Tag Archives: 2021 WSBK

Toprak demoted in WorldSBK results following KRT protest

2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship
Round Eight Magny-Cours

On the track Toprak Razgatlioglu made a clean sweep of all three race wins at Magny-Cours for the eighth round of the World Superbike Championship with Jonathan Rea finishing second in all three bouts.

Toprak took the chequered flag first in all three bouts at Magny-Cours but the scorecard says different following a demotion by Stewards

However, a protest by KRT after the end of proceedings on Sunday saw Toprak demoted to second place in the Superpole Race results. The protest alleged that Toprak exceeded track limits on the final lap and it was upheld by Stewards.

Pata Yamaha Team Manager Paul Denning was happy neither with the process or the outcome and expressed his displeasure.

Paul Denning – Pata Yamaha Team Manager

It’s disappointing of course. This weekend we saw incredible fighting between the two Championship protagonists. For our team, the first time we’ve won all three races. For Toprak, the first time he’s won all three races. An amazing sporting spectacle and amazing respect between these two fantastic riders. And then, after the end of Race 2 where we had been on pole position because of the result of the Superpole Race, the stewards made a decision after a protest that there was a tiny infringement on the last lap from Toprak touching the green on the exit of 9 and 10.

“This was caused by a protest from Kawasaki. It’s disappointing because honestly, genuinely, it’s not something we would’ve done. When a rider has gained zero advantage and you’re talking about 5mm of the rear tyre just touching the green, something that race direction had seen themselves, checked from the live footage, decided there absolutely was not a problem because there was not any advantage and it wasn’t clear he was on the green. But after they received the protest, they had to use all the tools they have, and this includes the onboard footage from Jonathan’s bike. They were able to see that there was a small amount on the green. If this is the way Kawasaki want to play, then maybe the sporting atmosphere will change a little bit.

Looking at the facts though it was a fairly cut and dried affair, and I am pretty sure if the shoe was on the other foot Yamaha would have taken the same course of action. However, if the officials were on the ball then a protest would not have been required, the penalty would have not been delayed and nobody would have a bad taste in their mouth.  Footage of the transgression can be seen here.


WorldSBK Superpole Race

The ten laps of the Tissot Superpole Race began with the battle between pole man Jonathan Rea and Toprak Razgatlioglu for the top step of the podium, as well as the one between Andrea Locatelli and Alex Lowes for third.

Razgatlioglu set a new record on the second lap and gained the upper hand against the defending World Champion to move into the race lead. However, the latter had no intention of letting him run away at the front. Rea closed the gap that had been created, breaking the newly set race record once again on the sixth lap and looking for his chance to attack.

In the meantime, Leon Haslam, Scott Redding and Michael van der Mark engaged in a heated battle for sixth, with Redding prevailing over the Honda and BMW riders, moving into fifth place behind Andrea Locatelli.

In the final lap, Jonathan Rea pulled out all the stops and the championship leaders locked horns in a heart-stopping battle, overtaking back and forth several times, but in the end it was Razgatlioglu who came out on top, crossing the finish line first just three-tenths of a second ahead of Jonathan Rea, with a well-deserved third place going to Alex Lowes.

Subsequently, Toprak Razgatlioglu was penalised for exceeding track limits, so the win went to Jonathan Rea, with the Yamaha rider relegated to second place.

WorldSBK Superpole Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR /
 2 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +0.148
3 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +5.282
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +6.643
5 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +7.384
6 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +8.119
7 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +9.515
8 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +9.888
9 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +11.325
10 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +11.683
11 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +11.979
12 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +12.231
13 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +12.502
14 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +21.597
15 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +22.318
16 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +25.630
17 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +26.090
18  J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +27.204
19 L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R +30.022
20 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +33.524
Not Classified
RET I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR 9 Laps

WorldSBK Race Two

Sunday afternoon’s Race Two gave Toprak Razgatlioglu his second win of the weekend to extend his Championship lead over Jonathan Rea.

World Superbike

The Turk got the better start from pole position and initially held the lead of the race but used a wider line through the long right-hander of Estoril, allowing Rea to sneak up the inside to take the lead. On the run down to Turn 5, Alex Lowes wanted to get involved in the lead battle but Razgatlioglu and Rea were able to keep him at arm’s length.

World Superbike

Scott Redding was running in third from the early stages of the race after jumping up from the second row of the grid as he claimed his first podium of the weekend after a challenging weekend for the British rider. Third place for Redding meant he lost ground in the Championship to leader Razgatlioglu, while Rea also gained on Redding in the standings.

Redding eventually lost touch with the leading pair

The race-winning move came on Lap 11 after an incredible two laps of battling between Razgatlioglu and Rea with the Turkish star overtaking Rea into the Turn 5 hairpin of Adelaide on Lap 10 before the six-time Champion responded into the Imola chicane. Rea retained the lead of the race for just another lap before Razgatlioglu was able to pass Rea again into Adelaide. The pair battled it out throughout the race before Rea settled for second after making a save in the closing stages of the race.

Andrea Locatelli claimed fourth place after another strong weekend for the Italian rookie, finishing two seconds behind Redding at the end of the race. Chaz Davies claimed a top five finish for his first since Race 2 at the TT Circuit Assen, with Davies and Alvaro Bautista both putting pressure on Locatelli for fourth place.

Andrea Locatelli and Chaz Davies

Michael Ruben Rinaldi was seventh, around two seconds back from Bautista, with Michael van der Mark in eighth. Dutchman van der Mark had been running in the top four but a scary incident with Locatelli on the start-finish straight meant he lost time and positions and was unable to respond to get back to the front of the group. He faced let pressure from Garrett Gerloff  for eighth but held on with the American in ninth, with Tom Sykes rounding out the top ten.

Axel Bassani continued his strong form with 11th place although the Italian rider did lose time to the group ahead, with Christophe Ponsson claiming 12th place for a strong result in front of his home fans. He battled throughout the race with compatriot Lucas Mahias directly behind Ponsson.

Japanese rookie Kohta Nozane claimed his best result of the French Round with 14th place and two points, with Tito Rabat completing the points. Rabat had got ahead of the Ponsson-Mahias battle but fell back in the latter stages of the race.

Jonas Folger claimed 16th place, missing out on a point by just over a second, while Argentinean rider Leandro Mercado was two seconds back in 17th place. Loris Cresson was the last of the classified runners in 18th place.

Despite a strong start to the race, Alex Lowes crashed out of the race in the early stages of the race with an accident on the entry of the Nurburgring chicane, with Lowes retiring from the race. Leon Haslam had an accident at the same corner shortly after, forcing the Honda rider out of the race.

WorldSBK Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 2.908
3 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R 8.406
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 10.329
5 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R 10.734
6 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R 11.467
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R 13.901
8 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR 15.640
9 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 16.254
10 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR 20.911
11 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R 39.410
12 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 42.808
13 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR 43.057
14 . Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 44.106
15 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 48.202
16 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 49.557
17 L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R 51.981
18 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1’07.692
Not Classified
RET L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R 17 Laps
RET A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR 20 Laps

Quotes

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

“For me an incredible weekend, because this was my dream – to make three wins together in one weekend, and I am really happy. Ok, somebody else decided we did not win the Superpole Race but for me, I won the race and I enjoy this fight a lot. We did everything we can so also big thanks to my team because they did an incredible job. Every race they improve my bike and also we are fighting every race for the win. I am not looking at the championship because I am always focused every race for win and for good points, and also this race, I try only to win. Finally again we made a great win in Race 2 and I am really happy today.”

Jonathan Rea

“It seems like we are having some issues to stop the bike as soon as the grip of the rear tyre drops. When the tyre is fresh for ten laps I feel quite confident, quite good. I knew if I was going to have a solid chance to have a race win then it would be the Superpole race. We made some big set-up changes, so massive kudos to the guys in the garage because we never give up. We just wanted to keep improving the bike. We could see in the cooler conditions I could use the SC1 tyre, but as soon as the temperature comes up it moves too much for my riding style. I need that extra stability that the 508 tyre brings. We are a so over-geared for the exit of the first gear corners and the final chicane. I was losing too many metres.”

Jonathan Rea
Andrea Locatelli

“It was a fantastic race for me today, because I needed to push until the end because I have the pressure behind me. We are very fast during the weekend, I take a podium yesterday and stay every time in the top four, this is really good! Today it was not easy and it’s still my first time at this track compared to the other riders, but we work really well, don’t make a mistake and I think this is the recipe to make the good results. In Race 2, I did not see Michael after I overtake him in the last corner, I sensed something but I didn’t see when he touched me. We touch a little bit but this is the race and I am happy that everything is okay. Now we have a good level but we need to do something more to try to stay with the front group. It has been an excellent season so far, and I am now P4 in the championship which I never thought would be possible!”

Scott Redding

“I’m satisfied with this result, especially because during the weekend we were able to improve the bike, mainly in the braking phase which was the principal problem. I tried in the first part of the race to stay with Jonny and Toprak but then I preferred not to risk and bring home an important result for the team.”

Alex Lowes

“I probably should have been on the podium yesterday, crashing so close to the end, but I knew I had good pace around here so it is nice to get back on the podium in the Superpole Race. I have been struggling in the last few months with some issues. Such a shame after the Race Two crash. Disappointed on one hand as honestly it’s the best I’ve been riding all year and yet this is my worst points haul of the year. Racing is like that sometimes. I had an issue with the brake which didn’t allow me to enter T7 like I wanted and that caught me out, unfortunately. Anyway, my speed was there so now I’ll take the positive points and turn my focus to the next race which is the home race of the team at Montmelo.”

Michael Ruben Rinaldi

“All in all it wasn’t a bad weekend because we understood many things that can be useful in the next rounds. It’s clear that the result of Race-2 is not exciting; despite that, the pace was positive, on the level of Scott who finished on the podium. Obviously, we can’t be satisfied with a seventh place finish but I’ll come back home from this French Round with positive feelings”.

Michael van der Mark

“This morning’s Superpole race was alright. I had good pace and had a good feeling with the bike. I was just missing one or two tenths to stay with Scott Redding and fight for fourth place. I was confident going into the main race and had a strong start but then I started to struggle after a few laps. I had some moments with a few riders and lost a lot of time there but at the moment, the package is just not good enough to fight every corner with the other guys. In some corners we are losing too much time.”

Tom Sykes

“It was difficult today. Put me on a clear track and I can go front row, put me on a clear track again in warm up and we can be consistently in the top four. We just cannot ride with the others. Unfortunately, when I’m with the other riders it becomes a lot more stop and start and we can’t follow them when it comes to opening the gas. As soon as I got clear track my lap times came down and were not too far from the fifth position in terms of lap time, but we can’t bridge the gap at this level. There’s a lot of information to be looked at, I will see with the team where we can improve.”

Alvaro Bautista

“I’m generally happy with our weekend here at Magny-Cours. Today we made some modifications to the bike’s setup, especially the electronics, nothing huge but we saw a little improvement, which gave me more confidence. I felt a bit better with the bike and so in the Superpole race, where I normally struggle more, I was able to be competitive and make a good comeback from fourteenth on the grid in just ten laps. And my seventh-place finish allowed me to move forward two rows on the grid for race 2. In the afternoon’s higher temperatures, the track conditions were more tricky, more slippery. But the feeling was still better than it sometimes has been in similar conditions. I made a good start but then I chose the wrong line at the first braking point and lost some positions. I recovered again and was able to maintain a consistent pace, finishing sixth, which is the most I think we could do at the moment. Now we head to tracks that I really like, so we will keep working and see what we can do there!”

Alvaro Bautista
Leon Haslam

“My expectations after qualifying were a bit higher to be honest. We had some problems in the first two races, but in the final Superbike race I felt we made a good improvement with the bike. Unfortunately we finished the weekend with a fast crash but the changes and progression we made with the setting meant that I was more comfortable. So I’m disappointed that it ended like this, but I felt I was more comfortable than I had been all weekend, particularly in terms of front feeling and braking. So, having made that step, we can now look forward to the next round at Barcelona, a track at which we completed a very productive test a few weeks ago.”

Jonas Folger

“I struggled in the races when the tank was full, particularly on the opening laps. I was not able to hold my line in the corners, which meant I could not go on the attack. The final third of each race was better – that was the best section of the race for me. We must now find out why we have these difficulties with the full tank. I will also see what I can do differently as a rider, to ensure that I get the BMW moving better. On the whole, it was another tough weekend for us. We will now analyse everything and I will take a close look to see what I, personally, can do better. Hopefully things will go our way at the next race weekend at Barcelona.”

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Toprak Razgatlioglu  370
 2  Jonathan Rea  363
 3  Scott Redding  298
 4  Andrea Locatelli  186
 5  Alex Lowes  176
 6  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  172
 7  Tom Sykes  159
 8  Michael Van Der Mark  154
 9  Garrett Gerloff  147
 10  Alvaro Bautista  115
 11  Chaz Davies  114
 12  Axel Bassani  100
 13  Leon Haslam  78
 14  Lucas Mahias  41
 15  Tito Rabat  38
 16  Kohta Nozane  32
 17  Isaac Vinales  20
 18  Christophe Ponsson  18
 19  Jonas Folger  14
 20  Eugene Laverty  14
 21  Leandro Mercado  8
 22  Marvin Fritz  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2

WorldSSP

The final race of the Motul French Round in the FIM Supersport World Championship provided action and drama throughout the race which was Red Flagged on the opening lap, with Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) taking his first ever victory in WorldSSP, becoming the second-youngest race winner in the class, while Turkish star Can Öncü claimed his maiden podium as he finished in third place behind Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha).

FIM Supersport World Championship

Like in Race 1 yesterday, there was an early Red Flag deployed after a crash on the opening lap involving Luca Bernardi (CM Racing), Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) at the Lycee Complex. Bernardi and Cluzel were taken to the medical centre following the crash, while Aegerter was able to take his bike back to the pits for his team to work on before the restart. Both Bernardi and Cluzel are conscious. Bernardi was diagnosed with a back injury and Cluzel with a head injury and cervical strain; both taken to Nevers Hospital for further assessments. The race after the Red Flag was shortened from 19 laps to 12.

FIM Supersport World Championship

Aegerter was able to re-join the race when the restart got underway and found himself as the de facto pole sitter with Bernardi not in the race, with the Swiss rider getting a good start to move into the head of the field. He found himself under pressure from Spanish rider Gonzalez and Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) with the Turkish star making a move at the Turn 5 Adelaide hairpin as he gained around five positions.

Aegerter soon reclaimed the lead of the race and Gonzalez followed him through on Öncü to move into second before he made a move on Lap 2 on Aegerter into the Nurburgring chicane to take first place, although Championship leader Aegerter responded into the right-hander hairpin of Adelaide a lap later. The battle raged on until the final laps with Aegerter and Gonzalez going elbow-to-elbow right until the Lycee Complex; Aegerter looking to make a move into Turn 15 but Gonzalez was able to cut back to take the lead through the chicane.

Öncü dropped back from the lead two as the race progressed into the clutches of teammate Philipp Oettl, with the pair separated by just 0.195s at the finish line as Öncü claimed his first WorldSSP podium and the first for Turkey since Kenan Sofuoglu at Qatar in 2017. Oettl came home in fourth place as he responded from a difficult Saturday.

Finnish rider Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) claimed his best result of the 2021 campaign with fifth place after starting from the front row; and his first top five since his victory at Magny-Cours in 2017. Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) claimed sixth place as he battled his way through the field after a difficult Superpole result.

Odendaal and Caricasulo

Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) was seventh as his resurgence continued while Andy Verdoïa (GMT94 Yamaha) was eighth on his return to the Championship as the youngest ever race winner secured another top ten finish. Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) claimed ninth place ahead of Hungarian rider Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team).

Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) was the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge competitor with 11th place, finishing two seconds clear of fellow WorldSSP Challenge competitor Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) in 12th. Swedish rider Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) was 13th ahead of 2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) in 14th. Federico Fuligni (VFT Racing) was the last points scorer in Race 2 as he secured 15th place, resisting the challenge from teammate Marcel Brenner and Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing).

WorldSSP Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours – Race 2
1. Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGO Team)
2. Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) +0.155s
3. Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) +1.438s

After an impressive debut in WorldSSP Race 1, Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) had a more difficult Sunday after he crashed at Turn 8 on Lap 4 of 12, dropping the Spanish rider to the back of the grid. He was able to remount his Yamaha machine and made up enough time to challenge Eduardo Montero Huerta (DK Motorsport) for 24th place. Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) crashed in the closing stages of the races at Turn 1 on Lap 10, forcing the Finnish rider to retire.

FIM Supersport World Championship

WorldSSP Race Two Results

Pos No. Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.451
3 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 +0.560
4 A. Verdoia Yamaha YZF R6 +0.852
5 p. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.211
6 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +1.242
7 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +1.616
8 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +1.650
9 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.853
10 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +1.968
11 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF R6 +2.128
12 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +2.326
13 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +2.481
14 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +2.811
15 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +3.095
16 L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +3.331
17 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +3.576
18 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +3.899
19 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 +4.083
20 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +4.254
21 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +4.606
22 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +4.711
23 D. Sanchis Martinez Esp Yamaha YZF R6 +4.947
24 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +5.248
25 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +5.603
26 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Lap
27 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Lap
28 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +1 Lap

WorldSSP Race Two Results Restart

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 +0.155
3 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.438
4 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.633
5 N. Tuuli MV Agusta +1.964
6 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +2.900
7 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +3.243
8 V. Verdoia Yamaha YZF R6 +6.303
9 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +6.626
10 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +6.893
11 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +8.458
12 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +10.976
13 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +12.899
14 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +13.021
15 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +14.119
16 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +15.252
17 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 +17.200
18 D. Sanchis Martinez Esp Yamaha YZF R6 +17.801
19 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +20.769
20 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +28.167
21 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +28.421
22 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +28.962
23 L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +39.827
24 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF R6 +46.769
25 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +49.721
Not Classified
RET V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 3 Laps
RET L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 /

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  302
 2  Steven Odendaal  240
 3  Philipp Oettl  178
 4  Luca Bernardi  161
 5  Manuel Gonzalez  158
 6  Jules Cluzel  140
 7  Federico Caricasulo  103
 8  Can Alexander Oncu  90
 9  Randy Krummenacher  84
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  77
 11  Niki Tuuli  69
 12  Hannes Soomer  48
 13  Christoffer Bergman  42
 14  Marc Alcoba  40
 15  Kevin Manfredi  31
 16  Vertti Takala  21
 17  Peter Sebestyen  21
 18  Galang Hendra Pratama  21
 19  Simon Jespersen  15
 20  Andy Verdoia  14
 21  Marcel Brenner  10
 22  Stephane Frossard  10
 23  Valentin Debise  9
 24  Sheridan Morais  9
 25  David Sanchis Martinez  8
 26  Maria Herrera  7
 27  Filippo Fuligni  6
 28  Michel Fabrizio  6
 29  Max Enderlein  5
 30  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 31  Federico Fuligni  5
 32  Hikari Okubo  4
 33  Massimo Roccoli  4
 34  Luca Grunwald  3
 35  Matteo Patacca  3
 36  Unai Orradre  2
 37  Daniel Valle  2
 38  Ondrej Vostatek  2
 39  Oscar Gutierrez Iglesias  1
 40  Luca Ottaviani  1
 41  Leonardo Taccini  1
 42  Davide Pizzoli  1
 43  Pawel Szkopek  1


WorldSSP300

The final race of the Motul French Round in the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship was a typically enthralling encounter as Spanish rider Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) claimed his second victory of the weekend after a race-long battle with his rivals at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, as he beat title contender Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) by less than half a second.

FIM Supersport 300 World Championship

Huertas and Championship contender Booth-Amos have been inseparable in the title battle and that continued on track in the 13-lap Race 2 encounter with just three tenths separating the pair at the end of the race, with Spanish rider Huertas extending his lead in the Championship standings with victory.

The pair had been battling it out in the traditional lead group but were able to hold the lead despite pressure from behind, with reigning Champion Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) claiming third place just one tenth behind Booth-Amos, as well as finishing half-a-second clear of Dean Berta Viñales (Viñales Racing Team) in fourth.

Viñales has endured a tricky season in his first campaign in WorldSSP300 but the French Round could have provided a breakthrough for the 15-year-old Spaniard, having taken in his first point in Race 1 on Saturday he was challenging in the lead group and took the lead of the race on the penultimate lap. He fell down to fourth in the closing stages of the race, but still claimed his best result in his career.

Jeff Buis

He finished ahead of Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) by around a tenth after a strong ride for the Japanese competitor in fifth place. Italian Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing) claimed sixth place after a strong weekend for Mastroluca, while Yeray Ruiz (Yamaha MS Racing) was seventh in his debut WorldSSP Round. Inigo Iglesias (SMW Racing) claimed eighth place while South African rider Dorren Loureiro (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) was ninth and Daniel Mogeda (Team#109 Kawasaki) rounding out the top ten.

2018 Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) was 11th after fighting her way through the field while Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) claimed 12th place. Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team), the sole KTM rider in the field, was 13th with Mirko Gennai (Team BRcorse) and Marc Garcia (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) rounding out the points; Garcia back in the points on his return to the Championship.

Dutch rider Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK) missed out on a points finish by just a tenth of a second as he came home in 16th place, ahead of Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project) in 17th; the Italian started from the pit lane after an infringement of the engine allocation regulations. Petr Svoboda (WRP Wepol Racing) was 18th with Alessandro Zanca (Kawasaki GP Project) and teammate Alejandro Carrion completing the top 20.

Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) was the first retirement of the race after he crashed on the exit of Turn 13 and was unable to re-join the race, while Margo Gaggi (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) suffered a highside crash at Turn 3 on Lap 4. On the same lap, Dutch rider Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) crashed at Turn 5 which forced him out of the race, while Meikon Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) pulled into the pits in the early stages with a technical issue. Hugo de Cancellis (Prodina Team WoroldSSP) was running the lead group but had to retire when he had an issue with his chain on Lap 6.

Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) had an eventful Race 2 with the Spanish rider given a double Long Lap Penalty for irresponsible riding that led to a collision in the Warm-Up session. After taking one of the Long Lap Penalties, he was given a ride-through penalty but was forced to retire from the race after a crash at Turn 17. Vicente Perez Selfa (Machado CAME SBK) had a technical issue in the closing stages of the race, as did Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing). Bahattin Sofuoglu’s (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) race came to a premature end on Lap 12 after he made contact with the back of Booth-Amos, the incident forcing the Turkish rider out of the contest when fighting in the lead group.

WorldSSP300 Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours – Race 2
1. Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki)
2. Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) +0.326s
3. Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) +0.446s

WorldSSP300 Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 /
2 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.326
3 J.  Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.446
4 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.892
5 Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.056
6 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +1.584
7 Y. Ruiz Yamaha YZF-R3 +1.805
8 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.050
9 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.412
10 D. Mogeda Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.665
11 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.001
12 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.077
13 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R +5.360
14 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +12.952
15 M. Garcia Kawasaki Ninja 400 +13.452
16 R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 +13.514
17 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki Ninja 400 +13.739
18 P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 +13.893
19 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +14.145
20 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 +14.332
21 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +14.619
22 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +14.726
23 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 +19.469
24 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +20.023
25 Y. Saiz Marquez Yamaha YZF-R3 +20.173
26 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +32.945
27 A. Quinet Yamaha YZF-R3 +35.974
28 A. Negrier Yamaha YZF-R3 +36.423
29 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +36.605
30 C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 +38.746
31 J.  Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 +52.722
32 D. Poncet Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m02.001
33 I.  Offer Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m09.632
Not Classified
RET T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 1 Lap
RET B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 2 Laps
RET J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 4 Laps
RET  V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 6 Laps
RET H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 8 Laps
RET K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 10 Laps
RET M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 11 Laps
RET M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 11 Laps
RET H. Khouri / /

WorldSSP300 Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  179
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  158
 3  Jeffrey Buis  102
 4  Samuel Di Sora  97
 5  Victor Steeman  74
 6  Yuta Okaya  68
 7  Hugo De Cancellis  62
 8  Koen Meuffels  58
 9  Ana Carrasco  51
 10  Dorren Loureiro  51
 11  Meikon Kawakami  48
 12  Alejandro Carrion  41
 13  Gabriele Mastroluca  41
 14  Ton Kawakami  41
 15  Unai Orradre  39
 16  Oliver Konig  37
 17  Mirko Gennai  36
 18  Bahattin Sofuoglu  32
 19  Bruno Ieraci  21
 20  Inigo Iglesias  20
 21  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  18
 22  Daniel Mogeda  17
 23  Dean Berta Vinales  14
 24  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  13
 25  Harry Khouri  12
 26  Kevin Sabatucci  10
 27  Filippo Maria Palazzi  10
 28  Yeray Ruiz  9
 29  Vicente Perez Selfa  9
 30  Marc Garcia  8
 31  Petr Svoboda  7
 32  Ruben Bijman  6
 33  Oscar Nunez Roldan  3
 34  Alfonso Coppola  2
 35  Thomas Brianti  2
 36  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 37  Christian Stange  1
 38  Johan Gimbert  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

Toprak tops Saturday at Magny-Cours

2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship
Round Eight Magny-Cours


Toprak Razgatlioglu took victory with an incredible display of pace and consistency to win the opening stanza at Magny-Cours by more than four-seconds as he gained a five-point advantage over nearest rival Jonathan Rea at the Motul French Round.

WorldSBK Race One

Razgatlioglu got a good start and took the lead through Turn 1 but soon found himself shuffled back thanks to the run down to the Turn 5 hairpin of Adelaide. He responded when Rea took the lead and made a move on Lap 4 at Adelaide to reclaim the lead of the race before he was able to pull out enough of a gap to keep Rea at arm’s length.

WorldSBK Race One

Rea was able to respond as the laps progressed, closing the gap to just a couple of tenths but could not make a move stick before Razgatlioglu extended his lead out in front to more than a second ahead of Rea, holding on to secure his second victory in a row following on from his win in Race 2 at Navarra. Rea’s second place extends his winless drought to seven races since he won at Assen in Race 2. Razgatlioglu showed remarkable consistent pace throughout the 21-lap encounter, always lapping in the 1’37s bracket and he also becomes the first Yamaha rider to take 18 podiums in a single season.

Razgatlioglu, Rea, Lowes

Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) claimed his third podium in WorldSBK with third place after he got a good start to the race to move up the field from fifth place, before battling the even faster-starting Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) for fourth place; eventually passing the Italian at Turn 5 on Lap 12.

Rinaldi, Locatelli

Rinaldi then gained a position on Lap 17 when Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) crashed at Turn 8 on Lap 17, forcing the British rider out of the race. It meant Locatelli was able to claim third place with Rinaldi being promoted to fourth.

Michael van der Mark

Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) claimed fifth place after battling from ninth on the grid, with the Dutchman enduring a difficult morning with no running in Free Practice 3. He finished two seconds clear of Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) in sixth place as all five manufacturers were represented in the top six.

Bautista, Haslam

There was a stunning battle for seventh place during the race between numerous riders which came down to the final chicane. Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) came home in seventh place with rookie Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) and Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) finishing eighth and ninth. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) rounded out the top ten after starting inside the top six as the British rider fell back throughout the latter stages of the race.

Toprak Razgatlioglu celebrates victory

American star Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) claimed 11th place, behind the incredible battle for seventh place, just two tenths away from Haslam. Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) started from eighth place and was unable to fight his way through the field as he fell back down through the order to take 12th place despite a Lap 19 crash as he looked to make a move on Sykes at Turn 13; Redding making no contact with Sykes but coming off his bike before he re-joined the race. Local rider Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha) was 13th at his home round as he claimed more points for his campaign, finishing less than a second ahead of Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team), with Isaac Viñales (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) rounding out the points.

Toprak Razgatlioglu celebrates victory

Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Action) had a difficult race but came home in 16th place while Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) had a battle for 17th place that went down to the line; the duo separated by just 0.082s as Nozane beat Cresson. Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) was the only other retirement apart from Lowes after he crashed out Turn 13 in the early stages of the race.

World Superbikes Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +4.467
3 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +10.285
4 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +13.283
5 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +15.535
6 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +17.824
7 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +20.067
8 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +20.127
9 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +20.150
10 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +23.763
11 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +23.977
12 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +38.551
13 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +44.742
14 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +45.494
15 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +45.612
16 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +55.985
17 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +59.560
18 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +59.642
Not Classified
RET 22 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR 5 Laps
RET 36 L.  Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R 14 Laps

Rider Quotes

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

“For me it was a really good race, and also thank you to my team because again they have made an incredible job this weekend as we improve my R1. Also I really like this track! Yesterday, I try a race simulation focus on just good lap time – a consistent lap time – and also in this race, after I passed Johnny, I just try consistent lap times and it was enough! I wanted to keep a good gap on the last lap so I have space for the “stoppie” across the finish, this was nice to do at last! I try also tomorrow, I hope I am fighting again for the win. The short race will not be easy for me because Johnny is very fast, but all the top riders are also fast! My dream this weekend is for three wins, not easy I know… but we will try!”

Jonathan Rea – P2

“I did not realise that I had made eight Superpoles in a row until I saw it on the TV screen. That is pretty cool. And 100 Superpoles for Kawasaki as well, which is great. It was a really good day at school for me because I learned a lot. I can give some information now to the engineers in the pitbox and hope they can do something with it. It is clear we are quite on the limit of the package and are asking a lot from the front of the bike – in terms of stability and front tyre. When I was with Toprak I felt really good in sector one, up to the braking area of Turn Five. But, changing gear from first to second on the exit of T5 I lost all the time in the lap. During the rest of the lap I felt quite good. Eventually it was time to consolidate second position because Toprak was going away.”

Andrea Locatelli – P3

“I’m really happy about today, because it is my first race here in Magny-Cours in the dry conditions and also with the Superbike! In the first part of the race, I tried to overtake Rinaldi but it was so difficult because I lose a little bit on the straight and in the corner I needed to change my “standard” braking and we compromise also on the exit of the corner. But I got in front and I try to push, and also I take my rhythm and try to close the gap to Alex. In the end, we make another podium and it’s excellent for us. I think we work very well during the weekend, we don’t make any mistake and I think we have a little bit more space to improve. I tried to push until the end today to understand the bike if we need to do this tomorrow, to push until the last lap, and the bike worked very well.”

Michael Ruben Rinaldi – P4

“It was a pretty positive race also because we are coming from a quite difficult period. We decided to work in a different way during this weekend and I think this new approach has paid off. Unfortunately, the rear grip was never the best. In the end, I wanted to fight for the podium but in the last five laps, the tire dropped a lot. We will try again tomorrow”.

Michael van der Mark – P5

“I think if you look at the result it isn’t that bad, but it’s a shame I lost so much time in this morning’s session. In the races, I had a good feeling with the bike and we wanted to try something different in FP3, but we couldn’t do so. So now in the race I am struggling a little bit and unsure whether yesterday’s setting was better or not. But anyway, I am happy with the points, and I am looking forward to tomorrow’s two races.”

Alvaro Bautista – P6

“I really enjoyed today’s race and making a comeback from fourteenth on the grid to sixth across the line. This morning I struggled to complete a good lap time in qualifying. I don’t know why but I didn’t feel I had sufficient grip in the rear tyre, so even if I pushed hard, I couldn’t be particularly fast. I was only able to improve by a couple of tenths with respect to the times I was setting with the race trye. I was confident for the race though, because I knew we had good race pace, so it was important to make a good start and try to stick with the guys ahead. And that’s exactly what we did so I’m happy, because I feel we did the best we can right now. For tomorrow it would be good to score a top-nine position in the sprint race so that we have a better start position for the second race, in which the aim is to try and improve further.”

Tom Sykes – P9

“It was another good Superpole but I am disappointed with the race today, and disappointed at not being able to race with the other bikes. Riding in the group, we struggled with the engine temperature and braking performance all through the race unfortunately. We were quicker in the turns but couldn’t get close on the straights to make a pass on the brakes. So, it was a frustrating race but we will have to have another go tomorrow.”

Leon Haslam – P10

“Qualifying went well for me today and I was also able to set a 37.0 with the same tyre combination I later raced with. Unfortunately though, right from the first lap of race 1, I had some issues in braking which forced me to just manage the situation every lap. I was at least seven tenths slower than I was in the practices, and so it felt like a very long race as a result. The fact I dropped three or four places in the final stages was my mistake, as I ran off track. So not the best result for me in the end, because after this qualifying and considering how the weekend was going, I felt we should have been able to finish top five. It could have been sixth place, if it hadn’t been for that mistake near the end.”

Scott Redding – P12

“It was a very tough race. I never had any grip both on the front and on the rear. I tried to hold on until the end even though the feeling was not the best. Then I crashed. In conditions like these, when the temperature is high but not very high, we have difficult problems to solve. Anyway, I hope to do better tomorrow in terms of results”.

Alex Lowes – DNF

“I felt good in all the sessions today. In Superpole on my second qualifying tyre I didn’t manage to improve my time and made a small mistake in Turn 15 but my first qualifying lap was still fast enough to be fourth on the grid. My start was not the best and I went back to fifth place, but I soon got back past Locatelli and Rinaldi to third. I stayed with Jonathan and Toprak a little bit but I did not have the pace mid-race. When Locatelli started catching me I tried to push again but I was on the limit of the front. It has been a while since I was on a podium so I kept pushing and unfortunately made a mistake on the front. To not finish the race is not positive but how I am riding, how I feel on the bike, is a lot more positive. To be as fast as I am feels great and we will get two more chances tomorrow.”

World Superbikes Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Toprak Razgatlioglu  336
 2  Jonathan Rea  331
 3  Scott Redding  277
 4  Alex Lowes  169
 5  Andrea Locatelli  167
 6  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  163
 7  Tom Sykes  153
 8  Michael Van Der Mark  142
 9  Garrett Gerloff  140
 10  Alvaro Bautista  102
 11  Chaz Davies  101
 12  Axel Bassani  95
 13  Leon Haslam  77
 14  Lucas Mahias  38
 15  Tito Rabat  37
 16  Kohta Nozane  30
 17  Isaac Vinales  20
 18  Jonas Folger  14
 19  Eugene Laverty  14
 20  Christophe Ponsson  14
 21  Leandro Mercado  8
 22  Marvin Fritz  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2

WorldSSP

The original race of 19 laps was Red Flagged on the opening lap after an incident involving Michel Fabrizio (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti), with the Italian coming off his bike before his Kawasaki machine went barrel rolling on the grass. With the amount of damage to his bike, the decision was made to Red Flag the race, with Race 1 restarted after with a 12-lap distance. Fabrizio was taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the incident, before being declared unfit with multiple contusions and abrasions. The restarted race also gave Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) a second chance after his MV machine suffered a technical issue on the opening lap, but he was able to join the restarted race.

Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) was unable to keep the lead from the start as Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) jumped the Sammarinese rider into Turn 1, with Bernardi falling to fifth before he started to fight his way back through the field. Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) had a good start as well as he looked to claim a home victory, applying pressure to Aegerter in the first part of the race

Dominique Aegerter leading

Spanish rider Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) had an eventful race as he battled for a top four finish with Championship contender Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team), with the South African rider battling back after a difficult Tissot Superpole session. Aegerter was able to go on to take his ninth victory of the season but Odendaal was able to claim second place with a Lap 11 move on Cluzel at Turn 5, with French rider Cluzel claiming his fourth podium of 2021 with third.

Gonzalez finished in fourth place as he narrowly missed out on a podium place by just 0.168s ahead of polesitter Bernardi in fifth with the pair separated by just one second. Bernardi was able to maintain a top five finish despite a challenging race, finishing ahead of Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing).

Dominique Aegerter celebrates victory

There was a battle between the two Kawasaki Puccetti Racing teammates as Philipp Oettl and Cam Öncü fought over seventh place, with Oettl able to finish ahead of his Turkish teammate by just two tenths. Italian rider Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) was ninth while Andy Verdoïa (GMT94 Yamaha), returning to the Championship, claimed a top-ten finish with tenth.

2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Racing) battled back from 19th place to claim 11th place, while Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) was 12th as the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider. Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) was 13th for his highest-placed finished of the 2021 season. Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) claimed 14th place as he secured points on his WorldSSP debut after moving up from WorldSSP300; both Orradre and Verdoïa have competed in WorldSSP300 and moved up from the class to success in WorldSSP, with Verdoïa the youngest ever race winner in WorldSSP after his win at the Catalunya Round in 2020. Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing), returning to competition following injury, secured 15th place.

WorldSSP Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours – Race 1
1. Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha)
2. Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) +0.869s
3. Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) +1.188s

Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha) was unable to take to the restarted race after he had an issue on the Warm-Up Lap, before his bike was collected by Vincent Falcone (TFC Racing) on the grid, with wildcard Falcone also not taking the restarted race; both riders taken to the medical centre for a check-up. Debise was diagnosed with a left wrist radius fracture and declared unfit, while Falcone was declared unfit and transported to Nevers Hospital for further assessment after being diagnosed with a cervical strain and thorax contusion. Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) retired from the race after a crash on Lap 3 at Turn 13, while Tuuli retired after an incident on Lap 8 at the same corner. Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) was another retirement in the 12-lap race, along with Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team).

WorldSSP Race Results

Pos No. Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +0.869
3 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +1.188
4 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 +1.356
5 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +2.348
6 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +3.957
7 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +4.931
8 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +5.159
9 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +6.565
10 A. Verdoia Yamaha YZF R6 +6.869
11 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +7.352
12 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +9.000
13 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +13.891
14 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF R6 +14.146
15 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 +16.784
16 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +17.134
17 L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +23.338
18 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +23.485
19 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +24.643
20 D. Sanchis Martinez Yamaha YZF R6 +25.864
21 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +35.114
22 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +37.260
23 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +37.468
24 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +52.638
Not Classified
RET N. Tuuli MV Agusta 5 Laps
RET V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 5 Laps
RET P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 7 Laps
RET G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 10 Laps
RET V. Falcone Yamaha YZF R6 11 Laps
RET V. Debise Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R /

WorldSSP Championship Standings

Rider Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  282
 2  Steven Odendaal  230
 3  Philipp Oettl  165
 4  Luca Bernardi  161
 5  Jules Cluzel  140
 6  Manuel Gonzalez  133
 7  Federico Caricasulo  94
 8  Randy Krummenacher  82
 9  Can Alexander Oncu  74
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  70
 11  Niki Tuuli  58
 12  Hannes Soomer  48
 13  Marc Alcoba  40
 14  Christoffer Bergman  39
 15  Kevin Manfredi  26
 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  Andy Verdoia  6
 26  Filippo Fuligni  6
 27  Stephane Frossard  6
 28  Michel Fabrizio  6
 29  Max Enderlein  5
 30  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 31  Hikari Okubo  4
 32  Massimo Roccoli  4
 33  Federico Fuligni  4
 34  Luca Grunwald  3
 35  Matteo Patacca  3
 36  Unai Orradre  2
 37  Daniel Valle  2
 38  Ondrej Vostatek  2
 39  Oscar Gutierrez Iglesias  1
 40  Luca Ottaviani  1
 41  Leonardo Taccini  1
 42  Davide Pizzoli  1
 43  Pawel Szkopek  1

WorldSSP300

WorldSSP300

Adrian Huertas and Tom Booth-Amos both started from the front row and immediately looked to stay in the lead group, which started to fragment as the 13-lap race. Initially at around 11 riders, it soon reduced to six before Huertas looked to have a gap on the field with around five laps to go. Booth-Amos was able to close the gap with two lap record lap times in the final few laps before challenging Huertas on the final lap; Booth-Amos managing to save a slide coming out of the final corner on the final lap but was able to hold on to second place with Huertas claiming the win. Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) claimed a home podium with third place, missing out on second place by just two tenths despite the save from Booth-Amos.

South African rider Dorren Louriero (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claimed fourth place after a strong performance in Race 1, finishing ahead of Daniel Mogeda (Team#109 Kawasaki) on his return to the Championship as he replaced James McManus at the team. Inigo Iglesias (SMW Racing) was in the top six but some four seconds back from Mogeda, while he was almost five seconds clear of Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing) in seventh.

Adrian Huertas

The sole KTM rider in the field, Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team), claimed eighth place and another top ten finish in the 2021 campaign while Brazilian Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) was ninth in the 13-lap race, with Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) missing out on ninth place by just one tenth of a second.

WorldSSP300 Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours – Race 1
1. Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki)
2. Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) +0.588s
3. Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) +0.810s

Meikon Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) was two seconds away from a top ten finish as he came home in 11th place, while Dutch rider Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) was 12th . Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) had an eventful race after starting from the middle of the pack, being forced down to 26th place in the early stages before fighting back to finishing in 13th. Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK) was 14th with Dean Berta Viñales (Viñales Racing Team) claiming his first points of the season with 15th despite a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start.

There was drama in the closing stages of the race at Turn 13 when Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) and Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) came together and ended up in the gravel. Buis was able to recover to finish in 25th but Turkish star Sofuoglu was a retirement from the race; both riders had been fighting in the lead group throughout the race.

Hugo de Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) was a retirement on Lap 2 of the 13-lap encounter after a technical issue through the Turn 5 Adelaide hairpin. A lap later, Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) and Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) came together at the same corner with both riders retiring from the race. Johan Gimbert (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini) retired on Lap 6 after he crashed on his own at Turn 5. Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) was the fifth retirement when he crashed at Turn 3 on Lap 7, forcing the Spanish rider out of the race. Yeray Ruiz (Yamaha MS Racing) suffered from technical problems at Turn 5 which forced the Spanish rider out of the race, as well as Petr Svoboda (WRP Wepol Racing). Adrien Quinet (Machado CAME SBK) also retired.

On Lap 11 of 13, Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) retired from the race after a crash at Turn 7, an incident that meant teammate Meuffels had to take a trip through the gravel. Yeray Saiz Marquez (Viñales Racing Team) retired with a technical problem in the closing stages of the race while wildcard Alexy Negrier (Alexy Moto Racing) crashed at Turn 6 right at the very end of the race.

WorldSSP300 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time//Gap
1 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 /
2 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.588
3 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.810
4 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.564
5 D. Mogeda Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.711
6 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.307
7 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +13.013
8 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R +13.330
9 T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +13.544
10 J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +13.640
11 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +15.979
12 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 +18.380
13 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +18.643
14 R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.757
15 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +19.009
16 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.549
17 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +25.663
18 C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.817
19 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.919
20 M. Garcia Kawasaki Ninja 400 +26.070
21 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +27.154
22 M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 +29.775
23 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +31.612
24 Y. Saiz Marquez Yamaha YZF-R3 +31.760
25 J.  Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +44.034
26 A. Negrier Yamaha YZF-R3 +49.611
27 D. Poncet Kawasaki Ninja 400 +49.749
28 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +49.979
29 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +50.388
30 I.  Offer Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m23.142
31 J.  Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m32.366
Not Classified
RET Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 3 Laps
RET B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 4 Laps
RET V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 4 Laps
RET A. Quinet Yamaha YZF-R3 4 Laps
RET Y. Ruiz Yamaha YZF-R3 5 Laps
RET P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 5 Laps
RET V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 7 Laps
RET J.  Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 8 Laps
RET A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 11 Laps
RET H. Khouri / 11 Laps
RET H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 12 Laps

WorldSSP300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  154
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  138
 3  Samuel Di Sora  93
 4  Jeffrey Buis  86
 5  Victor Steeman  71
 6  Hugo De Cancellis  62
 7  Koen Meuffels  58
 8  Yuta Okaya  57
 9  Meikon Kawakami  48
 10  Ana Carrasco  46
 11  Dorren Loureiro  44
 12  Alejandro Carrion  41
 13  Ton Kawakami  41
 14  Unai Orradre  39
 15  Oliver Konig  37
 16  Mirko Gennai  34
 17  Bahattin Sofuoglu  32
 18  Gabriele Mastroluca  31
 19  Bruno Ieraci  21
 20  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  18
 21  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  13
 22  Inigo Iglesias  12
 23  Harry Khouri  12
 24  Daniel Mogeda  11
 25  Kevin Sabatucci  10
 26  Filippo Maria Palazzi  10
 27  Vicente Perez Selfa  9
 28  Petr Svoboda  7
 29  Marc Garcia  7
 30  Ruben Bijman  6
 31  Oscar Nunez Roldan  3
 32  Alfonso Coppola  2
 33  Thomas Brianti  2
 34  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 35  Dean Berta Vinales  1
 36  Christian Stange  1
 37  Johan Gimbert  1

Motul French WorldSBK Round schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Friday wrap from Magny-Cours World Superbike

2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship
Round Eight Magny-Cours


The opening day of WorldSBK action from the Motul French Round at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours saw Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK) storm to the top of the standings. Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) finished the opening day second quickest and Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) third. The afternoon’s session was dry, after what had been a damp FP1 in the morning.

Toprak Razgatlioglu put in a long stint on the same tyres and set 11 mid-1’37s out a 13-lap run, showing his sensational consistency as he led the way for the main portion of the season and continued to improve his pace.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

Today in the first Free Practice, with the bad conditions it was not a really an easy start and for me it is also the first time I ride a Yamaha at this track in the dry conditions. We change some set-up for FP2 and I am feeling much better! I tried a race simulation of 15 laps – which was very, very positive. We are happy because we found a good improvement in the afternoon, the R1 is working very well here and now we are ready to race. We need to win again, and I aim to fight for the victory.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Team-mate Andrea Locatelli was a little bit behind his teammate as he adapts to Magny-Cours on a WorldSBK bike. Tracking his teammate at various points throughout the session. Come the end of the day, it was Razgatlioglu who was fastest, whilst Locatelli ended up in 11th, as he continues to get used to the R1 around the French circuit.

Andrea Locatelli – P11

It was a difficult first day in the end, but also I am happy – we don’t see a top position overall but we work very well. We tried to make a long run this afternoon, it is my first time here in Magny-Cours with this bike and the pace was not so bad! For sure we need to try to search for a little bit more speed, especially in sector two, but in general I am happy because it is the first time. We need to work a little bit around the bike and also I need to understand the track, but tomorrow we can improve. It’s not easy, I have never seen the track in the dry because last year in WorldSSP I only ride in the wet conditions, but we will see what is possible and for sure we will try to get the maximum.”

Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was up inside the top six as he continued to get to grips with the Magny-Cours circuit in the dry conditions for the first time in his career. Having been inside the top two positions for the last seven races, Redding is coming into the Motul French Round in fine form and was good in the mixed conditions in the morning. Redding finished the afternoon in second with teammate Michael Ruben Rinaldi down in ninth, with work to do for the Italian.

Scott Redding – P2

It was quite a weird day for me as I have never ridden on this circuit in dry conditions. For this reason, in the first part of the session, I focused mainly on finding the feeling with the circuit. Then I was able to find my pace and things went much better. We are in the right direction and I think we can improve tomorrow”.

Scott Redding
Michael Ruben Rinaldi – P9

In FP1 we didn’t take any risks on a track that was half dry and half wet. In the afternoon we worked a little differently compared to other races, lapping a lot and reducing the set-up work. The feeling is quite good even if obviously we need to improve. At the end of the day, we are all pretty close to each other and I think that if we work well tomorrow morning we’ll be able to make a good race“.   

The Kawasaki pairing of Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) and team-mate Alex Lowes were in good form as they took to the dry Magny-Cours circuit. Rea set a consistent pace and for the majority of the session, was sitting well inside the top five, whilst Lowes was also right with his teammate. The British duo worked away hard until the end of the session, before finishing third and eighth respectively, having been first and third in the morning’s damp-but-drying session. Rea’s in-touch with his Championship rival Razgatlioglu, but the Turk’s pace might well be giving him the edge over the race distance if conditions are to remain the same across Saturday and Sunday.

Jonathan Rea – P3

I did not feel completely comfortable on the bike today. I feel consistent, just consistently slow! In that last part of braking and tipping into the corner I feel I am losing a little bit. Aside from that, some areas where we have been really strong in the past, like sector one, I have been struggling. There are a lot of bumps in Turn One and the bike is not really absorbing them so well. It is taking the edge off full commitment because the bike is moving around. It is just a case of going through what we have learned this afternoon and comparing it with what we have had in the past. We know the bike works well here and we will try to make a step for tomorrow.

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes – P8

It was a good day – and my first day around Magny Cours on the Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10RR in dry track conditions. Last year we had every session wet, which made it a strange weekend! The bike feels good and I really enjoyed it this afternoon in FP2. It was nice and consistent and we have a couple of areas we know to improve in for tomorrow. A positive first day in France for me.”

Alex Lowes

The Independent charge was led by Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) in fourth place, with the Welshman going well at a circuit he took a podium at in his most recent race at the circuit. The next Independent came from Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and the American was constantly improving his time all the way to the end of the session. The two were the only riders inside the top ten from Independent teams but Davies in particular looks strong, with the Ducati rider constantly within the top five throughout the dry FP2 session.

It was a bright start to the weekend for one side of the Honda garage as Leon Haslam (Team HRC) completed the top five, showing his strengths around the Magny-Cours circuit. However, on the other side of the garage, Alvaro Bautista was down in 12th place, with the Spaniard working away on the Honda with it being his first day of dry weather running on the bike since joining the team. The potential is there this weekend, and with dry weather scheduled for the remainder of the weekend combined with wet running at the start of the day, Team HRC could be set for a stronger weekend than in recent rounds.

Leon Haslam – P5

We had no information for this track with the Honda, as last year it was wet, so the first dry laps we’ve completed here were this afternoon. Things weren’t so bad as far as lap times are concerned. There are still some areas in which we need to improve but the things we’ve found in testing can definitely help us make a step here. That wasn’t the case in Navarra, which probably was one of the most difficult weekend for us so far sadly, but at this circuit I think we’ve already made a step. We are trying to improve on corner entry mainly, and front feeling too. Here we have three corners where we are struggling, the stop-stop type of corner, but in the first sector, the fast flowing one, the bike is very strong. So we’ll keep working as we always do and we will see where we can go.”

Leon Haslam
Alvaro Bautista – P12

Finally we had a dry session here at Magny Cours this afternoon, a first one for us with Honda, because last year it rained the whole time and this morning the track was wet. We did a little bit of tyre testing to get some feeling in the dry and I have to say that the new asphalt is quite good, there are not many dips, especially considering that we’re coming from Navarra. We tried to improve our grip at maximum lean angle and our traction, the two areas where we suffer the most really. In the end, we are a little behind in the classification, but the times are very close and the gap is not too great. Tomorrow we will try to improve as much as we can because even a few tenths will make the difference in terms of our position. It’s important to complete a good qualifying lap to secure a good grid position. We are usually stronger in the second half of the race so starting as far ahead as possible will be important.”

The BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team enjoyed a good day’s work, as Tom Sykes took sixth place and was top BMW overall, although teammate Michael van der Mark was second in the mixed conditions in the morning session. Unfortunately for van der Mark, the Dutchman suffered a technical problem at Turn 11 during FP2, cutting his track action short. Sykes was just less than half a second from Toprak’s time, whilst van der Mark completed the top overall, edging out Locatelli by just 0.018s.

Tom Sykes – P6

Session one was obviously not too valuable, so the plan was to get our head down for session 2 but unfortunately, we did have a little bit of an issue with the bike but luckily I was able to get back to the pits. The guys did a fantastic job of turning it around and getting me back out there, so we had to miss a little bit of our schedule out and ultimately, we did have to compromise our plan. The good thing was that we were still in the top 6, but for sure we will look to improve on this tomorrow and keep working to get into the top 5.

Tom Sykes
Michael van der Mark – P10

To be honest this day has not been that bad. This morning we had to wait until the track was dry and when we had a dry line, I felt fast on the bike and had a good feeling with the BMW M 1000 RR. In FP2, I started really well but struggled with stopping the bike as it felt a bit nervous, so we tried to solve that. Towards the end of the session with a fresh tyre I made a mistake when on a good lap, and then unfortunately we had a mechanical issue right at the end of the session. But overall, I am feeling good with the bike. We haven’t changed too many things, so the base of the bike feels good. We just need to make the bike a little more stable on braking.

The best of the rest consisted of Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) who was 13th but just 1.096s from top spot and was more than a tenth clear of local hero Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in 14th. Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) was 15th on his Magny-Cours debut, ahead of Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) and Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team), with the Spaniard suffering an off-track excursion. Another home-hero Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport Yamaha) was 18th, ahead of Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura), Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) – who crashed at Turn 8 – and Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing). Cresson’s previous teammate, Jayson Uribe, isn’t at Magny-Cours due to travel issues.

World Superbikes Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 1m37.138
2 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.208
3 J. Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.288
4 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.334
5 L. Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +0.407
6 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +0.469
7 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +0.497
8 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.530
9  M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.633
10 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +0.670
11 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +0.688
12 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +0.704
13 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.096
14 L. Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1.230
15 J. Folger BMW M 1000 RR +1.781
16 L. Mercado Honda CBR1000 RR-R   IN +1.908
17 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +2.060
18 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +2.269
19 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.393
20 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +2.646
21 L. Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +3.453

WorldSSP

There was a big accident in the opening stages of the WorldSSP session with Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) and Hikari Okubo (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) going down at Turn 3, with Okubo being taken to the medical centre for a check-up. By the end of the session, it was Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) on top of the standings, leading for most of the afternoon.

Dominique Aegerter was in fine form throughout the afternoon’s running, with the Swiss bouncing back after losing his time in the opening session of the weekend for a yellow flag infringement. Aegerter kept improving right into the closing stages and had the better of Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing), with the Italian up in second after leading the way in FP1. Finding form at a circuit he’s more familiar with. He edged out the youngest ever WorldSSP race winner Andy Verdoïa (GMT94 Yamaha), as he flew the French flag up in third place.

Dominique Aegerter

Verdoïa’s teammate Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha), with the Frenchman in fourth and finding a good rhythm at his home circuit. In fifth place and making it three French riders inside the top five was Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha), with the wildcard going well and giving the home crowd to cheer about. Up in sixth place was Finnish rider Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti), as he returns to the track he won at back in the 2017 campaign, although he didn’t improve on his time.

Federico Caricasulo

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) was in seventh, as the German rider aims to get back to the front although he’s not found it easy on the opening day of action. Turkey’s Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) was the next of the Kawasaki’s in the order and eighth, just under a quarter of a tenth clear of Steven Odendaal in ninth place. Both riders set 20 laps, one more than Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in ninth, as the German rider aims to get back to the front although he’s not found it easy on the opening day of action. Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) completed the top ten as he gets up to speed with the Magny-Cours layout.

Notable names outside of the top ten include Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGO Team), who was on a good final lap before losing his time due to exceeding track limits, dropping to 12th, whilst Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) was lead WorldSSP Challenge rider in 13th. Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) was only 14th. Hannes Soomer’s (Kallio Racing) return saw him in 25th, whilst Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) graduates to WorldSSP for the rest of the year and his first day of action saw him in 26th.

WorldSSP Combined Times

Pos No. Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 1m41.314
2 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +0.029
3 A. Verdoia Yamaha YZF R6 +0.046
4 J. Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +0.064
5 V. Debise Yamaha YZF R6 +0.295
6 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 +0.347
7 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.412
8 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.522
9 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +0.546
10 L. Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +0.639
11 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.761
12 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 +0.809
13 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +0.905
14 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +0.921
15 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +1.017
16 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.034
17 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +1.115
18 L. Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.296
19 C. Bergman Yamaha YZF R6 +1.340
20 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +1.458
21 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +1.660
22 D. Valle Yamaha YZF R6 +1.749
23 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +1.824
24 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +1.850
25 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 +1.852
26 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF R6 +1.860
27 D. Sanchis Martinez Esp  Wrp Wepol Racing Yamaha YZF R6 +1.878
28 H. Okubo Kawasaki ZX-6R +2.013
29 V. Falcone Yamaha YZF R6 +2.624
30 L. Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +3.082
31 M. Herrera Yamaha YZF R6 +3.315
32 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +4.255

WorldSSP300

WorldSSP300 Championship leader Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) headed Friday’s running in both wet and dry conditions, with his time over eight-tenths clear of his nearest rivals on the dry track ahead of the Motul French Round.

Adrian Huertas

Huertas was fastest in the first 30-minute session in wet but drying conditions and continued that form into the second session with a time of 1’52.859s, comfortably the fastest time of the day. The only dry running in the afternoon was interrupted by a Red Flag with just over two minutes to go when Miguel Santiago Duarte (Yamaha MS Racing) suffered a mechanical issue at Turn 8, with the session ending early.

Jeffrey Buis

Reigning Champion Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) was in second as he looks to close in on the Championship leader, but he was eight tenths back from Huertas. Reigning Champion Buis had a four-tenths advantage of Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) in third place, with the field closing up behind Booth-Amos; with the top three in the Championship also the top three in the standings after Friday.

Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) claimed fourth place after a challenging day which included a highside crash at the final corner in this morning session, but he was able to re-mount and re-join the session. Australian Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claimed fifth place in a strong session, only one-tenth behind Booth-Amos.

Harry Khouri made a great start to the weekend

Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) was another who had a strong session with sixth place, finishing ahead of Daniel Mogeda (Team# 109 Kawasaki) who claimed seventh on his WorldSSP300 return. Inigo Iglesias (SMW Racing) secured eighth after the two 30-minute sessions with Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) and Hugo de Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) rounding out the top ten.

Dutchman Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) had a crash in Free Practice 1 after a highside exiting the final chicane but was able to re-join the session and responded by taking 11th place in the combined classification. Victor Steeman (KTM Freudenberg WorldSSP Team) was 12th with Yeray Ruiz (Yamaha MS Racing) in the top 15 on his debut. Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing) was 14th with Marc Garcia (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) in 15th upon his return to the Championship.

Wildcard entrant Alexy Negrier (Alexy Moto Racing) crashed during the second practice session in the afternoon and was unable to re-join the session, with the crash occurring in the opening stages of the 30-minute outing at Turn 15. Filippo Maria Palazzi (ProGP Racing) was declared unfit after Free Practice 1 after a crash at Turn 7. Although he was able to re-join the session, he was taken to the medical centre and ruled out of the weekend with a right wrist contusion.

Sylvain Markarian (Leader Team Flembbo) also suffered from a crash in Free Practice 1, but was able to take his bike back to the pit lane and go out, while Antonio Frappola (Chiodo Moto Racing) crashed and returned to the circuit at Turn 13; Markarian claiming 30th place and Frappola 39th. Vicente Perez Selfa (Machado Came SBK) had a technical issue in FP1 but was able to claim 18th place after Friday’s running.

WorldSSP300 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 1m52.859
2 J. Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.822
3 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.224
4 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 +1.295
5 H. Khouri Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.310
6 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.386
7 D. Mogeda Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.797
8 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.798
9 J. Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.870
10 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.891
11 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.934
12 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R +1.962
13 Y. Ruiz Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.017
14 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.034
15 M. Garcia Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.230
16 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.264
17 J. Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.276
18 V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.385
19 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.412
20 Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.440
21 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.465
22 R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.503
23 T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.666
24 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.701
25 P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.823
26 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.825
27 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.941
28 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.961
29 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.100
30 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.158
31 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.232
32 C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.236
33 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.415
34 M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.420
35 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.701
36 Y. Saiz Marquez Yamaha YZF-R3 +4.068
37 D. Poncet Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.328
38 A. Quinet Yamaha YZF-R3 +5.399
39 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.892
40 J. Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.908
41 A. Negrier Yamaha YZF-R3 +6.184
42 I.  Offer Kawasaki Ninja 400 +10.890
43 M. Duarte Yamaha YZF-R3 +11.522
44 F. Palazzi Yamaha YZF-R3 +15.370

Motul French WorldSBK Round schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

WorldSBK heads to France with leaders tied on points

2021 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship
Round Eight Magny-Cours


This weekend the Superbike World Championship circus moves to Nevers Magny-Cours circuit for the eighth round of season 2021.

Inaugurated over 60 years ago in 1960, the Nevers Magny-Cours circuit is 4411 metres long and has nine right-handers and eight to the left, with a minimum bend radius of 5 metres and a maximum of 474.45 metres plus a finishing straight which measures 250 metres in length. The maximum slope uphill is 2.38 per cent, with a 2.68 per cent descent.

Mangy Cours
Nevers Magny-Cours

This track is characterised by sudden deceleration and re-acceleration changes, interspersed with medium length straights and plenty of altitude changes. In its default layout it also provides a hairpin (Adelaide) with one of the heaviest braking points present among the international circuits, arriving from a fast straight. The asphalt has a smooth and regular surface and therefore offers little natural grip, especially in case of low temperatures or in the wet. Moreover, in some points the riders are called to brake in the downhill sections putting the front tyre under stress.

After twenty-one races, the WorldSBK Riders Standings of the Superbike World Championship has never been so close, with Jonathan Rea, and Toprak Razgatlioglu on level points (311 points), followed by Scott Redding with 273 points.

Razgatlioglu took his first ever win at Magny-Cours back in 2014 in the STK600 class, of which he’d be Champion in 2015. Then, he took a first STK1000 podium there in 2016 with second, before in 2019, his first WorldSBK win in a final lap shoot-out with Jonathan Rea came from 16th on the grid. He doubled up in the Superpole Race but with it being wet in 2020, he’s yet to show his strengths at the track on a Yamaha.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

For me, France is a special place because of my first wins in 2019, but like I have said before: we focus only on the next races ahead. I am not thinking about the championship! I like the Magny-Cours circuit a lot, it has fast sections and areas for hard braking which I enjoy. My team has been working hard at every round to give me the best R1 for the races, and we have been ready to fight everywhere. It will not be easy, Jonny and Scott [Redding] are very strong, but we will see.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

However, if Toprak’s ready for the challenge then so is his title rival Jonathan Rea – he’s won eight races at Magny-Cours, all of them for Kawasaki and apart from 2016, it has been every year. Add on to that the fact he’s been on the podium in all but one race at Magny-Cours on a Kawasaki (Race 2, 2017), then you’d be hard-pushed to find someone with a better track record.

However, Rea’s coming into France on the backfoot, having relinquished his Championship lead and, in the last six races, handed 37-points to Razgatlioglu. Both enjoy the track and have already had final lap battles there before.

Jonathan Rea

After the last few races, on new circuits for us, I am really excited to got to Magny Cours. It is a circuit where I have a lot of special memories, where we have been many times in the past, so we have a lot of data. Thankfully we had a full day of really nice weather at a Portimao test last week to keep working with the set-up of our Ninja ZX-10RR. I felt very good there and the condition fo the bike was very good. The bike set-up for Magny Cours is very similar to Portimao. It has a lot of heavy braking area but also changes of direction which really suit our bike. Now, with six rounds remaining in the championship we are past the halfway point and the next races will come along in very quick succession. The target is of course to win and to build some positive momentum into the last part of the year, which is going to be very intense. But I am excited, very motivated and can’t wait to get to France.

Jonathan Rea

Edging closer with each round is Scott Redding, as the Ducati star is now 38-points behind the top two in the title race, having been 81 back just six races ago. Redding’s been in top form lately; seven straight podiums and all of them within the top two positions. It’s a devastating run of form which neither Razgatlioglu nor Rea have matched so far this year. Redding’s in the best form of his career and with a win at Magny-Cours in 2020 to keep his title hopes alive, he’s one of the favourites.

Scott Redding

Last year I enjoyed racing on a circuit that was new to me. It’s clear that this time I’ll have a little more experience and that could be important to get off to a good start right away. My goal is to continue on the path we have taken in the last few very positive races.

Scott Redding

In stark contrast, Redding’s Ducati team-mate Michael Ruben Rinaldi had a subdued weekend at Navarra where he took 15 points, but a return to the top six will be welcome at Magny-Cours, as he did in 2020.

Michael Ruben Rinaldi

We can’t hide the fact that the last period has not been particularly positive for us. Now it’s time to turn the page. The contract signed for next season will give me great serenity to start working well with the team since FP1 on Friday.”

Michael Ruben Rinaldi

Toprak’s Pata Yamaha team-matre Andrea Locatelli also  hopes be back on the podium, having now established himself as a solid front-runner. He took a WorldSSP win at Magny-Cours in 2020, can he convert that into strong pace in WorldSBK though?

Andrea Locatelli

Last year Magny-Cours was a new circuit for me in World Supersport, so I will focus on the references with the R1 WorldSBK in Free Practice in the beginning. I think we can do very well there, I like the layout and we have been strong now for the last three rounds. The goal is to get closer to the front, so I hope we can keep working and carry the momentum this weekend. For sure I would like to improve on our “standard” position of fourth, which is becoming something funny with my team! If we can work on a good set-up on Friday, I think it will be possible to push on the maximum to get some good results again.”

Andrea Locatelli with Aussie crew chief Andrew Pitt

Rea’s Kawasaki team-mate Alex Lowes aims to fight for the podium despite a persistent injury, but he was on the podium twice at Magny-Cours for Kawasaki in 2020, so the pace is there.

Alex Lowes

For Magny Cours I have some good memories from last year on the Kawasaki, with the podiums in rain conditions. I am hoping it is dry this time because we didn’t get any dry laps last year in Magny Cours, so I want to try the Ninja ZX-10RR around there in the dry. It is a track I have always enjoyed going to and I have always gone quite well at. I have said it for the last few races but the target is to be back, fighting for the podium. So that is the target for Magny Cours.

Alex Lowes – Image 2snap

It was an impressive weekend for BMW at Navarra, as they seemingly found form in the hotter conditions in comparison to where they had come from in the past couple of seasons. Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) achieved his tenth front row for BMW at Navarra and capitalised on that with two top-six finishes in Race 1 and the Superpole Race, before taking fifth in Race 2. He was on the front row at Magny-Cours in 2020 as part of BMW’s first ever Superpole 1-2, when Eugene Laverty took pole.

Tom Sykes

I am definitely looking forward to the French round of the WorldSBK at Magny-Cours. It’s a circuit which has given the BMW podium success in the past and obviously for me my target is to add to that. The aim is also to maintain our recent improvement in form that we found for example at Navarra. That is the target for the weekend. Of course, there is still work to be done with the new BMW M 1000 RR so we will try our best to find the best balance and compromise to do this inside the race weekend.”

Tom Sykes – Image 2snap

On the other side of the BMW garage, Michael van der Mark didn’t have the same weekend as Sykes, with seventh, eighth and ninth being the Dutchman’s results at Navarra. However, six Magny-Cours podiums could propel van der Mark back to the sharp end.

Michael van der Mark

Magny-Cours is a track which I really enjoy riding. It always suits me. It has a bit of everything; fast and flowing sectors, stop-and-go corners, so it is a bit of a mix. Regarding the set-up of the bike, you also need to find some compromise here and there because it has all these different type of corners. I really love the first sector; that is one of my favourite parts of the track, but also the last sector is always nice for some good overtaking. I am looking forward to the weekend. We have improved our BMW M 1000 RR a lot and at Navarra, we struggled more with the high temperatures and I think we will not have that at Magny-Cours, so hopefully we have a bit more stable weekend. At Navarra, we made a big step lap-time wise in qualifying. Unfortunately for me it was so tight that I was still tenth, but if you look at the lap times, I made a huge step. We improved the performance there, so that is what we really need at Magny-Cours as well.

Michael van der Mark – Image 2snap

Over at Honda, it was another difficult round endured by Team HRC as Alvaro Bautista and Leon Haslam worked hard to break into the top ten once again. For Bautista, there was just one point-scoring ride across the weekend with eighth in Race 2, whilst Leon Haslam’s only points came in Race 1 with 13th. Both lie outside the top ten in the Championship but could break into it it this weekend, with Bautista level on points with previous team-mate Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven).

Alvaro Bautista

Magny-Cours is always tricky, largely due to the weather as you never know if it’s going to be wet, mixed conditions or whatever. Last year we barely had an opportunity to ride in the dry, so we don’t have much data in those conditions. The track has a bit of everything anyway, hard braking, long turns, and many changes of direction. It’s a tricky one, but we’re keen to continue our development and are focused on rounding out the season in the best way possible. I want an enjoyable end to my season with HRC.

Alvaro Bautista – Image 2snap
Leon Haslam

Magny-Cours has been good for me in the past. Last year I battled hard with Toprak and others for fourth place, before unfortunately suffering a highside just before the end of the race. In the wet, I’m confident that we can fight for the podium this time, while in the dry, I know we’ve made progress and hopefully it can be a kinder circuit to us than some of the others so far.”

Leon Haslam
Leon Haslam

The Independent battle is as fierce as ever and whilst Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) has taken a slight dip in form across the last two rounds, he’s comfortably clear of the next-best Independent rider Chaz Davies by 43 points.

However, closing in on Davies is young Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing), who is now just five-points behind the Brit and has leap-frogged Leon Haslam in the standings.

For Gerloff, he was fast in the rain of Magny-Cours in 2020, whilst Chaz Davies took a double win back in 2016 and won again in 2017. Axel Bassani’s form is somewhat unknown in WorldSBK, but back in World Supersport, he took his best ever finish with fourth in 2016.

The rest of the Independent battle is being fought further down, with Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) in 14th place, but going to his home-round full of confidence after two wins in the last three races held at the track in WorldSSP.

Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) tackles Magny-Cours for the first time and is three points behind Mahias, whilst Yamaha’s Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) will also go to Magny-Cours for the first time, after what seemed like a bit of a breakthrough at Navarra.

Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) returns to action after a positive COVID-19 test prior to Navarra, with Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) next up, just five points back.

Jonas Folger

Magny-Cours is a great circuit. We competed as wildcard starters in the French Championship there last year. I am happy that we did that, as it means that I am familiar with the circuit now. It is a very challenging circuit, including a real range of corners. There is a pretty long straight, some slow corners. Sometimes it flows and then you have a bit of stop-and-go – it has a bit of everything. I hope that we make a good start to the weekend, work well with the BMW from the word go and that our race results then build on recent races.”

Jonas Folger

Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport Yamaha) heads for his home round and will hope to impress, whilst Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) aims for points once more. Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and team-mate Jayson Uribe also aim for points, particularly Uribe who is yet to score.

Motul French WorldSBK Round schedule

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

WorldSBK visits another new track this weekend

2021 WorldSBK Round Seven
Navarra (Spain)

The 2021 Motul FIM Superbike World Championship heads into the second half of the season as the Pirelli Navarra Round beckons at the Circuito de Navarra. The facility is the second consecutive new venue for WorldSBK whilst also being the fifth consecutive that wasn’t on the 2020 calendar. With one of the fastest turns on the calendar and intricate sectors, Navarra is ready to welcome the intense Championship battle between Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) and Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK), with both separated by just three-points after 18 races.

The Circuit of Navarra is located near Los Arcos, a town in the Spanish region of Navarra, from which the name derives, and was inaugurated on 19th June 2010. The 3,933 kilometres of track develop through fifteen turns, of which nine right and six left turns. The layout of the circuit has a faster first section, characterised by several high-speed turns, both on the right and left side. In this first section, some surface imperfections could put the front tyre to the test, which must be able to guarantee directional stability and a good feeling to the rider. The second part of the circuit is instead characterised by multiple slow hairpins to be tackled in first and second gear, where agility and ease of steering will be crucial from the tyre point of view, to allow the rider to turn quickly in such tight corners.

The Championship battle is the closest it has been after 18 races since 2004 and there’s absolutely no shortage of vintage action in 2021. Toprak Razgatlioglu took 34 points out of Jonathan Rea’s lead at the last round at Most, meaning he is just three behind. Heading to Navarra where he was fast in testing, Razgatlioglu knows that he’s within striking distance of the Championship lead, even though he is focused on the race in hand and not the standings. He has a strong teammate for support too, with Andrea Locatelli not out of the top five in the last six races – of which he took two podiums, one at Assen in Race 2 and the other at Most in Race 1. The level playing field of Navarra may bring Locatelli further into contention as he aims for a first win, whilst also aims to pack out the places between Toprak and his Championship rivals.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

We had a good weekend in Most, and now I still only focus on the next races. Always, I want to win and this is what we work towards. If I think about the championship I feel stressed! So this is the best way. I like the track in Navarra – it is different with some fast and slow parts which suits my style. We had a good test there two months ago and I felt good with the R1. We will see on Friday, in practice we will focus on making a good set-up for the races.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu – Image 2snap
Andrea Locatelli

I feel like I can now start to fight with the first group on track – in Most this was really nice and it was a new track for almost everyone. We have a good base setting from the test in Navarra, so I hope we can continue in the same way. The feeling with the R1 is coming more and more easy for me and I enjoy riding it very much. The goal is to keep improving step by step and be able to push in every round to compete at the front. I am looking forward to seeing my team again this weekend and working to continue this way!”

Andrea Locatelli – Image 2snap

Jonathan Rea’s disastrous Most is now behind him as he hit the reset button with a small break and then a return to testing duties at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. Taking 23 points from three races in the Czech Republic, his second lowest amount for a round tally after Estoril’s 20 last year, Rea has got to hit the ground running at Navarra if he is to remain in the Championship lead. Taking a triple win at Assen and then enduring Most’s difficulties, the WorldSBK pendulum swings wildly from round to round, adding to the excitement and unpredictability of 2021.

Jonathan Rea

It is nice to go to Navarra, another new circuit for us. Unlike Most we have actually had a test there, a couple of months ago. I enjoyed the track but it seemed quite bumpy then. Now it seems the circuit have addressed some of the problems we faced. My rhythm and pace was pretty good there so I am quite curious to see, with everybody on track, how competitive everyone will be. I feel that with our Ninja ZX-10RR we can be strong. The idea is to start on Friday with a base set-up but also factoring in some ideas we tried at a previous test at Barcelona. I am excited for that and the aim is to have a really good race weekend.

Jonathan Rea

Team-mate Alex Lowes was racing with physical restrictions at Most and had three crashes in one day at Navarra during testing, so he’ll hope that those two aspects of his form aren’t indicative of the weekend ahead.

Alex Lowes

“Navarra is a new track for the championship but I think most people have tested there at some point. It’s a completely different track to Most because it’s quite slow. There’s a lot of first-gear corners. I think the racing is going to be good so I’m looking forward to it. Navarra is a technical track and lots of the corners lead onto the next one. It’s important to be patient and precise. At the test we did there we were fast and I had a good feeling with the bike. I believe there will be some good passing places and the racing is going to be really close. My target is to get back on the podium after a tough few races. I’m ready for the challenge!”

Alex Lowes

One of the main stories coming out of the Czech Republic was that Ducati and Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) are back, with the British star taking a long-awaited victory at Most. After getting his knee down in another way on the podium by proposing to his girlfriend, Redding’s mindset coming to Navarra is in a good place as he seeks to close the gap down further from 50, having taken it down from 81 last time out. Teammate Michael Ruben Rinaldi will also look to get back on the rostrum after his comebacks in Race 1 and Race 2 at Most, with the Italian storming through from eighth and 11th respectively. Can Ducati utilise their recent form and get their Panigale V4 R in the perfect operating window in Los Arcos?

BMW had a mixed weekend at Most, as Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) took a sturdy fifth place in Race 1, whilst teammate Michael van der Mark’s comeback from 17th to 7th in Race 2 also gave the German manufacturer something to shout about. However, they’re still yet to cement their place in the constant fight for the podium. With Navarra closing in, this could be the round where they really come on strong; Sykes has consistently hailed the progress that the team made with the bike at the Navarra test in July, citing that as one of the turning points of the 2021 season and the M 1000 RR project. Both he and van der Mark were quick and there’s a feeling that if both can have a clean run through Free Practice, they could be contenders come racing.

Tom Sykes

I’m looking forward to keeping the momentum going, with the races now coming quite fast. So we aim to build on what we understood when we were testing in Navarra some weeks ago – and also recently on the back of a test at Barcelona which was in very hot conditions. Obviously, it looks like Navarra will be warm. It’s a new circuit again for everybody so it will be interesting to see how the weekend goes, but ultimately the plan is to continue working with what we found in testing with the BMW M 1000 RR and hopefully we can transfer that kind of set-up into the hot track at Navarra and keep improving our results all of the time. I also want to take this opportunity to say massive congratulations to Michael and Nadieh on their fabulous new addition to the family, their little baby boy. That’s a massive achievement in life and I wish them all the best.

Tom Sykes
Michael van der Mark

It has been an exciting time since I returned from Most. On Thursday evening after the race weekend, Mason was born and it is great be able to spend some days with the family before heading to the next round. Now we will race at Navarra, and it is always good to have a new track on the calendar. We have been testing there and it is quite different compared to other tracks. It is really narrow and overtaking can be hard. It’s good that we have done a test there, even if our bike has changed quite a lot since then, so I am curious to find out how it will work. The first goal for the weekend is to qualify a little bit better. In Most I was a bit unlucky in qualifying with some traffic, I must say, but we’ve seen that for example on Saturday and Sunday we made a huge improvement on lap times and also pace-wise so it seems that we really found a good way with the set-up of the bike. Hopefully we will find that right set-up at Navarra pretty soon so we are right at the point from the start.

Michael Van Der Mark and Tom Sykes

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) showed strength at the Autodrom Most last time out as the Honda rider recovered from a Race 1 error to finish sixth, whilst he fought back after a slow start in Race 2. In his second ‘home event’ of the season, Bautista will hope the recent test in Barcelona can propel him and Honda forwards after electronic issues have plagued them continuously throughout the first six rounds of the season.

Alvaro Bautista

It’s a new track for everyone so we’ll see how it goes. When we tested at Navarra a couple of months ago, we saw how small and narrow it is, with a lot of hard braking and potholes. Having said that, with the work we completed during that test combined with the modifications we’ve made over the last race weekends, I am confident we can take a step forward in the upcoming races. I hope I can do well at what is a home track for me, not least because we’ll have spectators there to support us, which will be great as we’ve missed them.”

Alvaro Bautista and Leon Haslam

Teamate Leon Haslam will hope the level playing field can bring him further into play and especially after a strong Barcelona test, as HRC seek to return to the leading positions.

Leon Haslam

We didn’t get much track time when we tested at Navarra, so we’ll need to work to find a good solution for this circuit, but I’m looking forward to the challenge. I had a good feeling while there anyway, so that’s a good start, although I realise that some other teams have had more test time at the track than us. The layout is quite unique, in that it’s bumpy and has many first-gear corners, so you need to be sure you can stop and turn the bike. This is a priority and an area where we’ve been working, so it will be a good test for the Honda. We’ll see what we can do.”

The Independent battle is starting to see new names come into the picture; Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) enjoyed a calm Most weekend and was on top of testing after day one at Navarra back in July. However, it was Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) who took his best ever result at Most with a first top five in Race 1, finishing fifth. Bassani’s potential is high, and he’s growing in stature with each race – could he be a surprise towards the front of the field this weekend? Making a return to action will be Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing), whilst Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) will hope he can progress forward at his second home round of the year.

Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) is 16th in the Championship and returns to the track where he crashed at during testing, resulting in a broken finger. Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) aims to continue knocking on the door of the top ten, whilst Eugene Laverty’s (RC Squadra Corse) attendance is to be confirmed. Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing), Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport Yamaha) and Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) are next up, with Mercado returning after a positive COVID-19 test ruled him out of Most. Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and teammate Jayson Uribe complete the full-time entrants, whilst Suzuki return to the WorldSBK grid with Spanish Superbike rider Naomichi Uramoto wildcarding, meaning there’re six manufacturers on the grid.

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

Two weeks on from the FIM Supersport World Championship’s first visit to the Autodrom Most, another new venue presents more challenges for the paddock as the Circuito de Navarra prepares to host WorldSSP for the first-ever time with the Pirelli Navarra Round making its debut on the calendar. New tracks have the potential to spice things up and with the Championship gap being cut last time out, the Navarra Round is set up to be a thrilling encounter.

Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) continues to lead the standings after five rounds but found his gap at the top of the Championship to 37 points, down from 44 before the Czech Round, after Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) was able to return to the top of the rostrum in Race 1 at the Autodrom Most with Aegerter in fourth; although Aegerter responded in Race 2 to win ahead of Odendaal. A new venue could spice this Championship battle even more. Will Aegerter extend his lead at the top of the standings or will Odendaal close the gap even further?

German rider Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) lies third in the Championship after taking yet another podium finish last time out, but is still chasing his first win in the class. Oettl is only 33 points behind Odendaal as he searches to finish as high up the Championship as possible. Oettl will be looking over his shoulder though with Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) only 17 points behind.

The 19-year-old Spanish rider claimed his first WorldSSP podiums at the Autodrom Most and narrowly missed out on a potential first victory as he closed down Odendaal in Race 1; the duo separated by four tenths when Red Flags were shown. Gonzalez will be hoping he can go one better at the Navarra Round and claim his first victory.

The fight for third is a close affair with Sammarinese rider Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) two points behind Gonzalez after a stunning debut campaign in WorldSSP, although he is currently on a four-race podium drought; claiming three top-six finishes across the Dutch and Czech Rounds. Bernardi will be hoping he can return to the podium at the Navarra Round.

Jules Cluzel’s (GMT94 Yamaha) campaign so far has been marred with challenges and bad luck, including last time out when he was collected by Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) at Turn 1 on the second lap of the race. Despite this, Cluzel sits sixth in the standings on 100 points with three podiums to his name so far: MotorLand Aragon, Circuito Estoril and Misano World Circuit “Marco Simoncelli”. Cluzel will be hoping he is able to make it a fourth podium visit at a fourth circuit in the 2021 campaign.

Danish rider Simon Jespersen will make his WorldSSP debut with Kallio Racing in place of the injured Hannes Soomer, becoming the fourth rider from Denmark to compete in WorldSSP. Jespersen currently competes in the FIM CEV Superstock 600 championship in Spain, lying 13th in the Championship with one points-scoring result so far; a fourth place in Valencia.

Danny Webb announced his split with the WRP Wepol Racing outfit, and he will be replaced by David Sanchis Martinez at the team, who will also make his WorldSSP debut at Navarra. The Spanish rider has competed in endurance racing in 2021 and made his debut on a superstock bike at the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

WorldSSP Challenge competitor Maria Herrera (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) will be hoping to return to action but will need to undergo a medical check before she is cleared to ride. The team ran with Federico Caricasulo last time out at the Autodrom Most and he will return as a one event rider for the same team. Marc Alcoba (Yamaha MS Racing), Shogo Kawasaki (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti), Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) will also all need to undergo medical checks before racing at Navarra.

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

Redding & Razgatlioglu share Sunday wins at Most

2021 WorldSBK Round Six
Most – Sunday


Most WorldSBK Superpole Race

Toprak Razgatlioglu

Jonathan Rea and Toprak Razgatlioglu both got off to their usual good starts, with Razgatlioglu getting the holeshot ahead of his title rival, whilst Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) shot up into third ahead of Scott Redding. Tom Sykes held his top five starting slot in fifth whilst Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) was up to sixth. By the start of Lap 2, Redding was into third, passing Locatelli at Turn 1 under braking.

Tom Sykes

Toprak and Rea had begun to break clear of Redding and Locatelli behind them with a gap of around a second, with Razgatlioglu putting the hammer down and setting the fastest lap on Lap 2. However, Rea was right on his tail and starting to pressure the Turk, both riders laying some serious soft Pirelli stripes around the circuit with some good sideways action even at lean.

Alex Lowes

At the halfway point, Razgatlioglu continued to relentlessly push and opened a quarter-of a-second over Rea. Further back Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) was once again impressing, as he had pushed his way through into sixth ahead of Alex Lowes and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team).

With three to go, Jonathan Rea made another mistake at Turn 1, although this was without the consequence of Race 1 on Saturday. He made a mistake under braking and had to take to the Turn 1 run-off, ending his chances of victory but bringing him right into Redding’s vicinity. Redding was now right with the Championship leader and eager to get through as both danced luridly around the Most layout.

Jonathan Rea

Onto the last lap and with Razgatlioglu was out in front by over a second-and-a-half, the battle was on though for second and Redding pounced on Rea at Turn 1, getting the job done and holding station to the flag. Razgatlioglu taking his tenth career victory in his 100th start.

Alex Lowes recovered to sixth in the battle with Axel Bassani, with the Italian coming home a strong seventh. Garrett Gerloff took eighth place whilst Michael Ruben Rinaldi clinched ninth, less than three-tenths ahead of Alvaro Bautista.

Most WorldSBK Superpole Race Results

Pos  Rider Bike.…………………………….. Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.496
3 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1.384
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +5.765
5 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +8.694
6 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +9.306
7 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +10.152
8 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +11.216
9 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +11.514
10 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +12.344
11 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +12.518
12 M. Fritz Yamaha YZF R1 +14.342
13 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +15.591
14 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +22.917
15 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +24.924
16 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +30.155
17 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +30.249
18 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +30.804
19 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +37.768
20 J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +52.907
Not Classified
RET A. Delbianco Honda CBR1000 RR-R 2 Laps
RET T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 2 Laps
RET K. Hanika Yamaha YZF R1 7 Laps

Most WorldSBK Two

Toprak Razgatlioglu and Scott Redding were first and second on the grid and on the same tyre combination (standard SC1 front and SCX rear), Jonathan Rea had opted for the SC1 front and SC0 rear. After hitting the front, Redding never looked back and beat Razgatlioglu to the flag, whilst Rea was a distant third.

Michael Rinaldi

It was a blinding start from Toprak Razgatlioglu, who grabbed the holeshot from team-mate Andrea Locatelli. Scott Redding didn’t get off the line well but quickly recovered to third, whilst Jonathan Rea was down in fourth with team-mate Alex Lowes knocking right at his door, with Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in sixth.

There was a Turn 1 pile-up with Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) crashing, taking down Alessandro Delbianco (MIE Racing Honda Team); the incident forced Karel Hanika (IXS-YART Yamaha), Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) and Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) to go across the gravel. All riders were on their feet and relatively OK.

Scott Redding

Prodding and probing all the time, particularly at Turn 1, Scott Redding finally got ahead of Andrea Locatelli on Lap 3 at Turn 20, placing his Ducati in the middle of the two Pata Yamaha riders. Jonathan Rea’s SC0 tyre had now come into its own and he was right with the three ahead of him, as team-mate Lowes started to drop off. Further down the field, it was a bright start from Leon Haslam (Team HRC), who came up through the order into seventh from tenth on the grid.

Lap 5 saw Redding hit the front at Turn 1, passing Razgatlioglu after drawing alongside his rival down the front straight and getting the job finalised in the braking area. Meanwhile, Jonathan Rea wasn’t making the in-roads predicted, he was now eight-tenths behind Andrea Locatelli and slowly slipping back towards Alex Lowes, just half-a second splitting them after seven laps. However, on Lap 8, Locatelli and Lowes both made errors, meaning Rea was now back in the fight for third and got ahead of Locatelli on Lap 9.

Ruben Rinaldi

It was a tight fight for sixth place as Sykes held position ahead of Leon Haslam, whilst Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was eighth. Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was up in ninth from 17th on the grid, whilst Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) having a quiet race in tenth place, but his pace began to pick up as the race evolved. Three laps later and it was all change in a first chicane shuffle, with Rinaldi now sixth ahead of Sykes, van der Mark, Gerloff and Haslam, with the ‘Pocket Rocket’ suddenly dropping back into the clutches of team-mate Alvaro Bautista, who eventually got ahead of him with six to go.

Michael Van Der Mark and Tom Sykes

Meanwhile, back at the front, Scott Redding was riding the race of his life as he eased clear of Razgatlioglu and broke the Turkish rider’s spirit. With the gap now over three-seconds and Razgatlioglu settling for second, Redding was able to run his own pace.

Behind the top two, Rea was a further seven-seconds behind whilst Locatelli was keeping him honest in fourth. Alex Lowes, also using the SCX tyre, was being caught by Rinaldi, van der Mark and Gerloff and with two laps to go, Lowes had less than a second back to Rinaldi.

Scott Redding rode the perfect race for a first win since Estoril’s Tissot Superpole Race, taking the plaudits of the passionate Czech fans at Most. Razgatlioglu finished second and is now just three-points behind Jonathan Rea in the Championship – Rea himself finishing third.

Sunday Race 2 Podium – 1) S. Redding, 2) T. Razgatlioglu, 3) J. Rea

Locatelli took fourth in another stunning performance, whilst Michael Ruben Rinaldi got fifth on the final lap with a pass on Alex Lowes at Turn 1. Yamaha’s strength’s this weekend mean that they are now three points clear of Kawasaki in the manufacturer standings, with Ducati another three further back.

Lowes held on for sixth as he ran out of tyre life at the end of the race, whilst former team-mate Michael van der Mark was top BMW in seventh. Garrett Gerloff took a solid eighth as his trademark late-race pace saw him come on strong. Ninth went to Tom Sykes, whilst Alvaro Bautista completed the top ten. Leon Haslam was eleventh ahead of Chaz Davies who fought back after Turn 1-Lap 1 drama.

Alvaro Bautista

Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team), Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport Yamaha) completed the points in Race 2. Behind them, Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing), Isaac Viñales, Karel Hanika, Marvin Fritz (IXS-YART Yamaha), Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and teammate Jayson Uribe – after coming into the pits – completed the final results.

Most WorldSBK Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R /
2 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +3.587
3 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +12.460
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +15.206
5 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +19.479
6 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +19.901
7 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +20.034
8 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +20.250
9 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +24.043
10 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +25.257
11 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +29.203
12 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +38.396
13 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +41.674
14 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +45.843
15 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +54.144
16 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR +54.354
17 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m05.085
18 K. Hanika Yamaha YZF R1 +1m08.662
19 M. Fritz Yamaha YZF R1 +1m12.286
20 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m12.374
21 J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1 Lap
Not Classified
RET A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R /
RET A. Delbianco Honda CBR1000 RR-R /

WorldSBK Quotes

Scott Redding – P1

“I had a lot of emotions both in my head and in my heart. I only had one goal and that was to win for Jacey, for Brad (Jones), for myself. It was a very positive weekend even though I was a little upset yesterday with how the race ended. But it’s clear that hot reactions can be wrong sometimes. The championship standings? I don’t want to think in those terms. I just want to get the most out of every race. Then we’ll do the math at the end of the season.”

Scott Redding proposed to girlfriend Jacey on the podium

Toprak Razgatlioglu – P2

“I am really happy, for me it has been a very good weekend – my team did an incredible job and we are working really hard. Two wins, one second position – not too bad! In the last race, we tried a little bit different suspension set-up but in the race I did not feel quite as good. I tried to follow Scott, and I tried also to keep the rear tyre, but after some laps I felt some rear chatter and less grip. I say at this point, okay, second position is enough for me because we take such good points for the championship this weekend. It is also very good for Yamaha to be leading the Manufacturer championship, and also very good situation for me – this year is the first time that I am very close with Jonny in the Riders’ Championship. It is different for me and maybe I am feeling also sometimes a bit stressed! But I am focused only on each race, because I am fighting for the win always, this is important. It is not always easy! I am ready for the fight in Navarra, I like the track – we will see!”

Jonathan Rea – P3

“In the Superpole race I was completely on the limit, extracting all the potential from our Ninja ZX-10RR. It was a fun race but I made a small mistake and got sucked in behind Toprak a little bit. In the second race I had opted for the hard rear tyre, the more conservative option, because I never did many laps with the SCX tyre, except in the Superpole race for ten laps. My early rhythm was OK but I got a little bit stuck behind Locatelli, but after I went past him could not close the gap to Scott and Toprak. They had better rhythm today so it was more about third. I did not accept that on the grid but I thought maybe in the second part of the race it would come to me because I had the hard tyre, but I started with less grip and the drop off was the same. We are only halfway through the championship and the twists and turns that have happened already can happen in the second half of the season as well. At least I am at the top with a very small points gap to Toprak but we know who we are fighting and what we are fighting with. We have a lot of experience to lean on from the past, so I feel in a good position.”

Jonathan Rea

Andrea Locatelli – P4

“This has been our best weekend, because we made the podium and two fourth places – we also take some good points and this is important for the championship position because we are in eighth position and not so far from P4, which is not so bad! The feeling with the bike now is coming more and more easy. I can ride and I can push, and for sure we now have a lot of races coming up where I think we can do very well. We had a good test in Navarra, and after we go to Magny-Cours where I had a really good feeling last year, and also Barcelona, Jerez are such good tracks. I think overall I have a little bit more experience compared to the start of the season, and I can fight with the first group. I improve a lot and this weekend we are really happy, we didn’t make any mistakes and the team did a really good job. I’m so happy with the whole team, we work so well together and the relationship is nice, like a small family and we aim to continue this way. Now, we will see for the next race!”

Michael Rinaldi – P5

“It was a positive race overall. Unfortunately, the result of the Superpole Race compromised our chances of fighting for the podium. At the beginning of the race, I didn’t have enough grip to push as hard as I could, but from the middle of the race the feeling improved and I was able to pass Haslam and Sykes to catch Lowes, too. I’m relatively satisfied even though it’s clear that we have to work to be faster. I would like to congratulate Scott for the beautiful victory and for his proposal to Jacey.”

Michael Rinaldi

Alex Lowes – P6

“In Race Two for the first few laps I felt quite good and I was able to follow the front group. Then obviously the second half it was not as easy for me. I have some restrictions on myself and I can’t ride like I want. This track is not an easy track, it is physical track, and it was not an easy track for Kawasaki. We could see how hard Johnny was having to push. We could see that today we made some good steps forward with the bike set-up. I was a lot better entering the corner and I was able to flow a lot more. In this track you need to be smooth and flowing. I felt better today with the bike that’s for sure.”

Michael Van Der Mark – P7

“I think the at the end of the weekend it was not too bad. Especially this morning in the Superpole race I had such good pace, I improved over a second compared to yesterday and I was really happy on the bike. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a good start, I was a bit unlucky at T1 and couldn’t gain as many positions as I hoped so for race two I had to start from 17th again. The first run off the line was good and then the bike started to wheelie so we lost a little bit of time. Something happened at T1, but I was quite smart and took a tight line and avoided a lot of people. After that we had good pace and I was catching the guys in front one by one but I just couldn’t get by Rinaldi. Together we passed some people and in the end I tried to grab sixth or fifth. Overall, I think after all the struggles this weekend the team deserved a solid result.”

Michael Van Der Mark

Tom Sykes – P9

“It is what it is, I’m not entirely happy. In the sprint race I was able to maintain ten laps but in the second race I was struggling to just finish off the turn in the latter stages. There is still work to be done. We made a couple of small changes but we can’t do what our competitors are doing in the last eight laps. We have learnt a lot this weekend and certainly I’ve been close to several bikes, so I know where we are strong and where we need to work on. Overall, it was not the best weekend but there were some positives in Superpole and in the sprint race, so now for the longer race we can look to improve that package and keep working.”

Alvaro Bautista – P10

“Today was a difficult day for us in the sense that this morning, in the warm-up, we tried a slightly different set-up but in the end it didn’t give us the feeling we were hoping for and so we went back to what we had in Race 1. I made a decent start and finished ninth, earning a spot on the third row for Race 2. This afternoon unfortunately I had a bit of bad luck through the first turn because I got caught up in a race incident involving other riders and although I managed not to fall, I slipped a long way down the field. I recovered a little ground after that and was able to lap more or less with the times of the first five or six riders, but not faster than them so I could not close the gap. This is our limit, if we start well, we can stay with them but if we are behind, we never catch up. Having said that, I want to thank both the team and HRC because I know they are working hard and doing their best, but we have to take a big step forward if we want to fight for the positions we are aiming for.”

Leon Haslam – P11

“We didn’t change much on the bike today, but I tried carrying out a few different experiments throughout the race. We made a good start in race 2 and I was in a good battle with Sykes for P6/P7 and felt quite comfortable. But over the last eight or nine laps I had a problem with my shoulder and it was very difficult for me to brake effectively. So not a good situation with this small shoulder injury, and a little disappointing too, because through the first part of the race that was the best I’ve felt all weekend. I felt more at ease and know we had the potential to fight for sixth or seventh, but instead we closed eleventh.”

Leon Haslam

WorldSBK Championship Standings

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

Most WorldSSP Race Two

Race 2 at the Autodrom Most for the FIM Supersport World Championship was another thrilling fight at the front for a 19-lap encounter. After taking a victory in Race 1, Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) was aiming for a double win, but it wouldn’t be easy.

Dominique Aegerter

Odendaal and pole-sitter Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGO Team) had opted for the harder SC0 compound, whilst second on the grid and Championship leader Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) went for the SCX rear tyre, and it would be these three who went until the final laps in contention for victory. In the end, Aegerter came out on top, with Odendaal and Gonzalez close behind.

It was a messy run into the first chicane, as Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) went sideways into the opening turn and went right off track, narrowly avoiding the gravel and re-joining way down field in tenth. He wasn’t the only one to make a mistake though as pole-sitter and Race 1 podium finisher Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGO Team) went through the run-off and re-joined at Turn 3.

Jules Cluzel

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) found himself at the front ahead of Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha), with Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) once again in third, ahead of Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) who was fourth from 11th.

Soon, it would be a disaster for Jules Cluzel as he was wiped out at Turn 1 by Kevin Manfredi on Lap 2. A lap later and it would be Steven Odendaal’s turn to take to the Turn 1 run-off, whilst Dominique Aegerter was now the race leader after getting ahead into the first turn, but it was behind where the moves were also being made, as Manuel Gonzalez picked his way through on Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) and Philipp Oettl. Federico Caricasulo was fifth, but not in the lead group of four.

Steven Odendaal

Gonzalez momentarily got into the lead on Lap 6 at the fast, sweeping Turn 4, but Aegerter held on through Turns 5 and 6, with just millimetres between the leading group. All of the battling allowed the leading six riders to concertina together, with Steven Odendaal now beginning to recover from his Turn 1 misdemeanour. He was up to fifth ahead of Caricasulo. Aegerter continued to lead ahead of Gonzalez and now Bernardi, who made a bold move at Turn 2 on Oettl for third.

On Lap 10 and going into Turn 1, Steven Odendaal got into fourth ahead of Oettl whilst Bernardi went wide at Turn 1 and took to the run-off, dropping to fifth place. This then meant that Odendaal was now third, whilst Aegerter and Gonzalez were up ahead of him and slightly spaced out. Odendaal set the fastest lap whilst Caricasulo was now back into the top five a lap later, passing Bernardi at Turn 1 on Lap 11, whilst a technical problem took Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) out of the race further behind.

Federico Caricasulo

As the race entered its final third, Aegerter’s pace at the front began to fluctuate between mid-to-high 1’35s and low 1’36s, bringing Manuel Gonzalez right back into play, whilst closing in like a shark behind them both was Steven Odendaal, with just half a second covering the battle for victory and the leading three riders.

Philipp Oettl was now a distant fourth, whilst Luca Bernardi was back in fifth ahead of Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha). With four to go, Odendaal went into second place at Turn 21, keeping the power on and the bike turned between the final two corners – now, it was down to Odendaal to see if he could get ahead of Aegerter.

It was time to drop the pace at the front in the closing stages, as Dominique Aegerter had enough of a gap, with the Swiss taking a sixth win of the 2021 season and proving that his tyre gamble was the way to go, ahead of Steven Odendaal and Manuel Gonzalez.

Dominique Aegerter

The Spaniard backing up his first podium of 2021 from Saturday, despite being desperately close to second again in Race 2. With Aegerter back on top and Odendaal in second, the gap in the Championship is now 37.

Fourth place went to Oettl whilst Bernardi completed the top five ahead of fellow countryman Federico Caricasulo, who returned to the top six. Valentin Debise was a solid seventh ahead of Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti), whilst it was Can Öncü who once again faded as the race wore on to finish in ninth ahead of fellow Kawasaki rider Raffaele De Rosa.

11th went to Max Enderlein (Kallio Racing) ahead of Marcel Brenner (VFT Racing), Luca Grunwald (HRP Suzuki), Ondrej Vostatek and Sheridan Morais (Wojcik Racing Team) who completed the points. There was a big crash in the closing stages for Croatian Martin Vugrinec (Ferquest – Unior Racing Team) at Turn 17, but he was up on his feet.

World Supersport Race 2 Podium – 1) D. Aegerter, 2) S. Odendaal, 3) M. Gonzalez

Most WorldSSP Race Two Results

Pos No. Rider Bike……………………….. Time/Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +1.064
3 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 +1.166
4 p. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +7.303
5 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +8.528
6 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +8.536
7 V. Debise Yamaha YZF R6 +8.646
8 N. Tuuli MV Agusta +9.513
9 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +12.084
10 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +12.841
11 M. Enderlein Yamaha YZF R6 +28.337
12 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +30.592
13 L.  Grunwald Suzuki GSX-R600 +39.474
14 O. Vostatek Yamaha YZF R6 +39.536
15 S. Morais Yamaha YZF R6 +39.555
16 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +41.082
17 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +42.795
18 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +44.894
19 L.  Ottaviani Kawasaki ZX-6R +50.012
20 D. Webb Yamaha YZF R6 +55.157
21 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +1m32.618
22 P. Szkopek Yamaha YZF R6 +4 Laps
Not Classifieds
RET M. Vugrinec Yamaha YZF R6 3 Laps
RET J.  Mrkyvka Yamaha YZF R6 8 Laps
RET R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 9 Laps
RET M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R 11 Laps
RET L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 17 Laps
RET J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 18 Laps
RET K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 18 Laps
RET L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R /
RET V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 /

WorldSSP Championship Standings

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

Most WorldSSP 300 Two

Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) got the holeshot into Turn 1 before Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) got ahead of the Race 1 winner. There was a pile-up at the first chicane however, with Meikon Kawakami, Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) and Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing).

World Supersport 300 Start at Most

As the race settled down towards the end of the opening lap, it was Oliver Konig (Movisio by MIE) who was starting to shine as he took second from Steeman at Turn 20, before leading at Turn 1 of Lap 2. Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM) was now into second too, as the Brit gained places.

The lead swapped and changed throughout the opening laps, with Huertas, Steeman and Booth-Amos hit the front on Lap 4. At the end of the lap, there was drama for Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK) who, having qualified in fourth, was out after tucking the front at Turn 21.

Alejandro Carrion

Back at the front, Adrian Huertas was on rails and within a lap, had a half a second lead on Booth-Amos and Konig, whilst Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) was now right in the mix. Boot-Amos put in a stunning Lap 6 to bridge the gap to Huertas and set the fastest lap. Behind the front three, Konig, Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) and Steeman were also in contention.

With 7 laps remaining, it was a disaster for Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) who ran off-track before crashing as he re-joined, whilst Kevin Sabatucci (Viñales Racing Team) also went down but was up on his feet. A lap later, Miguel Duarte (Yamaha MS Racing) also retired.

Booth Amos leading a pack

Back at the front of the race, Huertas was defending his lead from Booth-Amos and Carrion, whilst Steeman had got his pace back and was in the mix in fourth ahead of Sofuoglu, who was working his way through the field but with four to go, he slowed up as a mechanical problem took him out.

With two laps to go, Alejandro Carrion got a massive slipstream to briefly lead, before Huertas and Booth-Amos returned to the front. It was a leading group of six as Oliver Konig had now dropped to seventh and became detached from the group.

Turn 1 on the last lap saw it all change as defending Champion Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) hit the front whilst his teammate Yuta Okaya almost wiped out Huertas, pushing the Spaniard back to sixth before he recovered to fifth ahead of Konig.

Adrian Huertas

It was all down to a run to the line for the leading four, as Carrion led coming out of the final corner before Booth-Amos slipstreamed into first. However, picking up the biggest slipstream, Jeffrey Buis – who was shuffled back to third at Turn 20 – blasted ahead to take victory by 0.008s ahead of Booth-Amos, whilst Carrion took third ahead of Steeman, with the Spaniard taking back-to-back podiums. Fifth place went to the recovering Huertas, who was robbed of a chance to fight for victory, meaning his lead in the title race is slashed to 11 points.

It was the narrowest of wins across the line for Buis

Sixth place belonged to home-hero Konig who did enjoy a stint at the front in the early stages, whilst it was Mirko Gennai (Team BRcorse) who took seventh, backing up his tenth place from Race 1.

Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) was in eighth place ahead of Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) and Hugo De Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300), after running off track in the incident with Samuel Di Sora.

Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing), Petr Svoboda (Wojcik Racing Team), Oscar Nuñez Roldan (SMW Racing), Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) and Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) completed the points.

World Supersport 300 Podium – 1) J.  Buis, 2) T. Booth-Amos, 3) A. Carrion

Most WorldSSP 300 Race two Results

Pos Rider Bike…………………………….. Time/Gap
1 J.  Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 /
2 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.008
3 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.032
4 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R +0.130
5 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.183
6 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.212
7 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +8.149
8 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.163
9 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.290
10 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.353
11 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +8.451
12 P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 +16.804
13 O. Nunez Roldan Kawasaki Ninja 400 +17.155
14 T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +17.238
15 H. Khouri Kawasaki Ninja 400 +17.356
16 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +17.402
17 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +18.030
18 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +20.740
19 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +20.776
20 F. Feigl Kawasaki Ninja 400 +21.485
21 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +21.697
22 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 +23.165
23 F. Palazzi Yamaha YZF-R3 +24.606
24 M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 +26.764
25 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +26.814
26 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +26.914
27 T. Brianti Kawasaki Ninja 400 +26.965
28 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +50.402
29 N. Lisci Yamaha YZF-R3 +58.666
30 J.  Mcmanus Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m04.202
31 J.  Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m04.252
32 M. Szamado Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3 Laps
Not Classified
RET Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 1 Lap
RET U. Orradre Yamaha YZF-R3 1 Lap
RET B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 4 Laps
RET M. Cervenka Kawasaki Ninja 400 4 Laps
RET S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 8 Laps
RET K. Sabatucci Yamaha YZF-R3 8 Laps
RET M. Duarte Yamaha YZF-R3 8 Laps
RET V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 9 Laps
RET R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 11 Laps
RET C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 13 Laps
RET J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 13 Laps
RET M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 /

WorldSSP 300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  129
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  118
 3  Jeffrey Buis  86
 4  Samuel Di Sora  77
 5  Victor Steeman  63
 6  Hugo De Cancellis  62
 7  Yuta Okaya  57
 8  Koen Meuffels  54
 9  Ana Carrasco  43
 10  Meikon Kawakami  43
 11  Alejandro Carrion  41
 12  Unai Orradre  39
 13  Oliver Konig  37
 14  Mirko Gennai  34
 15  Ton Kawakami  34
 16  Bahattin Sofuoglu  32
 17  Dorren Loureiro  31
 18  Gabriele Mastroluca  22
 19  Bruno Ieraci  21
 20  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  13
 21  Harry Khouri  12
 22  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  12
 23  Kevin Sabatucci  10
 24  Filippo Maria Palazzi  10
 25  Vicente Perez Selfa  9
 26  Petr Svoboda  7
 27  Marc Garcia  7
 28  Ruben Bijman  4
 29  Oscar Nunez Roldan  3
 30  Alfonso Coppola  2
 31  Thomas Brianti  2
 32  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 33  Inigo Iglesias  2
 34  Christian Stange  1
 35  Johan Gimbert  1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toprak wins Most WorldSBK opener as Rea crashes out

2021 WorldSBK Round Six
Tissot Czech Round – Saturday

Most WorldSBK Race One

World Superbike’s first ever race at the Autodrom Most in the Czech Republic fired up on Saturday and proved a thrilling spectacle across the 22 laps of the new circuit. After Rea crashed twice, it was a head-to-head grandstand finish between Razgatlioglu and Redding, with the Turk coming out on top in a final lap thriller.

First ever World Superbike race at Most gets underway

As the lights went out, Rea and Razgatlioglu got their customary flying starts and into Turn 1, the Turk got the holeshot ahead of Rea, whilst Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) out-braked himself and had to use the escape road. Scott Redding was third whilst Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) blasted up the order into fourth, from eighth on the grid. Sykes rejoined the action in fifth, whilst it was a bright start for Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), up from 11th and into seventh.

Rea and Razgatlioglu led the field into turn one

Rea put a stunning pass on Razgatlioglu at Turn 18 on Lap 2 but ran wide, giving Toprak the lead back and allowing Redding to come steaming on through and into second. Redding wasn’t done there though, as he then blasted through on Razgatlioglu on Lap 3 at Turn 1. Razgatlioglu then went wide at Turn 10, with Rea hitting second as the gloves came off.

Redding, Rea, Razgatlioglu

There was drama down field as Alessandro Delbianco (MIE Racing Honda Team) crashed out at Turn 15 on Lap 3, before Karel Hanika (IXS-YART Yamaha) crashed on Lap 4. The crashes kept coming as American debutant Jayson Uribe (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) also went down at Turn 15. Big names were also part of the drama as Lap 5 claimed Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) at Turn 1, before Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) joined him in a separate incident, both able to rejoin before Davies eventually retired.

Locatelli, Bassani

On Lap 7, Rea had been closed back in by Razgatlioglu as both were dropped by Redding by 1.8 seconds. Turn 13 saw the Ulsterman make a mistake, allowing Razgatlioglu to pounce at Turn 14 before Rea got him back at Turn 20. Toprak then repaid the favour at Turn 1 on the following lap before he began to edge closer to Redding. Further down the field, it was drama for Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) on Lap 8, as he suffered a big engine blow up at Turn 20 but thankfully didn’t leave any fluid on the track. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) quietly went about his business and was into fourth ahead of Rinaldi.

Rinaldi, Locatelli

On Lap 10, it was close again between Razgatlioglu and Rea with the title battle now being played out between the two, whilst Tito Rabat’s (Barni Racing Team) race was over as he crashed at Turn 1, before Alvaro Bautista tumbled down the order from sixth to 11th after a mistake, promoting Italian rookie sensation into sixth place, placing him as top Independent rider. Further down and having been in the points, Belgian rider Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) added to the Italian team’s tricky Race 1, crashing out at Turn 15.

Rea, Razgatlioglu

The gap between Redding and Razgatlioglu was now down to under a second as Lap 13 started, but Lap 14 would see a major moment for the race and an even bigger moment for the Championship. Jonathan Rea, chasing Toprak, tucked the front from third at Turn 1, just as he and Razgatlioglu were edging closer to Redding. Rea remounted in the blink of an eye, circulating in 11th but with eight to go, he had a chance of the top ten.

The tyres were now coming into play in the final six laps, as Razgatlioglu with the SCX tyre was now right with race leader Redding, who in-turn was setting a strong pace. Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), who was having a quiet race in sixth, also began setting his personal best lap and sector times, also on the SCX tyre. There was also a big battle for fourth, as Axel Bassani was giving Rinaldi something to think about.

With five to go, Rea crashed again, this time heavily at Turn 20 but the Championship leader was up on his feet. Meanwhile, in a titanic fight at the front, Razgatlioglu went around the outside of Redding at Turn 14 with four to go, before Redding blasted back ahead at Turn 1 a lap later. The gloves were off as the passionate Most fans were on their feet, with WorldSBK putting on a stunning spectacle in the first WorldSBK race at the track.

The last lap was upon the leading two and Redding rode a fantastic first half a lap, but Razgatlioglu was relentless in the final two sectors, as he made a bold move at Turn 15 but ran wide. Everyone sat back, thinking Redding had the race done but a stunning run through Turn 16, 17, 18 and 19 brought Razgatlioglu back into contention and he lay it all on the line, putting on a thrilling move at Turn 20, running Redding wide. Redding powered the Ducati to the line out of the last corner and closed right in, but it was too late. Razgatlioglu took one of his finest wins, with Redding in second and Andrea Locatelli taking third, some 13.8 seconds behind.

Razgatlioglu took the win by four-hundredths of a second…

Most WorldSBK Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike……………………………….. Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.040
3 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +13.838
4 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.650
5 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.935
6 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +17.099
7 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +22.590
8 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +24.728
9 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +26.924
10 M. Fritz Yamaha YZF R1 +39.559
11 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +58.991
12 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +59.105
13 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m21.929
14 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 1 Lap
Not Classified
RET J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 5 Laps
RET M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR 9 Laps
RET L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR 12 Laps
RET T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 13 Laps
RET J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 16 Laps
RET C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R 17 Laps
RET K. Hanika Yamaha YZF R1 19 Laps
RET J.  Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR 19 Laps
RET A. Delbianco Honda CBR1000 RR-R 20 Laps
WorldSBK Autodrom Most – Race 1
1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK)
2. Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +0.040s
3. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) +13.838s

Quotes

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

“I am really happy because it was a very good race me, but also hard work! I felt the grip was low from the start and so I just tried every lap to have the best possible lap time, to make no mistakes and try to catch Redding. Last lap I just tried my best, when Jonny crashed I knew I needed to take as many points as possible and so I pushed for the win. In the last lap I was fighting with Scott, I try every corner to attack because I need the full 25 points. Thanks to my team, because this weekend they have done an incredible job working, and it is a new track for everybody but Andrea and I both arrive on the podium. Tomorrow we will try again, we will see, but today was a good start!”

Scott Redding – P2

“I can’t be disappointed with this second place because it’s still an important result also for the World Championship standings. If I have to be honest, though, I think Toprak’s maneuver was very aggressive. But these are races, maybe tomorrow I’ll have to be more aggressive too. In any case it was a good race. The feeling with the bike was really good. I’ll try to do better tomorrow”.

Andrea Locatelli – P3

“An amazing podium for us, it’s so good. We started really well this weekend and I feel very strong here. We need to search a little bit for more grip in the rear to try and close the gap to the front group. In the end, my team were able to do a really good job today and I’m really happy. With Toprak, with Yamaha we work so well together and we improve every session which is important and the double podium is really nice for the team. We will try to enjoy this moment a little bit and spend some time tonight working towards tomorrow. For sure, in the Superpole Race will be important to try and stay with the front group for Race 2.”

Michael Rinaldi – P4

“I’m satisfied with this result especially because we were coming from a not easy period. The beginning of this weekend was quite complicated too, but the team has done a great job, facing the difficulties without never giving up; today we made great progress and this is the right direction: now we will work on the data we have collected to try to do better tomorrow”.

Alvaro Bautista – P7

“Mixed feelings today because we could have done more, both in the Superpole and the race. During the qualifying session I had a problem with the rear brake which prevented us from making at least a top-six lap time. It was a shame that happened in qualifying but at least it wasn’t during the race! I was able to make a good start in the race anyway, and entered the first chicane in seventh position, I think. During the first part of the race, I was lacking traction and the rear was sliding around a lot. This is something of a recurring issue for us, and we struggle with turning, which means we’re forced to keep a line through the corners that’s not ideal. Having said that, I was still able to maintain sufficient pace, close to the top five. Unfortunately, maybe midway through the race, I missed a gear at turn 15 and ran off track, dropping back to eleventh or twelfth. I recovered again, lapping not too badly but I’d lost too much time. I’m sorry about that, because with one thing and another today, we missed the opportunity to finish further ahead. Tomorrow we’ll try to do our best, as always, but to really take a step forward we need to improve our package.”

Leon Haslam – P8

“For the first time this year, we made a big improvement on the qualifying tyre during Superpole. I was up nearly three tenths which would have put me in around third place, but then we had a small problem in the final corners. I was a little frustrated because that could perhaps have been our first front row of the season, but we finished just one tenth from the front row anyway, so not bad anyway. The race was tough though, and I honestly felt like I was just managing the situation. The good news is that in running the race together more or less together, me and Alvaro were able to compare and contrast what we were doing and can hopefully learn from this as we prepare for tomorrow’s races.”

Tom Sykes – P9

“The qualifying result for sure was nice. When we put the Q tyre into the BMW M 1000 RR, I am able to ride the bike much more naturally, and the bike does things much better. But unfortunately for the race there was a mix of tyres. We went down the safer route and this certainly did not help us. After the start, going into T1 I was in there and I’ve been happy with my braking all weekend, but the guys had stopped, and I didn’t want to collect anyone, so I took the option to spoil my first lap. Then the second time somebody was up the inside of me and touched my handlebar, so I wasn’t able to make the turn. For tomorrow, we will look to improve the set up, and we will revisit the tyre choice. Overall, I am a little bit disappointed, also disappointed with the final race result but we have learnt a lot today. Tomorrow we will get two more chances.”

Tom Sykes
 Alex Lowes – P13

“A tough day at a tough track for me. Physically I am not good enough to ride at 100% and this track is really hard in that respect. I had a bad start and I made a little mistake and that first corner is quite hard in general. The pace was what it was after the fall but we got some points on the board. A tough day but we will try to do better tomorrow.”

Jonathan Rea – DNF

“I am perfectly OK after today’s falls. In the first crash going into the chicane I was just about on line but it was very strange because I crashed early on the bumps. It seems like a similar crash to the one I had in Donington. The bike was quite bent but I could see after I had picked it up I was in 11th place – so in a points scoring position, I was just riding around. Honestly, I do not know what happened in the penultimate corner. I was concentrating on what I was doing, not pushing super-hard and I just crashed. I was doing everything OK and then I was in the gravel. I am just frustrated with the outcome. In Superpole I had lost a bit of time early in my best lap and I knew I really had to put the last two sectors together. That last sector has been a strong point for us all weekend so I knew if I was calm and hit my points on the track it would be good enough for the front row, but maybe not pole.”

Jonathan Rea
Michael van der Mark – DNF

“It was a really disappointing day, to be honest. In Superpole, I had bad traffic on both outings on the Q tyre, which was such bad luck. It’s a shame as I felt we could really make a step forward, so it was not easy starting from P17 on the grid. Anyway, in the race I got a good start and had good pace. I was fighting my way towards the front and was feeling good with the bike but unfortunately when I was sat in P8 I lost the front going into T20. I was trying hard so it’s a shame because we lost some valuable points. It was a difficult day overall, but we can be happy with the pace we had in race one.”


WorldSBK Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  243
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  231
 3  Scott Redding  182
 4  Alex Lowes  130
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  124
 6  Garrett Gerloff  115
 7  Tom Sykes  109
 8  Michael Van Der Mark  104
 9  Andrea Locatelli  100
 10  Chaz Davies  85
 11  Alvaro Bautista  77
 12  Axel Bassani  71
 13  Leon Haslam  63
 14  Lucas Mahias  36
 15  Tito Rabat  23
 16  Kohta Nozane  23
 17  Isaac Vinales  19
 18  Eugene Laverty  14
 19  Jonas Folger  8
 20  Leandro Mercado  7
 21  Marvin Fritz  6
 22  Christophe Ponsson  6
 23  Loris Cresson  3
 24  Andrea Mantovani  2
 25  Luke Mossey  2

Most WorldSSP Race One

The 2021 FIM Supersport World Championship took to Autodrom Most in Race 1 on Saturday afternoon, and it was building to be a thrilling finish before a Red Flag was waved. A hair-raising opening few laps eventually settled down and it was Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) who took victory as the Red Flag came out, denying Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGO Team) and Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing).

Most WorldSSP Race One

It was a lightening start from Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) from fourth on the grid, as he grabbed the holeshot, whilst Philipp Oettl was second and ahead of fast-starting teammate Can Öncü Kawasaki Puccetti Racing). Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) was right in the mix, with pole-sitter Manuel Gonzalez going backwards and Steven Odendaal. Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) was an early crasher at Turn 8, whilst Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha) also failed to complete the first lap.

Before long, both Oettl and Öncü worked their way to the front and got ahead of Cluzel, before Öncü hit the front at the start of Lap 3 but it would be swapping and changing in what was an epic opening to WorldSSP Race 1. At the start of Lap 4, it was Steven Odendaal who went from fourth to first in the braking area at Turn 1, before Philipp Oettl got through on teammate Öncü into Turn 15. The Turk fought back at Turn 16 but clipped his teammate, being relegated to sixth whilst Odendaal now had a small gap beginning to appear. A lap later and pole-sitter Gonzalez had a huge moment at Turn 17, somehow staying upright.

There was a big crash on Lap 8 as Marc Alcoba (Yamaha MS Racing) crashed heavily at Turn 13. He was holding his wrist as he got onto his feet. At the front, Odendaal’s lead was hovering around the half a second mark, with Oettl and Gonzalez chasing him down. However, Dominique Aegerter was now starting to pick his way through the field and was in fourth. At the half-race distance, Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) was up into fifth after passing Luca Bernardi (CM Racing).

On Lap 11, Gonzalez set the fastest lap of the race and then got ahead of Oettl at Turn 1 on Lap 12. Having crashed earlier in the race, Leonardo Taccini (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) was now being lapped by the leading three, costing Odendaal time and bringing Gonzalez and Oettl back into contention. Odendaal, having managed his lead previously, was now defending it, whilst title rival Aegerter was zeroing in all the time from fourth.

Just as the race was reaching its climax, the Red Flag was displayed as the race had just tipped into two-thirds race distance, meaning the race would not be restarted and full points were on offer. Odendaal took his fourth win of the year, ahead of Manuel Gonzalez who took his first WorldSSP podium. Philipp Oettl took third behind the Yamahas, with Odendaal giving Yamaha a 104th win in WorldSSP, meaning they equal Honda’s record at the top in terms of manufacturers’ wins in WorldSSP.

Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team)

Dominique Aegerter took fourth place ahead of Federico Caricasulo and Luca Bernardi, whilst early race leader Jules Cluzel dropped to seventh. Another early leader, Can Öncü, was eighth as he dropped back through the race, ahead of Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) and Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team). Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) was 11th, ahead of Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura), Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team), Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Federico Fuligni (VFT Racing) completing the points.

WorldSSP Autodrom Most – Race 1
1. Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team)
2. Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) +0.430s
3. Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) +0.521s

Most WorldSSP Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 /
2 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 +0.369
3 P Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.661
4 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 +2.074
5 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +5.649
6 L.  Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +5.893
7 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +6.188
8 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +6.507
9 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 1 Sector
10 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 1 Sector
11 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 1 Sector
12 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R 1 Sector
13 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 1 Sector
14 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
15 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
16 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
17 M. Vugrinec Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
18 L.  Grunwald Suzuki GSX-R600 2 Sectors
19 P. Hobelsberger Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
20 O. Vostatek Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
21 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
22 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R 2 Sectors
23 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
24 L.  Ottaviani Kawasaki ZX-6R 2 Sectors
25 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 2 Sectors
26 P. Szkopek Yamaha YZF R6 3 Sectors
27 S. Morais Yamaha YZF R6 3 Sectors
28 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 3 Sectors
29 M. Enderlein Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
30 J.  Mrkyvka Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
Not Classified
NC L.  Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R /
RET M. Alcoba Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET V. Debise Yamaha YZF R6 //
RET D. Webb Yamaha YZF R6 /

WorldSSP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  182
 2  Steven Odendaal  150
 3  Philipp Oettl  124
 4  Luca Bernardi  107
 5  Manuel Gonzalez  104
 6  Jules Cluzel  100
 7  Randy Krummenacher  67
 8  Can Alexander Oncu  51
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  50
 10  Federico Caricasulo  50
 11  Hannes Soomer  47
 12  Marc Alcoba  40
 13  Niki Tuuli  35
 14  Christoffer Bergman  34
 15  Kevin Manfredi  22
 16  Vertti Takala  19
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  16
 18  Peter Sebestyen  15
 19  Sheridan Morais  8
 20  Maria Herrera  7
 21  Filippo Fuligni  6
 22  Michel Fabrizio  6
 23  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 24  Massimo Roccoli  4
 25  Matteo Patacca  3
 26  Stephane Frossard  3
 27  Federico Fuligni  1
 28  Luca Ottaviani  1
 29  Leonardo Taccini  1
 30  Davide Pizzoli  1
 31  Pawel Szkopek  1

Most WorldSSP 300 Race One

The 2021 FIM Supersport 300 World Championship inaugurated WorldSBK paddock racing action at the Autodrom Most and there was drama right from the start. Second-placed rider in the Championship Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) missed the start to the race after a technical issue on the grid. Come the end of the 14-lap encounter, it was Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) who mastered Most by putting a superb ride to break away at the front of the field and dominate the race.

Most WorldSSP 300 Race One

As the race ignited, there was all kinds of drama at the tight Turn 1, as Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) got it all crossed up and narrowly avoided the rear wheel of poleman Victor Steeman. Behind them, several riders ran through the gravel but somehow, everyone stayed upright through the first chicane. Going into Turn 20, three riders crashed: Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing), Vicente Perez (Machado CAME SBK) and Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) out at Turn 20 on the opening lap.

Soon enough, there was an established leading group with Victor Steeman, Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki), Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing), Oliver Konig (Movisio by MIE) and Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) were right there, with Huertas taking the lead at Turn 1. However, as soon as he hit the front, he tucked the front end of his Kawasaki and crashed out. He banged the bars into place and remounted, soon enough lapping around two seconds quicker than the race leaders, making for a thrilling prospect ahead. Home-hero Matthias Cervenka (AC Racing) was another crasher but remounted.

Steeman wasted no time in getting the hammer down and after four laps, had a gap of over a second. Now in what was battle for second, Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) had made great progress, whilst the crowd had the airhorns in full use as home-hero Oliver Konig was right amongst the podium fight. Further behind, Tom Booth-Amos had now hit the points just before the half-race distance point, whilst title rival Adrian Huertas was chasing Booth-Amos down, 15th and 16th respectively with the title battle being played out down field. The crashes kept coming, with Oscar Nuñez (SMW Racing) was on the floor at Turn 1 and then, Nuñez’s teammate Joel Romero hit the back of Niccolo Lisci (Machado CAME SBK) on the exit of Turn 10, falling off the side of his bike, whilst Lisci stayed upright.

With five laps to go, the battle for second went from second to 12th, as Hugo De Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300), Koen Mueffels (MTM Kawasaki), Mirko Gennai (Team BRcorse), Jeffrey Buis, Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK), Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) and Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) joined the duel. Two laps later and Adrian Huertas was more-or-less with them, as he came to within half a second of the rear of the group, making for a thrilling spectacle as the Championship battle now crept through the field. Tom Booth-Amos was right with his title rival too, both of them setting the fastest lap of the race on Lap 12.

Into the final lap and Huertas was now into seventh with Booth-Amos a place behind, whilst Di Sora was under serious pressure from Konig. With the home crowd going crazy, Konig took second going into the final two corners, whilst it was a first podium and thus a first race win for Victor Steeman, who dominated the first ever WorldSSP300 race at Most. Konig took second on the road but was dropped to third for exceeding track limits on the last lap after a post-race penalty, nonetheless the first podium for the Czech Republic in WorldSSP300. Whilst Samuel Di Sora crossed the line in third, he too exceeded track limits on the final lap and was dropped one place, meaning he was fourth behind whilst Alejandro Carrion picked up the pieces of the two ahead of him to finish in second.

Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team)

Bahattin Sofuoglu completed the top five ahead of a stunning Huertas who came back in fine form, ahead of Jeffrey Buis who stayed upright for seventh, ahead of Booth-Amos, De Cancellis, Gennai, Okaya, Perez Gonzalez, Bijman, Meuffels and Christian Stange. 2018 World Champion Ana Carrasco finished in 24th, as she struggled in the Czech Republic. Huertas in sixth and Booth-Amos in eighth means the Spaniard extends his Championship lead by two points over the Brit, now standing at 20.

Australian youngster Harry Khouri missed out on scoring points after crossing the line in P22.

WorldSSP300 Autodrom Most – Race 1
1. Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team)
2. Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) +5.340s
3. Oliver König (Movisio by MIE) +5.345s

Most WorldSSP 300 Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike………………………….. Time/Gap
1 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R /
2 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.340
3 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.345
4 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.350
5 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 +5.359
6 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.712
7 J.  Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +6.216
8 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +6.796
9 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.167
10 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +8.227
11 Y.  Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.250
12 J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.420
13 R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 +8.425
14 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 +8.565
15 C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 +18.903
16 P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.904
17 T. Brianti Kawasaki Ninja 400 +18.913
18 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +19.600
19 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +19.639
20 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +19.733
21 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +20.080
22 H. Khouri Kawasaki Ninja 400 +24.895
23 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 +24.937
24 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +24.964
25 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.070
26 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.125
27 K. Sabatucci Yamaha YZF-R3 +25.323
28 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +25.382
29 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +25.493
30 F. Palazzi Yamaha YZF-R3 +25.742
31 M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 +31.376
32 F. Feigl Kawasaki Ninja 400 +38.504
33 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +38.702
34 M. Szamado Kawasaki Ninja 400 +47.308
35 J.  Mcmanus Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1m09.773
36 N. Lisci Yamaha YZF-R3 +1m09.806
37 M. Duarte Yamaha YZF-R3 +1m22.718
38 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 3 Laps
Not Classified
RET 10 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF-R3 6 Laps
RET 22 J.  Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 7 Laps
RET 33 O. Nunez Roldan Kawasaki Ninja 400 8 Laps
RET 47 M. Cervenka Kawasaki Ninja 400 11 Laps
RET 87 T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 /
RET 21 V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 /

WorldSSP 300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  118
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  98
 3  Samuel Di Sora  77
 4  Jeffrey Buis  61
 5  Yuta Okaya  57
 6  Hugo De Cancellis  56
 7  Victor Steeman  50
 8  Koen Meuffels  46
 9  Ana Carrasco  43
 10  Meikon Kawakami  43
 11  Unai Orradre  39
 12  Bahattin Sofuoglu  32
 13  Ton Kawakami  32
 14  Dorren Loureiro  31
 15  Oliver Konig  27
 16  Alejandro Carrion  25
 17  Mirko Gennai  25
 18  Bruno Ieraci  21
 19  Gabriele Mastroluca  17
 20  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  12
 21  Harry Khouri  11
 22  Kevin Sabatucci  10
 23  Filippo Maria Palazzi  10
 24  Vicente Perez Selfa  9
 25  Marc Garcia  7
 26  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  6
 27  Ruben Bijman  4
 28  Petr Svoboda  3
 29  Alfonso Coppola  2
 30  Thomas Brianti  2
 31  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 32  Inigo Iglesias  2
 33  Christian Stange  1
 34  Johan Gimbert  1

2021 Czech Schedule (AEST)

Time Class Event
17:00 WorldSBK WUP
17:25 WorldSSP WUP
17:50 WorldSSP300 WUP
19:00 WorldSBK Superpole Race
20:30 WorldSSP Race 2
22:00 WorldSBK Race 2
23:15 WorldSSP300 Race 2

Source: MCNews.com.au

Toprak quickest out of blocks as WorldSBK gets underway at Most

2021 WorldSBK Round Six
Tissot Czech Round – Friday


WorldSBK’s first day of action at Most was blighted by weather from start to finish after an initial delay to the day’s action due to heavy fog. Come the close of business on day one, it was Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) who led the way on the combined times after a dry FP1, with Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) and Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) completing the top three, with just 14 riders setting a time in the wet afternoon session.

Razgatlioglu had a rather quiet opening session, never dropping outside of the leading positions before vaulting into top spot with less than ten minutes to go. Setting the fastest ever two-wheeled lap around Most, the Turkish rider only did two laps in FP2 and was second, but overall, it was an inconclusive but positive opening day at Most.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

Today was the first time I ride at Most circuit, but I like it! It’s like “my style” track because of the mix of slow and very fast corners. I’m happy because today for me was a good day. The plan was for a race simulation in the second session but then it started to rain, so we ride some laps in the wet conditions. We are happy with this though, it was the first time I was a little bit faster and also the confidence in these conditions is growing. I am feeling now that I am ready for a race! So we will see tomorrow what we can do.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Team-mate Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) was also in contention and was up the order in fifth place, the Italian building on his prosperous Assen podium from two weeks ago.

Andrea Locatelli – P5

It was a strange day because in the second Free Practice we rode in wet conditions, but also the feeling is quite good even in the wet. This was interesting because maybe the weather during the weekend could be a bit crazy. I’m so happy about this morning because we worked very well, put in the laps to learn the track and the bike felt so good in the dry. We hope for the good weather tomorrow morning to be able to continue to work to prepare for qualifying and the race. I feel confident and with P5 it was the best Friday for us for sure, it is a new track for everybody and so maybe tomorrow we can do very well.

Andrea Locatelli

Flying the flag for Kawasaki, Alex Lowes elevated himself into second place right at the close of FP1 in the morning. The British rider was exactly six-tenths from Toprak’s sensational top time, whilst his team-mate Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) was a solid sixth as both KRT riders took to the Most circuit for the first time. Rea was 0.840s behind Razgatlioglu and thus heads into Saturday with the Turk as his target, but Rea will be confident in the process and will of course be right in the mix come action on Saturday. Neither rider ventured out in FP2’s rain.

Alex Lowes – P2

It was a shame not to get a dry session in FP2 to get more laps in because the rest of the weekend looks like it might be dry. The first experience of the track this morning was quite good. I enjoyed the layout as this track has some real nice corners. In the first section the tarmac is different compared to the other sectors, which makes it feel quite different too, but apart from that it is a quite interesting circuit. It looks like it will be a lot about changing direction in the races and many corners lead into the next ones, so you need the bike to be really agile. We tried to make a set-up change this afternoon but we did not get the chance because of the rain. I think the best plan is to start again in the morning in FP3, hopefully it will be dry and we will get to try what we wanted to this afternoon.”

Alex Lowes
Jonathan Rea – P6

The bike was pretty good today. I had zero expectation coming here because there is no real footage or TV coverage to look at. I did a track walk with the guys from the team on Thursday and the biggest decision we have to take now is about the final gearing. There are a lot of second and third gear corners and I feel quite ‘in between’ corners sometimes. I learned the track quite well and there are a few little tricks that I can use where you can slide the tyre early to gain metres on the exit; use less or more kerb. We got lucky because FP1 was uninterrupted so I was able to do a lot of laps with no problems. We made a small change and went back out to finish the session so I took a lot of info from that. Unfortunately the second session, when we planned to confirm what we needed to do, was wet. A positive first day and pleasantly surprised at the feeling with the track.”

Jonathan Rea

Lying third going into Saturday is Scott Redding, with the 2020 runner-up led the way for most of the session. Being pipped in the closing stages, Redding will be hoping that Most’s unpredictability will bring him back into contention for the Championship. The British rider’s team-mate, Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati), languished in 13th on the combined times and will have work to do to get on the pace on Saturday, and didn’t head out in the wet FP2.

Scott Redding – P3

The day started quite well. The feeling with the bike was positive this morning and I was able to ride consistently with a convincing race pace. In the afternoon, then, there were no conditions to get on track. I really hope to be able to race tomorrow on a dry track“.

Scott Redding
Michael Rinaldi – P13

The start of FP1 was quite positive. Unfortunately, though, when I tried to get back on track with the soft tire I couldn’t make a significant step. The goal for FP2 was to continue and improve the work done in FP1. For this reason, we decided not to go on track in wet conditions“.

Leading the Independent charge and to the surprise of everyone was Marvin Fritz (IXS-YART Yamaha), with the German rider wildcarding and debuting in WorldSBK aboard a bike that is slightly modified in comparison to what he rides in the Endurance World Championship. Fritz was fourth, whilst the next Independent rider was his fellow wild-carding team-mate, Karel Hanika. The Czech rider was ninth as both proved to be revelations on day one at Most as both were inside the top ten in the wet too; he was one place higher than Garrett Gerloff in tenth, who topped the wet FP2 and made it five Yamahas in the top ten overall, whilst Axel Bassani was top Independent Ducati in 12th and third in the afternoon.

Marvin Fritz – P4

I’m really happy to be racing here for the first time in a long while. We had a one-day test here two months ago, but it was also raining and there was a lot of traffic. The most important thing was to understand the Pirelli tyres, because you have to ride in a different style. I’m super happy to be in fourth, I was so surprised to see it but it’s a great start. We lose a little bit out of the first chicane, but this track is not all down to power, it’s more about the corner speed and being good on the tyres. I think that the others will improve, but we can also make steps forward too, so I’m excited for tomorrow morning and getting underway for Race 1.”

Marvin Fritz
Karel Hanika – P9

It was a good day for us, it’s great to be back in WorldSBK. We have a good bike from EWC, so it’s nice to join this paddock and to be quite competitive in the dry conditions especially. We still have areas to improve, but we have an advantage in that we have more knowledge of the track now. Rain in the afternoon could give us an advantage in the race too, but we will see. We know where we are with the package, we don’t think we’ll challenge the podium places, but the goal is to take on the season regulars and score some points. FP3 tomorrow will be important to understand which tyres will be better for the races and I’m hoping to bring some good results for the Czech fans.”

Flying the flag for BMW and right in the mix is Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team). He took seventh in FP1 and thus on the combined times and stayed in his box for the wet weather in the afternoon. Team-mate Michael van der Mark was 11th overall but did two laps in FP2 to finish eighth, but during the heavier rain, opted to stay inside his garage.

Tom Sykes – P7

We came here with a clear plan of a base set up for the BMW M 1000 RR, and It seems it has been the strongest and most consistent in quite some time, which I am happy about. This morning I was able to go out with the harder tyres and really learn and understand the circuit and even from that we had a good plan for the bike going into this afternoon. Unfortunately, this afternoon we didn’t go out on track to try these things due to the weather. But tomorrow is another day and hopefully the sun will come back, and we all can have a safe weekends racing.”

Michael van der Mark – P11

It was nice to learn a new track again. To be honest its quite a fun circuit as there are some fast corners, some slow corners so it’s quite difficult, but I had fun. This morning we didn’t do that bad, but we stayed out on the harder tyre and we struggled a little bit with changing direction. We had some ideas to try for this afternoon but unfortunately it was wet, so we have a lot of things to try tomorrow morning.”

Making it five manufacturers inside the top eight places was Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), with the Spaniard back at Most for the first time since 2002. He managed to get an early lap in during FP2 and was fourth then, whilst teammate Leon Haslam was one of the first riders to get out on the track in the soaking wet conditions. The ‘Pocket Rocket’ headed out with less than 20 minutes to go and did nine laps. He was 14th on the combined times with his dry time being the representative one, so it was a mixed bag for Honda after day one.

Alvaro Bautista – P8

Today was spent discovering a new track and I must say I really like it. Even though I raced here twenty years ago, I had no clear memories of the layout and I didn’t expect it to be so enjoyable. It’s quite fast except for the first chicane, which is the only part I don’t like because it’s very tight and the asphalt is quite bumpy and worn. That sector is nothing like the rest of the track. So this morning we worked to try and find good feeling. We were lacking something in terms of our turning and rear grip but we had clear ideas to try in the afternoon. Unfortunately, as soon as we went out for the first run in FP2, the rain began and disrupted our plans. I eventually made a few laps in the wet but with those conditions the track has no grip at all and the bike was spinning a lot. Anyway, the weather forecast looks better for tomorrow so we will use the third free practice to work to improve before the Superpole and Race 1”.

Leon Haslam – P14

This first day at Most hasn’t been so bad. This morning we kept the same harder tyre for the whole session, so the actual lap time wasn’t great if we look at the final results, but we were quite competitive compared to others on the same solution. We still have things to learn and change but I was quite happy this morning. In the afternoon it was raining from the very first lap. We made a small change to head out towards the end of the session, still in the wet. I think I was the fastest in those conditions, but we still have things to improve upon of course. Anyway, we will see what the weather brings tomorrow and keep trying.”

In 16th place was Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) as the Spanish rookie heads to Most for the first time, with him rising to tenth in the afternoon’s rain. Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) was next up ahead of Japan’s Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), who was 12th in the wet running. Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) was next up ahead of Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha), Alessandro Delbianco (MIE Racing Honda Team), Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) and his new teammate Jayson Uribe from America.

Autodrom Most

WorldSBK Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 1m33.022
2 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.600
3 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.641
4 M. Fritz Yamaha YZF R1 +0.787
5 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +0.839
6 J. Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.840
7 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +0.984
8 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +1.063
9 K. Hanika Yamaha YZF R1 +1.120
10 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +1.133
11 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +1.245
12 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.256
13 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.506
14 L. Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +1.526
15 J. Folger BMW M 1000 RR +1.593
16 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +2.245
17 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +2.363
18 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +2.386
19 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.831
20 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +3.046
21 A. Delbianco Honda CBR1000 RR-R +3.055
22 L. Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +4.171
23 J. Uribe Kawasaki ZX-10RR +6.126
Autodrom Most

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  243
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  206
 3  Scott Redding  162
 4  Alex Lowes  127
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  111
 6  Garrett Gerloff  105
 7  Michael Van Der Mark  104
 8  Tom Sykes  102
 9  Chaz Davies  85
 10  Andrea Locatelli  84
 11  Alvaro Bautista  68
 12  Axel Bassani  60
 13  Leon Haslam  55
 14  Lucas Mahias  36
 15  Tito Rabat  23
 16  Kohta Nozane  21
 17  Isaac Vinales  15
 18  Eugene Laverty  14
 19  Jonas Folger  8
 20  Leandro Mercado  7
 21  Loris Cresson  3
 22  Andrea Mantovani  2
 23  Luke Mossey  2
 24  Christophe Ponsson  1

WorldSSP

The opening day of FIM Supersport World Championship action came to a close on Friday afternoon at the Autodrom Most with Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) stealing the headlines with a stunning last lap effort in FP2 to top the timesheets ahead of the Tissot Czech Round.

Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha)

Aegerter posted a 1’35.446s to claim to spot on Friday with the Swiss rider, on a run of five consecutive victories in WorldSSP, ahead of Spanish rider Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team). Gonzalez was one of just a handful of riders who did not improve their time in the afternoon, with his best time of 1’35.656s coming in Free Practice 1.

Patrick Hobelsberger (GMT94 Yamaha) was in the top three on his return to the Championship despite a crash at the very end of Free Practice 1 at Turn 21, with the German rider not able to set a lap time in FP2. Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) was fourth, four tenths back from Championship leader Aegerter, as he looks to get back to winning ways.

On his first WorldSSP appearance since 2014, French rider Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha) claimed fifth place, three tenths away from teammate Hobelsberger. Marc Alcoba (GMT94 Yamaha) was sixth after a very strong morning session, with the Spanish rider posting a 1’36.340s in FP1.

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) will be looking to move up the order as the weekend progresses after putting in the seventh best lap time throughout on Friday, ahead of Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) and 2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team). Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) rounded out the top ten, more than one second back from Aegerter’s pace.

Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed 11th spot and missed out on a place in the top ten by a matter of hundredths of a second while wildcard Ondrej Vostatek (Compos Racing Team By YART) secured 12th place after Friday’s action, two tenths away from the top ten, with the Prague-born rider impressing at his home round.

Federico Caricasulo (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) was 13th as he replaces Maria Herrera for the Czech Round, while Peter Sebestyen (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) was 14th despite a crash at Turn 16 in FP2. Marcel Brenner (VFT Racing), substituting for Davide Pizzoli, completed the top 15 ahead of Max Enderlein (Kallio Racing), who is standing in for Hannes Soomer.

Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) was just behind his teammate in 17th place with One Event rider Martin Vugrinec (Ferquest – Unior Racing Team) in 18th place. Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) also had a crash, both in the afternoon Free Practice 2 session, with an accident at the penultimate Turn 20.

WorldSSP Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 D. Aegerter Yamaha YZF R6 1m35.446
2 M. Gonzalez Yamaha YZF R6 +0.210
3 P. Hobelsberger Yamaha YZF R6 +0.332
4 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +0.425
5 V. Debise Yamaha YZF R6 +0.613
6 M. Alcoba Yamaha YZF R6 +0.894
7 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +0.967
8 J. Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +0.995
9 R. Krummenacher Yamaha YZF R6 +1.123
10 N. Tuuli MV Agusta F3 675 +1.163
11 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.226
12 O. Vostatek Yamaha YZF R6 +1.357
13 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R6 +1.373
14 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 +1.557
15 M. Brenner Yamaha YZF R6 +1.603
16 M. Enderlein Yamaha YZF R6 +1.658
17 V. Takala Yamaha YZF R6 +1.684
18 M. Vugrinec Yamaha YZF R6 +1.732
19 F. Fuligni Yamaha YZF R6 +1.779
20 R. De Rosa Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.875
21 S. Morais Yamaha YZF R6 +1.945
22 D. Webb Yamaha YZF R6 +1.967
23 L. Bernardi Yamaha YZF R6 +2.111
24 M. Fabrizio Kawasaki ZX-6R +2.221
25 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 +2.305
26 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +2.443
27 L. Ottaviani Kawasaki ZX-6R +2.894
28 L. Grunwald Suzuki GSX-R600 +2.928
29 P. Szkopek Yamaha YZF R6 +3.050
30 L. Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +3.149
31 S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 +3.630
32 L. Taccini Kawasaki ZX-6R +3.723
33 J. Mrkyvka Yamaha YZF R6 +3.984
34 E. Montero Huerta Yamaha YZF R6 +5.953

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  169
 2  Steven Odendaal  125
 3  Philipp Oettl  108
 4  Luca Bernardi  97
 5  Jules Cluzel  91
 6  Manuel Gonzalez  84
 7  Randy Krummenacher  62
 8  Hannes Soomer  47
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  46
 10  Can Alexander Oncu  43
 11  Marc Alcoba  40
 12  Federico Caricasulo  39
 13  Christoffer Bergman  34
 14  Niki Tuuli  28
 15  Vertti Takala  19
 16  Kevin Manfredi  19
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  14
 18  Peter Sebestyen  9
 19  Sheridan Morais  8
 20  Maria Herrera  7
 21  Filippo Fuligni  6
 22  Michel Fabrizio  6
 23  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 24  Massimo Roccoli  4
 25  Matteo Patacca  3
 26  Stephane Frossard  3
 27  Luca Ottaviani  1
 28  Leonardo Taccini  1
 29  Davide Pizzoli  1
 30  Pawel Szkopek  1

WorldSSP300

The rain stopped falling for the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship’s FP2 at Most, but it wasn’t enough to allow the track to dry out completely, meaning damp running concluded day one. Leading the way into day two after topping FP1, Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) took charge overall, although come the end of FP2, it was Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) who mastered the wet weather and made hay whilst the sun attempted to shine.

Steeman was right on the pace in the first session of the weekend and come the end of the day, he was the man to beat on the combined times, although he opted to not go out in FP2. Championship leader Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) was next up in second place overall but unlike Steeman, opted to head out and brave the FP2 rain, finishing in 20th. In the top three from the morning, Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez (Accolade Smrz Racing) was 13th in the wet afternoon session but nonetheless, looks competitive for his home-team.

In fourth place was Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) but he was 17th in the wet, whilst fifth place went to home-hero Oliver Konig (Movisio by MIE), who was the highest placed rider of the combined times in the wet weather. 2021 podium finisher Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) settled into the top six and was 16th in the tricky afternoon conditions, as the weather turned the morning running on its head.

Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) was seventh overall whilst next up in eighth was Christian Stange (2R Racing), the German having a strong morning showing. Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) completed the overall top nine but was the second-fastest rider of FP2’s wet running, indicative of a strong performances in all of the weather. Defending World Champion Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) was fastest in the wet but tenth overall, the Dutchman adapting to the weather and growing in confidence as the day wore on.

Second in the Championship Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) was 11th on the overall timesheets but third in the wet running, something Booth-Amos has always thrived in. Also finding form to break into the top ten in the wet running was Petr Svoboda (WRP Wepol Racing), who was top Czech rider in the afternoon in fourth.

Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) was fifth in FP2 and up from 29th in FP1 and Filippo Maria Palazzi (ProGP Project) was an even bigger improver, moving into seventh from 38th in the morning. Hugo De Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) was eighth in the wet but 22nd overall, whilst Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Project) was tenth in the wet but 17th in the dry. 2018 World Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) had a tough day: just 36th in the morning and 25th in the afternoon.  Young Aussie Harry Khouri was 32nd on combined times.

WorldSSP300 Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R 1m47.191
2 A. Huertas Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.470
3 J. Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +0.911
4 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.059
5 O. Konig Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.132
6 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.165
7 V. Rodriguez Nunez Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.474
8 C. Stange Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.674
9 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 +1.726
10 J. Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.730
11 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.882
12 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 +1.901
13 M. Gennai Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.073
14 P. Svoboda Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.076
15 Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.154
16 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.179
17 G. Mastroluca Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.221
18 I.  Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.229
19 R. Bijman Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.306
20 K. Sabatucci Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.407
21 V. Perez Selfa Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.492
22 H. De Cancellis Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.503
23 D. Berta Vinales Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.572
24 T. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.649
25 A. Coppola Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.823
26 S. Markarian Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.843
27 M. Szamado Kawasaki Ninja 400 +2.905
28 T. Brianti Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.258
29 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.432
30 O. Nunez Roldan Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.451
31 J. Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.454
32 H. Khouri Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.500
33 M. Cervenka Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.569
34 M. Gaggi Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.597
35 F. Feigl Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.610
36 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 +3.771
37 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.782
38 F. Palazzi Yamaha YZF-R3 +3.838
39 A. Frappola Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.524
40 A. Zanca Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.561
41 J. Mcmanus Kawasaki Ninja 400 +4.697
42 J. Romero Kawasaki Ninja 400 +5.651
43 M. Duarte Yamaha YZF-R3 +7.648
44 N. Lisci Yamaha YZF-R3 +7.699

WorldSSP300 Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Adrian Huertas  108
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  90
 3  Samuel Di Sora  64
 4  Yuta Okaya  52
 5  Jeffrey Buis  52
 6  Hugo De Cancellis  49
 7  Koen Meuffels  44
 8  Ana Carrasco  43
 9  Meikon Kawakami  43
 10  Unai Orradre  39
 11  Ton Kawakami  32
 12  Dorren Loureiro  31
 13  Victor Steeman  25
 14  Bahattin Sofuoglu  21
 15  Bruno Ieraci  21
 16  Mirko Gennai  19
 17  Gabriele Mastroluca  17
 18  Oliver Konig  11
 19  Harry Khouri  11
 20  Kevin Sabatucci  10
 21  Filippo Maria Palazzi  10
 22  Vicente Perez Selfa  9
 23  Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez  8
 24  Marc Garcia  7
 25  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  6
 26  Alejandro Carrion  5
 27  Petr Svoboda  3
 28  Alfonso Coppola  2
 29  Thomas Brianti  2
 30  Alex Millan Gomez  2
 31  Inigo Iglesias  2
 32  Johan Gimbert  1
 33  Ruben Bijman  1

2021 Czech Schedule (AEST)

Source: MCNews.com.au

New circuit beckons WorldSBK this weekend | Autodrom Most

2021 WorldSBK Round Six
Tissot Czech Round


The Motul FIM Superbike World Championship makes a stop in the Czech Republic this weekend, which will host the pinnacle of production machine racing for the first time since the 2018 round in Brno. This year a new circuit will see the riders battle for the world titles: the Autodrom Most will make its debut in the WorldSBK calendar, staying at least until 2025.

Autodrom Most was opened in 1983 as the first permanent motor racing complex in what was then known as Czechoslovakia. The circuit has already hosted many events including national motorcycle championships, as testament to the circuit’s commitment to be part of the sports, social and cultural life of the region. Autodrom Most is only one of the several new entries in the 2021 WorldSBK season and it is an unknown circuit to most of the riders and teams, which will have to use first practice sessions to work on the bike set up to tackle the track in the best way.

Autodrom Most has a strategic position in Central Europe thanks to its accessibility from Germany and Austria as well as Poland and also in part due to its advantageous location near the attractive cities of Prague and Karlovy Vary.

Autodrom Most

Length 4,212 m
Width 12 – 14 m
Longest straight 792 m
Shortest straight 150 m
21 curves (9 left and 12 right)
Superelevation 12.04 m
Maximum up-gradient +2.8 %
Maximum down-gradient -3.2 %
Clockwise travel direction


Autodrom Most

Having given up 37 points to Toprak Razgatlioglu over the Misano and Donington Park weekends, Jonathan Rea now leads Toprak by 37 in a title race that swings from round to round. Upon arrival in the Czech Republic, Rea’s in fine form – a first hat-trick of 2021 at Assen and five straight poles at the start of the season – and will look to extend his run into Most. He’s won first-time at four new tracks (Chang International Circuit, Sepang, San Juan Villicum and Barcelona-Catalunya), so could he be the favourite this weekend? Team-mate Alex Lowes is also in positive spirits coming to Most, with a new 2022 deal with KRT secured, meaning he can focus on the job in hand.

Jonathan Rea

It is always exciting going to a new circuit. Most is completely unknown to me and the team. Going to any new circuit I would study previous races, either MotoGP or past races of WorldSBK, but even after scouring the internet for footage it is very difficult to find race coverage of Most. The layout looks nice, some fast and flowing corners so it is exciting to learn something new. When I arrive I will do some laps with my bicycle and do a track walk with my team. The base set-up of our bike is in a really good window and on Friday it will be very important to find a good set-up and a rhythm straight away. Step-by-step we will get ready for the race. We do not have much time in practice but I enjoy that – being under pressure. I am looking forward to seeing what we can do. We had a great weekend in Assen so it would be nice to carry on with that momentum behind us.”

Jonathan Rea

Seeking redemption and aiming to reignite his title aspirations, Toprak Razgatlioglu will be targeting a return to winning ways at Most. Razgatlioglu, like Rea has good form at new tracks, with a podium in Argentina in 2018 and winning two races on WorldSBK’s return to Estoril in 2020. 11 podiums in 2021 and off the back of his first DNF, Toprak will be desperate to establish his pace at Most and, having already gained 37 points on Rea before, will be looking to starting that process once again on a level playing field.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

I am only focused on the coming races, the aim is to fight for the win always. I am looking forward to riding the R1 at Most, and it will be a new circuit for almost everyone so we will see what is possible. I think we are very strong in all circuits now but we will see what happens. My Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK team did an amazing job in Assen, and now we will continue the fight and try for the best position in every race.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu

For team-mate Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK), his first career podium will spear him; a new track could be the perfect neutral territory for the rookie to continue his strong showings of late and build on Assen’s solid foundations.

Andrea Locatelli

As always, I am excited to get back to riding my R1 WorldSBK and it will be interesting to discover this new circuit in Most. Assen was like a dream, together with my crew we have been working so hard to increase the speed on the limit, and keep taking steps in every race. To be on the podium finally in the long race, after leading for more than 10 laps was an amazing feeling! Now, we will keep working again and try to be strong to push for more good results this weekend.

Remaining in the lead in terms of the Independent riders and placing sixth in the Championship standings overall, American Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) will put Assen’s Race 2 controversy behind him and tackle the all-new Most venue. He could be one of the key fixtures at the front, as he usually goes well at tracks unknown to the opposition (podiums at Catalunya and Estoril in 2020).

The Yamaha presence on the grid this weekend is expanded further with the YART Yamaha EWC Official Team with Marvin Fritz and local star Karel Hanika making wild card appearances aboard lightly modified versions of the Yamaha R1 bikes they normally race in the FIM Endurance World Championship. Founded in 2001, the YART Yamaha team have enjoyed huge success in the FIM EWC and were crowned champions in 2009. The team were runners up in the championship last year, winning races in Sepang and Estoril and the YART Yamaha R1 has started five of the last six EWC races from pole position, with riders Fritz and Hanika always amongst the fastest in qualifying.

For their wildcard entries in Most the YART Yamaha bikes have been modified to meet the WorldSBK technical regulations whilst retaining many of the specialist components rarely seen in the WorldSBK paddock, but essential when racing for 24 hours at Le Mans and the Bol d’Or. One of the major changes will be the switch to the Pirelli rubber mandated in World Superbike as the team ride Endurance events on Bridgestones.

For Fritz, this weekend will mark his WorldSBK debut, having spent the last five seasons contesting FIM EWC with the YART Yamaha squad. The German was champion of the IDM Superbike Championship in 2016, while he also won the 2014 IDM Supersport 600 class, both on Yamaha machinery, and he raced at the Czech circuit whilst contesting the 2007 IDM 125cc Championship.

Marvin Fritz

I’m really looking forward to Most. It’s like a dream come true for me and my first time racing in the World Superbikes – I’ve raced Superstock before but never WorldSBK. I’m excited for the first free practice; I know the level of some of the riders from Suzuka, but it will be interesting to see the difference between the performance of the bikes. I’ve ridden at Most, and I’ve also raced there in the IDM 125cc Championship back in 2007, but I’ve not done that many laps so we will see. The track is really nice, when you come out of the hairpin at the back there’s a good flowing section which is fun. The first chicane is going to be one to watch, you have to brake hard to stop the bike and the asphalt there isn’t so great, which is a bit of a pity because the rest of the lap is a lot of fun. I’d like to say a big thanks to YART Yamaha and everybody for making this happen. I can’t wait to get going.

Marvin Fritz

Team-mate Hanika, who was born in Brno, has held the lap record at Most since 2019 and will be making his second WorldSBK appearance, having finished in the points at Laguna Seca in 2018. The 25-year-old spent several years in Moto3 after winning the Red Bull Rookies Cup and European Moto3 Championship in 2013. He joined YART Yamaha in EWC last year and was a part of the team’s victories at the 8 Hours of Sepang and 12 Hours of Estoril.

Karel Hanika

I’m very happy to get this opportunity to be joining the WorldSBK grid as a wildcard with the YART Yamaha team. Thanks to everyone who’s been behind this, especially Mandy and Yamaha. Most is a track where I’ve had the lap record for around two years, it’s a difficult circuit for sure but it has a nice flow. You must be really hard on the brakes for the first corner, which I think is going to be important for all of the races. The tarmac is overall good, but in the first sector it’s not too great. I believe it will suit our bike well, so I’m looking forward to the weekend and to racing at home in front of the Czech fans.”

Karel Hanika

Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) and teammate Michael Ruben Rinaldi were back in the mix at Assen, as both riders placed Ducati second in all three races of the weekend. Redding took second in both Race 1 and Race 2 whilst Rinaldi was promoted to second in the Tissot Superpole Race, after Razgatlioglu and Locatelli got demoted a place for exceeding track limits. Coming to Most, both took part in a track day at the circuit to get a basic understanding of the layout and to try and gain an advantage on their opposition. If they can get the Ducati Panigale V4 R operating in its sweet spot, expect to see the Bologna bullets at the sharp end again, as both aim to return to the title fight.

An up-and-down Dutch Round at Assen left BMW with a ‘what could’ve been’ as they left the Netherlands. Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was able to place to take two seventh place finishes and a 15th after a Race 2 crash, but it was Michael van der Mark who shone brightly with a fourth in Race 1 and sixth in Race 2; a big highside in the Tissot Superpole Race blotted his copybook from what was otherwise a strong home showing. Van der Mark and Sykes’ form is promising ahead of Most, a circuit they’ve not visited. The fast and flowing nature, like Assen, may well see the BMW M 1000 RR perform strongly, particularly with the neutral Most territory.

Achieving their best full-race result of 2021 so far, Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) hopes that Assen’s Race 2 was a turning point for Honda, despite crashes in Race 1 and the Tissot Superpole Race. His late race pace was exceptional, faster than Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) ahead of him and at one point, more than half-a-second faster than his ex-teammate. Can he take advantage of the unknown quantity of Autodrom Most and the high-speed nature of the track? Teammate Leon Haslam had a tricky Assen, with just an eighth in Race 1 and a tenth in Race 2 as his point-scoring rides.

Chaz Davies is ninth in the overall standings, 20 points behind Gerloff. Davies took a fourth place in Race 2 at Assen, something he’ll hope to gain confidence from going to the Czech Republic.

Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) lies 12th overall, after another splendid double top ten at Assen with tenth and ninth in Race 1 and Race 2. Like Gerloff, Bassani could benefit from Most, as he also took part in the track day with Redding and Rinaldi. Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) will aim to make more progress and break back into the top ten. Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) is next up in 16th, whilst Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) is 17th, having taken his best WorldSBK result at Assen in 11th in Race 1. Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) scored his first points last time out, as did Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing).

Eugene Laverty (RC Squadra Corse) will not be in attendance as the team continues their internal restructuring whilst Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) will also be out, following his Race 1 crash at Assen, where he picked up a left scaphoid fracture. Mahias returned to France for surgery, but the Czech Round will come too soon for Mahias. Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) will have to wait until Thursday before the round be declared fit or not, whilst Christophe Ponsson (Gil Motor Sport – Yamaha) returns.

American Jason Uribe (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) will debut in WorldSBK this weekend, as he is the second rider in the Italian team this weekend. This will be the first time since Magny-Cours 2018 that there’s been two American riders on the grid of a WorldSBK race, when it was Jake Gagne and PJ Jacobsen.

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  243
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  206
 3  Scott Redding  162
 4  Alex Lowes  127
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  111
 6  Garrett Gerloff  105
 7  Michael Van Der Mark  104
 8  Tom Sykes  102
 9  Chaz Davies  85
 10  Andrea Locatelli  84
 11  Alvaro Bautista  68
 12  Axel Bassani  60
 13  Leon Haslam  55
 14  Lucas Mahias  36
 15  Tito Rabat  23
 16  Kohta Nozane  21
 17  Isaac Vinales  15
 18  Eugene Laverty  14
 19  Jonas Folger  8
 20  Leandro Mercado  7
 21  Loris Cresson  3
 22  Andrea Mantovani  2
 23  Luke Mossey  2
 24  Christophe Ponsson  1

WorldSSP

A new venue has the potential to throw up plenty of surprises as the weekend progresses. With just two practice sessions before diving straight into Tissot Superpole, the work completed on Friday is crucial to setting up the entire weekend. In the last five races, Aegerter has won all five, a winning streak that puts him second in the all-time list and only behind Andrea Locatelli, on nine – but it has not been easy for him. Last time out at Assen, he withstood challenges from both Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) and Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) as both looked to end his winning run. Aegerter has opened up a 44-point lead over Odendaal in the Championship and, with the season approaching the halfway stage, Odendaal and Oettl will need to start getting on top of Aegerter sooner rather than later. Aegerter completed a track day at the Autodrom Most, while Odendaal and teammate Peter Sebestyen completed a test day at the Czech track.

Although Oettl has become a regular podium contender throughout his two seasons in WorldSSP, the German rider is still chasing his first win in the class. Oettl ran Aegerter close in the first half of Race 2 at Assen and will be hoping to push him even further at Most as he looks to become the third victor of the 2021 campaign and hope to move up from third in the standings. Spanish rider Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) has come close to his first podium in WorldSSP after making a step forward in 2021 with seven top-six finishes out of eight races in 2021, and nearly always in the lead group. Could the unpredictability of a new venue provide Gonzalez, who successfully underwent surgery for compartment surgery, the perfect opportunity to take his first WorldSSP podium? If Gonzalez secures points finishes at Most, his run of races in the points in WorldSSP will stand at 25 and equal the all-time record, set by Roberto Rolfo between Jerez 2013 and Phillip Island 2016.

Sitting fourth in the Championship standings, Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) has been one of the revelations of the 2021 campaign. The Sammarinese rider has claimed three podiums in 2021, all second places and all behind Aegerter, but the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round proved to be a more difficult affair for the 19-year-old. He was only able to secure tenth in the Tissot Superpole session and fell down to 12th in Race 1. Race 2 was a better result for Bernardi, with fifth, and only two seconds away from a podium. The Sammarinese rider will be hoping he can qualify better at Most to try and re-join the podium celebrations.

A team of massive success in WorldSSP, GMT94 Yamaha will have a new line-up at Most with Jules Cluzel being joined by Valentin Debise. Federico Caricasulo, who joined the team for the 2021 season, and GMT94 Yamaha parted company by mutual consent with Debise has tested for the team following his success in the French championship at Magny-Cours and also brings with him some recent WorldSBK experience having competed in two rounds in 2020. It’s been a difficult campaign for GMT94 Yamaha so far with Cluzel yet to finish higher than third place, and the team only taking one pole position when Caricasulo went fastest at Estoril. The team will be hoping Most marks a turning point in their campaign, and they can return to the top step of the rostrum. On top of the new line-up, Patrick Hobelsberger will make his WorldSSP return with the team in the Czech Republic as a one event rider.

After claiming his first podium since returning to the Championship, Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) will be hoping he can repeat his result at Assen to show it wasn’t just a flash in the pan, but a regular occurrence throughout the remainder of the 2021 season. Marcel Brenner will replace Davide Pizzoli at VFT Racing while Eduardo Montero Huerta will continue in place of Thomas Gradinger at DK Motorsport. Christoffer Bergman (Wojcik Racing Team) is scheduled to return to action after missing the Dutch Round through an injury picked up at the Estoril 12 Hours but will need to be cleared to race, as will Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) and Shogo Kawasaki (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti).

There are two wildcard riders scheduled to compete at the Autodrom Most with Ondrej Vostatek (Compos Racing Team By YART) and Jiri Mrkyvka (Maco Racing) joining the grid. Croatian rider Martin Vugrinec (Ferquest – Unior Racing Team) will make his WorldSSP debut as a one event rider, and in doing so will become the first rider from Croatian to compete in WorldSSP, while Eemeli Lahti (HRP Suzuki) will compete for the second consecutive event on his Suzuki machine after a solid showing at Assen.

WorldSSP Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  169
 2  Steven Odendaal  125
 3  Philipp Oettl  108
 4  Luca Bernardi  97
 5  Jules Cluzel  91
 6  Manuel Gonzalez  84
 7  Randy Krummenacher  62
 8  Hannes Soomer  47
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  46
 10  Can Alexander Oncu  43
 11  Marc Alcoba  40
 12  Federico Caricasulo  39
 13  Christoffer Bergman  34
 14  Niki Tuuli  28
 15  Vertti Takala  19
 16  Kevin Manfredi  19
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  14
 18  Peter Sebestyen  9
 19  Sheridan Morais  8
 20  Maria Herrera  7
 21  Filippo Fuligni  6
 22  Michel Fabrizio  6
 23  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 24  Massimo Roccoli  4
 25  Matteo Patacca  3
 26  Stephane Frossard  3
 27  Luca Ottaviani  1
 28  Leonardo Taccini  1
 29  Davide Pizzoli  1
 30  Pawel Szkopek  1

WorldSSP300

44 riders are scheduled to compete as the title battle in WorldSSP300 begins to take shop after three rounds of the 2021 campaign, with Spanish rider Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) leading the way after six races.

Unpredictability has, as always, been a huge part of the 2021 season but two riders have managed to be consistently fighting at the front during races. Huertas holds an 18-point advantage over Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) with the duo pulling away from the rest of the field. Out of the six races so far, Huertas has three wins with Booth-Amos claiming two. Crucially, Booth-Amos crashed out at the final corner of the final lap at both Misano Race 2 and Assen Race 1, allowing Huertas to build a gap. Booth-Amos rectified this with victory in Race 2 at Assen with Huertas in fifth.

French rider Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) claimed his second podium of the season at Assen in Race 2, allowing him to leap into third place in the Championship standings on 64 points. Di Sora heads into the Most weekend on the back of two third places and a fourth in the last three races and will be hoping this form continues for more podiums as he looks to close the 26-point gap to Booth-Amos.

WorldSSP300 Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Dominique Aegerter  169
 2  Steven Odendaal  125
 3  Philipp Oettl  108
 4  Luca Bernardi  97
 5  Jules Cluzel  91
 6  Manuel Gonzalez  84
 7  Randy Krummenacher  62
 8  Hannes Soomer  47
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  46
 10  Can Alexander Oncu  43
 11  Marc Alcoba  40
 12  Federico Caricasulo  39
 13  Christoffer Bergman  34
 14  Niki Tuuli  28
 15  Vertti Takala  19
 16  Kevin Manfredi  19
 17  Galang Hendra Pratama  14
 18  Peter Sebestyen  9
 19  Sheridan Morais  8
 20  Maria Herrera  7
 21  Filippo Fuligni  6
 22  Michel Fabrizio  6
 23  Roberto Mercandelli  5
 24  Massimo Roccoli  4
 25  Matteo Patacca  3
 26  Stephane Frossard  3
 27  Luca Ottaviani  1
 28  Leonardo Taccini  1
 29  Davide Pizzoli  1
 30  Pawel Szkopek  1

2021 Prosecco DOC Dutch Round Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au