Yamaha Racing Flex Some Muscle at ProMX Opener

It was a weekend to remember for the Yamaha Australia motocross teams contesting round one of the 2026 ProMX Championship at the always challenging Wonthaggi circuit in Victoria.
Again, another enthusiastic crowd rolled into the venue across the two days to watch the championship get under way and with five major classes on show, the action never stopped.

Round one is where all riders and teams like to set the tone for the year and Yamaha made their intentions clear. The BLU CRU riders won four of the five classes, including eight of the 11 races conducted over the weekend showcasing just how good the Yamaha YZ range of motocross bikes are.

MX1 – Monster Energy CDR Yamaha
Jed Beaton gave his hometown crowd something to cheer about as he proved his leg injury of 2025 is well and truly behind him. Beaton dominated the day with 1-1 results in both motos and looked like he has taken his riding and fitness to a new level.

Beaton stormed to the front early in moto one and simply rode away from the field and put the result beyond doubt before the halfway stage.

Moto two and he slotted in behind archrival, Kyle Webster, but was in no mood for taking any roost and just before the opening lap was completed, he made an aggressive move to snatch the lead and again ride off to victory.

“Great day for the team and I,” Beaton said at the end of the day. “Since coming back from my injury, there has been a lot of work put in, and it was nice to see it show up at round one. This track is a tough one, so if your fitness isn’t up to scratch or your bike isn’t good, it gets exposed here so, really happy with the work the team and I have done and now we move onto round two and try and do it again.”

It was also a solid start for team mate Aaron Tanti who rounded at the day in fifth place. Tanti struggled at Wonthaggi ion a lead up race only a month ago but was far better this time around and finished with 4-7 results to claim fifth and leave round one satisfied but still wanting more.

“Race one was solid from start to finish, just needed to be a little better at the end as I was in third and would liked to have held onto it but got passed by Webster in the last couple of laps so that was a bit frustrating.

Then in race two, I fell off in the second corner and was right at the pack of the bag. I picked up and got going and just tried to work my way forward but also had to be patient as it’s so chaotic back there.

I got through top seventh and was able to salvage some decent points for the round.

I leave here healthy and well placed in the series, so happy with the start of the year and looking to improve when we go to Canberra for round two,” Tanti ends.

MX2 / MXW – Monster Energy Yamalube Yamaha
Despite not landing on the podium, Noah Ferguson proved he is well and truly up for the fight in this year’s MX2 championship. With a newfound and more mature approach to his racing and training, Ferguson showed when faced with some adversity over the weekend he was still able to collect good points, show a blazing turn of speed and stay in the fight.

Ferguson finished the day in fifth place with 5-4 results but the riding was far more impressive than the results. A terrible start in race one saw him outside the top 10 and desperate to move forward. He worked his way through the field and was even able to grab a podium position late in the race before a rock smashed his hand to slow his pace, then fell on the final stages.

With plenty of ice and anti -inflammatory tablets between the motos, Ferguson lined up again for race two and his start was even worse. He jumped quickly but missed a shift and the whole field charged by him.

And the hard work started again. With bruised and super swollen hand, he began to pick off riders and make his way forward. By the halfway stage he was inside the top six and the podium within sight only to stall the bike because he wasn’t able to use the clutch as he liked.

He lost several positions and was again outside the 10 when got it fired back up again and rejoined the race. But the push forward was relentless and by race end, he crossed the line in fourth place in a gutsy ride.

“There was a bit going on over the weekend and I certainly improved my passing skills as I had to come from the back in both motos,” Ferguson explains. “But really happy to race it to the end of both motos and get the best points I could on a track that hasn’t been one of my better ones.

“Thank you the team for their hard work on the weekend and I caused them plenty of grief, but they were on top of things and awesome to have such great support.”

It was the Australian ProMX debut for Souya Nakajima and the Wonthaggi track was at its welcoming best. Japan doesn’t have a track that matches Wonthaggi in terms of its speed and its dirt. Then add in the bumps, rolling whoops and 40 rider field and it was a steep learning curve for the Japanese 250cc champ.

But, he stuck to the task and put together a consistent day to finish 15th for the round but the experience will only do him good as he does each round.

“The track become a lot rougher than anything I have raced and also the intensity of the first few laps is something I will need to improve on. In Japan only three or four fast riders but here there are 20 fast riders, and the first laps are crazy for me, so I need to get better at sprint speed and holding my position early in the race,” he explains.

The Lala Turner show rolled into town and she didn’t disappoint. Turner, the 2-time, AMA MXW champion in the US is here for the full women’s championship and kicked things of in spectacular fashion over the weekend.

The Women contested three races over the two days, races one and three contributed to the ProMX championship, while all three races were part of the FIM Women’s Oceania challenge.

Turner won the opening race after passing rival Charli Cannon early in the race and the pair cleared out from the field. Cannon had an issue late in the race and Turner went on to a comfortable victory.

Race two was just for the FIM challenge, so Turner who was nursing some blistered hands, rode smartly to look after delicate paws, crossed the line in second place and help big Team USA into a strong position for the final moto.

Then with 50 minutes between motos, she re-strapped her hand, refocused on putting her effort into the final race and securing the ProMX round victory.

She charged passed Cannon on the opening lap and set a pace that was too hot for the rest of the field, after 12 minutes of racing complete, she was out to a 12 second lead and the race looked to be done and dusted. But Turner spiced things up.  

Working her way through the lapped riders, she mis judged a rider in front of her and hit he back wheel, causing her to stall the bike. She was able to balance herself and then hit the button to refire her machine. A few hits and it restarted only for her to try and take off in the same tall gear, she had stalled the bike in moments before, and it cut out again.

All this time, Cannon was closing in and when she finally got it going again, the pair were almost side by side. But Turner wasn’t going to give it up that easy and after two corners to regain her composure, she then proceeded to pull away again and raced off to another victory, giving her the perfect start to her ProMX campaign.

“I made that hard work for myself, didn’t I,” she laughed from the podium. “I thought the rider was a bit further ahead of me, but she bobbled in the ruts and slowed right down, and I jumped on the brakes to stop, and I ended up stalling the bike.

“Then I started it and stalled it again. Luckily it started just as Charli was coming around and I was able to get going just before she passed me and I stayed in front of her.

“I have had such a great time, and everyone here as been so good to me and my family. Everyone at Yamaha has looked after us to well and I can’t wait to come back for the final few rounds later in the year and spend some more time.

“The team has been perfect and do whatever it takes to give me what I need and Joel my mechanic did an awesome job today,” Turner ends.

She is already back on a plane and headed home to the US to prepare for the up coming AMA championship.

MX3 / MX2 – Monster Energy WBR Yamaha
The WBR Team celebrated a 1-2 result on the day in the MX3 division and kicked the season off to the perfect start. On paper, the duo of Hayden Draper and Jack Deveson looked impressive, and it turned into a reality as the pair traded race wins on the day with Deveson taking the round win with his 2-1 result, just ahead of Draper with his 1-3 finish.

Deveson started the year in good fashion in race one and finished in second place and then charged forward from an average start in race two to snatch the leads in the final stages and take his first ProMX round win in the MX3 class.

“While I ride here at Wonthaggi a bit, its not my favourite track or surface to race on so it was good to come away with some good results,” he begins. “The team really ramped up the last couple of weeks and pulled together to get us what we needed and the 1-2 start is a great reward for everyone working behind the scenes.

Hayden Draper will be a name Australians will soon become familiar with. The current MX2 champion, and only 16 years of age, turned it on over the weekend to finish second and get his championship started on a positive note.

Draper comfortably won the opening moto and then had to charge from the back of the pack in race two after an early fall. But he rallied and charged his way all the way back to third place and a strong performance and one that shows he has the git as well as the speed.

“Pretty good day all round for me and a great day for the team. I just got caught up in race two and fell so that made things hard, but I did everything I could to get back up near the front and happy to finish for the day in second as that looked impossible 20 minutes earlier,” the Kiwi said.

It was also a day about gather points for the team MX2 rider, Seth Burchell. He sustained an injury at the end of the Supercross championship last year and it has been slow to heal so he came into round one a little under done but hoping to secure some points to get his year started.

He finished with 7-12 results to give him a top 10 for the day and a reasonable started all things considered.

85 Cup – GYTR Yamaha Junior Racing
Blake Bohannon did Blake Bohannon things and went on another rampage in the FOX 85cc Cup, dominating both motos and showing he simply is world class.

He spends most of his time riding and training on a 125 these days, but it didn’t take him long to get back into the swing of things on the smaller bike and pick up where he left of in 2025… winning.

He powered his way to commanding leads in both races and lets set for another big year.

Kye Sproule also contested the 85cc class, his first time at ProMX on an 85 and did a great job. A late race fall dropped him back plenty of positions in moto one, but he charged through for a sixth-place finish in race two and didn’t look at out of place with the older, more experienced riders.

The ProMX Championship now moves to Canberra for round two and if anything like the opening weekend, we are set for a barn burner of a season.

ProMX Results

  • ProMX Results

    Round One – Wonthaggi
    MX1
    1st Jed Beaton (Monster Energy CDR Yamaha)

    2nd Kyle Webster
    3rd Dean Ferris
    4th Todd Waters
    5th Aaron Tanti (Monster Energy CDR Yamaha)

    MX2
    1st Alex Larwood
    2nd Byron Dennis
    3rd Dylan Walsh
    4th Kayd Kingsford
    5th Noah Ferguson (Monster Energy Yamalube Yamaha)

    MX3
    1st Jack Deveson (Monster Energy WBR Yamaha)
    2nd Hayden Draper (Monster Energy WBR Yamaha)

    3rd Jackson Fuller
    4th Riley Burgess
    5th Heath Fisher

    MXW
    1st Lachlan Tuner (Monster Energy Yamalube Yamaha)

    2nd Mayla Herrick
    3rd Jordan Jarvis (Yamaha)
    4th Tayla McCutcheon
    5th Emma Milesevic

    85cc
    1st Blake Bohannon (GYTR Yamaha Junior Racing)

    2nd Jayce Stocker
    3rd Liam Millard.