to our Saturday evening race program. Saturday racing did run into darkness. The last two classes only got 3 laps for their last Moto, my bad, but they mostly took it like champs.
Saturday after dark really got to kicking, we had hundreds of folks up for the Chilli contest, costume contest, pumpkin judging, live band and Red Bull Straight Rhythm fan zone. I really do believe Saturday night festivities are one of the biggest driving forces behind this events continued success.
Sunday presented us with some huge numbers to process, we originally had 4 classes with 45 racers or more. These bigger races make it really hard to accommodate so many classes. We buzzed through a quick 3 lap practice and moved right into racing. Our Bat Cave Crew completed 3 amazing full track preps throughout the day, all taking less than 16 minutes a piece. Golf clap goes to that group of heathens. Some awesome racing transpired on Sunday, probably none more exciting than the pro class battles. Motocross is supposed to be a young mans sport, yet somehow the more mature gentlemen like Levi Kilbarger and Jeff Gibson still put on a clinic. Some young bucks were still in roost reach at lap six, but that's about it. We moved through Sunday very rigorously and we still didn't get done until 5:55. That's unacceptable, we are going to strongly investigate the solution to this. It's mathematically gotta change, either less classes or one site lap before each first Moto. I don't know yet, what's your ideas???
Review: the last and probably the most important thing we do in Chilli, is we listen. We listen to what you liked or what you didn't like. You can post your comments here or send us a private message to share your experience.
In closing, help us start promotions for 2018, share some pictures of your experience from Moto Mayhem. Thanks to everyone, ChilliTown will always be about you, the worker bee, the racer, the parents or the spectators. As for ChilliTown MX, we'll see you all next July! Jeremy Forcum