Tag Archives: Andrea Locatelli

Andrea Locatelli with Yamaha through to end of 2023

Italian rewarded for recent great form

Following his impressive performances as a rookie in the 2021 FIM Superbike World Championship, Yamaha has confirmed that Andrea Locatelli will remain on a Yamaha until at least the end of the 2023 season.

Locatelli has enjoyed a sensational first season in the WorldSBK championship, which sees him now sit fourth in the standings heading into the final five rounds. After four race weekends where he continued to get to grips with the Yamaha R1 WorldSBK, the Italian’s breakthrough weekend came at the TT Circuit Assen, where he scored his first podium finish.

Andrea Locatelli

I’m really happy to be extending my contract with Yamaha for two more years. For me, it’s a great opportunity. We have a really good group, a good team and a good bike, so I think in the future we can do very well. I’m so excited to be here and to continue to be a part of the Yamaha family. I’d like to say a special thanks to Andrea Dosoli, Eric de Seynes [Yamaha Motor Europe President & CEO], and everyone at Yamaha for giving me this opportunity. Now, we have two more years to try to improve together and achieve the best possible results.”

Andrea Locatelli with Aussie crew chief Andrew Pitt

Since the Dutch round, the 24-year-old is yet to finish outside the top four with further podiums coming at Most and, most recently, Magny-Cours. His performances had already triggered a clause in his contract seeing him remain with Yamaha for 2022, but both the manufacturer and rider are keen to continue this relationship into 2023, where Yamaha hopes to help him challenge for race wins and championship titles.

Andrea Dosoli – Yamaha Motor Europe, Road Racing Manager

We are delighted to confirm that Andrea will remain with the Yamaha family until at least the end of the 2023 WorldSBK season. He has been an integral part of Yamaha’s step-up program, and has demonstrated what our vision has been over the last few years. We expected that ‘Loka’ would be fast this year, but very few anticipated that he would already be challenging for podiums at such an early stage in his WorldSBK career. We want to secure him for the future and help guide him towards even greater success, and this new contract will give us the best opportunity to help him achieve that.

Andrea Locatelli

Locatelli stepped up to the 2021 WorldSBK grid following a record-breaking FIM Supersport World Championship campaign that saw him take 12 victories and the title, which he clinched with three rounds to spare in Barcelona. His climb from WorldSSP rookie to WorldSBK front-runner perfectly represents Yamaha’s step-up program and its commitment to giving young riders the opportunity to realise their potential.  Locatelli’s crew chief is Australian Andrew Pitt.

Andrea Locatelli has been on a great run of form – Image 2snap

Source: MCNews.com.au

Rea survives Magny-Cours melee to put one hand on trophy

Brutal opening encounter in France

WorldSBK Race One

Thrilling action up and down the grid was the order of the day during Race 1 for the Motul FIM Superbike World Championship with wet conditions greeting the 21 riders overnight for the opening race of the Pirelli French Round at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours as Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) claimed his 10th victory of the 2020 season.

BMW’s Eugene Laverty and Tom Sykes had one 1-2 in Superpole

The drama started at Turn 1 as both Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) and team-mate Eugene Laverty retired from the race on the opening lap; Laverty was taken out by a falling Sykes after the British rider was hit by Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team). The BMW duo had started 1-2 on the grid in what was a watershed moment for the squad but that dream turned to a nightmare at turn one as both riders slid out of the race.

At turn one though both BMW men went down in a chain reaction set off by Garrett Gerloff

Marc Bongers – BMW Motorrad Motorsport

What a day. It showed just how close together the ups and downs are in motorsport. Both Tom and Eugene had produced great performances in the changeable, but always wet conditions since the first practice session. Everything was going perfectly. Tom had coped well with his fall in yesterday’s practice and the team had done a good job to prepare the motorbike perfectly for today. The Superpole session was a thriller but we knew that we could finish really high up. To finish with P1 and P2, the first double pole for BMW Motorrad in the WorldSBK, is just fantastic! But the race was just as disappointing as the double pole had been wonderful. The race finished for both of them in turn 1. Gerloff had come from a long way back and went into T1 too hot. He then had to correct it and hit Tom on his elbow, which made him fall. Unfortunately, Tom’s bike then clipped the rear wheel of Eugene’s bike, which then saw him come off with a highsider. We find it a bit difficult to understand that Gerloff got away without an official warning or a penalty, but the decision made by the race direction is fix and we have to accept it. Both of our riders took a bit of a battering, but they are OK. Both of the bikes are badly damaged. We now have a long day ahead of us to put both motorbikes back together. But we are looking ahead to tomorrow and we will be ready to go when the riders and bikes are both OK.”

The run to turn one was fraught with danger

The incident left Rea, Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Gerloff battling for victory after Gerloff fell back following a mistake at Turn 5. Gerloff recovered to third place but a crash at the Turn 6-7 Nürburgring chicane eventually forced him to retire; the American star taken to the medical centre for a check-up.

Gerloff chasing Rea early on

It meant Rea and Baz duelled it out for victory with Rea coming out on top by around three seconds while Baz secured his first podium at Magny-Cours.

#FRAWorldSBK at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours – Race 1.
1. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)
2. Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) +3.342s
3. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +9.707s

Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) finished in third place as he secured his first podium since the Australian Round; Lowes securing his third podium of the season.

Alex Lowes

Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) followed up his victory at Catalunya with fourth at Magny-Cours as he continued to his strong end to the season as the Welshman finished ahead of the battling trio of Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team), Leon Haslam (Team HRC) and Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati).

Scott Redding was getting to know the Pirelli wets and a new circuit

Redding finished in fifth place ahead of Razgatlioglu in sixth after Haslam passed Razgatlioglu into Turn 12 before crashing straight after; Haslam retiring from the race.

Haslam raced hard and was determined to make up positions late in the race before a crash on the final lap sent him skittling after he passed Razgatlioglu for fifth place

Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN) finished in seventh place ahead of Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) equalling his best result of the 2020 season with eighth place. Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) finished ninth after the Dutchman crashed on Lap 15 at Turn 13 while battling in the top four positions, ahead of Leandro Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) in tenth.

Alvaro Bautista struggled in the conditons

Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) finished the 21-lap race in 11th place with Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) finishing just ahead of French rider Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) finishing in 13th place as he scored more points. Valentin Debise (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) scored his first ever WorldSBK points with 14th place and Xavier Pinsach (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) claiming points in his first WorldSBK race.

Samuele Cavalieri (Barni Racing Team) finished the race in 16th; equalling his best result of his races in the 2020 season with Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing HONDA Team) rounded out the classification in 17th place, with Haslam, Gerloff, Sykes and Laverty all retiring from the race.

Jonathan Rea – P1

It was super-hard to keep concentration for all 21 laps at the front. The pace was ridiculous but that is down to a few things. We had a good set-up on the Ninja ZX-10RR but also Magny Cours did a really good job of the new tarmac. Last year in these conditions a 1’53/54 was a good lap time, and now are doing 1’48/49s in the wet conditions. Massive thanks to my team, and everyone around, because I think we got the best out of the bike. You can never have a perfect set-up for the wet, because the conditions are always changing. Sometimes it is fully wet, sometimes there is just a little bit of water, then sometimes even a drying track. Overall our set-up for the rain was very good.

Jonathan Rea
Loris Baz – P2

I’m so happy. It was a crazy race. I know I had fantastic pace all weekend, but I took a gamble in Superpole, I went for the intermediate tyre. I just missed out on the right lap by a few seconds, so I was a bit annoyed at that. I had a great race, great pace and tried to be as close as possible. The pace he was putting was crazy, every lap he improved the time and for 12 or 13 laps we were going faster and faster. I had a moment on the kerb going into the last chicane, I lost a second, and then I just tried to manage the gap with Alex and then staying close to Jonny in case he made a mistake. He doesn’t make many mistakes so hats off to him because it’s not easy to put this kind of pace when you’re playing for a Championship. We have some fans here and it’s my first podium at Magny-Cours so I’m happy for them and we try again tomorrow.”

Loris Baz
Alex Lowes – P3

The first part of the race I felt quite good. In the second part I did not feel that good under hard braking, as the front was sliding a lot. Because I had a bit of a gap behind I just tried to manage the situation. I think we can improve a bit for tomorrow, of course, but I am happy to be back on the podium in these conditions. I have a lot of experience of riding around here in the rain from past seasons, but after the resurfacing it is like a different track. All the braking markers and tip-in points I remember from the past in the rain, you may as well completely forget them!”

Alex Lowes
Chaz Davies – P4

I am happy for this result. The feeling with the bike was very good and for this, I am particularly satisfied. Maybe I could have pushed harder but for me, it was fundamental not to make mistakes and to take important points to increase the advantage over Van Der Mark and consolidate the third position in the standings“.

Chaz Davies
Scott Redding – P5

In the first laps of the race, I could not find the feeling. Things improved when the track started to dry and I was able to reduce the gap with the front group. When it started raining again I tried to stay in contact, working well especially in braking areas. I think we can do well tomorrow, especially if we can find something in acceleration“.

Scott Redding was getting to know the Pirelli wets and a new circuit
Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P6

Today I didn’t have a good start to the qualifying session, but I came back in the box and we made a small set-up change and I felt a lot better. But with time for just one lap, I could only manage 13th on the grid – I needed one more lap to improve! In the race, I felt much better on the bike in these conditions, and also for me it is the best race I have ever had in the rain. The feedback from the Yamaha R1 was very good and I know where we can take more steps forward. Today, as a team we are quite happy – I saw it was possible to finish in P5 but on the last lap, Haslam had a big crash and it was not possible to avoid him without braking as his bike came across my race line. So, sixth in the end but the pace was not bad, and tomorrow we will try for a much better position.

Michael van der Mark – P9

Superpole was alright, to be honest. The track was starting to dry a bit so again the conditions were different to yesterday. I felt okay, improved my last lap time – the tyres were starting to get really warm and moving around so it was difficult, but P6 on the grid is a good place to start – and I did make a good getaway! I was a bit lucky at Turn 1, the BMW riders crashed in front of me and I managed to get up to second but I just didn’t have the confidence like the guys who passed me. At a certain point, I was riding alone in P4 and I had a good pace, but I just didn’t feel very good with the bike. The feedback and grip wasn’t what I needed, and then I made a mistake and crashed in Turn 13. I picked it up quickly and finished ninth, so we scored some points but I threw away a lot of important places for the fight for P3 in the championship. So, really disappointed, but tomorrow we have two more chances. I’m fast with a bike that I’m not really comfortable with, so hopefully tomorrow with an improved set-up on my R1 I can do well.”

Alvaro Bautista – P12

Another day of working in the wet. Basically this morning after the FP3 we tried a different setting, looking to improve our feeling ahead of qualifying but unfortunately I did not like it so much because the bike was a bit too soft and even if I got better feedback from the bike’s response, it was perhaps a little too much. So for Race1 we went back to yesterday’s solution in adjusting the electronics. So the feeling was similar to yesterday, especially with the rear which is the area I struggle with more, in that I basically cannot feel it. That means I cannot push without risking losing the rear tyre. I tried to gain every single tenth that I could and overall, we improved our pace and lap times compared to Friday. Not enough of course, and we’re still far from our target but at least we got a lot of data that we will use to try and sort this problem out and do better tomorrow.”

Leon Haslam – DNF

It was a demanding race and I didn’t make the best start, but despite a few small issues, I felt like I found a very good rhythm. Looking at the pace, I think I was one of the fastest guys on track and I was able to work my way up to sixth place, in the mix for fifth. Right from early on, I was fighting to stop the rear from coming round on corner entry and that’s basically how the crash came about when, on the last lap and while fighting with Toprak for fifth, I pushed the limit a little too far. It’s frustrating as another top five result would have been nice but we need to see the positives and take these into tomorrow’s two races. Let’s see what we can do.

WorldSBK Race One Results

Pos  Rider Bike Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 0.000
2 L.  Baz Yamaha YZF R1 +3.342
3 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +9.707
4 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +14.045
5 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.427
6 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +16.976
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +23.253
8 X. Fores Kawasaki ZX-10RR +27.173
9 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha YZF R1 +28.706
10 L.  Mercado Ducati Panigale V4 R +32.034
11 F.  Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R1 +37.928
12 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000RR-R +46.009
13 S. Barrier Ducati Panigale V4 R +46.371
14 V. Debise Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m39.992
15 X. Pinsach Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1 Lap
16 S. Cavalieri Ducati Panigale V4 R +1 Lap
17 T. Takahashi Honda CBR1000RR-R +1 Lap
Not Classified
RET L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000RR-R 1 Lap
RET G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 15 Laps
RET E. Laverty BMW S1000 RR /
RET T. Sykes BMW S1000 RR /

WorldSBK Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Jonathan Rea Kawasaki 315
2 Scott Redding Ducati 250
3 Chaz Davies Ducati 201
4 Michael Van Der Mark Yamaha 185
5 Toprak Razgatlioglu Yamaha 167
6 Alex Lowes Kawasaki 161
7 Michael Ruben Rinaldi Ducati 153
8 Loris Baz Yamaha 111
9 Alvaro Bautista Honda 98
10 Leon Haslam Honda 88
11 Tom Sykes BMW 70
12 Garrett Gerloff Yamaha 68
13 Federico Caricasulo Yamaha 46
14 Eugene Laverty BMW 45
15 Xavi Fores Kawasaki 45
16 Marco Melandri Ducati 23
17 Leandro Mercado Ducati 18
18 Sandro Cortese Kawasaki 14
19 Maximilian Scheib Kawasaki 11
20 Jonas Folger Yamaha 9
21 Sylvain Barrier Ducati 8
22 Christophe Ponsson Aprilia 4
23 Roman Ramos Kawasaki 4
24 Matteo Ferrari Ducati 4
25 Takumi Takahashi Honda 4
26 Lorenzo Zanetti Ducati 3

World Supersport

Soaking wet conditions provided dramatic action up and down the FIM Supersport World Championship grid as the rain fell in France with Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) and Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) duelled it out in a race-long battle for victory in the Pirelli French Round at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours.

Andrea Locatelli

Locatelli started the race from a season-low fourth place on the grid but quickly made it up to the front of the field as he took the lead on the opening lap, with Mahias just behind. Locatelli and Mahias were able to pull out a gap to the riders behind as they duelled it out for victory across the 18-lap race, with Locatelli taking the race win ahead of Mahias; the Italian securing his 11th win of the season. Locatelli’s victory means Yamaha have now secured the 2020 Manufacturers’ Title for WorldSSP.

Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) was able to take his first podium of the season, and career, despite starting the race in 16th place and take the first podium for Estonia in WorldSSP. The Estonian battled his way through the field and joined the battle for third place early in the race, finishing ahead of Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse), Kevin Manfredi (Altogoo Racing Team) and Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team).

De Rosa, Manfredi and Öncü were separated by just under a tenth when a Red Flag was shown on the final lap after Glenn van Straalen (MPM Routz Racing Team) crashed, with the trio unable to take their fight to the line; with Manfredi being the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider in the race.

Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) finished in seventh place, just half a second behind Öncü, but 16 seconds clear of Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) as he scored his best result of his career. Hungarian rider Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) was in ninth place with Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) completing the top ten.

Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) finished the race in 11th place with South African rider Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) in 12th. Spanish rider Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) was in 13th place with Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) and Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) completing the points finishes.
Kyle Smith (GMT94 Yamaha) had been in the podium fight but suffered two crashes as he showed rapid pace throughout the race; he first crashed on Lap 6 at Turn 15 and was able to re-mount. He then was able to fight his way back into podium contention but crashed at Turn 1 on Lap 12 as he caught the train and retired from the race.

Galang Hendra Pratama (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) crashed out of the race on Lap 5 while Karel Hanika (WRP Wepol Racing), making a wildcard appearance in WorldSSP, crashed out of the race on Lap 8; with both Pratama and Hanika retiring from the race. Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) pulled into the pit lane in the early stages of the race while Hikari Okubo (Dynavolt Honda) also retired from the race.

P1 Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

“It’s amazing. It’s been a really difficult weekend for me because it’s a new track for me and also I have not run a lot in the rain. The feeling with the bike, the work with the guys is so good, and we did a really good job today. For sure, we are ready for tomorrow. I am happy because now I have also won in the rain, this is good.”

P2 Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

“This was not an easy race. I don’t know why but the conditions were a little bit different compared to the other sessions. I don’t know whether this was the temperature of the water on the track, but the bike was completely different; the grip on the rear was not nice especially in the middle of the corner. I think, in the beginning, I had the rhythm to overtake and push at the front, but I prefer overall because I didn’t have the rhythm to ride alone. Finally, in the last laps, I lost a bit of the rear and Locatelli. I’m happy because I’m fast in all conditions, but the problem is so is Andrea! Tomorrow, I’ll try a different setting and try to understand this little problem of the rear from today.”

P3 Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing)

“It’s unbelievable! I cannot believe it. The beginning of the race was really difficult because I started from 16th and in the first laps I could not see anything, there was a lot of water. We did a really good yesterday morning; the bike is unbelievable. It’s been a long wait but it’s a really, really good feeling to be here.”

World Supersport Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R6 0.000
2 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-6R +1.427
3 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 2S
4 R. De Rosa MV Agusta F3 675 2S
5 K. Manfredi Yamaha YZF R6 2S
6 C. Oncu Kawasaki ZX-6R 2S
7 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki ZX-6R 2S
8 F. Fuligni MV Agusta F3 675 3S
9 P. Sebestyen Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
10 D. Webb Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
11 C. Perolari Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
12 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
13 I.  Vinales Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
14 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R 1 Lap
15 A. Bassani Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
16 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
17 L.  Cresson Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
18 A. Verdoia Yamaha YZF R6 1 Lap
Not Classified
RET G. Van Straalen Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET K. Smith Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET K. Hanika Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 /
RET H. Okubo Honda CBR600RR /
RET S. Frossard Yamaha YZF R6 /
NS P. Hobelsberger Honda CBR600RR /

World Supersport Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  288
 2  Lucas Mahias  179
 3  Jules Cluzel  146
 4  Philipp Oettl  126
 5  Raffaele De Rosa  119
 6  Corentin Perolari  101
 7  Steven Odendaal  99
 8  Manuel Gonzalez  98
 9  Isaac Vinales  93
 10  Hannes Soomer  75
 11  Danny Webb  61
 12  Peter Sebestyen  49
 13  Can Alexander Oncu  44
 14  Andy Verdoia  33
 15  Kevin Manfredi  31
 16  Federico Fuligni  29
 17  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza  25
 18  Axel Bassani  19
 19  Kyle Smith  16
 20  Miquel Pons  16
 21  Loris Cresson  12
 22  Galang Hendra Pratama  9
 23  Patrick Hobelsberger  6
 24  Maria Herrera  2
 25  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 26  Hikari Okubo  1
 27  Luigi Montella  1

World Supersport 300

A shortened Race 1 for the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship did not reduce the drama at the Pirelli French Round as Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) extended his Championship lead to 21 points after a late-race overtake on his teammate Scott Deroue at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours as MTM Kawasaki secured the Teams’ Championship and Kawasaki as Manufacturers’ Champions for 2020.

FIM Supersport 300 World Championship

The race was restarted after a Turn 1 incident on the opening lap of the original race involving Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (EAB Ten Kate Racing) at Turn 1, with the race Red Flagged so he could receive medical help; the Spanish rider taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the incident. The restarted race was reduced to six laps and the rain began to fall during the race.

Buis got a superb start for the race from fourth place and swept into the lead before Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) passed him on the opening lap, with Deroue quickly up to third place from eighth on the grid. Booth-Amos and Buis had pulled out a gap to Deroue but he was able to close it in just a couple of laps.

Buis inherited the lead of the race when Booth-Amos crashed coming out of the final corner with the British rider able to get off the track without assistance. Deroue took the lead from Buis shortly after but Buis stayed with his teammate before making a crucial overtake on Deroue into Turn 13. The duo finished almost nine seconds clear of third-placed Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300), with the Turkish rider claiming his fourth podium of the season.

Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished in fourth place with Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO) securing a fifth-place finish. Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) was in sixth place as he held off the challenge from Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) by just over a tenth of a second. Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki MOTORPORT) finished in eighth place with Enzo De La Vega (Machado Came SBK) securing his best result of the season with ninth and Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) completing the top ten.

Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished in 11th place, just ahead of Felipe Macan (Team Brasil AD 78) as the duo battled it out for a strong points finish. Adrian Huertas (ProGP Racing), Tom Bramich (Carl Cox-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) and Daniel Blin (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300) completed the points with the 14th place for Bramich making him the top finishing Australia.  Tom Edwards retired from the race.

Sharni Pinfold did not qualify for the main after crashing in the Last Chance Race and breaking her collarbone.


P1 Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)

“The rain was so heavy at the end of the race, so I needed to have a plan and at the beginning I thought I needed to stay out front. When Tom crashed, I needed to get past as he was on the track, and on the last lap I overtook Scott and finished first.”

P2 Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)

“It was quite difficult from eighth. In the first or second corner, someone crashed so there was a gap I had to close. It was really hard, but we did it. Tom crashed and I took over the lead, but then it started raining really hard. It was difficult, it was working out how fast you could go. In the last corner, it was really wet so I did not know where to brake. I braked a little bit later than the lap before, but Jeffrey overtook me. It was a good race, happy with second but not happy he finished first! We have to do something tomorrow.”

P3 Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300)

“My expectation was first or second and the first part of the race was good, but after the middle I had a little bit of a gap to the riders ahead. I tried to push but with the weather conditions it was not possible to push. After, I rode a little bit to save third position and I am happy with it.”

WSSP300 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Class Gap
1 J.  Buis Kawasaki A /
2 S. Deroue Kawasaki B +0.121
3 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha B +8.537
4 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki B +12.987
5 H. De Cancellis Yamaha B +13.574
6 Y. Okaya Kawasaki B +17.608
7 S. Di Sora Kawasaki A +17.851
8 K. Meuffels Kawasaki A +21.471
9 E. De La Vega Yamaha B +25.037
10 T. Kawakami Yamaha B +27.069
11 B. Ieraci Kawasaki A +28.048
12 F. Macan Yamaha A +28.312
13 A. Huertas Yamaha B +29.433
14 T. Bramich Kawasaki A +30.519
15 D. Blin Yamaha A +30.91
16 M. Gennai Yamaha A +33.127
17 L.  Simon Kawasaki B +34.696
18 T. Bercot Yamaha B +36.866
19 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki A +37.506
20 U. Orradre Yamaha A +38.952
21 S. Markarian Yamaha B +39.174
22 I.  Iglesias Bravo Kawasaki B +42.513
23 J.  Ioverno Kawasaki B +44.298
24 M. Garcia Kawasaki A +44.505
25 K. Aloisi Yamaha A +48.488
26 E. Mcglinchey Kawasaki A +2m12.204
Not Classified
RET A. Coppola Kawasaki B 1 Lap
RET N. Kalinin / A 1 Lap
RET T. Brianti Kawasaki B 1 Lap
RET T. Edwards Kawasaki B 2 Laps
RET T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki B 3 Laps
RET P. Svoboda Yamaha B 4 Laps
RET M. Kawakami Yamaha B 5 Laps
RET F.  Rovelli Kawasaki A /
RET M. Perez Kawasaki A /
RET A. Diaz Yamaha A /
RET V. Rodriguez Nunez Yamaha A /

WSSP300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jeffrey Buis  183
 2  Scott Deroue  162
 3  Bahattin Sofuoglu  127
 4  Unai Orradre  98
 5  Ana Carrasco  97
 6  Tom Booth-Amos  94
 7  Thomas Brianti  80
 8  Mika Perez  71
 9  Yuta Okaya  64
 10  Koen Meuffels  62
 11  Samuel Di Sora  59
 12  Meikon Kawakami  58
 13  Hugo De Cancellis  49
 14  Bruno Ieraci  49
 15  Kevin Sabatucci  37
 16  Ton Kawakami  37
 17  Nick Kalinin  29
 18  Adrian Huertas  25
 19  Marc Garcia  16
 20  Inigo Iglesias Bravo  15
 21  Filippo Rovelli  15
 22  Alan Kroh  13
 23  Glenn Van Straalen  13
 24  Enzo De La Vega  11
 25  Alvaro Diaz  10
 26  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  9
 27  Tom Edwards  9
 28  Alfonso Coppola  9
 29  Johan Gimbert  7
 30  Oliver Konig  5
 31  Felipe Macan  4
 32  Daniel Mogeda  4
 33  Filip Salac  4
 34  Alejandro Carrion  4
 35  Kim Aloisi  3
 36  Tom Bramich  2
 37  Angel Heredia  2
 38  Daniel Blin  1
 39  Paolo Grassia  1
 40  Tom Bercot  1
 41  Mirko Gennai  1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Somewhat surprising Sunday results at Catalunya WorldSBK

2020 WorldSBK Round Six – Catalunya

WSBK Superpole Race

Pole position rider Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team) got off the grid extremely well to move straight into the race lead but the KRT man was closely followed by Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha), Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team), Álvaro Bautista (Team HRC) and Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad). Also with an outstanding start, Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha) moved up from his fourteenth spot on the grid and clawed his way up through the ranks to sixth place as the laps progressed.

Loriz Baz – Superpole Race

The leading group was tight and on the third lap Bautista managed to overtake Michael van der Mark’s Yamaha and Rea’s Kawasaki on the straight, but his lead was short-lived due to a huge high-side at turn four which brought his race to an early end.

Michael van der Mark went on to take the lead from Rea who was then followed by Loris Baz (Ten Kate Yamaha) and Chaz Davies (Ducati), the latter enjoying a spectacular comeback ride. The final laps held no surprises, with Michael van der Mark taking his first win of the season ahead of Jonathan Rea and Loris Baz.

Tissot Superpole Race
1. M. van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team / Yamaha YZF R1)
2. J. Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR)
3. L. Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha / Yamaha YZF R1)

Superpole Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha 0.000
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki +2.372
3 L.  Baz Yamaha +2.923
4 C. Davies Ducati +3.929
5 G. Gerloff Yamaha +3.985
6 M. Rinaldi Ducati +6.487
7 A. Lowes Kawasaki +7.688
8 S. Redding Ducati +8.573
9 T. Sykes BMW +10.071
10 J.  Folger Yamaha +12.709
11 E. Laverty BMW +12.713
12 X. Fores Kawasaki +13.027
13 L.  Zanetti Ducati +21.781
14 V. Debise Kawasaki +21.922
15 S. Barrier Ducati +26.909
16 T. Takahashi Honda +29.074
Not Classified
RET A. Bautista Honda 8 Laps
RET S. Cavalieri Ducati 8 Laps
RET L.  Haslam Honda 9 Laps
RET F. Caricasulo Yamaha 9 Laps

WorldSBK Race Two

Race two was full of drama and intrigue at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya as Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) claimed his first win of the 2020 season and became the seventh different winner in 2020, while American rookie Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) claimed his maiden World Superbike podium at the Acerbis Catalunya Round.

Chaz Davies on the top step of the podium

Davies was able to get to the front in the early stages of the races before taking the lead and controlling the race, withstanding pressure from Tissot Superpole Race winner Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) after the pair passed each other in the first half of the race. Van der Mark then fell into the clutches of Gerloff after the American made a sensational start from fifth place to run in the top three, putting pressure on van der Mark all race.

Chaz Davies

Gerloff passed van der Mark for second place on the last lap but a mistake from Gerloff on Lap 10 allowed the Dutchman through for second; Gerloff coming home in third place. Davies held on to win his 31st race in his career, equalling Colin Edwards on the all-time list of winners. Gerloff’s podium means he becomes the first American to stand on the WorldSBK podium since Nicky Hayden in 2016.

Championship leader Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) extended his lead at the top of the standings with fourth place, finishing five seconds clear of Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team). Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) finished in sixth place after being passed by Sykes with just a couple of laps to go. Rea had lost ground at the start, but was able to regroup to finish in fourth place and take a 51 point lead into the next round at Magny-Cours.

Rea, Redding, Sykes

Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) secured his best result of the season with seventh place as he showed more impressive pace, ahead of Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) in eighth. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) was the sole Honda rider in Race 2 and finished in ninth, with Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) in tenth after losing lots of ground at Turn 1 at the start.

Jonas Folger’s (Bonovo Action by MGM Racing) impressive wildcard weekend continued as he battled his way from the back of the grid to 11th place; Folger not setting a time in Tissot Superpole and missing out on a top nine starting grid for Race 2 by the smallest of margins. Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) was 12th after starting from the back of the grid; Caricasulo penalised for irresponsible riding in the Superpole Race after a collision with Haslam.

Garrett Gerloff

Lorenzo Zanetti (Motocorsa Racing) scored points after being called up to the Championship on Friday evening with 13th place while Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing HONDA Team) and Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) completed the points-scoring positions.

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) did not start the race following a technical issue on the sighting lap; the Spanish rider, who was declared fit following his dramatic highside crash in the Tissot Superpole Race, pulling off the track shortly after leaving the pit lane. Samuele Cavalieri (Barni Racing Team) crashed out in the early stages, while Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) and Valentin Debise (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) had a coming together on Lap 17 while battling for 15th place. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN), who had been running in the top four for the majority of the race, had a technical issue in the latter stages of the race forcing him to retire from the race on Lap 19.

Chaz Davies taking victory in race two at Catalunya

WorldSBK Race Two Results

Pos  Rider Bike Gap
1 C. Davies Ducati 0.000
2 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha +2.460
3 G. Gerloff Yamaha +2.559
4 J.  Rea Kawasaki +8.040
5 T. Sykes BMW +13.196
6 S. Redding Ducati +14.232
7 E. Laverty BMW +16.409
8 A. Lowes Kawasaki +17.590
9 L.  Haslam Honda +18.536
10 L.  Baz Yamaha +20.401
11 J.  Folger Yamaha +20.451
12 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +25.414
13 L.  Zanetti Ducati +31.420
14 T. Takahashi Honda +51.264
15 X. Fores Kawasaki +3 Laps
Not Classified
RET M. Rinaldi Ducati 2 Laps
RET V. Debise Kawasaki 5 Laps
RET S. Barrier Ducati 5 Laps
RET S. Cavalieri Ducati 17 Laps
RET A. Bautista Honda

WorldSBK Quotes

Chaz Davies – P1

“It was a great race. The feeling is that we managed to put all the pieces of the puzzle together. Maybe we did it a bit late but the important thing is to have achieved this goal. I would like to thank my team who also worked late last night to fix some things on the set up that worked out great. The race pace was very good since the first laps and this allowed me to stay in the lead to manage the race. I am really very satisfied”.

Serafino Foti (Team Manager Aruba.it Racing – Ducati)

“We would like to congratulate Chaz on his extraordinary victory today. This is also a reward for the work done by his crew that has never given up and has always believed in the possibility of providing him with a high-performance bike. Then it is clear that Chaz did the rest by riding in a masterful manner. Unfortunately, it was a difficult day for Scott. After yesterday’s second place we were convinced he could be competitive in today’s races as well. It’s a shame we were unable to put him in the conditions to let him perform at his best and fight for the podium”.

Michael van der Mark – P2

“It’s been a really, really good Sunday. This morning I had a great start in the Superpole Race and I was following Johnny. I felt so good with the bike and felt sure I could battle with him, then Alvaro passed us both on the straight. Unfortunately for him he crashed and I was lucky I didn’t lose any time. I got to the lead and had such good pace, really quick and consistent as was able to pull away from Johnny. So, I’m really happy to take my first win this year! Then for Race 2, I started from pole position which is ideal. I had a good start, and for the first few laps I tried to feel how the grip levels were and how the bike felt. Chaz and Rinaldi passed me but I wasn’t worried as I knew I could keep the same pace as them. I overtook Rinaldi and tried to catch Chaz, but we both had our ‘strong points’ of the track. I passed him once, but to be honest I had to ask too much of my front tyre to stay with him, he wasn’t pulling away massively but every lap just a little bit. During the race I also had a little battle with Garrett, then I dropped him until two laps before the end when I made a small mistake – and there was Garrett again! Another nice battle in the last lap and I’m happy to finish on the podium in P2. I’m looking forward to Magny-Cours now, it’s good to have a few podiums under our belt, so let’s try and repeat it there.”

Michael van der Mark
Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – DNS

“It is difficult for me to know what to say – I am in a lot of pain but also happy because after scans in the hospital it looks like nothing is broken. The crash was very big, I made a mistake, so I am sorry to Yamaha and to my team, but this can happen. I am sad because Michael showed today the R1 can win. My target is to recover for Magny-Cours and fight again for the podium.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu chasing Chaz Davies
Paul Denning – Pata Yamaha Team Principal

“Both a very positive and negative race day for the Pata Yamaha team all at the same time. First of all, we’re so relieved that Toprak is not seriously injured after his huge highside in Warm-Up this morning. He was going extremely quick on his first timed lap, more-or-less qualifying pace, and ran a little wide in Turn 13 – and after the overnight rain and a dirty track, the end result was there for all to see. Thanks to the medical staff at the circuit and hospital for looking after him, also to Kenan and some valuable local Turkish support. Toprak should be OK to race in Magny-Cours, although he will be very sore for some days. For the other side of the garage, the day couldn’t really have gone much better! Some detailed, but important improvements to the bike by the team saw Mikey quickest in morning Warm-Up, dominate the Superpole Race from fifth on the grid to celebrate his first win of the year and – if not for just running out of front tyre grip a few laps from the end of Race 2 – it looked like a possible double win was on the cards. Two brilliantly-judged races by Mikey, superb work by his crew and we move on to Magny-Cours in positive spirits. Finally, congratulations to the GRT Yamaha team and Garrett Gerloff for a fabulous performance in Race 2 and Garrett’s first podium in WorldSBK.”

Garrett Gerloff – P3

“It doesn’t feel real! I’m trying to pinch myself. For a while, it didn’t feel like it would be possible this year, but to have it happen is just crazy. I don’t even have words! I’ve always dreamed of being on the podium in a World Championship and to have it happen, it’s like… it’s not real! I am kicking myself a little bit because if I wasn’t so stupid and just braked like I normally do into Turn 10 I probably would’ve made the corner and had second place. That’s something I’ll be thinking about for the next week and a half! I’m just so grateful that Yamaha gave me the opportunity to race in the World Championship, to Filippo in the GRT team for taking me on and being an awesome group of guys and girls, and for supporting me and always being positive. It’s been an amazing environment and I know I wouldn’t be here without them.”

Jonathan Rea – P4

“In the sprint race I felt pretty good but of course in the first laps I was very, very lucky. Alvaro came past on the straight and then in T4 had a huge crash at the exit. I hit his bike and in this moment I thought I was down; was going to crash. I almost let go but miraculously I stayed upright and someone was definitely helping me out there! I had to regroup and chase Mikey but his pace was very good today so congratulations to him and his team. I just didn’t have it in the final race. I felt I had some issues straight away with the front feeling, a lot of vibration in the brakes but apart from that feeling I felt good for about ten laps. The grip level started to drop and I suffered more with the front tyre than yesterday. I was getting a lot of warnings. The race was very tough and aggressive in the beginning so as soon as the pace settled I was just there, and the gap was very constant but to arrive in the front group I was going to have to go over the limit and push the front too much. The target coming here was to increase our championship lead and I think we managed quite well.”

Scott Redding – P6

“It was a very difficult Sunday for me. Both in Superpole Race and Race-2 I had some problems, especially in braking areas. This limited me a lot because I was never able to find the right pace to be competitive. It’s a shame: I expected to do well today. This is a bad result for the World Championship standings but I will not give up now. It is clear, however, that we will have to work hard to have a bike that performs as well as it did two months ago.”

Tom Sykes – P5

“It’s been a refreshing change today. We managed to get some good consistent laps under our belts this afternoon on the BMW S 1000 RR. We didn’t have the pace at the beginning of the race, we couldn’t get the mechanical grip compared to what the other guys had but, what we were able to do was play with the electronics and my riding style throughout the race and keep a consistent pace, which is what we did well. Unfortunately, we were not able to get the result we wanted in yesterday’s race, but we certainly learned from that so to get fifth today is a step in the right direction. I’m really looking forwards to Magny-Cours in a few weeks’ time. This morning in warm-up with a cooler track temperature, the performance from me and the bike was much easier so hopefully heading to France will accommodate me and the BMW S 1000 RR.”

Tom Sykes
Eugene Laverty – P7

“I made a good start from P12 on the grid in race two and found myself in P8 at the end of lap one. That made my life a lot easier, but it was a tough old race as I was having vibrations coming from both front a rear tyre, so that made it difficult which is disappointing in that aspect as I know the potential could have been much more. Barcelona has suited the BMW S 1000 RR, even in race one yesterday again our potential was so much more but losing that much time in the opening laps was difficult to bridge the gap to guys ahead. Magny-Cours in France will be an unknown for me as I have not ridden a bike like the BMW S 1000 RR around there before. But that is expected; this year was always going to be a learning curve for both me and the bike.”

Marc Bongers – BMW Motorrad Motorsport Director

“That was a great relief after our weekend at Barcelona got off to a difficult start. After the reliability issues on Saturday, it was good to finish the Sunday with our best race results of the season. We have been striving for results like this for a long time and it is great to have achieved that – even if it does not yet open up the path to the top. We performed well in warm-up but Tom’s pace in Superpole was too slow at the beginning, which resulted in a slightly disappointing ninth place. However, both Tom and Eugene made a good start to the second race and both of them made it through the turmoil in the first corners. Tom was able to pull away a bit with the leading group and Eugene was involved in a great battle with Lowes and Haslam before coming out on top by finishing seventh. Tom lost contact with the top six around the halfway point of the race but was able to maintain his pace through to the finish and was able to move up to fifth on the final lap, ahead of Redding and Eugene. Now is not the time to relax but we will take this positive development with us to Magny-Cours and we hope that we can repeat our performance there.”

Alex Lowes – P8

“Obviously this was a bit of a disappointing day for me. I gave absolutely 100% but I did not have the feeling I needed on the bike. We could not get the setting right to give me the confidence to push like we expected. It was a shame to have a difficult weekend as I had a lot of confidence after the last round, where I was feeling ill but still managed to get fifth and sixth places. We need to analyse what happened now and refocus on Magny Cours in a couple of weeks’ time to get back fighting at the front. That is the target for me now.”

Alvaro Bautista – DNS

“Today’s been a bittersweet day. In this morning’s warm-up I was pleased with how the bike was working because we were able to fix the setup issue we had yesterday, and our feeling was a lot better. In the Superpole race I moved into the lead, the first time we’ve been able to do that, which means we are continuing to improve. I was feeling so good on the bike and to be out front again that perhaps I was a little overconfident and pushed a bit too hard, which resulted in a crash. A pity. Physically I wasn’t feeling good ahead of race 2 but I when I jumped on my bike, I saw I was able to ride despite my foot injury. The pain was not too bad. But then the bike stopped on the sighting lap and so I didn’t have chance to compete at all. We’re looking into what the problem was. It was a pity because we had good pace also for race 2 and could have battled with the frontrunners in both the day’s races. Anyway, we will take the positives of this weekend. I’m happy with the job we are doing and with our steps forward and now we’ll see if we can make the most of the final two rounds and score the kind of results we deserve.”

Leon Haslam – P9

“A tough day for us. We made a bad start in the Superpole race and although my feeling was OK over the first lap, I was then hit from behind and crashed with Caricasulo. At first I thought I might have broken my leg but luckily that wasn’t the case and I was just very stiff in my lower body. After another bad start in race 2, my pace was not too bad and I was starting to catch some other riders. We had a good battle with Lowes, but then a small mistake in the final stages meant I eventually finished ninth. It was a tough race and I had some arm pump due to a lack of mobility following the crash, but we have made some steps forward if we consider the entire weekend. It’s just a pity about the actual race results because we had the potential to run top five today. Anyway, we move on to Magny-Cours and will try our best again there.”


WorldSBK Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  290
 2  Scott Redding  239
 3  Chaz Davies  188
 4  Michael Van Der Mark  178
 5  Toprak Razgatlioglu  157
 6  Alex Lowes  145
 7  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  144
 8  Alvaro Bautista  94
 9  Loris Baz  91
 10  Leon Haslam  88
 11  Tom Sykes  70
 12  Garrett Gerloff  68
 13  Eugene Laverty  45
 14  Federico Caricasulo  41
 15  Xavi Fores  37
 16  Marco Melandri  23
 17  Sandro Cortese  14
 18  Leandro Mercado  12
 19  Maximilian Scheib  11
 20  Jonas Folger  9
 21  Sylvain Barrier  5
 22  Christophe Ponsson  4
 23  Roman Ramos  4
 24  Matteo Ferrari  4
 25  Takumi Takahashi  4
 26  Lorenzo Zanetti  3

WorldSSP

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion

A fightback in the race after a poor start allowed Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) to be crowned World Champion in the 2020 FIM Supersport World Championship after battling his way from fifth to the front of the field at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for the first ever Acerbis Catalunya Round.

2020 FIM Supersport World Championship

Locatelli had started from pole position but found himself down in fifth place after the opening handful of laps with Locatelli not taking risks in the early stages, despite falling behind Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing). It would take until Lap 5 for Locatelli to start making moves, first passing Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) into Turn 1 before he passed Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) a lap later.

2020 FIM Supersport World Championship

The title-winning move came on Lap 9 as he made a move on both Mahias and Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing); Locatelli forcing Mahias wide and onto the run-off between Turns 1 and 2 although Oettl was able to pass Locatelli shortly after. Locatelli then extended his gap at the front to just over two seconds as he secured victory and the World Championship.

Raffaele de Rosa

Mahias finished the race in second place, meaning Yamaha secured the Manufacturers’ Championship with Mahias finishing second onboard his Kawasaki. Mahias was joined by teammate Oettl on the podium, with Mahias getting past Oettl with a handful of laps to go but unable to close the gap to Locatelli.

De Rosa secured a fourth placed finish, less than a second away from the podium, with Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) in fifth, his first top five since Portimao Race 2 as the South African continues to impress in WorldSSP. Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) finished in sixth place, finishing ahead of Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team); the 2019 WorldSSP300 Champion penalised three seconds for track limits infringements.

Steven Odendaal

Perolari fell down the order in the latter stages of the race to finish in eighth place with Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) in ninth; the British rider securing another top ten finish – his fifth in the last six races. Estonian Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) completed the top ten, finished just over a second behind Webb.

Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) just missed out on a top ten finish with 11th place with Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) in 12th place; the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider as he finished less than a tenth ahead of WorldSSP Challenge rider Kevin Manfredi (Altogoo Racing Team) in 13th. Race 1 winner Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) finished in 14th place as Loris Cresson (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) completed the points.

There was a collision on the run down to Turn 1 at the start between Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team) and Patrick Hobelsberger (Dynavolt Honda) with Hobelsberger taken to the medical centre for a check-up before being diagnosed with a left hip contusion and suspected pelvic injury. He will be transferred to hospital for further assessments. Galang Hendra Pratama (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) crashed on Lap 2 of the race while Kyle Smith (GMT94 Yamaha) and teammate Oscar Gutierrez came together on the same lap; all three riders retiring from the race.

P1 Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

“It’s a dream! Until then you know it’s alive but it’s an incredible day. We work everywhere, every time very well and this is our objective. This is an incredible day and I don’t have any words but I’m very excited. Thanks to my guys because they work very hard every time and this is the result.”

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion
P2 Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

“The race is not so bad again it’s not possible to win. I tried to follow but exactly the same race compared to the first part of the season and every stage of the season. It’s not possible to ride in the rhythm of the yellow bike. For sure, it’s not easy because when you start the race and your best position is second it is not nice, but this is racing and this is the racing for this year. I am happy for my team with second position and for Kawasaki because my teammate finished third and this is nice for the Puccetti team and Kawasaki.”

Lucas Mahias
P3 Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

“It was a tough job, I decided to use the softer rear tyre but after 10 laps to go I felt there was a drop and then I was just sliding around. I tried to build as much grip as possible, but it was a very hard job to do this with pickup but I’m happy, we have a 2-3 with Kawasaki and I think I learnt a lot this weekend. In the past two races, we didn’t have enough luck to finish on the podium but today feels really good.”

WorldSSP Race Two

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha 0.000
2 L.  Mahias Kawasaki +2.159
3 P. Oettl Kawasaki +4.252
4 R. De Rosa MV Agusta +5.086
5 S. Odendaal Yamaha +7.847
6 I.  Vinales Yamaha +8.195
7 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki +9.845
8 C. Perolari Yamaha +10.208
9 D. Webb Yamaha +12.732
10 H. Soomer Yamaha +14.231
11 P.  Sebestyen Yamaha +15.245
12 A. Bassani Yamaha +18.917
13 K. Manfredi Yamaha +18.989
14 A. Verdoia Yamaha +27.009
15 L.  Cresson Yamaha +32.532
16 G. Van Straalen Yamaha +32.576
17 M. Pons Honda +32.603
18 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha +32.810
19 L.  Montella Yamaha +42.222
20 G. Erill Kawasaki +55.646
Not Classified
RET F. Fuligni MV Agusta 2 Laps
RET O. Gutierrez Iglesiasesp Yamaha 15 Laps
RET K. Smith Yamaha 15 Laps
RET G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha 16 Laps
RET P. Hobelsberger Honda /
RET  C. Oncu Kawasaki /

WorldSSP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  263
 2  Lucas Mahias  159
 3  Jules Cluzel  146
 4  Philipp Oettl  124
 5  Raffaele De Rosa  106
 6  Corentin Perolari  96
 7  Steven Odendaal  95
 8  Isaac Vinales  90
 9  Manuel Gonzalez  89
 10  Hannes Soomer  59
 11  Danny Webb  55
 12  Peter Sebestyen  42
 13  Can Alexander Oncu  34
 14  Andy Verdoia  33
 15  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza  25
 16  Federico Fuligni  21
 17  Kevin Manfredi  20
 18  Axel Bassani  18
 19  Kyle Smith  16
 20  Miquel Pons  16
 21  Loris Cresson  12
 22  Galang Hendra Pratama  9
 23  Patrick Hobelsberger  6
 24  Maria Herrera  2
 25  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 26  Hikari Okubo  1
 27  Luigi Montella  1

WorldSSP300

The drama went to the final corner on the last lap in FIM Supersport 300 World Championship as the Championship visited the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for the first time with Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) claiming his and Japan’s first victory in WorldSSP300 during the Acerbis Catalunya Round.

P1 Yuta Okaya

A Turn 10 collision between Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing), Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300) and long-time race leader Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) separated out the front group meaning Okaya was able to claim victory. Orradre was able to continue in the race but finished in 26th place while Sofuoglu came home in tenth as Booth-Amos retired.

WorldSSP300

Okaya had been running at the front throughout on the 10-lap race and made the race-winning move on the last lap to claim the stunning victory, heading off teammates Scott Deroue and Jeffrey Buis as MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT claimed a podium lockout during Race 2; with Deroue closing in on Buis in the Championship standings. Deroue had to come through the Last Chance Race to make the main races and battled his way through the grid to get to the podium in Race 2 as he showed strong pace throughout.

WorldSSP300

Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) continued the team’s success as he finished in fourth place, the team claiming a 1-2-3-4 finish. Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil AD 78) finished the race in fifth place as the highest-placed Yamaha rider, finishing just over a tenth away from a podium finish. Inigo Iglesias Bravo (Scuderia Maranga Racing) secured a top six finished; under a tenth away from Kawakami.

WorldSSP300

Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO) was another who fought his way through the Last Chance Race to secure a seventh place finish, just ahead of Ukrainian rider Nick Kalinin (Battley-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) in eighth, Adrian Huertas (ProGP Racing) in ninth and Sofuoglu finishing in tenth despite the last-lap crash.

WorldSSP300

Race 1 podium finisher Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) finished in 11th place as he scored more points in Barcelona, with Daniel Mogeda (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) in 12th, Mika Perez (2R Racing) in 13th, with wildcard Angel Heredia (DEZA-ISMABON Racing Team) and Paolo Grassia (Team CHIODO Moto Racing), who started from the front row, completing the points-scoring positions.

WorldSSP300

There was a five-rider incident at Turn 10 on Lap 2 of the 10-lap race with Alejandro Carrion (Smrz Racing – Willi Race), Johan Gimbert (GP Project), Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project), Kim Aloisi (ProGP Racing) and Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) with Aloisi and Kawakami able to continue in the race. Filippo Rovelli (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) also did not finish the race, while Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) crashed out on the final lap.

P1 Yuta Okaya

“I have no words. It was such an exciting race but so difficult! It was the hottest conditions of the week and my bike is difficult to push on, we find the chance on the last lap so I could overtake Scott in the final corner. Happy for my first victory for me and also the first Japanese victory and thanks to the team.”

P1 Yuta Okaya
P2 Scott Deroue

“It’s unbelievable! This weekend has been so difficult. In first practice, we had a problem and we were not qualified for Superpole and the other practices were wet, so we were in the Last Chance Race. Yesterday, was really difficult in the wet. This morning was very good, I was fastest, so I knew I had the pace. Then you have to come from the back of the grid to the front and that can be very difficult. In the end, it was difficult, but it worked. I’m really happy.

P3 Jeffrey Buis

“It was a difficult race because in the middle of the race, my front tyre was completely destroyed and setting the lap times was hard. At the end of the race, I had some luck and I can come through to finish third. Good points for the Championship.”

WorldSSP300 Race Two

Pos Rider Bike Class Gap
1 Y. Okaya Kawasaki B 0.000
2 S. Deroue Kawasaki B +0.045
3 J.  Buis Kawasaki A +0.161
4 K. Meuffels Kawasaki A +0.239
5 M. Kawakami Yamaha B +0.292
6 I.  Iglesias Bravo Kawasaki B +0.343
7 H. De Cancellis Yamaha B +0.697
8 N. Kalinin Kawasaki A +0.773
9 A. Huertas Yamaha B +1.221
10 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha B +1.259
11 S. Di Sora Kawasaki A +1.455
12 D. Mogeda Kawasaki A +2.007
13 M. Perez Kawasaki A +2.032
14 A. Heredia Kawasaki B +2.085
15 P. Grassia Kawasaki A +2.318
16 A. Kroh Yamaha A +2.549
17 T. Brianti Kawasaki B +3.098
18 A. Coppola Kawasaki B +3.337
19 V. Rodriguez Nunez Yamaha A +10.316
20 M. Gennai Yamaha A +12.808
21 M. Garcia Kawasaki A +12.834
22 F. Perez Casas Yamaha B +13.094
23 I.  Garcia Kawasaki A +13.334
24 J.  Perez Gonzalez Yamaha B +14.130
25 F. Macan Yamaha A +14.147
26 U. Orradre Yamaha A +23.266
27 G. Mastroluca Kawasaki B +39.288
28 T. Kawakami Yamaha B +43.244
Not Classified
RET T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki B 1 Lap
RET B. Ieraci Kawasaki A 1 Lap
RET F. Rovelli Kawasaki A 7 Laps
RET K. Aloisi Yamaha A /
RET K. Sabatucci Kawasaki B /
RET J.  Gimbert Kawasaki A /
RET A. Carrion Kawasaki A /

WorldSSP300 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jeffrey Buis  158
 2  Scott Deroue  142
 3  Bahattin Sofuoglu  111
 4  Unai Orradre  98
 5  Ana Carrasco  97
 6  Tom Booth-Amos  94
 7  Thomas Brianti  80
 8  Mika Perez  71
 9  Meikon Kawakami  58
 10  Yuta Okaya  54
 11  Koen Meuffels  54
 12  Samuel Di Sora  50
 13  Bruno Ieraci  44
 14  Hugo De Cancellis  38
 15  Ton Kawakami  31
 16  Nick Kalinin  29
 17  Kevin Sabatucci  24
 18  Adrian Huertas  22
 19  Marc Garcia  16
 20  Inigo Iglesias Bravo  15
 21  Filippo Rovelli  15
 22  Alan Kroh  13
 23  Glenn Van Straalen  13
 24  Alvaro Diaz  10
 25  Victor Rodriguez Nunez  9
 26  Tom Edwards  9
 27  Alfonso Coppola  9
 28  Johan Gimbert  7
 29  Oliver Konig  5
 30  Daniel Mogeda  4
 31  Filip Salac  4
 32  Enzo De La Vega  4
 33  Alejandro Carrion  4
 34  Kim Aloisi  3
 35  Angel Heredia  2
 36  Paolo Grassia  1
 37  Tom Bercot  1
 38  Mirko Gennai  1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Andrea Locatelli crowned 2020 WorldSSP Champion

Andrea Locatelli
2020 World Supersport Champion

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion

It rarely happens in any Championship class, it has never happened in the FIM Superbike World Championship paddock; it’s happened only a few times in motorcycle racing history, the most recent in a World Championship being Giacomo Agostini in 1970. You hear of people winning Championships without winning a race but it’s a true gem to win nearly everything on your way to World Championship glory. In 2020, rookie Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) has won all but one race, and even then, it was only the weather that stopped him. He’s wrapped the title race up with some four races to go. WorldSSP has never witnessed such a whirlwind.

Locatelli came into the World Supersport Championship in a bid to show to the world that he could be Champion. A mildly successful yet rather uneventful spell in the Moto2 World Championship saw him leave the MotoGP paddock at the end of 2019 and head to World Supersport’s best team – reigning Champions BARDAHL Yamaha. Fabio Evangelista’s Italian team know exactly how to win races and coming into 2020 after their first Riders’ and Teams’ Championships in 2019 filled them all with confidence. But nobody could’ve expected what was on the horizon.

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion

Straight out the box in Australia and Andrea Locatelli was immediately on top Down Under, smoking the opposition to storm to victory by over five seconds. A similar domination to Alvaro Bautista in his debut race in WorldSBK in 2019 but never did we think it’d carry on. Lockdown ensued but Locatelli certainly wasn’t going to be put off. He came to Jerez in July to prove a point and doubled up in Race 1 and Race 2, before heading to the unknown Portimao a week later and doing it again – a track he’d never seen before and in Race 1, with strong competition from Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha). All the time however, it was the metronomic consistency that was capturing the headlines and captivating the fans: fastest laps set, records broken, pole positions secured and valiant victories thereafter.

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion

Then, it was MotorLand Aragon and back-to-back events on a track that Locatelli knew extremely well. The Italian youngster cleaned up with the opposition in the opening Prosecco DOC Aragon Round, albeit having to fight a little bit more than we’d seen before. The Pirelli Teruel Round was equally as tough and in Race 2, it looked like Locatelli may have finally had to fight in true, frantic WorldSSP fashion, as Raffaele De Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse), Cluzel and Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) brought the fight to the very front. However, De Rosa wiped out Cluzel at Turn 1 early in the race, releasing Locatelli and although Mahias stayed with him for half the race, Locatelli’s ultra-consistent pace broke Mahias.

Now, it’s just Round 6 of an eight-round schedule, but already Locatelli has locked up. He’s pinned down the Championship, locked out the opposition and shut up shop for the others’ title challenge. It’s quite simply breathtaking and rarely is a Championship bolted up this early and rarely are there so many wins – yes, there’s perhaps more opportunity to win in 2020 but not that much more; an average 13-race calendar has had two more tacked on the end and Locatelli’s ten wins thus for have been achieved in less than 13 races. His dominance knows no boundaries.

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

“It’s a dream! Until then you know it’s alive but it’s an incredible day. We work everywhere, every time very well and this is our objective. This is an incredible day and I don’t have any words but I’m very excited. Thanks to my guys because they work very hard every time and this is the result.”

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion
Fabio Evangelista – BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team Team Principal

“I knew that Andrea was coming from Moto2 and Moto3 after six years with a lot of experience but to be humble at the beginning during the winter I was thinking about being in the top five or top three positions. I could not have expected such a strong rider with such a fast method of working and so fast on track. We gave him I think the best package possible, 100%, but he finished all of the races because he´s a very good rider.”

The 2020 FIM Supersport World Championship not only went the way of Andrea Locatelli but also to Yamaha, who once again showed their strength and superiority in dominating the Championship. Every single race victory went the way of the Japanese manufacturer, with two of those being Yamaha podium lockouts. Two teams took victory, with the BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team winning 10 and the bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing taking one, with Andrea Locatelli and Andy Verdoïa respectively. It’s back-to-back Championships for the BARDAHL Yamaha squad and on top of it all, Locatelli becomes the first Italian Champion in the class for the Italian team.

Andrea Dosoli – Yamaha Motor Europe Road Racing Project Leader

“First of all, congratulations to Andrea and Fabio; when we started to discuss last year what we could do together finally we decided when entering this class we should enter at the top with the winning team who won the title the year before, because we strongly believed that he had the potential to fight for the title. And then we put all the pieces together, we started, and the result is here, so congratulations to both of them and congratulations also to all the R6 and the Teams supported by the program because first it’s the fourth title in a row for Yamaha so of course we are pleased about this and this is happening only because we have professional teams, a very talented rider like Andrea and a professional Team Manager as Fabio. I have been surprised – of course not because he won the title, honestly I expected him to win the title – but in the way he won the title; he has dominated the Championship, and I have been surprised by his approach, his method of working. I still remember Philip Island Race 1 I was in Parc Fermé, he had dominated the Race, the first time on an R6 with a new tyre specification, also a new challenge for the team. He dominated the race and in Parc Fermé of course he was celebrating, he was happy, but he told me ¨Andrea, during the race I understood something, I have spoken with the crew chief, I have spoken with Fabio, the mechanic, the bike is not 100%, we need to work, there is room for improvement, let´s go back to the garage and let’s try to be better for the next one”. This means a lot, I understood that Andrea is something special, then he delivered the results race by race. So, congratulations to all of us, it’s an honour to help you achieve your dreams.”

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) – 2020 FIM Supersport World Champion

WorldSSP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  263
 2  Lucas Mahias  159
 3  Jules Cluzel  146
 4  Philipp Oettl  124
 5  Raffaele De Rosa  106
 6  Corentin Perolari  96
 7  Steven Odendaal  95
 8  Isaac Vinales  90
 9  Manuel Gonzalez  89
 10  Hannes Soomer  59
 11  Danny Webb  55
 12  Peter Sebestyen  42
 13  Can Alexander Oncu  34
 14  Andy Verdoia  33
 15  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza  25
 16  Federico Fuligni  21
 17  Kevin Manfredi  20
 18  Axel Bassani  18
 19  Kyle Smith  16
 20  Miquel Pons  16
 21  Loris Cresson  12
 22  Galang Hendra Pratama  9
 23  Patrick Hobelsberger  6
 24  Maria Herrera  2
 25  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 26  Hikari Okubo  1
 27  Luigi Montella  1

Source: MCNews.com.au