Redding strikes back to win R2 at Aragon

2021 FIM Superbike World Championship
Round One – Aragon – Sunday

After a starting grid characterised by frenetic decisions between the intermediate or rain tyre, pole man Jonathan Rea took the race lead straight away ahead of team-mate Alex Lowes  in Sunday’s Superpole race. Behind them were Ducati rider Chaz Davies and Yamaha’s Garrett Gerloff, battling it out for third.

The leading four riders decided to race on intermediate tyres, whereas the first rider on rain tyres was Scott Redding in fifth.

During the race, Michael Van der Mark made a comeback after starting from the fifteenth spot on the grid, he gambled on slicks and moved up to fifth place behind Davies. However, his performance was not quite enough to finish on the podium and, at the end of the ten lap sprint race, Jonathan Rea finished 3.5-seconds ahead of Lowes, while Gerloff rounded out the podium a further two-seconds behind.

Superpole Race Podium

WorldSBK SuperPole Race

Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed/Km/h
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki / 308,6
2 A. Lowes Kawasaki +3.506 312,1
3 G. Gerloff Yamaha +5.051 311,2
4 C. Davies Ducati +8.908 311,2
5 M. Van Der Mark BMW +10.175 317,6
6 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +29.342 314,0
7 A. Bautista Honda +29.565 318,6
8 S. Redding Ducati +33.361 316,7
9 K. Nozane Yamaha +33.675 309,5
10 L.  Haslam Honda +34.771 313,0
11 M. Rinaldi Ducati +36.451 313,0
12 A. Locatelli Yamaha +38.709 309,5
13 J.  Folger BMW +41.188 310,3
14 T. Rabat Ducati +51.975 317,6
15 I.  Vinales Kawasaki +52.644 305,9
16 E. Laverty BMW +52.912 315,8
17 A. Bassani Ducati +1m07.329 315,8
18 L.  Mercado Honda +1m15.604 305,9
19 C. Ponsson Yamaha +1m16.459 306,8
20 L.  Cresson Kawasaki +1m17.105 302,5
Not Classified
RET 66 T. Sykes BMW 3 Laps 309,5
RET 76 S. Cavalieri Kawasaki 7 Laps 300,0
RET 44 L.  Mahias Kawasaki 8 Laps 301,7

WorldSBK Race Two

The drama continued in  the afternoon after a tyre gamble by Scott Redding saw the Brit respond to earlier disappointment and claim a sensational victory in Race Two, coming home almost ten seconds clear of his rivals.

World Superbike Aragon Race Two

An earlier rain shower meant the track was wet but drying throughout the day and, although there was a drying line appearing, most riders decided to race with the immediate tyres. As the track dried further, Redding was able to make his slick tyres work to move into the front and he did not look back, while Jonathan Rea came home in second ahead of teammate Alex Lowes.

The intermediate runners started off the race in the strongest position with six-time World Champion Rea and team-mate Lowes with American star Garrett Gerloff. Gerloff was able to make the move on Lowes for second place.

He soon had his eyes on Rea but it ended with Gerloff coming off his bike and Rea taking a trip through the gravel at Turn 14; an incident that cost both riders places and was placed under investigation by the FIM WorldSBK stewards, and Gerloff given a Long Lap Penalty; the first rider in WorldSBK to be given such a penalty.

Toprak Razgatlioglu, Lowes, Van der Mark, Rea, Redding

The incident allowed Lowes, Toprak Razgatlioglu and Michael van der Mark to jump ahead of Rea, with Razgatlioglu challenging Lowes for the lead of the race before van der Mark got by his former teammate to give the BMW M 1000 RR its first lap in the lead.

Michael Van der Mark leads Rea and Redding

The mixed conditions meant different strategies on the grid with tyre selection with only Scott Redding and Jonas Folger starting from the grid, although Michael Ruben Rinaldi made the switch to slicks before the race started with the Italian starting from the pit lane.

While the intermediate runners had the advantage in the early stages of the races, the track soon came into favour for the slick-shod bikes, with Redding passing Razgatlioglu for the lead and soon pulling out a large gap to the chasing pack to take his first win of the 2021 season.

While Redding extended his lead out in front, the battle for second was hotting up between van der Mark, Rea, Lowes, Razgatlioglu and Tom Sykes, who managed his intermediate tyres to latch onto the battle for second place. Rea had briefly got ahead of van der Mark at the final corner, but the Dutchman was able to fight back, although Rea was able to make the same move work on Lap 10 until Turn 1 on the next lap, with van der Mark fighting back.

Michael Van der Mark, Toprak Razgatlioglu

Sykes was able to pass Razgatlioglu on Lap 12 of 18 to move into fifth place as BMW searched for a strong result on their first weekend with the new BMW M 1000 RR, although the move cost both riders time. On Lap 13, Rea was able to make a move on van der Mark and make it stick to secure second place, before Lowes followed through a couple of laps later. Van der Mark tried to fight back but found himself sandwiched between teammate Sykes, who was on the kerbs at Turn 1, and Lowes on the inside, with van der Mark eventually falling down to fifth behind Lowes in third and Sykes fourth; the first time two BMWs have finished in the top five since 2013.

Michael Van der Mark, Rea, Lowes, Sykes

Drama was never far away in this race and that continued throughout the top ten with a three-way battle for sixth place between Razgatlioglu, Folger and Gerloff; the Turkish star just about holding on from Gerloff and Folger, who started on slick tyres. Andrea Locatelli was ninth with Lucas Mahias securing his first top-ten finish.

Scott Redding pulled away on slicks as the track came to him

Alvaro Bautista came home in 11th place ahead of a trio of rookies as Kohta Nozane secured another points finish in his maiden WorldSBK weekend, Isaac Viñales in 13th and Axel Bassani in 14th on an impressive weekend for the youngest rider on the grid. Christophe Ponsson was the final points position with 15th, finishing ahead of Rinaldi.

Eugene Laverty was the only BMW rider outside the top ten, finish just clear of Leandro Mercado who was 18th. Chaz Davies was the first to fall victim to the difficult conditions as he came off his Ducati Panigale V4 R at Turn, forcing the Welshman to retire from Race 2 on the opening lap of the race. Leon Haslam’s race came to an end on Lap 5 after he came off his Honda at Turn 2, with the British rider retiring from the race. Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) was another retirement after he crashed at Turn 1. Davies was able to finish the race in 19th despite the crash, ahead of TPR Team Pedercini Racing duo Loris Cresson and Samuele Cavalieri.


Scott Redding and Team Ducati
Scott Redding – P1

“Yes, it’s true, I took a big risk. In my career, however, the intermediate tires have betrayed me twice, both times when I was close to achieving a great result. For this reason, without hesitation, I asked my team to put on slicks. In the first few laps I tried not to make any mistake and then, obviously, it was not difficult to take the lead. For sure I would have preferred winning after having fought with the other guys, but it is still an important success, especially in light of what happened this weekend”.

Scott Redding
Jonathan Rea – P2

“I am really content with the weekend because to win the first race of the season was 100 times better than last year, and also to claim my 100th victory was a real target of mine. Today, I never experienced conditions like this in my whole career, where it really is a big tyre choice by the minute. Every minute it changes. With three minutes to go in race two I was asking Pere if they still had slicks on the grid! The Superpole race was the first time I had ever raced the intermediate tyres so huge kudos to Pirelli. I decided after that experience to use that tyre choice in the final race as well. It was the safest option. It wasn’t the right one, but it was the safest one, for sure. The majority of the grid had that combination. I realised that I was going to race for second but second feels like a win. The only way we could have been more competitive is with the right tyre choice. From that point of view I am really happy and excited for Estoril next week.”

Alex Lowes – P3

“We had no chance of staying with Scott in race two because after two laps the track was completely dry. That was a shame but I felt good on the bike and at the end I played a bit with some settings to find a bit more grip. Three podiums to start the year, on a track I think I have had one podium at in a sprint race on another bike before, but nothing really special. So it is nice to start the season like this. It is just one weekend but I feel good on the bike, which helps. If you are in control on the bike then you can manage the situations a little bit better. This morning in the full wet conditions I felt good. In the dry I felt good. In the mixed conditions we did a good job. In all of these conditions with the bike we understand what is happening and that puts us in a good position going forward.”

Tom Sykes – P4

“A bittersweet day, really. We definitely had a Superpole race to forget which we won’t go into too much detail about. That meant that we compromised our start position in race two. For race two, I wanted to go with the slick tyre but after this morning we opted to play it safe on the intermediates. Overall, after a good start, it was a bit of a waiting game. I could see what the guys in front of me were doing but obviously considering the tyres we were on I tried a different strategy to feel where the BMW M 1000 RR was working and where we had to improve. Unfortunately, we just missed out on the podium today, but considering our results here last year it is a huge improvement.”

Michael van der Mark – P5

“This morning, we had a wet warm-up session which was my first time on the BMW M 1000 RR in the rain, and to be honest I had such a good feeling from the first lap. The Superpole race was in mixed conditions but I opted to go with the slick tyre and in the end was the right choice. It did however keep raining at times during the race which slowed me down in places but anyway it was a good result for us. This afternoon’s race two again was a gamble on tyre choice, and I knew I made the wrong choice going up to the start as the track was drying so quickly. Despite that we made a good start, had some incredible battles taking the lead but I knew I was asking too much of the tyres and in the end some guys got past me. But we have got to be happy with the two P5 positions and most importantly the experience I’ve gained with the BMW M 1000 RR.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P6

“In the Superpole Race, my strategy was to choose the wet tyre because I saw that it was starting to rain again on the grid – my target was to finish well and to start from a better grid position in Race 2. Sixth was good considering the conditions, the riders in front all chose the intermediate tyres so it was a hard fight to get this result. The second race, I tried hard again to fight for the podium and I was strong in the opening laps – taking the lead for some laps and enjoying fighting. The feeling was not good in the middle of the race and I had to manage some problems, but sixth position can still be important points for the championship. We will see next weekend in Estoril, I love the track, now my R1 is better than before and I have good memories from last year!”

Garrett Gerloff – P7

“Our Sunday started off really well with a third place in the Superpole Race. The team and I made a perfect decision to go with the intermediate tyre, and it worked. It was nice to be on the podium, even though I felt like I could have gotten second place. In Race 2, I felt really good from the start, and wanted to at least fight for the podium, so I’m very frustrated with the mistake I made. I was behind Johnny (Rea), but I couldn’t stop as quickly as he did, and my options were either to hit him in the back or to get to his inside and hopefully miss him, so that’s what I tried to do. Unfortunately, I still ran into him, but at least he was able to stay on two wheels. I crashed, but I managed to pick up the bike right away and keep going. It was a bit bent, but overall the bike was good, so I tried to give the team the best possible result despite the mistake. It was nice to be the top independent rider at the finish. Next week we go to Estoril, a track that both I and my Yamaha R1 really like.”

Jonas Folger – P8

“We are absolutely happy with eighth place in race two. It is class that we managed this at the end of what was a difficult weekend. The conditions were very difficult and we did not know for a long time whether wets or slicks were the best option. We opted for slicks in the end. Only very few others made the same decision, including the winner Scott Redding, and we set the same lap time as Scott. The weather obviously suited us, but we are very happy. Unfortunately, I went wide in the battle with Toprak Razgatlioglu at the end of the race, otherwise we could perhaps have finished sixth. However, eighth place was still the highlight compared to the rest of the weekend, so we are very happy.”

Andrea Locatelli – P9

“I am quite happy because in the end we finish P9. It is not easy on the first and second lap for me, so now we need to work on this but for sure today’s races were difficult in the wet conditions. In the middle of Race 2, I was able to go quite fast here and the feeling was good. Overall I learned a lot during the weekend, and with the guys on the team together we did a really good job. Today is one of those days where you can be unlucky or lucky. Because maybe if we tried to use the slick tyre, it could have been a good chance for us to do something – but okay, we lose this opportunity but it is only my first race weekend in WorldSBK. Now we go on to Estoril and hope to push much more because I have more confidence on the R1 and I think this track is a really good opportunity for us.”

Alvaro Bautista – P11

“Today in the Superpole race we opted for rain tyres and when the track started to dry out the riders who had chosen intermediates or slicks clearly had different pace. In the end we ended up seventh, the second fastest among those who’d opted for rain tyres. The positive thing is that I had good feeling with the bike in conditions where we have struggled in the past, and that means we’ve taken a step forward in that respect. In race 2, the track was wetter than in the morning and we opted for intermediates, but the asphalt dried quickly during the race. It was the first time I was using these tyres and with a setting that was a bit of a mix, I wasn’t perfectly comfortable. Then, towards the middle of the race I started to have the same electric problem as yesterday and kept struggling to change gear. I had to manage the situation, riding very carefully to avoid taking any risks. It’s a shame, because without this problem yesterday we would have been fighting for the podium, and at least for the top six today. Having said that, we have to stay focused on the positive things, on the fact that we have worked very well on the set-up, the geometry, the suspension, and also the electronics. This gives me a lot of positive energy for next weekend at Estoril.”

Kohta Nozane – P12

“The conditions were different today, so the tyre choice was a bit tricky. The track kept changing too, so, at the beginning of the race, I was too cautious and I lost positions. I still managed to finish the race and learn so many things. I also took note of so many different aspects in which I have to improve. The next race will be my first time in Estoril, so it will be tough for me, but I will try to be as prepared as possible to do my best for the team. They are working so well with me and helping me a lot, so I will try to get a good result for them in Portugal.”

Michael Rinaldi – P16

“In these circumstances, you have to know how to evaluate the situation and make the right choice. Today I made the wrong choice and, as a result, I had one of the worst races of my career. Last year I came away from Aragon with 3 podiums; this year with only 9 points. This means that we have to find the feeling that we have been missing. The motivation is not lacking and I will try, together with the team, to turn the page from the next race”.

Eugene Laverty – P17

“It was not a good day, unfortunately. We had some problems in all sessions. For the long race, I had the wet front tyre and the other riders had intermediates or slick tyres so there was no chance to move further forward. So it was really disappointing but I am looking forward to Estoril already. I said that Aragón and Estoril have been the toughest two tracks for our bike last year so we have a big challenge but we did a good job here yesterday during qualifying so that’s reason for optimism. In Estoril, we need to put our progress on paper because this weekend we weren’t able to get the results we wanted.”

Leon Haslam – DNF

“The Superpole race did not go well unfortunately, after what was a positive (wet) warm-up. One of the issues was that we should have gone with the intermediate, but we also struggled a bit with throttle delivery. So a difficult race in which I took some risks on several occasions. Then in the final race we went with the intermediate solution, as did most riders, and the pace felt really good. I felt that we resolved the power delivery, as well as a few other things, it was only unfortunate that I then crashed. So even though the results overall have not been what we wanted, I do feel that we were able to make a good step in this final race, and I’m really looking forward to seeing what we can do next weekend at Estoril.”

WorldSBK Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed/Km/h
1 S. Redding Ducati / 316,7
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki +9.856 310,3
3 A. Lowes Kawasaki +10.434 314,0
4 T. Sykes BMW +12.094 307,7
5 M. Van Der Mark BMW +16.234 307,7
6 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +20.191 311,2
7 G. Gerloff Yamaha +20.427 311,2
8 J.  Folger BMW +20.587 314,0
9 A. Locatelli Yamaha +25.026 312,1
10 L.  Mahias Kawasaki +28.855 302,5
11 A. Bautista Honda +35.644 312,1
12 K. Nozane Yamaha +38.275 303,4
13 I.  Vinales Kawasaki +41.585 305,1
14 A. Bassani Ducati +44.922 313,0
15 C. Ponsson Yamaha +46.022 303,4
16 M. Rinaldi Ducati +1m08.072 314,9
17 E. Laverty BMW +1m13.998 312,1
18 L.  Mercado Honda +1m14.859 306,8
19 C. Davies Ducati +1 Lap 316,7
20 L.  Cresson Kawasaki +2 Laps 294,3
21 S. Cavalieri Kawasaki +3 Laps 291,9
Not Classified
RET T. Rabat Ducati 4 Laps 312,1
RET L.  Haslam Honda 14 Laps 311,2

WorldSBK Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  57
 2  Alex Lowes  45
 3  Scott Redding  40
 4  Toprak Razgatlioglu  30
 5  Tom Sykes  23
 6  Garrett Gerloff  23
 7  Michael Van Der Mark  21
 8  Chaz Davies  17
 9  Andrea Locatelli  13
 10  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  9
 11  Jonas Folger  8
 12  Leon Haslam  8
 13  Alvaro Bautista  8
 14  Lucas Mahias  7
 15  Kohta Nozane  7
 16  Axel Bassani  6
 17  Isaac Vinales  6
 18  Christophe Ponsson  1

WorldSSP

Tyre gambles were the order of the day as Steven Odendaal claimed a stunning FIM Supersport World Championship victory in difficult conditions at MotorLand Aragon for the Pirelli Aragon, while Jules Cluzel fought from last on the grid to claim a podium.

WorldSSP

The drama kicked off before the race had started with Cluzel losing his pole position due to a tyre pressure infringement, meaning the Frenchman had to start from last of the 25-strong grid. This gave both Philipp Oettl and Odendaal a clean run at the start, although Oettl was unable to convert this into a strong result after coming off his bike at Turn 2 on Lap 1, being joined in the gravel by Federico Caricasulo in separate incidents. Both were able to remount although Oettl retired from the race while Caricasulo finished in 18th place.

This allowed Swede Christoffer Bergman to take the lead of the race ahead of rookie Marc Alcoba, with Bergman becoming the first Swedish rider to lead a race in WorldSSP. However, the race was defined by tyre selections with both Bergman and Alcoba on full rain tyres, falling down the order and finishing in sixth and seventh.

WorldSSP

As the race progressed, riders on Pirelli’s intermediate tyres started to pick up the pace with Odendaal, Raffaele De Rosa, Hannes Soomer and Dominique Aegerter all jumping ahead of Bergman and Alcoba.

Cluzel’s race was compromised from the start with the tyre pressure infringement forcing him to start at the back of the grid, although he made light work of moving up the grid. The French rider had moved up to tenth in the early stages of the race and claimed the lead of the race with a handful of laps to go; his moves through the field including a double pass at Turn 1 to move up into fourth place on Vertti Takala and Manuel Gonzalez.

It had looked like the Frenchman would bounce back from yesterday’s disappointment, after being taken out from the lead of the race, but he was reeled in by Odendaal and De Rosa with just a few laps of the race left.

The battle for the win ended with a four-way scrap between Odendaal, De Rosa, Cluzel and Soomer with less than four tenths separating the four riders. De Rosa led on the final lap of the 15-lap race, aiming for his first ever win in WorldSSP, but lost out to Odendaal on the run to the final corner with the South African rider moving to the inside of the double left-hander to claim the lead of the race, with De Rosa unable to get the run out of the final corner to take victory; Odendaal making it two from two at MotorLand Aragon. Cluzel came home in third place despite starting at the back of the grid, holding off Soomer by 0.055s at the chequered flag.

Aegerter was some way back off the four-way scrap for the lead but came home in fifth place with Bergman finishing six, 12 seconds clear of early challenge Alcoba. Finnish rookie Takala came home in eighth place ahead of 2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher and Indonesian Galang Hendra Pratama.

Gonzalez secured 11th place, ahead of Kevin Manfredi who was the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider ahead of fellow competitor Maria Herrera in 13th place. Can Öncü came in in 14th place while Pawel Szkopek became the oldest rider to score points in WorldSSP at 45 years, nine months and 17 days old.

Niki Tuuli did not start Race 2 after he was declared unfit following yesterday with a concussion; an incident for which he has been penalised with a pit lane start for the next race he participates in. Thomas Gradinger was also declared unfit with a left foot contusion following a crash in Sunday’s Warm-Up session. After yesterday’s strong showing, Luca Bernardi had a technical issue in the early stages of Race 2 as he ran in the top five until the issue that forced him to retire.

P1 Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team)

“To be honest, it came as a huge surprise to me. I would’ve been happy on the podium today. The conditions were super difficult today. I’ve never even done a race, or practiced, with the intermediate tyres. The team on the grid said ‘no, we need to take the risk and go with the intermediates’, so I said I trust you guys. A big thanks to them because honestly, if it was my choice, maybe I would’ve gone with the wets.”

P2 Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura)

“I’m really happy, for me this is incredible. This winter, I had a big injury on my shoulder. For this, I want to say this was a difficult winter. I had an operation. Now I want to say thank you to my team, all the Calero family. The race is incredible, it was difficult trying to understand the conditions. I started too slowly but again, it came better and better throughout the race. I’m really, really happy.”

P3 Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha)

“To be honest, I was thinking not to fight for the victory, but I was fighting for the victory, so it was a great achievement. I had a moment at the end, it was raining, and it was incredible how fast we can go with the nearly slick tyre. It was something that you can take a lot of risk with to win, but you can also lose a lot. I was in the middle to manage but 16 points is great. It’s a shame that yesterday I lost 25 but the season is long and it’s good to be on the podium now.”

WorldSSP Podium

WorldSSP Race Two Results

Pos No. Rider Bike Gap Speed/Km/h
1 S. Odendaal Yamaha / 271,4
2 R. De Rosa Kawasaki +0.100 270,7
3 J.  Cluzel Yamaha +0.334 271,4
4 H. Soomer Yamaha +0.389 271,4
5 D. Aegerter Yamaha +17.785 268,0
6 C. Bergman Yamaha +19.976 261,5
7 M. Alcoba Yamaha +31.984 259,6
8 V. Takala Yamaha +35.144 274,8
9 R. Krummenacher Yamaha +36.403 264,7
10 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha +37.524 269,3
11 M. Gonzalez Yamaha +37.821 266,7
12 K. Manfredi Yamaha +50.606 265,4
13 M. Herrera Yamaha +56.884 266,0
14 C. Oncu Kawasaki +1’m04.895 268,0
15 P. Szkopek Yamaha +1m12.634 257,1
16 S. Frossard Yamaha +1m17.314 262,1
17 F. Fuligni Yamaha +1m17.560 265,4
18 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +1m33.617 264,7
19 L.  Taccini Kawasaki +1m33.621 268,7
20 S. Kawasaki Kawasaki +1m53.310 262,1
21 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki 1 Lap 265,4
Not Classified
RET L.  Montella Yamaha 2 Laps 255,3
RET D. Pizzoli Yamaha 4 Laps 260,2
RET L.  Bernardi Yamaha 5 Laps 268,7
RET P. Oettl Kawasaki 14 Laps 224,1

WorldSSP Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Steven Odendaal  50
 2  Dominique Aegerter  31
 3  Raffaele De Rosa  27
 4  Hannes Soomer  22
 5  Christoffer Bergman  18
 6  Jules Cluzel  16
 7  Philipp Oettl  16
 8  Manuel Gonzalez  16
 9  Luca Bernardi  13
 10  Randy Krummenacher  12
 11  Federico Caricasulo  10
 12  Marc Alcoba  9
 13  Vertti Takala  8
 14  Can Alexander Oncu  8
 15  Galang Hendra Pratama  7
 16  Kevin Manfredi  7
 17  Maria Herrera  7
 18  Michel Fabrizio  2
 19  Pawel Szkopek  1

WorldSSP300

The FIM Supersport 300 World Championship lived up to its reputation of unpredictability after a thrilling Race 2 at the Pirelli Aragon Round, where Tom Booth-Amos claimed a stunning first victory of 2021 at MotorLand Aragon.

WorldSSP300

As ever in WorldSSP300, drama was never far away throughout the 12-lap race with the lead ever-changing as well as battles throughout the field as the 43-strong field took part in Race 2. Booth-Amos claimed victory ahead of Unai Orradre, although the Spanish had crossed the line first he was penalised with a one-place penalty for exceeding track limits on the final lap. It meant he was relegated to second place, ahead of compatriot Adrian Huertas in third, just 0.013s between them.

Huertas had been in the lead of the race but did not want to be ahead going onto the back straight on the final lap, although he was unable to use the slipstream to retake the lead. Yuta Okaya finished in fourth place, with Ana Carrasco in fifth after a strong comeback weekend following an injury sustained in testing in 2020.

WorldSSP300

Ton Kawakami finished in sixth place, just 0.020s away from Carrasco but also just 0.056s ahead of Hugo de Cancellis in seventh and fellow French rider Samuel di Sora in eighth; a late charge seeing di Sora move up the order. Bruno Ieraci finished in ninth place with Meikon Kawakami completing the top ten.

The returning Dorren Loureiro finished in 11th place ahead of reigning Champion Jeffrey Buis; the Dutchman holding the lead of the race throughout different stages of the race but being shuffled down into 12th in the latter stages.

He finished four seconds clear of Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez who came home as the first of four consecutive Spanish riders in a group. Stand-in rider Alex Millan Gomez, replacing Alejandro Carrion who was declared unfit, claimed 14th place despite his first action of the weekend being in Tissot Superpole. 2017 Champion Marc Garcia was in 15th and completed the points, just 0.025s ahead of Inigo Iglesias.

WorldSSP300

Turn 1 was a pinch point for the 43 riders taking place in Race 2, with rookie Harry Khouri, Oliver König, Victor Rodriguez Nuñez, Joel Romero  and Miguel Santiago Duarte all having incidents on the opening lap; the latter taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the crash. One Event rider Stefano Raineri came off his bike on Lap 2 while Sylvain Marakarian crashed two laps later following his crash. Julian Giral Romero was also a retirement from Race 2.

WorldSSP300

Vicente Perez Selfa retired from the race after seven laps, shortly after he was given a double Long Lap Penalty by the FIM WorldSBK Stewards for irresponsible riding at Turn 1, while Bahattin Sofuoglu crashed out recovering after taking the first of his two Long Laps; the Turkish star given a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start.

Kevin Sabatucci was the penultimate retirement of the race when he crashed at Turn 1 on Lap 9, while Koen Meuffels brought his Kawasaki back to the pits after 10 of the 12 scheduled laps.

P1 Tom Booth-Amos (Fusports – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki)

“I didn’t really expect the win because I crossed the line in second but I’m obviously over the moon. I feel like this is my hardest round of the year so very happy to come away with a win and a second place and obviously the Championship lead. It’s a good way to start the season and we’ll continue like this.”

P2 Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing)

“I’m very happy with the race. During the race, I pushed a lot and fought with the Kawasaki. I’m very happy for me.”

P3 Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki)

“It has been a really good weekend. Today in the race, I gave my best but it wasn’t enough. I’m ready to fight for the Championship and I’m really with all the time, with the sensations.”

WorldSSP300 Podium

WorldSSP300 Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed/Km/h
1 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki / 198,9
3 U. Orradre Yamaha +0.127 213,0
3 A. Huertas Kawasaki +0.140 207,3
4 Y. Okaya Kawasaki +0.213 210,1
5 A. Carrasco Kawasaki +0.339 213,9
6 T. Kawakami Yamaha +0.359 208,9
7 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki +0.415 208,9
8 S. Di Sora Kawasaki +0.641 209,7
9 B. Ieraci Yamaha +0.791 210,1
10 M. Kawakami Yamaha +0.795 210,1
11 D. Loureiro Kawasaki +0.914 209,7
12 J.  Buis Kawasaki +1.565 209,3
13 J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki +6.020 208,5
14 A. Millan Gomez Kawasaki +6.038 206,5
15 M. Garcia Kawasaki +10.446 206,9
16 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki +10.467 207,7
17 R. Bijman Yamaha +10.497 207,3
18 V. Steeman KTM +10.675 205,7
19 F. Palazzi Yamaha +21.262 207,3
20 P. Svoboda Yamaha +21.288 205,3
21 M. Gennai Yamaha +21.305 204,5
22 G. Mastroluca Yamaha +21.432 204,9
23 A. Zanca Kawasaki +21.552 205,7
24 M. Gaggi Yamaha +21.596 203,0
25 T. Brianti Kawasaki +21.802 207,3
26 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki +32.246 204,2
27 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha +35.406 203,8
28 H. Khouri Kawasaki +37.283 199,3
29 O. Konig Kawasaki +57.453 196,7
30 J.  Mcmanus Kawasaki +1m01.259 204,5
31 I.  Offer Kawasaki +1m01.465 203,4
32 A. Frappola Kawasaki +1m01.558 199,3
33 A. Diez Rodriguez Kawasaki +1m07.527 198,9
Not Classified
RET K. Meuffels Kawasaki 2 Laps 209,3
RET K. Sabatucci Yamaha 4 Laps 202,6
RET B. Sofuoglu Yamaha 5 Laps 207,7
RET V. Perez Selfa Yamaha 5 Laps 205,7
RET S. Raineri Kawasaki 6 Laps 207,3
RET J.  Giral Romero Yamaha 7 Laps 206,1
RET S. Markarian Kawasaki 9 Laps 204,9
RET V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki 11 Laps 159,1
RET J.  Romero Kawasaki / /
RET M. Duarte Yamaha / /

WorldSSP300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Tom Booth-Amos  45
 2  Adrian Huertas  41
 3  Unai Orradre  33
 4  Yuta Okaya  29
 5  Samuel Di Sora  19
 6  Ton Kawakami  19
 7  Ana Carrasco  16
 8  Jeffrey Buis  14
 9  Hugo De Cancellis  13
 10  Bruno Ieraci  13
 11  Koen Meuffels  8
 12  Harry Khouri  7
 13  Meikon Kawakami  6
 14  Dorren Loureiro  6
 15  Marc Garcia  4
 16  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  3
 17  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 18  Inigo Iglesias  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 X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X 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 X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X X X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X

*** = Subject to homologation

Source: MCNews.com.au

Husqvarna 701 Enduro LR recall for possible fuel leak issue

Motorcycle Recall Notice


PRA No. – 2021/18985
Date published – 23 May 2021
Campaign number – TI 07_1870665

Supplier – Husqvarna Australia
Traders who sold this product – Authorised Husqvarna Motorcycle dealers
Where the product was sold – Nationally
Dates available for sale – 28 April 2020 – 22 April 2021

Motorcycle Models

Husqvarna 701 Enduro LR

Model Year 2020

98 affected motorcycles

Click here for VIN List


What are the defects?

The front fuel tank fuel lines may rub during operation, causing wear and damage to the fuel lines over time. Fuel may leak from damaged fuel lines.

What are the hazards?

If a fuel leak occurs, this may lead to a fire. A vehicle fire could increase the risk of an accident, serious injury or death to the rider, other road users and bystanders, and/or damage to property.

What should consumers do?

Consumers will be sent letters advising them of the recall and should contact an authorised dealer to arrange an appointment for inspection of their motorcycle and to have replacement fuel lines installed.

For further information, consumers can contact Husqvarna on 1800 644 771 or find their nearest authorised dealer using the dealer search option at https://www.husqvarna-motorcycles.com/au/

Source: MCNews.com.au

Gurecky gets the hammer down in an Oschersleben masterclass

In the last couple of laps disaster struck for Luciano once again. Heading off track for the second time, the Belgian rider shuffled way back down the order upon re-joining, with Kocourek able to take back second and secure himself a safer gap behind himself to boot. Phommara, meanwhile, had continued his charge and swept back round the outside of Hosciuc to lead the fight for the podium on the penultimate lap as well.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Rea notches up century with race one victory at Aragon

2021 FIM Superbike World Championship
Round One – Aragon – Friday

The start of the 2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship season brought more history for the record books as Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) claimed a stunning victory in Race 1 at MotorLand Aragon to claim his 100th race victory in WorldSBK, the first man to win 100 races in a single class of FIM road racing world championships.

Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK 1-2

Rea led a Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK 1-2 with Alex Lowes coming home in second place, four seconds away from Rea after challenging him in the early stages of the races. Lowes was under pressure from Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) and finished in second place by just 0.043s ahead of the Turkish rider, who had battled through from tenth on the grid.

Aragon Superbike Race One Podium

Rea was able to retain the lead of the race but was immediately put under pressure by teammate Lowes – looking to be the one who would deny Rea his 100th WorldSBK victory for the time being.

SBK Race One Start

Scott Redding (Aruba.It Racing – Ducati) ran in third in the early stages of the race but was unable to keep up with the pace of the Kawasakis out in front, ensuring Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) and Razgatlioglu, who started tenth, were able to stay in podium contention but not challenge the Kawasakis in the early stages.

Lowes leads Redding

Razgatlioglu was the first rider to get by Redding on the inside of the left-hander of Turn 1, allowing the Turkish rider to start chasing down the Kawasakis out in front. Davies followed a lap later with a sensational overtake on Redding at Turn 2 with Davies looking to add to his win total at Aragon.

Redding, Gerloff

After getting past Redding, the Turkish star had his eyes set on Lowes who was his next target for second place, with Razgatlioglu able to get past Lowes before he started to move his target towards Rea. Razgatlioglu was unable to break away from Lowes and Davies but started lapping faster than Rea with around five laps to go, although not fast enough to put pressure on Rea in the closing stages of the race.

Toprak Razgatliogliu leads Redding, Davies and Gerloff

On Lap 16, Lowes tried to re-pass Razgatlioglu at Turn 4 and briefly got ahead but the Turkish rider was able to brake later on the brakes, a theme that ran throughout the last few laps of the race, keeping Davies in contention for second place. At the final corner, Lowes again briefly got ahead but Razgatlioglu was able to just about defend his position although the British rider finaly got by at Turn 1 on Lap 17. The battle was not over as the race came to a conclusion as the pair duelled it out, with Lowes winning out on a drag race to the line for a KRT 1-2; both Lowes and Razgatlioglu claiming their 25th WorldSBK podium.

The battle allowed Redding and Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) to close in on the battle for second, although Redding dropped Bautista as he approached the battle creating a four-way battle for second place; although Bautista crashed out of the race on the final lap at Turn 2, forcing the Spanish rider to retire. After losing out earlier in the race, Redding was able to get by former teammate Davies for fourth place as the final lap started, with Redding finishing fourth and Davies fifth.

Tom Sykes

Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was unable to convert third on the grid to a podium finish but, after a difficult start, was able to manage his SCX tyre to come home in sixth place in the M 1000 RR’s first race. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.It Racing – Ducati) was another who managed the SCX tyre with seventh place, around two seconds clear of Leon Haslam (Team HRC).

American star Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) claimed a top ten finish at MotorLand Aragon, seven seconds clear of factory Yamaha rider Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) who claimed a top ten finish in his first WorldSBK race. Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) finished 11th on his debut for BMW, with Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) in 12th.

Three more rookies secured points finishes on their WorldSBK debut with Isaac Viñales (Orelac Racing VerdNatura), Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) rounded out the top ten, with Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Action), Christophe Ponsson (Alstare Yamaha) and Loris Cresson (TPR Team Pedercini Racing) the last of the runners.

Rookie Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) was the first to retire from the race with a technical issue in the early stages of the race after securing a top-12 starting grid spot, while Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) brought his Honda machine into the pitlane on Lap 8 with the Argentinean rider not finishing the race. Rookie Samuele Cavalieri (TPR Team Pedercini Racing) was another retirement from the race around the halfway stage, bringing his Kawasaki machine into the garage. Eugene Laverty (RC Squadra Corse) brought his BMW machine back to the garage on lap 14 of 18 with an issue after running close to the top ten for the majority of the race.

P1 Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)

We reached 100 race wins today and it was done with a lot of hard work. Over the off season Kawasaki really dug in with a new bike and we were able to make a step. Also in the off season I worked really hard on myself and I know I improved in all areas. I was born with the dream of racing motorbikes, and going with my parents to ride around Motocross tracks in 1993, ’94. The history is mad. Getting the opportunity to come to the world championship, in 2008 in Supersport, and straight away after my rookie season going to Superbike. Taking my first race win at Misano in 2009 as a rookie and now with 100 wins… It’s mad! Each and every race win is special, and I have never been a statistics guy, but when I was closing in on 100 wins that was a big goal. It is such a cool number and a career landmark. I am very proud of it. We had been a little bit unlucky in the winter tests with bad weather but my team have left no stone unturned and turned up at every test we could. They reorganised and rescheduled things so huge thanks to all the staff. Not only the management but all the mechanics and their families for making this sacrifice. We have been away from home so long this off season, often for no laps, but we are in a good position now. To win the first race starts our championship off 25 points better than last year! That was a good way to start.”

P2 Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)

I I felt good all weekend, I have been really strong and got lots of laps in. In the race, maybe on lap six or seven, I found some problems, struggling with the front of the bike. I did not expect that. I had two slides on the entry to turn five, then turn ten. I thought that as this is the first race of the year, if I crash now it is just for nothing. I thought to myself, find your rhythm, let Jonathan go, then when somebody passes you, try to fight. Then I realised it was Toprak and he is so good on the brakes! In this area, for some reason, I didn’t have the same feeling like I had in the practice sessions. Luckily Toprak used an SCX rear tyre and he started to slide a lot. I was quite smooth, managed well and started to battle with him again. The second part of the race was quite tough but with the difficulty I had I didn’t expect to be there at the end for second. The positive point was that qualifying was good, the start was good and I was riding well at the start, so we can try to improve for tomorrow.

P3 Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK)

“I’m really happy with this first race because normally I’m not really strong at this track, but today also my team did a good job because we see I’m on the podium in the first race. This is important for me because now, tomorrow, I come in very strong because I see some problems in the race and today I’m happy.”

WorldSBK Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki  /
2 A. Lowes Kawasaki +3.965
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +4.008
4 S. Redding Ducati +4.242
5 C. Davies Ducati +4.615
6 T. Sykes BMW  +6.784
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati +8.345
8 L.  Haslam Honda +10.187
9 G. Gerloff Yamaha +10.326
10 A. Locatelli Yamaha +17.693
11 M. Van Der Mark BMW +21.154
12 A. Bassani Ducati +27.523
13 I.  Vinales Kawasaki +30.963
14 K. Nozane Yamaha  +36.769
15 L.  Mahias Kawasaki +39.334
16 J.  Folger BMW +41.544
17 C. Ponsson Yamaha +43.179
18 L.  Cresson Kawasaki +1’21.460
Not Classified
RET A. Bautista Honda 1 Lap
RET E. Laverty BMW 5 Laps
RET S. Cavalieri Kawasaki 9 Laps
RET L.  Mercado Honda 11 Laps
RET T. Rabat Ducati 16 Laps

WorldSBK Superpole

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki 1m48.458
2 S. Redding Ducati +0.275
3 T. Sykes BMW +0.382
4 A. Lowes Kawasaki +0.432
5 C. Davies Ducati +0.611
6 G. Gerloff Yamaha +0.727
7 L.  Haslam Honda +0.788
8 A. Bautista Honda +0.880
9 M. Rinaldi Ducati +1.058
10 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +1.246
11 T. Rabat Ducati +1.303
12 E. Laverty BMW +1.309
13 L.  Mahias Kawasak +1.493
14 A. Locatelli Yamaha +1.504
15 M. Van Der Mark BMW +1.731
16 K. Nozane Yamaha +1.977
17 C. Ponsson Yamaha +2.031
18 J.  Folger BMW +2.170
19 I.  Vinales Kawasaki +2.214
20 A. Bassani Ducati +2.649
21 S. Cavalieri Kawasaki +4.259
22 L.  Mercado Honda +4.662
23 L.  Cresson Kawasaki +5.191

WorldSBK Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
1  Jonathan Rea  25
2  Alex Lowes  20
3  Toprak Razgatlioglu  16
4  Scott Redding  13
5  Chaz Davies  11
6  Tom Sykes  10
7  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  9
8  Leon Haslam  8
9  Garrett Gerloff  7
10  Andrea Locatelli  6
11  Michael Van Der Mark  5
12  Axel Bassani  4
13  Isaac Vinales  3
14  Kohta Nozane  2
15  Lucas Mahias  1

WorldSSP

The 2021 FIM Supersport World Championship started in dramatic fashion at MotorLand Aragon as Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. Yamaha WorldSSP Team) claimed a stunning maiden victory ahead at the Pirelli Aragon Round in Race 1 after taking advantage of a collision between early leaders Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) and Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti).

World Supersport Race Start

Odendaal suffered a highside crash at the Supported Test at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya which resulted in a dislocated shoulder, with Odendaal responding to that in perfect fashion with victory at Aragon. Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) claimed a maiden podium on his WorldSSP debut with Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in third.

There was a contrast of starts from the front row as Cluzel was able to get a superb jump on the field from pole position, while Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) lost time and positions as he fell through the order. The Finnish rider was able to stem the flow before starting to fight his way back through the field.

After Tuuli had recovered from his poor start, he was able to pass race winner Odendaal, second-placed Aegerter and Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) to start chasing down Cluzel, as they battled for the first victory of the season.

Oettl, Bernardi, Caricasulo, Gonzalez

Tuuli had fought back from his poor start to close down Cluzel for the lead but the pair collided in the braking area of Turn 12 with both forced to retire from the race, allowing Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing), Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) to engage in a three-way battle for the lead. Both Tuuli and Cluzel were taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the incident; Cluzel was declared fit while Tuuli was transported to hospital for further assessment after being declared unfit with a concussion. The incident was placed under investigation by the FIM WorldSBK Stewards.

Oettl and Aegerter swapped positions throughout Lap 12, with the German holding on to the lead, but allowed Odendaal to continue to close on the pair. As they approached the final corner, Aegerter was able to pass Oettl on the inside of the final corner, before Odendaal followed him through at Turn 1. Aegerter’s lead did not last long as Oettl passed him into Turn 1, but the Swiss rider moved back ahead at the double left-hander of Turns 4 and 5, with the pair switching positions throughout the last few laps; Aegerter faster in the first half of the lap with Oettl quicker in the second half leading to a thrilling battle for the win.

Odendaal beat Aegerter to the flag

Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) secured San Marino’s best ever result in WorldSSP with a stunning fourth place finish on his WorldSSP debut, ahead of Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team); the Spaniard picking up his best ever WorldSSP result. Federico Caricasulo (GMT94 Yamaha) finished in the top six on his return to WorldSSP following his year in WorldSBK in 2020.

Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) finished in seventh place with Christoffer Bergman (Wojick Racing Team) in eighth place on his return to WorldSSP; his 2020 season being interrupted by injuries sustained away from WorldSSP. Italian Raffaele de Rosa was ninth with Turkish rider Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) completing the top ten.

Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) claimed 11th place on his return to WorldSSP, ahead of Maria Herrera (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) who was the highest-placed WorldSSP Challenge rider, fending off the challenge from Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) in 13th.

Michel Fabrizio’s (G.A.P MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) scored points on his return to WorldSSP after 15 years away from the class, with Indonesian Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha completing the points.

Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) was 16th place, just one second outside the points, with Pawel Szkopek (Yamaha MS Racing) in 17th place. Rookie Shogo Kawasaki (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) was in 18th place and the last of the runners on the lead lap.

Leonardo Taccini (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) came off at the chicane in the early stages, forcing the young Italian to finish the race four laps down. An action packed run through the chicane meant Marc Alcoba (Yamaha MS Racing) came off his bike although he was able to re-join; the Spaniard coming into the race on the back foot following a six-place grid penalty for an underweight bike in the Tissot Superpole session. Davide Pizolli (VFT Racing) was another retirement following a crash in the early stages of the race, alongside Austrian Thomas Gradinger (DK Motorsport).

P1 Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team)

I’ve been working towards this moment for a long time. The team were excellent the whole weekend. We experienced some difficult conditions during this race because of the temperature.”

P2 Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha)

I’m very happy to be on the podium for the first time in Aragon in the WorldSSP class with the Ten Kate Racing Yamaha. They did a great job and it’s nice to already have one race on Saturday so tomorrow we can try to improve a little bit and I hope we can fight for the top position. To start the season like this is very good and I hope you enjoyed the race!

P3 Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

It was a really tough race; this afternoon was a lot hotter than I expected. It was a good race at the beginning. One time I lost a gear in Turn 15, so I lost some ground to Cluzel and in the end the tyre was completely finished. With the hotter condition, the Kawasaki seems to suffer a little bit. I think today, we did the best out of the situation and I’m happy to be om the podium again after half a year.

WorldSSP Race Results / Superpole

Pos  Rider Bike Race/Gap Q
1 S. Odendaal Yamaha / 1m53.402
2 D. Aegerter Yamaha +0.099 1m53.553
3 P. Oettl Kawasaki +2.635 1m53.353
4 L.  Bernardi Yamaha +3.956 1m54.323
5 M. Gonzalez Yamaha +4.738 1m54.374
6 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +4.817 1m53.650
7 H. Soomer Yamaha +6.121 1m54.106
8 C. Bergman Yamaha +7.212 1m54.185
9 R. De Rosa Kawasaki +8.352 1m54.388
10 C. Oncu Kawasaki +16.135 1m54.786
11 R. Krummenacher Yamaha +16.279 1m54.674
12 M. Herrera Yamaha +22.257 1m55.170
13 K. Manfredi Yamaha +22.296 1m55.000
14 M. Fabrizio Kawasak +34.274 1m55.697
15 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha +37.978 1m56.512
16 S. Frossard Yamaha +39.308 1m56.458
17 P. Szkopek Yamaha  +59.882 1m56.690
18 S. Kawasaki Kawasaki +1’04.435 1m58.983
19 L.  Taccini Kawasaki +4 Laps 1m57.548
Not Classified
RET J.  Cluzel Yamaha  7 Laps 1m52.937
RET N. Tuuli MV 7 Laps 1m53.225
RET F. Fuligni Yamaha 7 Laps 1m54.367
RET M. Alcoba Yamaha 12 Laps 1m54.033
RET D. Pizzoli Yamaha 13 Laps 1m54.584
RET T. Gradinger Yamaha 13 Laps 1m56.012
RET L.  Montella Yamaha 14 Laps 1m55.252
RET V. Takala Yamaha  14 Laps 1m55.393

WorldSSPStandings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Steven Odendaal  25
 2  Dominique Aegerter  20
 3  Philipp Oettl  16
 4  Luca Bernardi  13
 5  Manuel Gonzalez  11
 6  Federico Caricasulo  10
 7  Hannes Soomer  9
 8  Christoffer Bergman  8
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  7
 10  Can Alexander Oncu  6
 11  Randy Krummenacher  5
 12  Maria Herrera  4
 13  Kevin Manfredi  3
 14  Michel Fabrizio  2
 15  Galang Hendra Pratama  1

WorldSSP300

The first race of the 2021 FIM Supersport 300 World Championship was shortened due to a late Red Flag but it was not enough to stop Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) claimed his first ever WorldSSP300 victory despite being penalised with a Long Lap Penalty, claiming the closest ever victory in the class history at MotorLand Aragon for the Pirelli Aragon Round.

WorldSSP300

Huertas secured his first victory in the shortened race after taking the lead of the race with Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki) finishing just 0.004s behind Huertas at the last timekeeping point the pair had crossed before the Red Flag was deployed, thanks to an incident between Meikon Kawakami and Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing. Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) snuck onto the podium at the end of the race, with just 0.098s behind the top three, the fifth-closest podium of all time.

WorldSSP300

Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) immediately lost his starting grid advantage to Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) with the Spanish rider immediately getting the jump to take the lead of the 12-lap race. Further back in the pack, Sylvain Markarian (Leader Team Flembbo), wildcard Julian Giral Romero (Viñales Racing Team) and Thomas Brianti (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) were all caught up in a collision at Turn 12, forcing all three to retire from the race and Romero taken to the medical centre for a check-up. Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) was another early-race retiree after he went down at Turn 9.

WorldSSP300

Huertas kept within the front group throughout the early stages of the race but became the first WorldSSP300 to be penalized with a Long Lap Penalty, for track limits infringements, dropping down from first place down to tenth as well as losing time to the lead group. It meant Meikon Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) would take the lead of the race although immediately lost it to Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) and Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki).

Booth-Amos took the lead just before the halfway stage of the race and remained comfortable up at the front despite having the disadvantage of not being in a slipstream, holding on to the lead throughout the middle stages of the race. With six laps to go, Meikon Kawakami swept around the outside of the final corner to briefly take the lead of the race, although Booth-Amos quickly regained the lead.

On lap nine of 12, Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) had his brief moment of leading the race as he passed Booth-Amos, although the British rider was able to re-gain the lead. It was one of a number of battles throughout the lead group with less than three seconds separating

The race was ended on Lap 10 following an incident between Meikon Kawakami and Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing), who had fought into the lead group despite starting on the fifth row, but the incident at Turn 1 put both out of the race, with Sofuoglu taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the crash.

Orradre claimed fourth place from a front row start, just ahead of Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) completing the top five. Reigning Champion Buis finished in sixth place as his title defence started with a solid points finish at the venue his challenge kickstarted last season.

Polesitter Ton Kawakami finished in seventh place, ahead of Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) while Australian debutant Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki) claimed ninth place on his first start in WorldSSP300. The returning Bruno Ieraci (Machado CAME SBK) claimed a top ten finish, three tenths clear of 2018 Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300); the Murcian rider signing off her comeback with a points finish.

French rider Hugo de Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) claimed 12th place, ahead of 2017 Champion Marc Garcia (2R Racing), Inigo Iglesias (SMW Racing) and Dorren Loureiro (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki).

P1 Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki)

Last year was a really hard year. This year we worked so hard throughout pre-season and we take the things off the tree and we are really happy.

P2 Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki)

It’s always nice to be on the podium, so obviously happy about this. A little bit frustrated because I led most of the laps and because of the Red Flag I finished second. This is my worst circuit of the year, by far, so obviously I’m happy to come away with second. Points mean prizes so obviously we push for the Championship.”

P3 Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki)

My feeling is a little bit difficult because when I come to the parc ferme, I was first, but after I became third. I was a little bit confused myself but my pace is good and I am satisfied for the points, and we will be ready for Race 2.”

WorldSSP300 Race One Results / Superpole

Pos Rider Bike Race/Gap Q
1 A. Huertas Kawasaki / 2m06.502
2 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki +0.004 2m06.666
3 Y.  Okaya Kawasaki +0.098 2m07.169
4 U. Orradre Yamaha +0.209 2m06.530
5 S. Di Sora Kawasaki +0.345 2m06.928
6 J.  Buis Kawasaki +0.491 2m06.968
7 T. Kawakami Yamaha +0.624 2m06.498
8 K. Meuffels Kawasaki +1.247 2m07.603
9 H. Khouri Kawasaki +1.395 2m07.598
10 B. Ieraci Yamaha +1.815 2m07.006
11 A. Carrasco Kawasaki +2.124 2m07.442
12 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki +2.625 2m07.682
13 M. Garcia Kawasaki +2.954 2m07.335
14 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki 1 Sector 2m06.771
15 D. Loureiro Kawasaki 1 Sector 2m08.128
16 G. Mastroluca Yamaha 1 Sector 2m09.003
17 A. Zanca Kawasaki 1 Sector /
18 M. Gennai Yamaha 1 Sector 2m08.790
19 J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki 1 Sector 2m08.180
20 A. Millan Gomez Kawasaki 1 Sector 2m08.468
21 V. Perez Selfa Yamaha 1 Sector /
22 K. Sabatucci Yamaha 1 Sector 2m09.192
23 R. Bijman Yamaha 1 Sector 2m08.410
24 M. Gaggi Yamaha 1 Sector 2m08.127
25 F. Palazzi Yamaha 1 Sector 2m09.000
26 V. Steeman KTM 1 Sector 2m08.973
27 M. Kawakami Yamaha 2 Sectors 2m06.817
28 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki 2 Sectors 2m09.557
29 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha 2 Sectors 2m08.825
30 P. Svoboda Yamaha 2 Sectors 2m09.131
31 B. Neila Yamaha 2 Sectors 2m09.100
32 S. Raineri Kawasaki 2 Sectors 2m10.493
33 A. Diez Rodriguez Kawasaki 2 Sectors 2m12.843
34 J.  Romero Kawasaki 2 Sectors 2m11.634
35 A. Frappola Kawasaki 1 Lap 2m10.385
36 J.  Mcmanus Kawasaki 1 Lap 2m11.717
37 M. Duarte Yamaha 1 Lap 2m12.599
38 O. Konig Kawasaki 1 Lap 2m08.055
Not Classified
NC 54 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha / 2m07.587
RET 18 I.  Offer Kawasaki / 2m12.517
RET 19 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki / 2m07.167
RET 23 S. Markarian Kawasaki / 2m08.206
RET 48 T. Brianti Kawasaki / 2m07.835
RET 76 J.  Giral Romero Yamaha / 2m08.293

WorldSSP300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  25
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  20
 3  Yuta Okaya  16
 4  Unai Orradre  13
 5  Samuel Di Sora  11
 6  Jeffrey Buis  10
 7  Ton Kawakami  9
 8  Koen Meuffels  8
 9  Harry Khouri  7
 10  Bruno Ieraci  6
 11  Ana Carrasco  5
 12  Hugo De Cancellis  4
 13  Marc Garcia  3
 14  Inigo Iglesias  2
 15  Dorren Loureiro  1

2021 WSBK – Aragon Round 1 Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

I’ve just finished signing these! Only 200 available but most are flying out the door

I’ve just finished signing these! Only 200 available but most are flying out the door


Jonathan Rea announces unique “100 wins” Tee for charity. Only 100 units all signed!
Get yours!
All profits go to Aware NI and Nexe Fundació Nexe!

Buy here:
https://worldsbkstore.com/en/100-victories-jonathan-rea
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

We reached 100 race wins today and it was done with a lot of hard work. Over the off season Kawasaki really dug in with a new bi…

We reached 100 race wins today and it was done with a lot of hard work. Over the off season Kawasaki really dug in with a new bike and we were able to make a step. Also in the off season I worked really hard on myself and I know I improved in all areas. I was born with the dream of racing motorbikes, and going with my parents to ride around Motocross tracks in 1993, ’94. The history is mad. Getting the opportunity to come to the world championship, in 2008 in Supersport, and straight away after my rookie season going to Superbike. Taking my first race win at Misano in 2009 as a rookie and now with 100 wins… It’s mad! Each and every race win is special, and I have never been a statistics guy, but when I was closing in on 100 wins that was a big goal. It is such a cool number and a career landmark. I am very proud of it. We had been a little bit unlucky in the winter tests with bad weather but my team have left no stone unturned and turned up at every test we could. They reorganised and rescheduled things so huge thanks to all the staff. Not only the management but all the mechanics and their families for making this sacrifice. We have been away from home so long this off season, often for no laps, but we are in a good position now. To win the first race starts our championship off 25 points better than last year! That was a good way to start
.
📸 @geebeeimages
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65


Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

Husqvarna Grows Emobility Range With Vektorr Electric Scooter

Husqvarna is targeting eco-conscious urban riders hard with its growing emobility line.

Husqvarna is targeting eco-conscious urban riders hard with its growing emobility line. (Husqvarna/)

Husqvarna is giving eco-conscious urban riders yet another mount to consider in the new Vektorr electric scooter concept. Earlier this month the brand revealed its E-Pilen electric motorcycle, essentially aimed at the same crowd, in a push to broaden its rider base and position itself as a competitive player in the burgeoning electric motorcycle market.

The Vektorr Concept joins Husqvarna’s growing emobility line.

The Vektorr Concept joins Husqvarna’s growing emobility line. (Husqvarna/)

Technical details are slim, with Husqvarna calling out a top speed of just 27 mph and range of 59 miles per charge. No other specs are provided for the Vektorr at this time.

No word yet on when and where the Vektorr electric scooter will be available.

No word yet on when and where the Vektorr electric scooter will be available. (Husqvarna/)

In the styling department, the Vektorr is undeniably Husqvarna, with crisp clean lines that put it right at home with the E-Pilen and gas-powered cousins like the Svartpilen and Vitpilen.

The Vektorr will be aesthetically right at home with rides like the E-Pilen and others.

The Vektorr will be aesthetically right at home with rides like the E-Pilen and others. (Husqvarna/)

Styling is unmistakably Husqvarna.

Styling is unmistakably Husqvarna. (Husqvarna/)

If you happen to find yourself in Austria, you can pop over to the Pierer Mobility AG special exhibition in the KTM Motohall in Mattighofen to see the Vektorr and E-Pilen concepts in person.

The Bltz is a stand-up electric scooter concept Husqvarna hopes will appeal to riders in congested urban areas.

The Bltz is a stand-up electric scooter concept Husqvarna hopes will appeal to riders in congested urban areas. (Husqvarna/)

Huqvarna also announced a Bltz stand-up scooter concept, which will also be on display in the KTM Motohall exhibit. Stand-up scooters offer urban riders another mobility option that’s perhaps a bit more approachable than a scooter or motorcycle. The Bltz will max out at just over 12 mph.

The Bltz will max out at just over 12 mph.

The Bltz will max out at just over 12 mph. (Husqvarna/)

When these models, and the E-Pilen, finally do make it to production, they’re sure to find their feet in international markets first. Husqvarna says as much when it indicates that it’s “actively searching for qualified dealers in large metropolitan areas in Europe.” That’s all to say that it’ll likely be a few years before anyone Stateside is able to purchase an E-Husky.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

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