Tag Archives: Alistair Wilton

2019 Island Classic | Focus on Forgotten Era 350/500

350cc Forgotten Era & Unlimited Classic

500cc Forgotten Era & Unlimited Post-Classic

By Alistair Wilton


The 2019 running of the Island Classic saw another highly successful event at the famous Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, boasting international legends of motorcycling on a bevvy of rare and precious classic machinery.

There was plenty going on over the weekend, with over 50 races, so here’s a look at some of the smaller classes, which while not as renowned as the International Challenge, still feature amazing racing and incredible machines.


350cc Forgotten Era

While the focus is regularly on the Unlimited capacity class in Forgotten Era, which is not unexpected with bikes that are easy to source and easy to tune, the 350 class is one that is sometimes overlooked.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Lachie Hill
Lachlan Hill – Yamaha TZ350 – Image Rob Mott

The 350 class is dominated by true period Grand Prix class TZ350s and regularly puts on some of the best racing of the weekend, making it something not to miss.

However for 2019, with the loss of leaded race fuels (the 40+ year diet of 350GP bikes!) kicking in, there was a chance that this class could be a lottery as riders and tuners got to grips with the various replacements that have come to light.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Martin Morrison
Martin Morrison – Image Rob Mott

While there was a little mechanical mayhem which unfortunately beset a couple of front runners, including Kiwi Steve Brown and Taswegian Grant Boxhall, the fuel change didn’t put a damper on proceedings.

The headline should read ‘Lachlan Hill Dominates Again’, but that would ignore the enormous efforts that class newcomer Keo Watson put in riding Western Australian Neil Robinson’s immaculate TZ350.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Saturday Keo Watson
Keo Watson – Image Rob Mott

Lachie has dominated the class for five years and rightly so, with his riding efforts, but also a willingness to develop his bike, which has put him less than 1/10th of a second outside the lap record.

In 2019 Lachlan took four wins from four races and his excitement in doing so was visible on the last lap of race four.

However, Keo Watson wasn’t concerned with reputations and methodically went about taking the fight to Hill with three strong second place finishes. Racing saw Watson get ahead of Hill a number of times, including in a spectacular Race 2 on Saturday afternoon.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Keo Watson
Keo Watson – Image Rob Mott

Watson led on the last lap and after trying a move at the exit of Turn 2, finally making a pass under brakes at the Turn 4 hairpin on the last lap. The pace was strong enough that Hill reset his own personal best lap time and had a moment or two at MG.

By race four, Hill was in a relatively safe position on points for the class at 75 to Watson’s 60, but he would have had one eye on the Phil Irving Trophy as well. For four laps Watson and Hill were hardly separated, until suddenly there was only one of them.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Keo Watson Chris Hayward Lachie Hill
Lachlan Hill, Chris Hayward and Keo Watson – Image Rob Mott

A tyre experiment for the last race proved costly with Watson tucking the front and low siding at Hayshed, leaving Hill a very large gap over second placed Christopher Hayward. This one DNF unfortunately dropping Keo Watson from second down to sixth overall for the weekend.

Forgotten Era 350 for years has also had a strong Kiwi presence, fielding many riders in the class every year for 19 of the 26 years the event has run. 2019 was no different with eight riders and they were somewhat hampered by only being able to tune for the new fuels from Thursday onwards. However they were well on the case by Friday, though many of the team had made use of the exceptional talents of Bruce Woodley of Powerflow Engineering to keep things under control.

Jock Woodley – Image by Rob Mott

Jock Woodley was the most consistent of these, again landing third place overall with four strong rides – the same overall result as 2018. Chris Hayward had a number of lonely rides for second overall.

The unlimited Classic bikes were run concurrently with the Forgotten Era with Garth Francis taking four class wins on his 750 Norton, mixing it with the mid-field TZ350s.

350cc Forgotten Era / Unl Classic Race 1

  1. Lachlan HILL (VIC) 7:28.326
  2. Keo WATSON (NSW) +0.226
  3. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +9.698
  4. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +18.418
  5. Trevor TAYLOR (NZ) +43.875
  6. Garth FRANCIS (VIC) +43.933
  7. Andrew McLAREN (NZ) +53.017
  8. Andrew PITMAN (SA) +54.228
  9. Jason HOWCROFT (NZ) +54.249
  10. Bob SAYER (NSW) +1:06.492

350cc Forgotten Era / Unl Classic Race 2

  1. Lachlan HILL (VIC) 9:10.046
  2. Keo WATSON (NSW) +0.528
  3. Steven BROWN (NZ) +20.106
  4. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +24.079
  5. Grant BOXHALL (TAS) +51.375
  6. Trevor TAYLOR (NZ) +57.771
  7. Andrew McLAREN (NZ) +58.408
  8. Andrew PITMAN (SA) +1:01.021
  9. Jason HOWCROFT (NZ) +1:06.185
IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Saturday Jock Woodley
Jock Woodley leads fellow Kiwi Steve Brown – Image Rob Mott

350cc Forgotten Era / Unl Classic Race 3

  1. Lachlan HILL (VIC) 7:16.508
  2. Keo WATSON (NSW) +13.392
  3. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +18.027
  4. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +38.496
  5. Andrew McLAREN (NZ) +45.835
  6. Trevor TAYLOR (NZ) +56.749
  7. Robert HEATHER (VIC) +1:00.192
  8. Jason HOWCROFT (NZ) +1:00.937
  9. Garth FRANCIS (VIC) +1:09.734
  10. Andrew PITMAN (SA) +1:10.471

350cc Forgotten Era / Unl Classic Race 4

  1. Lachlan HILL (VIC) 9:07.796
  2. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +18.391
  3. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +40.970
  4. Andrew McLAREN (NZ) +53.058
  5. Andrew PITMAN (SA) +53.714
  6. Trevor TAYLOR (NZ) +59.035
  7. Jason HOWCROFT (NZ) +1:06.288
  8. Kevin McDONALD (NZ) +1:07.944
  9. Phil OADES (NZ) +1:20.652
  10. Garth FRANCIS (VIC) +1:30.929

350cc Forgotten Era Standings

  1. Lachlan HILL 100 points
  2. Christopher HAYWARD 73
  3. Jock WOODLEY 68
  4. Andrew McLAREN 61
  5. Trevor TAYLOR 60
  6. Keo WATSON 60
  7. Andrew PITMAN 54
  8. Jason HOWCROFT 51
  9. Phil OADES 42
  10. Kevin McDONALD 34

Unlimited Classic Standings

  1. Garth FRANCIS 100
  2. William MOONEY 70
  3. Dan GLEESON 56
  4. Brendan BURNS 49
  5. Bob SAYER 40
  6. David WEATHERHEAD 18

500 Forgotten Era / Open Post Classic

Based upon current form, the question was going to be who was going to come second?
Current ASBK Supersport 300 champion Tom Bramich on the incredibly reliable Ron Angel Racing Paton 500 was looking too strong to bet against, which was a prediction seen out by the weekend.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Tom Bramich
Tom Bramich – 1973 Paton BM3 500 – Image Rob Mott

The answer as to who would claim second was Keo Watson with four second places, but don’t let the results let you think these were processional. Yes, Bramich was away in race one and two but also had Unlimited Post classic bikes to play with. By Race 3 on Saturday afternoon, Watson was well on to his game and running with Bramich, never more than a second apart the whole race with neither having a speed advantage.

IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Sunday Tom Bramich
Tom Bramich – 1973 Paton BM3 500 – Image Rob Mott

Race 4 saw Tom in a strong position chasing for an overall win, which ensured the clean sweep with Watson second, while Christopher Hayward put in four great rides in third each time for third overall.

Due to an accident in the International Challenge Beau Beaton on the big Irving Vincent didn’t feature in the Unlimited Post Classic past Saturday lunchtime, but in his earlier showing he reset the lap record in race two for a run away win by 10 seconds up over Dean Oughtred on his immaculate Carl Cox Racing / Dynoverks CR750, backing up his win in race one.

Tom Bramich aboard the Paton Image Russell Colvin
Tom Bramich on the Paton – Image Russ Colvin

With Beaton out for the weekend, Oughtred had a clear run in Race 3, but a DNF in race four let evergreen Laurie Fyffe through for the overall win, with Robert Wallace just missing out pushing him back to third.

500cc Forgotten Era & Unl Post-Classic Race 1

  1. Beau BEATON (NSW) 7:09.518
  2. Dean OUGHTRED (VIC) +10.589
  3. Tom BRAMICH (VIC) +13.414
  4. Simon COOK (SA) +27.751
  5. Keo WATSON (NSW) +28.576
  6. Laurie FYFFE (NSW) +31.092
  7. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +31.478
  8. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +36.609
  9. Steven BROWN (NZ) +36.755
  10. Robert WALLACE (VIC) +42.964

500cc Forgotten Era & Unl Post-Classic Race 2

  1. Beau BEATON (NSW) 9:01.183
  2. Dean OUGHTRED (VIC) +7.216
  3. Tom BRAMICH (VIC) +8.549
  4. Keo WATSON (NSW) +15.125
  5. Simon COOK (SA) +22.270
  6. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +27.773
  7. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +35.123
  8. Steven BROWN (NZ) +37.543
  9. Laurie FYFFE (NSW) +39.234
  10. Tony WILKINSON (VIC) +45.853

500cc Forgotten Era & Unl Post-Classic Race 3

  1. Dean OUGHTRED (VIC) 7:16.501
  2. Tom BRAMICH (VIC) +5.826
  3. Keo WATSON (NSW) +5.881
  4. Simon COOK (SA) +13.365
  5. Laurie FYFFE (NSW) +20.204
  6. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +21.852
  7. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +22.600
  8. Steven BROWN (NZ) +24.602
  9. Martin MORRISON (USA) +39.836
  10. Tony WILKINSON (VIC) +40.732

500cc Forgotten Era & Unl Post-Classic Race 4

  1. Tom BRAMICH (VIC) 9:08.380
  2. Keo WATSON (NSW) +12.247
  3. Christopher HAYWARD (SA) +17.137
  4. Laurie FYFFE (NSW) +26.645
  5. Jock WOODLEY (NZ) +33.457
  6. Owen WARD (QLD) +42.423
  7. Martin MORRISON (USA) +44.124
  8. Paul SMITH (WA) +45.345
  9. Robert WALLACE (VIC) +55.075
  10. Dave FULLER (QLD) +56.564

500cc Forgotten Era Standings

  1. Tom BRAMICH 100 points
  2. Keo WATSON 80
  3. Christopher HAYWARD 72
  4. Jock WOODLEY 68
  5. Martin MORRISON 59
  6. Paul SMITH 57
  7. Dave FULLER 55
  8. Trevor TAYLOR 48
  9. Steven BROWN 48
  10. Andrew McLAREN 45
IIC Phillip Island Rob Mott Friday Tom Bramich
Tom Bramich – 1973 Paton BM3 500 – Image Rob Mott

Unlimited Post-Classic Standings

  1. Laurie FYFFE 77 points
  2. Dean OUGHTRED 65
  3. Robert WALLACE 64
  4. Wayne GOW 57
  5. Simon COOK 56
  6. Owen WARD 51
  7. Beau BEATON 50
  8. Fred SCHAFER 49
  9. Lex McKINLEY 45
  10. Stacey HEANEY 39

Source: MCNews.com.au