Herfoss pips Maxwell for victory in Darwin opener

Darwin ASBK Race One


After an exciting qualifying session at Hidden Valley this morning that saw three riders under the lap record, and Wayne Mawell smashing the qualifying lap record, it was shaping up as a serious rumble in the jungle up in the tropics on Saturday afternoon.  DesmoSport Ducati duo Oli Bayliss and Mike Jones went P2 and P3 to make it an all-Ducati front row for the first time ever in Australian Superbike. Jones fell in Q2 though and would not make the start for the race this afternoon as he was off in hospital getting some hand injuries attended to.

Wayne Maxwell had dominated every session so far this weekend – Image Half Light

Had Troy Herfoss been foxing somewhat ahead of this opening bout? The Penrite Honda man only made one real attempt at a lap-time in Q2 and that was a 65.645s, so the pace is there. Do Michelin have an ace card up their sleeve in regards to tyre life in these sweltering conditions?

Did Herf’ have something extra up his sleeve? – Image Half Light

Glenn Allerton is enthused with the fresh out of the box M 1000 RR and they should be able to find more improvements in every session as they find their feet with the new bike. How it looks after its tyres over race distance though is a question nobody has an answer for yet.

From road bike to race bike in a matter of hours… NextGen BMW M 1000 RR – Image Half Light

South Australian privateer Daniel Falzon was the fastest qualifying Yamaha after a significant break away from the sport.

Bryan Staring showed more progress is being made with BC Performance Kawasaki to qualify seventh and fastest Dunlop runner. His team-mate Josh Waters, by far the most successful Superbike rider ever at Hidden Valley, is not quite there yet and starts from P11.

Bryan Staring on the grid – Image Half Light

Anthony West made some significant steps forward today. Finally getting into the 66s in Q1 with a 66.995s before then dropping six-tenths off that to end Q2 in eighth place on 66.396s. Arthur Sissis also starts from that third row in P9, the ex-speedway rider is an absolute gun off the line, expect him to make up plenty of positions by turn one.

On the form guide though if one was trying to work out the odds, with Wayne Maxwell setting the pace in every session, and putting 5 x 65s in that final qualifying session, he looks very hard to beat. He already has a point for pole and with this weekend being a three-race format instead of the normal two, this round takes on even more significance in the championship chase.


ASBK Superbike Race One

Maxwell got a great launch while Oli Bayliss got his worst start of the season after starting from his best grid position ever! Image Half Light

Wayne Maxwell absolutely smoked them off the line. Herfoss was away well too in second place and quickly closed that ground back up to Maxwell through the opening turns as Glenn Allerton slotted up to third.  Corey Turner and Daniel Falzon got tangled up at turn one and both ran off the circuit.

Maxwell was away well – Image RbMotoLens

Down the straight for the first time and it was Maxwell, Herfoss, Allerton and Oli Bayliss. That quartet was already pulling a significant gap over the rest of the field.

The leading four broke away from the rest almost immediately

Both Maxwell and Herfoss were down into the 65s by lap three and Oli Bayliss joined them in that bracket next time around before then slipping past Glenn Allerton to move up to third place.

Maxwell lowered the race lap record next time around, 65.827 the new marker, then followed by a 65.706 but Herfoss went one better, a 65.618 to stick right onto the tail-pipes of that Ducati V4 R.  That pair were starting to pull away a little from Bayliss now but Oli was trying to hang on and also under the previous lap record.

Bayliss tried a little too hard though and ran off the circuit. He was having a red hot go but that mistake lost him around nine-seconds and he had drifted back to sixth place.

Up front it was back to ops normal, Maxwell and Herfoss running on their own.  Allerton had started strongly but had lost touch by the halfway point, the BMW man now four-seconds behind the leading duo.

Nothing separated Maxwell and Herfoss throughout the whole 16-laps of the race – Image Half Light

Nothing separated Maxwell and Herfoss up front with six laps to go. Herfoss had not made an attempt to make a pass, but it did look as though he had the speed to make such a move. The Penrite Honda looked on rails while the Boost Mobile Ducati was starting to look a little loose, the Italian bike on Italian rubber was definitely sliding around more than the French rubber shod Japanese machine.

Herfoss had a sniff up the inside at the end of the main straight with four laps to run but didn’t force the issue and Maxwell retained the lead. Maxwell had slowed the pace a little in the middle of the race but now as they looked towards the home stretch he wound the wick up once again and Herfoss came along for the ride.

At the last lap board Maxwell had two-tenths on Herfoss after dropping back down to a 66.1.  Herfoss closed back up on him in the mid-part of the lap and was right on his tail around the back of the circuit.

Herfoss only led for a few corners all race, but it was the few corners that mattered… – Image Half Light

Herfross backed it in up the inside a couple of corners before the end and forces Wayne wide and gave Herfoss the line for the next corner, they both pick the bikes up and get back on line but Herfoss had the advantage, led onto the main straight and took a brilliant victory.

Herfoss demonstrated why you can never rule him out come race day – Image Half Light

Glenn Allerton puts the M 1000 RR on the podium in its first outing, albeit 9.5-seconds behind the leading pair.

Glenn Allerton – Image Half Light

Oli Bayliss staged a brilliant recovery after a poor start followed by a mistake that saw him run off the circuit, he then got it together and worked his way back past a number of riders to claim fourth position and came close to running down Allerton to get back into the podium positions. It was revealed after the race that Allerton had been struggling with a slipping clutch.

Bryan Staring and BC Performance will be encouraged by their fifth place finish while South Aussie privateer Arthur Sissis was the highest finishing Yamaha in sixth place ahead of Anthony West.

We have two further races tomorrow, the first at 1050 and the second at 1405. That is in Darwin time which translates to 1120 and 1435 for the eastern seaboard.

Hidden Valley Race One Podium – Image RbMotoLens

ASBK Superbike Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed
1 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR / 273
2 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R +0.060 279
3 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR +9.652 263
4 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R +10.878 272
5 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R +11.670 267
6 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 +12.977 271
7 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 +17.477 261
8 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R +17.600 272
9 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 +23.679 266
10 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 +33.261 272
11 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R +34.346 269
12 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR +34.439 262
13 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 +43.392 270
14 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 +43.746 272
15 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 +1m00.033 263
16 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R +1m03.351 266
17 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1 Lap 259
18 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1 Lap 259
19 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1 Lap 126

ASBK Championship

With that victory Herfoss claws back five-points on Maxwell and the gap now shrinks to six-points, 112 plays 106.

A hard fought and tactical victory for Herfoss saw him claw some points back on Maxwell – Image RbMotoLens
Troy Herfoss

It was such a fun race. In qualifying, Wayne was so fast and with Mike (Jones) and Oli (Bayliss) also doing good times, we narrowly missed out on a front-row start, which was a little disappointing. There were stages during the race where I started to doubt myself, but I knew I had to play the patience game. Riding 16 laps in the heat is physically demanding, but I felt quite comfortable. I like going to races where fitness is one of the main factors, because I think it plays to my strengths.”

Wayne Maxwell

I covered Troy at turns five and six, and I tried to block the line into turn 11 – I went in there reasonably deep and tried to hang on the outside, but he was too good. I was in a rhythm for most of the race, just trying to hit a lap time; the grip went away towards the end. I love it – I’m really happy, there are so many positives for us to take out of the race and we’ll try to improve a tiny bit for tomorrow morning.”

Maxwell’s lead was trimmed back to six-points – Image RbMotoLens

That podium finish promoted Glenn Allerton up to third place in the championship on 82-points. Both he and the NextGen Team will have even more motivation fuelled from the potential to come from that M 1000 RR that they only took delivery of a couple of days ago.

Glenn Allerton

It’s been a massive effort by the team to build a brand-new bike, strip it down, install all the suspension and electronics. If this is our first race on it and we’re on the podium, it shows the potential is really high. The clutch was slipping really badly out of the last corner for a lot of the race and costing me a lot of time; I’m confident if we fix that issue for tomorrow, we’ll be right there with the top two.”

Allerton and NextGen BMW will be fizzing at the potential of the new M 1000 RR – Image RbMotoLens

It is clearly obvious that the Yamaha Racing Team and Dunlop combination is not competitive enough this year for Cru Halliday and Aiden Wagner to show their speed. Still, Halliday has been making sure he stays on the bike clocking up points and holds down fourth place in the championship, which is impressive in itself.

It has taken BC Performance some time to get on top of the new ZX-10RR but Bryan Staring has been collecting points where he can and to his credit is sixth in the championship chase.

That mistake in qualifying that left Mike Jones with some hand and foot injuries that prevented him from starting the race is a hefty blow for the Queenslander, but he still ranks fifth on the points table and is certainly not out of the main game yet.


ASBK Championship Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 20 112
2 Troy HERFOSS 25 106
3 Glenn ALLERTON 18 82
4 Cru HALLIDAY 11 76
5 Mike JONES 74
6 Bryan STARING 16 70
7 Oli BAYLISS 17 62
8 Arthur SISSIS 15 61
9 Jed METCHER 12 59
10 Matt WALTERS 10 52
11 Lachlan EPIS 9 45
12 Josh WATERS 13 40
13 Anthony WEST 14 38
14 Yannis SHAW 5 26
15 Luke JHONSTON 8 25
16 Michael EDWARDS 3 25
17 Aiden WAGNER 7 22
18 Mark CHIODO / 22
19 Nathan SPITERI / 20
20 Aaron MORRIS / 14
21 Philip CZAJ / 10
22 Daniel FALZON 6 6
23 Jack DAVIS 4 4
24 Hamish McMURRAY / 4
25 Sash SAVIN / 3

  Manufacturers Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Yamaha 76 361
2 Ducati 37 248
3 Kawasaki 39 166
4 BMW 31 131
5 Honda 25 105
6 Suzuki 5 46

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au

Maxwell smashes Hidden Valley lap record in exciting qualifying session

Darwin ASBK Qualifying


While the times had looked tight on Friday, no rider had put in more quick laps than Wayne Maxwell. The Boost Mobile Ducati rider looked to be reeling off low 66s at will. He did five laps under 66.5 in FP1 and another seven in FP2.

The second quickest rider on Friday, young Oli Bayliss, only managed two laps under 66.5, third placed man Mike Jones did three as did Troy Herfoss. Maxwell certainly hit the ground running in Darwin but it would be interesting to see what his competitors had found in themselves and their motorcycle overnight.

Glenn Allerton was enjoying the new BMW M 1000 RR which the NextGen crew had turned from a road bike picked up a dealership late Wednesday afternoon into a race bike while at the track. We take a look at the new M 1000 RR here.

Daniel Falzon was the quickest Yamaha on Friday in P6 while Bryan Staring led the Kawasaki charge in P7.

Who would be the rider to upset the Ducati 1-2-3 stranglehold on Friday?  Many riders also might be searching for a two down the long main straight.

Qualifying 1

In a departure from the normal qualifying procedure all riders had to take part in QP1 in order to earn their positions in QP2, rather than that top dozen beind taken from the quickest 12 in Free Practice. Track temperatures were almost 20-degrees cooler than they had experienced in Friday afternoon’s FP2.

Wayne Maxwell put in a 65.799 on his first flying lap. The first 65 of the weekend and just outside the qualifying lap record set here by Troy Bayliss here in 2018 at 65.601s.

Mike Jones then went P2 on 66.010s and young DesmoSport Ducati team-mate Oli Bayliss P3 on 66.324s. Glenn Allerton was P4 and South Australian privateers Arthur Sissis and Daniel Falzon P5 and P6 halfway through the 20-minute session.

Troy Herfoss did not join the session unil that halfway point and then cruised a couple of laps to find some clear air before putting his head down to set a 66.152s with just over seven-minutes remaining in the session.

Most of those riders then seemed pretty content to sit on that with their transfer spot to Q2 secured. ASBK competitors have to use rubber from their race tyre allocation during qualifying so riders generally don’t put in many more laps than they have to in order to preserve the rubber for the races.

Maxwell though did head back out late in the session though and was under at the second split, pasting Pirelli around the circuit on his way to lowering the benchmark a fraction further, 65.796s the new marker. Not content with that though he then went through the first and second splits quicker again on the next lap before crossing the stripe to lower it again to 65.682s.

A big high-side from Mark Chiodo a couple of minutes before the end of the session left his crew with some work to do but he would not be taking place in Q2 after finishing the session down in 19th place.  Cru Halliday also rolled to a stop late in the session on the YRT machine and will start from P13 later this afternoon while team-mate Aiden Wagner is even further back in P16.

Q1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.682
2 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m06.010
3 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m06.152
4 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m06.242
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m06.430
6 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.458
7 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.506
8 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.540
9 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.712
10 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.792
11 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.887
12 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.995
13 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.018
14 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.089
15 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.268
16 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.391
17 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.849
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m08.953
19 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.986
20 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1m09.732
21 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m11.542

Qualifying 2

There was only a short five-minute break before the top 12 were allowed back on track for Q2.

Mike Jones and Oli Bayliss were the first out of pit-lane ahead of Daniel Falzon but the top nine were all on track in no time.

Wayne Maxwell again quickly to the top of the charts, a 65.690s but seconds later Mike Jones joined him in that 65 bracket with a 65.711s. Maxwell backed up his 65.690 though with a new outright ASBK Superbike qualifying lap record, 65.507 the new Hidden Valley benchmark and fastest ever motorcycle lap of the 2.9-kiklometre circuit.

Daniel Falzon then dropped in 66.016 to join that duo on the provisional front row. The JD Racing privateer outfit back on track after a lengthy break from competition and showing great speed.

With five-minutes remaining it was Maxwell from Jones, Falzon, Herfoss and Allerton. That top five all left the pits and went back out on track. Mike Jones had to abort an attempt after running in too deep.

Oli Bayliss then joined Maxwell and Jones in the 55s, a 65.815s to the youngster which he then immediately backed that up with a 65.527! Only two-hundredths of the new lap record set by Maxwell only minutes earlier. Jones then crossed the stripe on 65.555s. Herfoss then joined the 65s party with a 65.645 to go P4.

Maxwell then smashed out a 65.181s. Smashing the lap record and again underlining his dominance of proceedings and taking that important championship point for pole.

Mike Jones crashed late in the session after losing the front. He had to get some hand injuries checked out and was taken off to hospital for further investigation.

Glenn Allerton then made it a five-way party in the 65s, a 65.821s on the new M 1000 RR putting him in P5 ahead of Daniel Falzon while Bryan Staring will head row three in P7.

An amazing qualifying session.

This bloke is on fire this weekend – Image RbMotoLens

Anthony West made some significant steps forward today. Finally getting in the 66s in Q1 with a 66.995s before then dropping six-tenths off that to end Q2 in eighth place on 66.396s. Arthur Sissis also on that third row in P9.

Lachlan Epis will start from P10 ahead of Josh Waters and Matt Walters.

Wayne Maxwell has set the pace in every session this weekend and he did 5 x 65s in that final qualifying session. On that form he looks very hard to beat.

Maxwell and Bayliss in the qualifying Parc Ferme, Jones didn’t make it back to the pits in time – Image RbMotoLens

Will the DesmoSport Ducati duo find some more to take him on over the 16-lap race distance?

Oli is showing some really serious one-lap pace here this weekend. Does he have the package for race distance to challenge Wayne? – Image Rb MotoLens

Has Herfoss been foxing somewhat? The Penrite Honda man only made one real attempt at a lap-time in Q2 and that was a 65.645s, so the pace is there…

Glenn Allerton is enthused with the brand new out of the box M 1000 RR and they should be able to find more improvements in every session as they find their feet with the new bike.

We don’t have to wait long to find out as Race One is scheduled to get underway at 1405 in Darwin this afternoon which equates to 1435 for the Eastern seaboard. We have two further races tomorrow.


Q2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.181
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m05.527
3 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m05.555
4 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m05.645
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m05.821
6 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.016
7 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.123
8 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.396
9 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.446
10 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.476
11 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.703
12 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.791

Combined Qualifying

Pos Rider Bike Best
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.181
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m05.527
3 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m05.555
4 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m05.645
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m05.821
6 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.016
7 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.123
8 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.396
9 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.446
10 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.476
11 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.703
12 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.791
13 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.018
14 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.089
15 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.268
16 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.391
17 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.849
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m08.953
19 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.986
20 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1m09.732
21 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m11.542

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Saturday, 19 June
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 92
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

Riders reflect on opening day of practice in Germany

2021 MotoGP Round Eight Sachsenring

Friday MotoGP Rider Quotes

Miguel Oliveira – P1

“It was a good day. We did many laps with used tyres and the pace was nice. We hoped and expected to have a good time attack at the end and we managed to do it. There was no pressure at all to be super-fast today but you know it just kind of happened. So that means we are on a good direction and I feel comfortable with the bike. We need to be sharp and still pay a lot of attention to the small details because our rivals are also quite fast so I hope to do a good FP3 and hopefully go straight through to Q2 and qualify well for Sunday.”

Miguel Oliveira
Fabio Quartararo – P2

“I didn‘t feel great with the front tyre this morning and we saw that quite clearly. I crashed straight away. But anyway, I feel good and I‘m on the pace. We had more than 30 laps in total on the tyre in FP2, so that was mentally challenging. I was counting to myself, ‘17, 18, 19‘. I thought, ’Okay, I know that I have old tyres.‘ The time attack after that was a little strange, because you switch from a medium with 30 laps to a brand new soft. That‘s totally different. I didn‘t use all the potential of the soft, but in general I feel happy. I don‘t feel as good with the bike as I usually do, but we are working on it for tomorrow. I would really like to get pole, but first I need to stay calm and work on the pace. Then qualifying for me is like a game. It‘s an important part to prepare for the race, but the most important part for me is to have fun in tomorrow‘s Q2.”

Fabio Quartararo
Maverick Vinales – P3

“It‘s been a positive Friday. I‘m happy because the work done in Montmeló is now paying off. I have such a good feeling with the front, which was something that we were looking for. Normally we struggle a bit in this area, and then I lose confidence. With Silvano we worked a lot with the front, and it‘s starting to get much better. But, you know, when you focus a lot on improving one specific area you can lose out a bit in another. So, right now we are trying to find a good balance on the bike and try to build it up. I think it was important to be inside the top 3 today. That‘s always nice, also for the team. We will try to keep going with a lot of motivation.”

Maverick Vinales
Alex Rins – P4

“This is a track that I like, and I’m not feeling bad with my arm. I’m pleased with my position today, even if I lack a bit of consistency in lap times I am quite fast. I have a bit of pain in Turn 3 because it’s a long right-handed corner then there’s a quick change of direction. I also feel it on the brakes in Turn 1 and Turn 12, but in general this track has a lot of left-handed corners which maybe helps me a bit, although in MotoGP we’re always using our right hand for the throttle and brakes! I’m happy because I’ve completed my programme today, and tomorrow will be a similar plan. I’m satisfied with fourth, and tonight I will take some painkillers and try to rest a bit to be ready for tomorrow.”

Alex Rins
Pol Espargaro – P5

“Crashing was not part of the plan, but I am trying to find the limit now, rather than in the race. We are figuring it out but Turn 3 is causing some problems at the moment and this is why I fell there. Over one lap we are quite good, but the crashes meant we couldn’t really do as long a run today as we had hoped. It was a bit of a messy day honestly, but we have the speed here. Tomorrow we need a smoother day, less crashes and more in control. The bike is working well here this weekend.”

Pol Espargaro
Takaaki Nakagami – P6

“Today was a really good start to the German GP and a good day for us. We were P3 in FP1 and this afternoon we were able to be in the top six. We have a good feeling on the bike and good pace already. In sector one I need to improve as that’s the only place I’m not able to make a good speed, but in all the rest we’re in good shape. Tomorrow I’ll be focusing on improving in sector one and, if we can do that, we have a chance of maybe staying in the top three. That’s the target for tomorrow and I’m looking forward to the qualifying session.”

Aleix Espargaro – P7

“I know it may seem strange, given the final position, but I think this was the best Friday of the season so far. I felt good straight away. I’m able to be fast without taking excessive risks and the grip helps us, significantly higher than it was in Barcelona. I didn’t put together a perfect performance on my flying lap, but I’m competitive in terms of pace. This will be a track where the tyres will be highly stressed, also because of the weather conditions, so working well on that aspect is important.”

Johann Zarco – P8

“I am happy to be riding at this circuit again. My style is not ideal for this track, but I will try to adapt myself as much as possible. Together with the team, I am working a lot to find the best solution for us. I am happy with my last run where we were able to find important information.”

Jack Miller – P9

“My feeling with the bike is good, and I’m pretty satisfied with the work done today. We tried all the available tyres except for the soft and made a time attack with the medium in the final minutes of FP2. I think I already have a clear idea of what we will use in the race on Sunday. We are working mainly on the setup to make the bike more stable in the last two sectors, where we are not yet as strong as in the first two. Overall, I’m positive and happy with how the weekend is going so far.”

Jack Miller
Franco Morbidelli – P10

“It has been a good first day and we managed to get into the top-ten, which is an important thing. Although I think the lap time will need to be a bit faster to get into Q2. Today we were fast enough to do it and I felt good with the bike, we didn’t have any problems, so I’m happy about that. Of course there are things that could be better here and there, which we will do our best to try to improve, but it’s only the first day here. We are looking at some combinations of settings at the moment, to give ourselves the best bike setup that we possibly can. Let’s see what happens tomorrow.”

Danilo Petrucci – P11

“I’m really happy about the feeling I have with the bike here. It was maybe the first session, in which I felt strong and I was always very confident. We did some steps and it works, so I’m looking forward to tomorrow. I think if we do everything in a perfect way, we can make it to the top 10, which would be a very good target for us.”

Danilo Petrucci
Marc Marquez – P12

“Here I feel less physical limitations, honestly I was expecting zero problems but I still don’t think I am riding at my best. I can manage it and we have a good pace at the moment but for sure a focus for tomorrow is working on riding style. I didn’t put a new tyre at the end, I spoke with the team as I didn’t feel like I had the energy to do it. We are working to understand many things with the bike when it’s working well here. Our pace is looking good but it’s not the best on track at the moment.”

Marc Marquez
Álex Márquez – P13

“The end of the first day and I can honestly say I’m happy. It’s my first time here with a MotoGP bike and I enjoyed it, that’s the most important thing. I was able to play with the bike to try to improve things, we need to improve with the used tyre especially and make a step forward, but we are not bad and we can be happy with our day. There’s still a lot of work to do and things that we need to understand better, but we introduced today the new aerodynamic and among other things that were working quite well. The bike is working well. The problem of the grip is still there, but it’s something that we can manage a bit better than at Montmelo. This weekend, it will be important to be in Q2 directly, and also difficult because everyone is so close, but it’s definitely possible at this track.”

Jorge Martín – P14

“Physically I feel much better compared to how I was In Barcelona and that is a good starting point. I am not far off from the top ten and I feel satisfied with this first day even though this is my first time riding a Ducati on this track. I remain positive.”

Joan Mir – P16

“I’m not happy about today, we still have a lot of work to do because my feelings with the bike weren’t good, especially in FP2. We have a margin to improve and we need to figure it out overnight, but I feel quite calm anyway because I know we can be stronger. I didn’t have a good feeling with the bike overall, but especially with the grip – these hot temperatures make everything slippery and I felt better in the cooler conditions. I did my time attack with a medium front tyre, and I think I should’ve used the hard because I feel better with that. I didn’t have much confidence with the front so I couldn’t really push. Once we’ve checked everything we can try to piece it all together in FP3 so that we’re prepared for qualifying.”

Iker Lecuona – P17

“Finally, it was a quite ok day. We have been working well with the team and improved from FP1 to FP2. We are still far from the top, but in some places of the track I feel really good. We need to check the data now and we are aware of the way we need to follow, so I feel we have the potential to recover the gap tomorrow morning and to fight for the Q2.”

Luca Marini – P18

“It was not an easy day, we had some problems, but the feeling was not bad at all. What we did in the Barcelona test worked here, I felt good on the bike and I rode as I like. In FP2 I had a problem shortly after the start, which made me lose feeling with the rear. I went back out on the soft tire, but I couldn’t get the most out of it because I had the medium tire in front, whereas I prefer the hard one. I tried to push anyway because the top 10 was possible, but I crashed. The soft held out for about three laps, so I tried to make the most of it on my fifth attempt. I’m really sorry for the team because they’ll have a lot of work to do tonight.”

Enea Bastianini – P19

“It was a difficult day, however, we got some positive things out of it and we have a good pace. This morning I was able to try different tires, but I didn’t feel comfortable with the hard one. My fast lap wasn’t very good and also some other riders bothered me and didn’t allow me to give 100%. I am sure that tomorrow we will achieve better times and we will try to give our best.”

Lorenzo Savadori – P20

“I liked coming back to this track. The last time I raced here was in 2019 with the MotoE bike. Clearly, everything changes with a MotoGP bike. The track gets a lot smaller, but I must say that I had fun. We worked a lot with used tyres. We need to improve the second stage of the race because in Barcelona that was a limiting factor for us again. When I put on the new tyre, I did two decent laps, but I think that our potential is higher. We are still lacking a bit, especially on T2, but I continue to improve and, for now, that is still the main objective.”

Valentino Rossi – P21

“It’s been difficult today because it’s been very hot. In FP2 this afternoon we also tried the harder tyre to try to understand what it’s like. My second run was not too bad because my pace was quite good but in the end I unfortunately had a small crash, and it made me lose some confidence. This also meant that I had to change bike for the time attack, so my fast lap was not fantastic – plus I also made a mistake in the fourth sector. I am losing some time in sector three, so we need to look at this to find the best setting for tomorrow. It’s difficult to predict what will happen this weekend, as it is only Friday, but we will try our best.”

Francesco Bagnaia – P22

“It was a productive day. We focused mainly on finding the right set-up for the bike to limit tyre wear and get a good pace for the race. I am pretty satisfied with the work we have done in the two sessions today. For sure, it will be important to take another step forward ahead of tomorrow morning’s FP3, where we will also try our time attack to secure a spot directly into Q2″.

Francesco Bagnaia

Friday Practice Reports


New week, same speed: Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) remains the fastest man in MotoGP only a few days after his Catalan GP win, with the Portuguese rider topping the timesheets on Day 1 of the Liqui Moly Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland.  Around half-a-second off the outright lap record, Oliveira escaped Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) by a couple of tenths to take to the top, with Maverick Viñales making it two Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP machines in the top three on Friday as he ended FP2 within a tenth of his team-mate.

FP1

The day started with a very familiar name at the top of the Sachsenring timesheets: Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team). The Spaniard is undefeated at the venue in the premier class plus a few years before that, and he was quick out the blocks before also stringing together a longer run of laps. Second was Quartararo, who also took a fast tumble – rider ok – at Turn 12 before moving back to within 0.168 off Marquez.

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) started the event a tenth further back in third, ahead of another Honda: Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team). The number 44 also crashed at Turn 2, rider ok. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) completed the top five, less than half a tenth in further arrears.

The other crasher in FP1 was the first: Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing). The Spaniard went down at Turn 12, rider ok.

FP2

In the afternoon, everyone improved and Miguel Oliveira took over at the top. The Catalan GP winner went more than 1.6 seconds quicker than his morning best, and just under a second quicker than Marc Marquez’ FP1 fastest lap, to head the timesheets in the session. He had two-tenths in hand over Quartararo, who was second once again, with Viñales moving up from tenth in FP1 to complete the top three.

Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) stole some headlines in fourth, the Spaniard impressing despite his wrist injury sustained ahead of Barcelona, ending the day top Suzuki and just under four tenths off the top. Pol Espargaro, Nakagami and Aleix Espargaro also impressed again, taking fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively. Marc Marquez, meanwhile, was shuffled down to outside the top ten.

Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia) crashed first at Turn 13 and then at Turn 7, rider ok, and Pol Espargaro had his second crash of the day at Turn 4. Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) also slid out; the ‘Doctor’ at Turn 1.

Friday Combined Times

FP2 timesheets are the combined timesheets, so it’s Oliveira, Quartararo, Viñales, Rins, Pol Espargaro, Nakagami and Aleix Espargaro in the top seven. Next up is a Ducati duo as Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) pipped Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) to P8 by just 0.011, with Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) completing the top ten.

Danilo Petrucci (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing), who now has the updates seen on the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing machines of Oliveira and teammate Brad Binder, took P11 by the end of play and is the first man set to miss out on Q2 as it stands, with Marc Marquez ultimately ending the day in 12th by just 0.009. The eight-time World Champion said he’d expected to find himself in slightly better shape at the track but also didn’t push for a time attack.

Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) was even closer to the rider ahead – Marc Marquez – by the end of the day. Just 0.002 split the two as the younger Marquez slots into P13. With the track not featuring on the 2020 calendar, the day was the first taste of the Sachsenring in MotoGP for more than just the 2021 rookies. Alex Marquez was the fastest of those who haven’t raced the track before in the premier class.

Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) was a tenth further back in P14, with Brad Binder completing the fastest fifteen on Friday ahead of reigning Champion Joan Mir.

Rossi ended Friday in P21, with a compatriot for company just behind him: Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team). The number 63 was last on the timesheets and, although he didn’t push for a fast lap on soft tyres, will be looking for a lot more on Saturday morning as FP3 gets underway – as will the likes of Marc Marquez and Joan Mir.

Friday MotoGP Combined Times

Pos Rider MOTORCYCLE Time/Gap
1 M.Oliveira KTM 1m20.690
2 F.Quartararo YAMAHA +0.220
3 M.Viñales YAMAHA +0.333
4 A.Rins SUZUKI +0.387
5 P.Espargaro HONDA +0.418
6 T.Nakagami HONDA +0.441
7 A.Espargaro APRILIA +0.453
8 J.Zarco DUCATI +0.491
9 J.Miller DUCATI +0.502
10 F.Morbidelli YAMAHA +0.538
11 D.Petrucci KTM +0.592
12 M.Marquez HONDA +0.601
13 A.Marquez HONDA +0.603
14 J.Martin DUCATI +0.708
15 B.Binder KTM +0.736
16 J.Mir SUZUKI +0.763
17 I.Lecuona KTM +0.878
18 L.Marini DUCATI +0.905
19 E.Bastianini DUCATI +1.012
20 L.Savadori APRILIA +1.188
21 V.Rossi YAMAHA +1.278
22 F.Bagnaia DUCATI +1.521

MotoGP Championship Top Five

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 115
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 101
3 Jack MILLER Ducati 90
4 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 88
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 78

Moto2

Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) was fastest in FP1 and FP2 on Day 1 of the Liqui Moly Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland, ending the day an impressive three tenths clear in the combined times. It was once again a Red Bull KTM Ajo 1-2, however, with rookie Raul Fernandez the man on the chase.

Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) completed the top three, pipping Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) to it by a single thousandth.

Friday Moto2 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 R.Gardner KALEX 1m24.197
2 R.Fernandez KALEX +0.339
3 F.Di Giannanto KALEX +0.442
4 S.Lowes KALEX +0.443
5 X.Vierge KALEX +0.610
6 A.Fernandez KALEX +0.643
7 S.Corsi MV AGUSTA +0.835
8 M.Schrotter KALEX +0.848
9 T.Arbolino KALEX +0.888
10 T.Luthi KALEX +0.896
11 M.Ramirez KALEX +0.944
12 A.Arenas BOSCOSCURO +0.955
13 J.Navarro BOSCOSCURO +0.965
14 M.Bezzecchi KALEX +0.986
15 L.Dalla Porta KALEX +0.990
16 J.Roberts KALEX +1.239
17 H.Syahrin NTS +1.265
18 A.Canet BOSCOSCURO +1.354
19 B.Bendsneyde KALEX +1.356
20 A.Ogura KALEX +1.397
21 A.Lopez KALEX +1.403
22 C.Beaubier KALEX +1.502
23 L.Baldassarri MV AGUSTA +1.520
24 S.Chantra KALEX +1.528
25 N.Bulega KALEX +1.530
26 J.Dixon KALEX +1.667
27 F.Aldeguer BOSCOSCURO +1.709
28 S.Manzi KALEX +1.709
29 B.Baltus NTS +1.964
30 C.Vietti KALEX +1.965

Moto2 Championship Top Five

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 139
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 128
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 101
4 Sam LOWES Kalex 75
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 60

Moto3

John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) was the man to beat on Day 1 of the Liqui Moly Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland, the Brit topping the timesheets in the morning and no one able to displace him. Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) starts his German GP off on good footing too as he ends Friday in second, just over a tenth off the top, with Championship leader Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) completing the top three after going quickest in the afternoon.

Aussie rookie Joel Kelso who answered a call-up from the CIP Green Power Team to replace their injured rider finished Friday 25th quickest, 2.8-seconds off the P1 pace set by McPhee.

Friday Moto3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.Mcphee HONDA 1m26.739
2 T.Suzuki HONDA +0.113
3 P.Acosta KTM +0.351
4 G.Rodrigo HONDA +0.370
5 D.Öncü KTM +0.530
6 S.Nepa KTM +0.550
7 R.Fenati HUSQVARNA +0.758
8 D.Foggia HONDA +0.762
9 F.Salac HONDA +0.762
10 D.Binder HONDA +0.771
11 A.Migno HONDA +0.854
12 N.Antonelli KTM +0.960
13 I.Guevara GASGAS +0.997
14 J.Masia KTM +1.043
15 J.Alcoba HONDA +1.059
16 L.Fellon HONDA +1.110
17 S.Garcia GASGAS +1.116
18 Y.Kunii HONDA +1.176
19 K.Toba KTM +1.180
20 X.Artigas HONDA +1.183
21 R.Rossi KTM +1.236
22 A.Fernandez HUSQVARNA +1.371
23 R.Yamanaka KTM +1.381
24 A.Izdihar HONDA +1.817
25 J.Kelso KTM +2.836
26 E.Bartolini KTM +2.878

Moto3 Championship Top Five

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 120
2 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 81
3 Jaume MASIA KTM 72
4 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 61
5 Darryn BINDER Honda 58

Source: MCNews.com.au

Ride to the Races with Wayne Rainey and Eddie Lawson

How about a nice little ride in the local hills to kick off MotoAmerica’s Laguna Seca round July 9, with 500cc champions Wayne Rainey and Eddie Lawson?


MotoAmerica Press Release:

IRVINE, CA (June 18, 2021) – Imagine riding your motorcycle through some of the most picturesque areas of California’s Central Coast on a Friday in July, ending up at the iconic WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, having your day culminate with a Q&A session with three-time World Champion and MotoAmerica President Wayne Rainey, four-time World Champion Eddie Lawson and other surprise guests before enjoying nonstop racing action the rest of the weekend.

Although it sounds too good to be true, it’s not, because on Friday, July 9, “Rainey’s Ride to the Races” will take place as a special lead-in to the MotoAmerica Superbike Speedfest at Monterey, July 9-11, and you can be part of the festivities.

This exclusive ride will be limited to 35 riders who purchase a special “Rainey’s Ride to the Races” premium ticket package. The ticket package will cost $325 per participant, with the majority of the price tax deductible, as the ride will benefit the Roadracing World Action Fund, a 501c3 non-profit organization that promotes motorcycle racing safety through the installation of soft air barriers at racing events.

The ride will begin at 10 a.m., after a visit to the Moto Talbott Collection Motorcycle Museum in Carmel Valley, California. It will tour past working ranch lands, local wineries, around the Santa Lucia Mountain ranges, past the rural Salinas Valley foothills and the historical Soledad Mission before returning to WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca for the Q&A with Rainey, Lawson and more surprise guests, conducted by Gordon McCall.

Rainey’s Ride to the Races will be led by McCall and will include Lawson at a relaxed, easy pace, with no riders left behind. Along with McCall, there will be a sweep, two rovers and, in the event of unforeseen mechanical issues, a Sag Wagon with a trailer to transport motorcycles back to WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca. The 90-plus-mile ride will take approximately two to two and a half hours.

“I’m thrilled to be a part of Rainey’s Ride to the Races,” said Rainey. “I live in the area, and I’m excited to share its beauty with others. I can’t think of a better way to see the things that the Monterey Peninsula has to offer than from the seat of a motorcycle. This is going to be a memorable day for everyone who takes part in the ride and I’m looking forward to sitting down and chatting with the participants when they arrive back at the track. This will be a lot of fun.”

The Rainey Ride to the Races ticket package is available HERE.

The post Ride to the Races with Wayne Rainey and Eddie Lawson appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.

Two For The Price Of One: Suzuki Reveals the A2 License-Compliant GSX-S950

Suzuki has just revealed their GSX-S950 to the masses – and it’s the first motorcycle I’ve encountered this year that is technically a two-for-one.

a front view of the new GSX-s950, in Triton Blue.

There’s been a bit of confusion regarding this bike’s specs, so here’s the breakdown based on the current known details:

At full power, the GSX-S950 has 95PS (70kW) and 92 Nm of torque and clocks in at 214 kg.

Despite the GSX-S950 having the same 999cc inline-four power output as the GSX-S1000, Suzuki has deliberately restricted the output to make the bike A2 license compliant.

Suzuki’s website describes the bike as follows:
With 95PS (70kW) peak power, [the GSX-S950 is] the ideal choice for newer or returning riders and can be switched to 47.5PS (35kW) to make this model available to A2 license holders too.”

a photo of a rider trying out the new GSX-s950, in Triton Blue.

According to a report from AutoX, the GSX-S950 was created with the client in mind – specifically, clients desiring a lower power output than the GSX-S750 and the GSX-S1000 but still wanting the flexibility to upgrade later if necessary. 

Essentially, should the rider want a bike that is A2 license compliant, they can purchase the GSX-S950, knowing that they can tune it up from 47 bhp to 93 bhp and 93Nm of torque upon the inquiry of their unrestricted license. 

ROHITESH UPADHYAY breaking the record for world's longest no-hands wheelie October 2019

a picture of the new GSX-S950 front display.

The new GSX-S950 has also been given a stacked headlight, ride-by-wire throttle, low RPM assist feature, and slip-and-assist clutch, as well as a twin-spar aluminum frame superbike-derived swingarm & rear-shock identical to that of the GSX-S1000.

Suzuki plans on releasing the GSX-S950 later in August of this year. 

For more information on all things Suzuki, head over to WebBikeWorld.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Gardner vs Fernandez: 1-2 for title rivals on Moto2™ Day 1

Continuing to show some kind of strong form was Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team), sixth overall ahead of the first non-Kalex rider in the field, Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing), who historically has had good showings at the Sachsenring, with two Moto2™ podiums in years gone by. Eighth place was home-hero Marcel Schrotter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), recovering after his FP1 crash; rookie teammate Tony Arbolino was a solid ninth, also after a morning crash, whilst Switzerland’s Tom Luthi (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) rounded out the top ten. 

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Oliveira conquers frenetic MotoGP™ FP2 in German heat

It was fine Friday for Alex Rins (Team SUZUKI ECSTAR), with the returning Spaniard a solid fourth and top Suzuki, just over half a tenth from Viñales and the top three. Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) suffered another Turn 3 crash, but he once again bounced back to place the Honda inside the top five, one place higher than fellow Honda rider Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda IDEMITSU), with Honda looking strong at the Sachsenring, with two Hondas inside the top six overall. 

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Acosta heads FP2 in Moto3™, McPhee remains top overall

Alongside new crew chief Daniel Bonmati, McPhee was able to shine in the morning and was well inside the top ten in the afternoon to complete a solid opening day in Germany, whilst it was Tatsuki Suzuki who was chasing the British rider, finishing second whilst also inside the top four in FP2. Acosta was able to improve his time in the afternoon to top the session and broke into the top three on combined times, whilst it was Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) was fourth overall but second in the hotter afternoon session, whilst Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) was fifth at the end of the day.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here