Is Razgatlioğlu set for a bombshell MotoGP™ switch?

The next question, if true, is who does Razgatlioğlu sign for? Yamaha, given that’s where he rides in WorldSBK, would surely be in pole position. But would Razgatlioğlu sign for a non-factory outfit? The murmurings last year suggested not. Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP have already signed Franco Morbidelli until the end of 2023, and alongside the Italian is current World Champion Fabio Quartararo – no space at the inn then, surely? Unless – like Andrea Dovizioso (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team) – Yamaha fancy luring Razgatlioğlu in with a full factory deal in their Independent Team, or Quartararo unexpectedly leaves Yamaha for whatever reason.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

CFMoto Racing PrüstelGP reveal their first Moto3™ machines

Former 125cc World Champion Tom Lüthi will begin work as Sporting Director, whilst former Gresini Moto3™ boss Massimo Capanna comes on board as new Technical Director. Further support from KTM throughout 2022 is apparent too with the Austrian factory’s Vice President of Motorsports and Road Racing, Jens Hainbach, in attendance.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Kevin Magee’s 1992 Yamaha YZR 500 0WE0 two-stroke GP racer

1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0

With Phil Aynsley


This is the factory Yamaha YZR 0WE0 ridden by Kevin Magee to second place in the 1992 500cc All Japan Championship, where Magee finished behind fellow Aussie Daryl Beattie on an NSR Honda. Peter Goddard had won the Championship for Yamaha on the 0WD3 the previous year, so it was a good time for Aussie riders!

Kevin Magee's 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0
Kevin Magee’s 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0

The owner has bodywork in both the 0088 AJC colours (seen in the two images of Kevin demoing the bike), as well as in 1989 Team Roberts Lucky Strike colours.

Kevin Magee's 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0
Kevin Magee’s 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0

The bike is fairly unusual for the period in retaining the factory frame. Most factory YZRs, even the GP teams, were using the ROC chassis.

Kevin Magee's 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0
Kevin Magee’s 1992 Yamaha YZR 0WE0

Yamaha experimented with various firing orders during the year (180º was the normal) with a 0-90º “big bang” motor being used from half way through the GP season. Kevin preferred a 90-270º firing order however – but this wasn’t used in GPs. The output of 160 hp was 5 hp up on the 1991 0WD3.

Source: MCNews.com.au

BMW Motorrad hits global sales record

While BMW Motorrad set a record sales year in 2021 with a massive 14.8% increase, Australia’s performance was up only marginally.

According to BMW Motorrad Australia, they sold 2512 motorcycles and scooters to the end of December which was a 0.8% increase on 2020.

Globally, BMW Motorrad sold 194,261 motorcycles and scooters which was up 24,989 up on the previous year.

Understandably, the German company’s best performer which remains the largest market with 25,972 sales and leading the brand in its home.

Next best is Italy with 16,034 (15.2%), just one ahead of the USA which witnessed 32.1% growth.

But the biggest improver was India with a whopping 102.5% increase to 5191.

Other notable improvements were China which was up 21.4% to 14,309, Spain (12,616, 14.4 %) and France (19,887,13.4%).

BMW Motorrad claims the UK’s exit from the EU had no significant impact on their sales with an increase of 26.6% and sales of 9263 in Great Britain/Ireland compared with 7315 the previous year.

BMW R 18 Big BoxerBMW R 18 Big Boxer
BMW’s R 18 Big Boxer engine

Boxer models remain the driving force for the company with sales of more than 60,000 R 1250 GS and GS Adventure alone and R models accounting for half of the company’s sales.

BMW Motorrad boss Markus Schramm says he is proud of the results.

“It’s precisely in times of crisis where you can see how well a team sticks together,” he says. 

“I look forward to 2022 with great confidence as we start the year with what is sure to be the strongest product offering ever. 

“Our four cruiser models from the BMW R 18 model family are entering their first full year of sales together. 

“In addition, in the first few months of 2022 alone, the market launches of the all-electric BMW CE 04 and our four superior 6-cylinder models K 1600 GT/GTL/B and Grand America, which have been further improved in all respects, are absolute highlights in our range and will generate a further sales drive in the first half of the year. 

“We also have a lot planned for the second half of 2022, so our customers and fans are in store for a number of surprises.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Interview | Wayne Maxwell’s racing plans for 2022

Wayne Maxwell to defend Australian Superbike Championship crown in 2022

Trev –  So Wayne, that was a pretty short retirement….

Wayne Maxwell – “(Laughs) Yes that’s right, a little lesson not to speak before you were 100 per cent sure I guess…  

“2021 didn’t really work out how we thought it was going to work out. We thought the contact tracing and Covid was getting under control, but it wasn’t meant to be. 

“Anyhow, it was a successful year for us, and hopefully a good platform towards us having a good season in 2022.”

Wayne Maxwell – 2021 Australian Superbike Champion – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – You do have a lot going on in 2022, along with the normal husband and dad duties, you are continuing to expand your Ohvale program, and have also stepped up to run the inaugural FIM MiniGP Australia Series, a Road to MotoGP initiative between Dorna, FIM and Ohvale Europe which made its debut in 2021, and starts in Australia this year. You’ve been instrumental in getting the Ohvale days going in Australia, predominantly on small kart tracks, and have expanded to new tracks this year. I believe the pressures of running the series and promoting that business was part of the reasoning behind you initially choosing to pull the pin on your racing career.  What changes are you making to ensure you can stay on top of all these commitments in 2022?

Wayne Maxwell with son Archie – Image RbMotoLens

WM – “Obviously it’s a massive challenge, I have gone all-in with focus. I’ve got two fantastic partners with Nick and Dim in Ohvale. We are also surrounded by a great bunch of people around us and with the support of Motorcycling Australia it is going to be something great for us to help change things, to hopefully make going racing easier and help with the future of the young kids coming through and to have this great platform for a road to MotoGP. 

Rocket Ronny in action at a Port Melbourne Ohvale Ride Day – Image RbMotoLens

“To ensure all that doesn’t go wrong, I have finished up my day job to fully focus on Ohvale now, so I don’t have be out on building sites on the tools like I have for the last five years or so, which will give me a lot more flexibility and time to train, and then work a bit later at night once the kids go to bed.

Wayne Maxwell at one of the regular Ohvale ride days at Port Melbourne – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – Just glancing back to 2021 again, from the outside looking in, you looked to be doing it relatively easy at The Bend. I know looks can be deceptive, but the team must have given you a bike that was pretty much spot-on that weekend. 

WM – “Life, and especially racing, is so much about being in the right place at the right time, for me to be in that team, with Craig as the leader, Adrian’s commitment, along with everyone else, the main key people obviously,  Greg and Julie from Racer’s Edge, and Dale, all of our supporters, Barry and Ken Horner have got a wealth of knowledge and are obviously second to none when it comes to engineering.  Without the support of all those things needed to go racing, without the support of all those it doesn’t happen. Everyone actually enjoys being there. No one is grumpy, it is a fantastic environment, I guess that is what produces the results on track.” 

Craig McMartin working on the set-up of the Boost Mobile Ducati V4 R – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – How much time do you spend with Adrian going over the data, and providing feedback for him to fine tune the bike over the course of a race weekend? I presume you have a great baseline to work from now, then it is just a matter of fine tuning the package to the conditions over each day of the race weekend. 

WM – “We spend a little bit of time, I don’t spend too much time as I try to stay in my lane, I am the rider, everyone plays their role, everyone is equally important from the rider, to whoever makes the lunches, it doesn’t happen without everyone. 

“With Adrian I spend a little bit of time, probably mostly at night, we never really go out for dinner, we just stay together at our accommodation and eat there, as we all enjoy each other’s company. Once dinner finishes up, we have an ice-cream, then we pull the laptop out and have a look at some of the data for half an hour or so. Then the next morning Adrian will come back to me with some stuff, and we roll on from there.” 

Adrian Monti and Wayne Maxwell embrace at The Bend after Wayne wrapped up the championship – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – The systems now are so sophisticated that I imagine unless the bike gets really out of shape, you hardly even feel the traction control system working, is that right.  

WM – “Yeah. Honestly it is a very complex the way it is done. Every brand has a different strategy in the way they do it, from dropping cylinders, retarding ignition, or pulling the throttle back, or even a combination of all of the above. Unlike the MoTeC system that some teams are moving to this year, we can’t change the way all that works. We actually don’t have a lot of adjustment when it comes to that with the Marelli system, it is all set in the background pretty much like any other kit ECU, be that a Yamaha or a Honda or whatever, you can’t really change the background behind the way it works, you can only really change the numbers that they allow you to change. It’s not perfect, but we have a very good system and can work around it.” 

Wayne Maxwell – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – Engine brake control was something you were struggling early on with in regards to the standard ECU, which is the reason why you wanted to go MoTeC in the first place, yet you still did win races with the stock electronics, how much work is still spent on refining engine brake control with your current Magneti Marelli electronics?

WM – “It’s more than just you say the current engine brake control, yes we spend a little bit of time with the engine brake control, refining that, but it’s more the data to work out exactly what’s needed. Look at Toprak, doesn’t matter what you do with engine brake control if he has the back wheel in the air half the time.  And we can’t adjust the chassis, to say kick the front out so we still have good feel when the wheel comes off the ground, we run standard steering head angle and triple clamps, it is probably a bit more important for us than in some series where they can adjust the geometry more. 

Wayne Maxwell – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – As early advocates for MoTeC, would you and your team likely support a move to a control MoTeC ECU across the board? I know the Ducati and Honda team have made some big investments in the homologated kit now, but with Motorcycling Australia not having the resources and tools to plug into those systems, and thus ensure people are not accessing functionality that they shouldn’t be using, it does seem very open to potential abuse…?

WM – “It does. And just say you have got a Yamaha, and you are a customer with a kit ECU, what’s to say that the Factory Yamaha Racing Team are not using a different program, that you can’t even get.. In our circumstances with Marelli, everyone on a Ducati can get exactly what we have. 

“Or if we went to a MoTeC control ECU, which we would be 100 per cent supportive of, and having the same as everyone else, I feel that way everyone has the same and there are no excuses. 

“To my mind, racing has never been easier, at the moment, than it ever has. Everyone has access to the same tyres, no special tyres for special riders/teams, there is nothing like that, everything is accessible.  

“Back when I first started every manufacturer had two factory bikes, they had special tyres… Back then I think as a kid I was just naive to all that, I just thought well he is on the same bike and I am going to beat him, on the same bike…

“But right now I think the access is pretty equal. For people’s peace of mind, the control ECU is good in some respects. But of course you still have to drive it, you still have to be able to analyse the data, you’ve still got to be able to give good feedback.. And I still don’t think it is going to change the results.”

Wayne Maxwell testing at Phillip Island – Image by RBMotoLens

Trev – Nor do I think to a degree, not to any huge margin.  But in some ways racers have to be protected from themselves, and looking for things to blame other than themselves. So it would take that little metric out of the blame equation. 

Wayne – “Definitely.”

Trev – Do you think there is enough technical oversight in ASBK? Supersport 300 is starting to be called Superbike 300 around the pits, due to the amount of alleged cheating going on there. Of course we do have to allow Motorcycling Australia some leeway over the past couple of years of the pandemic, in regards to staffing and logistics issues, but do you think 2022 should be the time they started getting serious in this area? I have raised this with Motorcycling Australia via Peter Doyle, and while he said more oversight would be a great thing, he immediately pointed out the economic impact that these extra human resources would cost, and asked, would competitors swallow paying larger entry fees to help fund such policing of the rules? What’s your take on the situation? 

WM – “You are damned if you do, and you damned if you don’t if you are Motorcycling Australia.  You pull someone’s bike down only to find they are not cheating and they are going to be ropeable. Thus they are stuck between a rock and a hard place, they are working towards trying to find a happy medium of a system to put in place. But let’s be honest, if you are winning in Supersport 300 there is not a Superbike team kicking in the door to sign you up, it doesn’t really matter… It’s just a class for learning the ropes….

“I never won anything, because I was too big, in the smaller categories, not until we got to the big bikes, and got the experience and got better. I can guarantee you now that there are guys finishing fifth and sixth in those classes now, that will probably out-do the guys that have been winning in the years to come.”

Wayne Maxwell – 2021 Australian Superbike Champion – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – That’s an interesting way of looking at it…. Thanks for the chat Wayne, see you at Phillip Island in a few days time. 

Wayne – “See you then Trev.” 

Source: MCNews.com.au

Race Reports, Results, Points & Video Highlights from AMA SX Round Three

2022 Monster Energy AMA Supercross
Round Three – Petco Park, San Diego, CA

Report by Trevor Hedge – Images by Jeff Kardas


450 Heat One

Defending Champion Cooper Webb dominated the opening 450 Heat of the night from go to whoa while KTM team-mate Marvin Musquin gave chase.

Musquin was challenged at times for second place by Ken Roczen but the Frenchman held on and the German had to settle for third.

Roczen chased Musquin hard but had to settle for third

Justin Brayton had a strong heat race, running fourth throughout and crossing the line less than five-seconds behind the race winner in his first race back since testing positive for Covid.

Cooper Webb dominated the opening 450 Heat

450 Heat One Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Cooper Webb KTM  9 Laps
2 Marvin Musquin KTM  +00.814
3 Ken Roczen Honda +01.807
4 Justin Brayton Honda  +04.873
5 Dylan Ferrandis Yamaha  +13.123
6 Justin Bogle Suzuki  +14.516
7 Max Anstie KTM  +15.094
8 Dean Wilson Husqvarna  +15.856
9 Brandon Hartranft Suzuki  +17.911
10 Josh Hill KTM +19.856
11 Kyle Chisholm Yamaha +22.676
12 Cade Clason Honda +30.128
13 Fredrik Noren KTM +31.295
14 Justin Starling GASGAS +38.531
15 Joan Cros Kawasaki +41.678
16 Kevin Moranz KTM +44.799
17 RJ Wageman Yamaha 8 Laps
18 Scotty Wennerstrom Kawasaki +17.606
19 Joshua Greco Kawasaki  +39.553
20 Nick Schmidt Husqvarna 3 Laps

450 Heat Two

Joey Savatgy and Aaron Plessinger got hooked up together on lap one and lost a lot of time extricating themselves from each other while on the ground. Savatgy coming off worse and taking no further part in the Heat, the 27-year-old recently tore his ACL but raced Oakland and had planned to race all season but presumingly this incident may have caused further damage that saw him withdraw from the event.

Savatgy is still under there…

A couple of minutes in Adam Cianciarulo pulled out for some reason, picking up his mechanic and heading back to the pit truck.

McElrath started well but faded

Shane McElrath was strong early on before stalling his machine and losing plenty of ground. He recovered well to then battle Malcolm Stewart before finishing in sixth place.

No such dramas for fastest qualifier Jason Anderson. The new Kawasaki signing dominated while Justin Barcia and Eli Tomac battled over second place.

Jason Anderson looked like he would be the man to beat come the Main

Tomac eventually snuck past Barcia on the final lap to take that second place. Chase Sexton fourth, Malcolm Stewart fifth.

Tomac got Barcia on the final lap

Remarkably, Aaron Plessinger recovered from that opening lap misfortune that put him way behind to claim ninth place, thus earning his automatic qualification through to the Main.

450 Heat Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Jason Anderson Kawasaki 9 Laps
2 Eli Tomac Yamaha +05.775
3 Justin Barcia GASGAS +07.134
4 Chase Sexton Honda +07.878
5 Malcolm Stewart Husqvarna +16.113
6 Shane McElrath KTM +18.867
7 Alex Martin Yamaha +22.148
8 Mitchell Oldenburg Honda +23.166
9 Aaron Plessinger KTM +25.530
10 Ryan Breece Yamaha +27.484
11 Austin Politelli Honda +34.977
12 Adam Enticknap Suzuki +45.824
13 Deven Raper Kawasaki 8 Laps
14 Alex Ray Honda +03.594
15 Theodore Pauli Kawasaki +10.959
16 Vann Martin Yamaha +23.028
17 Bryson Gardner Honda +56.127
18 Aaron Siminoe Kawasaki 5 Laps
19 Adam Cianciarulo Kawasaki  2 Laps
20 Joey Savatgy KTM DNS

450 Main

The riders reported that the track was very tough and the physical effort was clear on their faces after even the relatively short seven-minute Heat races. Thus it was looking likely to be somewhat of a survival of the fittest come the Main, a 20-minute plus one lap test of physical endurance. 

It had already been a testing event for some with Joey Savatgy not making the Main after crashing in his Heat race, hurting himself and then not making the LCQ.  

Adam Cianciarulo retired from his Heat race after hurting his knee when saving a crash in the whoops. He then decided to not race the LCQ and chose to sit the event out, so he was another fancied rider missing from the starting gates.

Everyone got away cleanly when the gates dropped but emerging from turn one with the early race lead was Marvin Musquin ahead of Chase Sexton, Eli Tomac, Cooper Webb and Ken Roczen. 

Chase Sexton made his move on Musquin three-minutes into the race and took the lead. Moments later Eli Tomac pushed the Frenchman further back to third place. Webb was looming large in fourth along with Roczen.  Jason Anderson had worked his way past Dylan Ferrandis to move up into sixth place.  

Ken Roczen

Roczen slipped past Webb, and a few turns later both of them moved past Musquin, relegating the #25 to fifth.  Up front Sexton led Tomac by 2.4-seconds and Roczen was now starting to close on both of them. 

Jason Anderson then pushed his way past Webb in the whoops to move up to fourth place. With 13-minutes remaining on the shot clock Sexton led Tomac by 4.5-seconds.  Roczen was now looking to challenge Tomac but then made a mistake in the whoops which allowed Anderson to get up the inside of him and close off his line, putting Roczen on the deck, briefly, but long enough for the German to be demoted all the way back to eighth. 

With ten-minutes left Sexton’s lead was now six-seconds over Tomac. Jason Anderson then closed in on Tomac and made short work of the #3 Yamaha to take second place and then left Tomac in his dust. Anderson was on fire but Sexton had almost a seven-second buffer with less than nine-minutes to run.

Just after writing that he was on fire, Anderson’s Kawasaki started smoking…The KX450F was now losing power and Anderson was losing places as he tried to bring the bike home and salvage some points. His team pit-board saying ‘as long as you can’, indicating to him that he should still try to make the chequered flag. 

Due to Anderson’s misfortune, Tomac was now second, Ferrandis third, Webb fourth and Malcolm Stewart fifth.  With four-minutes left on the shot clock Sexton had an eight-second buffer over Tomac. 

Chase Sexton went on to take his maiden 450 victory in dominant fashion.  

Chase Sexton took his maiden 450 victory in dominant fashion.

Eli Tomac came home second while Dylan Ferrandis managed to stave off a late charge from Cooper Webb to claim the final step on the rostrum. 

Malcolm Stewart fifth ahead of Aaron Plessinger while Ken Roczen salvaged 16 Points for seventh after that costly earlier incident. 

Justin Barcia eighth while Jason Anderson gently coasted his smoking machine home to ninth.  Marvin Musquin rounded out the top ten ahead of Justin Brayton. 

After the event AMA officials then sanctioned two riders. Justin Bogle and Justin Barcia had been conducting some argy-bargy in the event. Barcia tipped Bogle over early on, then when he came around to lap Bogle later in the Main, Bogle punted Barcia off the track.  Barcia was penalised one position, dropping him from eighth to ninth in the official results, while Bogle was disqualified and thus loses the single point he had scored in the Main.

Three different winners in the opening three rounds, and with only 14-points covering the top ten, this is the closest AMA Supercross has ever been three rounds in. 

Barcia arrived in San Diego with the red plate but leaves in fourth place. While Eli Tomac leaps from sixth into the championship lead! 

Jason Anderson was second on the points table but tonight’s machine problems saw him relegated to sixth.

Chase Sexton’s victory catapulted him from ninth right up to equal second with defending champion Cooper Webb, both of them now only a single point behind new championship leader Tomac. 

Chase Sexton took his maiden 450 victory in dominant fashion.

450 Video Highlights


450 Main Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Chase Sexton Honda 26 Laps
2 Eli Tomac Yamaha +06.001
3 Dylan Ferrandis Yamaha +07.758
4 Cooper Webb KTM +09.133
5 Malcolm Stewart Husqvarna +12.438
6 Aaron Plessinger KTM +16.124
7 Ken Roczen Honda +16.775
8 Jason Anderson Kawasaki +32.936
9 Justin Barcia GASGAS +32.936
10 Marvin Musquin KTM +35.727
11 Justin Brayton Honda +37.895
12 Max Anstie KTM +41.623
13 Shane McElrath KTM 25 Laps
14 Dean Wilson Husqvarna +01.453
15 Brandon Hartranft Suzuki +19.592
16 Mitchell Oldenburg Honda +24.461
17 Kyle Chisholm Yamaha +26.008
18 Josh Hill KTM +50.167
19 Ryan Breece Yamaha 24 Laps
20 Alex Martin Yamaha +08.385
21 Fredrik Noren KTM 10 Laps
22 Justin Bogle Suzuki 22 Laps

450 Post Race Press Conference

450 Championship Standings (Round 3 of 17)

Pos Rider Rnd1 Rnd2 Rnd3 Points
1 Eli Tomac 6 4 2 59
2 Chase Sexton 5 9 1 58
3 Cooper Webb 2 7 4 58
4 Justin Barcia 3 3 9 56
5 Jason Anderson 10 1 8 54
6 Aaron Plessinger 9 2 6 54
7 Ken Roczen 1 13 7 52
8 Malcolm Stewart 7 5 5 52
9 Marvin Musquin 4 8 10 47
10 Dylan Ferrandis 16 6 3 45
11 Dean Wilson 12 10 14 33
12 Max Anstie 14 15 12 28
13 Joey Savatgy 8 11 27
14 Shane McElrath 18 14 13 24
15 Adam Cianciarulo 11 12 23
16 Justin Brayton 13 11 22
17 Brandon Hartranft 17 16 15 21
18 Mitchell Oldenburg 15 16 15
19 Kyle Chisholm 18 17 11
20 Alex Martin 17 20 9
21 Josh Hill 20 18 8
22 Justin Starling 21 19 6
23 Ryan Breece 22 19 5
24 Fredrik Noren 20 21 5
25 Cade Clason 19 4
26 Joan Cros 21 2
27 Justin Bogle 22 1

250 Heat One

Hunter Lawrence won his heat race from Garrett Marchbanks and Chris Blose.   

Carson Mumford had led early on before slipping to fourth as the race progressed. 

250 Heat One Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Hunter Lawrence Honda  9 Laps
2 Garrett Marchbanks Yamaha  +02.233
3 Chris Blose GASGAS +07.794
4 Carson Mumford Suzuki +11.127
5 Carson Brown KTM +15.853
6 Nate Thrasher Yamaha +17.315
7 Kaeden Amerine KTM +23.037
8 Derek Kelley KTM +25.309
9 Cole Thompson Yamaha  +29.381
10 Ryan Surratt Yamaha +29.934
11 Richard Taylor Yamaha +33.043
12 Jerry Robin GASGAS +34.980
13 Brandon Ray Kawasaki +36.451
14 Mcclellan Hile Honda +37.788
15 Gared Steinke KTM +45.266
16 Preston Taylor Kawasaki +45.326
17 Chris Howell Kawasaki +50.549
18 Nicholas  Nisbet Honda +55.206
19 Justin  Rodbell Kawasaki +1m12.773
20 Wyatt Lyonsmith Kawasaki 8 Laps

250 Heat Two

Christian Craig took out the second Heat in a race that was significantly faster than what we witnessed in the opening Heat.  Both Craig and second placed finisher Michael Mosiman recorded mid-high 48s, a second quicker than what the first and second place finishers had recorded in the opening Heat. 

250 Heat Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Christian Craig Yamaha 9 Laps
2 Michael Mosiman GASGAS +01.212
3 Vince Friese Honda +12.423
4 Jo Shimoda Kawasaki +15.461
5 Dilan Schwartz Suzuki +23.727
6 Robbie Wageman Yamaha +26.705
7 Jalek Swoll Husqvarnar +29.330
8 Dylan Walsh Kawasaki +33.945
9 Dylan Woodcock Husqvarna +38.896
10 Mitchell Harrison GASGAS +40.967
11 Dominique Thury Yamaha +47.184
12 Cheyenne Harmon Honda +48.736
13 Colby Copp GASGAS +52.724
14 Maxwell Sanford Honda +1m11.890
15 Geran Stapleton GASGAS 8 Laps
16 Tre Fierro Kawasaki +01.396
17 Hunter Schlosser Yamaha 7 Laps
18 David Pulley Yamaha +08.507
19 Devin Harriman KTM 4 Laps
20 Logan Karnow Kawasaki DNF

250 Main

Carnage at the start…

A huge melee at turn one saw championship leader Christian Craig get tangled up with Jo Shimoda which also brought down Ryan Surratt, Garrett Marchbanks, Chris Blose and Robbie Wageman.

Melee at turn one

No such drama for Michael Mosiman though who took the holeshot and immediately started to pull away with a clean track in front of him.

Hunter Lawrence was quickly up into to second, Carson Mumford third and Nate Thrasher fourth.

Michael Mosiman got away to a great start

Thrasher moved past Mumford to take third place five laps into the race while Craig was scything his way up the field after that turn one incident, already up to tenth place at that juncture.

By half-race distance Craig was up to sixth. A couple of minutes later he was fourth…

Hunter Lawrence piled the pressure on Mosiman throughout

Up front Hunter Lawrence was keeping the pressure on Mosiman but the GASGAS rider was holding on. The gap was rarely any more than a second, despite plenty of lapped traffic.

Both Mosiman and Lawrence then made a mistake in the whoops, Mosiman baulked by a lapper, and then Lawrence got crossed up and hit the back of Mosiman, both of them almost going down but Mosiman remained upright to come out the other side of the incident with a 3.5-second advantage over Lawrence with a minute plus one lap remaining in the race.

That essentially looked to have decided the race, Mosiman had the breathing space to cruise home but then lapped riders came into the picture once again! Mosiman got tripped up by a lapper once again but Hunter did not have quite enough left in the bag to get the better of Mosiman before the chequered flag.

Christian Craig fought his way from last to a podium finish in an impressive display of riding

Christian Craig pushed Friese off the podium on the penultimate lap in what was a spectacular recovery from the back of the field. Crossing the line only 25-seconds behind the race winner.

250 Podium

Jo Shimoda also did a great job of damage control to finish fifth place.

And that winner was Mosiman, the 22-year-old taking a historic first win after leading the entire race from holeshot to chequered flag.

The win promoted Mosiman up to third in the standings

In the championship chase Christian Craig retains the lead in the 250 West ranks, Hunter Lawrence only gaining two-points over the Star Yamaha rider to now trail by six-points.

The win promoted Mosiman up to third in the standings, five-points behind Lawrence, and eight-points ahead of Friese.

Michael Mosiman has captured his first AMA Supercross victory. Not to mention, it’s GASGAS Factory Racing’s first win in the 250SX class.

250 Main Video Highlights

250 Main Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps/Interval
1 Michael Mosiman GASGAS 20 Laps
2 Hunter Lawrence Honda +01.361
3 Christian Craig Yamaha +25.109
4 Vince Friese Honda +27.058
5 Jo Shimoda Kawasaki +44.178
6 Carson Mumford Suzuki +52.302
7 Jalek Swoll Husqvarna 19 Laps
8 Nate Thrasher Yamaha +02.854
9 Cole Thompson Yamaha +05.416
10 Carson Brown KTM +08.076
11 Dylan Walsh Kawasaki +10.631
12 Derek Kelley KTM +12.083
13 Chris Blose GASGAS +13.880
14 Robbie Wageman Yamaha +19.018
15 Ryan Surratt Yamaha +38.540
16 Devin Harriman KTM 18 Laps
17 Dilan Schwartz Suzuki +12.378
18 Dylan Woodcock Husqvarna +35.211
19 Brandon Ray Kawasaki +46.603
20 Kaeden Amerine KTM 17 Laps
21 Justin  Rodbell Kawasaki +44.762
22 Garrett Marchbanks  Yamaha 10 Laps

250 Post Race Press Conference

250 West Championship Standings (Round 3 of 10)

Pos Rider Rnd1 Rnd2 Rnd2 Points
1 Christian Craig 26 26 21 73
2 Hunter Lawrence 21 23 23 67
3 Michael Mosiman 17 19 26 62
4 Vince Friese 18 17 19 54
5 Jo Shimoda 16 16 18 50
6 Seth Hammaker 23 21 44
7 Nate Thrasher 11 18 15 44
8 Carson Mumford 13 9 17 39
9 Robbie Wageman 15 13 9 37
10 Chris Blose 12 14 10 36
11 Garrett Marchbanks 19 15 1 35
12 Cole Thompson 9 11 14 34
13 Dilan Schwartz 8 12 6 26
14 Carson Brown 10 13 23
15 Ryan Surratt 7 7 8 22
16 Dylan Walsh 6 0 12 18
17 Dominique Thury 14 3 17
18 Jalek Swoll 16 16
19 Devin Harriman 1 8 7 16
20 Derek Kelley 2 11 13
21 Logan Karnow 5 6 11
22 Mitchell Harrison 10 10
23 Hunter Schlosser 4 5 9
24 Dylan Woodcock 4 5 9
25 Kaeden Amerine 3 0 3 6
26 Brandon Ray 0 4 4
27 Gared Steinke 0 2 0 2
28 Justin  Rodbell 2 2
29 Jerry Robin 1 0 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

A record sales year for BMW Motorrad across the globe

2021 BMW Motorrad Sales Figures

BMW Motorrad finished the year with a record sales result despite major logistical challenges stemming from the global pandemic. With 194,261 units (+14.8%), 2021 (previous year: 169,272), was the best year since BMW Motorrad was founded

Europe showed strong sales growth in 2021. Italy (16,034 units / +15.2 %), Spain (12,616 units / +14.4 %) and France (19,887 units / +13.4 %) were the most important growth drivers and able to continuously increase their sales figures.  In total, 9,100 more vehicles were delivered in Europe, than in the previous year.

Germany remains by far the largest single market for BMW Motorrad. With 25,972 units sold, BMW Motorrad will again defend its position as the most successful motorcycle manufacturer in the German market in 2021.

The UK’s exit from the EU had no significant impact on BMW sales. With an increase of 26.6% and sales of 9,263 units in Great Britain/Ireland (previous year 7,315 units), the British market is stronger than ever before.

BMW is also continuing to expand in the Asian market. China (14,309 units / +21.4%) is one of the strongest growth and volume markets in Asia with double-digit growth. India continues to develop strongly, posting significant growth of 102.5% and 5,191 units.  In Australia BMW sales were up a sight 0.5 per cent to 2891.

The market in the USA developed very positively for BMW Motorrad in 2021. With 16,030 motorcycles and scooters sold (previous year: 12,135 units), BMW Motorrad achieved an impressive +32.1% growth in the USA.

Sales in Brazil are not growing quite as fast, but they are increasing steadily. With 11,150 vehicles sold (previous year: 10,707 units) and a growth of +4.1%, the South American market is among the top 7 BMW Motorrad markets in 2021.

Sales of the traditionally strong R Series increased significantly overall. Thanks to the new top-of-the-line R 1250 RT tourer and the four emotional BMW cruisers from the R18 model family, sales figures in the flat-twin boxer segment once again grew strongly, accounting for around half of the total 194,261 vehicles sold.

A total of over 60,000 units of the two touring enduros R 1250 GS and GS Adventure alone, were delivered to customers in 2021.  In Australia sales of both the R 1250 GS and R 1250 GS Adventure models were also up, with 821 sales registered.

In the big-bore Supersports market BMW performs very strongly in Australia with the S 1000 RR the #1 selling sportsbike in Australia by a considerable margin.  The S 1000 XR and F 900 XR sport-touring models also sold well in Australia.

The BMW M 1000 RR was the first true M motorcycle from BMW Motorrad to enter the market in 2021 and 1070 units of the model were sold globally.

Markus Schramm, Head of BMW Motorrad

I look forward to 2022 with great confidence as we start the year with what is sure to be the strongest product offering ever. Our four cruiser models from the BMW R 18 model family are entering their first full year of sales together. In addition, in the first few months of 2022 alone, the market launches of the all-electric BMW CE 04 and our four superior six-cylinder models K 1600 GT/GTL/B and Grand America, which have been further improved in all respects, are absolute highlights in our range and will generate a further sales drive in the first half of the year. We also have a lot planned for the second half of 2022, so our customers and fans are in store for a number of surprises.

Source: MCNews.com.au

TNT 135 Added to the Benelli Summer Sale 🔥

TNT 135 Added to the Summer Sale!

To celebrate the Australian Summer, Benelli is now offering the TNT 135 at a hot price of $3,990 ride away! You can also jump on some other great offers, including a $600 Gear Pack with the purchase of the multi award-winning TRK 502 Adventure-Sport, or the Sport-Naked 752s!

Available for immediate delivery, head down to your nearest Benelli Dealership for a test ride, or visit our website for more information. Here’s to a Summer to remember!

Summer just got even better!

The team at Benelli know that there’s nothing quite like summer-time riding. So as an early Christmas present, we’re giving you an incredible deal across the ENTIRE Benelli motorcycle range.

Until the end of January 2021, get a super low 3.99% PA* comparison rate across the multi award-winning range, including Italy’s number #1 selling model, the TRK 502.

Most powerful in class, equipped with a 5-speed gearbox that allows easily achievable highway speeds. The new TNT has been created to win the hearts of a user that demands the utmost from their equipment, while still providing an unparalleled, enjoyable experience.

Take to the streets for just $3,990 ride away!

Source: MCNews.com.au

$500 Off + Bonus Rack with CUx Ducati Special Edition⚡

$500 OFF + BONUS REAR RACK!

Super SOCO has teamed up with Ducati to create the CUx Ducati Special Edition electric scooter – a luxury version of the CUx model. To celebrate the last of the Ducati Special Edition CUx Smart Scooters, Super SOCO is giving you $500 off the ride away price, plus a BONUS rear carrier rack!*

Race into Super SOCO dealerships today to secure one of the last Special Edition CUx scooters ever, but hurry, this offer is valid until 28th February 2022 or until stocks last.

Crafted with a combination of intelligent technologies and functional design, the CUx electric scooter was engineered to give you the most out of your riding experience. Free yourself with the CUx electric scooter!*

Source: MCNews.com.au

Australian Electric Motor Co opens first electric bike dealership

Australian Electric Motor Co (AEMC) will become the first all-electric motorcycle dealership in the country when it opens its doors on the Gold Coast tomorrow (24 January 2022).

Company founder and regional director Tobin Page says they will import electric motorcycles from Italian electric motorcycle company Energica who supplied the bikes for the MotoE series.

It means Energica will be available on five continents.

Tobin says Energica will be closely followed by the return of Zero Motorcycles to Australia after five years

Zero motorcycles electric motorcycles
Zero motorcycles

Zero is the largest electric motorcycle company in the world. They pulled the plug on imports into Australia in 2017, citing unfavourable exchange rates and taxes.

AEMC also have their eyes set on “a number of premium electronic motorcycle brands both within Australia and internationally”.

“We’re bringing the very best electric motorcycles to the Australian market, which has been patiently waiting for this step to the future,” says Tobin.

“There’s so much innovation happening in electric vehicles and it’s about to be a very exciting year for people wanting to make the switch.”

The AEMC dealership was developed with the support of City of Gold Coast’s investment and business attraction program, which supports growth industries that will contribute to the local economy.

“Our City promotes sustainability both within council and across the wider community,” says Gold Coast Mayor Tom Tate.

“Seeing businesses like AEMC establish their presence on the coast sends a powerful message about how we are diversifying our economy and attracting innovative private enterprise. I wish them every success.”

Customers can book test rides and inspect the motorcycles from tomorrow (24 January).

Australian Electric Motor Co was established by the English Electric Motor Co, the biggest dedicated electric motorcycle retailer in the UK.

AEMC also offers insurance, finance and trade-ins, and will host demo days.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com