Kelso races to 7-7 at Jerez CEV Repsol | Roulstone P11

2021 FIM CEV Repsol – Round 6 Jerez


The FIM CEV Repsol championship was back on track at Jerez for Round 6 over the weekened, with a minute of silence observed for Hugo Millan, before racing got underway.

Round 6 of the FIM CEV Repsol championship started with a minute of silence for Hugo Millan
Round 6 of the FIM CEV Repsol championship started with a minute of silence for Hugo Millan

In the Moto3 JWC Brit Scott Ogden (Aspar Junior Team) got off to a brilliant start, picking up his first-ever class win. Race 2 meanwhile went the way of David Muñoz.

Aussie Joel Kelso raced to a strong 7-7 result across both races, moving into eighth overall. Senna Agius finished P19 in Race 1, but recorded a DNF in Race 2.

In the Moto2 European Championship, Fermin Aldeguer grabbed another win and the championship title, with team-mate Alonso Lopez finally claiming his first win of the year in Race 2.

For the Hawkers European Talent Cup, it was the perfect day for Maximo Martinez who took both wins. Australia’s Jacob Roulstone was just outside the top-10, in 11th in Race 1, but was a DNF in Race 2. He now sits 10th overall in the standings.


FIM Moto3 JWC

Race 1 of the FIM Moto3 JWCh saw Scott Ogden take a superb victory. After taking his best qualifying position yet the previous day, Ogden hit the front with five laps to go.

Moto3 Race Start
Moto3 Race Start – 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 – Jerez

Eventual third place finisher Ivan Ortola (Team MTA) slipped past him at Turn 9 on the final lap, before Ogden managed to take back the advantage at Turn 13. David Muñoz took second place and picked up crucial championship points over series leader Daniel Holgado (Aspar Junior Team).

Scott Ogden
Scott Ogden – 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 – Jerez

Australia’s Kelso finished seventh, with Senna Agius 19th.

Scott Ogden

“It’s incredible, I’m very happy with this victory, which would not have been possible without all the support from my team. It was a crazy race, but little by little I managed to place myself first. I have focused on setting my pace, without thinking about whether they would pass me or not. I wanted to try, and I managed to stay ahead. I came to the last corner in fourth position, but I knew that if I braked late, I could get the inside line.”

Scott Ogden
Scott Ogden – 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 – Jerez

Race 2 didn’t go the same way for Ogden as he crashed out on lap 8. Instead, it was David Muñoz that would take victory, using his superior placing to pull out a one-second margin at the flag over second placed Ivan Ortola.

It marked a great day for Muñoz and Ortola, with both of them going one better in Race 2 than they did in Race 1. Daniel Holgado picked up third in Race 2, meaning that he held his championship lead to 42 points over race-winner Muñoz. But with just 75 points left to play for, the championship is still firmly in the grip of Holgado.

Daniel Holgado

“We are being very consistent; we are going to continue in this line and we will try to get the title at Misano. I’m happy with how the weekend went. We had to yet take the step forward in the last laps, but at least we have drawn good conclusions. In the second race, the temperature was very high and made everything difficult, but we have got the best possible performance and we have returned to the podium for the seventh time this year.”

Daniel Holgado
Daniel Holgado – 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 – Jerez

Joel Kelso took his second seventh place of the weekend in Race 2, while for Agius is was a DNF.

Joel Kelso – P7/7

“Difficult weekend to say the least we tried our best but unfortunately it was not enough, we will come back stronger in Misano.”

Joel Kelso - 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 - Jerez
Joel Kelso – 2021 FIM CEV Repsol Round 6 – Jerez

Source: MCNews.com.au

Father and son duo set for lap of WA for charity

The Lap: A Live Ride for Young Lives


On September 10 father and son team; Weston Jackson and Joel Jackson, will set off on ‘The Lap; A Live Ride for Young Lives,’ a 45-day, 10,000km motorbike journey around the entirety of Western Australia to raise funds and awareness for Telethon Weekend 2021.

The Lap; A Live Ride for Young Lives
The Lap; A Live Ride for Young Lives

This adventure seeks to be a uniting cause to bring people together in support of young West Australians and their families. With 35 events across the state, The Lap will include live music events, visits and fundraising events at public schools, events at local gyms and visits to recognise local business who pledge donations.

All ticket sales, donations, merchandise sales and fundraising efforts will go to Telethon. But if supporters can’t make it to events they can donate online and be a part of the ride to save young lives.

Joel Jackson (right)

Joel Jackson is a AACTA and Logie award winning actor, best known for his role as Peter Allen in ‘Not The Boy Next Door’ . A volunteer at Telethon since 2015, Joel’s recent collaboration in 2020 with the Moorditj Mob of Wesley College was the biggest performance of indigenous performers at a Telethon ever.

Joel is an Officer Cadet in the Australian Army Reserve, an ambassador for the Australian Children’s Music Foundation, Soldier On and previously Redkite. In 2011, Joel was awarded Young Citizen of the Year for the Pilbara region.

Weston Jackson is the current Principal at Millars Well Primary School, Karratha and has been an Educator for more than 40 years. In 2019, Weston was the recipient of a Harvard Fellowship from the WA Department of Education. An acknowledgement of his leadership and contributions in Public Education, including but not limited to; indigenous education, leadership and mentoring. In 2004 Weston received the award for Outstanding Aboriginal Educator from the Department of Education whilst Principal at Pannawonica Primary School.

Joel Jackson at MotoMax in Perth

Benelli Australia is proud to be a supporter alongside major sponsor Hawaiian, with MotoMax in Perth assisting in getting the boys on the road. The Lap is a registered Telethon fundraiser.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toprak Razgatlioglu and Jonathan Rea now equal on points

2021 WorldSBK Round Seven
Navarra (Spain)

WorldSBK Superpole Race

Elbows were well and truly out in the Tissot Superpole Race at the Pirelli Navarra Round as the lead MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship trio were engaged in battle throughout the 10-lap encounter that was won by Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) as he made it back-to-back victories at the Circuito de Navarra and the tenth in his WorldSBK career; and also the first time he has claimed three victories on the bounce in his career following on from his Race 2 victory at Most.

Redding and Rea broke away from Razgatlioglu

Redding got the jump on Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) as the lights went out while Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) made up ground from eighth on the grid to run in second on the opening lap. The Championship leading trio battled it out through the opening laps of the ten-lap encounter with all three taking turns to lead the race; Razgatlioglu able to take advantage of Redding and Rea battling to move back into second before making a move on Rea at Turn 1 to take the lead. The trio continued to battle it out before Redding was able to pull away from Rea, who re-passed Razgatlioglu and the trio shared the podium for the seventh time this season.

Seventh time this season this trio have shared the podium together

Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) claimed fourth place for the fourth consecutive race and will lead the second row away from the lights in Race 2, with Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) in fifth. Lowes was able to pass Locatelli throughout the 10-lap encounter, but Locatelli responded to claim fourth. Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) will complete the second row after sixth place in the Superpole Race.

Andrea Locatelli

British rider Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) will head the third row from seventh place as his strong weekend at Navarra continues, with Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) completing the third row. Dutchman van der Mark and American Gerloff were also battling it out for eighth place with the BMW rider able to hold on for eighth.

Redding clearly enjoys a huge power advantage on the Ducati

WorldSBK Superpole Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R /
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.631
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +3.040
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +3.845
5 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +4.501
6 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +6.302
7 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +7.203
8 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +10.054
9 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +10.620
10 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +16.297
11 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +16.791
12 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +17.321
13 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +17.353
14 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +18.531
15 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +18.578
16 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +20.506
17 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +23.206
18 L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R +23.308
19 N. Uramoto Suzuki GSX-R1000R +28.254
20 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +40.060
21 J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +41.263
Not Classified
RET T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 4 Laps

WorldSBK Race Two

The final race of the inaugural Pirelli Navarra Round for the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship was a tense and dramatic affair as the top three of the Championship battled it out for honours at the Circuito de Navarra. Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) came out on top as he claimed a stunning Race 2 victory and left the round top of the Championship heading into the French Round.

Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) and team-mate Toprak Razgatlioglu got lightning starts from the 22-lap encounter, the race shortened by one lap following a delayed start after the Warm-Up lap had been completed due to an issue with Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) on the grid. Locatelli swept around the outside of Razgatlioglu and Rea at the start while Rea dropped back behind his teammate, Alex Lowes.

Locatelli and Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) ran wide in the early stages of the race which forced the pair down the order, allowing Lowes to move up ahead of both of them before Locatelli fought back to run in fourth place; a position he has become very accustomed to over the last couple of rounds.

All three of Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) and Razgatlioglu exchanged positions in the opening laps of the race before it settled down slightly with Razgatlioglu leading the race ahead of Rea and Redding as the lead three in the Championship trio looking to take points out of each other in the Championship battle.

Toprak Razgatlioglu takes victory

On Lap 17, Rea saved a front-end slide heading into Turn 15 which allowed Redding to close the gap to Rea throughout Lap 18, before the pair went side-by-side into the fast right-hander of Turn 1 on Lap 19. Redding was on the inside, but Rea cut back to keep the position. On the same lap of the race, Redding pulled off an incredible move around the outside of Turn 14 to move into second place after Rea ran wide at Turn 13. It meant Razgatlioglu claimed victory ahead of Redding and Rea with the Turkish star now level with Rea in the Championship on 311 points. Razgatlioglu has 17 podiums in the 2021 campaign which ties him for the record of podiums for a Yamaha rider, level with Ben Spies in 2009.

WorldSBK Circuito de Navarra – Race 2
1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK)
2. Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +1.105s
3. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +3.715s

Locatelli made history with his latest fourth place finish in WorldSBK as he became the first rider to secure five consecutive four place finishes, finishing almost four seconds clear of Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in fifth place. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) came home in sixth place, less than a second behind Sykes.

Italian rider Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) finished in seventh place in Race 2 after battles throughout the race, with Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) claiming eighth place as all five manufacturers were represented in the top eight, with Dutch rider Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in ninth place. Van der Mark had crossed the line ahead of Bautista but was penalised for exceeding track limits on the final lap, meaning he came home in ninth. Rookie Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) took another top ten finish as he continues to impress throughout his rookie campaign.

Rinaldi

Bassani’s fellow rookie, Tito Rabat (Barni Racing), was 11th place and just 2.4s away from a top ten finish but was unable to overhaul Bassani, while Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Action) came home in 12th and took more points from Navarra after not scoring since the Aragon Round that opened the 2021 campaign.

Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha) took home four points with 13th place ahead of Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in 14th, who had an eventful race. The Frenchman had to serve a double Long Lap Penalty for an irresponsible manoeuvre on the grid after he had been delayed on the grid ahead of the second Warm-Up lap. Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) secured a 15th place finish and one point despite a crash on Lap 3 of the 22-lap race at Turn 13, able to battle back through the field. OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing Jayson Uribe and Loris Cresson were the last of the classified runners in 16th and 17th respectively.

Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) both were forced out of the race after coming together at Turn 9. Naomichi Uramoto (JEG Racing) had a technical issue on Lap 9 of 22 at Turn 5 which forced the Suzuki rider out of the race on his WorldSBK’s debut. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) was out of the race on Lap 14 after he came off his Honda machine at Turn 2. Kohta Nozane’s (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) race came to an end on the final lap after a 22nd lap crash at Turn 5.

WorldSBK Race Two Results

Pos  No. Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.105
3 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +3.715
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +10.758
5 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +14.437
6 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +15.151
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.875
8 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +18.272
9 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +18.991
10 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +29.430
11 T.  Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +31.834
12 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +40.104
13 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +49.695
14 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m12.388
15 L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R +1m14.472
16 J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m25.210
17 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m30.578
Not Classified
RET K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 1 Lap
RET L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R 9 Laps
RET N. Uramoto Suzuki GSX-R1000R 15 Laps
RET C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R /
RET G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 /

Quotes

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

“First I have to thank my team, because they did an incredible job to improve my bike so much for Race 2. This weekend was not easy for me, every race we try but every race we struggle a little. I decide P3 is better than crash but when I understand my bike in Race 2 has more potential, I feel full motivation to win. We are very happy with this important result! Also, I see Loka pass Redding into Turn 5 on the first lap, I smile in my helmet and I think “ok, we are like hungry dogs attacking, let’s go!” Thank you again to my team, I enjoyed a lot Race 2 today and now we focus on Magny-Cours and the next races.”

Scott Redding

“It was a really positive weekend. Two wins and a second place: to be honest, is an exciting result. During Race 2 I thought a lot about the strategy, I could have pushed but at the same time, I didn’t want to take unnecessary risks. The fight for the World Championship is open and it is necessary to think in these terms. I thank the team for the work they have done. We have great confidence”.

Jonathan Rea

“I had a little bit more margin today. I felt after the Superpole race that I could really fight for it in Race Two. Toprak made a huge step, he was very fast and the rhythm was faster than yesterday. For ten laps I was fighting, fighting, fighting, and I was just waiting for his speed to drop off – but it never really did. I was losing front feeling, having a lot of front slides and it was time for me then to consolidate. I had a big moment in the last corner, when I hit an object on the track, which was just off line. That made the front bobble and I caught the slide, and then I had another slide in T13. It was one of those – a tough weekend. It wasn’t perfect for everybody, people were slipping and sliding around, but it penalised us a little bit more. That said, it was solid. I wasn’t confident coming here so to come away with what we did, and not losing too many points in the championship. It could have been much worse for us.”

Alex Lowes

“The Superpole Race was good for us. We made a few changes on the bike after yesterday and I was stronger. I was able to get closer to the guys in front. The pace felt quite good to the end, nice and consistent. We decided to keep the bike the same for the last race when the temperature went up. I got a good start again but on lap one at T9 everybody was trying to get into position. There are not too many places to pass around here and when Tom Sykes hit me I had to release the brake or else I was going to hit Andrea Locatelli. That was a shame because it put me right back. I struggled to come back through. I was faster than Michael van der Mark but it took me five or six laps to pass him and by the time I had got on the back of him my tyre was moving a lot. It was a frustrating race because I could not fight like I wanted to.”

Andrea Locatelli

“It’s another great weekend for us because we make three times P4. In the races today we improved a little bit, but I made a mistake when I tried to pass Redding in the first lap of Race 2, then Redding tried to pass me and I went a little bit wide. Then in the braking of Turn 9 Lowes touched me and I went off the track and then I am in seventh or eighth position… I tried to push on the maximum to get into my “standard” position of P4 and when I arrived there, I try to follow the front riders but I couldn’t close the gap. In the end, this is okay and I try to make my own rhythm and I finish the race with another P4. We work very well and for sure now we have Magny-Cours and it’s a new track for me with the R1. I have seen it before last year but I need to take some reference with this bike but I think we can do very well also in France. I’m very happy about this weekend and the guys work very well!”

Tom Sykes

“It was not a bad weekend. With the high track temperatures, it was definitely a challenging weekend. For the engines and for the riders, this kind of temperatures got to the limit in the afternoon race. Overall we have been trying to improve the set-up of the bike, certainly since as well the hot test in Catalunya, but still we had some limitations. We had some big problems in the race and we tried two different solutions from the tyre but I had some limitations in some different aspects to be fair. Even in race two I had some issues with turning and understeer, also rear traction. I just worked hard to try to managing the bike on brake pressure, in throttle openings and tried to make the best race I could. I had a lot of pressure throughout the race but we were able to deal with this. The best was lap one. We struggled to get a run on anyone this weekend but there was a bit of confusion between Alex Lowes and Andrea Locatelli and going into the turn at the end of the back straight that was a good opportunity for me so I took that and that gave me a good track position for the rest of the race.”

Michael van der Mark

“It was a tough Sunday. In this morning’s Superpole race I struggled quite a lot with the front end of the bike. I just couldn’t attack anyone or stay with anyone so I was a bit disappointed but anyway, I gained a few starting positions for race two. I then had a good start but I immediately felt that I was losing at the exits compared to the others so I tried to push more on the front but I didn’t feel good and it was quite a long and tough race. We need to improve that but at least we got some points, we always keep trying and I am looking forward to Magny-Cours now.”

Michael Rinaldi

“It was a very difficult round in which we struggled to find the feeling. We worked a lot on the bike and we found a good set up at the end in Race-2. It’s clear that the start from thirteenth position made it difficult to get a good result; but the pace proves us that in another condition we could have been with the group in front. We must remain positive and work hard in view of the next races”.

Alvaro Bautista

“We did not change too much on the bike set-up from yesterday, because in analysing the data we could not find a reason for the crash in race 1. But we did choose a different spec of tyre today and I felt a better with the front, so maybe we just didn’t make the best choice for race 1. I made a bad start in the Superpole race, losing several positions and despite recovering fairly well, I just missed out on P9 and so had to start from the fourth row once again in the afternoon. I made a better start in race 2 but during the first half of the race I struggled to overtake, because we are lacking some traction when exiting the corners, especially when everyone is on fresh tyres and are able to brake hard. After a few laps, when the tyre performance begins to drop, I can be more effective, and in fact our pace at that point was very similar to the top five. Anyway, this was a tough track for us, and I think the upcoming races will be better.”

Leon Haslam

“It’s been a tough weekend, for both me and Alvaro really. In race 2, we were in the same small group but then I lost a little contact with Alvaro when Bassani made a mistake and I risked colliding with him. The lap times weren’t so bad anyway, but then I made a small mistake with the back shift and crashed. That was frustrating because I didn’t feel I was pushing excessively and we were gradually catching Bassani for P10, which would have been nice. Anyway, it is what it is and now we look ahead to the next Magny-Cours round. I’m feeling more confident about the upcoming tracks too, so we’ll see what we can do.”

Jonas Folger

“The Superpole race was pretty good, even if the start didn’t work out, which was the case for all three races. We had problems with the clutch at the start all through the weekend, and we need to work on that now. My pace was good in the second half of the Superpole race. The weather was also a bit cooler, which generally suits us. After a difficult start to race two, the pace was also OK. I am not entirely happy with the weekend but we did score some points. Of course, some other riders took a tumble and that helped us but I made it through OK and we achieved our objective of scoring points.”

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Toprak Razgatlioglu  311
 2  Jonathan Rea  311
 3  Scott Redding  273
 4  Alex Lowes  169
 5  Andrea Locatelli  151
 6  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  150
 7  Tom Sykes  146
 8  Garrett Gerloff  135
 9  Michael Van Der Mark  131
 10  Chaz Davies  92
 11  Alvaro Bautista  92
 12  Axel Bassani  87
 13  Leon Haslam  71
 14  Lucas Mahias  38
 15  Tito Rabat  35
 16  Kohta Nozane  30
 17  Isaac Vinales  19
 18  Jonas Folger  14
 19  Eugene Laverty  14
 20  Christophe Ponsson  11
 21  Leandro Mercado  8
 22  Marvin Fritz  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2

WorldSSP

The FIM Supersport World Championship’s first visit to the Circuito de Navarra provided more enthralling drama as Championship contenders Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) battled it out for Race 2 honours at the Pirelli Navarra Round in a shortened encounter after Red Flags were deployed on Lap 15 of the planned 20.

Red flags stopped play early

Starting from seventh on the grid, Simon Jespersen (Kallio Racing) got the jump to lead the race on the opening lap of the 20-lap race as the Danish rider gained six positions off the line, although his lead did not last long as Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha) claimed the lead with a move at the right-hander of Turn 11. Jespersen tried to fight back but had a huge moment on the exit of Turn 11 which allowed Odendaal to keep the lead.

Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) claimed another podium in his rookie WorldSSP campaign

In a familiar story to Race 1, Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) found himself shuffled down the order in the early stages of the race but was able to fight back after getting past his rivals, although had to close down a gap of almost two seconds to Odendaal as he looked for his second win of the weekend. On Lap 8, Aegerter attempted to make the pass at Turn 15 but Odendaal was able to respond on Lap 9.

After four laps of not being able to pass Odendaal, Aegerter looked to make the move on Lap 13 into the final corner and briefly got ahead, although Odendaal was able to re-pass on the run into Turn 1. Aegerter did not lead Odendaal lead for much longer, though, as he made a move at Turn 3 – just one lap before Red Flags were shown after a crash for Borja Gomez (Yamaha Ms Racing) at Turn 1; Gomez taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the incident and will be transported to Estella Hospital for further assessments, with Gomez having multiple contusions but conscious. It meant Aegerter claimed victory to extend his Championship lead over Odendaal, with the gap between the two now 47 points. Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) claimed another podium in his rookie WorldSSP campaign after fighting his way back through the field.

Aegerter the victor over Odendaal

Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) had a strong weekend at Navarra and claimed fourth place in his second round with the Yamaha Motoxracing outfit with his former teammate, Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) in fifth; the pair battling it out for fourth during the latter stages of the race. Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed sixth place after a challenging weekend for the German rider.

Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) was seventh and narrowly missed out on a place in the top six after fighting with Oettl, while Jespersen finished in eighth place after being unable to maintain his place on the podium but an impressive WorldSSP debut for the Danish rider as he stood in for the injured Hannes Soomer. Italian Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) was ninth with Swiss rider Marcel Brenner (VFT Racing), who was running inside the top five in the early stages of the race, completing the top ten.

David Sanchis Martinez (WRP Wepol Racing) was 11th after a strong debut weekend for the Spanish rider as he replaced Danny Webb after he split with the team, with Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) claiming a points finish on his return from injury, Federico Fuligni (VFT Racing) claimed 13th place with Daniel Valle (GMT94 Yamaha) 14th as he stood in at the GMT94 Yamaha outfit. Oscar Iglesias Gutierrez (Yamaha MS Racing) rounded out the points paying position with 15th and his best WorldSSP result in his second round.

Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) had an eventful race as he fell down the order in the early stages but battled back to take 16th place, ahead of Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) and Leonardo Taccini (Orelac Racing VerdNatura); Taccini the highest placed rider competing in the WorldSSP Challenge. He had a battle with fellow WorldSSP Challenge competitor Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) with Manfredi in 19th place, ahead of Michel Fabrizio (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti), Luigi Montella (Chiodo Moto Racing) and Maria Herrera (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing).

Hikari Okubo (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) crashed at Turn 15 which put an end to his fight for points while Randy Krummenacher (EBA Racing Team) and Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) came together at Turn 3 on Lap 4 as they both dropped down the order, although both were able to re-join. The incident was placed under investigation by the FIM WorldSBK Stewards although it was deemed no further action was necessary.

Eduardo Montero Huerta’s (DK Motorsport) race came to an end on Lap 5 as he crashed out on his own and was diagnosed with a right wrist contusion following a check-up at the medical centre, while Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) crashed out at Turn 12, although he was able to re-join. He then had a second crash on his own at Turn 11 which forced the Indonesian rider out of the race.

Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) was declared unfit for Race 2 after his crash in Race 1 on Saturday with a right shoulder dislocation, while Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) was also declared unfit after a crash in Warm-Up with a cervical strain and right ankle contusion.

WorldSSP Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +0.294
3 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +2.264
4 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +3.700
5 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +3.965
6 P Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +5.624
7 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 +5.855
8 S. Jespersen Yamaha YZF R6 +5.969
9 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +6.536
10 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +7.384
11 D. Sanchis Martinez Yamaha YZF R6 +10.087
12 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +10.674
13 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +11.571
14 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +14.809
15 O. Gutierrez Yamaha YZF R6 +15.302
16 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +17.424
17 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +21.085
18 L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +1 Sector
19 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Sector
20 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R +1 Sector
21 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Sector
22 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Lap
Not Classified
NC R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET B. Gomez Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R /
RET G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET H. Okubo Kawasaki ZX-6R /
RET E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 /

Quotes

Dominique Aegerter – P1

It was, again, a big battle from the start. My start was a little bit better today but still we were battling a lot with many riders. I think the fans enjoyed it. I could close the gap to Steven. It was not so easy to overtake him. Sad that the race was Red Flagged, I hope the rider who crashed is okay. No wheelies, no burnouts for the fans but I hope you enjoyed it. We took the maximum out of this weekend and we will have some espresso tonight with them and I can’t wait to relax, after three hard weeks racing, a little bit at home with friends and family.

Steven Odendaal – P2

I tried a different strategy today and unfortunately it didn’t work out. We just didn’t have the pace this weekend but it’s all about the long run and being consistent, getting the maximum points we can. We just missed a little bit and I’m sure we’ll catch them in the next one. Sad that the race ended early, but I hope that the rider who crashed is okay. Not nice to end that way.

Luca Bernardi – P3

I’m happy for this second podium here. We did a good job with the team. I had a good feeling with the bike. I’m a little bit sad for this Red Flag but this is the race. Next time, we try to take another podium and I’m happy.”

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  257
 2  Steven Odendaal  210
 3  Philipp Oettl  156
 4  Luca Bernardi  150
 5  Jules Cluzel  124
 6  Manuel Gonzalez  120
 7  Federico Caricasulo  84
 8  Randy Krummenacher  77
 9  Can Alexander Oncu  66
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  63
 11  Niki Tuuli  58
 12  Hannes Soomer  47
 13  Marc Alcoba  40
 14  Christoffer Bergman  39
 15  Kevin Manfredi  22
 16  Vertti Takala  21
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  21
 18  Simon Jespersen  15
 19  Peter Sebestyen  15
 20  Marcel Brenner  10
 21  Valentin Debise  9
 22  Sheridan Morais  9
 23  David Sanchis Martinez  8
 24  Maria Herrera  7
 25  Filippo Fuligni  6
 26  Michel Fabrizio  6
 27  Max Enderlein  5
 28  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 29  Hikari Okubo  4
 30  Massimo Roccoli  4
 31  Federico Fuligni  4
 32  Luca Grunwald  3
 33  Matteo Patacca  3
 34  Stephane Frossard  3
 35  Daniel Valle  2
 36  Ondrej Vostatek  2
 37  Oscar Gutierrez Iglesias  1
 38  Luca Ottaviani  1
 39  Leonardo Taccini  1
 40  Davide Pizzoli  1
 41  Pawel Szkopek  1

2021 WorldSBK Calendar

Date Track SBK SS600 SS300
21-23 May Aragón (Spain) X X
28-30 May Estoril (Portugal) X X  
11-13 Jun Misano (Italy) X X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X    
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X X
06-08 Aug Autodrom Most (Czech) X X X
20-22 Aug Navarra (Spain) X X  
3-5 Sep Magny-Cours (France) X X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X  
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X  

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jason O’Halloran extends BSB lead to 119 points

2021 British Superbike Championship
Round Six Cadwell Park


2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 1

Peter Hickman became the sixth different race winner of the 2021 Bennetts British Superbike Championship season, claiming FHO Racing BMW an emphatic first race win in the series in front of a rapturous home crowd at Cadwell Park.

At the start, Jason O’Halloran hit the front of the pack, narrowly moving down the inside of Glenn Irwin with Hickman holding third. However, by the time the pack had reached Chris Curve, Glenn Irwin had taken the lead for Honda Racing.

Irwin was trying to break the field; edging out an initial gap of 0.8s over the opening laps, but behind Hickman had made a decisive move on O’Halloran to move into second.

By the seventh lap Hickman had reeled Irwin back in and the advantage had vanished. Irwin made a small mistake to run slightly wide and Hickman didn’t need an invitation as he dived through to take the lead.

Hickman then unleashed a series of fast laps, breaking the lap record with a time of 1m:26.350s, to gap O’Halloran and Irwin, before taking the chequered flag in front of an ecstatic crowd.

Peter Hickman

However, the podium fight wasn’t over and whilst O’Halloran had moved into second, Irwin was soon under pressure from Tommy Bridewell.

Peter Hickman

The Oxford Products Racing Ducati rider had left it to the final laps to carve his way through, taking no prisoners to grab the final podium place on the penultimate lap to push Irwin into fourth.

Christian Iddon was able to get to the front of the next pack, moving ahead of Lee Jackson and Andrew Irwin in the closing five laps.

Ryan Vickers, who set the fastest ever lap of Cadwell Park yesterday, was eighth as he bounced back from a high-speed crash in qualifying.

Rory Skinner and Josh Brookes completed the top ten.

2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Peter HICKMAN BMW 20m21.062
2 Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha +2.080
3 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati +3.729
4 Glenn IRWIN Honda +4.348
5 Christian IDDON Ducati  +4.529
6 Lee JACKSON Kawasaki +4.617
7 Andrew IRWIN BMW +5.253
8 Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki +7.120
9 Rory SKINNER Kawasaki +8.084
10 Josh BROOKES Ducati +9.729
11 Storm STACEY Kawasaki +17.295
12 Dan LINFOOT Honda +18.059
13 Bradley RAY BMW +20.200
14 Xavi FORÉS BMW +21.693
15 Tim NEAVE Suzuki +27.090
16 Takumi TAKAHASHI Honda +34.723
17 Bjorn ESTMENT Suzuki +37.790
18 Joe SHELDON-SHAW Kawasaki +40.534
19 Ryo MIZUNO Honda +51.768
20 Brian McCORMACK BMW +1m12.074
21 James HILLIER BMW +1m19.361
Not Classified
DNF Tarran MACKENZIE Yamaha 7 Laps
DNF Dean HARRISON Kawasaki 10 Laps
DNF Gino REA Suzuki 11 Laps

2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 2

Peter Hickman made it a double dose of victories for FHO Racing BMW in the second Bennetts British Superbike Championship race at Cadwell Park, despite come under pressure on the final lap from standings leader Jason O’Halloran.

O’Halloran got a tremendous launch off the line to lead the pack on the opening lap but Hickman was instantly on the attack. However, it wasn’t until lap nine that he could make a pass on the McAMS Yamaha rider, diving down the inside on the brakes at Mansfield.

Hickman continued to try and break the pack, edging out an advantage over O’Halloran but the Australian reeled him back in over the final three laps. The McAMS Yamaha rider was within striking distance on the final lap, but despite piling on the pressure, Hickman had the edge at the chequered flag.

The battle for third was initially between Christian Iddon, the region’s fastest plumber Lee Jackson, and the Irwin brothers, but disaster struck again for the VisionTrack Ducati rider when he crashed out of third at Charlies unhurt on lap four.

Jackson then had the upper hand for FS-3 Racing Kawasaki, but Tommy Bridewell was storming through the pack after another bad start, running in eighth on the opening lap.

The Oxford Products Racing Ducati rider first moved ahead of Glenn Irwin, and then hit a top three position with a decisive pass at Coppice on lap 14, pushing Jackson back to fourth.

Bridewell was able to break the group behind him, but reigning champion Josh Brookes had been building momentum throughout the race from his fourth row start, and was able to force his way through to fifth with three laps to go.

The lone VisionTrack Ducati rider held off Glenn Irwin, who was then embroiled in a fight with his brother Andrew, as the pair exchanged blows throughout the closing stages, but it was the Honda Racing rider who had the edge at the chequered flag.

Andrew Irwin’s seventh place put him just ahead of rival BMW rider Bradley Ray, who currently holds the final place in the top eight of the standings for the Rich Energy OMG Racing BMW team.

Ryan Vickers, still feeling sore after his high-speed qualifying crash was ninth as Storm Stacey again returned to the top ten for Team LKQ Euro Car Parts Kawasaki.

Tarran Mackenzie was watching from the sidelines after the McAMS Yamaha rider decided to sit out today’s races after breaking his finger in his race one crash yesterday.

2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Peter HICKMAN BMW 26m10.023
2 Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha +0.155
3 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati +0.817
4 Lee JACKSON Kawasaki +1.672
5 Josh BROOKES Ducati +7.384
6 Glenn IRWIN Honda +10.159
7 Andrew IRWIN BM +10.605
8 Bradley RAY BMW +10.758
9 Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki +12.567
10 Storm STACEY Kawasaki +24.172
11 Tim NEAVE Suzuki +25.917
12 Xavi FORÉS BMW +32.029
13 Dan LINFOOT Honda +32.331
14 Dean HARRISON Kawasaki +34.114
15 Joe SHELDON-SHAW Kawasaki +46.301
16 Takumi TAKAHASHI Honda +46.436
17 James HILLIER BMW +1m21.355
Not Classified
DNF Rory SKINNER Kawasaki 3 Laps
DNF Brian McCORMACK BMW 5 Laps
DNF Bjorn ESTMENT Suzuki 6 Laps
DNF Gino REA Suzuki 9 Laps
DNF Christian IDDON Ducati 15 Laps
DNF Ryo MIZUNO Honda 15 Laps

2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 3

In the final race, O’Halloran hit the front to take the initial advantage off the line, but by the time the pack had reached Park, Glenn Irwin went for a move down the inside to grab the lead.

O’Halloran was then pushed back into third place when Hickman made a move on lap three, before the FHO Racing BMW rider was able to take the lead at Mansfield two laps later.

Bridewell again had one of his bad starts off the pole position, which dropped him down to fifth on lap one, but by the sixth lap, he had wrestled his way through into third place.

The leading trio remained the same as the previous two races with Hickman and O’Halloran ahead of Bridewell, until the closing stages.

Cadwell Park BSB

Hickman managed to save a big moment on the final lap, but it meant that he lost momentum at Coppice. O’Halloran seized the opportunity and made a decisive move down the inside at Charlies.

Jason O’Halloran leading Peter Hickman

O’Halloran was able to hold off a counter attack to score his first race win at Cadwell Park, and with it claims the Milwaukee Summer Grand Slam Trophy. Hickman meanwhile took second place and his highest points’ score of this round crowned him Milwaukee King of the Mountain.

Peter Hickman and Jason O’Halloran

The battle for fourth was between Brookes and Jackson, which went down to the wire. Brookes had made a spectacular pass on Jackson and Glenn Irwin in the early stage of the race to move into fourth.

Brookes continued to defend hard from Jackson, but the FS-3 Racing Kawasaki rider was able to match his best season result, making a move with three laps to go to push the Australian back a position. Today’s fifth places marks Brookes’ best result of the season in dry conditions but the defending champion is still only 12th in the championship standings on 105-points.

Glenn Irwin held off Iddon to claim sixth place with Ray in eighth, but dropping out of the top eight in the standings by just two points. Andrew Irwin and Vickers completed the top ten.

Jason O’Halloran and Tommy Bridewell on the podium

2021 BSB Cadwell Park – Race 3 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha 26m07.054
2 Peter HICKMAN BMW +0.203
3 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati +2.332
4 Lee JACKSON Kawasak +5.832
5 Josh BROOKES Ducati +6.004
6 Glenn IRWIN Honda +8.953
7 Christian IDDON Ducati +9.351
8 Bradley RAY BMW +9.669
9 Andrew IRWIN BMW +10.135
10 Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki +17.308
11 Gino REA Suzuki +17.592
12 Rory SKINNER Kawasaki +17.862
13 Xavi FORÉS BMW  +19.289
14 Dan LINFOOT Honda +28.847
15 Tim NEAVE Suzuki +34.431
16 Dean HARRISON Kawasaki +40.598
17 Joe SHELDON-SHAW Kawasaki +41.684
18 James HILLIER BMW +1m28.243
19 Brian McCORMACK BMW  +1 Lap
Not Classified
DNF Takumi TAKAHASHI Honda  3 Laps
DNF Storm STACEY Kawasaki 5 Laps

BSB Quotes

Josh Brookes

The three hours of track time on Thursday helped me get into a bit of a rhythm and being back at a track I like helped this weekend but the improvements we made were still tiny. I can see on track where I’m losing time and, in this series, you can’t afford to give away the time that we’ve been giving away. We still can’t get to the bottom of the main issues but although the improvements have been small, we’ve still made progress and that’s a positive. Two fifth places aren’t where I want to be finishing but it certainly felt better to be fighting a bit closer to the sharp end.”

Christian Iddon

You make your own luck in this game and that’s two crashes in two meetings which have been my fault. And when added to two when I was knocked off, it’s disappointing in one way but with Taz not riding, I’ve somehow managed to climb to second in the title. In truth, we’ve chased our tail all weekend and I’ve not found a suitable setting despite the team working so hard. We were hoping to get some more data in race two to help for the final race today, but the crash scuppered that. We now regroup and head to Snetterton in a positive frame of mind as that’s where I got my maiden win last year.


2021 British Superbike Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
1 Jason O’HALLORAN (Yamaha) 342
2 Christian IDDON (Ducati) 223
3 Tarran MACKENZIE (Yamaha) 223
4 Tommy BRIDEWELL (Ducati) 205
5 Peter HICKMAN (BMW) 200
6 Danny BUCHAN (BMW) 165
7 Glenn IRWIN (Honda) 154
8 Lee JACKSON (Kawasaki) 133
9 Bradley RAY (BMW) 131
10 Ryan VICKERS (Kawasaki) 114
11 Rory SKINNER (Kawasaki) 111
12 Josh BROOKES (Ducati) 105
13 Andrew IRWIN (BMW) 92
14 Gino REA (Suzuki) 64
15 Kyle RYDE (BMW) 53
16 Danny KENT (Suzuki) 49
17 Dan LINFOOT (Honda) 46
18 Xavi FORÉS (BMW) 39
19 Storm STACEY (Kawasaki) 27
20 Dean HARRISON (Kawasaki) 17
21 Joe FRANCIS (BMW) 11
22 Tim NEAVE (Suzuki) 7
23 Ryo MIZUNO (Honda) 4
24 Luke HOPKINS (Honda) 2
25 Bjorn ESTMENT (Suzuki) 1
26 Takumi TAKAHASHI (Honda) 1
27 Joe SHELDON-SHAW (Kawasaki) 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jett Lawrence closes to within three-points of championship lead

2021 Pro Motocross Championship
Round 9 – Budds Creek

Images by Jeff Kardas


Nestled in the shadow of the nation’s capital of Washington D.C., Southern Maryland’s Budds Creek Motocross Park served as the site of the ninth round of the 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing.

Intermittent cloud cover was complemented by humid conditions for the Circle K Budds Creek National, as a fierce battle for victory unfolded in the 450 Class and required a tie-breaker to determine a winner. In the end, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Dylan Ferrandis prevailed over Team Honda HRC’s Ken Roczen for the Frenchman’s fifth win of the summer.

Dylan Ferrandis maintained his 39-point lead over Roczen with three rounds remaining

In the 250 Class, Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Jeremy Martin relied on an emphatic win in the final moto to capture his class-leading third victory of the season by a single point over Jett Lawrence. The Aussie youngster closed to within three-points of championship leader Justin Cooper.


2021  AMA Pro Motocross Video Highlights


450 Moto 1

The first 450 Class moto got underway with Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Cooper Webb at the head of the pack with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, with Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac and Roczen in hot pursuit. Known as one of the best opening-lap riders in the world, Roczen put the hammer down immediately and made a quick pass on Tomac for second and then fought his way into the lead around Webb a short time later. By the completion of the first circuit, Roczen was already more than a second clear of the field.

Ken Roczen

As Roczen continued to inch away, Webb and Tomac battled it out for second, which allowed Team Honda HRC’s Chase Sexton and Ferrandis, the championship leader, to join the mix. A determined Tomac saw several pass attempts thwarted by Webb, but he eventually made the move. However, a hard charge by Sexton saw the Honda rider get by both Webb and Tomac on the same lap to vault from fourth to second and put Honda 1-2 in the running order.

Marvin Musquin

The Honda duo continued to put distance over the rest of the field as Tomac started to lose ground to Ferrandis in fourth. The Frenchman got into a rhythm and soon found himself within a few bike lengths of the Kawasaki, at which point he went on the attack and made an impressive pass to take control of third. Back out front, Sexton started to chip away at his deficit to Roczen and closed to within a few seconds of the lead, while Ferrandis continued to log the fastest laps on the track.

With less than five minutes remaining in the moto, the top three ran within five seconds of one another, with Ferrandis consistently the fastest of the trio. As the race clock ticked to under a minute remaining, Ferrandis closed in on Sexton for third and took advantage of a lapped rider to make the pass happen with relative ease. With two laps to go, four seconds separated the championship rivals. Ferrandis took huge chunks out of his deficit and closed to within striking distance on the final lap, and even had a shot at stealing the win as they navigated the final section, but Roczen held on to take the moto win by three tenths of a second. Sexton finished a distant third, with Tomac fourth and Webb fifth. The torrid pace by Roczen and Ferrandis saw them lap through 11th place.

450 Moto 1 Results

Pos RIDER BIKE Time/Gap
1 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 19 Laps
2 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F +00.384
3 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +10.199
4 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +34.270
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +51.467
6 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +58.364
7 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1:01.959
8 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1:08.416
9 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1:09.375
10 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +1:22.941
11 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 18 Laps
12 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +06.485
13 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +18.643
14 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +25.797
15 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +29.709
16 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE +42.656
17 William Clason KAW KX450 +44.955
18 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +49.718
19 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F +52.709
20 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +1m05.589
21 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F +1m15.992
22 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +1m23.182
23 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m24.377
24 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m29.834
25 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m36.940
26 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 +1m49.305
27 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m53.994
28 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE 17 Laps
29 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +22.821
30 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 +50.482
31 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F +1m03.412
32 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +1m07.692
33 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F +1m55.096
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F 16 Laps
35 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 12 Laps
36 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 11 Laps
37 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 10 Laps
38 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE +01.912
39 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 6 Laps
40 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 5 Laps

450 Moto 2

The German picked up where he left off to start the second moto by racing to the MotoSport.com Holeshot over Webb, Ferrandis, and Sexton.

Ken Roczen

With no one ahead of him Roczen put his head down and sprinted away on the opening lap to a lead of just under two seconds. Behind him, Sexton aided his teammate with a pass on Ferrandis, which dropped the Yamaha rider to fourth.

Cooper Webb

Sexton wasn’t done and he kept the charge going on Webb, easily moving into second to put the Honda riders once again at the head of the pack. Ferrandis responded as well and made the pass on Webb for third, while Tomac dropped Webb to fifth a short time later.

Chase Sexton

The top four riders on the track ran within a handful of seconds of one another 10 minutes into the moto and things only got tighter from there. As the race reached the halfway point the gap closed to just over two seconds. A bobble by Sexton allowed Ferrandis to move into second and put Sexton into the clutches of Tomac. The Kawasaki rider bided his time but eventually made his move to take over third.

Dylan Ferrandis

Up front, Ferrandis had Roczen in his sights. They traded fast laps to keep the gap at about a second as they approached the final 10 minutes of the moto, while Tomac lurked in third. A battle for the lead ensued as Ferrandis looked for a way around. After several attempts Ferrandis made the pass happen and seized control of the moto with seven minutes to go.

Dylan Ferrandis

Once out front, the Frenchman gapped the German and appeared to have the moto in hand. Roczen was able to put in a late charge in the closing laps and got within a few bike lengths of Ferrandis, but the points leader responded, was more efficient navigating lapped traffic, and brought home the moto win by 4.8 seconds at the end.

450 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 18 Laps
2 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE +04.847
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 +08.743
4 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE +32.708
5 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE +37.000
6 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE +38.944
7 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m07.858
8 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F +1m13.075
9 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE +1m28.956
10 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 +1m35.942
11 Coty Schock HON CRF450R +1m42.677
12 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 +1m59.582
13 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 17 Laps
14 Justin  Rodbell KAW KX450 +10.642
15 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE +16.085
16 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F +18.489
17 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE +22.229
18 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 +26.350
19 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 +32.551
20 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F +39.314
21 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE +57.691
22 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R +1m02.276
23 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 +1m20.701
24 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F +1m23.637
25 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE +1m29.015
26 William Clason KAW KX450 +1m30.348
27 James Harrington KTM 450 SX-F +1m30.678
28 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 +1m44.527
29 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 16 Laps
30 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 +24.870
31 Dustin Jensen YAM YZ 450F +30.307
32 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F +45.626
33 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 +49.802
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F +1m30.329
35 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 12 Laps
36 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 8 Laps
37 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 5 Laps
38 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F +04.303
39 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE 1 Laps
40 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F DNF

450 Overall

With identical moto scores, Ferrandis (2-1) and Roczen (1-2) ended the day tied atop the overall classification. However, by virtue of his better result in the second moto Ferrandis earned the tiebreaker to earn his fifth win of the season. Tomac completed the overall podium in third (4-3).

Dylan Ferrandis

Last weekend I got beat so bad, so we made some changes this week and came back better (today),” said Ferrandis. “The bike was so good, I could do whatever I wanted. I was glad to get my pace back and in the second moto I was able to catch Kenny (Roczen) and battle for the win. It was fun, but it’s always the most fun when you win.”

450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
1. Dylan Ferrandis, France, Yamaha (2-1)
2. Ken Roczen, Germany, Honda (1-2)
3. Eli Tomac, Cortez, Colo., Kawasaki (4-3)

With equal points for the afternoon, Ferrandis’ lead over Roczen in the 450 Class standings remains at 39 points with three rounds remaining. Tomac remains third, 71 out of the lead.


450 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos Rider Bike M1 M2 POINTS
1 Dylan Ferrandis YAM YZ 450F 2 1 47
2 Ken Roczen HON CRF450R WE 1 2 47
3 Eli Tomac KAW KX450 4 3 38
4 Chase Sexton HON CRF450R WE 3 4 38
5 Cooper Webb KTM 450 SX-F FE 5 6 31
6 Joseph Savatgy KTM 450 SX-F FE 6 7 29
7 Marvin Musquin KTM 450 SX-F FE 10 5 27
8 Dean Wilson HQV FC450 RE 8 9 25
9 Coty Schock HON CRF450R 7 11 24
10 Max Anstie SUZ RMZ 450 9 10 23
11 Kyle Chisholm YAM YZ 450F 11 13 18
12 Justin  Rodbell  KAW KX450 12 14 16
13 Brandon Hartranft SUZ RMZ 450 15 12 15
14 Christian Craig YAM YZ 450F 40 8 13
15 Jacob Runkles GAS MC450F 13 16 13
16 Justin Bogle KTM 450 SX-F FE 14 17 11
17 Chris Canning KTM 450 SX-F FE 23 15 6
18 Scott Meshey HQV FC450 RE 16 35 5
19 William Clason KAW KX450 17 26 4
20 Tyler Stepek KAW KX450 35 18 3
21 Ryan Surratt HQV FC450 20 19 3
22 Jeremy Hand HON CRF450R 18 22 3
23 Ben LaMay KTM 450 SX-F 19 36 2
24 Cody Groves YAM YZ 450F 22 20 1
25 Nicolas Rolando KTM 450 SX-F FE 24 21 0
26 Bryce Backaus YAM YZ 450F 27 24 0
27 Bryce Hansen KAW KX450 29 23 0
28 Tristan Lane KTM 450 SX-F FE 28 25 0
29 Jeremy Smith KAW KX450 25 28 0
30 Ricci Randanella KAW KX450 26 29 0
31 Dawson Ryker YAM YZ 450F 21 40 0
32 Cory Carsten SUZ RMZ 450 30 33 0
33 Lane Shaw KTM 450 SX-F 32 32 0
34 Austin Cozadd YAM YZ 450F 34 34 0
35 Matthew Hubert KAW KX450 39 30 0
36 Bryton Carroll YAM YZ 450F 31 38 0
37 Robert Piazza YAM YZ 450F 33 37 0
38 Kenneth Venarchick KTM 450 SX-F FE 38 39 0
39 James Harrington KTM 450 SX-F 27 0
40 Dustin Jensen YAM YZ 450F 31 0
41 Aaron Plessinger YAM YZ 450F 36 0
42 Jace Kessler YAM YZ 450F 37 0

450 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider` Points
1 Dylan Ferrandis 392
2 Ken Roczen 353
3 Eli Tomac 321
4 Chase Sexton 308
5 Marvin Musquin 240
6 Cooper Webb 240
7 Justin Barcia 239
8 Christian Craig 224
9 Aaron Plessinger 217
10 Joseph Savatgy 189
11 Max Anstie 149
12 Adam Cianciarulo 147
13 Dean Wilson 146
14 Justin Bogle 118
15 Brandon Hartranft 111
16 Coty Schock 102
17 Fredrik Noren 58
18 Justin  Rodbell 56
19 Chris Canning 46
20 Ryan Surratt 42
21 Ben LaMay 35
22 Zachary Osborne 33
23 Jason Anderson 29
24 Jacob Runkles 23
25 Jeremy Hand 22
26 Tyler Stepek 21
27 Kyle Chisholm 20
28 Scott Meshey 17
29 Phillip Nicoletti 9
30 William Clason 9
31 Jace Kessler 8
32 Alessandro  Lupino 8
33 Ryan Sipes 8
34 Tyler Medaglia 6
35 Curren Thurman 4
36 Alex Ray 4
37 Cody Groves 4
38 Carson Brown 3
39 Mitchell Falk 3
40 Robert Piazza 3
41 Jeremy Smith 2
42 Jacob Hayes 2
43 Bryce Backaus 1
44 Hunter Schlosser 0
45 Nicolas Rolando 0
46 Dawson Ryker 0
47 Bryce Hansen 0
48 Cole Thompson 0
49 Nathan Augustin 0
50 Matthew Hubert 0
51 Brian Borghesani 0
52 Ricci Randanella 0
53 Bryson Gardner 0

250 Moto 1

The first gate drop of the 250 Class saw the 40-rider field funnel into the first turn, from which Monster Energy/Star/Yamaha Racing’s Justin Cooper, the championship leader, emerged with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Jalek Swoll and Monster Energy/Pro Circuit/Kawasaki’s Austin Forkner. The clear track paid big dividends for Cooper as he was able to sprint out to an early lead while Swoll and Forkner duked it out for second. Cooper completed the opening lap with a three-second advantage, while Forkner made the pass and settled into second.

Justin Cooper scored the holeshot

As Cooper and Forkner continued to lead the way, Rockstar Energy Husqvarna Factory Racing’s RJ Hampshire was on a march forward. After starting fifth, Hampshire made a pass for fourth and then worked his way around teammate Swoll to take control of third. Hampshire then set his sights on Forkner. As he gave pursuit, Hampshire encountered misfortune and lost several positions, which moved Swoll back up to third, but under heavy pressure from Team Honda HRC’s Jett Lawrence. The Australian rider was patient and made the pass for third.

Jeremy Martin

With 10 minutes left in the moto the battle for second heated up between Forkner and Lawrence, who was the fastest rider on the track at this stage of the race. As they navigated through lapped traffic Lawrence benefitted from a rider who crashed right in front of Forkner and forced the Kawasaki rider off-line, which allowed Lawreance to take over the position unchallenged. Cooper and Lawrence, the top two riders in the championship, were then separated by 5.4 seconds with six minutes to go.

Cooper responded to Lawrence’s charge from second and picked up the pace in the closing stages of the moto to maintain his advantage. He easily finished off a wire-to-wire victory and secured his fifth moto win of the season by 5.3 seconds over Lawrence while Martin followed with a quiet third-place effort, with Forkner fourth and Swoll fifth.

Hunter Lawrence was sixth

250 Moto 1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 18 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +05.335
3 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F +14.094
4 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +21.164
5 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 +26.758
6 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +27.415
7 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +28.201
8 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +41.170
9 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +47.282
10 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +49.129
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +51.789
12 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m02.364
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m04.686
14 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m08.456
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m14.544
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +1m21.152
17 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 +1m26.079
18 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 +1m50.690
19 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +1m52.993
20 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +1m57.508
21 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 17 Laps
22 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F +03.596
23 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F +23.080
24 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +24.879
25 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +30.003
26 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F +34.064
27 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +55.218
28 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F +1m00.574
29 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m25.218
30 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F 16 Laps
31 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 +09.851
32 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +36.108
33 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +50.388
34 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
35 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 11 Laps
36 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 10 Laps
37 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m33.713
38 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F 8 Laps
39 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 7 Laps
40 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 6 Laps

250 Moto 2

The second moto roared out the gate with Martin leading the way with the MotoSport.com Holeshot, followed by Lawrence in second, as Cooper navigated his way into the top five.

Jeremy Martin

With no one in front of them, Martin and Lawrence quickly moved out to a lead of more than four seconds on the rest of the field, with about two seconds separating the top two.

Budds Creek 250

As the lead pair settled in, the attention shifted to Cooper as he looked to move up the running order. He gave chase to Team Honda HRC’s Hunter Lawrence from fifth, as both riders looked to track down AEO GASGAS’ Ty Masterpool in third. Masterpool then went down, which allowed Lawrence to assume third and Cooper fourth. That was ultimately the last change for position amongst the top five.

Hunter Lawrence

Martin was dominant en route to his sixth moto win of the season with a wire-to-wire effort. He took the checkered flag 8.8 seconds ahead of Jett Lawrence in second with Hunter Lawrence third, followed by Cooper in fourth.

Jett Lawrence closes to within three-points of championship lead

250 Moto 2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 18 Laps
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R +08.846
3 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R +28.539
4 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F +45.142
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 +48.889
6 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 +51.551
7 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 +53.348
8 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 +1m04.984
9 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F +1m14.772
10 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F +1m22.105
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F +1m24.895
12 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R +1m28.969
13 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE +1m37.754
14 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 +1m42.907
15 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 17 Laps
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F +01.269
17 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F +13.279
18 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F +27.658
19 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F +34.926
20 Zack Williams GAS MC250F +37.603
21 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F +55.357
22 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F +1m04.835
23 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R +1m33.546
24 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F +1m41.631
25 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F +1m43.707
26 Levi Newby HQV FC250 +1m48.246
27 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F +1m54.343
28 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 16 Laps
29 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F +00.657
30 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F +24.791
31 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F +36.461
32 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F +43.947
33 Dennis Gritzmacher KTM 250 SX-F +56.854
34 Lawrence Fortin III KTM 250 SX-F +1m04.799
35 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F +1m06.596
36 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F 15 Laps
37 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 13 Laps
38 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 9 Laps
39 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 8 Laps
40 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 7 Laps

250 Overall

By virtue of his second-moto win, Martin surged to the top of the overall classification with 3-1 moto finishes. It signified the 20th victory of his career, which moves him into a tie with Steve Lamson for fourth on the all-time wins list.

It was a hot one today,” said Martin. “I think I’m able to dig deep because as a kid I had to do chores on my parent’s track (Spring Creek MX Park), so I think I’m used to the heat. My team had the bike dialed in, it was just on rails out there. I haven’t been that comfortable on the bike in a while and it just feels so good when everything is working perfectly like that.

Jeremy Martin

Jett Lawrence just missed out on the overall win by a single point but settled for the runner-up spot (2-2) and his sixth podium finish of the season. Cooper was one additional point behind in third (1-4) to keep his unblemished podium streak this season intact at nine rounds.

Jett Lawrence closed to within three-points of championship lead

Lawrence gained a single-point on Cooper in the 250 Class standings, where three-points now separate the championship rivals with three rounds remaining. Martin’s victory moved him up to third, 60 points out of the lead.

Justin Cooper leads the series by three-points with three rounds remaining

I’m coming off a sickness a few days ago, so I’m just happy to be here to be honest,” said Cooper. “I didn’t have the energy to keep up with those guys today, so I’m pretty satisfied to come away with a podium. We only lost a point in the championship and have three rounds to go, so we need to be ready to fight to the finish.”

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)
1. Jeremy Martin, Millville, Minn., Yamaha (3-1)
2. Jett Lawrence, Australia, Honda (2-2)
3. Justin Cooper, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., Yamaha (1-4)

250 Class Overall Results (Moto Finish)

Pos RIDER BIKE M1 M2 Points
1 Jeremy Martin YAM YZ 250F 3 1 45
2 Jett Lawrence HON CRF250R 2 2 44
3 Justin Cooper YAM YZ 250F 1 4 43
4 Hunter Lawrence HON CRF250R 6 3 35
5 Austin Forkner KAW KX 250 4 5 34
6 Jo Shimoda KAW KX 250 7 7 28
7 RJ Hampshire HQV FC250 9 6 27
8 Ty Masterpool GAS MC250F 8 9 25
9 Dilan Schwartz SUZ RMZ 250 10 8 24
10 Jalek  Swoll HQV FC250 5 15 22
11 Joshua Varize KTM 250 SX-F 11 11 20
12 Jarrett Frye YAM YZ 250F 14 10 18
13 Carson Mumford HON CRF250R 13 12 17
14 Maximus Vohland KTM 250 SX-F FE 12 13 17
15 Preston Kilroy SUZ RMZ 250 15 14 13
16 Levi Kitchen YAM YZ 250F 16 16 10
17 Kaeden Amerine YAM YZ 250F 19 17 6
18 Seth Hammaker KAW KX 250 17 4
19 Garrett Hoffman YAM YZ 250F 27 18 3
20 Jerry Robin HQV FC250 18 28 3
21 Devin Simonson YAM YZ 250F 40 19 2
22 Zack Williams GAS MC250F 24 20 1
23 Tommy Rios YAM YZ 250F 20 21 1
24 TJ Uselman GAS MC250F 25 22 0
25 Maxwell Sanford HON CRF250R 29 23 0
26 Kyle Greeson KTM 250 SX-F 28 27 0
27 Jake Pinhancos KTM 250 SX-F 26 31 0
28 Vincent Luhovey KTM 250 SX-F 22 36 0
29 Brandon Scharer YAM YZ 250F 21 37 0
30 Levi Newby HQV FC250 33 26 0
31 Jeffrey Walker KTM 250 SX-F 36 24 0
32 Cole  Harkins KTM 250 SX-F 30 30 0
33 Christopher Prebula KTM 250 SX-F 23 38 0
34 Jared Lesher YAM YZ 250F 37 25 0
35 Noah Willbrandt YAM YZ 250F 32 32 0
36 Blake Ashley YAM YZ 250F 38 29 0
37 Jack Rogers KAW KX 250 31 39 0
38 Garrett Marchbanks YAM YZ 250F 34 40 0
39 Dennis Gritzmacher KTM 250 SX-F 33 0
40 Lawrence Fortin III KTM 250 SX-F 34 0
41 Xylian Ramella KTM 250 SX-F 35 0
42 Stephen  Hooker KTM 250 SX-F 35 0
43 Luke Renzland HQV TC125 39 0

250 Class Championship Standings (Round 9 of 12)

Pos Rider Points
1 Justin Cooper 367
2 Jett Lawrence 364
3 Jeremy Martin 307
4 Hunter Lawrence 298
5 RJ Hampshire 270
6 Jo Shimoda 220
7 Jalek  Swoll 195
8 Austin Forkner 186
9 Colt Nichols 172
10 Maximus Vohland 168
11 Michael Mosiman 154
12 Garrett Marchbanks 146
13 Dilan Schwartz 140
14 Carson Mumford 127
15 Pierce Brown 126
16 Jarrett Frye 123
17 Ty Masterpool 109
18 Stilez Robertson 90
19 Joshua Varize 76
20 Nathanael Thrasher 52
21 Levi Kitchen 47
22 Ramyller Alves 31
23 Preston Kilroy 29
24 Seth Hammaker 26
25 Derek Kelley 25
26 Alex Martin 19
27 Brandon Scharer 13
28 Kailub Russell 11
29 Derek  Drake 9
30 Xylian Ramella 8
31 Christopher Prebula 7
32 Jerry Robin 7
33 James Harrington 7
34 Cameron Mcadoo 6
35 Kaeden Amerine 6
36 Grant Harlan 6
37 Zack Williams 6
38 Jace Kessler 5
39 Garrett Hoffman 4
40 Jesse Flock 3
41 Max Miller 3
42 Jake Pinhancos 2
43 Devin Simonson 2
44 Dominique Thury 2
45 Tommy Rios 1
46 Gared Steinke 1
47 TJ Uselman 1
48 Luke Renzland 1
49 Joseph Tait 0
50 Gabe Gutierres 0
51 Vincent Luhovey 0
52 Levi Newby 0
53 Tre Fierro 0

Just three rounds remain in the 2021 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship, which will travel to the motorsports mecca of the greater Indianapolis area next Saturday, August 28, for the 10th round of the season and the Guaranteed Rate Ironman National from Crawfordsville, Indiana’s Ironman Raceway.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Scott Redding takes first blood at Navarra

2021 WorldSBK Round Seven
Navarra (Spain) Saturday

Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) claimed his second consecutive WorldSBK win in a row and the ninth of his career after a commanding victory on Saturday at Navarra as he closed the gap to title rival Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) down to 45-points in the Championship standings.

As the lights went out for the first race of the weekend, Redding got the jump over pole-sitter Rea into Turn 1 but Redding’s advantage did not last long as Rea fought back at the Turn 6-7 section of the circuit to re-take the lead, also withstanding an early challenge from rookie Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) on the opening lap.

Andrea Locatelli

At the start of Lap 6, Redding got a better run out of the Turn 15 right-hand hairpin to make a move on Rea into the incredibly fast right-hand Turn 1, getting the move completed just before they turned in before pulling out a gap of over a second on Rea over the next handful of laps.

Rea led Redding early on

Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) was a rider making moves from the start as he battled from eighth place to fourth on the opening lap and found himself behind team-mate Locatelli, but spent numerous laps behind him before he was finally able to pass his rookie team-mate on Lap 7 after the Italian ran wide.

Toprak Razgatlioglu

Rea was running in second place but survived a couple of mistakes at Turn 9, a big moment before running wide a on Lap 15, losing around two-seconds to Redding but did not lose out to Razgatlioglu in either the race or the Championship battle; Rea extending his lead over Razgatlioglu to seven-points.

Alex Lowes

There were plenty of battles up and down the field as riders searched for the best possible position, with Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) coming home in fifth place behind Redding, Rea, Razgatlioglu and Locatelli, with Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in sixth and Dutch team-mate Michael van der Mark in seventh.

Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) had a battle in the latter stages of the race over eighth place, with American star Gerloff unable to make a pass on the youngest rider on the WorldSBK grid, Bassani holding on to take eighth place with Gerloff in ninth. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) completed the top ten after a challenging opening race, the Italian involved in battles in the midfield throughout.

Rinaldi, Bautista

Rookie Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) claimed 11th place after a strong race battling throughout the field ahead of Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) in 12th; Rabat involved in a long battle with Leon Haslam (Team HRC) with the British rider coming home in 13th place. Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Action) scored his first points since Race 2 at MotorLand Aragon with 14th place, with Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha) completing the points. Ponsson found himself on the ground at Turn 3 after an incident involving Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) on Lap 3 at Turn 3 but was able to re-mount his Yamaha machine to secure one point in Race 1; Mercado retired from the race.

Three riders finished the race but were unable to claim a points finish in Race 1 at Navarra with Suzuki wildcard Naomichi Uramoto (JEG Racing) finishing in 16th place, just two tenths behind Ponsson and narrowly missing out on points. Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) had been running in the points-paying positions during the 23-lap race but fell down the order to finish 17th, with teammate Jayson Uribe in 18th; the American having a crash on Lap 13 at Turn 13 but able to recover to finish the race.

Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) had an incident on his own at Turn 11. Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) retired from the race after he crashed on his own at Turn 9 while, at the same time, Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) had a crash at Turn 12 but was able to re-join before bringing his machine back to the pits.

Scott Redding – P1

I’m really happy because it was not an easy race with such a high temperature. But we managed to find the ideal conditions to race at our best. Since the first laps, I had confidence, the feeling was excellent, I felt comfortable. The World Championship? I just want to keep thinking race after race. I’m doing my best, the Aruba.it Racing – Ducati team and Ducati are doing their best. Let’s continue like this.

Scott Redding
Jonathan Rea – P2

What a lap in Superpole! I really got the best out of the tyre but I was overcooking a few corners, missing some apexes, so I was really surprised at the lap time. I was a little bit nervous about the start of the race. It was very important to be at the front and we had quite a good start, but Scott was just a little bit better. At the beginning I felt I could go to the front and when Scott went quite wide in T5 and T6 I went on the inside and passed him. From there I just kept my rhythm until he blasted me on the straight. After that I thought, ’I’m there’ but then the front started to heat up, stability started to go down and the front was moving. Over-pushing the front, I had a few slides and enough to tell me to brake a bit earlier. I lost as much as one second during one mistake and Scott went away. I did not feel he was destroying us lap-by-lap when it was constant, the gap was quite similar, so I feel we can make some changes on the front tomorrow to make a step forward.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P3

The race was not easy for me because of the very hot conditions, but it was the same for everybody. After five laps the feeling was like the front tyre was destroyed, there was a very early drop in performance, and every corner I feel like I nearly crash but I try my best. We are happy because again we arrive on the podium and take good points for the championship – but this is not enough for me. Tomorrow I want to try to win. Johnny and Scott were very fast today, but in the second lap I lost time with a big mistake with a missed shift so they got away. After I try again to catch but we did not have enough for second or first position because they were very fast. Tomorrow I will fight again – it is not easy in the heat, especially with the tyres, but we will see.”

Andrea Locatelli – P4

The race for sure was not easy today but I say that we need to fight a little bit because in these conditions we were not quite strong enough. Also yesterday the feeling with the bike was not so bad but today we lost a little bit with the heat. In the end it was a good race because the gap to win is a little bit closer – it’s not so big! We had a little bit of a problem with the gear change, I missed some shift during the first and second lap and so I lost the gap with the front riders. We need to be happy though because we have another good result and for sure, tomorrow we try to find another solution to go a bit faster compared to today and then we will see. But today we did a good job overall.”

Alex Lowes – P5

In Superpole I felt quite good and my laps were not too bad. I used a race tyre and two Q tyres. On the second one I made a mistake in the last sector. It was so close. Jonathan and Scott did good laps but behind it was only a couple of tenths, not even that. I ended up seventh and the position was not ideal coming from the third row. In the race I had a good start and was fourth until Toprak passed me. I thought I would sit behind those guys out front but I wasn’t fast enough because I was struggling with the front. I was a bit quicker than the guys behind so it was a bit of a boring race for me. But it was a long race – and hot. I used the Race One experience to try to be consistent and understand how I can improve for Sunday.

Tom Sykes – P6

It was not too bad. We had a good qualifying and starting from the front row is always a nice target. Coming off the start, another rider came by me and almost took my handle bar so I had to close the gas and a Kawasaki had gone by. So the first lap wasn’t very good and then, to be honest, behind Alex Lowes on the first couple of laps, it was just a bit too steady so I need to have a look at that for tomorrow. I need to try to get a better start and first couple of laps but after that I just settled into the rhythm that we found yesterday afternoon. It looks like everyone was suffering a little bit more today because the times were slower than yesterday afternoon. I really struggled with the front end of the bike with the turning and some of the rear traction so for sure it was a difficult race to manage. We had to change the way to approach some corners et cetera and try to find a way to ride around those problems so we’ve got a lot of work to do tonight and hopefully we can improve the set-up for these hot conditions tomorrow.

Michael van der Mark – P7

To be honest, I was expecting a lot more. This morning, we made a huge step in performance and in lap time consistency. Also in Superpole, we’ve made a good step. I was tenth but the gap to P5 was really close. I was happy with that, but in the warmer conditions in the race the bike just did not react like in the cooler conditions. It’s normal but I struggled too much so we need to find a solution for tomorrow.”

WorldSBK Race One

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R /
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.519
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +5.894
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +9.405
5 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +16.219
6 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +20.600
7 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +24.158
8 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +26.497
9 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +26.718
10 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +29.602
11 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +39.387
12 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +41.316
13 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +44.338
14 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +48.470
15 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +1m21.773
16 N. Uramoto Suzuki GSX-R1000R +1m21.956
17 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m30.006
18 J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1 Lap
Not Classified
RET C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R 17 Laps
RET A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R 17 Laps
RET L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR 20 Laps
RET L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R 20 Laps

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  286
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  279
 3  Scott Redding  241
 4  Alex Lowes  154
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  141
 6  Garrett Gerloff  134
 7  Andrea Locatelli  132
 8  Tom Sykes  131
 9  Michael Van Der Mark  122
 10  Chaz Davies  89
 11  Alvaro Bautista  84
 12  Axel Bassani  81
 13  Leon Haslam  71
 14  Lucas Mahias  36
 15  Tito Rabat  30
 16  Kohta Nozane  30
 17  Isaac Vinales  19
 18  Eugene Laverty  14
 19  Jonas Folger  10
 20  Christophe Ponsson  8
 21  Leandro Mercado  7
 22  Marvin Fritz  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2


WorldSSP

Drama and tension throughout the opening race of the FIM Supersport World Championship’s first visit to the Circuito de Navarra as Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) secured a sensational victory for the seventh time this season after a race-long battle with Championship rival Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) at the Pirelli Navarra Round.

FIM Supersport World Championship

The opening laps of the race were unpredictable as the lead riders exchanged positions consistently. Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) and Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) were the big winners as the lights went out with Spanish rider Gonzalez took the lead of the race from second, while Odendaal moved into second from fourth as Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) fell to fifth.

After an impressive Friday and Saturday at Navarra, Simon Jespersen (Kallio Racing) moved into the podium places at the start of the race, challenging Gonzalez for second place in the opening laps after Gonzalez lost out to Odendaal. Gonzalez was able to respond on Lap 6 to re-take the lead in search of his first WorldSSP victory. Aegerter dropped down the order in the opening laps but fought back to be in the lead group on Lap 7 as he worked his way back through the field.

Aegerter’s fightback meant he was directly behind Odendaal in the middle phase of the race and soon found himself in second, behind Odendaal, as the pair made a move on Gonzalez on Lap 8 of the 20-lap encounter, with the top two in the Championship running as the top two in the race. On Lap 9, Aegerter made an aggressive move at the Turn 15 hairpin that ends the lap, but Odendaal was able to respond on the start-finish straight at the start of Lap 10.

Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) was another who battled his way up through the order including two aggressive moves into Turn 15 and joined the lead group, before an incredible move into the fast right-hander of Turn 1 on Gonzalez to move into third. He tried a similar move through the first two fast right-handers on Aegerter, but the Swiss rider was able to defend into Turn 3. With eight laps to go, Odendaal made a move on Turn 1 on Aegerter before Aegerter responded through Turns 2 and 3 to regain the lead. Aegerter eventually got past Odendaal and went on to claim victory at Navarra with Odendaal in second and Bernardi third; unable to take advantage of the battling duo ahead although he did battle Odendaal for second throughout the final laps.

Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) claimed fourth place in the thrilling encounter with his former teammate, Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) in fifth, his joint-best result since his WorldSSP campaign. Just half-a-second separated Cluzel and Caricasulo at the end of the race, with Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) coming home in sixth place.

German Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished seventh after battling his way up through the field, finishing a second clear of teammate Can Öncü after the Turkish star battled his way up from 24th to eighth in Race 1. Jespersen lost ground as the race progressed but still claimed a stunning ninth place ahead of Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti); Jespersen taking the first top-ten finish for a Danish rider in WorldSSP since 2011 when Robbin Harms at Aragon.

Indonesian Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) came home in 11th place after a strong Race 1 at the Circuito de Navarra ahead of the returning Hikari Okubo (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) in 12th; Okubo making his WorldSSP debut in place of the injured Shogo Kawasaki. David Sanchis Martinez (WRP Wepol Racing) was 13th on his WorldSSP debut with Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) and Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) completing the points.

Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) had a crash but was able to re-join the race, although he brought his Kawasaki machine into the pits later on. Eduardo Montero Huerta (DK Motorsport), Oscar Gutierrez Iglesias (Yamaha MS Racing) and Michel Fabrizio (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) also retired from the race. Gonzalez was taken to the medical centre following the crash. Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) had an off in the closing stages of the race and brought his Yamaha machine back into the pitlane.

Gonzalez was out of the race after he crashed at Turn 9 after being shuffled out of the lead group, bringing to an end his record-equally run of points-scoring finishes of 25 consecutive WorldSSP races in the points, a record that stretched back to his WorldSSP debut at Phillip Island in 2020. Marcel Brenner (VFT Racing) was a late retirement after he had an incident at Turn 13 after a strong showing in the race, running inside the top ten.

P1 Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha)

It was a very good day for me. It’s very hot out here in Navarra and it was a long 20-lap race, but we had a great battle in the first few laps, a lot of overtaking, big battles to get the lead. When I had the lead, I could go at my own pace and in the end, I had a three-second advantage.”

P2 Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team)

It was quite a hard race today, the temperatures were really, really hot. When Aegerter passed me, I held on for a little while. I thought I could try to block pass him again but I just didn’t have it in me. Unfortunately, we have to settle for what we can. It’s a long run in the Championship, not that I’m thinking of that, but it is important. The maximum we could take was 20 points today.

P3 Luca Bernardi (CM Racing)

Today was a very hard race, very hot. Step by step, I worked with my team and I have a good feeling with the bike. It was a very hard race and in the last lap I tried to take second position.”

WorldSSP Race One

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 +4.425
2 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +4.425
3 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +5.074
4 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +6.124
5 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +6.674
6 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +10.729
7 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +18.201
8 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +19.248
9 S. Jespersen Yamaha YZF R6 +19.954
10 N. Tuuli MV Agusta +21.876
11 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +26.139
12 H. Okubo Kawasaki ZX-6R +30.505
13 D. Sanchis Martinez Yamaha YZF R6 +31.526
14 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +31.734
15 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +32.120
16 B. Gomez Yamaha YZF R6 +34.046
17 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +36.057
18 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +36.084
19 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +36.381
20 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +37.126
21 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +48.876
22 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +52.468
23 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +1m02.499
24 L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +1 Lap
Not Classifieds
RET 56 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 4 Laps
RET 81 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 9 Laps
RET 84 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R 11 Laps
RET 17 O. Gutierrez Yamaha YZF R6 13 Laps
RET 3 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R 13 Laps
RET R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R 13 Laps
RET E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 /

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  232
 2  Steven Odendaal  190
 3  Philipp Oettl  146
 4  Luca Bernardi  134
 5  Manuel Gonzalez  120
 6  Jules Cluzel  113
 7  Randy Krummenacher  77
 8  Federico Caricasulo  71
 9  Can Alexander Oncu  66
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  56
 11  Niki Tuuli  49
 12  Hannes Soomer  47
 13  Marc Alcoba  40
 14  Christoffer Bergman  35
 15  Kevin Manfredi  22
 16  Vertti Takala  21
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  21
 18  Peter Sebestyen  15
 19  Valentin Debise  9
 20  Sheridan Morais  9
 21  Simon Jespersen  7
 22  Maria Herrera  7
 23  Filippo Fuligni  6
 24  Michel Fabrizio  6
 25  Max Enderlein  5
 26  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 27  Hikari Okubo  4
 28  Marcel Brenner  4
 29  Massimo Roccoli  4
 30  David Sanchis Martinez  3
 31  Luca Grunwald  3
 32  Matteo Patacca  3
 33  Stephane Frossard  3
 34  Ondrej Vostatek  2
 35  Federico Fuligni  1

2021 Prosecco DOC Dutch Round Schedule

Time Class Event
17:00 WorldSBK WUP
17:25 WorldSSP WUP
19:00 WorldSBK Superpole Race
20:30 WorldSSP Race 2
22:00 WorldSBK Race 2

2021 WorldSBK Calendar

Date Track SBK SS600 SS300
21-23 May Aragón (Spain) X X
28-30 May Estoril (Portugal) X X  
11-13 Jun Misano (Italy) X X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X    
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X X
06-08 Aug Autodrom Most (Czech) X X X
20-22 Aug Navarra (Spain) X X  
3-5 Sep Magny-Cours (France) X X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X  
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X  

Source: MCNews.com.au

Lauren Trantham: Ep. 19 Rider Magazine Insider Podcast

Episode 19 Rider Magazine Insider Podcast Lauren Trantham Ride My Road

Our guest on Episode 19 of the Rider Magazine Insider Podcast is Lauren Trantham, founder of Ride My Road. In 2016, Lauren set out on a 10,000-mile solo motorcycle journey across the United States to photograph American survivors of human trafficking. She founded Ride My Road to reach as many people as possible about the realities of human trafficking in America. The organization has raised over $160,000 for survivor-led organizations, hosted dozens of events across the country, and educated thousands of motorcyclists. Ride My Road hosts F.A.S.T. (Fight Against Sex Trafficking) Ride charity events and the #Survivorbike™ Series (volunteer builders restore old bikes and donate them for fundraising giveaways), and it recently launched Disruptors University.

You can listen to Episode 19 on iTunes, Spotify, and SoundCloud, or via the Rider Magazine Insider webpage. Please subscribe, leave us a 5-star rating, and tell your friends!

Check out previous episodes:

The post Lauren Trantham: Ep. 19 Rider Magazine Insider Podcast first appeared on Rider Magazine.
Source: RiderMagazine.com

Rea quickest in the cool morning but Toprak excels in the heat

2021 WorldSBK Round Seven
Navarra (Spain)

The opening day of action was as fierce as ever as the seventh round of the Superbike World Championship got underway at Circuito de Navarra in Spain.

Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) led the opening session however an increase in temperature during the afternoon left Rea in seventh for the vast majority of that session. Conversely, Alex Lowes made good improvements throughout the afternoon as the heat became more of a factor. As the chequered flag waved at the end of the day though, it was still Rea on top overall thanks to his marker in FP1, whilst Lowes was tenth.

Jonathan Rea

We had two very different sessions today to confirm some items that we used at the recent Montmelo test. I felt OK getting up to speed with the track and the bumps. When the temperature came up in the afternoon it changed the track little bit, so the grip level dropped. We went back to some components that we had been using previously in FP2. Basically we confirmed that we had been going in the right way at the Montmelo tests.”

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes

I actually felt good on the bike today. Our lap times don’t reflect how I felt out on track. With the bike set-up we are looking to improve our corner entry, especially in the trail braking area, to be ready for Race One on Saturday. That’s the area we are going to focus on most of all. The circuit layout is fun – I like it.

Alex Lowes

Having led most of the afternoon session, Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) was in good form in the FP2 heat of Navarra. Despite most of the riders struggling to improve on their morning times due to the higher temperatures and greasier track surface. In the end, Toprak was able to top FP2, and was second overall thanks to his better time in FP1.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Today we are happy because it was a good start on Friday to finish second position overall for fastest times. For me, the race simulation is the most important but we are very strong, and also I am feeling like my bike is much better in the second session. We are feeling ready to race, but we will see because I think it will not be an easy race – very hot in Navarra! We will see, maybe it is not easy but I will try again to fight for the win.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Team-mate Andrea Locatelli was once again right in the mix as the Italian continues to grow in stature. He was in third for the majority of the session before finishing fourth at the flag, and fifth overall at the end of the day.

Andrea Locatelli

In the end, I’m very happy because we have worked very hard on this first day and finished in a good position – P4 in the second session where conditions were hottest, P5 overall. We tried to search for a good rhythm in the heat and the feeling with the bike is not so bad. For sure for tomorrow we will try to improve a little bit more and try to take some more speed especially in sector four because we lose a little bit here. In general, I’m confident and tomorrow we will improve – but we will see, it will not be easy because it is so hot! Tomorrow we will be ready to race.”

Andrea Locatelli

Third place on the combined timesheets was Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati), the British rider picking up his strong pace from the last round at Most. In the closing stages of FP2, it was Redding who was looking strong as he made gains throughout various sector times but returned to the pits with a technical issue in the final minute of the session. His team-mate Michael Ruben Rinaldi also improved throughout the afternoon, finishing third in FP2 and actually improving his time from the morning, one place behind Redding. Overall, however, it was Redding third and Rinaldi seventh.

Scott Redding

It was a very positive day and I must admit I had a lot of fun. I completed a lot of laps and even when at the end of FP2 the team asked me to come back to the box, the feeling was so good that I kept lapping then running out of gas. That’s good, also because the pace was strong even in the afternoon with the higher temperature“.

Scott Redding
Michael Rinaldi

We encountered some difficulties today. This morning I didn’t have a good feeling with my bike while in the afternoon, on a much warmer tarmac, we were able to improve while the others struggled a bit more. For this reason, I’m quite satisfied even if we have to work to make a small step forward“.

The battle for Independent supremacy is set to be a big one this weekend; Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) took the honours on the overall times but in FP2, he suffered a crash at Turn 4. This afternoon’s pace was still enough however, although Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) is a serious contender this weekend and looks like he may be able to go with Gerloff, although grid position will be vital. Gerloff was fourth overall, Davies sixth, whilst another Independent rider who impressed were Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) who was 11th overall but the fastest in the final sector in FP2.

Eighth place in the combined times was Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), with the Spaniard particularly strong in the morning session before setting his fastest FP2 time on his final lap of the session. Whilst Bautista was the lead Honda, team-mate Leon Haslam had a positive afternoon as he improved his time in comparison to the morning to finish in 14th, although he was still left in 15th in the combined times, despite being the third-fastest through the opening sector in the afternoon heat.

Alvaro Bautista

We tested here a couple of months ago and conditions remain similar now, in that the track is still bumpy. It’s a challenging one, with many slow corners – I think the most enjoyable section is the first fast corner. This morning we had issues with the braking, my bike rather unstable, so in the afternoon we tried to work on this but the track conditions were hotter and so we had less grip. I tried some different compounds but the grip, particularly at the edge of the tyre, was very low. We have some more ideas for tomorrow anyway, and this morning we weren’t so far from the front, so let’s see if we can find something to improve the bike’s stability and rear grip.

Leon Haslam

This morning we had a small crash, unfortunately it came when I put a new tyre in so results in the end were not so good. We are having some problems trying to stop the bike. Conditions this afternoon were very hot, and we spent most of the session trying to understand how to improve in terms of corner entry because we had the same issue as in the morning and I could not go any faster with the new tyre. We still have some work to do tomorrow, but we knew this circuit would be tough. We are competitive at many tracks, but the very tight corners are one of the areas in which we need to improve, and this circuit in particular has a lot of these. It’s a good track at which to test our weak points anyway, and we will keep trying and pushing for this.

Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) took BMW into ninth place and was one of the many riders who couldn’t improve their time in the afternoon session. Sykes was less than a second off the top spot, whilst his team-mate Michael van der Mark couldn’t crack the top ten on the opening day; the Dutchman completed 38 laps but was 11th, something he will hope to improve on as the weekend evolves.

Tom Sykes

It’s not been a bad day. We have been understanding the package off the back of a test in Catalunya and we understood a few of the parameters. This afternoon in the hotter conditions we really looked at some of the tyre selection that Pirelli have brought here. I was overall happy with our consistency and the pace at the end on used tyres. Hopefully now we have got a lot of information of that and overnight we will now make some fine adjustments and try again tomorrow. It is looking like it is going to be a very hot weekend so hopefully we can maintain that pace from FP2.”

Michael van der Mark

I think if you look at the position from today it is not really where we want to be. This morning I felt good on the bike and did some OK lap times, but the times from 7th to my position are really close. Unfortunately, my fastest lap got cancelled so that is why I am back in eleventh place. I think otherwise I potentially would have been 7th which is not so bad. This afternoon was good for us in the warmer conditions to try some things on the bike and see how it works, I was happy with the bike it just seems we are missing some things in a few areas. I think we can fix this and be higher up the grid tomorrow.

The rest of the field saw Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) in 13th, Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) in 14th – the Spaniard however showing flashes of hope throughout – and then the returning Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in 16th, despite an FP1 technical issue and FP2 crash at Turn 15, although he was OK on both occasions. Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) was 17th, although he was third-fastest in the final sector in the afternoon, ahead of Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha) in 18th and another returnee, Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team), in 19th. Wildcard Naomichi Uramoto (JEG Racing) completed the top twenty overall, ahead of Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and his teammate, American Jayson Uribe.

WorldSBK Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J. Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1m37.629
2 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +0.123
3 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.164
4 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +0.453
5 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +0.468
6 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.600
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.841
8 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +0.902
9 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +0.907
10 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.935
11 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +1.081
12 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.194
13 J. Folger BMW M 1000 RR +1.364
14 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.419
15 L. Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +1.578
16 L. Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1.858
17 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +2.197
18 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +2.863
19 L. Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R   IN +3.070
20 N. Uramoto Suzuki GSX-R1000R +3.388
21 L. Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +4.024
22 J. Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +4.627

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  266
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  263
 3  Scott Redding  216
 4  Alex Lowes  143
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  135
 6  Garrett Gerloff  127
 7  Tom Sykes  121
 8  Andrea Locatelli  119
 9  Michael Van Der Mark  113
 10  Chaz Davies  89
 11  Alvaro Bautista  84
 12  Axel Bassani  73
 13  Leon Haslam  68
 14  Lucas Mahias  36
 15  Tito Rabat  26
 16  Kohta Nozane  25
 17  Isaac Vinales  19
 18  Eugene Laverty  14
 19  Jonas Folger  8
 20  Christophe Ponsson  7
 21  Leandro Mercado  7
 22  Marvin Fritz  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2

WorldSSP

Spanish rider Gonzalez heads into the Navarra Round on the back of his first two WorldSSP podiums and, in buoyant mood, posting a 1’41.181s in the morning Free Practice 1 session to top the times for the day with the 19-year-old not able to improve his best time in the afternoon session. Aegerter, leading the Championship, was able to improve in the second 45-minute session but it was not enough to overhaul Gonzalez, claiming second place but just 0.016s behind. Four tenths away from the leading duo was Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) as the Italian rider showed strong pace on Friday at Navarra despite a crash at Turn 3 in the morning Free Practice 1 session; the former WorldSBK rider was able to re-join the session following the crash.

Simon Jespersen (Kallio Racing) had an eventful day as the Danish rider replaced the injured Hannes Soomer at Kallio Racing as he secured fourth place in the combined standings on his WorldSSP debut, but also had a crash in the second session of the day at Turn 15. French rider Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) was fifth fastest after posting a time of 1’41.781s, an improvement from Free Practice 1 and good enough for second place in the afternoon session. 2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) rounded out the top six with a strong showing from the Swiss rider as he searches for a return to the rostrum. Krummenacher’s time was just 0.014s slower than Cluzel.

Currently second in the Championship, Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) was seventh after Friday’s action at Navarra and finished more than six tenths down on Gonzalez’s time while Sammarinese Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) was eighth after finding almost seven tenths of a second between FP1 and FP2. Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) secured a top ten finish with ninth place ahead of Finnish compatriot Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing); the top nine in the standings separated by just one second.

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) has shown remarkable consistency in the 2021 campaign so far with six podiums from ten races and will be hoping he can improve on his 11th place finish on Friday, although the German did lose his best lap time in FP2 for slow riding; his overall best time coming in the morning session. Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) was 12th and Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in 13th despite the Turkish rider having a crash at Turn 9 in the second session.

VFT Racing’s Marcel Brenner secured a top-15 finish after Friday action with 14th place with Borja Gomez, replacing Pawel Szkopek at Yamaha MS Racing rounding out the top 15. Just two tenths of a second separated Öncü in 13th and Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) in 19th place, showing how competitive the field is in WorldSSP.

David Sanchis Martinez, who is taking the reins of WRP Wepol Racing’s Yamaha YZF R6 machine from Danny Webb, claimed 16th place while Oscar Gutierrez Iglesias, replacing the injured Marc Alcoba at Yamaha MS Racing, was 17th. Indonesia’s Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) was 18th with Bergman 19th and Hikari Okubo (G.A.P MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti), standing in for the injured Shogo Kawasaki and making his return to the Championship in 20th; Okubo also the highest-placed WorldSSP Challenge rider.

WorldSSP Friday Combined Times

Pos No. Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 1m41.181
2 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 +0.016
3 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +0.375
4 S. Jespersen Yamaha YZF R6 +0.488
5 J. Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +0.600
6 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +0.614
7 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +0.663
8 L. Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +0.920
9 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 +0.992
10 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +1.138
11 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.142
12 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.456
13 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.604
14 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +1.752
15 B. Gomez Yamaha YZF R6 +1.757
16 D. Sanchis Martinez Yamaha YZF R6 +1.765
17 O. Gutierrez Iglesiasesp Yamaha YZF R6 +1.775
18 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +1.783
19 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +1.877
20 H. Okubo Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.915
21 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +1.928
22 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +2.062

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  207
 2  Steven Odendaal  170
 3  Philipp Oettl  137
 4  Manuel Gonzalez  120
 5  Luca Bernardi  118
 6  Jules Cluzel  100
 7  Randy Krummenacher  67
 8  Federico Caricasulo  60
 9  Can Alexander Oncu  58
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  56
 11  Hannes Soomer  47
 12  Niki Tuuli  43
 13  Marc Alcoba  40
 14  Christoffer Bergman  34
 15  Kevin Manfredi  22
 16  Vertti Takala  19
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  16
 18  Peter Sebestyen  15
 19  Valentin Debise  9
 20  Sheridan Morais  9
 21  Maria Herrera  7
 22  Filippo Fuligni  6
 23  Michel Fabrizio  6
 24  Max Enderlein  5
 25  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 26  Marcel Brenner  4
 27  Massimo Roccoli  4
 28  Luca Grunwald  3
 29  Matteo Patacca  3
 30  Stephane Frossard  3
 31  Ondrej Vostatek  2
 32  Federico Fuligni  1
 33  Luca Ottaviani  1
 34  Leonardo Taccini  1
 35  Davide Pizzoli  1
 36  Pawel Szkopek  1

2021 Prosecco DOC Dutch Round Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport | Road Test Review

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
Triumph’s new Tiger 850 Sport is a capable, affordable adventure bike. It looks like it was dipped beak-first into a vat of red paint, like a Maker’s Mark bottle dipped in wax. (Photos by Kevin Wing)

Manufacturers sometimes make peculiar choices when naming motorcycles. Despite its name, the new-for-2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport has the same engine size (888cc) as the Tiger 900 GT and Tiger 900 Rally. And even though it has “Sport” in the name, the 850 actually makes less horsepower. On Jett Tuning’s dyno, the Tiger 850 made 82.1 horsepower and 58 lb-ft of torque at the rear wheel, which is 7.6 horsepower and 1.4 lb-ft of torque less than the Tiger 900 Rally Pro we tested last year.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
Twin radiators channel heat through ducts in the bodywork.

Designed to be the most accessible Tiger in terms of power, torque, specification, and price, simply calling it the Tiger 900 probably makes more sense. With a base price of $11,995, the Tiger 850 Sport costs $2,705 less than the Tiger 900 GT and $3,405 less than the Tiger 900 Rally. Its main competitors are street-oriented adventure bikes like the BMW F 750 GS (which is actually an 850; base price, $10,995), the BMW F 900 XR ($11,695), and the KTM 890 Adventure ($13,099).

Triumph detuned the Tiger 850’s engine to comply with A2 licensing requirements in Europe. It was able to hit a lower price point by foregoing an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) and multi-mode cornering-optimized ABS and traction control in favor of a more conventional non-switchable ABS and switchable traction control setup. The Tiger 850 Sport has fewer riding modes (only Road and Rain) and the  Marzocchi suspension adjustability is limited to rear preload. Other nips and tucks include a 5-inch TFT display instead of the 7-inch TFT the Tiger 900s, and there’s no cruise control, quickshifter, self-canceling turnsignals, or centerstand.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
Windscreen is one-hand adjustable to five positions over a 2-inch range.

The Tiger 850 Sport is hardly a bargain-bin special. It’s equipped with premium Brembo Stylema monoblock front calipers, a radial front brake master cylinder, a slip/assist clutch, a dual-height seat (31.9/32.7 inches), a hand-adjustable windscreen, full LED lighting, a 12-volt power outlet, and a luggage rack. Its curb weight is a manageable 474 pounds, and we averaged 219 miles of range from the 5.3-gallon tank.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
A roomy cockpit with an upright riding position allows riders to relax or shift into attack mode.

Greg’s Gear
Helmet: Fly Racing Sentinel Mesh
Jacket: Fly Racing Butane
Gloves: Fly Racing FL-2
Pants: Scorpion Covert Pro Jeans
Boots: Sidi Gavia Gore-Tex

Inline Triples are a signature feature on Triumphs as diverse as Tiger adventure bikes, the Speed Triple naked sportbike, and the Rocket 3 muscle cruiser. The Tiger 850 has what Triumph calls a T-Plane crankshaft with a 1-3-2 firing order. After cylinder 1 fires, the crank turns 180 degrees, cylinder 3 fires, the crank turns 270 degrees, cylinder 2 fires, the crank turns 270 degrees, and so on. The irregular firing sequence gives the engine the feel of a Twin down low and the character of a Triple from the midrange on up.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
A T-Plane crankshaft enhances the character and torque spread of the Tiger’s Triple.

Power increases linearly to 7,000 rpm then plateaus at around 80 horsepower until the 10,000-rpm redline. There’s a broad spread of torque, with 80% or more of peak torque available between 2,400 and 9,100 rpm. A balancer shaft quells most of the engine’s vibrations, but overall it feels more coarse than some of Triumph’s other Triples. Rain mode dulls throttle response, but in Road mode the right grip delivers precise throttle inputs with no stutters or hiccups. Other than a fair amount of heat felt on the left side, there’s little to complain about with the Tiger’s engine.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review

As I’ve written in previous reviews, Triumph’s design and engineering philosophy imbues its motorcycles with a user-friendliness that makes its bikes – even those I’ve never ridden before – feel familiar and intuitive. The Tiger 850 Sport is no exception. Its ergonomics are comfortable, its fit and finish are at a high level, and its handling strikes a good balance between agility and stability. Response and feel at the front brake lever are excellent, the slip/assist clutch is light and smooth, and the transmission shifts with minimal effort. The fork dives under hard braking, but generous suspension travel and comfort-oriented damping settings provide good ride quality in a range of riding conditions.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
On rough twisty roads, the Tiger digs its claws in. Its Brembo Stylema front calipers are fantastic.

The Tiger’s 19-inch front wheel, Michelin Anakee Adventure 90/10 tires, and decent ground clearance allow for some light-duty off-roading, but the ABS doesn’t have an off-road mode nor can it be turned off at the rear wheel. What makes the Tiger 850 Sport most appealing is its versatility as a streetbike, serving as an able commuter or errand-runner during the week, a canyon carver on the weekend, and a comfortable tourer for as many days as you can take off from the grind. Given its budget-friendly MSRP, buyers should have some money left over to tailor the bike to their needs. Triumph offers various luggage options and other accessories such as heated grips, handguards, a centerstand, crash protection, comfort seats, a low seat (31.1/31.9 inches), and more.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review
The Tiger 850 Sport is a well-sorted adventure bike. Its engaging engine, quality components, and sensible feature set make for an appealing overall package. And if red isn’t your thing, it also comes in blue.

Its name may be a bit misleading, but the Tiger 850 Sport is a great value for an impressively versatile European motorcycle.

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport Specs

Base Price: $11,995
Warranty: 2 yrs., unltd. miles
Website: triumphmotorcycles.com

ENGINE

Type: Liquid-cooled, transverse inline Triple, DOHC, 4 valves per cyl.
Displacement: 888cc
Bore x Stroke: 78.0 x 61.9mm
Compression Ratio: 11.3:1
Fuel Delivery: EFI w/ throttle-by-wire, 44mm throttle bodies x 3
Lubrication System: Wet sump, 3.3 qt. cap.
Transmission: 6-speed, cable-actuated wet slip/assist clutch
Final Drive: O-ring chain

CHASSIS

Frame: Tubular-steel trellis w/ engine as a stressed member, cast aluminum swingarm
Wheelbase: 61.3 in.
Rake/Trail: 24.6 degrees/5.2 in.
Seat Height: 31.9/32.7 in.
Suspension, Front: 45mm USD fork, no adj., 7.1 in. travel
Rear: Single shock, adj. spring preload, 6.7 in. travel
Brakes, Front: Dual 320mm floating discs w/ 4-piston radial monoblock calipers & ABS
Rear: Single 255mm disc w/ 1-piston floating caliper & ABS
Wheels, Front: Cast aluminum, 2.50 x 19 in.
Rear: Cast aluminum, 4.25 x 17 in.
Tires, Front: 100/90-19
Rear: 150/70-17
Wet Weight: 474 lbs.
Load Capacity: 491 lbs.
GVWR: 965 lbs.

PERFORMANCE

Horsepower: 82 @ 8,400 rpm (rear-wheel dyno)
Torque: 58 lb-ft @ 6,700 rpm (rear-wheel dyno)
Fuel Capacity: 5.3 gals.
Fuel Consumption: 41 mpg
Estimated Range: 219 miles

2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport review dyno horsepower torque

The post 2021 Triumph Tiger 850 Sport | Road Test Review first appeared on Rider Magazine.
Source: RiderMagazine.com

Bringing you the Best Motorcycle News from Around the Web!