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Marquez earns sixth MotoGP title with Thai GP victory

News 6 Oct 2019

Marquez earns sixth MotoGP title with Thai GP victory

Eight-time world champion defeats Quartararo at Chang International Circuit.

Image: Supplied.

In yet another head-to-head scrap, Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) took on Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) in a thrilling climax, leaving it to the last lap to take victory in a final corner showdown that saw him lift his sixth premier MotoGP crown and his eighth world championship.

With tension mounting, it was lights-out and a fantastic start from Fabio Quartararo, as the 20-year-old Frenchman blasted into the lead at turn one, with Marc Marquez almost colliding with Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) on the short shoot to the first turn.

Maverick Vinales made a good start and held on to third whilst Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) also got away well, pushing through into fourth. Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) didn’t make big gains but was seventh by the end of lap one, moving through from ninth on the grid. It was a catastrophe for Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), who stalled his bike on the grid and had to start from pitlane.

The race settled down and Quartararo set an incredibly hot pace out front, pulling Marquez along with him as the two began to trade fastest lap times. Valentino Rossi had got ahead of Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) at the final corner, whilst Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) loomed in the background. There was a disaster further down the field as Mika Kallio (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) crashed out at turn eight. The Finnish rider was okay, but his race was run.

Lap seven and Vinales had dropped out of contention for victory as the Spaniard struggled with a full fuel load in the early laps of the race. Andrea Dovizioso hadn’t been able to make any further in-roads on the riders ahead but had pulled out a half-a-second advantage over Franco Morbidelli, whilst Valentino Rossi was under pressure from the Suzuki pairing of Mir and Rins. Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) had dropped to ninth but was two seconds clear of Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) in tenth.

There was drama for Valentino Rossi on lap 10 and 11, as the Italian experienced a sudden drop-off in pace and found himself behind Rins and then Mir, the latter getting through at turn three. The 40-year-old nine-time champion picked his pace back up but was just 1.7s off the back of the Suzuki. With Rins in clear air, he set of after Morbidelli.

At half race distance, the gap was down between the leading two and Marc Marquez had hit stalking mode; the Honda rider just sat in behind the rookie Frenchman, shadowing him. However, Quartararo responded a lap later, setting a scintillating pace as the two riders duelled. Behind them however, Maverick Vinales was closing in and set his personal best lap of the race for a third consecutive time. The race was reaching an incredible climax, as the leaders began to concertina together.

Lap 15 saw Alex Rins make his way into fifth place, getting ahead of Franco Morbidelli, who was having a very strong and solid ride inside the top six, a position he had held all weekend. There was disappointment behind though, as Aleix Espargaro retired into the pits from a top ten placing. This promoted Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) into the top 10.

The race was coming to a close and on lap 23, after a few laps of more-or-less riding pillion with Quartararo, Marquez showed his hand at turn three but ran wide, allowing Fabio back ahead. The crowd were on their feet as a second grandstand finish for a second consecutive year beckoned at the Chang International Circuit. Cheers and screams, the atmosphere was electric with history on the horizon in more ways than one.

On the final lap, Marquez tried again at turn three and this time it worked, as he pulled his Honda down to an apex and then blasted onwards to turn four. Quartararo had been strong in the final sector for the entire race however and built in momentum all the way through from turn eight.

Closing through every corner, Quartararo tried one massive lunge at turn 12, as the enormous Thai audience watched on. Going slightly wide, an opportunistic Marquez didn’t settle for a safe second and sliced back through to take the win on the run to the line, whilst the Petronas Yamaha SRT outfit had to settle for second. Maverick Viñales couldn’t get in on the action and in the end, was third.

Behind them, a magnanimous Andrea Dovizioso held on to fourth and Alex Rins took fifth from tenth on the grid. Franco Morbidelli was secured a sixth place ahead of Joan Mir, whilst Rossi could only manage eighth. Completing the top 10 were Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) and Takaaki Nakagami. Miller recovered for 14th.

The Moto2 class saw Luca Marini (SKY Racing Team VR46) storm to a first victory in almost a year, whilst Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Iker Lecuona (American Racing KTM) locked out the podium places on a day where Alex Marquez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) had no answer for his opposition, losing points in his championship lead. Australian Remy Gardner (SAG Racing) finished 12th.

An enthralling Moto3 World Championship rumbled into Thailand with great anticipation and expectation. Starting from pole position for the first time in his career, Celestino Vietti (SKY Racing Team VR46) looked to get the better of his rivals in order to achieve success at a track he’d never seen before.

However, a dramatic race happened nonetheless, going down to the final lap, and it would be Albert Arenas (Gaviota Angel Nieto Team) who snatched victory, ahead of Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) and Alonso Lopez (Estrella Galicia 0,0), who took a career-first Moto3 rostrum. MotoGP now heads to Twin Ring Motegi in Japan on 20 October.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Jones declares Maxwell clash a ‘dog move’

News 6 Oct 2019

Jones declares Maxwell clash a ‘dog move’

Maxwell maintains innocence as title chances increase at Phillip Island ASBK.

Image: TDJ Media.

Mike Jones (DesmoSport Ducati) and Wayne Maxwell (Team Suzuki Ecstar) have reacted to their race two clash at Phillip Island’s penultimate round of the 2019 Motul Pirelli Australian Superbike Championship (ASBK), with Jones declaring the incident a ‘dog move’, while Maxwell suggests it was a racing incident.

After a fierce battle in the opening half of the second encounter, former points leader Jones made a slight error on lap seven which Maxwell looked to capitalise on, however the Suzuki pilot made contact with Jones on the exit of the turn that ultimately forced the Ducati rider to crash out of the race.

The incident immediately underwent investigation by Race Direction, however no further action was deemed post-race, meaning the provisional results would in fact be official, with Maxwell retaining second.

Jones, who was demoted to third in the standings after previously holding the points after rounds four and five, believes there was intent behind the manoeuvre that has come at a significant cost to his title campaign.

“Look, it was obviously a bit of a dog move really by Maxwell,” Jones told CycleOnline.com.au. “I was wide, and I felt like I left enough space for him to take the line on the inside and have the position, but at the end of the day, he wanted to run it out to the edge of the track and take me with him.

“It was the type of move the certainly didn’t need to be done – there have been plenty of times where people have run wide and the guy coming up the inside keeps their line and goes into the lead.

“I think it was definitely a hard move and it definitely had some intent to do some damage – at the end of the day, it did. It’s a shame for me, a shame for the championship because were going really well and it was looking like a really strong race.”

Race one winner Maxwell maintains his innocence on the matter, although he admits the thought of a post-race penalty crept into mind during his thrilling battle with eventual race two and overall winner Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda Racing).

“He went in to cover his line, couldn’t stop and went deep, I got sucked in there a bit and picked up the throttle to drive and block the line – he tried to hang on around the outside and I think he clipped my foot and he went down,” Maxwell explained to CycleOnline.com.au.

“I’ve been on the end of that twice this year, and that’s not what I want to see and it’s not what I’m about. I’ll go see Mike and see if he’s alright. As for the race, it was a tough race. It’s a race we probably should’ve won.

“I was thinking about Mike [on the last lap], because I was thinking am I going to get a penalty? How is it going to be read and how is everyone going to react to it? It is what it is and we still got a strong result.”

Herfoss now leads Maxwell by three points heading into Sydney Motorsport Park’s finale, while Jones sits in third, 1.5 points behind Maxwell.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Newly-crowned champion Toparis earns Phillip Island Supersport win

News 6 Oct 2019

Newly-crowned champion Toparis earns Phillip Island Supersport win

Agius and Ford earn Supersport 300 and Yamaha R3 Cup wins.

Image: Russell Colvin.

Fresh from earning the Supersport crown following race one, Landbridge Yamaha’s Tom Toparis went onto claim the overall victory with a pair of wins at Phillip Island’s sixth round of the 2019 Motul Pirelli Australian Superbike Championship (ASBK).

In challenging and windy conditions, Toparis pushed on to capture top honours in the opening outing of the day, with the New South Welshman only needing to finish sixth the secure his maiden Supersport crown.

Nic Liminton (Yamaha) was an early challenger for the top spot, however crashed out in the closing stages, allowing Aiden Hayes (Yamaha) and Jack Passfield (Yamaha) to complete the top three. Broc Pearson (Yamaha) and Ty Lynch (Yamaha) locked out the top five.

In race two, it was another Toparis show as the newly-crowned champion stormed to a 5.684s victory over Liminton, the South Australian comfortably earning runner-up honours. Hayes was third followed by Passfield and Richie Dibben (Suzuki), while overall it was Toparis from Hayes and Passfield.

In the Supersport 300 category, Senna Agius (Kawasaki) emerged with the overall win after recording a 1-2-1 scorecard across the weekend, defeating Luke Jhonston (Yamaha) and Yannis Shaw (Kawasaki), while the Yamaha R3 Cup was topped by Hunter Ford (Yamaha) followed by Max Stauffer (Yamaha) and Locky Taylor (Yamaha).

Championship leader Carter Thompson took out top honours in the bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup, defeating Angus Grenfell and Max Gibbons.

The ASBK now heads to Sydney Motorsport Park on 1-3 November for the seventh and final round of the series.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Championship chaos as new points leader Herfoss wins Phillip Island

News 6 Oct 2019

Championship chaos as new points leader Herfoss wins Phillip Island

Title contenders Jones, Halliday and Staring crash out of chaotic race two.

Image: TDJ Media.

The 2019 Motul Pirelli Australian Superbike Championship (ASBK) was thrown into chaos during race two of Phillip Island’s penultimate round, as the encounter saw three title contenders crash out as Troy Herfoss broke through to claim the race and overall win, while also inheriting the points lead.

It was once again Mike Jones (DesmoSport Ducati) and race one winner Wayne Maxwell (Team Suzuki Ecstar) who the hit front, as the chaos commenced early with title challenger Cru Halliday (Yamaha Racing Team) crashing out on lap two.

The battle between Jones and Maxwell ensued over the opening half of the race, the duo trading positions on numerous occasions and making a number of close calls before Herfoss joined the party.

The championship erupted on lap seven when Maxwell snuck underneath Jones, bumping him in the process before the Ducati pilot hit the ground and was ruled out the race – ultimately relinquishing the points lead. The incident went under investigation by Race Direction, however no further action was deemed post-race.

Drama within the points chase didn’t stop there as championship contender Bryan Staring (Kawasaki BCperformance) crashed out moments later, making it three title challengers with zero-point scores.

While the mayhem continued, Maxwell and Herfoss maintained their battle for the lead, the victory coming down to the final turns as the reigning champion edged his rival by just 0.028s for the top spot.

Josh Waters (Team Suzuki Ecstar) locked out the podium in third, while the top five was completed by Daniel Falzon (Yamaha Racing Team) and Matt Walters (Kawasaki Connection).

Glenn Allerton (Maxima BMW) was sixth followed by Damon Rees, as Alex Phillis (Team Suzuki Ecstar), Lachlan Epis (Kawasaki) and Sloan Frost (Suzuki) made up positions eight, nine and 10. Overall, it was Herfoss who captured the win ahead of Maxwell and Waters. Herfoss leads Maxwell by three points in the championship standings.

The ASBK now heads to Sydney Motorsport Park on 1-3 November for the seventh and final round of the series.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Toparis lifts maiden Supersport crown at Phillip Island ASBK

News 6 Oct 2019

Toparis lifts maiden Supersport crown at Phillip Island ASBK

Landbridge Yamaha rider secures championship following race one victory.

Image: Foremost Media.

Landbridge Yamaha’s Tom Toparis has been crowned the 2019 Supersport champion in the Motul Pirell Australian Superbike Championship after securing victory during the opening encounter at Phillip Island’s sixth round.

The New South Welshman rode dominantly to the title this season, winning every race bar one in his campaign so far, as one round still remains on the calendar.

“I’m wrapped to win the championship – it’s my first time winning an Australian title,” Toparis explained. “I can’t thank my team and family enough – the Landbridge Yamaha team has done such a good job all year and we’ve won so many races.

“I’m so happy – after last year, we worked so hard to beat Cru, and now to do it here on the new Yamaha – it’s an awesome bike to ride. I’m grateful for everyone that’s given me the opportunity to win the championship.”

The newly-crowned champion will head out for Supersport race two this afternoon, scheduled for 2:20pm AEDT.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Herfoss the new ASBK Superbike Championship leader!

2019 ASBK – Round Six – Phillip Island

Superbike Race Two


Wayne Maxwell completely dominated the opening 12-lapper while Troy Herfoss displayed even more determination than normal to take second ahead of Mike Jones. While Maxwell had been by himself up front, the battle for second place had been frenetic and took place with Josh Waters and Cru Halliday in close company.

Mike Jones may have ‘only’ scored third but he still extended his lead in the championship over Cru Halliday out to 14.5-points. The 25-points for Wayne Maxwell promoted him into third place, four-points behind Halliday, 18.5-points over Jones. Herfoss’ hard fought second place had pushed his tally up to 216-points, thus we had 20-points covering the top four in the championship ahead to this final race of the penultimate round.

Away we go!

All riders got away cleanly but it was pole-sitter Mike Jones that led them through Southern Loop for the first time with Wayne Maxwell and Matt Walters in close company.

Jones and Maxwell started to break away from the field from turn four and around the back of the circuit, the pair down the chute to start lap two nose-to-tail. Despite tailing Jones around turn 12 the Ducati still had enough mumbo to pull away from the Suzuki down the main straight.

Maxwell made his way past at turn three with an inside move that made the Ducati man stand the Ducati down a little. Matt Walters was still a strong third place.

Cru Halliday then saw his championship chances slide away from him as the #65 went down while trying to pass team-mate Falzon at MG Hairpin. 

Mike Jones was back into the lead with ten laps to go but not for long as Maxwell again took the lead at turn four. 

Troy Herfoss then put in a new fastest lap of the race on lap four to close in on third placed Matt Walters and then pass him around the back of the circuit. Next target Jones…

Herfoss set another new fastest lap of the race on the next circuit, a 1m32.512s to close to within striking distance of the leading duo. Would Herf’ have enough rubber left to take the battle all the way to Maxwell and Jones in the closing laps….?

Mike Jones goes down!

Jones went down at turn four, he was just a little wide on entry and while trying to gather it back up and on-line he was brushed on the inside by Maxwell who was on the normal tighter line, the result saw Jones on the deck, and Maxwell in the lead…

Officials notified us that the incident was under investigation, for what reason I don’t really know unless they had a lot more camera angles than I had seen…

Bryan Staring goes down…!

Another championship contender sees his championship chances disappear before his eyes as Bryan Staring. 

Mark Chiodo goes down!

With five laps to run it was Herfoss shadowing Maxwell and that pair had three-seconds on Matt Walters.

The Cessnock Kawasaki privateer was starting to come under attack from Josh Waters and Daniel Falzon as they tried to steal that podium from the 26-year-old. He was not giving up without a very big fight, the ZX-10R wriggling and writhing around on corner exit but Walters pin-point accurate on corner entries in what was an impressive performance. 

Last lap board

Troy Herfoss lunges up the inside of Wayne Maxwell into turn one on the final lap, maintains sway through Southern Loop, Maxwell goes up the inside before turn three… Maxwell has the inside line at turn four, maintains advantage into Siberia. Herfoss on the pipe of the Suzuki before slipping up the inside before Hayshed in an awesome move!

Herfoss holds on through Lukey Heights and MG Hairpin, leads Maxwell around turn 11…… Gets the power down…..   Maxwell got a great run off 12 but Herfoss had done enough! Herfoss the race winner by 0.028 of a second at the chequered flag! 

Herfoss wins and takes series lead!

Troy Herfoss the new championship leader by three-points over Maxwell.  Jones still right in the hunt, only 4.5-points off the championship leader and of course that means less than five-points separates that top trio heading to the championship finale at Sydney Motorsport Park early next month. 

Josh Waters got the better of Falzon and Walters to climb the final step on the rostrum for this race, and also third place for the round. 


Superbike Race Two Results

  1. Troy Herfoss 
  2. Wayne Maxwell +0.028s
  3. Josh Waters +5.845s
  4. Daniel Falzon +5.865s
  5. Matt Walters +7.018s
  6. Glenn Allerton +21.089s
  7. Damon Rees +27.446s
  8. Alex Phillis +27.875s

Superbike Championship Points

  1. Troy Herfoss 241
  2. Wayne Maxwell 238
  3. Mike Jones 236.5
  4. Cru Halliday 222
  5. Josh Waters 216
  6. Bryan Staring 211.5

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dominant race one ASBK win for Maxwell at Phillip Island

News 6 Oct 2019

Dominant race one ASBK win for Maxwell at Phillip Island

Herfoss fights off Jones for runner-up honours in the opening encounter.

Image: Russell Colvin.

Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Wayne Maxwell earned a dominant race one victory at Phillip Island’s penultimate round of the 2019 Motul Pirelli Australian Superbike Championship (ASBK), while the fight for podium positions unfolded behind him.

The number 47 quickly moved by pole-sitter and championship leader Mike Jones (DesmoSport Ducati) in the opening corners, and that was the last the field saw of him as he lodged a 1.653s victory.

Reigning champion Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda Racing) challenged Jones for second amongst a group of riders that included Matt Walters (Kawasaki Connection), Josh Waters (Team Suzuki Ecstar), and Yamaha Racing Team duo Cru Halliday and Daniel Falzon.

Herfoss eventually got the better of Jones, however an error with just one lap to spare saw the number one drop to third. It wasn’t the end though, as Herfoss pushed on to make an aggressive pass in the dying stages, managing to fend off Jones’ evidently faster Ducati down the final straight to claim runner-up honours by a slender 0.114s

Waters, who remained very much in the fight for the podium, was a further 0.070s behind Jones, as Halliday was a fraction off to complete the top five.

Falzon was sixth ahead of Walters, as Bryan Staring (Kawasaki BCperformance), Mark Chiodo (Penrite Honda Racing) and Glenn Allerton (Maxima BMW) concluded the top 10.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Maxwell dominates P.I. opener | Herf’ puts it on the line for second

2019 ASBK – Round Six – Phillip Island

Superbike Race One


Riders were greeted by a very windy Phillip Island circuit this morning and with pockets of precipitation in the general area, but none yet at the track itself, it certainly had many turning their minds to a possible wet set-up and/or a compromise somewhere between wet and dry if the track ended up damp.

Morning warm up was dry with temperatures heading towards 20-degrees celsius, but the wind chill made that feel a lot cooler than the indicated ambient temperature was registering. Herfoss topped morning warm-up with a 1m33.112 ahead of Wayne Maxwell and Daniel Falzon. The tail-wind down the main straight saw more riders than normal crack the 300 km/h barrier through the Computime speed trap. Herfoss was clocked at 303 km/h to finish the session equal fastest down the chute with Mike Jones and Matt Walters. Eight riders registered 300 km/h or more in the rapid fire five-minute warm-up session.

Mike Jones had taken pole on Saturday afternoon, his fourth in a row, and with it that vital single championship point to extend his series lead over Cru Halliday out to 12.5-points. With 101 points still up for grabs ahead of this morning’s race and less than 40-points separating the top six Jones does have the advantage, but that could disappear in an instant and the championship is still completely wide open.

Matt Walters had come to the fore on Saturday with his fastest ever lap of Phillip Island to qualify on the front row alongside Jones and Maxwell. The Cessnock Kawasaki privateer remarking that he has not felt this comfortable with a motorcycle for more than half-a-dozen years, his 1m32.545s lap good enough to place him third on the grid.

Daniel Falzon headed the second row ahead of Troy Herfoss and Cru Halliday while Josh Waters led row three alongside Glenn Allerton and Bryan Staring.

What had been a tail-wind in morning warm-up had switched to a more troublesome gusty mistral across the circuit that would cause riders trouble through both turn two and the Hayshed. Those conditions made it seem unlikely that the 1m31.881s lap record set by Jones on a Kawasaki back in February at the season opener would be troubled this morning. As they negotiated the warm-up lap that wind was becoming even more troublesome, switching direction rapidly and the gusting frequency increasing.

We’re away!

Mike Jones got a great run from pole position but Walters’s Kawasaki twisted up a little as the front rose which cost the Cessnock Kawasaki privateer on the run to turn one.  Wayne Maxwell slipped past Mike Jones on the entry to turn one and dropped the hammer! 

Matt Walters was fired up to regain some of that lost ground and stuck it sideways up the inside of Falzon to move back up to fourth place behind Troy Herfoss.

Maxwell untouchable on that opening circuit, a 1m38.606s more than a second faster than any of his competitors. Troy Herfoss squeezed past Mike Jones early on lap two and immediately pulled a couple of tenths on the series leader.  Matt Walters then started to form a rear-guard action on Jones as Daniel Falzon came along for the party!

Maxwell was maintaing his one-second lead as they started lap three with Herfoss giving chase.  As the race was wearing on more riders were starting to get closer to Jones and Walters, not only Falzon still in that picture but being joined by Cru Halliday and Josh Waters forming up on the rear of that group.

A mistake by Herfoss at Southern Loop proved costly, allowing Jones and the chasing horde to close right onto the tail of the Penrite Honda. Jones then used the speed of the Ducati to pass Herfoss on the run to turn one next time around, the Honda man using a wide exit on Southern Loop to try and drive as hard as possible and stay with Jones through turn three. Jones a little wide at four allowed Herfoss back through to second place but Jones got him back at Siberia, the tail of the Ducati then wiggling its way out of Siberia and perhaps already struggling for grip with eight laps still to run.

Despite backing his pace off a little on that previous circuit Wayne Maxwell now had a 2.2-second buffer over his pursuers. Clear but turbulent air allowing the #47 Suzuki to run his own race while his combatants tussled hard behind them and dusted each other up. Nothing separated that battle for second place as the race broached the halfway distance and it was Jones from Herfoss, Falzon, Halliday, Waters and Walters. 

Late on that sixth lap Herfoss and Jones pulled some ground on the rest of that group, Herfoss all over the back of the Ducati throughout the back of the circuit and right in the slipstream down the chute, and still sniffing the fumes from that Termignoni through the exit of Southern Loop. Herfoss looking to have much more faith in his front tyre than Jones, particularly at Hayshed.

Herfoss up the inside of Jones at Southern Loop next time around, runs across the ripple strip on the inside of turn three and looking very aggressive indeed. I wrote in my Friday preview that Herfoss needs to somewhat throw caution to the wind a little now if he wants to maintain that #1 plate on the front of that Penrite Honda in 2020, and obviously Herf’ was of a same mind.

Herfoss so deep into turn one to keep the faster Ducati at bay but still gathers it up to maintain his advantage, the defending champion taking some very different lines in comparison to his rivals, working to the advantages of the Honda and finding speed in new places to keep his foes at bay.

A minor slip-up by Herfoss with two laps to go allowed Jones to sneak back past the Honda to claim second place and as they got the last lap board Josh Waters had closed to within touching distance of the tail of that Penrite Honda.

Jones maintains the advantage through Southern Loop, Herfoss all over the back of him at turn four, shadows him at Hayshed, up the inside at MG Hairpin forcing Jones to stand the Ducati up, Herfoss leading Jones through 11 but the Ducati winding up strong off the banking and right up the tail of the Honda as they tipped into turn 12. Herfoss though got great drive off that final turn and had his nose in front at the line to take that second place from Jones. 

Wayne Maxwell of course the hero of the morning, but I must say that ride from Herfoss was very impressive. Full of aggression and no shortage of mongrel to keep his championship defence very much alive. 

Josh Waters a strong finishing fourth palce ahead of Halliday and Falzon. 

An eighth place result for Bryan Staring costly for his championship chances. Matt Walters the highest finishing Kawasaki in seventh. 

Superbike Race One Results

  1. Wayne Maxwell – Suzuki 
  2. Troy Herfoss – Honda +1.653s
  3. Mike Jones – Ducati +1.767s
  4. Josh Waters – Suzuki +1.837s
  5. Cru Halliday – Yamaha +2.138s
  6. Daniel Falzon – Yamaha +3.510s
  7. Matt Walters – Kawasaki +4.395s
  8. Bryan Staring – Kawasaki +14.214s
  9. Mark Chiodo – Honda +19.403s
  10. Glenn Allerton – BMW +22.890
  11. Jamie Stauffer – Ducati 22.987s
  12. Lachlan Epis – Kawasaki +34.670s
  13. Alex Phillis – Suzuki +38.999s
  14. Sloan Frost – Suzuki +45.445s
  15. Dean Hasler – BMW +59.492s

Superbike Points

  1. Jones 236.5
  2. Halliday 222
  3. Maxwell 218
  4. Herfoss 216
  5. Staring 211.5
  6. Waters 198
  7. Walters 144.5
  8. Falzon 139
  9. Phillis 118
  10. Sissis 106.5

Source: MCNews.com.au

Bartosz Zmarzlik crowned 2019 SGP World Champion

2019 FIM Speedway Grand Prix

Leon Madsen claims the Torun win – Zmarzlik the title


Zmarzlik has made history at the Torun SGP of Poland final, claiming 14-points to follow 1973 World Final winner Jerzy Szczakiel and 2010 SGP champion Tomasz Gollob into Polish speedway’s most exclusive club – as a world champion.

The 24-year-old held his nerve under immense pressure after Leon Madsen won the Revline Torun SGP with a 21-point maximum to push Zmarzlik all the way, with the Dane claiming the silver medal and Russia’s Emil Sayfutdinov bagging bronze.

It’s nine years since Gollob lifted the sport’s biggest prize in 2010 and Zmarzlik spent that season racing with the great man at Polish club Gorzow. Now it’s Zmarzlik who leads Gorzow’s challenge in the PGE Ekstraliga and he admits Polish speedway’s all-time great backed him to follow his compatriot to the top of the sport one day.

Bartosz Zmarzlik

“Tomasz Gollob was my leader and I remember being with Tomasz in 2010. He said to me ‘young man, you are the same make as me, but in a smaller size.’ This is unbelievable – I am the third Polish world champion. It is very nice and I don’t know what to say now. It has been a hard month for me. I have had all these people coming up to me, saying ‘you can win’ or ‘you’ve won’. It was a hard time. I am much happier now. I want to say a big thanks to the Polish fans, and all the fans. They created a good atmosphere in the stadium.”

FIM Speedway Grand Prix Torun Zmarzlik
Bartosz Zmarzlik – Torun SGP of Poland

Zmarzlik went into the second semi-final requiring a win or second place to seal the title, and he delivered one of the starts of his life to claim an unforgettable victory before celebrating wildly with his crew and the fans.

With so much at stake, Zmarzlik was ultra-focused at the start line, and hailed Madsen for racing to the first and only 21-point maximum of 2019 to push him all the way in the battle for gold.

“The semi-finals were very important. I didn’t think anything in my head – I was only looking for the tapes. It was very important – that very first moment at the start line. At the end of the first corner, I felt I could win the heat. Then everything happened in slow motion in that race. It was unbelievable. It was the best race of my career. All season, no other rider has scored 21 points. But Leon did it. I am even happier because everything worked well and I got 14. It was not so easy, but I got the World Championship.”

FIM Speedway Grand Prix Torun Zmarzlik
Bartosz Zmarzlik – Torun SGP of Poland

Madsen was elated with his third SGP win of 2019, adding to his Warsaw and Cardiff victories, as he became only the second rider to win World Championship silver in their debut season, following Patryk Dudek in 2017.

Leon Madsen

“It was incredible. I am stoked about my own performance tonight. I am very happy about being vice-world champion in my first year in the GP. Considering the injuries I have had this year, it hasn’t been easy, racing with pain in the ankle and back. It just makes me prouder about what I have achieved this year.”

Sayfutdinov reached the rostrum for the first time since winning SGP bronze in his debut season 10 years ago. While he was disappointed not to become Russia’s first individual senior world champion, he saluted new champion Zmarzlik.

Emil Sayfutdinov

“I tried my best and I would have loved to have won this meeting. I would love to have been the first Russian world champion, but Bartosz Zmarzlik didn’t give me the chance. He was so good. I tried my hardest. I raced 100 percent all night and I knew what was at stake. Bartek is the well-deserved world champion.”

Zmarzlik, Madsen and Sayfutdinov are joined in qualifying for SGP 2020, by fourth-placed Fredrik Lindgren, Martin Vaculik in fifth, Maciej Janowski in sixth, Jason Doyle in seventh and eighth-placed Patryk Dudek. Doyle took fifth at the Torun SGP.

Ninth-placed Matej Zagar and Niels-Kristian Iversen in 10th spot join them after finishing first and second respectively at the GP Challenge in Gorican on August 24, with Australia’s Max Fricke – third in that meeting – joining them.

The SGP 2020 line-up will be completed by four wild cards, which will be named by the SGP Commission soon.


Final World Championship Standings

  1. Bartosz Zmarzlik 132
  2. Leon Madsen 130
  3. Emil Sayfutdinov 126
  4. Fredrik Lindgren 105
  5. Martin Vaculik 95
  6. Maciej Janowski 87
  7. Jason Doyle 84
  8. Patryk Dudek 79
  9. Matej Zagar 78
  10. Niels-Kristian Iversen 77
  11. Artem Laguta 76
  12. Antonio Lindback 63
  13. Tai Woffinden 60
  14. Janusz Kolodziej 57
  15. Robert Lambert 39
  16. Max Fricke 36
  17. Mikkel Michelsen 15
  18. Bartosz Smektala 10
  19. Oliver Berntzon 7
  20. Adrian Miedzinski 6
  21. Charles Wright 5
  22. Vaclav Milik 4
  23. Maksym Drabik 4
  24. Matic Ivacic 2
  25. Jacob Thorssell 2
  26. Martin Smolinski 1

Torun SGP Scores

  1. Leon Madsen 21
  2. Emil Sayfutdinov 15
  3. Niels-Kristian Iversen 11
  4. Bartosz Zmarzlik 14
  5. Jason Doyle 11
  6. Tai Woffinden 9
  7. Antonio Lindback 7
  8. Fredrik Lindgren 7
  9. Artem Laguta 7
  10. Martin Vaculik 7
  11. Maciej Janowski 7
  12. Janusz Kolodziej 6
  13. Adrian Miedzinski 6
  14. Patryk Dudek 4
  15. Matej Zagar 4
  16. Robert Lambert 2
  17. Jakub Miskowiak DNR
  18. Karol Zupinski DNR

Source: MCNews.com.au

Front row builds confidence for independent surprise Walters

News 6 Oct 2019

Front row builds confidence for independent surprise Walters

Experienced Kawasaki rider makes his mark in ASBK qualifying at Phillip Island.

Image: Russell Colvin.

Kawasaki independent Matt Walters stole the show in Motul Pirelli Australian Superbike Championship (ASBK) qualifying on Saturday at Phillip Island after slotting his Ninja ZX-10RR onto the front row of the grid.

Walters, 26, will start third in both of today’s Kawasaki Superbike races in Victoria after posting a PB lap of 1m32.545s in Q2 on Saturday afternoon.

“It was a really good lap and I had a lot of fun doing it,” Walters told CycleOnline.com.au. “It’s the best lap I’ve ever done here, so it’s really confidence inspiring – we’ll keep chipping away and trying to move forward.

“We’ve had two or three really hard years, not with the bike, but just things that haven’t gone our way. We’re turning it around though, so to be on the front row is great for a small, family-run outfit.”

With a pair of 12-lap races on the agenda for Sunday, Walters knows that the real challenge is ahead as he starts alongside pole-setter Mike Jones (DesmoSport Ducati) and Wayne Maxwell (Team Suzuki Ecstar).

“One lap’s alright, but I’ve gotta do it for two races on Sunday…” he added. “That’s when it counts, so I’m really looking forward to getting the elbows out and getting involved.”

Source: CycleOnline.com.au