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Alvaro Bautista tops opening day of WSBK practice in Jerez

Round Six – Jerez – Friday Practice


Day one at Jerez has concluded for the Motul FIM Superbike World Championship, with Alvaro Bautista (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) putting in a late lap in FP2 to go top. Despite a late red flag after a spectacular crash for Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing – Yamaha) left gravel and debris on the track at Turn 4, a flurry of action concluded the session with many changes in positions.

Championship leader Alvaro Bautista was on top in FP2 for the majority of the session before being knocked off his familiar perch by Van der Mark for a brief moment. The Spanish rookie, who has raced at Jerez many times, went back on top in the closing stages with the fastest lap of the weekend. Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) had a tough day at the office, but you can never discount the Welshman; the former WorldSBK runner-up finished eleventh overall.

Michael van der Mark continued his strong performance from the morning session, becoming the first rider to go into the 1’39s in FP2, improving in the final five minutes to consolidate his strong pace. His teammate, Alex Lowes (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) was again a prominent figure at the sharp end, ending the day in fourth, with the Pata Yamaha pairing enjoying the return to Jerez.

The Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK strategy for Jonathan Rea looked to be to send him out and get him to dial laps in, with the reigning four-time WorldSBK Champion setting numerous consecutive fast laps. On his tenth lap, Rea improved his time before finally improving to third on the combined timesheets, improving his time in the latter part of the session but remaining in third. His teammate Leon Haslam completed the day in ninth in the session and overall.

2013 World Superbike Champion Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) didn’t improve his time overall until very late in the session, placing fifth overall, ahead of Tissot Superpole on Saturday. Whilst Sykes showed strong signs of improvement, Markus Reiterberger (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was out on track for the first time. With no lap time set in FP1, FP2 proved crucial for the German rider, who finished 15th at the end of the day.

A strong start in FP1 for Melandri saw the Italian crash in FP2, albeit with himself being OK and riding the bike back to the pits. He finished sixth on combined times. Teammate Sandro Cortese improved his time and completed the day in seventh, with a strong end to FP2. It has been a strong start for Yamaha at the Acerbis Spanish Round, with four in the top seven.

In eighth place, Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Barni Racing Team) enjoyed a strong FP2 and maintained his top ten placing from FP1. The Italian was the second Ducati in the session and also, the third Independent team rider behind the GRT duo. Turkish Puccetti Racing rider Toprak Razgatlioglu finished tenth at the end of the day.

WorldSBK returnee Loris Baz was back with a bang, as he had a massive crash at Turn 4, although he was OK. His bike cartwheeled through the gravel trap, bringing out a momentary red flag for debris.


Álvaro Bautista – P1

“Today it was a very positive day, even though in the morning session we had a few problems with excessive tyre wear, probably because of the track conditions after the rain that fell overnight. In the afternoon therefore the work focussed on this aspect in particular. I really liked one of the new rear tyre solutions for its durability and consistency even though we used it over a distance that was longer than that of the race, at the same time also improving the feeling with the front over this morning. Tomorrow we’ll focus more on fine-tuning the chassis because I’m convinced we can make a further improvement and as a result another step forward.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Michael van der Mark – P2

“It’s been a really positive opening day and I felt good with the bike from the start. The changes we tested in Misano really seem to have worked and that inspired a lot of confidence in the R1. We knew this afternoon would be interesting once the track temperature went up, so we wanted to see how the bike reacted to that. Again, I was quick from the start, but we still need to do a bit more work to improve on the brakes, as I’m still struggling a little to get the bike stopped. But, overall, I’m really happy with the first day here in Jerez.”

WSBK Rnd Fri VanDerMark
Michael van der Mark

Jonathan Rea – P3

“It was a really positive day in the end as we managed to turn things around. The biggest challenge was coming from riding the Endurance machine in Japan only a few days ago to this morning. I got a little bit lost with my feeling on the bike. Also, since they re-asphalted the surface here the grip is so, so high. It is an abnormal feeling to ride on it and you do not understand the limit because the grip is so high. So, I am just trying to acclimatise to that. I also tried all options of rear tyres to confirm our understand of which one to use. In the afternoon session we changed a few things to give me a bit more confidence on the brakes and we reconfirmed the step we made in a Misano test with my position on the bike. I was happy with where we were.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Rea
Jonathan Rea

Alex Lowes – P4

“We made a good start in FP1 this morning, finishing the session second behind Michael. This afternoon I did just over race distance on a set of tyres, which dropped us down the times a little but the pace was still good. We’ve got some new parts that we weren’t able to test over a long run at the Misano test because of the weather but, after today, we have a much better understanding of the bike and where we’ve improved. I’ve always been fast here in Jerez, so I know I can do the times, but we just wanted to work on the bike on worn tyres and in the hotter temperatures this afternoon, to get a better feel for how it’s going to be in the race tomorrow. A good start to the weekend and one on which we can build for the race tomorrow. I’m happy.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Alex Lowes
Alex Lowes

Marco Melandri – P6

“I’m feeling much better on the bike with a different riding position and that also gave me a better feeling with the tyres. Now we have to work in a slightly different way for the set-up but I’m happy, because for the first time I’m not so far from the front and it looks like we are going in a good way. I think our weekend here in Jerez can be different to the last few races.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Melandri
Marco Melandri

Sandro Cortese – P7

“It was a very positive start and we saw an improvement in both the base setting and the lap times between the two sessions today. The conditions were very special, very hot, but the second session was more or less the same time as the race tomorrow, so it gave us an opportunity to work on set-up in very similar conditions. We had a positive test in Misano and the updates we got from Yamaha are all working well, so I’m happy and confident for tomorrow.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Sandro Cortese
Sandro Cortese

Leon Haslam – P9

“This morning wasn’t too bad but we were suffering in the same areas as Imola to get the bike to stop. This afternoon it was harder and kept losing the front. We found a better way right at the end, and even on 15 lap-old tyres I set my best lap over the session. So there were some positives but it was a tough one. It looks like it will continue hot like it was this afternoon. So that is something we need to look at, make a bit of a plan and then see where we can get to tomorrow.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Haslam
Leon Haslam

Chaz Davies – P11

“Today has been a bit tricky and we struggled a little bit with the front overloading all the time. We need to rebalance the bike to give me better feeling and speed on entry, connect the dots in the middle of the corner and keep the corner speed. Despite these problems, I’m fairly confident of improving tomorrow, it’s just that we were a bit too wide of the mark today. Jerez is a different track to Imola, and what works there doesn’t work here so we’re going to have to make some changes.”

WSBK Rnd Fri Chaz Davies
Chaz Davies

Loris Baz – P13

“it was an up and down first day, let’s say. I’m not really happy because I’ve given my guys a lot of work to do tonight with the fast crash at the end of FP2, which definitely wasn’t in the plan, but we also need to understand why I crashed because it was a bit strange. Apart from that the day was going well; we weren’t that far from the other four Yamaha riders and we managed to improve on the set-up we finished with at the Misano test. We need to continue working in this way tomorrow and then use the race as another opportunity to increase our understanding with the bike. I’m looking forward to tomorrow already.”


World Superbike Friday Combined Times
  1. BAUTISTA Alvaro ARUBA Racing Ducati 1’39.428
  2. VAN DER MARK Michael Pata Yamaha Team 0.226
  3. REA Jonathan Kawasaki Racing Team 0.304
  4. LOWES Alex Pata Yamaha Team 0.411
  5. SYKES Tom 66 GBR BMW Motorrad Team 0.506
  6. MELANDRI Marco GRT Yamaha WorldSBK 0.602
  7. CORTESE Sandro GRT Yamaha WorldSBK 0.629
  8. RINALDI Michael Ruben BARNI Racing Team 0.862
  9. HASLAM Leon Kawasaki Racing Team 0.911
  10. RAZGATLIOGLU Toprak Turkish Puccetti Racing 0.976
  11. DAVIES Chaz ARUBA Racing Ducati 1.209
  12. TORRES Jordi Team Pedercini 1.314
  13. BAZ Loris Ten Kate Racing – Yamaha 1.427
  14. MERCADO Leandro 3Orelac Racing VerdNatura 1.490
  15. REITERBERGER Markus BMW Motorrad Team 1.614
  16. DELBIANCO Alessandro Althea Mie Racing 2.300
  17. TAKAHASHI Yuki Moriwaki Althea Honda  2.497
  18. BRIDEWELL Tommy Team Goeleven 2.588
  19. KIYONARI Ryuichi Moriwaki Althea Honda 2.744

World Supersport

The opening day of FIM Supersport World Championship action saw plenty of action throughout the two sessions. Come the end of play on the opening day, it was Bardahl Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team duo of Federico Caricasulo and Randy Krummenacher that were on top, with Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) back in third. A brief red flag was shown earlier in the session for Glenn van Straalen, who crashed, leaving a lot of gravel on the circuit needing to be cleaned away.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSS Krummenacher
Randy Krummenacher

It was a strong end to the day for Caricasulo, who just pipped his Swiss teammate overall by 0.048s. The duo has been battling all season, with the WorldSSP title pendulum swinging from one rider to the other. The end of day one at Jerez sees the Italian on top overall, at a track he won at from pole in 2017, whilst Krummenacher couldn’t improve his time. In third position, Jules Cluzel, who hadn’t featured at the front for the majority of the session, improved at the end of the session to consolidate his top three placing.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSS Caricasulo
Federico Caricasulo

Fourth position belonged to Raffaele De Rosa (MV Agusuta Reparto Corse) raced up the order late on, confirming his pace after his podium at Imola. Fifth place went to 2017 WorldSSP Champion Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing). The Frenchman suffered a small tumble at Turn 2 but rounded the day off in fine style. In sixth position on combined times was Austrian rider, Thomas Gradinger (Kallio Racing). A track at which he has very little experience on, Gradinger has had a strong start to the weekend.

Seventh position saw a solid start to proceedings for Hikari Okubo (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing), as the Japanese rider goes in search of his first career podium. Behind him, the first of the home-heroes, Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing), who was just 0.3s off of a top three slot, whilst in ninth, Britain’s Kyle Smith (Team Pedercini Racing) was reacquainting himself to the Jerez circuit. Tenth position went to Smith’s teammate, Ayrton Badovini.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSS Cluzel
Jules Cluzel

A brief red flag was brought out after a crash for Glenn van Straalen (EAB Racing Team) at the penultimate corner, with gravel on the circuit as a consequence. His fellow countryman, Jaimie van Sikkelerus, made a return to action after his surgery between rounds. They finished 18th and 25th respectively.

World Supersport Friday Combined Times
  1. Caricasulo 1m41.948
  2. Krummenacher 1m41.996
  3. Cluzel 1m42.942
  4. De Rosa 1m43.136
  5. Mahias 1m43.142
  6. Gradinger 1m43.162
  7. Okubo 1m43.201
  8. Vinales 1m43.242
  9. Smith 1m43.588
  10. Badovini 1m43.925
  11. Sebestyen 1m44.002
  12. Quero Martinez 1m44.242
  13. Perolari 1m44.384
  14. Danilo 1m44.600
  15. Soomer 1m44.829
  16. Fuligni 1m45.053
  17. Cresson 1m45.082
  18. Van Straalen 1m45.195
  19. Calero 1m45.315
  20. Hartog 1m45.665
  21. Arbel 1m45.788
  22. Canducci 1m45.924
  23. Herrera 1m45.962
  24. Stange 1m46.638
  25. Van Sikkelerus 1m46.980
  26. Gyorfi 1m47.766
  27. Sconza 1m48.176
  28. Matern 1m50.302

WorldSSP300

It was an exciting opening day for the WorldSSP300 Championship, as after the opening two Free Practice sessions, lap times were already under the existing lap records for the class at Jerez. Heading the timesheets on day one, championship leader Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team), aiming to keep his 100% record after the opening rounds of the season. Marc Garcia (DS Junior Team) and Galang Hendra Pratama (Semakin Di Depan Biblion Motoxracing) were second and third respectively.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSSP Gonzalez
Manuel Gonzalez

Gonzalez set about his Friday looking to build on his positive start to the season, with the Spaniard coming to the circuit as championship leader and favourite for a home win. Heading the timesheets, he looks set to enjoy another great weekend. It was a positive start for Marc Garcia, who returns to the scene of his 2017 title win. The Spaniard made it a 1-2 for home-heroes, whilst Galang Hendra Pratama was flying the Indonesian flag high in third.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSSP Garcia
Marc Garcia

In fourth position, Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) had a strong session and was in fourth place on the combined sheets. The Australian’s time was 0.779s from the top time but with plenty more track action, expect him to be strong throughout the remainder of the weekend. Fellow Australians Tom Bramich and Jack Hyde were 37th and 44th respectively.

Fifth position was the first of the Group B riders, with Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team), with Mika Perez (Scuderia Maranga Racing) in sixth.

WSBK Rnd Fri WSSP Pratama
Galang Hendra Pratama

Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) was only ninth in Group A in FP2, subsequently leaving her outside of the top ten overall, whilst Scott Deroue (Kawasaki Motoport) was also languishing down the order; both riders with work to do ahead of Saturday and Sunday.

WorldSSP300 Group A and B Combined Results
  1. Gonzalez 1m52.794
  2. Garcia 1m53.207
  3. Hendra Pratama 1m53.550
  4. Edwards 1m53.573
  5. Steeman 1m53.665
  6. Perez 1m54.102
  7. De Cancellis 1m54.111
  8. Otten 1m54.323
  9. Verdoia 1m54.337
  10. Bonoli 1m54.379
  11. Carrasco 1m54.393
  12. Orrade 1m54.547
  13. Schotman 1m54.643
  14. De La Vega 1m54.671
  15. Deroue 1m54.671
  16. Pedeneau 1m54.743
  17. Ieraci 1m54.791
  18. Meuffels 1m54.817
  19. Kalinin 1m54.821
  20. Okaya 1m54.834
  21. Jahnig 1m54.977
  22. Buis 1m55.020
  23. Sanchez 1m55.131
  24. Loureiro 1m55.250
  25. Sofuoglu 1m55.280
  26. Luna Bayen 1m55.287
  27. Kappler 1m55.332
  28. Neila 1m55.354
  29. Iozzo 1m55.379
  30. Bastianelli 1m55.400
  31. Sabatucci 1m55.452
  32. Kawakami 1m55.537
  33. Carrion 1m55.693
  34. Rovelli 1m55.868
  35. Facco 1m55.922
  36. Arduini 1m56.142
  37. Bramich 1m56.172
  38. De Bruin 1m56.205
  39. Foray 1m56.292
  40. Dore 1m56.355
  41. Blin 1m56.378
  42. Hartmann 1m56.471
  43. Erill 1m56.563
  44. Hyde 1m56.725
  45. Konig 1m56.787
  46. Schwarz 1m57.092
  47. Hernandez Moyano 1m57.137
  48. Giacomini 1m57.174
  49. Perez Gonzalez 1m57.641
  50. Quinet 1m58.195
  51. Naud 2m00.809
  52. Aloisi 2m00.959
  53. Pelikanova 2m01.589
  54. Molina 2m01.797

Source: MCNews.com.au

2019 Isle of Man TT: Dunlop Senior TT Results

You would think that Dean Harrison would be sick of Peter Hickman by now. Harrison has finished exactly one spot behind Hickman in the Superstock TT, Superbike TT and both Supersport TT races this week. The pattern even extended back to last year’s Senior TT, where Harrison led for five and a half laps before Hickman dropped a record-breaking final lap to steal the win.

For the 2019 Senior TT, Harrison finally gained the upper hand, wrapping up this year’s TT with a win over his rival. The script was flipped in this year’s Senior TT, with Hickman leading the first four laps before a technical issue cut his pace on the fifth lap. Harrison took advantage, taking the lead and holding it through the sixth and final lap for the win, averaging a speed of 130.824 mph.

Hickman led by nearly 18 seconds when his BMW S1000RR began to overheat. Hickman started to lose seven to eight seconds to Harrison through every sector but still managed to hold on to second.

Conor Cummins completed the podium in third place, which he held for nearly the entire race.

The win was Harrison’s first in the Isle of Man TT, and put a stop to Hickman’s attempt at being the fourth man to win four TTs in a week.

Begin Press Release:


Harrison Wins Dramatic Dunlop Senior TT Race

Dean Harrison won a dramatic Dunlop Senior TT race on Friday morning, the final race of the 2019 Isle of Man TT Races fuelled by Monster Energy, with the Silicone Engineering Kawasaki rider taking the lead after long time leader Peter Hickman (Smiths Racing BMW) ran into trouble on the fifth lap.

Hickman had opened up a near 18-second lead at two-thirds race distance but he slowed when the bike overheated on the penultimate lap of the Mountain Course which allowed Harrison to sweep through for his third TT victory. Hickman held on for second – 53.062s behind – with Conor Cummins (Milenco by Padgetts Honda) taking third.

With good conditions all around the course, Hickman led from Harrison at Glen Helen first time around but – as expected – it was close with the gap just 0.351s. The duo had already opened up a near six-second advantage over third placed Cummins. Michael Dunlop, Michael Rutter and David Johnson were lying in fourth, fifth and sixth respectively but James Hillier clearly had an issue during the first sector and was down in 21st place.

Harrison nudged ahead at Ballaugh by two tenths of a second but by Ramsey Hickman was back in front albeit by just a tenth of a second. Cummins was now over 11 seconds in arrears and while Dunlop remained in fourth, he was only 0.024s behind the Manxman. Johnson had now overhauled Rutter for fifth with the latter coming under pressure from Davey Todd.

An opening lap of 134.284mph – which proved to be the fastest lap of the race and the meeting – gave Hickman a 2.2s lead over Harrison with Cummins still in third but now over 14s adrift. He only led Dunlop by 0.824s as Johnson maintained fifth but Todd had now moved up to sixth with his first ever 130mph+ lap. Twenty three time TT Race winner John McGuinness retired at the Bungalow while Hillier had clawed his way back up to 11th.

Harrison reduced his deficit to Hickman by four tenths at Glen Helen on the second lap with Cummins pulling away from Dunlop – the gap between the two now more than three seconds. Johnson was ten seconds behind the 19-time TT Race winner in fifth but six seconds clear of sixth placed Todd.

At Ramsey, Hickman had extended his lead to 3.4s and aided by another superb run over the Mountain, a second lap of 134.28mph, which was, amazingly, only 0.022s slower than his first lap, saw the gap stretch to 8.067s. Cummins continued in third although Dunlop closed the gap slightly but Johnson retired at Bedstead which allowed Todd and Rutter to move up to fifth and sixth respectively. It was double disappointment for Honda as Ian Hutchinson retired at the pits.

After the first round of pit stops, Hickman’s lead had grown to ten seconds by the time he got to Glen Helen on the third lap and Cummins had also pulled away from Dunlop in the battle for the final podium spot, the difference now almost 11 seconds. Rutter had closed in on Todd though and they were split by only 1.4s.

By the end of the third lap – half race distance – Hickman had added more time to his advantage and the Burton upon Trent rider’s lead had increased to a formidable looking 13.48s. Cummins was looking safe in third as he now had a healthy gap of almost 16 seconds over Dunlop but although Rutter had got to within a second of Todd at Ramsey, the youngster enjoyed a seven-second gap over his more experienced rival as they headed out onto lap four. Hillier was now running in seventh.

Coming into the second pit stop, Hickman’s lead over Harrison had increased again, up now to 17.6s, after lapping at 133.55mph as Cummins got more and more secure in third. Todd remained in fifth but Hillier was continuing to work his way back up the leaderboard and a near 131mph lap saw him close to within 3.1s of Todd.

The pit stops saw a significant change at the top of the timings though and by Glen Helen on the fifth lap, Harrison had brought the lead down to 7.9s as Hickman went through the first sector over nine seconds slower than his Kawasaki rival. The drama continued and at Ballaugh, Harrison had brought the gap down to just 1.1s with Hickman going through the subsequent Sulby speed trap at just 159mph, 30mph slower than Harrison!

Going through Ramsey for the penultimate time, there was a new race leader as Harrison took the lead for the first time and he now led by almost eight seconds. Hickman was losing seven to eight seconds to Harrison through every sector but although he was now over 18s behind, he continued on to his sixth and final lap.

Harrison pressed on and with an untroubled final lap, he duly took his third TT win by 53.062s but with Hickman’s pace slowing, all eyes fell on whether or not he could hold onto second place. He did it – just – as he held off Cummins by 5.8s.

Dunlop had a comfortable fourth place and it was Hillier who got the verdict over Todd for fifth, the latter setting a personal best lap of 131.49mph on the sixth lap in just his second year at the TT. Michael Rutter, Jamie Coward – who recorded his first 130mph lap – Brian McCormack and Dominic Herbertson completed the top ten.

The race results enabled Hickman to regain the Joey Dunlop TT Championship he last won in 2017 with 111 points, 13 ahead of Harrison (98) with Hillier in third (69). Hickman will receive a Bremont watch from the TT’s Official Timing Partner.

After twice previously finishing second, Coward won the TT Privateer’s Championship with the maximum 125 points after being the top privateer in all five of the races. McCormack (61) finished second with Paul Jordan (58) in third.

Kawasaki won the Manufacturer’s Award with Smiths Racing taking the Team Prize for the third year in a row.

The post 2019 Isle of Man TT: Dunlop Senior TT Results appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.

2019 Isle of Man TT: SES TT Zero Results

Michael Rutter established a new TT Zero record, lapping the Isle of Man’s Mountain Course with an average speed of 121.904 mph, surpassing his own record set last year of 121.824 mph. This year’s race marks the tenth running of the TT Zero; over that span, the lap record average speed has increased by 25 mph from the original record of 96.82 set by Mark Miller.

Rutter had the fastest pace from start to finish, and was never really challenged, even by fellow Mugen rider John McGuinness. Rutter held a four-second lead over McGuinness through Glen Helen. Third through Glen Helen was Davey Todd for the University of Nottingham, riding in place of Daley Mathison who died this week during the Superbike TT.

McGuinness cut a second off Rutter’s lead at Ballaugh, and continued to make ground, setting a race-best speed of 176.14 mph through the speed trap shortly after on the Sulby Straight (compared to Rutter’s 173.86 mph). But Rutter soon began to pull away once more, extending his lead to five seconds through the Ramsey Hairpin.

Ramsey also marked the end of Todd’s race, with Ian Lougher moving up to third where he would finish.

2019 Isle of Man TT: SES TT Zero Results
Pos. Rider Machine/Team Time Speed
1 Michael Rutter Mugen/Bathams Mugen 18:34.172 121.904 mph
2 John McGuinness Mugen/Bathams Mugen 18:42.738 120.979 mph
3 Ian Lougher Idaten X RE/Team Mirai 22:02.697 102.690 mph
4 Matthew Rees University of Bath 23:52.100 94.845 mph
5 Allann Vener Brunel/Brunel University 24:44.815 91.478 mph
6 Mike Norbury Duffy Motorsport SR 27:10.800 83.289 mph
7 Shaun Anderson Duffy Motorsport 31:25.831 72.026 mph

Rutter Breaks His Own Lap Record in Ses TT Zero Race Victory 6.6.19

Michael Rutter was in record breaking form in today’s SES TT Zero race for electric bikes at the 2019 Isle of Man TT Races fuelled by Monster Energy.

Rutter clinched the race win with a new record lap from Bathams Mugen teammate John McGuinness. Another veteran competitor, Team Mirai’s Ian Lougher, took the final podium place.

Celebrating its 10th year this year, the TT Zero Race lap record has gone from an average speed of 96.82mph set by Mark Miller in the inaugural TT Zero Race, to Rutter’s new time of 121.909mph, just under a second inside his old record set last year.

The race has been dominated in recent years by the Mugen team, with John McGuinness, Michael Rutter and Bruce Anstey all winning races for the Japanese-based factory team and today’s win for Rutter’s – his fifth in the class -also extended his record of winning every TT Zero Race that he has participated in. He was also the first rider to break the prestigious 100mph mark for an electric bike in 2012.

Rutter was never headed in the race and his lead was over 4 seconds at the opening timing point at Glen Helen from Bathams Mugen teammate John McGuinness. Davey Todd, who replaced his Penz13.com teammate Daley Mathison – who was so tragically killed in the Superbike race earlier in the week – on the Nottingham University bike, was in third but was already almost eleven seconds off the leaders pace. Wales’s Ian Lougher and South African Allann Venter (Brunel University) completed the top five.

McGuinness closed the gap to just over three seconds at Ballaugh and set the fastest time through the Sulby speed trap – a remarkable 176.14 to Rutter’s 173.86 with Todd also flying through Sulby straight with 160.16 – all three times testament to the progress that these electric bikes have made.

However, Rutter again improved his lead back up to almost five seconds by the third check point at Ramsey Hairpin. By the Bungalow the main question on everyone’s lips was whether Rutter could break his own lap record and he answered the question at the Grandstand with a new lap record.

McGuinness comfortably held on to second place at the chequered flag but with Davey Todd stopping after Ramsey, Ian Lougher moved into the final podium place and duly came home in third with an average lap speed of 102.690mph.

zero,

With Todd retiring, it was left to Allann Venter to give Brunel University the honour of being the leading University. The Duffy Motorsport pair – Mike Norbury and Shaun Anderson were next home with 83.289 and 72.026 respectively. Matthew Rees, representing the University of Bath, was the final finisher.

The post 2019 Isle of Man TT: SES TT Zero Results appeared first on Motorcycle.com News.

2020 Yamaha YZ125X First Look

Other off-road-specific features include a 2.1-gallon fuel tank with a fuel petcock that has reserve, large radiator, gripper seat, aluminum handlebar, wider YZ-F-style footpegs, factory sidestand, and an O-ring chain. Yamaha believes this is the ultimate GNCC and hare scrambles weapon for new riders as well as those who simply want a light, nimble motorcycle to compete upon. Whatever the reason, we have a feeling the YZ125X is going to garner a lot of attention in the resurgent two-stroke racing community. The 2020 YZ125X will be available at the end of June with an MSRP set at $6,699.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Dean Harrison wins Senior TT after Hickman’s BMW falters

Dean Harrison wins

First Senior TT win for Kawasaki since 1975

Metzeler break Dunlop stranglehold

After a disastrous start to TT race week with non-stop weather delays, Thursday had seen the clouds break long enough to run a massive five TT races, completely catching up on the race program with the most races ever run on a single day in TT history.

The following day weather was forecast to close in and turn downright ugly with expected falls of up to 50mm from Friday afternoon. Thus organisers moved the six-lap Senior TT ahead to an earlier 1000 start time, which was then pushed back a little to 1015 as marshalls helped clean small sections of the course. The sky though was the most welcoming seen across the whole TT fortnight which bode well for the coming Senior TT.

Peter Hickman and Dean Harrison proved a step above the competition last year and the pair carried that form into TT 2019. Hickman though did seem to have an edge on Harrison in the lead-up to the Senior and would enter the race as favourite.

David Johnson proved he is ready to pounce should either of that pair make any mistakes today. The South Australian scored his maiden podium yesterday in the Superstock TT, despite a demonstrably clear horsepower deficit. Today, with the extra 25 horsepower of the Superbike spec’ Fireblade beneath him, that gap should be less evident.

Michael Dunlop of course is always in with a strong chance of a win should he find a little more speed today. He added to his TT win tally late on Thursday evening with victory in the Lightweight TT.  The likes of James Hillier and Conor Cummins can also never be discounted. Ian Hutchinson has failed to hit his straps this week but could also mount a last-minute surprise return to form if the planets aligned for the Bingley Bullett

Michael Rutter also showed his speed yesterday with the TT Zero win and new lap record on the Mugen electric bike, I think it is fair to say there is no more experienced road racer on any motorcycle grid in any series, anywhere in the world with as much experience as Rutter.  For the Senior TT he is on the bespoke RC213V-S Honda and while many might suggest he is a long shot, I am one that thinks that shot might actually not be all that long…

The other elder statesman of the roads is of course John McGuinness. His return from injury is being made on the V4 Norton, a machine that has proved good enough to lap over 130mph with Josh Brookes at the controls in 2017. On the grid McGuinness remarked he hadn’t quite found his rhythm on the Norton yet, and that they had been chasing a small electrical problem.

Conor Cummins was to head down Glencrutchery Road first with the other riders waved off at ten-second intervals. After Cummins it was Harrison, McGuiness, Hutchinson and Hillier the first five away. They were followed by Dunlop, Gary Johnson, Michael Rutter, David Johnson and Peter Hickman.

They are away!

Dean Harrison was quick out of the blocks and had pulled more than four-seconds back on Conor Cummins by the first split at Glen Helen. Michael Dunlop was also away well along with Michael Rutter while David Johnson was sixth.

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison

At Ballaugh Bridge for the first time there was nothing between Harrison and Hickman for the lead. There was eight-seconds back to Conor Cummins in third place, the Padgetts Honda being quickly caught by Michael Dunlop though while David Johnson had moved past Rutter to take fifth place.

At Bungalow for the first time Peter Hickman had a one-second lead over Harrison while Conor Cummins was managing to stave off the advances of Michael Dunlop to hold on to third place. David Johnson still fifth, seven-seconds behind Dunlop. John McGuinness stopped at Bungalow with some sort of problem.

134.28mph lap from standing start!

At the end of lap one Dean Harrison registered a 133.99mph lap from a standing start as we waited with baited breath for race leader Peter Hickman to cross the stripe… There he goes, 134.28mph lap from a standing start for Hicky. Cummins still third ahead of Dunlop with David Johnson in fifth after a 130.98mph opening lap.

IOMTT Senior Conor Cummins
Conor Cummins

At Ballaugh Bridge for the second time it was still Hickman in front but now with a gap out to two-seconds. Conor Cummins was looking to have the measure of Michael Dunlop, his advantage out to four-seconds now. David Johnson a further 12-seconds back in fifth.

Peter Hickman registered 192mph through the Sulby speed trap and by Ramsey had extended his lead over Harrison out to 3.4-seconds. Cummins a further 20-seconds back, with 5-seconds on Dunlop and 20-second on Johnson.

Hickman extended his lead out to 6.5-seconds by Bungalow, which was then 6.94-seconds by Cronk ny Mona.

In the pits!

Dean Harrison the first rider into the pits while Peter Hickman arrived eight-seconds later after clocking a 134.281mph despite having to slow for the pit entry. Michael Dunlop and Peter Hickman exited pit-lane together on the track but of course there was more than a 30-second gap separating them on the timing monitors, Dunlop appearing to give way to Hickman as they got back up to speed heading down Glencrutchery Road.

Honda Racing men retire

Ian Hutchinson retired after coming into the pits but David Johnson limped to a halt out on the circuit after his Fireblade had started coughing and spluttering earlier in the lap. A terrible blow after the promise Johnson showed yesterday as he raced to a podium finish in the Superstock TT.

At Glen Helen on lap three Hickman’s lead out to ten-seconds over Harrison as Conor Cummins extends his advantage over Michael Dunlop. The demise of David Johnson promoted Michael Rutter up into the top five, but 38-seconds behind fourth placed Dunlop.

On the run to Ballaugh Bridge Harrison clawed back half-a-second on Hickman but Hicky then made that up and more by Ramsey Hairpin to extend his lead back out to 10.494-seconds. Conor Cummins 35-seconds behind the race leader in third place but with 13-seconds over Dunlop.

Hickman pulled another two-seconds over Harrison by Bungalow to extend his lead to 12.198-seconds and by the start-finish line at The Grandstand that lead was 13.486-seconds. Conor Cummins 40.7-seconds behind the leader but with 16-seconds over Dunlop as they commenced lap four.

At Ramsey Hairpin on lap four the gap between Hickman and Harrison was 12.532-seconds after the Kawasaki man put in the faster sector time from Ballaugh Bridge to Ramsey. Conor Cummins 49-seconds behind the race leader but with a now comfortable 18-seconds over Michael Dunlop.

Hickman owns the next sector though, from Ramsey to Bungalow Hicky three-seconds quicker than Harrison to extend his lead out to 15.260-seconds. Hickman has displayed a huge advantage through that sector over Harrison all week and no doubt the Kawasaki man will study the post-race footage on how to narrow that gap at TT 2020.

IOMTT Senior Peter Hickman
Peter Hickman

Second Pit Stop

New rear tyres going in the bikes along with enough fuel to last the final two laps of the TT Mountain Course. When they came into the pits the gap on the timing monitors was 17.683-seconds but Hickman’s team helped him extend that by another 1.6-seconds in the pits.

Through the first split on lap five Hickman’s lead had been dramatically shortened by more than ten-seconds! Unsure if some sort of post pit-stop problem or he got held up somewhere on the circuit or made a mistake, but all of a sudden his lead has been more than halved…

Problems for Hickman…

At Ballaugh Bridge the gap now down to 1.1-seconds… Nothing in it… Hickman had some problems with the BMW Superbike spitting water at high rpm, and those gremlins had surfaced again and looked to possibly rob him the chance of a Senior TT win here today… Because of those problems encountered earlier this week, which had led the team to change engines, radiators, hoses, caps etc. but still yet to cure the problem, Hickman had favoured using the Superstock engine in today’s Senior TT.  Scrutineers however had impounded that engine for post-race technical inspections, that choice was taken away from the Smiths Racing BMW squad. Even requests for the engine to be sealed and then inspected after the Senior were rejected by TT officials, thus Smiths BMW were forced to take the gamble on the Superbike…

Harrison into the lead..

Dean Harrison moved into the race lead at Ramsey Hairpin, the advantage to the Kawasaki man a significant 7.877-seconds and seemingly building at every split. Can Hickman keep it going to the flag or will his problems allow Conor Cummins and Michael Dunlop onto the podium…

By Cronk ny Mona Harrison’s lead was 18.157-seconds and by the start-finish line in front of The Grandstand that was 18.386-seconds. Hickman’s pits had been ready to receive him but Hickman instead blasted past them. Conor Cummins a further 33.208-seconds behind in third place but with 25-seconds over Michael Dunlop.

Last lap!

Peter Hickman was down to using only half-throttle and only 11,000 rpm as he tried to reduce the amount of coolant the BMW ejected. That had allowed Dean Harrison to extend his lead out to 31.471-seconds. Hickman was nine-seconds slower than third-placed Conor Cummins on the Grandstand to Glen Helen sector and the gap between the pair was down to 24.355-seconds.

Harrison’s lead out to 40.454-seconds at Ballaugh Bridge and the BMW six-seconds slower than third placed Conor Cummins through that last split, the gap between second and third place men now down to 17.740-seconds.

At Ramsey the gap between Hickman and Cummins was down to 12.842-seconds, at Bungalow it was then down to 8.923-seconds. Harrison’s lead was more than 50-seconds.

IOMTT Senior Dean Harrison Podium Peter Hickman Conor Cummins
2019 Senior TT Results
1. Dean Harrison
2. Peter Hickman +53.062
3. Conor Cummins  +58.879

Dean Harrison the clear winner ahead of a frustrated but ultimately still great scoring Peter Hickman after he managed to nurse that Smiths BMW home over the final two laps in order to get that second place ahead of Conor Cummins by a slender 5.817-seconds.

IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison – Senior TT Winner – 2019

Michael Dunlop had a comfortable fourth place and it was Hillier who got the verdict over Todd for fifth, the latter setting a personal best lap of 131.49mph on the sixth lap in just his second year at the TT.

Michael Rutter, Jamie Coward – who recorded his first 130mph lap – Brian McCormack and Dominic Herbertson completed the top ten.

The race results enabled Hickman to regain the Joey Dunlop TT Championship he last won in 2017 with 111 points, 13 ahead of Harrison (98) with Hillier in third (69). Hickman will receive a Bremont watch from the TT’s Official Timing Partner.

After twice previously finishing second, Coward won the TT Privateer’s Championship with the maximum 125 points after being the top privateer in all five of the races. McCormack (61) finished second with Paul Jordan (58) in third.

Kawasaki won the Manufacturer’s Award with Smiths Racing taking the Team Prize for the third year in a row.


2019 Senior TT Results

  1. Dean Harrison
  2. Peter Hickman +53.062
  3. Conor Cummins  +58.879
  4. Michael Dunlop +1m26.709
  5. James Hillier +2m30.352
  6. Davey Todd +2m32.920
  7. Michael Rutter +3m03.571
  8. Jamie Coward +3m13.561
  9. Brian McCormack +3m49.971
  10. Dominic Herbertson +4m09.262
  11. Gary Johnson +4m41.665
  12. Shaun Anderson +5m58.740
  13. Derek Sheils +6m07.744
  14. Mike Booth +6m55.370
  15. Michael Sweeney +7m14.207
  16. Horst Saiger +7m15.358
  17. Mark Parrett +7m55.596
  18. Joe Akroyd +8m00.702
  19. David Jackson +8m03.310
  20. Frank Gallagher +8m05.124
IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison
Dean Harrison – Senior TT Winner – 2019
IOMTT Senior Post Dean Harrison
The front of the Silicone Engineering Kawasaki after almost two hours of racing at the Senior TT

Source: MCNews.com.au

Folger stands in for Pawi at Petronas

Jonas Folger: “I’m really excited to get the chance to be competing again. I can’t wait to get back on a bike and get that racing feeling. PETRONAS Sprinta Racing are an exceptionally professional team in all three categories and I know some of the crew in the Moto2 squad from the past. I’m looking forward to working with them again, especially as I have some good friends there. I have positive memories of Barcelona as I’ve been on the podium and put in some fast laps there in the past. It’s actually one of my favourite tracks and it suits my riding style well. The Kalex is a really fun bike to ride because the riding style is very similar to what you use in MotoGP. The Triumph engine feels closer to a MotoGP bike, it suits me and I didn’t do badly in testing, so I can’t wait to get going again on it!”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Johnson earns maiden Isle of Man TT Superstock podium

Australian contender snatches third in Superstock thriller.

Image: Supplied.

Honda Racing’s David Johnson earned his first Isle of Man TT podium in sensational fashion in the Superstock category, getting the better of Michael Dunlop (MD Racing BMW) by just 0.2 seconds.

The Australian was eighth on the first of the three-lap encounter, but wasted no time in starting his ascent through the field. Moving into fourth by lap two, he pushed on for the top three in a incredible display of riding, overcoming Dunlop in the final sector.

“That was an unreal Superstock race,” Johnson stated. “I didn’t get up to speed straight away on the first lap but then I got up to fourth at the start of lap two. I saw the gap and it was +0 the whole time I was in fourth. I didn’t know it was Michael I was dicing with but I could see the times to and fro and I just thought ‘I gotta get this’.

“I just tried not to put a foot wrong on that last lap. Over the Mountain on the last lap was the best I’ve ever ridden over there on the Superstock bike, and that last sector was something else – I just put everything into it.

“I was P4 at the Bungalow and still at Cronk Ny Mona, so I just pushed like mad over the last bit. The team did a fantastic job and the dynamic between us is always very good, so I’m just so happy to get this podium.”

The Superstock race was taken out by Smiths Racing BMW rider Peter Hickman, comfortably beating home Dean Harrison (Silicone Engineering Kawasaki) to make it five career TT race wins.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Erzberg Extreme Motorcycle Enduro 2019 In Photos

“This feels amazing. I think this could be the most important Erzberg victory of my career. A lot of people were talking about my age, and at 44 I did have some doubts about my fitness for the full race. But I just kept my focus and kept pushing. I knew I would have work to do from the start, but the faster sections of the race, early on, never really suit me. Once I got to Carl’s Diner, I started to make up time. It was different to when I walked it, and I was feeling it physically, but it went really well. I managed to lead going into Green Hell, but it was close there with Manni. I just had to keep pushing after that. It’s amazing to be a five-time Erzberg winner.”

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com