
Round two of the British Extreme Enduro Championship returned to one of the UK’s most feared venues — Tong — for the legendary Wild Willys Extreme, and it did not disappoint.
Tong once again lived up to its reputation. The course combined steep, energy-sapping climbs with tight woodland sections, deep ruts, rock gardens and unforgiving man-made obstacles. It was relentless from the first lap to the last — a proper extreme enduro battlefield where fitness, focus and technical precision were pushed to the limit.
This venue has long been considered one of the toughest stops on the British calendar, and round two only reinforced that status.
At the front, Mario Roman delivered another masterclass.
After taking victory in round one, the Spanish rider returned to Tong with confidence and control. His balance, throttle precision and ability to maintain rhythm through the nastiest sections set him apart once again. Calm under pressure and razor sharp on the technical terrain, Roman secured back-to-back wins and tightened his grip on the championship lead.
Dan Peace rode a strong and determined race to claim second place. Consistent across the brutal layout and composed when mistakes could easily happen, he managed the race smartly to secure a well-earned runner-up finish.
Richard Moorhouse rounded out the podium with a solid third place. Using his experience and technical ability to navigate the most demanding obstacles, he kept things clean and controlled to finish among the front runners in a highly competitive field.
Wild Willys Extreme is everything British extreme enduro stands for — mud, rocks, sweat and relentless intensity. No easy laps. No breathing space. Just pure hard racing.
Source:
Enduro DKA






