barrygrussell
Senior Member
Reproduced by kind permission of Racing News Thailand: the motorcycle section of Edd Ellison's comprehensive coverage of the Asia Cross Country Rally
The 17th edition of the AXCR saw bikes included for the first time, bringing a real ‘Dakar’ feel to the ‘bivouacs’, as two and four wheel drive machines mixed together. Twenty riders were set to start, half from Japan, with four making up ‘Team Cambodia’, and three each for ‘Team Korea’ and ‘Team Thailand’.
With two of the three Thai bikes being entered by AP Honda, plus the KTM of Dusit Semangern (#118 KTM 690R), Thailand would stand a decent shot at victory against a hugely experienced Japanese contingent.
Over the 2.2 km SS1 it was Thailand immediately on top as the two factory Honda CRF250L machines of (#101) Manoch Abdullkalee and (#102) Jesadang Chotana swept to the front of the leaderboard with the former posting a fastest time of 2 mins 34 seconds and the latter being just 7 seconds further back when the clock stopped. Third, in 2:43, was the quickest Japanese runner, Tadao Ezure (#107 Yamaha WR450).
Onto Leg 2, and with a 398.13 km route (of which 219.45 km timed) the serious action got underway, and as the bikers rolled into overnight Parc Ferme in Sa Kaeo after a long and gruelling day, it shook out as a 1-3 finish for AP Honda with Manoch taking his second straight stage win in 3:25.41 with the interloper being Japan’s highly rated Yoshio Ikemachi (#103 Yamaha WR400). The top three on the bike classification going into Leg 3 reflected the stage finish.
Manoch, however, was only fourth quickest on Leg 3, the top two spots went to ‘Team Cambodia’ riders but they didn’t threaten at the front of the classification. Yoshio, did though, and he came in third chipping, almost three minutes out of the AP Honda rider’s lead, which came down to just 28 seconds. A tough stage for Jesadang saw him drop almost quarter of an hour and that slid the Honda rider down to seventh place overall. It would be all down to just one Thai rider.
And things just kept getting tighter at the front through Leg 4 and once it shook up an equally nail-biting final day was in store as Manoch’s lead was now down to just 18 seconds after SS4, the top two barely separable over 173.09 km of timed action. At the front and now riding on home soil, Team Cambodia had strolled to a 1-2-3 finish at the top of the time sheets, while both Manoch and Yoshio struggled, the later coming home only thirteenth fastest of the nineteen remaining riders and dropping more than nine minutes to the stage winner, but more importantly, he was 14 seconds faster than Manoch, and that halved the Thai rider’s lead, they were now on 8:20.38 and 8:20.52, and the rally was living up to all the expectations of nail biting excitement on the first bike participation.
It wasn’t to turn out to be a Thai winner in the bike category though as Yoshio, after chipping steadily away at Manoch all event, took another 39 seconds off the AP Honda rider over the final stage and that was enough for him to vault past to win by the smallest of margins, just 25 seconds, after a timed distance of seven hundred kilometres over treacherous surfaces.
The Japanese rider completed the final stage in 45 mins and 39 secs while Manoch turned in the distance in 46 mins and 18 secs. However it was a real fighting ride from the Thai rider and a performance to be proud of. His team mate, Jesadang, chipped away at the leaderboard to finish in an excellent fifth and with the third Thai rider, Dusit, finishing an excellent eleventh, all three ‘local’ starters had safely made the chequered flag.
The 17th edition of the AXCR saw bikes included for the first time, bringing a real ‘Dakar’ feel to the ‘bivouacs’, as two and four wheel drive machines mixed together. Twenty riders were set to start, half from Japan, with four making up ‘Team Cambodia’, and three each for ‘Team Korea’ and ‘Team Thailand’.
With two of the three Thai bikes being entered by AP Honda, plus the KTM of Dusit Semangern (#118 KTM 690R), Thailand would stand a decent shot at victory against a hugely experienced Japanese contingent.
Over the 2.2 km SS1 it was Thailand immediately on top as the two factory Honda CRF250L machines of (#101) Manoch Abdullkalee and (#102) Jesadang Chotana swept to the front of the leaderboard with the former posting a fastest time of 2 mins 34 seconds and the latter being just 7 seconds further back when the clock stopped. Third, in 2:43, was the quickest Japanese runner, Tadao Ezure (#107 Yamaha WR450).
Onto Leg 2, and with a 398.13 km route (of which 219.45 km timed) the serious action got underway, and as the bikers rolled into overnight Parc Ferme in Sa Kaeo after a long and gruelling day, it shook out as a 1-3 finish for AP Honda with Manoch taking his second straight stage win in 3:25.41 with the interloper being Japan’s highly rated Yoshio Ikemachi (#103 Yamaha WR400). The top three on the bike classification going into Leg 3 reflected the stage finish.
Manoch, however, was only fourth quickest on Leg 3, the top two spots went to ‘Team Cambodia’ riders but they didn’t threaten at the front of the classification. Yoshio, did though, and he came in third chipping, almost three minutes out of the AP Honda rider’s lead, which came down to just 28 seconds. A tough stage for Jesadang saw him drop almost quarter of an hour and that slid the Honda rider down to seventh place overall. It would be all down to just one Thai rider.
And things just kept getting tighter at the front through Leg 4 and once it shook up an equally nail-biting final day was in store as Manoch’s lead was now down to just 18 seconds after SS4, the top two barely separable over 173.09 km of timed action. At the front and now riding on home soil, Team Cambodia had strolled to a 1-2-3 finish at the top of the time sheets, while both Manoch and Yoshio struggled, the later coming home only thirteenth fastest of the nineteen remaining riders and dropping more than nine minutes to the stage winner, but more importantly, he was 14 seconds faster than Manoch, and that halved the Thai rider’s lead, they were now on 8:20.38 and 8:20.52, and the rally was living up to all the expectations of nail biting excitement on the first bike participation.

It wasn’t to turn out to be a Thai winner in the bike category though as Yoshio, after chipping steadily away at Manoch all event, took another 39 seconds off the AP Honda rider over the final stage and that was enough for him to vault past to win by the smallest of margins, just 25 seconds, after a timed distance of seven hundred kilometres over treacherous surfaces.
The Japanese rider completed the final stage in 45 mins and 39 secs while Manoch turned in the distance in 46 mins and 18 secs. However it was a real fighting ride from the Thai rider and a performance to be proud of. His team mate, Jesadang, chipped away at the leaderboard to finish in an excellent fifth and with the third Thai rider, Dusit, finishing an excellent eleventh, all three ‘local’ starters had safely made the chequered flag.