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Manuel Lettenbichler the victor | 2019 Red Bull Romaniacs


Securing the win on the final day of racing in Romania, Manuel Lettenbichler claimed his debut victory in WESS. He was joined on the podium by Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Alfredo Gomez (ESP) and Graham Jarvis (GB).

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Manuel Lettenbichler
Manuel Lettenbichler

Holding the provisional lead at the end of the penultimate day, Lettenbichler was determined to claim the top step of the podium on the final day of racing. With a slender one-minute and seven-second lead over Gomez, the German pushed hard from the off and following the early climbs maintained his position at the front.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Overview
Red Bull Romaniacs

Gomez appeared to struggle to find his rhythm early on, dropping back behind a charging Jonny Walker (GB). The Red Bull KTM Factory Racing rider was on top form and provisionally led on corrected time entering the service point.

But with heavy rain greeting riders, the already challenging trails proved slippery and unpredictable. Gomez found his rhythm in the rain and brought the fight back to Lettenbichler. The duo swapped and changed position with each passing section.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Manuel Lettenbichler
Manuel Lettenbichler

Lettenbichler entered the Gusterita finishing arena first and worked hard to complete the remaining climbs as quickly as possible. Anxiously waiting for Gomez to arrive, the KTM rider kept one eye on the clock and one on his rival as the seconds ticked by.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Nathan Watson
Nathan Watson

The nerves soon turned to joy and with Lettenbichler declared the winner, the celebrations could begin. For Gomez it was a case of close, but not close enough. Despite giving his best effort on arguably the toughest day of this year’s race it was not to be and he had to settle for the runner-up result. Putting hopes of another victory in this year’s championship on hold, Jarvis ended his week on the third step of the podium.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Alfredo Gomez
Alfredo Gomez

Manuel Lettenbichler (KTM – GER)

“I’m over the moon right now, I really can’t believe it. This race is really something special and to win here feels amazing. The event is so long and so hard and anything can happen, so I’m so pumped to take the win. It’s been an incredible five days and so gnarly, especially with all the rain we’ve had. Some of the uphills that would have been tricky anyway have become near impossible today. It’s 10 years since my dad won Red Bull Romaniacs so it’s great to be able to match his achievement – the Lettenbichlers are definitely going to celebrate tonight!”

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Manuel Lettenbichler Andreas
Ten years after his father Andreas took victory at Romaniacs, Manuel Lettenbichler won the 2019 edition of the famous event

Alfredo Gomez (Husqvarna – ESP)

“It’s been an amazing race, I’m so happy to get on the podium. The first day didn’t go so well for me but then on the second day I had a better feeling on the bike and was able to take the win. The last two days also went well and it was great to have such a close fight with Mani and Graham. Obviously I’m disappointed not to have taken the win but it still feels great to come second after such a long and demanding race. Thank you to everyone who helped me over the event – my team and all the fans – I’ll come back even stronger next year.”

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Alfredo Gomez
Alfredo Gomez

Graham Jarvis (Husqvarna – GB)

“It was definitely the hardest day today – it was so slippery on the hills after the rain and there was a lot of pushing. I’m happy just to get to the finish today – I was going well up to the service point then I had a crash and lost my GPS. After that I just tried to tag onto the other riders so I knew where to go. I did get lost a couple of times, so I’m really happy to get third. Overall the event has gone well, it’s been one of the closest and I’m happy that I was still in contention right up to the end.”

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Graham Jarvis
Graham Jarvis

With the top three proving themselves the main contenders, Blazusiak was a definite improver as the week wore on. Hampered by his technical issue on day one, a strong ride on the final two days brought him back up the leaderboard for fourth. A really strong ride from Walker for third on Off Road Day Four, saw him complete the top five in the final classification.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Taddy Blazusiak
Taddy Blazusiak

Taddy Blazusiak

“Considering what happened on day one, I’m happy with how things went. On the second day, I knew I had lost a lot of time so just kept to a solid pace to avoid making any mistakes. After that things went well and I was able to push. I was hoping for a podium, but unfortunately, I simply lost too much time early on. Still, to place fourth in what is my first ever finish at Romaniacs is not bad at all. This race is tough and especially like today when it’s raining it really pushes you to the limit. Experience and set up is also really important so I’ll take what I’ve learned and come back stronger next year.”

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Taddy Blazusiak
Taddy Blazusiak

Jonny Walker

“Obviously it’s not been the best Romaniacs for me, it would have been nice to get on top of the podium again, but I have to take some positives from the race. I started off strong but was struggling on a lot of the hills and that was tiring me out too much, especially as my wrist is still a concern. I kept going though and then for the last day we made some big changes to the bike and suspension and it seemed to work really well – I led the final day for a good while. I’m pleased with how things ended up and feel I’ve finally turned things around now for the WESS championship. Really looking forward to my home race at Hawkstone Park now.”

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Jonny Walker
Jonny Walker

Behind the top five, drama struck Sherco Factory Racing’s Mario Roman. Holding fourth overall, the Spaniard had a bad day at the office in seventh. Despite a strong three days previous, he slipped to seventh overall. His loss was Billy Bolt’s gain, with the British rider moving up to sixth overall.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Mario Roman
Mario Roman

Signing off on an impressive week, JD Gunnex KTM Racing privateer David Cyprian (CZ) placed ninth in the rain to end round five eighth overall. TTR Officine Rigamonti’s Pol Tarres (ESP) and Josep Garcia (KTM-ESP) completed the top 10 in ninth and tenth respectively.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Josep Garcia Montana
Josep Garcia

Anthony Solar was the first Australian home in the Gold Class at Red Bull Romaniacs. With a Silver top 10 finish on his first trip in 2017, he returned to the event this year to go for Gold against the best Extreme riders in the World. He completed the event in 23rd outright. 

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Graham Jarvis
These three Aussies ran the same course as hard enduro legends like Grahama Jarvis (pictured).

Countrymen Chris Perry and Adam Giles also took on the Gold Class challenge and while Perry made it to the last day he had to join Giles in the list of non-finishers. Still, massive respect to these guys for taking on Romaniacs in the premier category.  Chris Perry spoke to Wildwood promoter Steven Braszell after the event. 

Chris Perry

“Couldn’t make it through the race track today, I was just too worn out and then with all the rain the track was just impossible. I’m totally fucked now but I’m definitely training and coming back next year! Some of these gold sections we done are just so far ridiculous I can’t explain it!”


Silver

In the Silver class a final day win for Britain’s Sam Winterburn couldn’t deny Spain’s Josu Artola the top step of the podium. Opting to play safe and settle for second was enough to see the Spaniard win the Silver category outright. Spain’s Alberto Aramburu placed third overall in Silver.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Final Climb
The final climb at Red Bull Romaniacs

Josu Artola (Husqvarna – ESP) – Silver Class Winner

“I’m so pleased to win the Silver Class. I won the first three days and it would have been great to have posted the fastest time today, but I decided it would be better to take it steady to make sure I got the victory. The hills were so slippery and at Red Bull Romaniacs anything can happen, so I just followed today’s winner to the finish. It feels great to win here at one of the toughest races – I’m so happy.”

Shane Moss was the first Aussie home in the Silver category, finishing 18th while Adam Poole was 24th and Tim Gibson 39th. 


Bronze

Romania’s Radu Sardarescu grabbed the final day’s win, but shadowing him home for second saw Poland’s Marcin Welglarz claim the overall Bronze class victory. In the final classification he was joined on the podium by Eric Slominski (USA) and Jean Michel Vigand (FRA).

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Bronze Winner Marcin Weglarz
Poland’s Marcin Welglarz claimed victory in the Bronze category

Brent Brady was the first Australian home in Bronze with a highly creditable sixth place. Countrymen Cameron Brice scored 22nd, Christian Barrett 33rd, Jason Beaton 49th, Raymond Borg 51st, Robert Kingston 73rd and Nicholas Kirk 74th. 


Iron

History was made in the Iron class with Anna Schmolzl becoming the first woman to ever win a category in Red Bull Romaniacs. The German was a model of consistency this week never faltering outside the top three, earning her a commanding 20-minute margin of victory over Danny Melvin (USA) and Mexico’s Eduardo Martinez.

Red Bull Romaniacs WESS Day Anna Schmolzl
Anna Schmolzl became the first woman to ever win a category in Red Bull Romaniacs when she took out the Iron Class

First Aussie home in Iron was Aaron Mcfadzen in 35th.  Dominic Dercole was 48th, Brenden Murphy 63rd and Joshua Devine 64th.

Congratulations and respect to all the Australian riders that had a go, finishing or not. 

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Trying
So near but yet so far for some…

The World Enduro Super Series continues with round six at Hawkstone Park Cross-Country, UK on September 21-22.

Red Bull Romaniacs Final Manuel Lettenbichler
Manuel Lettenbichler now leads Gomez and Jarvis in WESS Championship points standings

2019 Red Bull Romaniacs
Day Four Results

Gold Class

  1. Manuel Lettenbichler (KTM – GER) 5:37:59
  2. Alfredo Gomez (Husqvarna – ESP) 5:39:16
  3. Jonny Walker (KTM – GB) 5:43:27
  4. Graham Jarvis (Husqvarna – GB) 5:46:11
  5. Taddy Blazusiak (KTM – POL) 5:53:39
  6. Billy Bolt (Husqvarna – GB) 6:54:00
  7. Nathan Watson (KTM – GB) 6:55:41
  8. Josep Garcia (KTM – ESP) 7:05:03
  9. David Cyprian (KTM – CZ) 7:17:24
  10. Pol Tarres (Husqvarna – ESP) 7:24:43…

Silver Class

  1. Sam Winterburn (GB) 4:57:55
  2. Josu Artola (ESP) 5:02:00
  3. Alberto Aramburu (ESP) 5:06:13
  4. Emanuel Gyenes (ROU) 5:14:09…

Bronze Class

  1. Radu Sardarescu (ROU) 4:33:18
  2. Marcin Welglarz (POL) 4:35:26
  3. Eric Slominski (USA) 4:35:43
  4. Marius Muntean (ROU) 4:37:38
  5. Mark Galbraith (NZL) 4:49:25…

Iron Class

  1. Tom Simpson (GB) 4:11:57
  2. Danny Melvin (USA) 4:17:54
  3. Anna Schmolzl (GER) 4:26:32
  4. Eduardo Martinez (MEX) 4:25:01…

2019 Red Bull Romaniacs
Final Overall Classificiation

Gold Class

  1. Manuel Lettenbichler (KTM – GER) 20:39:51
  2. Alfredo Gomez (Husqvarna – ESP) 20:42:15
  3. Graham Jarvis (Husqvarna – GB) 20:52:12
  4. Taddy Blazusiak (KTM – POL) 21:25:36
  5. Jonny Walker (KTM – GB) 21:30:40
  6. Billy Bolt (Husqvarna – GB) 23:16:34
  7. Mario Roman (Sherco – ESP) 23:36:25
  8. David Cyprian (KTM – CZ) 23:48:33
  9. Pol Tarres (Husqvarna – ESP) 24:42:30
  10. Josep Garcia (KTM – ESP) 25:08:26…

Silver Class

  1. Josu Artola (ESP) 18:57:20
  2. Sam Winterburn (GB) 19:39:55
  3. Alberto Aramburu (ESP) 20:18:14
  4. Emanuel Gyenes (ROU) 20:31:54
  5. Dustin McCarthy (USA) 20:35:35…

Bronze Class

  1. Marcin Weglarz (POL) 17:43:32
  2. Eric Slominski (USA) 17:53:43
  3. Jean Michel Vigand (FRA) 18:03:04
  4. Radu Sardarescu (ROU) 18:17:13
  5. Brent Brady (AUS) 18:45:04…

Iron Class

  1. Anna Schmolzl (GER) 16:09:43
  2. Danny Melvin (USA) 16:31:13
  3. Eduardo Martinez (MEX) 16:35:17
  4. Tom Simpson (GB) 16:48:18
  5. Agostino Crema (ITA) 17:11:07…

WESS Championship Standings (After round 5)

  1. Manuel Lettenbichler (KTM – GER) 3570 pts
  2. Graham Jarvis (Husqvarna – GB) 3460 pts
  3. Alfredo Gomez (Husqvarna – ESP) 3164
  4. Mario Roman (Sherco – ESP) 2940 pts
  5. Billy Bolt (Husqvarna – GB) 2725 pts
  6. Jonny Walker (KTM – GB) 2700 pts
  7. Josep Garcia (KTM – ESP) 2615 pts
  8. Taddy Blazusiak (KTM – POL) 2590 pts
  9. Nathan Watson (KTM – GB) 2091 pts
  10. Pol Tarres (Husqvarna – ESP) 1965 pts…

WORLD ENDURO SUPER SERIES
2019 SCHEDULE

Round 1: Toyota Porto Extreme XL Lagares (Portugal) May 10-12
Round 2: Trèfle Lozérien AMV (France) May 17-19
Round 3: Erzbergrodeo Red Bull Hare Scramble (Austria) May 30-June 2
Round 4: Hixpania Hard Enduro (Spain) June 21-23
Round 5: Red Bull Romaniacs (Romania) July 30-August 3
Round 6: Hawkstone Park Cross Country (United Kingdom) September 21-22
Round 7: BR2 Enduro Solsona (Spain) October 5-6
Round 8: GetzenRodeo (Germany) November 2

Source: MCNews.com.au

KTM front row milestone for Zarco in timely breakthrough

News 4 Aug 2019

KTM front row milestone for Zarco in timely breakthrough

Frenchman takes advantage of mixed conditions to land P3 on Brno grid.

Image: Supplied.

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Johann Zarco enjoyed his first real success of the 2019 MotoGP season by claiming the Austrian manufacturer’s first-ever front row start in the premier class at Brno.

The Frenchman will start from third aboard the RC16 at today’s Czech Republic grand prix after advancing through Q1 and then shining in mixed conditions experienced throughout Q2.

“This feels pretty good because I have been going through a tough time,” Zarco said. “I’m still struggling, but the wet makes a reset for everyone. In the afternoon I found a good way and great confidence – I could feel the bike and the tyres. The strategy to go with slick tyres at the end was complicated and didn’t feel it.

“Rain tyres were a bit too hard for pole position, but I had good lap from earlier in the session. Anyway, this brings a good feeling for the team because I needed this and it shows I still have this fighting spirit that is necessary for this level.”

It was a stellar afternoon for the factory KTM operation, with Spaniard Pol Espargaro also making his way through Q1 to eventually qualify fifth on the grid. It equals his personal best qualifying result on the RC16, also starting fifth at Circuit of the Americas earlier this year.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Scott Redding tops BSB qualifying at Thruxton

2019 British Superbike Championship
Round Seven – Thruxton – Saturday


Scott Redding claimed his third pole position of the Bennetts British Superbike Championship season with a last lap dash in the final two minutes of the final Datatag Qualifying session as he snatched the top spot from Tommy Bridewell at Thruxton.

The final stage of Qualifying was extended to 12 minutes when light rain began to fall, but with it stopping and starting during the crucial final stage, the battle for pole went down to the wire with the fastest rider changing eight times before the chequered flag.

Initially Christian Iddon had tried to set an early lap time and he went to the top of the timing screens for Tyco BMW ahead of Bridewell, but a few minutes later Andrew Irwin had surged to the top, however just 60 seconds later his brother Glenn claimed the leading position.

Redding had been tentative initially when the session got underway but then with six minutes on the clock he fired the Be Wiser Ducati to the top of the times, but he didn’t maintain it to the finish as Bridewell then posted his fastest lap of the session to put the Oxford Racing Ducati ahead of the opposition.

However Redding was ready to go for another time attack in the fight for pole position and he launched ahead with less than two minutes on the clock to bag the top time in Datatag Qualifying ahead of Bridewell.

Scott Redding – P1

“I am so happy to be on pole here. These guys [Bridewell and Hickman] sound like they had a strategy going on in that session listening to what they just said! I haven’t got time for strategies this weekend, with zero laps around here before I just need to try and learn everything I can at every moment. I’m making mistakes, but I’m pushing on the limit. Then it started raining and basically the guys in the team said to me this track is super grippy in the rain so you should be alright, so I took that on the shoulder and I took the chance. I saw some of the boys putting hands up and I saw Tommy going out on his used tyre; seeing all these things I just thought to myself I’m going to do my own thing. I was going to go in the pits but then I saw Irwin go in, but I decided to just go and take a chance. I stuck it into Church, it was raining a bit, and I had both wheels sliding but I just thought to myself “hold it for one more lap. To come away with the pole was something I didn’t real expect today, but for sure something that I wanted. I have been working on race distance as I hear a lot of talk about saving the tyres and I was in a rhythm and I think that helped. I am happy and now I am looking forward to some good races tomorrow!”

Peter Hickman had been moving back up the order in the closing stages after a positive start and he was able to seal his second front row qualifying performance of the season.

BSB Thruxton QP Hickman
Peter Hickman

Josh Brookes will head the second row; the Be Wiser Ducati rider decided to hold out in the opening stages of the session but he was able to move into fourth, pushing the racing brothers Andrew and Glenn into fifth and sixth respectively.

Ryan Vickers had his strongest qualifying performance of his rookie season in seventh place ahead of Jason O’Halloran and Iddon who completed the riders in Q3 for Tyco BMW.

BSB Thruxton QP Bridewell
Tommy Bridewell

However it was disappointment for Tarran Mackenzie who crashed out in the opening stage of Datatag Qualifying, sustaining a left wrist fracture, the same injury sustained by Joe Francis, which both riders now unfit ahead of tomorrow’s two races.

Thruxton BSB Qualifying Results

  1. Scott Redding (Be Wiser Ducati) 1m:14.803s
  2. Tommy Bridewell (Oxford Racing Ducati) +0.059s
  3. Peter Hickman (Smiths Racing BMW) +0.502s
  4. Josh Brookes (Be Wiser Ducati) +0.668s
  5. Andrew Irwin (Honda Racing) +0.733s
  6. Glenn Irwin (Tyco BMW) +0.774s
  7. Ryan Vickers (RAF Regular & Reserve Kawasaki) +0.940s
  8. Jason O’Halloran (McAMS Yamaha) +1.101s
  9. Christian Iddon (Tyco BMW) +1.139s

Supersport

Kyle Ryde took the first Dickies British Supersport GP2 win on track at Thruxton, slipping past Supersport class winner Jack Kennedy at the final corner. Launching off the line was the Integro Yamaha of Brad Jones but by the time they crossed the line for the first time series leader Kennedy had found a way through as had Ryde.

Remaining in a tense game of follow the leader for much of the race, title challenger Alastair Seeley had moved up to fourth by lap six before the Safety Car was deployed just one lap later. Pitting back in at the start of the tenth lap, it was a three lap battle for the win.

Coming down to the final corner on the final lap, Ryde was able to slice his way through Kennedy to take the victory on track and secure the GP2 machine. Kennedy finished top Supersport machine whilst Jones was able to hold off a late challenge from Seeley to take second.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Marquez pulls amazing lap on slicks in the damp to take pole

2019 MotoGP – Round 10 – Brno

Monster Energy Grand Prix České republiky


Qualifying Summary

Pole positions come and go, lap records are broken, and the paddock inevitably marches on. But every now and then, someone creates a moment that instantly gets inked into the history books, and that’s exactly what Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) did to take pole position in the Monster Energy Grand Prix České republiky.

Slicks in mixed conditions are a recipe for gravel or glory and Marquez rode a bucking bronco to inch perfect precision to produce one of the most stunning qualifying performances in history, annihilating his rivals by over two and a half seconds. 

MotoGP Brno QP Marquez Wet Brakes
Marc Marquez – Brno 2019

This is the 58th pole position for Marc Marquez on what is his 118th start in the premier class (49.1%), equalling the record of 58 premier class poles held by Mick Doohan. In addition, this is his 86th pole position of his Grand Prix career (43.8%).

If Marc Marquez wins the race at Brno, he will become the fourth rider to reach the milestone of 50 premier class wins along with Valentino Rossi (89 wins), Giacomo Agostini (68) and Mick Doohan (54).

Marc Marquez – P1

“At the start I believed in the slick tyres with how the conditions were changing. In the end when the rain came back and the track got wetter it was difficult! Maybe in hindsight I took a little too much risk, but in the end we finished in a good way and I am happy. Tomorrow it looks like it will be a sunny day, so a normal race. With the conditions we have had, it is hard to know where everyone is but the target is the podium.”

MotoGP Brno QP Marquez
Marc Marquez – Brno 2019

Joining Marquez on the front row are Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), who also took the gamble on slicks, and Johann Zarco (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), who took the first front row for the Austrian factory and his first this season.

MotoGP Brno QP Miller
Jack Miller

Jack Miller is both the highest-placed Ducati and Independent Team rider. This is Miller’s best qualifying result since Misano last year, when he also qualified in second place.

MotoGP Brno QP QP Marquez Miller Zarco
2019 Brno MotoGP Qualifying results:
1 – Marc Marquez (SPA – Honda) 2’02.753
2 – Jack Miller* (ITA – Ducati) +2.524
3 – Johann Zarco (FRA – KTM) +2.598

Jack Miller – P2

“It was a very exciting qualifying. The decision to get back on track with slicks, after the first run in wet conditions, was risky but paid off. I tried to push as hard as I could to close the gap with Marquez but it started raining again on the last lap. I am still very happy with this result. We are doing a great job this weekend.”

MotoGP Brno QP Miller
Jack Miller

More milestones for the KTM MotoGP project with Zarco’s front row start. Red Bull KTM capitalised on the changing weather conditions (the Free Practice sessions and Q1 chrono were mostly wet) to stop the RC16 in Parc Ferme and on the front row for the first time thanks to Johann Zarco’s increased competitiveness. The Frenchman was able to excel in the damp and took 1st place in Q1 and set a rapid lap early in the short Q2 blast to capture P3 for the grid.  

MotoGP Brno QP Zarco
Johann Zarco

Johann Zarco – P3

“This feels pretty good because I have been going through a tough time. I’m still struggling but the wet makes a reset for everyone. In the afternoon I found a good way and great confidence: I could [really] feel the bike and the tyres. The strategy to go with slick tyres at the end was complicated and didn’t feel it. [To use] Rain tyres were a bit too hard for Pole Position but I had good lap from earlier in the session. Anyway, this brings a good feeling for the team. I needed this, and shows I still have this fighting spirit that is necessary for this level.”

MotoGP Brno QP Zarco Team Celebrate
Johann Zarco and Team KTM

Qualifying Report

In Q1, it was also KTM’s time to shine as Zarco reigned ahead of teammate Pol Espargaro, with the two split by just 0.020 and both moving through to contest what looked like a very challenging Q2. And that it turned out to be, with Zarco again the man in the spotlight as the Frenchman took provisional pole with ten minutes remaining, ahead of Espargaro, and a dry line starting to appear on the track.

MotoGP Brno QP Zarco
Johann Zarco

The drama came first from a fight between Marquez and Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar), with the two getting a little too close for comfort on track before rolling into pitlane in tandem and exchanging a few words. And that’s when the reigning Champion switched to slicks, heading back out with seven minutes left on the clock, as the rain began to return.

MotoGP Brno QP Marquez Michelin
Marc Marquez – Brno 2019

Meanwhile, Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) had gone the opposite way, and it looked like Marquez could have made a serious mistake as the Ducati man shot up into second to split the KTMs…and the rain started to fall. But then the red sectors started to appear.

First it was a few tenths, and by the end of the lap it was over a second. At parts of the track it was pouring with rain but the number 93 kept on keeping on, eking out the advantage with utter commitment to the cause and taking over on top.

Miller was also seeing red and moved up to second behind Marquez not long after, and that was surely all she wrote? Not so as both men began another flying lap. For Miller, sadly, it came to an early end as the Australian crashed out. But he’d done enough to keep his impressive second place and once again proved a master of rolling the dice, with everything now left to one man and his slicks: Marquez. Could he improve? He didn’t need to, but the reigning Champion was on a mission.

MotoGP Brno QP Marquez Wet
Marc Marquez – Brno 2019

Four tenths in sector 1 became nearly a second in sector 2, before the third sector saw the timing screens light up with a gap of almost a second and a half. The final sector was where the rain was still coming down though; all that stood between Marquez and pole number 58. That, too, was conquered, with Marquez’ final effort pulling him two and a half seconds clear of the field and a second and a half ahead of his previous best. Mission accomplished, history made.

MotoGP Brno QP Miller
Jack Miller

So he heads Miller and Zarco as the Frenchman earns KTM’s first MotoGP front row start and his best qualifying result since taking pole in Malaysia last year, with Dovizioso putting himself in a solid position for the race in fourth.

Andrea Dovizioso – P4

“After my first run in Q2 I was sure we could have made a further improvement on our time and on my second run, with the hardest rain tyre available, I thought I could lap in 2’05 but I wasn’t sure if that would be enough. In the end I managed to do a good lap and even though I’m not on the front row, it’s OK in any case because today, with the track conditions we encountered, it was very easy to make a mistake; the most important thing was to start as close to the front as possible and we did that. I’m happy above all because in the dry yesterday we were quite fast and tomorrow it looks like there will be good weather for the race. Obviously Marquez is ahead of us, and he’s always very strong, but also Rins and Viñales will be competitive tomorrow. We’ll have to see their choice of tyres and in any case we will have to do a good warm-up to arrive at the race with a good feeling.”

MotoGP Brno QP Bagnaia Rins Mir
Bagnaia, Rins, Mir

Pol Espargaro lines up in fifth for the second time this season, with Rins ultimately set to launch from sixth.

Pol Espargaro – P5

“A great day for everyone: the team, me and also Johann for the front row and we were all pleased to go through Q1 and to end up where we are in complicated conditions. After yesterday we knew it would involve some risk – especially with the track so wet and then drying – to get through to Q2. Johann has been working all year and I’m happy for him because he’s a good guy. It’s great we both made the Q2 and then those incredible results. Tomorrow will be interesting. It will be a fun race for us.”

MotoGP Brno QP Pol Espargaro
Pol Espargaro

Alex Rins – P6

“This sixth place on the grid is positive, I feel that my pace can be good in the dry or the wet, so I’m ready to enjoy tomorrow’s race. The Q2 session was difficult because tyre choice was crucial, it wasn’t a clear decision between the wet and the slick. In the end I tried the gamble of slicks and it didn’t work out because the conditions were half and half, but I’m not really disappointed because my position and pace are good anyway.”

MotoGP Brno QP Rins
Alex Rins

Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) slammed in a late personal best time on the wet tyres to spearhead the third row of the grid in Brno, ‘The Doctor’ leads Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) and Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), who are in eighth and ninth respectively.

Valentino Rossi – P7

“It was a very difficult day, especially for the qualifying. We always had half-and-half conditions and we wanted to try to use the slicks at the beginning, but the conditions weren’t good enough. Before my second run I saw a lot of people go out on slicks, but for me it was too wet. There was not enough time to put on slicks for us. These conditions are always difficult for us, we struggle very much, so starting from the third row is not so bad. I hope for a dry race tomorrow and also for a dry Warm Up, because we have a lot of things to try, especially to make the right tyre choice.”

MotoGP Brno QP Rossi
Valentino Rossi

Danilo Petrucci – P8

“It was a very complicated qualifying session because the track conditions were difficult to interpret. The track was wet and then it gradually got drier, but towards the end of the session it started to rain again and unfortunately I wasn’t able to be quick when I went out on slick tyres. In any case, even though our aim is always to start from the first two rows, row 3 is not bad at all and tomorrow I hope to get a good start and then play my cards in the race, which looks like being dry.”

Maverick Viñales – P9

“The slicks didn‘t work for us. I tried to go out on them, because I spotted the opportunity, but ultimately I think it was a bad decision. We should have followed our plan to go out on the medium wet tyre at the end, I think our position would have been much better, but it is what it is. You have to take the positives. It‘s been a great weekend, I‘m riding fast on the wet and dry, so we need to keep this positivity going for tomorrow. I start from P9, but normally I‘m starting good now and I‘m doing good first laps, so I need to keep going. These mixed conditions were very difficult for us. With more water on the track it was better and I was faster. I’m really confident for tomorrow, because I felt great on the soft tyre in the dry conditions on the Friday, so I think that can be a good choice for us. I don‘t know about the others, but it works really well for our bike. I think tomorrow‘s Warm Up will be very important to decide everything, but anyway the feeling is there, I‘m in good shape, so I think I can do well.”

MotoGP Brno QP Vinales
Maverick Viñales

Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT), Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) completed the Q2 runners.

Fabio Quartararo – P10

“Practice went really well and we finished in the top ten in really hard conditions. Qualifying was really tricky, and the problem with still being a rookie is that the tricky days are the ones where I learn the most. It was the first time I’ve ridden in conditions like this, so I gained a lot of experience. The main lesson is that maybe I should have pushed more on the first lap, because after that it was really difficult to be fast. But let’s see now what happens tomorrow and whether it is dry or wet for the race.”

MotoGP Brno QP Quartararo
Fabio Quartararo

Cal Crutchlow – P11

“Qualifying in 11th is not great for the race tomorrow, honestly speaking I think our pace is a little bit faster than that, we’re probably in the top six. I just made a mistake in Q2 that I didn’t take the slicks early enough, I came in a lap later but Marc (Marquez) and Jack (Miller) did an incredible job so I don’t know if I’d have been able to challenge them even if I’d had the slicks on. So overall it wasn’t a great qualifying session for us, but I tried my best and we’ll have to see what we can do in the race. We tried a different set-up in the wet in FP4 which felt a bit better and I think that will work in the dry as well, so we look forward to tomorrow.”

MotoGP Brno QP Crutchlow
Cal Crutchlow

Franco Morbidelli – P12

“We had very mixed conditions in qualifying and we struggled a little bit with the tyre choice. Unfortunately, we made the wrong one. I went with slicks but at the end of my out lap it started raining and there wasn’t enough time to go back in and change them. I didn’t make a flying lap, but 12th position isn’t so bad because we were fast in wet conditions even if it didn’t work out in qualifying. We had good sensations on Friday morning in the dry from the bike too, and now it’s just a case of waiting and seeing what weather conditions come tomorrow.”

MotoGP Brno QP Rossi
Valentino Rossi

The Czech Adrenaline Factory certainly lived up its name on Saturday, as Marquez swept away records and rain for premier class pole 58. But Sunday should be dry, and that’s a whole new ball game…  Both Rossi and Dovizioso have been hugely successful at this circuit, will they step up to the plate tomorrow and challenge for the win…?

MotoGP Brno QP Rossi
Valentino Rossi

MotoGP Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Q Time/Gap
1 Marc Marquez Q2 2m02.753
2 Jack Miller Q2 +2.524
3 Johann Zarco Q2 +2.598
4 Andrea Dovizioso Q2 +2.837
5 Pol Espargaro Q2 +2.957
6 Alex Rins Q2 +3.419
7 Valentino Rossi Q2 +3.480
8 Danilo Petrucci Q2 +3.704
9 Maverick Viñales Q2 +3.873
10 Fabio Quartararo Q2 +3.895
11 Cal Crutchlow Q2 +4.370
12 Franco Morbidelli Q2 +6.651
13 Takaaki Nakagami Q1 + 0.232
14 Francesco Bagnaia Q1 +0.253
15 Sylvain Guintoli Q1 + 0.518
16 Miguel Oliveira Q1 +0.730
17 Stefan Bradl Q1 + 0.941
18 Aleix Espargaro Q1 + 1.251
19 Joan Mir Q1 +1.521
20 Karel Abraham Q1 + 1.865
21 Hafizh Syahrin Q1 +2.122
22 Tito Rabat Q1 + 2.282
23 Andrea Iannone Q1 + 2.890

Moto2

Alex Marquez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) is on pole for the Monster Energy Grand Prix České republiky, but there’s much more to the headline than that. The number 73 timed it to perfection on a difficult, mixed track to take two seconds out his closest challenger, Sam Lowes (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), and pick up where he left off in Germany. Lowes starts second after a nevertheless impressive session, with Lorenzo Baldassarri (Flexbox HP 40) completing the front row in third…four seconds adrift.

MotoGP Brno QP Moto Alex Marquez
Alex Marquez

Earlier there was plenty of drama in Q1, with Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) moving up to lead Bo Bendsneyder (NTS RW Racing GP) and Brit Jake Dixon (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team) in third, with another impressive performer in fourth as Marco Bezzecchi (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) joined them to move through. Some first timers, some wet weather specialists…and everything to play for in Q2.

The rain was easing off in the second session and times tumbled. After the first five minutes, the top four were the Q1 graduates, with Marco Bezzecchi leading the way, but there was plenty more to come.

Baldassarri took the leap to dry tyres, swiftly followed by Marquez. Then Bo Bendsneyder took a light tumble at Turn 1, rider remounting, as Marcel Schrötter (Dynavolt Intact GP) and Sam Lowes started to attack. But it was Fabio Di Giannantonio (Beta Tools Speed Up) who took over at the top at that stage, with Friday’s fastest impressing in the very different conditions, and it was clear that whoever set their flying lap last would be making some serious gains as it continued drying out.

It came down to Marquez vs Lowes, with each sector making it increasingly clear that the number 73 was about to absolutely obliterate the opposition. And that he did, although it was also true of Lowes with everyone else.

A late lap from Lorenzo Baldassarri secured him third on the grid and a front row for the first time with Qatar, although the deficit was sizeable it proved enough. Nicolo Bulega (Sky Racing Team VR46) blasted in a lap right at the end to head up row two, turning the tables on compatriot rookie Giannantonio to just pip him on Saturday, with Marco Bezzecchi in sixth making it an all-Italian second row as he took his best Moto2™ grid position since joining the class.

MotoGP Brno QP Moto QP Marquez Lowes Baldassarri
2019 Brno Moto2 Qualifying results:
1 – Alex Marquez (SPA – Kalex) 2’06.787
2 – Sam Lowes (GBR – Kalex) +2.018
3 – Lorenzo Baldassarri (ITA – Kalex) +3.979

Marcel Schrötter was seventh as he aims for back-to-back podiums, with Bo Bendsneyder in eighth ahead of fellow top performer Jake Dixon. Augusto Fernandez (Flexbox HP 40) completed the top ten.

So where’s Championship challenger Tom Lüthi (Dynavolt Intact GP)? Down in P12 despite his previous wet weather win at Brno. He’ll be looking to move forward on Sunday, as will Xavi Vierge (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) in 14th, Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Ajo) 16th and returnee Mattia Pasini (Tasca Racing Scuderia Moto2 down in 24th….

Marquez seems on an unstoppable roll of late. But race day is set to dawn dry, and the number 73 had serious company before the conditions changed. Can he do it again?

Moto2 Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Q Time/Gap
1 Alex Marquez Q2 2m06.787
2 Sam Lowes Q2 +2.018
3 Lorenzo Baldassarri Q2 +3.979
4 Nicolo Bulega Q2 +4.590
5 Fabio Di Giannantoni Q2 +5.266
6 Marco Bezzecchi Q2 +5.486
7 Marcel Schrotter Q2 +5.637
8 Bo Bendsneyder Q2 +6.053
9 Jake Dixon Q2 +6.334
10 Augusto Fernandez Q2 +6.644
11 Jorge Navarro Q2 +6.669
12 Thomas Luthi Q2 +6.696
13 Luca Marini Q2 +6.803
14 Xavi Vierge Q2 +6.964
15 Remy Gardner Q2 +7.139
16 Brad Binder Q2 +7.390
17 Tetsuta Nagashima Q2 +8.150
18 Enea Bastianini Q2 +8.182
19 Jorge Martin Q1 +0.811
20 Joe Roberts Q1 +1.265
21 Andrea Locatelli Q1 +2.089
22 Somkiat Chantra Q1 +2.092
23 Iker Lecuona Q1 +2.142
24 Mattia Pasini Q1 +2.153
25 Steven Odendaal Q1 +2.371
26 Lukas Tulovic Q1 +2.483
27 Stefano Manzi Q1 +3.046
28 Xavi Cardelus Q1 +3.330
29 Jonas Folger Q1 +4.194
30 Dominique Aegerter Q1 +4.734
31 Philipp Oettl Q1 +6.608
32 Dimas Ekky Pratama FP1 +3.420

Moto3

Tony Arbolino (VNE Snipers) celebrated his birthday in style at the Monster Energy Grand Prix České republiky, taking pole position by an impressive four tenths in the wet. He’s perfectly set up for race day after also having been fast on Friday in the dry, and he’ll be joined on the front row by 2016 Brno winner John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and 2015 winner Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse).

MotoGP Brno QP Moto Tony Arbolino
Tony Arbolino

But before all that was decided in Q2, after the heavens opened on Saturday morning, Q1 was high risk and there was plenty of drama: Tom Booth-Amos (CIP Green Power) tumbled at Turn 13, Albert Arenas (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team) suffered a highside at Turn 3, although he remounted, and Can Öncü (Red Bull KTM Ajo) was teetering on the edge of the top four when he crashed out. The Turk held onto his fourth place, however, joining Raul Fernandez (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team), Makar Yurchenko, (BOE Skull Rider Mugen Race) and Alonso Lopez (Estrella Galicia 0,0) in going through to Q2.

As Q2 began, conditions were wet wet wet and remained so, with McPhee leading for much of the session. Fernandez was also looking strong, but Arbolino changed the benchmark with two minutes to go and was the first rider in the 2’18s. Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) then shot into second place in the closing stages, but was pipped right at the end by McPhee. Antonelli then did the same to his teammate, dropping Suzuki down to fourth.

MotoGP Brno QP Moto QP Arbolino McPhee Antonelli
2019 Brno MotoGP Qualifying results:
1 – Tony Arbolino (ITA – Honda) 2’18.020
2 – John McPhee (GBR – Honda) +0.400
3 – Niccolo Antonelli (ITA – Honda) +0.802

Alongside the Japanese rider is Fernandez despite a crash at Turn 3 for the Spaniard, with Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) completing the second row in sixth place as the Championship contender put himself in a solid position for Sunday. Makar Yurchenko took a career-best qualifying position with seventh, ahead of Spanish rider Jaume Masia (Bester Capital Dubai). Japanese rookie Ai Ogura (Honda Team Asia) locked out the third row.

Alonso Lopez (Estrella Galicia 0,0) completed the top ten, ahead of veteran Romano Fenati (VNE Snipers), Qatar winner Kaito Toba (Honda Team Asia) and youngest ever Grand Prix winner Can Öncü (Red Bull KTM Ajo). Home hero Filip Salac (Redox Prüstel GP) was just behind them, putting in a solid performance for P14.

So who’s missing from the front? Championship leader Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) had a tough qualifying, and the Italian faces a fight back through the field from P17 – qualifying just ahead of teammate Marcos Ramirez, another usual frontrunner.

Moto3 Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Q Time/gap
1 Tony Arbolino Q2 2m18.020
2 John Mcphee Q2 +0.400
3 Niccolò Antonelli Q2 +0.802
4 Tatsuki Suzuki Q2 +0.833
5 Raul Fernandez Q2 +0.855
6 Aron Canet Q2 +0.933
7 Makar Yurchenko Q2 +1.297
8 Jaume Masia Q2 +1.329
9 Ai Ogura Q2 +1.699
10 Alonso Lopez Q2 +2.055
11 Romano Fenati Q2 +2.112
12 Kaito Toba Q2 +2.340
13 Can Oncu Q2 +2.353
14 Filip Salac Q2 +2.706
15 Andrea Migno Q2 +2.858
16 Celestino Vietti Q2 +3.287
17 Lorenzo Dalla Porta Q2 +3.859
18 Marcos Ramirez Q2 +4.011
19 Albert Arenas Q1 + 0.748
20 Jakub Kornfeil Q1 +1.357
21 Darryn Binder Q1 + 1.455
22 Dennis Foggia Q1 +2.295
23 Yuki Kunii Q1 +2.313
24 Ayumu Sasaki Q1 +2.673
25 Kazuki Masaki Q1 +3.053
26 Sergio Garcia Q1 +3.054
27 Deniz Oncu Q1 +3.158
28 Riccardo Rossi Q1 +3.607
29 Tom Booth-Amos Q1 +4.202
30 Stefano Nepa Q1 +4.422

AEST Schedule

Time Class Session
1640 Moto3 WUP
1710 Moto2 WUP
1740 MotoGP WUP
1900 Moto3 Race
2020 Moto2 Race
2200 MotoGP Race

Source: MCNews.com.au

Slick gamble pays off for Marquez and Miller in Brno qualifying

News 4 Aug 2019

Slick gamble pays off for Marquez and Miller in Brno qualifying

Defending MotoGP champion matches Mick Doohan’s all-time pole record.

Image: Supplied.

Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez rode to a spectacular pole position at Brno’s Czech grand prix on Saturday, gambling on slick tyres on mixed conditions and making it work.

Marquez threaded the needle to perfection in one of the most stunning qualifying performances in history, annihilating his rivals by over two and a half seconds.

If that wasn’t enough, it’s also pole number 58 for the Spaniard, equalling Mick Doohan’s all-time premier class record. Joining Marquez on the front row are Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), who also took the gamble on slicks, and Johann Zarco (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), who took the first front row for the Austrian factory.

In Q1, it was also KTM’s time to shine as Zarco reigned ahead of teammate Pol Espargaro, with the two split by just 0.020s and both moving through to contest what looked like a very challenging Q2. And that it turned out to be, with Zarco again the man in the spotlight as the Frenchman took provisional pole with 10 minutes remaining.

The drama came first from a fight between Marquez and Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar), with the two getting a little too close for comfort on track before rolling into pit-lane in tandem and exchanging a few words. And that’s when the reigning champion switched to slicks, heading back out as the rain began to return.

Meanwhile, Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) had gone the opposite way and it looked like Marquez could have made a serious mistake as the Ducati man shot up into second to split the KTMs when rain started to fall. But the number 93 kept on keeping on, eking out the advantage with utter commitment to the cause and taking over on top.

Miller was also seeing red and moved up to second behind Marquez not long after. For Miller, sadly, it came to an early end as the Australian crashed out, however, he’d done enough to keep his impressive second place and once again proved a master of rolling the dice.

Marquez’s final effort pulling him two and a half seconds clear of the field and a second and a half ahead of his previous best lap in the session. Mission accomplished, history made.

So he heads Miller and Zarco as the Frenchman earns KTM’s first MotoGP™ front row start and his best qualifying result since taking pole in Malaysia last year, with Dovizioso putting himself in a solid position for the race in fourth. Espargaro lines up in fifth for the second time this season, with Rins ultimately set to launch from sixth.

Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) slammed in a late personal best time on the wet tyres to spearhead the third row of the grid in Brno, ‘The Doctor’ leads Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) and Maverick Vinales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), who are in eighth and ninth respectively. Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT), Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) completed the Q2 runners.

In Moto2, Alex Marquez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) is on pole, but there’s much more to the headline than that. The number 73 timed it to perfection on a difficult, mixed track to take two seconds out his closest challenger, Sam Lowes (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) and pick up where he left off in Germany.

Lowes starts second after a nevertheless impressive session, with Lorenzo Baldassarri (Flexbox HP 40) completing the front row in third – four seconds adrift. Australian Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) starts 15th on the grid after topping Q1.

The Moto3 field will be led away by Tony Arbolino (VNE Snipers), taking pole position by an impressive four tenths in the wet. Also having been fast on Friday in the dry, he’ll be joined on the front row by John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse).

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Seabright demolishes the opposition in a drenched Race 1

Behind Ogden’s first non-podium finish of the season, Brian Hart was forced to settle for fifth, with Jamie Lyons putting in an impressive ride to complete the top six and take his best result of the season so far. Charlie Farrer came home seventh, ahead of Jamie Davis, Jack Hart and Ross Maguire, who completed the top ten just a couple of tenths off Hart.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Thriller from Miller: How did he get second in qualifying?

“I feel pretty good. It’s a nice way to start the second half of the season by qualifying on the front row,” he said. “She was a bit tricky out there, I tried my maximum, came in early, I only did a lap on the wets. I wanted to give myself enough time because the track here in Brno is so long, so it takes so much time to do a lap, so I knew if I was going to do it, I had to do it quite early.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Zarco earns KTM their first MotoGP™ front row start

KTM Motorsport Director, Pit Beirer, spoke of his delight: “With Johann this was the best practice we’ve had since he’s been riding with us. He got a feeling with the bike, he could push, he could go faster lap after lap and get confidence with the bike. I know it was raining, terrible conditions, but it was positive. So why not?”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Brno battle expected in dry conditions on Sunday

Starting his challenge from the final position on the second row, Alex Rins (Team Suzuki ECSTAR) has shown before that on race day, he can be the rider to surge through the field. One place behind him and heading up row three, it was a better qualifying showing from Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) – ‘The Doctor’ looking for a return to the podium he was last on in the United States. His teammate, Maverick Viñales, will go from ninth on the grid. His dry weather pace is looking strong, so if he can get a good start then he may well be one to keep an eye on. Former Czech Grand Prix winner, Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol), starts in 11th.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Six winners in six years at Brno?

6. With Zarco in third, this is the best qualifying result for a KTM rider in the MotoGP™ class, beating the fifth place set by Pol Espargaro earlier this year in Austin. With Pol Espargaro, this is the first time there are two KTM riders in Q2 since the Australian GP last year with Pol Espargaro and Bradley Smith, and the first time there are two KTM riders within the front two rows of the grid in the premier class.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here