LEVI KITCHEN | GRIT-224 | 250MX

Though embodying top-tier speed throughout the day in Pennsylvania, Yamaha’s Levi Kitchen would be amongst a number of factory riders who were forced to possess a less-than-desired gate pick(s) after rain had fallen during qualification sessions. This would create a drier track for those in the “B” practice, giving factory athletes a canvas of competition that was filled with precipitation in mud...leaving Kitchen to claim thirty-second prior to advancing to the first moto. He would do the best he could to push his way into the top-twenty though by the time the green flag was waved, accruing sixteenth prior to seeking to climb even higher in the laps thereafter. Scrubbing his way over the infamous “Carmichael Jump,” he would power into the rollers thereafter while leaning toward the rear fender; and keeping the front end floating for as long as possible all storming into the right-handed corner in the distance. He would power through grooves on the inside of the hillside that were more than a “foot-peg” in depth, which would almost attempt to slow his 250cc machine to a halt...but Kitchen kept going, battling with Talon Hawkins while attempting to make passes on Tom Vialle and Preston Kilroy. But the speed of those inside the top-fifteen was something that had to be acknowledged, and proved to be a bit difficult for Kitchen to simply storm past, as they neared the checkered flag. He would try a number of differing lines in order to pass Tom Vialle as the finish-line neared, but it was Kitchen who had to reside twelfth prior to advancing to moto two. His start for the second moto was prolific, where he took the hole-shot and an initial lead but was quickly passed by Honda’s Chance Hymas. Kitchen was then pursuing the Idaho resident with everything he had, but would have to deal with the likes of Ryder DiFrancesco, Tom Vialle, and Hunter Lawrence as riders were trying to overtake him. It would be Honda’s Lawrence who was the first to pass Kitchen, where with roughly seventeen and a-half minutes remaining on the clock, the number ninety-six would pass the Washington native which forced Kitchen to third. And then as the field approached the twenty-minute mark, it would be Vialle who was the to pass Levi. But he wasn’t going to give up, and would rebound with an array of strong laps while nearing the final circuit of the moto...where he managed to pass Chance Hymas, while simultaneously being overtaken by Jo Shimoda. The swing of positions would list Kitchen in fourth for the moto — where he was then finalized in a well-respected ninth place overall on the day. 

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