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Oli Bayliss breaks through for ASBK victory and sets new lap record

Darwin ASBK Race Two


At first it looked like a quite innocuous front end lose during final qualifying as Mike Jones pushed to try and further his place up the grid on Saturday morning but later investigations found injuries that would ultimately rule Mike Jones out of the remainder of proceedings at Hidden Valley.  Jones had qualified third but missed Saturday’s race as he was examined in hospital where he remains today ahead of hand surgery.

What led to Jones’ crash that damaged his hand was an earlier kerb-strike earlier that broke and dislocated toes in his foot.  Mike Jones is not the only rider to have copped a significant whack to the foot on the kerbs here this weekend, we know that Troy Herfoss, Yanni Shaw and Lachlan Epis are all smarting from similar impacts that resulted in varying degrees of injury. Mark Chiodo crashed yesterday and had not been cleared by medical staff to take part today.

Mike Jones missing from the grid today – Image RbMotoLens

The loss of three significant points scoring opportunities is a cruel blow for both Jones and the DesmoSport Ducati squad with this effectively ruining any chances that Jones might have had to fight for the championship. It is also a blow to the series as in the rounds staged so far this year it has only been Jones that looked even close to getting on terms with the dominance of Wayne Maxwell and Troy Herfoss. Jones’s team-mate Oli Bayliss had already stepped up a gear this weekend and will now be the sole focus of the team for the remainder of their time in Darwin.

In the opening race of the weekend Oli Bayliss looked very strong early on before a mistake a few laps into the race cost him a lot of time and positions. He worked his way back through to almost claim a podium and will be pumped off the back of that ahead of this morning’s encounter.

Oli will have the full focus of the whole DesmoSport Ducati Team today – Image RbMotoLens

At the front it was that pair we always expect to be battling for the win, Wayne Maxwell and Troy Herfoss. Maxwell had set the pace in every session and on qualifying form looked as though he would be almost impossible to beat. Herfoss didn’t read that script though and sat on that tail-pipes of the Boost Mobile Ducati for all but the last few corners of the race. Late on the final lap he slid the Penrite Honda under Maxwell on entry to a corner and then had the race line through the final couple of turns to take victory by the narrowest of margins.

Final preps being made to the Boost Mobile Ducati this morning – Image RbMotoLens

Maxwell will be determined to not allow that to happen again but after Herfoss spent almost the entire 16 laps of race one studying the form of Maxwell and the Ducati nobody has a better understanding of the comparative strengths and weaknesses between the two bike-rider packages. I would imagine the intelligence gained from that reconnaissance mission would inform any changes the Penrite Honda might make to the Fireblade overnight. Similarly, Maxwell’s crew-chief in exile, Adrian Monti watching on from plague-town Melbourne and keeping in constant voice and data contact with the team throughout, would have studied the race footage and data overnight to try and tweak their package further for its long-run form.

Final fettling on the new NextGen BMW M 1000 RR this morning in Darwin – Image RbMotoLens

Glenn Allerton had also been very strong early on but a clutch-slip issue on the new M 1000 RR ultimately blunted his challenge.  The NextGen BMW squad will have sorted that overnight and they will be hoping to hang onto the back of Herf’ and the Wayne-Train throughout the entire 16-laps today. Lachlan Epis had accidentally put his M 1000 RR into Rain Mode and thus he was riding a very blunted instrument on Saturday and will feel like it is ripping his arms off today.

Daniel Falzon will be out to make up for the disappointment of being taken out early on in race one – Image RbMotoLens

Daniel Falzon has been the strongest Yamaha runner so far this weekend but his challenge was cruelled at turn one on Saturday when he was punted from behind. Anthony West has managed to hone his race package further and is much closer to competitive pace this weekend.

The official Yamaha Racing Team are not having a great weekend but will be hopeful of turning around that form this morning.

BC Performance continue to tune the new ZX-10RR – Image RbMotoLens

Bryan Staring and BC Performance have already made significant progress this weekend and will be working hard to continue with that momentum as they get the new ZX-10RR up to speed. Staring finished fifth on Saturday but was a significant 12-seconds behind the top duo over the 16-lap race distance which indicates they still have significant gains that need to be made in order to be competitive. They are, however, the fastest Dunlop runners


ASBK Superbike Race Two

Race Two start, first time around… – Image RbMotoLens

Wayne Maxwell looked to get major wheelspin off the line and perhaps also suffered some clutch creep but still led the field around turn one ahead of Oli Bayliss and Troy Herfoss. Only a few corners later though Herfoss went down which saw the red flag brought out and the medical team sent to the scene.

Herfoss lost the front at turn four

The Penrite Honda looked to hit the air-fence first at Turn Four and took the fence with it which then led to a vastly reduced amount of air-fence protection from the wall by the time Troy made impact with the wall.

The bike took the air-fence with it

Early indications are that Troy’s femur is broken just below the ball. He has also suffered some shoulder injuries, but the extent of those is yet to be ascertained.

The issues of air-fences unable to be effectively secured to the ground raises its head yet again. It’s clear that they are not an adequate substitute for run-off areas. If you put posts in the ground to secure the air-fence then you are only putting another hard object that the rider may hit, thus the secure installation of them is always challenging. They essentially need to buried deep in the ground but when they are a temporary measure that is not really practicable.

We do know that on the start-line senior personnel in some teams had complained that officials were making them remove the tyre-warmers before track cleaning had been completed ahead of their race.  Obviously that results in tyres losing temperature. Troy fell the first time he tilted to use the right side of the tyre.

Due to being a supporting act of the V8 Supercar program, Race Two was cancelled due to time constraints as it would be a lengthy undertaking to reinstall the air-fence to a satisfactory standard.

While of course we have the utmost concern and sympathy for Herfoss and Jones, the cancellation of that race certainly helps them in the championship as his competitors were then denied the extra opportunity to make gains against them.  The cancellation reduces the disadvantage they were to be under in the championsip chase. Some might read those comments at heartless, but it’s just simple maths and facts and is what it is.


ASBK Superbike Race Three

Troy Herfoss and Mike Jones were missing from the grid on Sunday afternoon – Image RbMotoLens

Obviously Troy Herfoss and Mike Jones were missing from the grid on Sunday afternoon. A crash during qualifying for Jones, and a crash on Sunday morning for Herfoss, had both riders receiving treatment in Darwin Hospital. Mark Chiodo was also missing from the grid due to a crash earlier in the weekend.

DesmoSport Ducati personnel attend to the V4 R of Oli Bayliss on the grid – Image RbMotoLens

Sunday morning had been Darwin’s coldest of the year with the overnight temperature dropping to 18-degrees Celsius. Temperatures were much hotter when they formed up on the grid on Sunday afternoon for the third and final race of the weekend though with the track temp’ nudging towards 55-degrees and the ambient temperature 30-degrees.

Oli Bayliss scored the hole-shot and the teenager led the field through turn one from Wayne Maxwell and Glenn Allerton. Lachlan Epis was up to third, Arthur Sissis fifth and Daniel Falzon sixth before being demoted to seventh by Bryan Staring.

Oli maintained the lead throughout the opening lap but Maxwell went up the inside on lap two. Glenn Allerton was right with that duo and Oli was trying to find an opportunity to retaliate on Maxwell. Both that pair in the 65s on lap three, a 65.792 to Maxwell and 65.959 to Bayliss. They then backed those up with 65.8s to start to pull away from Glenn Allerton.

Maxwell leading Bayliss – Image RbMotoLens

The red flag then came out after Matt Walters went down heavily at turn one. Corey Turner was also off the circuit after being collected by Matt but it was Walters that appeared to need some medical attention. Riders were then called back to the grid while moments later Walters managed to get up and walk away.  The Cessnock Kawasaki rider had no brakes heading for turn one, after repeatedly pumping the lever he knew he had to just try and thread the needle between the riders in front of him and he did an amazing job not to centre-punch any of them. He took to the kerb at the last minute to try and evade Turner but could not avoid collecting the Queenslander, who was luckily unhurt. As for Walters he sustained a decent whack to his wrist and ankle but doesn’t think anything is broken.

Re-Start

The race was eventually re-started for a shortened eight-lap distance. This time around Maxwell got off the line well and held the line into turn one to maintain the race lead. Arthur Sissis again ridiculously awesome off the line to shoot up to third place ahead of Glenn Allerton, Bryan Staring and Daniel Falzon. The clutch control and reactions of Sissis must be other-worldly, years of high-level speedway competition has honed those reactions to perfection.

Wayne Maxwell through to the lead – Image RbMotoLens

Oli Bayliss was not letting Maxwell get away. A 65.625 bettering Maxwell’s 65.795 to stick right with the veteran. Maxwell responded with a 65.683 but could still not shake Bayliss. The DesmoSport Ducati looked quicker down the main straight but Maxwell had the wood on Bayliss under brakes.

A couple of seconds further back Glenn Allerton had moved into third place and stretched away from the rest of the field. Daniel Falzon was fourth with four-laps to run ahead of Bryan Staring, Aiden Wagner, Lachlan Epis and Anthony West.

Wayne Maxwell leading Oli Bayliss – Image Half Light

Both Maxwell and Bayliss then went under the race lap record set by Troy Herfoss yesterday, but it was Bayliss the quicker of the pair, 65.445 to Maxwell’s 65.513, but still it was Maxwell with his nose in front on track.

Two laps to run and Oli Bayliss took the lead into turn one, Maxwell gave him plenty of room and did not even attempt to come back at him, one eye firmly focussed on the championship no doubt. Bayliss maintained the lead throughout that penultimate lap and maintained that advantage into turn one for the final time.

Maxwell closed up on him in the latter half of that final lap but did not look ready to take any risks. He got on the gas hard a few corners before the end but a big slide put paid to any chance he had of getting on terms with Bayliss through the final corner. The victory belongs to Oli Bayliss and it was a hard-fought and well-deserved one at that. Oli Bayliss is also the round victor by a point over Maxwell.

Oli Bayliss gets a hug from DesmoSport Ducati Co-Owner Ben Henry in Parc Ferme – Image RbMotoLens

Has his performance in Darwin announced the emergence of Oli Bayliss amongst our own local group of Superbike ‘aliens’?  He was strong all weekend and won that race fair and square, and even set a new race lap record in the process.

Wayne Maxwell congratulates Oli – Image RbMotoLens

Oli knows Morgan Park very well and if he can carry this form through to that  Queensland venue, which will host the next round of the series on the weekend of August 22, he will be able to lock in his place amongst the best competitors still racing here in Australia. But at 17, he is 20 years younger than most of them….

Oli Bayliss gets a hug from mum Kim in Parc Ferme – Image RbMotoLens

Darwin was certainly one hell of a rollercoaster for the DesmoSport Ducati squad but despite Mike’s pain and disappointment I am sure he will be celebrating with the Gold Coast based squad this evening.

A roller-coaster of a weekend ends on a high note for DesmoSport Ducati – Image RbMotoLens

Glenn Allerton crossed the stripe seven-seconds behind that duo to claim his spot on the podium ahead of Bryan Staring and Daniel Falzon. A very encouraging result for NextGen BMW with the new M 1000 RR they only put together at the track this week.

Hidden Valley Round Podium – Image RbMotoLens

ASBK Superbike Race Three Results

Pos Rider Bile Gap
1 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R /
2 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R +0.172
3 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR +6.937
4 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R +8.855
5 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 +9.096
6 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 +11.407
7 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 +11.769
8 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R +13.579
9 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 /
9 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 +13.703
10 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 +14.620
11 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 +20.856
12 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R /
12 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 +24.605
13 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R +34.221
14 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 +43.172
15 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR +12.502

ASBK Championship

ASBK next reconvenes at Morgan Park on the weekend of August 22.  That means Troy Herfoss and Mike Jones have two-months to try and recover from the injuries they sustained this weekend in Darwin.

Maxwell will take a 26-point lead over Herfoss to Morgan Park and Glenn Allerton has significantly strengthened his hold on third place in the championship.

Despite not having a race package that has proved competitive this year Cru Halliday continues to keep his nose clean to rack up points through consistency. Considering their lack of speed it is amazing that he has managed to get the YRT machine to fourth in the championship standings.

With that victory Oli Bayliss moves up to fifth in the championship chase, equal on points with Bryan Staring, 45-points behind series leader Maxwell.

Oli Bayliss

Everything just felt really good this weekend to be honest. We tested really well, and I felt within myself that I could race at the front at Hidden Valley. The Panigale V4 R is such a fun bike to ride, and everyone in the team is working so well together to keep letting me ride it faster and faster. As soon as we got on track on Friday I knew we were in a good position and if it wasn’t for running wide in race one, I think I could have been battling for a win there too. Dad gave me some advice on the start line about my race plan, I got off the line a lot better which really helped with track position and I managed my race, picked my strong points and I’m so happy to finally get a win on a superbike! A huge thank you to Benny, Mum, Dad, Byron and the whole DesmoSport Ducati team, and also a quick shout-out to Mike (Jones) and especially Troy Herfoss after a pretty big crash. I hope you both heal up fast.”

DesmoSport Ducati Team co-owner – Troy Bayliss

Oli did an incredible job this weekend and I couldn’t be prouder. Today I think he showed everyone a little of what he’s capable of on the Panigale V4 R. He rode smart, was patient, chose his opportunities and made them most of them not just in the race he won, but every time he was on track. It’s been a tough few weeks for me but to see Oli take the win… It was emotional for sure. The weekend obviously wasn’t so kind to Mike, he was ready this weekend to take it to the front, so to end up in hospital without even starting a race is tough, but he’ll bounce back for sure.”

Oli Bayliss with his dad, three-time World Superbike Champion Troy Bayliss – Image RbMotoLens

There are still more than 200-points up for grabs this season, if the plague remains subsided enough for us to run the full calendar.

ASBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 132
2 Troy HERFOSS 106
3 Glenn ALLERTON 100
4 Cru HALLIDAY 88
5 Oli BAYLISS 87
6 Bryan STARING 87
7 Mike JONES 74
8 Arthur SISSIS 71
9 Jed METCHER 70
10 Josh WATERS 53
11 Anthony WEST 52
12 Matt WALTERS

2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au

Troy Herfoss seriously injured at Hidden Valley

ASBK Superbike Race Two

Race Two start, first time around… – Image RbMotoLens

Only a few corners after Race Two got underway this morning at Hidden Valley the race was red-flagged.

Herfoss lost the front at turn four

Troy Herfoss went down which saw the red flag brought out and the medical team dispatched to the scene. They were with Troy quickly.

The Penrite Honda hit the air-fence first at Turn Four and took the fence with it, which then led to a vastly reduced amount of air-fence protection from the wall by the time Troy made impact with the wall.

The bike took the air-fence with it

We quickly got word that Troy was conscious and communicating and he has now been transferred to Darwin Hospital.

Early indications are that Troy’s femur is broken just below the ball. He has also suffered some shoulder injuries, but the extent of those is yet to be ascertained.

The issues of air-fences unable to be effectively secured to the ground raises its head yet again. It’s clear that they are not an adequate substitute for run-off areas. If you put posts in the ground to secure the air-fence then you are only putting another hard object that the rider may hit, thus the secure installation of them is always challenging. They essentially need to buried deep in the ground but when they are a temporary measure that is not really practicable.

We do know that on the start-line senior personnel in some teams had complained that officials were making them remove the tyre-warmers before track cleaning had been completed ahead of their race.  Obviously that results in tyres losing temperature. Troy Fell the first time he tilted to use the right side of the tyre.

Due to being a supporting act of the V8 Supercar program, Race Two was cancelled due to time constraints as it would be a lengthy undertaking to reinstall the air-fence to a satisfactory standard.


ASBK Championship Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 20 112
2 Troy HERFOSS 25 106
3 Glenn ALLERTON 18 82
4 Cru HALLIDAY 11 76
5 Mike JONES 74
6 Bryan STARING 16 70
7 Oli BAYLISS 17 62
8 Arthur SISSIS 15 61
9 Jed METCHER 12 59
10 Matt WALTERS 10 52
11 Lachlan EPIS 9 45
12 Josh WATERS 13 40
13 Anthony WEST 14 38
14 Yannis SHAW 5 26
15 Luke JHONSTON 8 25
16 Michael EDWARDS 3 25
17 Aiden WAGNER 7 22
18 Mark CHIODO / 22
19 Nathan SPITERI / 20
20 Aaron MORRIS / 14
21 Philip CZAJ / 10
22 Daniel FALZON 6 6
23 Jack DAVIS 4 4
24 Hamish McMURRAY / 4
25 Sash SAVIN / 3

  Manufacturers Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Yamaha 76 361
2 Ducati 37 248
3 Kawasaki 39 166
4 BMW 31 131
5 Honda 25 105
6 Suzuki 5 46

2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au

Injuries force Mike Jones to withdraw from Darwin event

Mike Jones to miss all Hidden Valley races

At first it looked like a quite innocuous front end lose during final qualifying as Mike Jones pushed to try and further his place up the grid but later investigations found injuries that would ultimately rule Mike Jones out of the remainder of proceedings at Hidden Valley.  Jones had qualified third but missed Saturday’s race as he was examined in hospital where he remains today ahead of hand surgery.

What led to Jones’ crash that damaged his hand was an earlier kerb-strike earlier that broke and dislocated toes in his foot.  Mike Jones is not the only rider to have copped a significant whack to the foot on the kerbs here this weekend, we know that Troy Herfoss, Yanni Shaw and Lachlan Epis are all smarting from similar impacts that resulted in varying degrees of injury after Saturday.  (At the start of race two on Sunday Herfoss then crashed heavily and was taken to hospital)

DesmoSpot Ducati Team co-owner – Ben Henry

Mike is still in hospital, and will be operated on early today to repair some of the damage done, mainly to his little finger now. We sent him out to put in a fast lap time midway through the qualifying two session and as he was finding some great pace, he clipped his left foot on the kerb, breaking and dislocating his toe. Mike pushed on to set a fast lap but ultimately crashed due to the injury to his foot where he then damaged his finger. He was having a great weekend, the team is working really well together and I really think that we were in for a strong result, but these things happen in racing. We’ll know more about Mike’s recovery as the day goes on, so while he is being taken care of in hospital, we’ll concentrate on supporting Oli for the final two races today as he continues his own strong weekend.”

Mike Jones on his way to qualifying third at Hidden Valley – Image RbMotoLens
Mike Jones

I’m really disappointed to miss this weekend’s three races. I was feeling great on the bike and came into the round really confident that I would be racing for the win in all three races, and right up until I eventually came off I still believed that. After I hit the kerb with my foot, I knew I’d done some serious damage, but I managed to push on, setting my fastest lap of the weekend, beating Troy’s (Bayliss) 2018 lap record (1:05.601) before I crashed. The doctors reset my toe yesterday, dislocated with two breaks, and today they’re working on repairing my finger. I’ll know a lot more later in the day about my expected recovery, so for now I’ll have to settle for watching the racing from the sidelines after they finish fixing me up.”

The loss of three significant points scoring opportunities is a cruel blow for both Jones and the DesmoSport Ducati squad with this effectively ruining any chances that Jones might have had to fight for the championship. It is also a blow to the series as in the rounds staged so far this year it has only been Jones that looked even close to getting on terms with the dominance of Wayne Maxwell and Troy Herfoss. Jones’s team-mate Oli Bayliss had already stepped up a gear this weekend and will now be the sole focus of the team for the remainder of their time in Darwin.


ASBK Championship Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 20 112
2 Troy HERFOSS 25 106
3 Glenn ALLERTON 18 82
4 Cru HALLIDAY 11 76
5 Mike JONES 74
6 Bryan STARING 16 70
7 Oli BAYLISS 17 62
8 Arthur SISSIS 15 61
9 Jed METCHER 12 59
10 Matt WALTERS 10 52
11 Lachlan EPIS 9 45
12 Josh WATERS 13 40
13 Anthony WEST 14 38
14 Yannis SHAW 5 26
15 Luke JHONSTON 8 25
16 Michael EDWARDS 3 25
17 Aiden WAGNER 7 22
18 Mark CHIODO / 22
19 Nathan SPITERI / 20
20 Aaron MORRIS / 14
21 Philip CZAJ / 10
22 Daniel FALZON 6 6
23 Jack DAVIS 4 4
24 Hamish McMURRAY / 4
25 Sash SAVIN / 3

  Manufacturers Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Yamaha 76 361
2 Ducati 37 248
3 Kawasaki 39 166
4 BMW 31 131
5 Honda 25 105
6 Suzuki 5 46

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au

Herfoss pips Maxwell for victory in Darwin opener

Darwin ASBK Race One


After an exciting qualifying session at Hidden Valley this morning that saw three riders under the lap record, and Wayne Mawell smashing the qualifying lap record, it was shaping up as a serious rumble in the jungle up in the tropics on Saturday afternoon.  DesmoSport Ducati duo Oli Bayliss and Mike Jones went P2 and P3 to make it an all-Ducati front row for the first time ever in Australian Superbike. Jones fell in Q2 though and would not make the start for the race this afternoon as he was off in hospital getting some hand injuries attended to.

Wayne Maxwell had dominated every session so far this weekend – Image Half Light

Had Troy Herfoss been foxing somewhat ahead of this opening bout? The Penrite Honda man only made one real attempt at a lap-time in Q2 and that was a 65.645s, so the pace is there. Do Michelin have an ace card up their sleeve in regards to tyre life in these sweltering conditions?

Did Herf’ have something extra up his sleeve? – Image Half Light

Glenn Allerton is enthused with the fresh out of the box M 1000 RR and they should be able to find more improvements in every session as they find their feet with the new bike. How it looks after its tyres over race distance though is a question nobody has an answer for yet.

From road bike to race bike in a matter of hours… NextGen BMW M 1000 RR – Image Half Light

South Australian privateer Daniel Falzon was the fastest qualifying Yamaha after a significant break away from the sport.

Bryan Staring showed more progress is being made with BC Performance Kawasaki to qualify seventh and fastest Dunlop runner. His team-mate Josh Waters, by far the most successful Superbike rider ever at Hidden Valley, is not quite there yet and starts from P11.

Bryan Staring on the grid – Image Half Light

Anthony West made some significant steps forward today. Finally getting into the 66s in Q1 with a 66.995s before then dropping six-tenths off that to end Q2 in eighth place on 66.396s. Arthur Sissis also starts from that third row in P9, the ex-speedway rider is an absolute gun off the line, expect him to make up plenty of positions by turn one.

On the form guide though if one was trying to work out the odds, with Wayne Maxwell setting the pace in every session, and putting 5 x 65s in that final qualifying session, he looks very hard to beat. He already has a point for pole and with this weekend being a three-race format instead of the normal two, this round takes on even more significance in the championship chase.


ASBK Superbike Race One

Maxwell got a great launch while Oli Bayliss got his worst start of the season after starting from his best grid position ever! Image Half Light

Wayne Maxwell absolutely smoked them off the line. Herfoss was away well too in second place and quickly closed that ground back up to Maxwell through the opening turns as Glenn Allerton slotted up to third.  Corey Turner and Daniel Falzon got tangled up at turn one and both ran off the circuit.

Maxwell was away well – Image RbMotoLens

Down the straight for the first time and it was Maxwell, Herfoss, Allerton and Oli Bayliss. That quartet was already pulling a significant gap over the rest of the field.

The leading four broke away from the rest almost immediately

Both Maxwell and Herfoss were down into the 65s by lap three and Oli Bayliss joined them in that bracket next time around before then slipping past Glenn Allerton to move up to third place.

Maxwell lowered the race lap record next time around, 65.827 the new marker, then followed by a 65.706 but Herfoss went one better, a 65.618 to stick right onto the tail-pipes of that Ducati V4 R.  That pair were starting to pull away a little from Bayliss now but Oli was trying to hang on and also under the previous lap record.

Bayliss tried a little too hard though and ran off the circuit. He was having a red hot go but that mistake lost him around nine-seconds and he had drifted back to sixth place.

Up front it was back to ops normal, Maxwell and Herfoss running on their own.  Allerton had started strongly but had lost touch by the halfway point, the BMW man now four-seconds behind the leading duo.

Nothing separated Maxwell and Herfoss throughout the whole 16-laps of the race – Image Half Light

Nothing separated Maxwell and Herfoss up front with six laps to go. Herfoss had not made an attempt to make a pass, but it did look as though he had the speed to make such a move. The Penrite Honda looked on rails while the Boost Mobile Ducati was starting to look a little loose, the Italian bike on Italian rubber was definitely sliding around more than the French rubber shod Japanese machine.

Herfoss had a sniff up the inside at the end of the main straight with four laps to run but didn’t force the issue and Maxwell retained the lead. Maxwell had slowed the pace a little in the middle of the race but now as they looked towards the home stretch he wound the wick up once again and Herfoss came along for the ride.

At the last lap board Maxwell had two-tenths on Herfoss after dropping back down to a 66.1.  Herfoss closed back up on him in the mid-part of the lap and was right on his tail around the back of the circuit.

Herfoss only led for a few corners all race, but it was the few corners that mattered… – Image Half Light

Herfross backed it in up the inside a couple of corners before the end and forces Wayne wide and gave Herfoss the line for the next corner, they both pick the bikes up and get back on line but Herfoss had the advantage, led onto the main straight and took a brilliant victory.

Herfoss demonstrated why you can never rule him out come race day – Image Half Light

Glenn Allerton puts the M 1000 RR on the podium in its first outing, albeit 9.5-seconds behind the leading pair.

Glenn Allerton – Image Half Light

Oli Bayliss staged a brilliant recovery after a poor start followed by a mistake that saw him run off the circuit, he then got it together and worked his way back past a number of riders to claim fourth position and came close to running down Allerton to get back into the podium positions. It was revealed after the race that Allerton had been struggling with a slipping clutch.

Bryan Staring and BC Performance will be encouraged by their fifth place finish while South Aussie privateer Arthur Sissis was the highest finishing Yamaha in sixth place ahead of Anthony West.

We have two further races tomorrow, the first at 1050 and the second at 1405. That is in Darwin time which translates to 1120 and 1435 for the eastern seaboard.

Hidden Valley Race One Podium – Image RbMotoLens

ASBK Superbike Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed
1 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR / 273
2 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R +0.060 279
3 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR +9.652 263
4 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R +10.878 272
5 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R +11.670 267
6 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 +12.977 271
7 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 +17.477 261
8 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R +17.600 272
9 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 +23.679 266
10 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 +33.261 272
11 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R +34.346 269
12 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR +34.439 262
13 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 +43.392 270
14 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 +43.746 272
15 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 +1m00.033 263
16 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R +1m03.351 266
17 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1 Lap 259
18 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1 Lap 259
19 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1 Lap 126

ASBK Championship

With that victory Herfoss claws back five-points on Maxwell and the gap now shrinks to six-points, 112 plays 106.

A hard fought and tactical victory for Herfoss saw him claw some points back on Maxwell – Image RbMotoLens
Troy Herfoss

It was such a fun race. In qualifying, Wayne was so fast and with Mike (Jones) and Oli (Bayliss) also doing good times, we narrowly missed out on a front-row start, which was a little disappointing. There were stages during the race where I started to doubt myself, but I knew I had to play the patience game. Riding 16 laps in the heat is physically demanding, but I felt quite comfortable. I like going to races where fitness is one of the main factors, because I think it plays to my strengths.”

Wayne Maxwell

I covered Troy at turns five and six, and I tried to block the line into turn 11 – I went in there reasonably deep and tried to hang on the outside, but he was too good. I was in a rhythm for most of the race, just trying to hit a lap time; the grip went away towards the end. I love it – I’m really happy, there are so many positives for us to take out of the race and we’ll try to improve a tiny bit for tomorrow morning.”

Maxwell’s lead was trimmed back to six-points – Image RbMotoLens

That podium finish promoted Glenn Allerton up to third place in the championship on 82-points. Both he and the NextGen Team will have even more motivation fuelled from the potential to come from that M 1000 RR that they only took delivery of a couple of days ago.

Glenn Allerton

It’s been a massive effort by the team to build a brand-new bike, strip it down, install all the suspension and electronics. If this is our first race on it and we’re on the podium, it shows the potential is really high. The clutch was slipping really badly out of the last corner for a lot of the race and costing me a lot of time; I’m confident if we fix that issue for tomorrow, we’ll be right there with the top two.”

Allerton and NextGen BMW will be fizzing at the potential of the new M 1000 RR – Image RbMotoLens

It is clearly obvious that the Yamaha Racing Team and Dunlop combination is not competitive enough this year for Cru Halliday and Aiden Wagner to show their speed. Still, Halliday has been making sure he stays on the bike clocking up points and holds down fourth place in the championship, which is impressive in itself.

It has taken BC Performance some time to get on top of the new ZX-10RR but Bryan Staring has been collecting points where he can and to his credit is sixth in the championship chase.

That mistake in qualifying that left Mike Jones with some hand and foot injuries that prevented him from starting the race is a hefty blow for the Queenslander, but he still ranks fifth on the points table and is certainly not out of the main game yet.


ASBK Championship Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 20 112
2 Troy HERFOSS 25 106
3 Glenn ALLERTON 18 82
4 Cru HALLIDAY 11 76
5 Mike JONES 74
6 Bryan STARING 16 70
7 Oli BAYLISS 17 62
8 Arthur SISSIS 15 61
9 Jed METCHER 12 59
10 Matt WALTERS 10 52
11 Lachlan EPIS 9 45
12 Josh WATERS 13 40
13 Anthony WEST 14 38
14 Yannis SHAW 5 26
15 Luke JHONSTON 8 25
16 Michael EDWARDS 3 25
17 Aiden WAGNER 7 22
18 Mark CHIODO / 22
19 Nathan SPITERI / 20
20 Aaron MORRIS / 14
21 Philip CZAJ / 10
22 Daniel FALZON 6 6
23 Jack DAVIS 4 4
24 Hamish McMURRAY / 4
25 Sash SAVIN / 3

  Manufacturers Points

Pos Name Points Total
1 Yamaha 76 361
2 Ducati 37 248
3 Kawasaki 39 166
4 BMW 31 131
5 Honda 25 105
6 Suzuki 5 46

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Source: MCNews.com.au

Maxwell smashes Hidden Valley lap record in exciting qualifying session

Darwin ASBK Qualifying


While the times had looked tight on Friday, no rider had put in more quick laps than Wayne Maxwell. The Boost Mobile Ducati rider looked to be reeling off low 66s at will. He did five laps under 66.5 in FP1 and another seven in FP2.

The second quickest rider on Friday, young Oli Bayliss, only managed two laps under 66.5, third placed man Mike Jones did three as did Troy Herfoss. Maxwell certainly hit the ground running in Darwin but it would be interesting to see what his competitors had found in themselves and their motorcycle overnight.

Glenn Allerton was enjoying the new BMW M 1000 RR which the NextGen crew had turned from a road bike picked up a dealership late Wednesday afternoon into a race bike while at the track. We take a look at the new M 1000 RR here.

Daniel Falzon was the quickest Yamaha on Friday in P6 while Bryan Staring led the Kawasaki charge in P7.

Who would be the rider to upset the Ducati 1-2-3 stranglehold on Friday?  Many riders also might be searching for a two down the long main straight.

Qualifying 1

In a departure from the normal qualifying procedure all riders had to take part in QP1 in order to earn their positions in QP2, rather than that top dozen beind taken from the quickest 12 in Free Practice. Track temperatures were almost 20-degrees cooler than they had experienced in Friday afternoon’s FP2.

Wayne Maxwell put in a 65.799 on his first flying lap. The first 65 of the weekend and just outside the qualifying lap record set here by Troy Bayliss here in 2018 at 65.601s.

Mike Jones then went P2 on 66.010s and young DesmoSport Ducati team-mate Oli Bayliss P3 on 66.324s. Glenn Allerton was P4 and South Australian privateers Arthur Sissis and Daniel Falzon P5 and P6 halfway through the 20-minute session.

Troy Herfoss did not join the session unil that halfway point and then cruised a couple of laps to find some clear air before putting his head down to set a 66.152s with just over seven-minutes remaining in the session.

Most of those riders then seemed pretty content to sit on that with their transfer spot to Q2 secured. ASBK competitors have to use rubber from their race tyre allocation during qualifying so riders generally don’t put in many more laps than they have to in order to preserve the rubber for the races.

Maxwell though did head back out late in the session though and was under at the second split, pasting Pirelli around the circuit on his way to lowering the benchmark a fraction further, 65.796s the new marker. Not content with that though he then went through the first and second splits quicker again on the next lap before crossing the stripe to lower it again to 65.682s.

A big high-side from Mark Chiodo a couple of minutes before the end of the session left his crew with some work to do but he would not be taking place in Q2 after finishing the session down in 19th place.  Cru Halliday also rolled to a stop late in the session on the YRT machine and will start from P13 later this afternoon while team-mate Aiden Wagner is even further back in P16.

Q1 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.682
2 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m06.010
3 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m06.152
4 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m06.242
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m06.430
6 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.458
7 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.506
8 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.540
9 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.712
10 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.792
11 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.887
12 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.995
13 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.018
14 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.089
15 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.268
16 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.391
17 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.849
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m08.953
19 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.986
20 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1m09.732
21 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m11.542

Qualifying 2

There was only a short five-minute break before the top 12 were allowed back on track for Q2.

Mike Jones and Oli Bayliss were the first out of pit-lane ahead of Daniel Falzon but the top nine were all on track in no time.

Wayne Maxwell again quickly to the top of the charts, a 65.690s but seconds later Mike Jones joined him in that 65 bracket with a 65.711s. Maxwell backed up his 65.690 though with a new outright ASBK Superbike qualifying lap record, 65.507 the new Hidden Valley benchmark and fastest ever motorcycle lap of the 2.9-kiklometre circuit.

Daniel Falzon then dropped in 66.016 to join that duo on the provisional front row. The JD Racing privateer outfit back on track after a lengthy break from competition and showing great speed.

With five-minutes remaining it was Maxwell from Jones, Falzon, Herfoss and Allerton. That top five all left the pits and went back out on track. Mike Jones had to abort an attempt after running in too deep.

Oli Bayliss then joined Maxwell and Jones in the 55s, a 65.815s to the youngster which he then immediately backed that up with a 65.527! Only two-hundredths of the new lap record set by Maxwell only minutes earlier. Jones then crossed the stripe on 65.555s. Herfoss then joined the 65s party with a 65.645 to go P4.

Maxwell then smashed out a 65.181s. Smashing the lap record and again underlining his dominance of proceedings and taking that important championship point for pole.

Mike Jones crashed late in the session after losing the front. He had to get some hand injuries checked out and was taken off to hospital for further investigation.

Glenn Allerton then made it a five-way party in the 65s, a 65.821s on the new M 1000 RR putting him in P5 ahead of Daniel Falzon while Bryan Staring will head row three in P7.

An amazing qualifying session.

This bloke is on fire this weekend – Image RbMotoLens

Anthony West made some significant steps forward today. Finally getting in the 66s in Q1 with a 66.995s before then dropping six-tenths off that to end Q2 in eighth place on 66.396s. Arthur Sissis also on that third row in P9.

Lachlan Epis will start from P10 ahead of Josh Waters and Matt Walters.

Wayne Maxwell has set the pace in every session this weekend and he did 5 x 65s in that final qualifying session. On that form he looks very hard to beat.

Maxwell and Bayliss in the qualifying Parc Ferme, Jones didn’t make it back to the pits in time – Image RbMotoLens

Will the DesmoSport Ducati duo find some more to take him on over the 16-lap race distance?

Oli is showing some really serious one-lap pace here this weekend. Does he have the package for race distance to challenge Wayne? – Image Rb MotoLens

Has Herfoss been foxing somewhat? The Penrite Honda man only made one real attempt at a lap-time in Q2 and that was a 65.645s, so the pace is there…

Glenn Allerton is enthused with the brand new out of the box M 1000 RR and they should be able to find more improvements in every session as they find their feet with the new bike.

We don’t have to wait long to find out as Race One is scheduled to get underway at 1405 in Darwin this afternoon which equates to 1435 for the Eastern seaboard. We have two further races tomorrow.


Q2 Results

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.181
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m05.527
3 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m05.555
4 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m05.645
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m05.821
6 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.016
7 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.123
8 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.396
9 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.446
10 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.476
11 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.703
12 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.791

Combined Qualifying

Pos Rider Bike Best
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m05.181
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m05.527
3 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m05.555
4 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m05.645
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m05.821
6 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.016
7 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.123
8 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.396
9 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.446
10 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m06.476
11 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.703
12 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.791
13 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.018
14 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.089
15 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.268
16 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.391
17 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.849
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m08.953
19 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.986
20 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1m09.732
21 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m11.542

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Saturday, 19 June
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 92
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

ASBK Insights – Road bike to race bike in 24 hours

2021 mi-bike Australian Superbike Championship

We had a chat with Shane Kinderis this morning after the NextGen BMW head honcho had just sent his latest acquisitions out on track at the opening practice session of the Hidden Valley round of the Australian Superbike Championship in Darwin. Shane picked up two new BMW M 1000 RR motorcycles in Darwin on Wednesday afternoon and has been burning the midnight oil ever since in a quest to prepare the bikes for competition this weekend. We spoke to him just after FP1, but before FP2 today.


Trev – Anecdotally, I have heard the wings on the bikes have made a dramatic difference to the confidence your riders had on the bikes when you previously tested the M bodywork on your current race bikes before actually getting an M bike. Has this surprised you? And them? 

A standard BMW M 1000 RR as it comes off the showroom floor

Yes. We have had some bodywork for a while and tested it at Wakefield and both Glenn and Lachy came in, I guess more confused than anything else, because where they expected the benefits to be there wasn’t, but where they weren’t expecting it, there was. Mostly under braking, the bike is so much more stable under brakes, it really grounds the bike I guess would be the best way describe it. While at high speed their first comments were that it made it harder to change direction, the bike sort of wanting to resist, which is once again, not what we expected. They definitely do something, and that was on the old bikes, we actually had to put 10 mm more pre-load on the front forks to get them off the bottom under brakes, obviously we would get to changing spring rates etc. but when we were just trying the bodywork out for the first time, we literally just ran the fairings for one session at Wakefield to see what they did, and yeah, we were very surprised.”

NextGen BMW M 1000 RR being prepped in the pits in Darwin on Friday morning – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – And I know we have been across this before in previous chats, but just again for our readers can you again explain the advantages the rear suspension linkage has on the M model, compared to the linkage designed for the much longer travel stroke of the Marzocchi electronic Dynamic Damping Control shock on the other S 1000 RR models?

So basically the new M has a more, I guess a known rate, your normal 2:1 linkage ratio, which means you don’t have the shaft speeds that you do with the other linkage which works the poor (race) shock so hard that it just overheats it, as with the linkage designed for the electronic shock it works our conventional race shocks twice as far as it should. But with the M we gain more benefits than that, it’s just not the linkage, the swing-arm is different, the back of the frame is different, the linkage ratio is actually adjustable also. It is quite a complex mechanism in the back linkage now.”

BMW M 1000 RR

Trev – And have you been working with and taking advantage of the ShiftCam technology by changing the phasing of the cams at all in race trim? As standard the cams change over at 9000 rpm. 

ShiftCam is used in our race package, we would never remove it. They remove it in British Superbike because the spec’ ECU used in that series doesn’t have the capability to drive it, but for sure we are using ShiftCam.”

Trev – As for the independent control of the throttle bodies in pairs. For the uninitiated this essentially enables tuners to smooth out the power delivery at major lean angles by feeding one pair of cylinders more air-fuel mixture to increase drive, before then progressively adding more power by bringing in the remaining two cylinders at a different rate as lean angle lessens and grip increases.   Riders can also toggle this functionality on or off while on track.  Have you been working with this functionality during testing Shane? It must almost be a time black-hole development wise, if you really want to use this feature to its maximum extent?

To be honest, since the latest software update, we haven’t touched it, we are just using it ‘as supplied’. We have put the same software package in the new M bikes we have just got, but we had to change the internal firmware of the ECU, because these bikes generate so much more power, there are different torque numbers etc. used in the calculations, to make it all work, even though the ECU is the same, we have had to put the firmware version in it that is specific to the M.”

BMW M 1000 RR

Trev – Are Glenn and Lachlan changing their power delivery or traction control maps on the fly during race conditions, as the tyres go away later on in the race? 

Yes, always, always.

Trev – Is the launch control good enough now for the racers to use all of the time? Again, for the uninitiated, the launch control on even a standard S 1000 RR can be programmed for rider weight and whether the launch will be on a slight incline or decline, for the ECU to work out how best to launch the bike and feed the power in. 

We have never not used it, since the newer bikes came along, generally Glenn and Lachlan always gain places on every start, we used to get poor starts, but since the bikes got launch control I don’t think we have ever gone into turn one a position lower down than what we had qualified.”

Trev – A few years ago BMW moved away from using Brembo calipers to the American made Hayes caliper, along with a Nissin master cylinder. Now for the M bike Nissin calipers are used with zinc-nickel coated steel pistons with added cooling features integrated into the calipers and thicker disc rotors. This might be a significant step forward, have the boys mentioned anything about the bikes this morning?

NextGen BMW M 1000 RR – Image RbMotoLens

Their first comments were wow.. obviously Glenn is one of the hardest brakers in the championship, and he came in and said heading to turn one he had to let go of the brakes and get on the throttle again. Up until now we have used the same GaleSpeed master cylinder that we used on the previous bikes, so literally the only difference this morning was the Nissin caliper and they both said ‘holy’, ‘just unbelievable.’”

BMW M 1000 RR uses different calipers made by Nissin

Trev – You going to be running the carbon rims that come standard on the M?

Funny story… The carbon wheels, the M has different wheels, nobody told us, so we only have one set of wheels for each bike for the weekend. We were unaware they were different.”

NextGen BMW M 1000 RR – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – Different how?

Because of the under-slung rear caliper, the rear disc rotor sits out about 40 mm wider. It is actually outside of the line of the wheel. That said it is proper World Endurance stuff it drops straight in. I would have thought that they would simply produce some sort of adaptor for the disc and use the same carbon rims as are available for the other S 1000 RR models, as I wouldn’t imagine they would engineer a whole new carbon rim design, but they have.”

Quite a few valve-train changes for M 1000 RR

Trev – BMW claim 212 horsepower (5 up from S 100 RR) at 14,500 rpm stock from the M 1000 RR. 113 Nm at 11,000 rpm and an increased rev-limit to 15,100 rpm. The M engine has lighter but stronger Mahle two-ring pistons (each piston is 12 grams lighter), tweaked combustion chambers, new camshafts with more lift and an increased compression ratio to 13.5:1 (from 13.3), along with longer and lighter shot-peened Pankl titanium (S 1000 RR uses tempered steel) rods. Fully machined intake ports, even smaller and lighter rocker arms (width reduced from 8 mm to 6.5 mm – weight reduction of six per cent) and various other small tweaks.  Are you using the stock M engines this weekend or are you putting the engines out of your current race-bikes into the M bikes this weekend until you get the engines in the M machines run in and prepped? 

BMW provided dyno charts comparing S 1000 RR and M 1000 RR

Both boys just came in smiling after that first session, going ‘crikey’ it’s fast. And that was just after getting off the previous race bike on to this new standard M model and they were pulling another gear down the straight.

“One of the main objectives of the M is the engine. Obviously, I am a well-seasoned engine builder but check out the photo I took on my phone of the CNC ports last night.

Purdy ports

They are spiralled CNC ports, so they put a spin in the air before it even goes into the port, which can only really be done with CNC machining, they are an unbelievably magnificent piece of equipment, I am seriousy impressed.

“Air-box is completely different, the variable intake trumpet mechanisms are different, and we’ve got another 1000 rpm with the titanium con-roads and all that. Both boys just came in and they were literally both gobsmacked at how much faster the bike was, how much quicker it accelerates.

“The engine changes are significant, cylinder head different, rods are different, pistons are different, two-ring pistons not three. They are claiming five more horsepower difference, but I have never seen with all these changes, CNC head etc. and all the other bits and pieces make only five horsepower. 

“Lachlan come in and said he was behind Oli and caught him and could have passed him, the first time he has been able to draft the V4 Ducati.

Trev – The chassis geometry is also quite markedly different on the M bikes. Steering head angle and fork offset are different, the swingarm is a significant 12 mm longer and you now have more adjustments available in regards to pivot point. The front-rear balance of the standard M bike is also quite different with less weight on the front end (52.1 per cent on the M compared to 53.8 per cent on the R). With all those changes, suspension and set-up wise, you seem to be essentially starting from scratch this weekend despite the limited practice time available. So with this in mind I have to ask, are you mad? 

Completely. “Absolutely and completely. I cannot thank our guys enough for what we have done. We had two road bikes at 3pm Wednesday, and we haven’t had much sleep since then.”

Glenn Allerton shaking down the new M 1000 RR at Hidden Valley today in ASBK Free Practice – Image RbMotoLens

BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Video on the M 1000 RR


ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

Ducati 1-2-3 atop the charts on Friday at Hidden Valley

Darwin ASBK FP2


Riders got out for their second session of the day this afternoon at Hidden Valley with a 30-minute FP2 session. The track temperature had passed 56-degrees, while ambient was a sticky 32-degrees.

That didn’t stop Wayne Maxwell from dropping in a 66 on his first flying lap then putting a 66.508 on his second and a 66.379 on his third to further underline his potential here this weekend. Some lapped traffic then slowed him back to a 67 before he then got straight back down to a 66.335s, which he then backed that up with a 66.177, undercutting his FP1 topping time from the morning.

Troy Herfoss had gone out at the beginning of the session and completed a lap but then returned to the pits, presumably with some sort of problem. The Penrite Honda man lost almost ten-minutes before getting back out on circuit.

Troy Herfoss – Image RbMotoLens

Mike Jones went a tenth quicker than his FP1 time early in the session, a 66.5, which he then repeated again a few minutes later.

Glenn Allerton had turned his first laps on the new M 1000 RR late in FP1 and immediately dropped another three-tenths in FP2 with a couple of 66.7s in succession.

Oli Bayliss had demonstrated great speed in FP1 but was running somewhat under the radar in FP2, that was until the teenager got wound up with ten-minutes left in the session and went top!  A 66.072 putting the youngster on top of the time-sheets.  His DesmoSport Ducati team-mate Mike Jones also improved his standing to 66.306 at this juncture and it was a Ducati 1-2-3 atop the timing screens. Oli then put in a 66.153 to show that 66.072 hadn’t been a flash in the pan.

Oli Bayliss looking strong this weekend – Image RbMotoLens

With six-minutes to run almost the entire Superbike field were on track. Maxwell was putting in more quick laps, a 66.213 not quite as good as his earlier 66.177, but again underlining how consistently he is able to turn in quick laps.

South Australian privateer Daniel Falzon dropped in a 66.520s to declare to the paddock that he was going to be a force to be reckoned with this weekend, despite a long time away from competition.

Herfoss didn’t really get down to business until the dying minutes, a 66.524 shaving a few thousandths off his FP1 time but only good enough for fifth. He improved further in the dying seconds to 66.381 to push Falzon back to fifth.

Wayne Maxwell – Image Half Light

With two-minutes to run Maxwell put the Boost Mobile Ducati back on top with a 66.051. That time set amidst a run of low 66.1s. While other top runners had put in a fast lap here and there, Maxwell was just reeling lap after lap off around this pace every time he was on the circuit. So far, he is looking without a doubt the man to beat.

Wayne Maxwell

We worked through our plan today, and it was satisfying to end the day on top, but it hasn’t been without its challenges,” Maxwell said. “Our head engineer, Adrian, is stuck in Melbourne at the moment, so he’s been working remotely. Without the personal interaction, it makes it harder, but a full credit to the Boost Mobile with K-Tech crew – they’re doing their best in difficult circumstances and as usual, they’ve given me a very good bike. I did my fastest time on a used tyre, so I’m confident heading into qualifying tomorrow.”

Wayne Maxwell – Image RbMotoLens

Hugely impressive for Oli Bayliss to run Wayne so close and take second overall for the day, three-tenths ahead of his vastly experienced team-mate Mike Jones who completed that Ducati 1-2-3 on Friday. Neither of them displayed the consistency at that pace demonstrated by Maxwell though.

Oli Bayliss

My only previous experience at Hidden Valley was on a Supersport 300 bike, so I knew I had to train as hard as I could to prepare for a weekend of Superbike racing in hot conditions,” Bayliss said. “We improved in both sessions today and I was really happy with my times before the clutch let go, so we’re in good shape for tomorrow.”

DesmoSport Ducati – Image RbMotoLens

Herfoss fourth but I suspect it was not all plain sailing today at Penrite Honda and he is yet to really demonstrate his full potential. I think they will be stronger tomorrow.

Troy Herfoss – Image Half Light

Glenn Allerton and NextGen BMW will be absolutely pumped off the back of today’s first run on the new M 1000 RR. They are only scratching the surface of the set-up potential of the bike yet they were only half-a-second off P1 and well in the game.

South Australian family privateers the Falzons will be pretty happy with their work today – Image Half Light

Daniel Falzon sixth on the privateer JD Racing Yamaha YZF-R1 a huge boon for the family squad as they took the honour of being top Yamaha.

Bryan Staring got the BC Performance Kawasaki into the 66s, a 66.780 good enough for seventh quickest and giving the squad more encouragement after what has been a difficult start to season 2021 for the Sydney based outfit.

Bryan Staring – Image RbMotoLens

Cru Halliday was eighth quickest just ahead of Jed Metcher while Lachlan Epis rounded out the top ten ahead of Josh Waters, Arthur Sissis and Aiden Wagner.

The qualifying lap record at Hidden Valley was set by Troy Bayliss here a few years ago at 65.601s, and the race lap record set by Troy Herfoss the same year at 65.904s.

Qualifying gets underway tomorrow morning ahead of Race One on Saturday afternoon followed by two more races on Sunday.


Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Lap
1 Wayne MAXWEL Ducati V4R 1m06.051
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m06.072
3 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m06.306
4 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m06.346
5 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m06.519
6 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.520
7 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m06.780
8 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m06.865
9 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.007
10 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m07.194
11 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.199
12 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.256
13 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.378
14 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.392
15 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.722
16 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.895
17 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m09.469
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m09.914
19 Jack DAVIS BMW S RR 1m09.928
20 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m10.199
21 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m12.622

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

Wayne Maxwell tops opening practice in Darwin

Darwin ASBK FP1


There was a 20-minute delay to the start of the opening 40-minute practice session for Superbikes as a track clean-up was underway from one of the four-wheel classes. Riders were called to the end of pit-lane before then being sent back to get tyre-warmers back on. The track temperature was already nudging towards 50-degrees celsius and the ambient passing 30-degrees, perfect weather for standing around in your leathers…

Wayne Maxwell was the first rider into the 6s, a 66.942s recorded 15-minutes into the session then immediately backed up with a 66.830s, which was then followed up with a 66.879. He drifted back into the 67s briefly before then lowering the morning benchmark to 66.673s, followed by a 66.737 as the session passed its halfway point.

Glenn Allerton had spent the first half of the session on the S 1000 RR before then returning to the pits to ride the new M 1000 RR that they only took delivery of in Darwin less than 48 hours ago. On the initial shakedown laps the rear brake locked on due to the pedal free-play not being set quite correctly on the hastily prepared bike but that was quickly sorted and Glenn was back on track familiaring himself with the new bike.

Glenn Allerton shaking down the new M 1000 RR – Image Half Light

Troy Herfoss had put in a few 67.0s in the first half of the session before returning to the pits and then rejoining the track with 15-minutes remaining to drop in a 66.729s which was then immediately backed up with a 66.732s.

Young Oli Bayliss and his DesmoSport Ducati team-mate Mike Jones then also dropped into the 66s, a 66.775 to Oli and 66.899 to Oli.  The youngsters bike had a wardrobe malfunction during the session also and has some bodywork flapping in the breeze.

Some bodywork came adrift on the DesmoSport Ducati during the session – Image RbMotoLens

Wayne Maxwell left the pits with just under ten-minutes left in the session and immediately put his head down to lower the benchmark once again, a 66.265, then immediately backed that up with a quicker 66.240, then went quicker again with a 66.215. He then ran off briefly before rejoining the circuit and returning to pit-lane.

Oli Bayliss then moved up to P2 after putting in a 66.515 with just over five-minutes remaining in the session. Jones then pushed Herfoss further back to P4, a 66.704s to the #46 DesmoSport Ducati. Second laters though Herfoss demoted Jones to P4 once again after putting in a 66.536s to spoil the Ducati 1-2-3.

In the dying seconds of the 40-minute session Maxwell then put in new fastest split times across the first two splits but then failed to improve across the final split, this his 66.215 on his 19th lap of the session the early benchmark here this weekend.  That compares to the qualifying lap record set by Troy Bayliss here a few years ago at 65.601s, and the race lap record set by Troy Herfoss the same year at 65.904s.  The Boost Mobile Ducati squad without their crew-chief Adrian Monti this weekend as due to COVID restrictions he is working from Melbourne in constant communication with team personnel on the ground in Darwin.

Oli Bayliss a brilliant second place in this opening session. Seriously impressive for the 17-year-old who only joined the Superbike ranks this year, and previously has only ever ridden a 300 around this circuit.

Troy Herfoss (66.536s) third ahead of Mike Jones (66.704s) in fourth place.  BC Performance’s Bryan Staring next best on 67.012s ahead of NextGen BMW’s Glenn Allerton whose best of 67.077s was set on the fresh new M 1000 RR only put together overnight.

Bryan Staring – Image Half Light

Privateer Daniel Falzon ranked seventh in the morning session on the back of a 67.583s as he gets back up to speed after a lengthy break from competition. Cessnock Kawasaki privateer Matt Walters P8 ahead of the YRT entry of Cru Halliday while privateer Arthur Sissis rounded out the top ten.

Anthony West was 11th this morning ahead of Aiden Wagner and Josh Waters.

FP2 is schedule to get underway at 1420 Darwin time, which equates to 1450 AEST.

Wayne Maxwell sporting a new graphics design on his Shark helmet for this round – Image RbMotoLens

Superbike Hidden Valley Friday FP1 Times

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne MAXWELL Ducati V4R 1m06.215
2 Oli BAYLISS Ducati V4R 1m06.515
3 Troy HERFOSS Honda CBR RR 1m06.536
4 Mike JONES Ducati V4R 1m06.704
5 Bryan STARING Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.012
6 Glenn ALLERTON BMW S RR 1m07.077
7 Daniel FALZON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.583
8 Matthew WALTERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.668
9 Cru HALLIDAY Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.693
10 Arthur SISSIS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.727
11 Anthony WEST Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.895
12 Aiden WAGNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m07.953
13 Josh WATERS Kawasaki ZX10R 1m07.956
14 Lachlan EPIS BMW S RR 1m08.098
15 Jed METCHER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.354
16 Corey TURNER Yamaha YZF-R1 1m08.361
17 Mark CHIODO Yamaha YZF-R1 1m10.199
18 Yannis SHAW Suzuki GSX-R 1m10.283
19 Luke JHONSTON Yamaha YZF-R1 1m10.609
20 Michael EDWARDS Yamaha YZF-R1 1m14.844

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au

ASBK Insights – Paul Free on electronics and bike set-up

Penrite Honda Crew Chief Paul Free

On the eve of the ASBK showdown in Darwin getting underway we had a chat with Penrite Honda’s Paul Free, Crew Chief for Troy Herfoss. Hopefully some of these insights will help interested readers get more of an understanding of how things work these days in Australian Superbike.


Trev – What have you been working on primarily since the previous round and at recent test sessions?

Electronics. Really just been focussing on electronics. Up until now I just haven’t had a lot of mind space to really focus on the electronics side of it. With the help of Charlie Hallam, he has been coming to the track with me to collectively try and get our heads around the system, as it is really quite a complex system, we’ve just been working our way around that. The manual for it is in Jinglish, so it is quite difficult to navigate, but spending time together with young Charlie, spending time at the track and just playing with stuff and seeing what it does, looking at that on the data-logger, as some things don’t appear on there as they are necessarily meant to, so that’s been an interesting process, and something we will be spending a lot more time with ongoing.” 

The dash on the Penrite Honda

Trev – Is gearing fairly set and forget these days? With the bikes having such a broad spread of power, or is it something that still requires on-track testing rather than simple maths back in the pits?

When you go to a new track, like this (Hidden Valley) is new to this 21 model Fireblade then yes perhaps. But we will just start with the older bikes gearing from when we were here last, 2018 I think, as a reference, and then will change that accordingly to the Michelin tyres and this new bike.  We might change a tooth perhaps, but to be honest most likely won’t have to.  We went to Queensland Raceway to test recently, and we hadn’t been there for many years, and just used exactly the same gearing as we did at Winton and it worked perfectly. We do change it, but the bike has such a massive spread of power. Troy rides this current Fireblade right down to as low as 5000 rpm, right up to the 15,000 rpm limiter, so you’ve got a 10,000 rpm power-band there, which is a pretty damn useable power spread.” 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – I believe some of the earliest challenges you had with getting the new Fireblade set-up for racing here in Australia was in the mapping of the fly-by-wire throttle. Which is something the Kawasaki boys have been struggling with this season after receiving their new bike. Results wise it certainly looks as though that’s well and truly sorted now on the Penrite Honda, or are you still tweaking it from day to day in response to changing conditions and from track to track?

The stuff we initially had problems with was self inflicted. I will honestly say that. We played with some stuff and caused ourselves our own mischief. Once we learned that, it was pretty easy to see what and why things were happening.  But yes, like I mentioned earlier, we are starting to put a lot more emphasis on electronics, and opening up more of the package on that side. There is just so much adjustability in there.

Superbike race teams in Australia Trev are honestly getting to the point, you can see with the Ducati teams, you need a dedicated person to just be looking at electronics all day. Focussing on the data, interpreting that data, then talking to the rider and making the necessary changes based on those two inputs. But probably more so the data than the rider input. It’s getting very, very complicated and increasingly challenging, but I suppose it is just the way of the world… I can see before too long that each proper team will have one person that is just an electronics person, where that is all they do.” 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

Trev – It is almost an endless black hole that you can pour infinite resources into essentially, and certainly employ more than one guy to focus on, particularly for a two-rider team. 

100 per cent. But in the end budgets rule everything. If you have one person dedicated in that electronics role, even in a multi-rider team, in fact that may even help speed up some processes, having data inputs from two different riders and bikes, but yes even for a single rider team it’s not far away. It adds a lot of costs to a team operation, that’s another person that has got to be paid, got to be fed, got to be accommodated and moved around the country, you know that adds up, but it is what it is.” 

Trev – With the new bike does Troy have the facility to change engine, traction control or engine braking control during a race as grip levels change? Or does he leave well enough alone and just trust his right hand?

To date no. He hasn’t been changing that during a race, to date, but that will change after what we have recently learned.”

Trev – From what I have witnessed, after spending so much time in pit garages with you over the past 20 years or so, is just how much work you put in to tweaking the suspension package, to a degree so fine that the uninitiated will never understand. Despite the bikes producing so much power now, we know that the power delivery is also now so refined and smooth that it does make putting the power down to the ground perhaps easier than it ever was. Thus it seems in modern racing you really win or lose on entry speed, so is the focus of the suspension tuning now much more critical on the front than the rear?

It’s balance. It’s completely balance. If the bike is not balanced you haven’t got a motorbike. When you know what you are looking at you can see that from a mile away, when you are looking at a bike and a rider, entering, going through and exiting a corner, a mile away. 

Trev – Has that balance changed more towards one end than the other in recent times? 

I don’t know if I can actually comment on that, because I have always concentrated on having a very, very well balanced bike, and a bike that is easy to ride. There is no point in having a motorbike that you can rip the ears off for one lap, because that doesn’t help you on lap 16 does it? So a really balanced bike, whether that was five years ago or now, I don’t think that has really changed.”

Trev – You have worked with Troy for a long time now. Where has he most improved of late do you think? 

A good question. A hard one to answer. I know that his level of determination, and his desire to succeed, at any time, is unwavering. He is just such a focussed individual, it’s crazy. To see that race at Wakefield Park, race two I think it was, six laps to go and he is two-seconds behind the leader, and he has an ability to pull him in and pass that guy, in six laps, I don’t know that anyone else can do that. But this guy here, he is just mental for success.”

Troy Herfoss and Paul Free – Behind Herf’s Colgate smile the intensity burns white hot

Trev – In recent times it does seem as though Troy and Wayne are performing a cut above the rest. Different bikes and different tyres, yet they never seem to be far apart.  Your time is spent giving Troy the best package you can provide, and Wayne’s team work hard to do the same. With the fine tuning of all the systems on these latest model bikes do you think technicians now are perhaps more important than ever? 

Mmmm.  I don’t know if they are more important than ever, it has always been extremely important that a rider has a good technician, a clever technician, someone that can assist the rider at every point throughout a race weekend, right down to a championship. I think there is ultimately plenty of riders in any championship that could be successful, if they had the right level of support, I think that is the big difference with Troy and Wayne at the moment. That’s not taking anything away from those guys, they are right now at their very, very best. I don’t want to sound like I’m a crew chief in Troy’s team and I am making him win, that’s not what I am saying at all, but I think it is vitally important that a rider has the right people around them, people that know what they are doing, understand the motorcycle, understand the rider, understand what’s required to make that bike and rider package be at its best, every day, every weekend, and make sure it is there and stays in that position. So I don’t know if they are more important now, than in the past, I don’t think so, I think it has been the same.

Trev – Are there any specific extra challenges thrown up this weekend in regards to the tyre allocation for the three-race format put in place for Darwin?

No, we have got nine tyres, in total, over the three races and the qualifying sessions. So we have no challenge with tyres whatsoever, we have ample tyres in that allocation, no problem at all. The big challenge here will be the outright temperature. We see this track temperature at different circuits, around the country, and when we go testing and stuff. We just checked the track temperatures here now, mid-afternoon on Thursday here, and it was 50-degrees. We see those temperatures throughout the year, but what you don’t see is just the outright heat of the ambient temperature. It is so, so humid and hot here, I think the biggest challenge up here in Darwin is just keeping your rider physically hydrated, if you can keep him physically strong and fit all weekend then come Sunday you will be right on top of it.

Trev – Thanks for your time Paul, a pleasure as always, good luck for the weekend. 

Penrite Honda setting up in Darwin this morning – Image RbMotoLens

ASBK Hidden Valley Schedule

Friday, 18 June
10:25am – Practice 1 (40 min) FOX Sports
2:20pm – Practice 2 (30 min) FOX Sports

Saturday, 19 June
10:15am – Qualifying 1 (20 min) FOX Sports
10:40am – Qualifying 2 (15 min) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 1 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7

Sunday, 20 June
10:50am – Race 2 (16 laps) FOX Sports
2:05pm – Race 3 (16 laps) FOX Sports/Channel 7


2021 ASBK Championship Calendar (Updated)

  • Round 1 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC February 18-21 Cancelled
  • Round 2 Winton Motor Raceway, Benalla, VIC March 12-14
  • Round 3 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW April 16-18
  • Round 4 Hidden Valley Raceway, NT – Supercars 2+4 (Superbikes only) June 18-20
  • Round 5 Morgan Park Raceway, QLD August 20-22
  • Round 6 The Bend Motorsport Park, Tailem Bend, SA September 23-26
  • Round 7 Wakefield Park Raceway, Goulburn, NSW October 15 – 17 *
  • Round 8 Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, VIC November 5-7 *

Alpinestars Superbike Championship Standings

Pos Rider Total
1 Wayne MAXWELL 91
2 Troy HERFOSS 81
3 Mike JONES 74
4 Cru HALLIDAY 65
5 Glenn ALLERTON 64
6 Bryan STARING 54
7 Jed METCHER 47
8 Arthur SISSIS 46
9 Oli BAYLISS 45
10 Matt WALTERS 42
11 Lachlan EPIS 36
12 Josh WATERS 27
13 Anthony WEST 24
14 Michael EDWARDS 22
15 Mark CHIODO 22
16 Yannis SHAW 21
17 Nathan SPITERI 20
18 Luke JHONSTON 17
19 Aiden WAGNER 15
20 Aaron MORRIS 14
21 Philip CZAJ 10
22 Hamish McMURRAY 4
23 Sash SAVIN 3

Darwin ASBK Entry List

  • #1 Wayne Maxwell – Ducati
  • #2 Mark Chido – Yamaha
  • #3 Jed Metcher – Yamaha
  • #12 Matt Walters – Kawasaki
  • #13 Anthony West – Yamaha
  • #14 Glenn Allerton – BMW
  • #16 Luke Jhonston – Yamaha
  • #17 Troy Herfoss – Honda
  • #21 Josh Waters – Kawasaki
  • #25 Daniel Falzon – Yamaha
  • #28 Aiden Wagner – Yamaha
  • #32 Oli Bayliss – Ducati
  • #37 Michael Edwards – Yamaha
  • #46 Mike Jones – Ducati
  • #51 Corey Turner – Yamaha
  • #61 Arthur Sissis – Yamaha
  • #65 Cru Halliday – Yamaha
  • #67 Bryan Staring – Kawasaki
  • #83 Lachlan Epis – BMW
  • #92 Jack Davis – BMW
  • #333 Yanni Shaw – Suzuki

Source: MCNews.com.au