Crawfordsville, IN - It's all over for 2007, and the history books must now be re-written. Bill Ballance is the all-time King of Quads in the Can-Am Grand National Cross Country Series. The Yamaha rider went out and won the season-finale Kloz Ironman GNCC to make sure the championship was his, and now he has won the GNCC crown for the eighth-straight time, an all-time record. "It hasn't even hardly sunk in yet," said Ballance, clearly getting emotional on the podium. "When I first started this years ago, I was just hoping to be a top ten rider. To win eight in a row, I can't even believe it. I'm just so happy, we weren't even trying to win this one, we were trying to take it easy and make sure we didn't have problems with the bike, and things started happening and we ended up in the lead."Ballance's rival Chris Borich looked like he could win the Ironman, although Ballance still would have only needed to finish 12th to win the crown anyway. Borich took the ITP Holeshot Award and battled with Ballance most of the day, but he ran into trouble on the rugged track with two laps to go and dropped to fifth. "There was a bottle neck and I tried to climb a hill, and it was all blown out, just deep ruts everywhere," said Borich. "So I got stuck there and lost some time, went to the back. I came back up and got stuck again on the last lap, that was about it."
With Borich experiencing those problems, Ballance was assured of the championship. But the Ironman race win wouldn't be as easy to get, because Adam McGill was charging hard after his first win. In third at one point and battling with new XC2 Champion Brandon Sommers and veteran Matt Smiley, McGill put on a strong charge late in the race to nearly pass the champ. "I remember Bill telling me before the day, he said save everything for the last lap," said McGill. "So I did, I just followed him for a while and we started dicing it up a little bit and taking a little bit of chances. Brandon Sommers got in front me and I'll tell you one thing--that kid can move. Hats off to him, he ran me hard today. I guess I came out on top. I tried to give it everything I had about the last two miles. Bill and I came out to this last field section, I took the line wide and he took it tight, and when we got into the next turn, he swung it wide and I was right up under his grab bar. If he would have slowed down just a little bit more, I would have been up on his seat saying hey, what's up to him. Hats off to him--eight times--I don't think anybody's going to beat it."
It may seem odd that Ballance would offer McGill advice that could lead to his own defeat, but McGill has faith. "People say to be old and wise you have to be young and stupid first," said McGill. "I look up to Bill and what all these guys have to say. All these guys are real good friends to me, and I don't think they'd steer me wrong."
Smiley was happy to end the season with another podium. He started nearly last but worked his way forward. "I picked my way up through the field pretty quickly," said Smiley. "The next thing you know I was pulling up to the leaders. They all pitted and I kept going and took the lead over. I picked a bad line on one of the hills and dropped back. I lost my seat so it got a little rough on the last mile. I'm just real happy with the way things worked out today."
Fourth went to Sommers, matching the finish of his XC1 pro debut at the previous GNCC in Ohio. After the race, Sommers collected the first-ever green number-one plate as the 2007 XC2 Pro Am Champion.
Sommers and the rest of the field would surely like to collect their first GNCC XC1 Overall title, but Ballance plans on returning to win number nine in 2008. "We're coming back again next year," said Ballance. "We have a contract with Yamaha, and just take it one year at a time. We're having fun with it, and things are good, so just ride the boat while it's sailing, I guess."
Don Ockerman won XC2 on this day, and the season-long class contender was happy with that result. "I got the lead on the second lap and let it hang out; I didn't want anybody catching me," said Ockerman. "Everything went perfect today--awesome track. I learned quite a bit over the summer and took that home, worked with it a little bit."
Second in XC2 went to Kevin Yoho, his third podium of the season. "I got a bad start," said Yoho. "I wrecked a couple times and just finally got going there towards the end. The start's pretty big because I'm pretty wore out by the time I get to the last lap."
Third in XC2 went to Brian Wolf, his first podium of the season. "We had bad luck all year," said Wolf. "I got fifth off the line and just went up there. It's awesome. I never thought I'd be up here."