AMA Progressive Insurance Dirt Track Grand Championships HomeThe other three brothers from Owensboro, Kentucky

July 2 – It was short-track time at the Grand Championships Wednesday, as the small bikes raced at one of the nicest facilities in the country and one family went home with a trio of National titles.

gillims2side.jpg (93192 bytes)The Gillim boys — Hayden, Frankie Lee and Ethan (right) — all live in Owensboro, Ky., where dirt-tracking apparently comes naturally. It is, after all, the same place that produced another trio of brothers who took the dirt-track world — and the road race world — by storm: Tommy, Nicky and Roger Lee Hayden. And if the geographic connection weren't strong enough, consider that the Gillims are related to the Haydens through their father, Earl. For those keeping score at home, the Gillims are Earl's brother's grandsons.

On Wednesday, Ethan Gillim earned wins in the 50 Pee Wee and 50 cc Junior 4-6 classes. After notching the Pee Wee win going away, Earl came back two races later to take over the lead after the passing holeshotter Springer Derosear through turns two and three. Then he just stayed in front until the flag. The results gave Earl the points lead in both classes.

Then, in the next race, Hayden Gillim (no points for guessing who he's named after), grabbed the holeshot in 65 DTX 7-11 and simply stayed in front. He's tied for second in the class with Michael Martin, both of whom are a single point behind leader Kevin Walter.

But the Gillims weren't the only family to collect more than one National title on the short track. Austin Greenland took top honors in two races Wednesday, adding to his points tally in both classes. In 85c DTX 9-13, Greenland, of Spring Mills, Penn., Greenland had to work hard for the win, coming back from a fourth-place start to second before a red-flag restart, then passing into the lead on the first lap back. It was only then that he was able to open a huge gap — actually lapping back into the field, to win. Greenland is tied for first in the points with Brad Baker of Chehallis, Wash.

In 85cc Modified 12-15, Greenland proved he would not give up tying the holeshot with Cory Hildebrand of Milford, N.H., and holding the low line through the first three corners to take over the lead finally on the front straight. Then he never looked back and finished with the flag. He leads the class by 7 points over Cody Anselmi of Lodi, Calif.

Perfect scores so far came from four racers who had two out of two wins. Aside from Ethan Gillim, Ian Keith nabbed a second win in 50cc Sr 7-8, Michael Martin took another win in 65cc Mod 7-11, and Aaron King won again in 125 Mod.

Yes, there is something in the water in Owensboro, Kentucky

Good things apparently come in threes when it comes to dirt-track racers from that little town in Kentucky that the road-racing Hayden brothers made famous. This time around at the AMA Progressive Insurance Grand Championships, it's not the sons of Earl Hayden, Tommy, Nicky and Roger Lee, who are winning.

Now, it's the Gillim boys — Ethan, Hayden and Frankie Lee — who all live in Owensboro as well. They're the grandsons of the brother of Earl Hayden, the father of the Hayden boys, two of which race AMA Chevy Trucks Superbike classes, and a third who is a Honda factory rider in MotoGP. And like their older cousins, the Gillims have already snagged sponsorship.

The sponsorship starts young in the sport, and Ethan and Frankie have support from Cobra on 50cc bikes, while Hayden has Suzuki support on 65. The family brought an astounding 13 bikes down for the races — 12 race bikes and a pit bike.

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That number look familiar? Hayden Gillim runs Nicky Hayden's number. Must be lucky

"They seem to do real well at it," says father Frank Gillim." Earl's given us so much advice that it's difficult to single out the best piece. Probably just to make they're having fun and not to put too much pressure on them."

Gillim family tuner Tryce Welch of Fast Forward Racing says the Gillims have been riding since about the time they could walk, and they practice at probably the most famous track in all of Owensboro — the one in Earl Hayden's yard.


The Rest of the Races:

50cc Senior 7-8 Premier: Ian Keith of Brimfield, Ill., took the holeshot and held it even after a red-flag restart. second place Jake Lewis of Princeton, Ky., put a last lap pass on third place Bailey Spence of Rising Sun, Md. to round out the podium.

85cc Mod 7-11 Premier American Suzuki: Brad Baker wheelied off the line and still put down enough traction to get the holeshot, and hung on all the way to the flag. Second place Kyle Anselmi of Lodi, Calif., held off the rest of the chasing pack for second, while Ricky Boley of Newark, Ohio, took third.

125 Modified: Aaron King of Dysart, Iowa, once again walked away with the win, holding off Travis Myers of Breckenridge, Mich., in second and Cory Hildebrad of Milford, N.H., in third.

65 Mod 7-11 Premier: In what is rapidly becoming the Michael Martin show, this class was once again led through the first turn by the rider from Lockeford, Calif. He stayed on to win going away, with Michael Johnson of Mount Morris, Mich., in second and Trent Hawkins of Sanford, Mich., in third


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All in the Gillim family. Clockwise from upper left, father Frank, mother Kerri, grandfather Marty Hayden, Ethan, Frankie Lee and Hayden.
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You have to hand it to the Illinois Motorcycle Dealers Association — They know how to water a track!
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That's about as close as they got to Brad Baker.
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Eathan Gillim collects the flag
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Austin Greenland celebrates
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A lot of work got them here. Now they're racing for National championships
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Ian Keith gets more practice on his victory laps
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Goodbye! Aaron King, son of dirt-tracker Rich King, leads the field
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Michael Martin gets it over

© 2003, American Motorcyclist Association