The 2019 MotoAmerica Twins Cup season was the 2nd season of the Twins Cup class in MotoAmerica. Chris Parrish entered the season as the defending champion, after taking the inaugural championship aboard a Suzuki SV650.
Round | Circuit | Date | Race 1 Winner | Race 2 Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Road Atlanta | April 5–7 | Michael Barnes | Michael Barnes |
Circuit of the Americas | April 12–14 | (No Event) | (No Event) | |
2 | Virginia International Raceway | May 3–5 | Chris Parrish | (No Event) |
3 | Road America | May 31-June 2 | Draik Beauchamp | (No Event) |
4 | Utah Motorsports Campus | June 14–16 | Alex Dumas | (No Event) |
5 | Laguna Seca | July 12–14 | Kaleb De Keyrel | (No Event) |
6 | Sonoma Raceway | August 9–11 | Alex Dumas | (No Event) |
7 | Pittsburgh International Race Complex | August 23–25 | Alex Dumas | Alex Dumas |
8 | New Jersey Motorsports Park | September 6–8 | Alex Dumas | (No Event) |
9 | Barber Motorsports Park | September 20–22 | Chris Parrish | (No Event) |
[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]
2020 Entry List | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Team | Constructor | No. | Rider | Rounds |
1833Cjknows/Roaring Toyz | Yamaha | 251 | Kaleb De Keyrel | 5 |
2dags Racing | Suzuki | 377 | Dustin Walbon | 1–3, 5, 7 |
419 Racing | Suzuki | 592 | Jon Crawford | 1, 2, 7, 9 |
728 | Jerry Reeves | 1, 2, 7, 9 | ||
789 Racing | Suzuki | 789 | Steven Smith | 1, 9 |
AGV Sport Monkey Moto | Ducati | 921 | Steven Shakespeare | 3–8 |
Altus Motorsports | Yamaha | 117 | Austin Phillips | 1 |
AP MotoArts | Yamaha | 77 | Draik Beauchamp | All |
107 | Shawn Hill | 1, 3, 7 | ||
120 | Cooper McDonald | 1, 3–9 | ||
Arizona Speed Engineering | Kawasaki | 183 | Pete Murray | 9 |
Autovest Suzuki | Suzuki | 24 | Joseph Blasius | All |
Blue Line Racing | Suzuki | 167 | Anthony Marcinek | 3, 7 |
Catalyst Reaction Suspension/FeelLikeAPro.com | Suzuki | 215 | Michael Kim | 4, 5, 6 |
Center for Plastic Surgery Racing | Yamaha | 532 | Carl Price | All |
Century Trucks & Vans | Suzuki | 176 | Shawn Adams | 3–9 |
177 | Daniel Adams | All | ||
Champ Racing | Suzuki | 198 | Jonathan Champ | 3, 7 |
416 | Daniel Mataczynski | 7 | ||
Chiefs Racing Team | Suzuki | 996 | Greg Reisinger | 1, 2, 7, 9 |
Colin Chatterjie Racing | Suzuki | 460 | Colin Chatterjie | 8 |
Conquest CBD/RiderzLaw Racing | Yamaha | 213 | Jason Madama | All |
Copoulos Built RBoM Engineering | Suzuki | 180 | Curtis Murray | All |
Crosslin Racing | Suzuki | 409 | Christian Crosslin | 9 |
428 | Calvin Crosslin | 7 | ||
D&D Cycles | Yamaha | 117 | Austin Phillips | 1 |
Dairy Boys Racing | Suzuki | 110 | Tim Koebert | 3 |
Danielle Diaz Racing | Kawasaki | 86 | Danielle Diaz | 4, 5 |
Dustin Walbon Racing | Suzuki | 377 | Dustin Walbon | 1–3, 5, 7 |
First XV Racing | Suzuki | 771 | Clifton Ramsdell | 1–6 |
Ghetto Customs | Suzuki | 1 | Chris Parrish | All |
Gino Angella Racing | Yamaha | 231 | Gino Angella | 1–3, 5, 8, 9 |
Honos | Yamaha | 71 | Jorge Ehrenstein | 5 |
Janglerracing | Suzuki | 460 | Colin Chatterjie | 8 |
JB Racing/RBoM Engineering | Yamaha | 121 | Joseph Behlmann | 9 |
KK47 Racing | Yamaha | 473 | Kris Lillegard | All |
LWT Racer | Suzuki | 429 | Tyler Humphreys | 8 |
444 | Doane Richardson | 2 | ||
600 | Sam Wiest | 2, 7, 8 | ||
889 | Sean Dougherty | 2, 8 | ||
LWT RACING/BMG Motorsports | Suzuki | 272 | Brian McGlade | 8 |
Metal Mulisha | Yamaha | 175 | Tyler Valentine | 4 |
Metric Garage | Yamaha | 127 | Jim Whitten | All |
MonkeyMoto/AGV Sport | Ducati | 921 | Steven Shakespeare | 3–8 |
N2 Racing | Suzuki | 642 | Robert Cichielo Jr. | 1–3, 7–9 |
N2/Escape Racing | Suzuki | 298 | Ned Brown | All |
PlasticSurgeryRacing.com | Yamaha | 532 | Carl Price | All |
Quarterley Racing | Ducati | 111 | Michael Barnes | All |
R6 Graveyard | Suzuki | 661 | Randall Smith | 1 |
RB Racing | Suzuki | 171 | Ray Hofman | 1–3, 5, 7 |
RBoM Racing | Suzuki | 119 | Tyler Freeman | 1, 2, 9 |
180 | Curtis Murray | All | ||
442 | Gillis Glidewell | 1, 2, 9 | ||
615 | Austin Miller | 1, 2, 7, 9 | ||
621 | Chris Bays | 1–5, 8 | ||
18 | Jackson Blackmon | 8, 9 | ||
Ready To Ride | Suzuki | 270 | Ryne Snooks | 2, 7, 8 |
RiderzLaw Racing | Suzuki | 38 | Kris Turner | 1–7, 9 |
303 | Andrew Yzabal | 4–6 | ||
454 | David Catalina | 5, 6 | ||
Roadracing World Young Guns | Suzuki | 16 | Alex Dumas | All |
Roaring Toyz/1-833-CJKNOWS | Yamaha | 711 | Robert Fisher | 1, 2, 3, 5 |
251 | Kaleb De Keyrel | 5 | ||
Ruthless Racing | Yamaha | 229 | Darren James | 1–5, 7–9 |
SP8S Racing | Kawasaki | 138 | Chris Speights | 2, 7, 8 |
Spears Racing | Suzuki | 911 | Jeffrey Tigert | 1, 3, 4 |
SRH Plumbing | Yamaha | 107 | Shawn Hill | 1, 3, 7 |
SWANG Motorsports | Yamaha | 671 | Samuel Wang | 2 |
Tanglewood Transport Racing | Suzuki | 941 | Scott Nelson | 7 |
Team Legacy Racing | Yamaha | 100 | Justin Filice | 1, 2 |
Team Thomas Racing | Suzuki | 160 | Joshua Thomas | 1, 7 |
Team Yo! | Suzuki | 141 | Keith Buras | 2, 7, 9 |
The Draik 77 | Yamaha | 77 | Draik Beauchamp | All |
Trackworx Motorsports | Suzuki | 132 | Jonathan Pellnitz | 1–3, 7 |
Trees Racing | Suzuki | 154 | Jared Trees | 7 |
Turner's Cycle/MotoUniverse Racing | Suzuki | 38 | Kris Turner | 1–7, 9 |
TWF Racing | Yamaha | 551 | Aaron Tulchinsky | 6 |
Unit F14 Powder Coating | Suzuki | 545 | Chandler Slagle | 9 |
Yall Mad Racing/AP MotoArts | Yamaha | 504 | Matthew Riedlinger | 6 |
Richard Lee Memorial Racing Team | Suzuki | 130 | Dave Juntunen | 3 |
Points are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.
Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th | 12th | 13th | 14th | 15th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points | 25 | 20 | 16 | 13 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Superbike World Championship is a silhouette road racing series based on heavily modified production sports motorcycles.
The 2016 FIM MotoGP World Championship was the premier class of the 68th F.I.M. Road Racing World Championship season.
MotoAmerica is the organization that promotes the AMA Superbike Series since 2015. Sanctioned by the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) and the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM), it features eight classes of road racing: Superbike, Stock 1000, Supersport, King of the Baggers, Super Hooligan National Championship, Twins Cup, Junior Cup, and Mini Cup.
The 2020 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season was the 44th season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the 6th since its renaming to MotoAmerica. Cameron Beaubier entered the season as the defending champion, after taking his fourth title in 2019.
The 2021 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season was the 45th season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the 7th since its renaming to MotoAmerica. Cameron Beaubier entered the season as the defending champion but did not defend his title after moving to the 2021 Moto2 World Championship.
The 2022 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season was the 46th season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the 8th since its renaming to MotoAmerica.
The 2022 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship season was the 8th season of the MotoAmerica Supersport class. The defending class champion was Sean Dylan Kelly, who vacated his title during 2022 to race internationally in Moto2.
The 2022 MotoAmerica Stock 1000 Championship season was the 8th season of the Stock 1000 class of motorcycle racing within the MotoAmerica series.
The 2021 MotoAmerica Superstock 1000 Championship season was the 7th season of the Stock 1000 class of motorcycle racing within the MotoAmerica series. Cameron Petersen entered the season as the defending champion, but vacated the class to race for the M4 ECSTAR Suzuki Team in the MotoAmerica Superbike class in 2021.
The 2021 MotoAmerica Twins Championship season was the 4th season of the Twins Cup class in MotoAmerica competition.
The 2019 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season was the 43rd season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the 5th since its renaming to MotoAmerica. Cameron Beaubier entered the season as the defending champion, after taking his third title in 2018.
The 2021 MotoAmerica Junior Cup season was the 7th season of the Junior Cup class in MotoAmerica competition.
The 2019 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship season was the 5th season of the supersport class of motorcycle racing within the MotoAmerica series. J.D. Beach entered the season as the defending champion.
The 2019 MotoAmerica Superstock Championship season was 5th season of the Stock 1000 class since the renaming of the series to MotoAmerica. The defending champion was Andrew Lee who took his first Stock 1000 title during the 2018 season.
The 2019 MotoAmerica Junior Cup season the 5th season of Junior Cup since the series was renamed to MotoAmerica. Alex Dumas was the defending champion, after taking maiden Junior Cup title during the 2018 season aboard a KTM.
The 2023 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season is the 47th season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the ninth with current promoter Wayne Rainey and the KRAVE group.
The 2024 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship season is the 48th season of the premier class of circuit-based motorcycle racing in the United States and the tenth with current promoter Wayne Rainey and the KRAVE group.
The 2023 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship season was the 9th season of the MotoAmerica Supersport class. The defending class champion was Josh Herrin, who vacated his title during 2023 to race in MotoAmerica Superbike.
The 2022 MotoAmerica Twins Championship season was the 5th season of the Twins Cup class in MotoAmerica competition.
The 2023 MotoAmerica Twins Championship season was the 6th season of the Twins Cup class in MotoAmerica competition.