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RACE PREVIEW

2024 AMA Supercross & Motocross Rider Numbers

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The American Motorcyclist Association has posted the official number list for the 2024 Supercross, Pro Motocross, and SuperMotocross Championships. Competitors have been ranked in relation to their total points scored racing the 250 or 450 Classes through the 2023 racing season; the best riders rewarded with the champion’s number one plate in their respective division, others were allowed the option to pick a “permanent” to run for the remainder of their career, and most claim status with whatever two-digits they’ve been assigned by the system.

Chase Sexton’s switch from 23 to 4 is the most significant change. Riders who win the 450 SX, 450 MX, or 250 MX title can choose from the available single digits (4-5-8). Jett Lawrence and Hunter Lawrence passed, stating they would keep their current numbers for sentimental and commercial purposes.

A handful of numbers came back into the rotation after Ryan Dungey/Zach Osborne/Broc Tickle/Chad Reed did not earn the necessary 25 championship points or file a request to retain for one more year with the AMA. However, Justin Brayton, Justin Bogle, and Marvin Musquin did send the necessary paperwork to the office in Pickerington and will run 10-19-25 if they race in 2024. If they do not compete, the numbers will become available in 2025.

These circumstances are how Max Vohland became 20, Fredrik Noren 22, and Grant Harlan 23 for 2024.

Haiden Deegan and Levi Kitchen’s combined point totals from Supercross and Pro Motocross Championships (539 for Deegan, 478 for Kitchen) meant the 250 Class riders were rewarded with their pick of a new career number. Deegan selected 38 and Kitchen 47.

Tom Vialle did not score enough points to choose a career digit and, per the calculation procedure, would have been assigned 13. However, since the AMA allows riders to skip the “unlucky number,” the two-time MX2 world champion went with the available 16.

Vialle and Deegan are two of the seven riders who debuted professionally in 2023 and earned assigned numbers for 2024. Talon Hawkins will be 35, Caden Braswell 42, Chance Hymas 48, Daxton Bennick 59, and Bryce Shelly 93.

Ten riders will go from three digits to two: Josh Hill (44), Coty Schock (69), Josh Cartwright (74), Anthony Rodriguez (84), Hunter Yoder (85), Luca Marsalisi (86), Max Miller (87), Luke Neese (89), Devin Simonson (91), Jace Kessler (92).

Four international riders who only followed the Pro Motocross tour did enough to earn a spot on the list: Jose Butron (49), Lorenzo Locurcio (60), Romain Pape (68), and Harri Kullas (79).

Teammates with numbers in sequential order: Cooper Webb and Eli Tomac (2-3), Malcolm Stewart and Christian Craig (27-28), Cameron McAdoo and Austin Forkner (63-64).

Active riders that held two-digit numbers in 2023 but did not earn one for 2024: Vince Friese, Nick Romano, Ryan Breece, Carson Brown, Justin Rodbell, John Short, Logan Karnow, Dominique Thury, Josh Gilbert, Josiah Natzke, Chris Canning, Lance Kobusch, Devin Harriman, Geran Stapleton.


2024 AMA Supercross, Motocross & SuperMotocross Rider Numbers

1. Chase Sexton | Supercross – 450 Class
1. Jett Lawrence | Supercross – 250 West Region

1. Hunter Lawrence | Supercross – 250 East Region
1. Jett Lawrence | Motocross – 450 Class
1. Jett Lawrence | SuperMotocross – 450 Class
1. Haiden Deegan | SuperMotocross – 250 Class

*2. Cooper Webb
*3. Eli Tomac
**4. Chase Sexton
*6. Jeremy Martin
*7. Aaron Plessinger
*9. Adam Cianciarulo
*10. Justin Brayton
*11. Kyle Chisholm
*12. Shane McElrath
*14. Dylan Ferrandis
*15. Dean Wilson
16. Tom Vialle
*17. Joey Savatgy
*18. Jett Lawrence
*19. Justin Bogle
20. Max Vohland
21. Jason Anderson
22. Fredrik Noren
23. Grant Harlan
*24. RJ Hampshire
*25. Marvin Musquin
26. Garrett Marchbanks
*27. Malcolm Stewart
*28. Christian Craig
29. Ty Masterpool
*30. Jo Shimoda
31. Jordon Smith
*32. Justin Cooper
33. Jalek Swoll
34. Ryder DiFrancesco
35. Talon Hawkins
36. Phil Nicoletti
37. Max Anstie
**38. Haiden Deegan
39. Pierce Brown
40. Dilan Schwartz
41. Carson Mumford
42. Caden Braswell
43. Seth Hammaker
44. Josh Hill
*45. Colt Nichols
*46. Justin Hill
**47. Levi Kitchen
48. Chance Hymas
49. Jose Butron
50. Enzo Lopes
*51. Justin Barcia
52. Derek Drake
53. Derek Kelley
54. Chris Blose
55. Mitchell Oldenburg
56. Jeremy Hand
57. Nate Thrasher
58. Cullin Park
59. Daxton Bennick
60. Lorenzo Locurcio
61. Stilez Robertson
62. Kevin Moranz
63. Cameron McAdoo
64. Austin Forkner
65. Henry Miller
66. Justin Starling
67. Benny Bloss
68. Romain Pape
69. Coty Schock
70. Jerry Robin
71. Cole Thompson
72. Jace Owen
73. Robbie Wageman
74. Josh Cartwright
75. Marshal Weltin
76. Michael Mosiman
77. Preston Kilroy
78. Josh Varize
79. Harri Kullas
80. Michael Hicks
81. Cade Clason
82. Mitchell Harrison
83. Guillem Farres
84. Anthony Rodriguez
85. Hunter Yoder
86. Luca Marsalisi
87. Max Miller
88. Dylan Walsh
89. Luke Neese
90. Hardy Munoz
91. Devin Simonson
92. Jace Kessler
93. Bryce Shelly
*94. Ken Roczen
95. Ryan Surratt
*96. Hunter Lawrence
97. Tristan Lane
98. Kaeden Amerine
99. Jett Reynolds

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Michael Antonovich

Michael Antonovich has a wealth of experience with over 10 years of moto-journalism under his belt. A lifelong racing enthusiast and rider, Anton is the Editor of Swapmoto Live and lives to be at the race track.

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