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Riders reflect on Sachsenring MotoGP | Round 9

MotoGP 2019

Round Nine – Sachsenring
MotoGP Race Rider Quotes


Marc Marquez – P1

“It was a perfect strategy. But I didn’t have a perfect start as I ran a little deep at Turn One. After that my plan was two slow laps to warm the front tyre well and then push, and it’s exactly what I did. Step by step I opened the gap and followed the plan as I needed to. Once the gap was at three seconds I stayed there and saved the tyre and enjoyed riding. It’s a great feeling to win here again and to enter the summer break in this way. Congratulations also to my brother for his win today, it’s always really nice to win together! I want to say thank you to the Repsol Honda Team for their work in this race and the first half of the season.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez makes it 10 wins in a row at Sachsenring in 2019
Maverick Viñales – P2

“We discovered quite early this weekend that second place might be the best we could do here, so with that in mind we achieved the objective. For us it’s really good, second is my best result here. I started well, I did a good first few laps. This result means a lot, it prepares me for Brno. I’m really happy, we understand the way to go. Yamaha is working in a good way, and I know our strong and weak points. It’s good that we have a summer break to improve the bike and improve myself. The tyre choice was very difficult, I took a gamble with the hard because I worked most of the time with this tyre. It was on the limit if I could or could not finish the race, and I said to myself ‘If I need to slow down in the last ten laps, I will, but I will be at the front’. I’m very pleased for Yamaha, it’s very important to get a consecutive first and second place. I saw Cal on my pit board the whole time and for about fifteen laps I closed every door. I worked very hard on making sure he couldn’t overtake me, because I knew if he did, he would go. Luckily I was second, so I’m very pleased and happy. I can’t wait for Brno to try out the new things and see if we take a step.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Maverick Vinales
Maverick Vinales – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Cal Crutchlow – P3

“First of all, it’s great to be on the podium at the HJC Grand Prix, the team did a fantastic job. We worked all weekend on what we thought would be a race pace. Yesterday I did around the 28 lap mark a 22.7 and that’s exactly what I did on the 28th lap today. Everybody was shocked when my pace was that, but I thought that would be the pace in the race and it was. The track condition was not great, in the middle of the race I had a bit better pace than Maverick (Vinales), but once (Alex) Rins crashed I thought I’m on the podium anyway and we had nine seconds to the guys behind and the gap was going up every lap. I planned to attack with five laps to go, but the wind was so strong that my eyes were streaming with water, so I tried to blink it out and he (Vinales) got a bit of a gap. I came again, but then with two laps to go I made a big mistake in turn 10 and lost the rear of the bike. So after that I said Maverick could have it, I’m very happy with the podium today, the team and Honda have worked very, very hard and we deserve it.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Cal Crutchlow AX
Cal Crutchlow – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Danilo Petrucci – P4

“Today we did our best, making a strong comeback to finish fourth and take home important points for the championship. It’s been a complicated weekend, but fortunately yesterday’s crash didn’t particularly compromise our performance during the race. I was able to get off to a strong start from twelfth place on the grid and I immediately recovered some positions, then I simply tried to manage the rear tyre in the best way possible. It wasn’t easy to hold off the other riders of the pack, and once again I had a fun battle with Andrea and Jack. The only negative note is the gap from the winner, but I think we achieved the best possible result today. Now we’ll take a small break, during which we’ll work hard to be even more competitive by the time we’re back in action and make up ground in the championship.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Danilo Petrucci AX
Danilo Petrucci – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Andrea Dovizioso – P5

“Today we had another exciting battle with Danilo for almost the entire race and claimed fifth position in a sprint to the finish line to bring home important points in one of the most difficult tracks for us, which is undoubtedly positive. However, we couldn’t have done more during the race and the gap shows how we still need to improve under some aspects to be able to fight at the front in each situation. We’re still second in the championship despite the bad luck we had in Barcelona and the issues we encountered in the last couple of races. For sure we won’t give up and we’ll try to put this short break to good use and find some new solutions to be more competitive, starting from next round at Brno.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Andrea Dovizioso AX
Andrea Dovizioso – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Jack Miller – P6 (First Independent)

“To be honest, I thought I could do better. I had the pace to attack the two official Ducati on the last lap but in the end, I preferred not to make mistakes and take home important points that allow me to go on holiday as the first Independent rider.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Jack Miller
Jack Miller – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Joan Mir – P7

“It was really nice to fight for top positions in a quick group, but I made some mistakes and I had to recover some places, which cost me a bit. Anyway, I’m happy with my performance and my pace, it was difficult to pass the other riders in front of me, but I gave it my best shot and I could bring home seventh. Now it’s time for a little break with my family, and then I’ll start preparing for part two!”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany joan mirr
Joan Mir – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Valentino Rossi – P8

“I‘m not satisfied because it was a difficult race, I suffered a lot. First of all, we used the medium rear tyre because Michelin said to us that it would be impossible to race with the hard, but I had a lot of sliding and not enough grip, so this was the first problem. The bigger problem was that in Assen in the race I felt strong, so here we tried to confirm it, but in reality I wasn‘t very fast, I didn‘t feel good with the bike. This is a difficult moment, because the last time when we were here, at this part of the championship, I was very competitive. From Le Mans to Sachsenring I did some good races. This year it‘s been a lot more difficult, so we need to get a better understanding, because I don‘t have a great feeling with the bike and I‘m not as fast as we want.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Franco Morbidelli – P9

“It was a strange race for me. I was in the big group stretching from fourth back, but I couldn’t attack and had to stay behind. I tried to manage the tyres, but even then they dropped off a little and I lost my position within the group. We came home in the top ten, but the feeling in the race was completely different from practice. Now we’ve got time to relax and study everything, and we can start where we left off in Brno with some new ideas.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Franco Morbidelli
Franco Morbidelli – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Stefan Bradl – P10

”All weekend I was able to really enjoy riding and working with the team. Not many people are able to ride in Repsol Honda colours at home so it was a very special weekend for me and I enjoyed every moment. A big thank you to the team as they were incredibly welcoming and we were able to work extremely well together. Our approach in the race was good, maybe if I had been a little more aggressive in the opening laps I could have stayed with the group in front better and been stronger but still, a top ten was my target. I was able to be consistent and achieve what we set out to do for myself, the team and HRC.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Fri Stefan Bradl
Stefan Bradl – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Pol Espargaro – P12

“The start was not amazing – we had a small electronic problem – but the first half of the race was OK and I was fighting with some other riders. I was trying to keep the tyre but towards the end it was finished and I was really disappointed to suffer such a big drop on the rear. I could not ride or do anything because there was so much spin. We tried our best today. Now it is time to relax a little bit and then go hard again in the Czech Republic.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Pol Espargaro
Pol Espargaro – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Andrea Iannone – P13

“We are headed into the summer break on an upward trend. From Barcelona on, we took a small step and we need to pick up from here for the second half of the season. It was not an easy race today. I struggled with fresh tyres, but as the laps went by, I began to improve. We are taking some points home, but more than anything, I have more confidence in the saddle. We are able to understand the RS-GP better and we are very clear about which points we need to work on. I hope that the guys at home are able to get something new ready already for Brno. Our goal from here on is to battle consistently for the top 10.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Andrea Iannone
Andrea Iannone – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Takaaki Nakagami – P14

“It was a really tough day, like yesterday. The situation is that my whole body was getting worse not better so unfortunately it was a difficult two days. But yesterday was good, we did really well considering my condition. During the warm-up, the doctor gave me some injections to help with the pain which helped a bit. During the race there was a lot of pain and it was difficult. Over the last eight laps I had lack of grip on the rear and I had to slow down, but we scored a few points and that’s quite positive. Now we have three weeks off and tomorrow I’m going back to Japan so I will have time to rest, especially my left foot. We have time, so I will try to recover soon and I’m really looking forward to working with the team in the second part of the season.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Takaaki Nakagami AX
Takaaki Nakagami – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Hafizh Syahrin – P16

“The beginning of the race was really good but after ten laps we had a very big drop. I tried to keep the pace but it was impossible in the left corners to keep the grip. It was easy to spin and many times, I was sliding a lot. I couldn’t ride the bike comfortably and was fighting especially with the left side. I just continue working hard, even if we go into the summer break now.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Hafizh Syahrin
Hafizh Syahrin – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Pecco Bagnaia – P17

“It was a very particular weekend. I had to skip the FP2 for the FP1 crash and my physical condition was not at its best. Saturday’s practice was positive and even in the warm-up there was confidence. I didn’t expect to struggle so hard in the race. I can’t wait to be in Brno.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Pecco Bagnaia
Pecco Bagnaia – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Miguel Oliveira – P18

“It’s a sad finish this weekend because I think it was one of my strongest I had all season. I was very consistent in terms of race pace and also quite fast. It’s a shame that I made this mistake early in the race because after the crash even with a broken winglet I was quite fast and I had the pace to be inside the top 10. It is frustrating, but the most important is, that after the crash we picked up the bike and continued the race, which was very important for me in order to get information for the team and to learn from this, also to keep working hard to be fast again in Brno.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Miguel Oliveira
Miguel Oliveira – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Alex Rins – DNF

“I lost a podium today. My feeling with the bike was really nice and I tried to get into second place as soon as possible because I felt that my rhythm was strong. Unfortunately, I lost the front on a fast right-hander, I entered into it just a couple of kilometres per hour faster than usual, and that’s why I crashed. It’s a shame because it’s my second DNF in a row, but I still feel positive because my pace has been good recently and I know I can get good results again when we come back after the break.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany alex rins
Alex Rins – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Johann Zarco – DNF

“My start was quite correct but there was a lot of sliding in the cooler conditions. I was expecting this and tried to keep consistent and limit the mistakes but in Turn 3 I came into the corner – maybe with too much lean – and lost the front. It’s a shame because I was in the points and that was the target. I know what I will do during the summer break and I am motivated to work and come back stronger in the Czech Republic.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Johann Zarco
Johann Zarco – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Aleix Espargaro’ – DNF

“We were finally competitive. I’m sorry for the team and for all those who work on this project. When you end a race with a crash, you are usually angry about it, but today I am pleased because we were able to stay with the group where we want to be battling, from fourth to tenth place. I had a good start. I didn’t have great grip on the rear, but I was very strong in braking and I managed to stay up with Rossi. When he overtook Morbidelli, I struggled to do the same and I got a bit frustrated. When I got past him and tried to close the gap, I made a small mistake on turn 1 and crashed. We are not in the fight for the title, so when I saw the chance to take eighth, I went for it. It’s a pity about how it ended, but I am very pleased about how we did this weekend.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Aleix Espargaro
Aleix Espargaro – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Fabio Quartararo – DNF

“I made a small mistake; I was trying to overtake another rider and I hesitated a little about whether or not to do it and ended up going into the corner with too much speed and lean angle. It’s the first mistake I’ve made in a race, and I’ll learn from it and come back stronger. The first half of the season has been really positive – we didn’t expect some poles and podiums. I’m happy with the balance of the year so far and really looking forward to the second half.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Fabio Quartararo
Fabio Quartararo – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

Team Managers

Massimo Meregalli – Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Team Director

“We already predicted yesterday that managing the rear tyre would be key in today‘s race, and that was indeed the case. Maverick had shown good pace here all weekend, so we knew the tyres were performing well, but managing the degradation over the whole length of the race is challenging, especially when under pressure from a chasing rider, like Mack was today. He did a fantastic job. He was very consistent and precise, so this second place is well-deserved. Vale used the medium rear tyre, but it didn’t behave like we predicted. We had expected a better consistency, especially in the second part of the race, but it didn’t keep up its performance level. Because of this Vale wasn’t able to attack at the end of the race. We now have a three-week break which we will use to recharge before we head to Brno, where we will have some things that our riders can try during the test.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Maverick Vinales
Maverick Vinales – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Davide Brivio – Team Suzuki Ecstar Manager

“It was a pity for Alex that he crashed, because he was in a good position and he had space around him, therefore we missed a chance for another good result. But these things happen. Joan did a really good race, he was faster than his group at times, but it’s difficult to overtake here in Sachsenring. Anyway, it was great for him to be around much more experienced riders, and battle with them. We’re looking forward to the second half of the season, we’re competitive and we can try to go for good results. We’ll do our best.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany joan mirr
Joan Mir – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Team Manager

“The weekend was not so good because we are at a point where 12th position does not make us happy any more. Pol had a lot of issues in the race with the tyres and the bike. He could stay with the group in the first half of the race but then the lap-times dropped dramatically. It was not what we expected. The crash from Johann so early was not good for him or for us. Miguel also had a slide but afterwards his pace and lap-times were great. At least we can look at a top ten position in the championship for the summer break and now Dani [Pedrosa] and Mika [Kallio] will do some tests for us. We’ll analyse the last GPs because we’ve had some really good ones. Difficult races like today often mean you learn even more. The company will not stop working or pushing and we will come back stronger after the break.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Pol Espargaro
Pol Espargaro – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Wilco Zeelenberg – Petronas Yamaha Sepang Racing Team Manager

“We aren’t very happy with the race, with Fabio on the ground on lap two and Franco having a difficult time keeping his tyres alive. But in the end, he finished the race in the best way possible, scoring valuable points after a few DNFs earlier this season. It wasn’t our best performance of the year, but after eight races we can be proud with what we’ve achieved. I’m looking forward to a good break because I think we all need it and deserve it, and then we can come back in Brno and achieve a little bit better than today.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Fabio Quartararo
Fabio Quartararo – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019
Hervé Poncharal – Red Bull KTM Tech3 Team Manager

“This has been a very frustrating last round before the summer break for the Red Bull KTM Tech3 team. We knew with Miguel we had a very strong pace, we did a great FP3 and an even better FP4. Unfortunately, one more time, we didn’t qualify well enough and I think that is something we have to work on very much for the second part of the season. Clearly, the start was quite good from Miguel, average for Hafizh. Miguel was in the good group and unfortunately, although he is a rider that very, very rarely does a mistake, he did one and that was a costly mistake at the wrong moment. He was brave to pick up the bike, back on track with a broken winglet on the right side and completely bent brake lever. Even though, he pushed and was doing impressive lap times with the bike quite damaged. What is leaving us even more sad is the fact, that this pace would have been good enough for the top 10 or even the top 8, which means for the best result of the season so far. Of course, it would have been great to leave on holidays with that result. We know we can, but we need to make it and prove it on paper. This is a pity, but I just want to say ‘Good job, Miguel! Thank you for staying on track, thank you for pushing and this is something that for sure will make you a better MotoGP rider and I’m sure you learned quite a lot today!’ On the other side, I don’t know what to say, because the Qualifying position was a bit better for Hafizh than Miguel. The start was, as I said earlier, not ideal, but anyway, he passed a few guys ahead of him and was 15th, so we were quite happy when he was fighting with Nakagami in front. We thought that could be at least one of the guys finishing in the points and having a bit of positive feeling before the end of this first part of the season. Unfortunately, we saw his pace dropping dramatically, many riders passed him. I can’t explain it, because it looks like the same scenario every weekend; at the end of the race, there is no grip, much sliding, no pace. That was in Assen, but then we got the carbon swingarm, which is supposed to be better. Clearly, the tyre wear is more than Miguel, who has been a lot faster than his teammate today. So, maybe there is also something to understand about how to handle the bike, how to set it up and how to ride it. But I am disappointed with that result, because I’m sure today Hafizh had the possibility to score a point or two, minimum and we didn’t do it, which is a shame. Still I wish everybody a great break and hopefully we can start on a good base in Czech Republic for the second part of the year.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Miguel Oliveira
Miguel Oliveira – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

MotoGP Results


Source: MCNews.com.au

Marquez claims tenth Sachsenring win in a row | Miller sixth

MotoGP 2019

Round Nine – Sachsenring
MotoGP Race Results / Report


Marc Marquez proved who’s boss at Sachsenring over the weekend taking his tenth victory at the track in a row, having claimed an early lead from Turn one and then proceeding to lead for the entire duration, finishing +4.587 ahead of Maverick Vinales.

Marc Marquez

“My plan was try to lead from the beginning to the end, that was my mentality. For that reason the start wasn’t perfect but I took a lot of risk in the first corner, I braked so late and I was able to be in there and then the first two laps I was just cruising and trying to understand the limit of the track after the rain. Then when I saw the tyres were ready, I was ready and the bike was ready, then I started to attack. I started to do low 1:21s, that was my rhythm in the first ten laps, and apart from that, when I saw Rins was three seconds behind me, then I started to save the tyre and finish the race.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Marquez Podium
Marc Marquez – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

That makes it ten wins in a row in Germany for the reigning Champion, all from pole, with Maverick Viñales and Cal Crutchlow completing the podium. Marquez’ win for the seventh successive time in the premier class at the Sachsenring also equals Valentino Rossi’s record of premier class wins in a row at one venue, set in Mugello from 2002-2008.

Despite a bad start Marquez kept it pinned into Turn 1, the last of the late brakers able to emerge in the lead as Fabio Quartararo slipped back from second to sixth at the start; Viñales, Jack Miller, Alex Rins and Crutchlow all getting past the Frenchman. The first shot of drama would come from the Frenchman too as Quartararo’s race suddenly ended at Turn 3 on Lap 2, the rookie going to get back past Ducati Team’s Danilo Petrucci but the front washing away in his first ever premier class crash out of a race.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Marquez
Marc Marquez – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

The battle at the front at that point was more a freight train, with Marquez conducting the pace from Viñales as Crutchlow and Rins demoted Miller down to fifth. The top four started to edge clear of the rest, but edging clear of everyone was King of the Ring Marquez as a 1:21.228 – a new lap record – on Lap 5 saw his lead creep up to just under a second. The man in second was Rins, and he was also stretching his advantage over Viñales and Crutchlow to the same distance, but Marquez was in the groove.

The seven-time Champion showed exactly why the Sachsenring is his playground, not powering away at a rapid rate but instead eking out a tenth here and there, his lead gradually increasing until he suddenly put the hammer down. Lap 10 saw Marquez go 0.4 faster than Rins as the gap rose above the two-second barrier. From then on, there was no stopping the now ten-time Sachsenring winner.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Cal Crutchlow
Cal Crutchlow – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

The battle for the second and third steps on the podium was heating up, however. Crutchlow was shadowing Viñales, who in turn was sitting a second back from Rins, with the gap remaining constant between the trio as we passed the mid-stage of the race. And the battle for fifth place was very much on as Ducati Team’s Andrea Dovizioso and Petrucci were going head-to-head with fellow GP19 rider Miller, Joan Mir, Valentino Rossi and Aprilia Racing Team Gresini’s Aleix Espargaro in a close fight for big points.

Nearer the front though, disaster then struck at the top of ‘The Waterfall’ for Rins. 0.9 clear of Viñales and Crutchlow, the Suzuki man suddenly skitted out at Ralf Waldmann corner for his second consecutive DNF. With the man on the chase down and out, it left Marquez with an unassailable 4.9 lead.

The last ten laps were just about controlling the gap for Marquez as he saw a 10th Sachsenring win appear ever closer, but who would finish second? Crutchlow had been attached to Viñales’ back wheel for some time to put the Spaniard under pressure and with two laps to go, the duo were separated by nothing.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Vinales Crutchlow
Maverick Vinales – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

But the number 35 then had a scare at Turn 10; a warning sign that saw Crutchlow running wide and subsequently keeping it calmer to give up the chase. Just ahead, Marquez crossed the line to win his fifth race of 2019, the seventh consecutive year he’s won five or more races in a premier class season – a record that sees him surpass MotoGP Legend Giacomo Agostini and nine-time Champion Rossi, both of whom managed to do it for six straight years.

Viñales crossed the line to take his second straight podium, with Crutchlow getting his equal best result of the year in third and his first rostrum since Qatar GP. The Brit’s ride was even more impressive as he battled a torn anterior cruciate ligament and a small fracture to the top of his tibia this weekend following a cycling mishap. Behind the top trio, meanwhile, there were important points in the Championship to be decided just down the road.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Jack Miller
Jack Miller & Valentino Rossi – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

Rossi had lost touch on the battle for fourth in the latter stages, and it was Mir vs the three Ducatis. With Marquez out in front, second in the Championship Dovizioso needed to limit the damage as much as possible but Petrucci wasn’t going to let his teammate have it all his own way. The Italians exchanged P4 at the bottom of ‘The Waterfall’ before Dovi went to get back past Petrucci into Turn 1 with three to go and they both ran wide; Miller diving up the inside of both.

Dovizioso was aggressive though and attacked the Australian as the battle between the Ducatis went down to the wire, Petrucci leading them onto the last lap. The Mugello winner would ultimately hold fourth as the chequered flag came out, a terrific performance after his big crash in Q2, with Dovizioso producing another fine fight back to take P5 from P13 on the grid. Miller was forced to settle for a solid sixth.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany Petrucci Dovi
Dovizioso chases down teammate Petrucci – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

Mir picked up his third consecutive top ten in seventh, a great ride from the rookie, with Rossi ending his run of three-straight DNFs with a P8 at the Sachsenring. Franco Morbidelli finished ninth in Germany, the first time he’d raced in the premier class at the track after missing out last year, with Jorge Lorenzo’s replacement Stefan Bradl grabbing his second top ten of the season in front of his home fans.

Tito Rabat put in a stunner to take P11 from last on the grid, ahead of a tougher race for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Pol Espargaro. Andrea Iannone was 13th and top Aprilia after a crash for teammate Aleix Espargaro, with Takaaki Nakagami riding through the pain barrier to P14. Karel Abraham completed the points.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Germany MotoGP Podium
Marquez took the win from Vinales and Crutchlow – Sachsenring Round 9 – MotoGP 2019

The summer break is now upon us and Marquez will doubtless be the most relaxed after extending his lead once again. But next up is Brno and it’s a good venues for some key rivals…as well as a few weeks away, giving the likes of Quartararo time to come back swinging. Will the reign continue? The Monster Energy Grand Prix České republiky will decide…

MotoGP Results


Source: MCNews.com.au

A Donington trifecta for Jonathan Rea | Sykes robbed

WSBK 2019

Round Eight – Donington
Sunday Race Results / Report


Until a couple rounds ago, the Motul FIM World Superbike Championship seemed to have taken a very clear direction with Álvaro Bautista winning the first 11 races, seemingly without any rivals able to make any trouble for him.

But from the Jerez round and then with the next round in Misano, the Spanish Ducati rider made a few mistakes, leaving his flank exposed, and four-time World Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR) did not stand idly by.

After the fantastic double in Misano, winning both Race 1 and Race 2, at Donington Park, the Northern Irishman did the triple, winning all three races and taking the lead in the rider standings already on Saturday, then increasing his advantage to 24-points ahead of Bautista on Sunday.

WSBK Rnd Donington WorldSBK Sunday Race Finish Rea
Jonathan Rea

For his part, the Spaniard was unable to be as incisive as he had in the early part of the season, and on English soil he had to settle for a meagre bounty – third place in Race 2.

The Donington weekend, at least in the premier class, was certainly an important one for all the Kawasaki riders who also took two second place finishes here with the skilled Toprak Razgatlioglu (Turkish Puccetti Racing / Kawasaki ZX-10RR), and two third place finishes with Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR).

If Kawasaki and Ducati seem to be the most incisive bikes in the World Championship for factory derivatives, in WorldSSP, it is a different story, because in this case, Yamaha is dominating, taking the top two positions on the podium, as well as fourth, thanks to the performances of Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha / Yamaha YZF R6), first across the line, and teammates Federico Caricasulo and Randy Krummenacher (Bardahl Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team / Yamaha YZF R6), second and fourth respectively. Yamaha also dominated in the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship race, won by Italian Kevin Sabatucci of Team Trasimeno Yamaha.


WorldSBK Tissot Superpole Race

The first race on Sunday lasted even less than the scheduled 10 laps, as it was red-flagged on the eighth lap due to an accident that involved no less than five riders.

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Sykes Rea Haslam
Tom Sykes leads Jonathan Rea

At the start, pole man Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team / BMW S1000 RR) got off well, managing to stay ahead of Race 1 winner, Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR), who had started from the second spot on the grid.Behind them was Toprak Razgatlioglu (Turkish Puccetti Racing / Kawasaki ZX-10RR) who succeeded in moving up from seventh to third.

However, the four-time World Champion Kawasaki rider was not giving up easily, and on the fifth lap he was able to overtake his former team-mate for the race lead. In the meantime, Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR) and Álvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati / Ducati Panigale V4 R) moved respectively into fourth and fifth place.

It seemed like the race would end in that order, but during the eighth lap, Peter Hickman (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team / BMW S1000 RR) had a technical problem on turn 11 and leaked oil, ending up in the gravel. Unfortunately, the same fate awaited Sandro Cortese, Leandro Mercado, Alessandro Delbianco and Ryūichi Kiyonari, slipping on the oil left on the track by the British rider.

Race direction was therefore forced to wave the red flag, which decreed the end of the race, but on the final lap to return to pit lane, Tom Sykes, who had been lying second in the race, also slipped on the oil left behind by Hickman, crashing out. Unable to get the bike to Parc Fermé, Tom Sykes lost his second place in a crushingly unfair blow to the private Turkish Puccetti Racing team rider.

This made it an all-green podium with Jonathan Rea, Toprak Razgatlioglu and Leon Haslam respectively on the first, second and third step.

WSBK Rnd Donington WorldSBK Sunday Tissot Superpole Race Celbration
Superpole Race Podium

Superbike Race Two

In this race, the Kawasaki riders were once again the undisputed protagonists, with Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK / Kawasaki ZX-10RR) and Toprak Razgatlioglu (Turkish Puccetti Racing / Kawasaki ZX-10RR) going back and forth for the lead throughout the race, which was then won by the Northern Irishman.

Razgatlioglu managed to overtake Rea for the lead twice, first on the third lap and then on the eighth, but on the twelfth lap he was forced to relinquish the position to the four-time World Champion who had a slightly faster pace than his.

In any case, the Turkish rider was able to give Rea a run for his money all the way to the chequered flag, finishing just three tenths of a second behind the Championship leader.

The other Kawasaki rider, Leon Haslam, seemed to have third place in the bag, but on the thirteenth lap, Álvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati / Ducati Panigale V4 R) was able to overtake him, thereby taking the only podium finish of what was a difficult weekend for the Ducati riders.

WSBK Rnd Donington WorldSBK Sunday Race Podium
Race Two Podium

Jonathan Rea

“It was incredible, a similar story to Misano with Toprak in Race 2. It was really difficult, he was so strong on the brakes, but my team gave me a great bike and physically this weekend I felt really good, so I was able to extract the best potential from my ZX-10RR. In free practices, I was a little bit unhappy about the setup, and we were quite far away, 0.9 s from the fastest lap time, but step by step we arrived and three race wins, and back in the lead of the championship I can’t quite believe it. We will keep working like we are doing and we go to Laguna next week, which is another good track for us, but I enjoyed the atmosphere here. There were a lot of people here at Donington and now let’s see what happens”.

WSBK Rnd Donington WorldSBK Sunday Tissot Superpole Race Rea
Jonathan Rea

Toprak Razgatlioglu

“Yesterday with the wet conditions we didn’t go well. We tried a similar setup to Misano but I didn’t feel good on the bike and it was sliding a lot at the rear, so I was waiting for today because I was expecting a dry race and I felt really strong on those conditions. The Tissot Superpole Race was good but it wasn’t perfect. We focused on Race 2, which was more important for me. I did a good start, I followed Johnny and after I overtook him we had a small fight together but he was strong and fast. On the final two laps, I tried to attack him again but it was impossible. I am happy with another podium and now we see what will happen in the US”.

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Toprak Razgatlioglu
Toprak Razgatlioglu

Leon Haslam

“Honestly, I had a really good feeling on 80% of the track but I was just struggling on that last part with the stop/start areas. I am happy with the pace because I was losing so much in the last two turns but and making it back in the rest of the track – and that was against the fastest guys. I did feel that if we could have sorted those last two corners out we would have been in that battle for those top two spots today. We have had a run of podiums and a fifth place finish recently so we are there or thereabouts. We closed the points gap on third and we will keep on pushing on.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Haslam Razgatlioglu
Leon Haslam

Álvaro Bautista

“Today it was important to finish the weekend with a podium, after yesterday’s crash. In the Superpole Race I tried to stay with the front group and pushed as hard as I could; unfortunately, my Panigale V4 R was moving around a lot and I had to make a big effort to ride it and keep it upright. In Race 2 I made a good start, and tried to stay in the front group despite the same problems I had in the Superpole Race. Here at Donington we were struggling a lot, but I’m quite happy to have achieved the best possible result. We’re analysing the data to try and improve the weak points of the bike and tackle the Laguna Seca race stronger than before.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Bautista Davies
Álvaro Bautista

Chaz Davies

“It was a really tough day. After the Superpole race, I was optimistic that we could potentially have a decent long race. We made some changes and felt the bike was a bit better. The start and the first few laps were good and I got up to fifth place, then things got a bit more difficult. After a few more laps my pace faded, because I had pretty bad arm pump as well. Donington is a bit of a strange circuit that requires a lot of physical effort; today things were tougher especially with me fighting the bike as much as I am. Unfortunately, there’s not much to be happy about after a weekend like this one, but now I can’t wait to get to Laguna, which is a track I like a lot.”

Alex Lowes

“The issues in Superpole yesterday set us back a little bit today. We made some changes to the bike ahead of the Sprint Race and, while I didn’t feel quite as good as I was expecting, towards the end I was coming on strong in what was quite a tight group. With only seven laps because of the red flag it didn’t feel like much of a race to be honest. In Race 2 I knew it was going to be difficult to get away with the leading group starting from further back, but I felt I managed the race well. I was really strong at the end, but not quite close enough to challenge for the final podium, but there were plenty of positives we can take into the Laguna Seca race next week.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Davies Lowes
Alex Lowes chasing Chaz Davies

Michael van der Mark

“We made a change to the bike after the Sprint Race and I think we maybe went a little bit in the wrong direction, as I was struggling for rear grip from the start and couldn’t use the new tyre like everyone else. I actually got a good start but then dropped back quite quickly and there wasn’t much I could do about it. I had good pace, but I’d have liked to have been able to push harder. We have to be happy with the points we’ve scored this weekend, given the injury, but as a racer I know that if I had the grip then I’d have been able to fight with Alex and the other guys. The wrist was much better than I was expecting this weekend, so now I can look forward to Laguna with some confidence.”

Marco Melandri

“This was not a good weekend for us. After Misano I expected to have a much better feeling, especially here at Donington where I’ve had good results in the past. So, we were expecting a positive weekend here, but it turned out very different. I never really had a good feeling and I struggled a lot from the start. Either the bike doesn’t like me, or my riding style doesn’t suit the bike, so it’s difficult. Yamaha and the team are working incredibly hard to help me find a solution and so am I, but we’re still looking for the light at the end of the tunnel.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Davies Melandri
Marco Melandri in pursuit of Chaz Davies

Sandro Cortese

“Today was a day to forget, if I’m honest. It started in the Sprint Race when I was the first to arrive in the corner where the oil had been dropped. I had no chance and crashed so heavily that the bike was literally in two pieces. I have to say a big thank you to my team, who did an incredible job to basically build a new bike in just two hours. They were still working on it on the grid and, even one minute before the start of Race 2, we weren’t sure whether we were going to make the start. After all this drama I wasn’t as focused I normally am but, after two crashes, it was important for me to finish the race and pick up some points to round out the weekend. Now we must look forward to the next race in Laguna, where I hope we can end the first part of the season with some good results.”

Tom Sykes

“It certainly was an unlucky day. When we came over the hilltop into Melbourne Loop after the red flag, there was a parked car right at the edge of the tarmac, riders, bikes and marshals, so I looked up just to try and understand if someone was coming on track. Then I hit the oil, Jonathan nearly crashed and I unfortunately did. What happened unfortunately completely changed the dynamic of the day and of the long race. Starting from tenth, I struggled as I would have needed some clear air. So the performance was certainly compromised in today’s race today. It’s a shame because we definitely had the pace for the podium. Yes, I’m disappointed but with the form we have shown this weekend, we still have a lot of positives to take away.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Sykes Rea Razgatlioglu
Tom Sykes leading Jonathan Rea in the Superpole Race

Peter Hickman

“I’m a bit disappointed to be outside the top ten, to be honest. I felt I had some pace to be inside the top ten. But I did not quite have the grip in the final race compared to what we had earlier in the day and yesterday. Maybe the track temperature went a bit up but because of what had happened in the Superpole Race, we did not have the time to make changes on the bike for race two basing on what we had learned in the first race. But it’s the way it goes. I’ve had a good weekend, I enjoyed myself and learned some stuff. The team has been fantastic, really thanks to Smiths Racing BMW for allowing me to compete here and to Dunlop UK for allowing me to drop their weekend to come here. I hope to get some opportunity like this again sometime in the future.”

WSBK Rnd Donington Sun Hickman
Peter Hickman

WorldSBK Results


Source: MCNews.com.au

Morgan Park ASBK Sunday | Part Two

2019 ASBK
Round Four – Morgan Park

Images by TBG and Rob Mott


Superbike Race Two

Nobody had an answer for Mike Jones in the opening stanza this weekend (Link), but competitor teams would now have a lot more data to try and fine tune their set-up ahead of this afternoon’s second 16-lap Superbike bout.

Race one had also seen the championship tighten up even further. Cru Halliday had taken the championship lead this morning by a single point, while Mike Jones had moved up to second place. A fall for previous championship leader Bryan Staring late in the opening race was costly, but the Kawasaki man remounted to cross the line in last position. With only 12 finishers that last position still netted him nine championship points to help limit the damage to his title aspirations.

We are away!

The lights went out to start the second and final 16-lap bout at Morgan Park just before 1430 this afternoon and it was race one winner Mike Jones that blasted hardest off the line. The front Pirelli of the big 1299 Ducati pawing the air as he led the field towards turn one.

Daniel Falzon had a brilliant start and was quickly on the back of Jones, but a couple of corners in to the race the Ducati man ran off the circuit! Jones got all out of shape under brakes and had to let the anchors off and run off in order to stay upright.

Troy Herfoss made short work of Daniel Falzon, as did Wayne Maxwell, and it quickly became a battle between these two foes as they started lap two. Maxwell sneaked past Herfoss to take the lead and their tussle then allowed Falzon back into the game. Also joining the party was Cru Halliday and Josh Waters.

Mike Jones had re-joined the race at the back of the pack and put his head down, reeling off fastest laps of the race more than half-a-second quicker than the race leaders. By lap four he had worked his way back up to seventh place and was closing in on Bryan Staring.

Aaron Morris’ encouraging debut with BMW then ended on a sour note, with a NextGen S 1000 RR turned upside down in the in-field. Still, a brilliant weekend for Morris that certainly gave the squad some heart and something to cheer for after a tumultous season thus far that had brought them little reward.

Up front Maxwell and Herfoss had started pulling away from third placed Halliday. The YRT man now had his hands full with not only team-mate Falzon, but also Josh Waters and Bryan Staring.  Mike Jones was still lapping faster than everyone and by half-race distance the Queenslander had joined that party. The win was looking out of Jones’ grasp, but a podium was still a distinct possibility.

The DesmoSport Ducati man dispensed with Falzon as he slotted the 1299 Final Edition up the inside of the YRT machine into turn one with seven laps to run. Next target Waters… He got him in an identical move on the next lap to move up to fifth. Next target Staring… The Kawasaki man was a little bit harder to pass but it was job done two laps later, despite Jones running wide and almost off the circuit once again… Next target Halliday… And there it is, Jones up to third place with two laps to go.

Bryan Staring though was determined to try and put that BCperformance Kawasaki on the podium. Jones was not to be denied though and managed to keep Staring at bay to the chequered flag.

Wayne Maxwell and Troy Herfoss are lucky that Jones made that early mistake, as the pace the local man showed after recovering from that error was strong enough to indicate that he likely would have walked away from that duo to another clear victory. But Jones made a mistake, they didn’t.

ASBK Rnd MorganPark Race ImageRM Wayne Maxwell Troy Herfoss
Herfoss had a crack at Maxwell on the final lap but it was to no avail

That marks Maxwell’s first victory since the championship opener. Herfoss put his nose in front early on the final lap but Maxwell had the corner speed to simply sweep back past and deny the reining champion the victory.

ASBK Rnd MorganPark Race ImageRM Wayne Maxwell
Wayne Maxwell celebrates victory at Morgan Park

That win also earned Maxwell the round win by a single point over Jones, Herfoss taking third overall.

ASBK Rnd MorganPark Race ImageRM Wayne Maxwell
Wayne Maxwell celebrates victory at Morgan Park

Those results close the championship chase up even tighter!

ASBK Rnd MorganPark Race ImageRM Wayne Maxwell ParcFerme Jones Herfoss
Morgan Park round podium

Mike Jones the championship leader by a single point over Cru Halliday. Bryan Staring only seven-points further back, with Herfoss another seven-points behind in fourth place.  That win promotes Wayne Maxwell into fifth in the championship by a single point over team-mate Josh Waters. Every single one of those aforementioned riders have Australian Road Race Championships under their belt, and any one of them could still lift the Title this year as things are wide open as we next head to Winton Motor Raceway in September for round five of the Motul/Pirelli Australian Superbike Championships. Bring it on!

Superbike Race Two Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Wayne MAXWELL (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R 0.000
2 Troy HERFOSS (QLD) Honda CBR SP +0.375
3 Mike JONES (QLD)  Ducati 1299 FE +3.585
4 Bryan STARING (WA) Kawasaki ZX10RR +3.812
5 Cru HALLIDAY (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R1M +4.999
6 Josh WATERS (VIC) Suzuki GSXR-R +5.269
7 Daniel FALZON (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R1M +9.444
8 Arthur SISSIS (SA) Suzuki GSXR-R +25.093
9 Matt WALTERS (NSW) Kawasaki ZX10RR +25.874
10 Alex PHILLIS (VIC) Suzuki GSXR-R +40.432
11 Lachlan EPIS (NSW) Kawasaki ZX10RR +44.093
12 Damon REES (NZ) Honda CBR +44.380
13 Mark CHIODO (VIC) Honda CBR SP +53.706
14 Brian HOUGHTON (QLD) Honda CBR RR +1:10.525
DNF Aaron MORRIS (NSW)  BMW S RR +12 Laps

Supersport Race Two

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race Grid Start
Supersport Race Two grid

Nic Liminton and Reid Battye took their turns battling with Nic Liminton in the first of the Supersport bouts but eventually it was Toparis that got the upper hand before then streaking away to a clear victory. Would any one have an answer for Toparis this afternoon…? Or would the Goulburn teenager’s 48-point championship lead increase further…?

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race Grid Tom TOPARIS
Tom Toparis wished good luck on the starting grid by his team

Reid Battye scored the holeshot on the Ecstar Suzuki and led the field through the first turns as Toparis and Liminton gave chase. Toparis getting a much better start this time around and immediately challenging for the lead. It was not until lap three though that Battye relinquished the lead to Toparis. While Toparis was never really threatened from thereon in he never managed to really break away from Battye.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race First Corner Reid BATTYE leads
Supersport Race Two

Behind Toparis the battle for second place was hotting up though as Nic Liminton closed on Battye while Callum Spriggs and Oli Bayliss also tried to join that party. Spriggs put in the fastest lap of the race on lap five to close on Nic Liminton and challenge the young South Australian for third place. A couple of laps later Liminton ran in was too deep which gave Reid Battye plenty of breathing space. The Suzuki man though made his own mistake and lost a number of positions, drifting all the way back to sixth place.

Those mistakes from Liminton and Battye had promoted Callum Spriggs up to a clear second place, while Oli Bayliss was in a relatively lonely third place. The top three now were really strung out while Broc Pearson was doing his best to try and close down Oli Bayliss in order to steal the final step on the podium.

Pearson sneaked past Bayliss early on the final lap, but Bayliss got back around him and put his head down on the final lap to make that podium his.

Callum Spriggs a strong second place in another of his rare appearance these days in the competition.

Tom Toparis leaves Queensland with a 61-point lead in the Australian Supersport Championship. It must be said that Toparis did it relatively easily, while his main rivals made their mistakes trying to match his pace.

Supersport Race Two Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Tom TOPARIS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R6 0.000
2 Callum SPRIGGS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +3.087
3 Oli BAYLISS (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R6 +4.511
4 Broc PEARSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +4.991
5 Corey TURNER (QLD) Honda CBR +12.016
6 Reid BATTYE (NSW)  Suzuki GSX-R +16.126
7 Chris QUINN (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R6 +19.384
8 Nic LIMINTON (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +19.804
9 Dallas SKEER (SA)  Suzuki GSXR 600 +21.487
10 Aidan HAYES (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +26.457
11 Jack PASSFIELD (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R6 +31.829
12 Ty LYNCH (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +35.658
13 Avalon BIDDLE (NZ) Yamaha YZF-R6 +39.818
14 Andrew EDSER (NSW)  Kawasaki ZX6R +1:14.156
15 Jack HYDE (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +1 Lap

Supersport 300 Race Three

Senna Agius once again quickly established himself as the man to beat. Agius on the new 400 Kawasaki immediately streaked away from the chasing Yamaha YZF-R3 horde. Agius built a massive 2.5-second lead on the opening lap and the field never managed to reel any of that gap back in over the remainder of the race.

The battle for second place though was insane! Harry Khouri, Zac Levy, Harrison Voight, Max Stauffer, Hunter Ford, Seth Crump, Yannis Shaw and Brandon Demmery all swapping and changing at almost every turn in what was a titanic battle over the remaining steps on the rostrum. Winning that battle for second place was Championship leader Max Stauffer from Harrison Voight with Harry Khouri missing out on a podium by a gnat’s whisker.

Max Stauffer remains in the lead of the Supersport 300 Championship but Agius has trimmed his buffer down to 28-points after what has been a dominant weekend for the 14-year-old.  Full championship standings can be found further down the page.

Supersport 300 Race Three Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Senna AGIUS (NSW) Kawasaki EX 400 0.000
2 Max STAUFFER (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +4.952
3 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +4.968
4 Harry KHOURI (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +4.973
5 Hunter FORD (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +5.148
6 Zac LEVY (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +5.412
7 Yannis SHAW (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 +5.476
8 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW) / Yamaha R3 321 +5.527
9 Seth CRUMP (QLD) KTM RC 390 +8.245
10 Luke JHONSTON (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +22.260
11 Peter NERLICH (VIC) Kawasaki EX 400 +22.293
12 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +22.359
13 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +22.487
14 Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +25.966
15 Travis HALL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +27.358
16 Ryan SMITH (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +28.474
17 Tom NEWTON (NZ)  Kawasaki EX 400 +37.454
18 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC)  Yamaha R3 321 +42.304
19 Josh HALL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +42.354
20 Laura BROWN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +46.487
21 Jacob HATCH (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +46.538
22 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +47.294
23 Brad TRIVETT (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 300 +47.927
24 Mitch KUHNE (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +52.080
25 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +52.730
26 Ryan MOSCARDINI (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +58.106
27 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +59.453
28 Noel MAHON (VIC)  Kawasaki EX 400 +1:11.957
29 Jeremy CZMOK (VIC) Yamaha R3 321 +1:13.885
30 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +1:17.345
31 Gregory FARRELL (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 300 +1:17.434
32 Hayden STIFF (NSW) Kawasaki EX 400 +1:23.471
33 John LYTRAS (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +2 Laps
DNF Locky TAYLOR (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +3 Laps

YMF R3 Cup Race Three

TBC

YMF R3 Cup Race Three Results


bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race Three

TBC

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race Three Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW)  Yamaha YZR-R15 0.000
2 Angus GRENFELL (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 +0.018
3 Carter THOMPSON (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +0.838
4 Archie MCDONALD (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.857
5 Tom DRANE (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.898
6 Glenn NELSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.932
7 Marianos NIKOLIS (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +6.143
8 Max GIBBONS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +6.238
9 Lucas QUINN (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +6.558
10 Thomas BROWN (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +11.602
11 Zak PETTENDY (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +11.641
12 Jacob HATCH (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +11.673
13 Varis FLEMING (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +13.586
14 Jai RUSSO (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +13.886
15 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 +13.910
16 Lincoln KNIGHT (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +30.075
17 Hunter DIPLOCK (NSW)  Yamaha YZR-R15 +30.127
18 Cormac BUCHANAN (NZ) Yamaha YZF-R15 +30.199
19 Jamie PORT (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +30.823
20 Patrick BOGNAR (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 +37.848
21 Tom CONNORS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +38.383
22 Toby JAMES (VIC)  Yamaha YZR-R15 +55.030
DNF Alex KENWORTHY-JONES (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +2 Laps
DNF Natalie BARBATI (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 +4 Laps

Superbike Masters Race Two

Alex Pickett blasted the big FZR1000 off the line ahead of Saturday race victor John Allen on the TZ750 two-stroke Yamaha.

Pickett kept that lead until three laps from the end when the big four-stroke Yamaha went into a monumental tank-slapper coming on to the main straight that almost launched him into orbit but somehow young Alex managed to hang on to it. Must have reminded him of his Isle of Man exploits! It broke the bolt-in lock-stops off the FZR1000!

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBKM Race Alexander PICKETT Broken Steering Lock
FZR1000 lock stops were not man enough to cope with a Morgan Park tank-slapper

That moment allowed John Allen through to the lead before going on to take the win by 1.5-seconds.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBKM Race Podium John ALLEN Alexander PICKETT Murray CLARK
Superbike Masters Round Two Podium

Superbike Masters Race Two Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 John ALLEN (QLD) Yamaha TZ 750 0.000
2 Alexander PICKETT  Yamaha FZR 1000 1.507
3 Murray CLARK (QLD) Suzuki GSXR 17.951
4 Mark McVEIGH (NSW) Yamaha FZR 1000 46.575
5 Scott WEBSTER (VIC) Suzuki GSX 1200 47.255
6 Gregory JAMES (NSW) Honda CB 1100 R 59.704
7 Mark RODDA (NSW) Suzuki GS 1000 S 1:01.567

Superbike Masters Race Three

TBC

Superbike Masters Race Three Results

TBC


Source: MCNews.com.au

Morgan Park ASBK Sunday | Part One

2019 ASBK
Round Four – Morgan Park

Images by TBG and Rob Mott


Kawasaki Superbike Race One

Mike Jones had earned pole position for today’s fourth round of the Motul/Pirelli sponsored Australian Superbike Championship at Morgan Park. A 1m12.609s on the big 1299 Ducati V-Twin also a new lap record for the 25-year-old Queenslander on Saturday afternoon in front of a strong local crowd.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Mike JONES
Mike Jones on pole

Cru Halliday has been consistently fast across all sessions thus far this weekend as the YRT man again states his threat as a potential challenger for the ASBK Title this season.

Wayne Maxwell is always Mr Consistency. Even when his star does not shine as the brightest, it still always manages to be looming large, nobody every discounts his strength as a potential challenger.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Wayne MAXWELL
Wayne Maxwell getting ready on the grid

Troy Herfoss has not looked as confident here this weekend. The Penrite Honda squad made their competitors almost look silly here last year, but it has not been smooth sailing for them here this time around. Herfoss’ main gripes have been about the lack of suppleness from the suspension over the bumps. He still managed to clock a 1m13.127s to qualify fourth, but while most of his competitors had put in lots of fast laps so far this weekend, Herf’ has only managed a handful of laps at anything like a speed that would threaten for a win today.

Next on the grid is Bryan Staring. You can’t mention the Western Australian this season without the subject turning to tyres as the BCperformance Kawasaki man is the only prime combatant on Dunlop rubber. That was the difference that allowed him to walk away from the rest of the field last time out at The Bend. He also walked away from that South Australian circuit as the new championship leader, by a single point over Halliday.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Grid
Morgan Park ASBK Race One Grid

Daniel Falzon seemed fairly happy to keep his powder dry yesterday as he concentrated on saving his tyres for today. Tyre longevity is always the prime decider between hero and zero in the Australian Superbike class and it seems as though Falzon is playing the long game this weekend. Arm pump though a concern for the South Australian at this bumpy and physical three-kilometre lay-out.

Last year Josh Waters struggled here before staging a magnificent come back to form in the second race. He has not figured highly during practice and qualifying, but you know the Ecstar Suzuki crew would have been working hard overnight on a set-up that will give the marauder from Mildura a good chance here today.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Aaron MORRIS
Aaron Morris was looking strong on the NextGen BMW

In the middle of the third row is Aaron Morris. The 26-year-old is standing in for the injured Glenn Allerton on the NextGen BMW this weekend and has thus far put in a stand-out performance. He is a genuine podium threat today if the team have provided him with a set-up that looks after his rear Pirelli.

Qualifying ninth was Matt Walters while Mark Chiodo rounded out the top ten.

We are away!

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Start
Morgan Park ASBK Race One

Mike Jones launched the big Ducati off the line ahead of Troy Herfoss and Cru Halliday as Bryan Staring tussled with Daniel Falzon. A poor start to the race for Wayne Maxwell had the Ecstar Suzuki man languishing in seventh position with plenty of work to do.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park SBK Race Start TBG
Morgan Park ASBK Race One

Troy Herfoss took the lead from Mike Jones late on lap one but the Ducati man got him straight back. Herfoss looks like a different man here today than we witnessed on Friday and Saturday, but the Penrite Honda had no answer for that 1.3-litres of Ducati underneath Mike Jones as he walked back past the reigning champion as soon as there was a clear piece of tarmac in front of them.

YRT team-mates Daniel Falzon and Cru Halliday were tussling over third position before the South Aussie went down on lap three after a soft front-end lose saw him slide across the dirt. Mark Chiodo also went down.

Falzon’s demise promoted Bryan Staring up to fourth position but not for long, the Kawasaki man was then pushed again back to fifth as Maxwell started his march forward. Josh Waters was in the mix also and certainly still within podium contention at this stage of the race.

Herfoss was trying to make up for his horsepower deficit by going in deep and hard under brakes, but that was sometimes proving costly on exit and allowing Jones to eke out yet more ground. That front-end approach also of course bringing more risk with it, and with a championship on the line it was going to be interesting to see just how hard Herfoss was going to push his luck in order to try and stick with Jones and challenge for the win.

As this opening bout approached half-race distance Wayne Maxwell pushed his way past Troy Herfoss and to add further insult Cru Halliday then relegated the defending champ to fourth. Bryan Staring was all over the back of Herfoss and looking to push Herfoss back yet another position.

Up front Mike Jones was clocking low-mid 1m13s lap after lap but it was starting to look as though that might not be enough as Wayne Maxwell got the GSX-R1000 wound up and started closing a little on the Ducati. Coming with him was Cru Halliday but there was still only a little over two-seconds covering the entire top five with six laps to run.

Bryan Staring then got through on Herfoss. Would the Dunlop runner show a late race advantage once again and catch his rivals in the closing stages..? We know he has the fitness to last the distance…

It became apparent though as the race wore on that nobody had an answer for Mike Jones. The Ducati man had the package beneath him and the fitness to run the pace right to the flag. It was up to the rest to fight over the remaining steps on the rostrum.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Finish Mike JONES
Mike Jones takes victory

Bryan Staring was looming large right on the tail of Halliday and Maxwell but then went down at AGV Corner after losing the front. That promoted Troy Herfoss up in to fourth position, but the Honda man was not in a position to challenge for a podium, he was now five-seconds off that battle.

The battle on track for second place though was still well and truly alive as Halliday nipped at the heels of Maxwell over the final couple of laps. Halliday had a look up the inside to try and take Maxwell but had to pull out of it and look for another opportunity. He couldn’t do it though and thought it safer to settle for yet another podium rather than risk a no-score, thus Maxwell took second place by a length from Halliday.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Finish Wayne MAXWELL Cru HALLIDAY
Maxwell takes second place ahead of Halliday

The race winner, a dominant victor, Mike Jones.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Parc Ferme Mike JONES
Mikes Jones congratulated by supporters with his dad in front of shot

The new championship leader is Cru Halliday, albeit by a single point over Jones. Full championship standings can be found further down the page.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Parc Ferme Cru HALLIDAY
Cru Halliday the new ASBK Championship points leader

Troy Herfoss looked strong early on but then went out of the game in the latter half of the race before finishing fourth. Herfoss won’t be happy with that lack of competitiveness, as if not for the falls of others he would likely have been seventh in this bout. Still, he will be somewhat comforted by still bagging decent points as he keeps his championship defence alive.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Parc Ferme Mike JONES
Mike Jones – Race One Victor

Josh Waters nearly managed to close the Honda man down on the final lap but took fifth place. Waters had a clear ten-second buffer over Aaron Morris and Alex Phillis.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Race Podium Wayne MAXWELL Mike JONES Cru HALLIDAY
Morgan Park ASBK Race One Podium

Kawasaki Superbike Race One Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Mike JONES (QLD) Ducati 1299 FE 0.000
2 Wayne MAXWELL (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R +2.164
3 Cru HALLIDAY (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R1M +2.276
4 Troy HERFOSS (QLD)  Honda CBR SP +8.517
5 Josh WATERS (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R +10.859
6 Aaron MORRIS (NSW) BMW S RR +21.997
7 Alex PHILLIS (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R +22.247
8 Matt WALTERS (NSW)  Kawasaki ZX10RR +26.292
9 Arthur SISSIS (SA) Suzuki GSXR-R +28.102
10 Lachlan EPIS (NSW)  Kawasaki ZX10RR +56.880
11 Brian HOUGHTON (QLD) Honda CBR RR +1:08.833
12 Bryan STARING (WA)  Kawasaki ZX10RR +1:27.839
DNF Damon REES (NZ)  Honda CBR +12 Laps
DNF Daniel FALZON (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R1M +14 Laps
DNF Mark CHIODO (VIC)  Honda CBR SP +14 Laps

Australian Supersport Race One

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race Start
Australian Supersport Race One

Nic Liminton got a great jump from pole position to lead Reid Battye and Tom Toparis as they negotiated the first complex of turns.  Liminton was keen to make a break and had his head down as Battye and Toparis gave chase.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race Start
Reid Battye and Tom Toparis clash off the line

Callum Spriggs started to challenge Toparis for third position on lap two as Corey Turner, Oli Bayliss and Broc Pearson tried to keep that leading quartet in sight.

Reid Battye seemed to be gathering strength as the race wore on, his Suzuki looking to ride the bumps around the back of the circuit much smoother than Liminton’s machine.

Nic Liminton out of the seat early on lap three which allowed Battye to sneak through and Toparis followed him to demote Liminton back to third place.  Oli Bayliss also got Liminton a short time later as the youngster moved up to fourth.

On the next lap Corey Turner pushed Liminton back to fourth place as Battye and Toparis looked to be making a small break over their pursuers.

Toparis took the race lead as the race broached the halfway point. Tom looked to be able to take different cornering lines as he wished, without any real cost in speed, while Battye had the Ecstar Suzuki GSX-R600 was always on the seemingly perfect line in order to be competitive. Battye was hanging on to Toparis but it seemed like only a matter of time before Toparis would start to walk away on the new YZF-R6, if he made any mistakes though Battye would be right there and ready to pounce.

The battle for the final step on the rostrum was still hectic with Corey Turner, Oli Bayliss, Nic Liminton, Callum Spriggs and Broc Pearson all waging war.

Oli Bayliss got to the head of that battle of third place but then went wide, Corey Turner also followed him wide and did not manage to avoid the recovering Bayliss which sent the youngster off into the dirt. Oli showed some impressive dirt skills to rejoin the circuit without head-butting a tyre wall and rejoined the race in 11th place.

At the front Toparis had pulled away from Battye to the tune of 2.5-seconds with three laps to run. Disaster then struck the Suzuki man as he went down and out of the race, a terrible blow after an impressive ride from the Suzuki man.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Race Crash Reid Battye
Reid Battye goes down

The battle for third had now become a battle for second, and that war was still on in earnest, albeit a massive seven-seconds behind the race leader. Nic Liminton was leading that group but then some sort of problem struck the South Australian and he lost a few positions. That made the battle for second place now down to two, Broc Pearson and Callum Spriggs now the prime combatants.

Tom Toparis cruised to the chequered flag while Callum Spriggs managed to fend off the advances of Broc Pearson on the final lap to secure second position in what was an all Yamaha podium.

Corey Turner brought the 52Motorsports Honda home in fourth position ahead of Liminton and Chris Quinn.

Oli Bayliss did well to recover from his off-track excursion and work his way back up to seventh place by the flag ahead of Dallas Skeer and Avalon Biddle while Ty Lynch rounded out the top ten.

Australian Supersport Race One Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Tom TOPARIS (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 0.000
2 Callum SPRIGGS (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R6 +7.443
3 Broc PEARSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +7.631
4 Corey TURNER (QLD) Honda CBR +12.587
5 Nic LIMINTON (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +20.350
6 Chris QUINN (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +21.778
7 Oli BAYLISS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +25.277
8 Dallas SKEER (SA)  Suzuki GSXR 600 +25.444
9 Avalon BIDDLE (NZ)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +26.950
10 Ty LYNCH (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +29.064
11 Aidan HAYES (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +32.234
12 Jack PASSFIELD (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 +35.552
13 Andrew EDSER (NSW) Kawasaki ZX6R +1:05.556
14 Jack HYDE (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R6 +1:13.399
15 Reid BATTYE (NSW) Suzuki GSX-R +2 Laps

YMI Supersport 300 Race Two

Senna Agius managed to break away from the pursuing horde in the second Supersport 300 race of the weekend which left Hunter Ford, Zac Levy, Max Stauffer, John Lytras and Brandom Demmery to fight over the podium scraps.

As the race wore on that battle for second place amongst the Yamaha YZF-R3 had come down to a two-rider affair, Hunter Ford and Zac Levy the protagonists. Zac Levy and Hunter Ford crossed the line side-by-side and it came down to the electronic timing transponders to separate them by two-thousandths of a second!

Out front though Senna Agius was not going to be challenged on the new Ninja 400 Kawasaki and even had enough of an advantage to just button off in the closing laps. Thus the winning margin of 1.374-second not representative of the actual speed difference between Agius and his pursuers.

YMI Supersport 300 Race Two Results

Pos Rider Machine Gap
1 Senna AGIUS (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 0.000
2 Hunter FORD (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +1.374
3 Zac LEVY (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +1.376
4 Max STAUFFER (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +2.277
5 John LYTRAS (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +2.469
6 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +4.370
7 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +8.431
8 Yannis SHAW (NSW)  Kawasaki 400 +8.528
9 Seth CRUMP (QLD)  KTM RC 390 +10.734
10 Harry KHOURI (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +10.761
11 Locky TAYLOR (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +12.522
12 Travis HALL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +22.115
13 Luke JHONSTON (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +22.774
14 Peter NERLICH (VIC) Kawasaki 400 +24.046
15 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +28.645
16 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +36.929
17 Mitch KUHNE (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +45.567
18 Tom NEWTON (NZ)  Kawasaki 400 +48.462
19 Josh HALL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +48.919
20 Ryan SMITH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +51.155
21 Laura BROWN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +52.461
22 Jacob HATCH (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +57.635
23 Brad TRIVETT (NSW) Kawasaki 300 +57.696
24 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +57.715
25 Ryan MOSCARDINI (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +58.789
26 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +1:09.282
27 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +1:10.753
28 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC)  Yamaha R3 321 +1:17.494
29 Hayden STIFF (NSW)  Kawasaki 400 +1:17.508
30 Noel MAHON (VIC)  Kawasaki 400 +1:17.894
31 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +1:26.370
32 Gregory FARRELL (NSW)  Kawasaki 300 1 Lap
33 Jeremy CZMOK (VIC) Yamaha R3 321 1 Lap
DNF Callum O’BRIEN (WA) Kawasaki 400 4 Laps
DNF Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 8 Laps

YMF R3 Cup Race Two

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens RCup Race First Corner
YMF R3 Cup Race Two – John Lytras leads

It was another crazy, exciting R3 Cup bout that kicked off the Sunday proceedings at Morgan Park this morning for round four of the 2019 Australian Superbike Championship.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens R Cup Race
YMF R3 Cup Race Two – John Lytras leads

John Lytras, that name always there, was going at it hammer-and-tong with Max Stauffer, Zac Levy, Harrison Voight, Hunter Ford, Brandon Demmery and Harry Khouri. That is not a turn one lap one description of the leading pack, but that group of eight riders were still tightly bunched as the race past the half-way point of its eight-lap distance.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens RCup Race
YMF R3 Cup Race Two – Zac Levy

The pack chopped, changed and cut each other over the final laps but at the chequered flag it was that young man John Lytras with his nose in front as Zav Levy and Harry Khouri completed the podium just ahead of Hunter Ford, with less than two-tenths of a second covering that top four at the stripe.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens RCup Race Parc
YMF R3 Cup Race Two – John Lytras wins from Zac Levy and Harry Khouri

YMF R3 Cup Race Two Results


Pos Name Machine Gap
1 John LYTRAS (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 0.000
2 Zac LEVY (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.012
3 Harry KHOURI (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.133
4 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.571
5 Hunter FORD (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.178
6 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +0.859
7 Max STAUFFER (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +1.177
8 Travis HALL (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 +2.147
9 Luke JHONSTON (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 11.974
10 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +12.026
11 Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.297
12 Locky TAYLOR (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.338
13 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.611
14 Ryan SMITH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +18.623
15 Mitch KUHNE (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +20.213
16 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +21.439
17 Josh HALL (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 +27.761
18 Laura BROWN (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +37.481
19 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +39.772
20 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +39.789
21 Zak PETTENDY (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +41.351
22 Ryan MOSCARDINI (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +42.015
23 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 +54.532
24 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +54.605
25 Hunter DIPLOCK (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +1:09.603
26 Lachlan O’BRIEN (NT) Yamaha YZF-R3 +1:17.509
DNF Zylas BUNTING (NSW) / Yamaha YZF-R3 2 Laps
DNF Jeremy CZMOK (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R3 6 Laps

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race Two

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens OJC Race Parc Ferme Angus GRENFELL Glen NELSON Max GIBBONS
bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race Two Podium

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race Two Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Angus GRENFELL (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 0.000
2 Glenn NELSON (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.669
3 Max GIBBONS (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.679
4 Marianos NIKOLIS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.697
5 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha YZR-R15 +5.720
6 Carter THOMPSON (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.837
7 Tom DRANE (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +5.986
8 Zak PETTENDY (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +13.929
9 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 +13.954
10 Thomas BROWN (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R15 +13.986
11 Jai RUSSO (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +14.030
12 Varis FLEMING (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 +15.163
13 Alex KENWORTHY-JONES (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +18.570
14 Patrick BOGNAR (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 +23.438
15 Lincoln KNIGHT (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +29.416
16 Cormac BUCHANAN (NZ) Yamaha YZF-R15 +29.488
17 Hunter DIPLOCK (NSW) Yamaha YZR-R15 +29.790
18 Tom CONNORS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 +30.071
19 Jamie PORT (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 +30.345
20 Toby JAMES (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 +48.128
21 Archie MCDONALD (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 +1:34.467
DNF Lucas QUINN (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R15 2 Laps
DNF Natalie BARBATI (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 3 Laps
DNF Jacob HATCH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 5 Laps
ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens OJC Race Parc Ferme Angus GRENFELL
bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race winner Angus Grenfell


Source: MCNews.com.au

Marquez on pole despite determined effort from Quartararo

Round Nine Sachsenring


It started in the 125 World Championship, it continued in Moto2 and now it’s seven times in a row in MotoGP: Marc Marquez continued his stunning form to make it ten successive Sachsenring pole positions in the HJC Helmets Grand Prix Motorrad Deutschland.

It was a close run affair though as Quartararo was once again a key challenger despite a big tank-slapper in FP3 that partially dislocated the Frechman’s shoulder – to add further discomfort top of his ongoing recovery from arm pump surgery.

Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) completed the front row and missing out on second by just 0.006.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Pole Marquez Quartararo Vinales
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying

MotoGP Qualifying Report

The drama started early as Q1 saw Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) lead Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) into Q2 to fight for the top 12, and that had some serious consequences for Championship challenger Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) as he was knocked out by just a few thousandths. He’ll face a fight back on Sunday from P13 on the grid.

Meanwhile, at the front, Marquez was the first man to set a benchmark time in Q2, the number 93 slamming in a 1m20.575s. But there was more to come, with an advantage of two-tenths then becoming half a second as the Repsol Honda rider set a new all-time lap record. A 1m20.215s moved the goalposts 0.553s clear of his nearest challengers as the undisputed King of the Ring laid down the gauntlet for the riders to try and match. And slowly but surely, that half a second gap started to shrink, down to 0.185s as both Quartararo and Marquez headed onto their final flying laps – the 20-year-old was just behind Marquez on circuit.

Both riders set a red first sector, Marquez was superior in the second, Quartararo then went through his favoured third split in the red…but so did Marquez. It all came down to the final sector of the session – would Marquez hold on for a tenth straight pole or would Quartararo steal it from the seven-time Champion’s grasp? Marquez did set a slightly faster lap and a couple of seconds later, Quartararo crossed the line but it wasn’t to be. But two tenths off Marquez in Q2 at the Sachsenring whilst not exactly fighting fit is a warning shot regardless, and you can tell how much the young Frenchman wants it…

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Quartararo
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying – Fabio Quartararo

Maverick Viñales finished just 0.006 off Quartararo to lineup in P3, his fourth front row start of the season, as Rins spearheads the second row of the grid in P4.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Vinales
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying – Maverick Vinales

By far the leading Ducati rider in qualifying, Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) had a great session to launch from P5, he’ll sit next to the brave Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) – the Briton qualifies sixth for the German GP despite suffering a torn ACL and a small fracture to the top of his tibia ahead of this weekend.

Petronas Yamaha SRT’s Franco Morbidelli leads the third row ahead of Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and the duo will line up with Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) alongside them. The Spaniard was involved in an incident with Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) after it appeared the Suzuki rider held up the Italian on the entrance to ‘The Waterfall’ and on the exit of Turn 12…

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Petrucci
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying – Danilo Petrucci

Just behind that drama, Takaaki Nakagami qualified P10, with the Japanese rider beating fellow Q1 graduate Valentino Rossi by 0.033 to turn the tables on ‘The Doctor’ in Q2.

To continue a more turbulent session for Petrucci, not long after his words with Mir the Italian then suffered a huge crash at Turn 9 as the front washed away. He headed to the medical centre for a checkup, and will race from P12…just ahead of teammate Andrea Dovizioso.

Stefan Bradl (Repsol Honda Team) was 14th as he replaces the injured Jorge Lorenzo, with Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) close behind in P15.


MotoGP Rider Quotes

Marc Marquez – P1

“I am riding very well and since FP1 I have felt good here. We’ve just been trying different tyres and some different things on the bike to see how it compares. Even in qualifying we tried some different things to keep understanding more. We have everything in place for tomorrow but the Yamaha riders are very fast, Viñales and Quartararo are very fast so we will have to keep an eye on them. The pole was possible today but we will have to see if the win is possible tomorrow!”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Fri Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

Fabio Quartararo – P2

“I’m delighted to be on the front row again, because this morning was tough for us. I made a mistake this morning and had a big moment at 250 kmh, but on track my shoulder was only a little bit painful in qualifying. It’s one of the most important tracks of the year to qualify well at because it’s so narrow and tight, so I’m really pleased with the result. It’s going to be a long race tomorrow, but I’m looking forward to getting stuck in because I think we’re in a good position to fight.”

Maverick Viñales – P3

“I‘m really happy because we achieved today‘s objective. It‘s true that we could have done better, but we are improving the bike quite a lot. I didn‘t expect to be that close in qualifying, because the gap was bigger in FP3. We need to keep working like this. I feel great on the bike, especially my rhythm is good, but it will be very important to make another step this evening. We are going to try our best to go for the win. Managing tyre degradation will be crucial tomorrow, so we‘re going to try to make that work for us. I don‘t know which tyre I will use yet, because the weather will be very different from what we had today.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Fri Vinales
Maverick Vinales

Alex Rins – P4

“I had a bit of a scary moment on the last corner of the last lap, I was setting a really quick time and I had to make a save with my elbow! But nevertheless, I’ve finished today on the second row and that’s within my target. Tomorrow I’ll try to get a good start, because I feel like I have strong pace.”

Jack Miller – P5

“I was very comfortable with hard rubber. In the last run with the soft tyre maybe we could have done better but the front tyre already had many laps. The second row is still a good result ahead of the race. The choice of tyres for tomorrow will be important but there is great confidence.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Fri Miller
Jack Miller

Cal Crutchlow – P6

“Yeah, I’m happy enough. I qualified there in Assen, sixth there and sixth here. I think that’s about our pace this weekend, it’s going to be a really long difficult race and obviously the heat today didn’t help anybody’s tyres, but overall we’re happy enough. I’ve no idea (about tyres for the race), I used the really used rear tyre in FP4 and it was very difficult to manage, but that’s what it’s going to be like in the race. Marc (Marquez) has the pace compared to everybody else, we can see that, but we just don’t know how our rear tyre performed in that session because we used it from the morning. We’ll see, I believe that we have the pace to do a good job tomorrow, potentially fight for the podium or potentially fight for tenth. It’s always a good race here and a real battle.”

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring Fri Crutchlow
Cal Crutchlow

Franco Morbidelli – P7

“It was a good day for us. We’re faster in race pace than over one lap, which gives us confidence for Sunday. I didn’t have a perfect feeling in qualifying, but I had a great feeling in FP4 so we’ll see what happens tomorrow. It’s difficult to say what kind of a race it will be as practice this morning was a bit sketchy because of the high winds, but despite that we felt strong. Marquez looks to be a little bit ahead of everyone else, but behind him it’s really open.”

Pol Espargaro – P8

“I was expecting a good weekend. It was a little bit harder than last year because everyone was flying but we also went faster in FP3 and the qualifying. I’m happy with that position on the grid and it’s good to be near the top. The third row is a decent position for us. I think we have a good set-up and ideas for the race tomorrow and I’m looking forward to it. My wrist is better here simply because there are so many left corners. I still need a few painkillers but otherwise it is OK.”

Joan Mir – P9

“I’m happy, but I expected a little bit more because my pace in FP4 was really good, so I thought I could go even quicker with a new tyre in qualifying. Anyway, I will start on the third-row tomorrow, and I’m pleased with that. I’m ready to try hard in this final race before the summer break.”

Takaaki Nakagami – P10

“It was a very tough day for me, this morning I felt good and, for the first time since Assen, I put shoes on and, although it was difficult, started to walk. But at the end of the FP3 session I felt that something was wrong, I was in a lot of pain and after that the condition of my left ankle was a disaster. I could not put any weight on it or walk, so it was really tough for me. At one moment in FP4 I thought I might have to retire as I couldn’t change the gear, I wasn’t able to do the movement to downshift. After that I took off all the taping to try and make it a bit more flexible and that helped, although it was very painful. For tomorrow I don’t know, it’s a small track and 30 laps does not help me or my body. I think I will need an injection and painkillers (for the race), but we’ll wait and see what our strategy for the race is.”

Valentino Rossi – P11

“My team did a great job! They were able to recover the bike in just ten minutes between Q1 and Q2, because that was the bike I felt better on. In Q2 I was able to finish at the top, but unfortunately after that I had a small crash, and I lost the feeling a little. It was a shame I couldn’t make the same lap times during Q2 as I did before, so I have to start a bit further down the grid. My pace is not so bad, but on a hot lap I suffered a bit, I didn’t feel fantastic, especially at the last part of the race track. We’ll see tomorrow, also because it looks like the conditions for tomorrow will be different from today.”

Danilo Petrucci – P12

“Unfortunately I crashed in one of the fastest parts of the track. I lost the front as soon as I closed the throttle and in the crash I hurt both my left wrist and right hand. Luckily I don’t have any fractures but I have a big bruise and at the moment I feel quite a bit of pain, especially in the tendons of my right hand. I hope to feel better tomorrow morning. I believe we can still ride a strong race, even though starting from twelfth position makes things more complicated. Still, I want to give it my all and bring home as many points as possible to defend third place in the championship.”

Andrea Dovizioso – P13

“Today we managed to improve the feeling with the bike and the overall speed, but unfortunately not enough to gain access to Q2. It’s been a complicated day, we worked hard as usual but on this track unfortunately we struggle more than in others. To start from fifth row doesn’t mirror our potential but we simply need to pull ourselves up and try to get the best possible start and recover as many positions as we can. Weather conditions could mix things up a bit, in any case we surely won’t give up.”

Stefan Bradl – P14

“We have had another busy and productive day today. We have accomplished a lot today and our pace is good. For tomorrow we will start from the fifth row so we must make sure we are sensible during the race and do not get caught up in anything. I’m looking forward to it as I think we can gain some positions and riding at home is always very special.”

Aleix Esparagaro’ – P15

“The weekend is going much better than Assen. In terms of my physical fitness, I did not expect a change in such a short amount of time. In the simulations with used tyres, I felt good. In qualifying, I expected to be able to do better, but I ran into traffic and wasn’t able to put together a clean lap. Starting from behind here is not idea, given the scarce opportunities for overtaking, but I can count on a good pace and I am able to be incisive in braking. I will definitely need to stay calm in the first lap. Some of our rivals will manage to create a gap, but over 30 laps, management will be fundamental.”

Andrea Iannone – P16

“We are doing better than I expected on this track. Unfortunately, the biggest limitation was qualifying, where we had a significant gap. I can confirm what was already said, in other words, that tyre management will be key in the race tomorrow. It won’t be easy. We still haven’t decided which compound to use because we need to analyse all the data carefully.”

Pecco Bagnaia – P17

“First of all, I want to thank the Clinica Mobile. They did a really great job allowing me to be on track today. I still have a lot of neck pain but I’m going to grit my teeth tomorrow. Today the feeling with the bike has improved so we can fight tomorrow for valuable points for the standings.”

Hafizh Syahrin – P18

“I’m really happy with Qualifying but we had a crash in FP4 with the first bike, which had some good parts. The guys were not able to repair the number one bike in time. So, I had to jump on the second one, which also had some more kilometres on the engine. I just tried my best and was quite surprised to be so fast. I hope I have a good pace for the race tomorrow.”

Johann Zarco – P19

“I expect to fight in the points tomorrow. I’ll be happy with this. I had a good feeling in the morning but in the afternoon a few more problems with the warm weather. We lost some grip and it became a bit more complicated. We’ll work hard for tomorrow and try to find a solution. I still need to change my smooth style. There are some good things going on and we just need to hold onto those through the race.”

Miguel Oliveira – P20

“We did a quite good Saturday: a very good FP3, a fantastic FP4 with a very good race pace but we couldn’t make it in the Qualifying. Three riders improved their lap times directly behind me. I got no warning that I was being followed. It’s a costly mistake that puts us very far back on the grid, having the potential to be much more in front. We will see tomorrow. It’s going to be a hard race. We know it’s not easy to overtake at this track, but we will do our best.”

MotoGP Combined Qualifying Times

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time
1 Marc MARQUEZ HONDA Q2 1m20.195
2 Fabio QUARTARARO YAMAHA Q2 1’m20.400
3 Maverick VIÑALES YAMAHA Q2 1m20.406
4 Alex RINS SUZUKI Q2 1m20.531
5 Jack MILLER DUCATI Q2 1m20.690
6 Cal CRUTCHLOW HONDA Q2 1m20.857
7 Franco MORBIDELLI YAMAHA Q2 1m20.964
8 Pol ESPARGARO KTM Q2 1m21.023
9 Joan MIR SUZUKI Q2 1m21.061
10 Takaaki NAKAGAMI HONDA Q2 1m21.104
11 Valentino ROSSI YAMAHA Q2 1m21.137
12 Danilo PETRUCCI DUCATI Q2 1m21.486
13 Andrea DOVIZIOSO DUCATI Q1 1m21.105
14 Stefan BRADL HONDA Q1 1m21.227
15 Aleix ESPARGARO APRILIA Q1 1m21.313
16 Andrea IANNONE APRILIA Q1 1m21.433
17 Francesco BAGNAIA DUCATI Q1 1m21.446
18 Hafizh SYAHRIN KTM Q1 1m21.465
19 Johann ZARCO KTM Q1 1m21.637
20 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM Q1 1m21.683
21 Karel ABRAHAM DUCATI Q1 1m21.796
22 Tito RABAT DUCATI Q1 1m22.119

Alex Marquez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) is on pole position for the HJC Helmets Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland, coming through Q1 and setting a 1:23.585 to beat fellow Q1-protagonist Luca Marini (SKY Racing Team VR46) to the top by just 0.079. Home hero Marcel Schrötter (Dynavolt Intact GP) completes a front row at the Sachsenring covered by 0.082, setting us up for another Sunday to remember in the intermediate class.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Moto Alex Marquez
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying – Moto2 – Alex Marquez

Marquez and Marini moved through Q1 along with Sam Lowes (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) and Jorge Navarro (MB Conveyors Speed Up), who set a new all-time Sachsenring lap record in the session. He came out to set the early pace in Q2, a 1:23.944 the provisional benchmark, but the Spaniard later crashed at Turn 13, the same place he did in FP3 – rider ok. His session was over and while over a tenth under in the first sector, Free Practice pacesetter Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Ajo) also crashed out of contention at Turn 3 while sitting P13.

Marquez then went to the top of the times ahead of rookie Fabio Di Giannantonio (MB Conveyors Speed Up), with Schrötter taking P2 and Marini then taking second with 30 seconds to go. Ultimately,nNo one could topple Championship contender Marquez, who takes his first pole position since Malaysia 2018.

Di Giannantonio held onto P4 to get his best qualifying in the intermediate class, with the Italian spearheading the second row of the grid ahead of Assen winner Augusto Fernandez (FlexBox HP 40) and the leading KTM of Iker Lecuona (American Racing KTM). 0.283 covers the top two rows. Jorge Martin (Red Bull KTM Ajo) had a good session to finish seventh, the reigning Moto3 World Champion enjoying his best Saturday afternoon Moto2 result, with Xavi Vierge (EG 0,0 Marc VDS), Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) and Lorenzo Baldassarri (FlexBox HP 40) completing the top ten.

Championship leader Tom Lüthi (Dynavolt Intact GP), meanwhile, had a disappointing session and the Swiss rider has work to do from P12 as main rival Marquez launches from pole. Navarro is the man just ahead of him in P11, with Lowes just behind him. And Binder? His crash sees Friday’s fastest facing a fight back from P17.

Marquez is in a prime position to make up for the disappointment of Assen and try and take back that Championship lead. Can Lüthi stop him and move up from P12?

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Moto Marini Marquez Schrötter
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Moto2 Qualifying

Moto2 Combined Qualifying Times

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time
1 Alex MARQUEZ KALEX Q2 1m23.585
2 Luca MARINI KALEX Q2 1m23.664
3 Marcel SCHROTTER KALEX Q2 1’m23.667
4 Fabio DI GIANNANTONI   ITA SPEED UP Q2 1m23.781
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ KALEX Q2 1m23.823
6 Iker LECUONA KTM Q2 1m23.833
7 Jorge MARTIN KTM Q2 1m23.868
8 Xavi VIERGE KALEX Q2 1m23.881
9 Remy GARDNER KALEX Q2 1m23.883
10 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI   ITA KALEX Q2 1m23.928
11 Jorge NAVARRO SPEED UP Q2 1m23.944
12 Thomas LUTHI KALEX Q2 1m24.027
13 Sam LOWES KALEX Q2 1m24.136
14 Andrea LOCATELLI KALEX Q2 1m24.229
15 Bo BENDSNEYDER NTS Q2 1m24.327
16 Nicolo BULEGA KALEX Q2 1m24.329
17 Brad BINDER KTM Q2 1m24.353
18 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA KALEX Q2 1m24.474
19 Marco BEZZECCHI KTM Q1 1m24.231
20 Jonas FOLGER KALEX Q1 1m24.233
21 Dominique AEGERTER MV AGUSTA Q1 1m24.334
22 Simone CORSI KALEX Q1 1m24.521
23 Stefano MANZI MV AGUSTA Q1 1m24.580
24 Enea BASTIANINI KALEX Q1 1m24.773
25 Joe ROBERTS KTM Q1 1m24.861
26 Jake DIXON KTM Q1 1m25.037
27 Steven ODENDAAL NTS Q1 1m25.059
28 Lukas TULOVIC KTM Q1 1m25.233
29 Xavi CARDELUS KTM Q1 1m25.891

Ayumu Sasaki (Petronas Sprinta Racing) will start from a maiden pole position in the HJC Helmets Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland, taking the honour from compatriot Kaito Toba (Honda Team Asia) by just 0.057 at the Sachsenring. It’s 18 years since the last time there was a Japanese 1-2 in the lightweight class, with Youichi Ui and Nobby Ueda heading the field in the the 2001 South African GP. Sasaki will also be the first Japanese rider to start from pole position in the lightweight class since Youichi Ui in 2003, with compatriot Hiroki Ono taking the honour in his home Grand Prix in 2016 but later receiving a grid penalty. Marcos Ramirez (Leopard Racing) completes the front row.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Moto Ayumu Sasaki
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Qualifying – Moto3 – Ayumu Sasaki

Another key headline sees Championship leader Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) start from P22, his worst qualifying in over two years, after exiting pitlane for his second and final time attack too late, missing the chance at another flying lap. He’ll start from the eighth row and faces a fight back on Sunday if he’s to keep the points lead.

But before all that, a sunny Sachsenring greeted the grid once again on Saturday, and in Q1 it was rooke Ai Ogura (Honda Team Asia) who topped the session to moved through, joined by Dennis Foggia (Sky Racing Team VR46), Assen podium finisher Jakub Kornfeil (Redox Prüstel GP) and Le Mans winner John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing). By that stage Canet was already out, as was fellow Championship challenger Tony Arbolino (VNE Snipers), giving Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) the opportunity to capitalise.

Dalla Porta did, and behind Sasaki, Toba and Ramirez, the Italian starts fourth and heads up Row 2. He’s joined by Romano Fenati (VNE Snipers Team) just 0.032 in arrears, and although the veteran had a laptime cancelled, it remains his best qualifying performance since his return to the class. Jakub Kornfeil, from Q1, completes the second row.

Albert Arenas (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team) took P7 and has Dennis Foggia for close company, with Gabriel Rodrigo (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3) locking out the third row. McPhee took P10 from Alonso Lopez (Estrella Galicia 0,0) by an infinitesimal 0.001, with rookie Can Öncü (Red Bull KTM Ajo) pushed down to 12th by just 0.006 after a solid weekend so far for the Turk.

Filip Salač (Redox Prüstel GP) continued his roll of improved pace into qualifying and starts P13, ahead of Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and rookie Raul Fernandez (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team), who was one of the fastest on Friday. Ogura is next up, ahead of Antonelli, who looks to make some serious moves forward on Sunday to take some solid points and at least gain on Canet in the standings despite missing out on the chance to make the most of it.

MotoGP Rnd Sachsenring QP Moto Toba Sasaki Ramirez
2019 MotoGP – Round Nine – Sachsenring Moto3 Qualifying

Moto3 Combined Qualifying Times

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time
1 Ayumu SASAKI HONDA Q2 1m26.135
2 Kaito TOBA HONDA Q2 1m26.192
3 Marcos RAMIREZ HONDA Q2 1m26.306
4 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA   ITA HONDA Q2 1m26.460
5 Romano FENATI HONDA Q2 1m26.492
6 Jakub KORNFEIL KTM Q2 1m26.588
7 Albert ARENAS KTM Q2 1m26.686
8 Dennis FOGGIA KTM Q2 1m26.729
9 Gabriel RODRIGO HONDA Q2 1’m26.806
10 John MCPHEE HONDA Q2 1m26.853
11 Alonso LOPEZ HONDA Q2 1m26.854
12 Can ONCU KTM Q2 1m26.860
13 Filip SALAC KTM Q2 1m26.883
14 Tatsuki SUZUKI HONDA Q2 1m27.002
15 Raul FERNANDEZ KTM Q2 1m27.040
16 Ai OGURA HONDA Q2 1m27.188
17 Niccolò ANTONELLI HONDA Q2 1m27.260
18 Sergio GARCIA HONDA FP3 1m26.674
19 Tony ARBOLINO HONDA Q1 1m26.780
20 Stefano NEPA KTM Q1 1m27.111
21 Jaume MASIA KTM Q1 1m27.154
22 Aron CANET KTM Q1 1m27.164
23 Kazuki MASAKI KTM Q1 1m27.241
24 Celestino VIETTI KTM Q1 1m27.278
25 Darryn BINDER KTM Q1 1m27.548
26 Makar YURCHENKO KTM Q1 1m27.825
27 Riccardo ROSSI HONDA Q1 1m27.879
28 Andrea MIGNO KTM Q1 1m28.072
29 Tom BOOTH-AMOS KTM Q1 1m28.424
30 Dirk GEIGER KTM Q1 1m29.318

MotoE Combined Qualifying Times

Pos Rider Team Time
1 Niki TUULI Ajo MotoE 1m27.456
2 Hector GARZO Tech 3 E-racing 1m28.243
3 Eric GRANADO Avintia Esponsorama Racing 1m28.254
4 Mike DI MEGLIO EG 0,0 Marc VDS 1m28.384
5 Xavier SIMEON Avintia Esponsorama Racing 1m28.389
6 Matteo FERRARI TRENTINO Gresini MotoE 1m28.792
7 Bradley SMITH One Energy Racing 1m28.858
8 Nicolas TEROL Openbank Ángel Nieto Team 1m28.982
9 Alex DE ANGELIS OCTO Pramac MotoE 1m29.553
10 Mattia CASADEI Ongetta SIC58 Squadracorse 1m29.905
11 Lorenzo SAVADORI TRENTINO Gresini MotoE 1m29.959
12 Niccolo CANEPA LCR E-Team 1m30.376
13 Sete GIBERNAU Join Contract Pons 40 1m30.524
14 Kenny FORAY Tech 3 E-racing 1m30.711
15 Randy DE PUNIET LCR E-Team 1m31.479
16 Joshua HOOK OCTO Pramac MotoE 1m31.831

MotoGP Sunday Schedule AEST

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jonathan Rea takes victory and series lead at Donington


World Supersport 300

As the rain continued to drench the Donington Park circuit, the WorldSSP300 riders took to the track and put in strong lap times, combatting the weather in the best way possible. It was a history-making two Tissot Superpole sessions, as Ton Kawakami (BCD Yamaha MS Racing) took his first pole position, becoming the first Brazilian rider to take a WorldSSP300 pole position and the first pole for a Brazilian rider in the entire WorldSBK paddock.

WSBK Rnd Donington SSP Superpole Celebration Kawakami
Ton Kawakami

With Group A taking to the circuit first, the Brazilian rider took advantage of the bad weather, which often acts as a great leveller in motorcycle racing. Kawakami left it late to go to the top, pinching pole position from Indonesian rider, Galang Hendra Pratama (Semakin Di Depan Biblion Motoxracing). Hendra Pratama was demoted to third overall, as Andy Verdoïa (BCD Yamaha MS Racing) went top of Group B but only second overall.

Mika Perez (Scuderia Maranga Racing) moved up the order in Group A and finished fourth overall to the head of row two. Perez is ahead Hugo De Cancellis (Team Trasimeno Yamaha), who suffered a small crash during Group B, whilst he is ahead of Dorren Loureiro (Nutec – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki), who completes row two.

There were numerous shocks in the WorldSSP300 Tissot Superpole, most notably with Scott Deroue (Kawasaki MOTOPORT), who need to go through the Last Chance Race. Ana Carrasco, who won at Misano to go second in the championship, was only 16th on combined times. Having won at Donington Park last season, Carrasco will want to fight hard to try and get back to the front this year.

Perhaps the biggest story of the Tissot Superpole session was that the championship leader, Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team), who crashed heavily at Redgate Corner (Turn 1), needing medical assistance. He was taken to the medical centre for a check-up, with more updates to follow. There were numerous crashes in the sessions, with Verdoïa, De Cancellis, Marc Garcia (DS Junior Team), Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) and Omar Bonoli (Team Trasimeno Yamaha) to name all but a few of the crashers.

In the afternoon, WorldSSP300 action returned for the Last Chance Race, determining the six riders which will go up to join the main grid for the main race on Sunday. It was a fierce race which saw many accidents, although some unexpected names make it through to Sunday action for the first time, too.

With the Last Chance Race getting underway, wildcard Kade Verwey (Team XG Racing) took the lead, putting on a show in front of his home crowd, in a bid to try and make a name for himself and get through to Sunday’s race. However, as he dropped back through the order, he found himself surrounded by faster riders. Attempting to make up time, Verwey crashed but in the process, wiped out joint-second in the championship, Scott Deroue (Kawasaki MOTOPORT), as the Dutchman had to go through the Last Chance Race for the first time.

At the flag, it was Nick Kalinin (Nutec – RT Motorsport by SKM – Kawasaki) who prevailed ahead of the chasing pack, after they had spread out. He won, ahead of Jan-Ole Jahnig (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team), Robert Schotman (Kawasaki MOTOPORT), Manuel Bastianelli (Prodina IRCOS Kawasaki), Paolo Giacomini (Kawasaki GP Project) and Beatriz Neila (BCD Yamaha MS Racing). Giacomini makes it through to the Sunday race for the first time this season.

Supersport 300 Superpole Combined

Pos Rider Bike Class Superpole
1 T.  Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m52.914
2 A. Verdoïa Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m53.025
3 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m53.047
4 M. Perez Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m53.246
5 H. De Cancellis Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m53.409
6 D. Loureiro Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m53.626
7 F.  Rovelli Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m53.838
8 O. König Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m53.917
9 D. Otten Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m53.922
10 K. Sabatucci Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m54.189
11 B. Ieraci Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m54.340
12 L. Loi Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m54.580
13 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m54.638
14 V. Steeman KTM RC 390 R B 1m54.652
15 E. De La Vega Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m54.708
16 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m54.916
17 T.  Edwards Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m54.990
18 J.  Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m55.031
19 Y. Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m55.115
20 T.  Bramich Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m55.290
21 O. Bonoli Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m55.362
22 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m55.745
23 J.  Perez Gonzalez Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m55.873
24 B. Sanchez Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m55.897
25 K. Meuffels KTM RC 390 R A 1m55.944
26 D. Iozzo Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m55.962
27 M. Kappler KTM RC 390 R B 1m55.986
28 K. Aloisi Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m56.067
29 R. Dore Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m56.071
30 F.  Hernandez Moyano Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m56.074
31 K. Verwey Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m56.235
32 J.  Facco Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m56.283
33 M. Bastianelli Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m56.834
34 A. Quinet Honda CBR500R B 1m57.069
35 K. Hartmann Yamaha YZF-R3 A 1m57.258
36 J.  Foray Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m57.294
37 R. Schotman Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m57.600
38 M. Luna Bayen Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m57.818
39 P. Giacomini Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 1m57.882
40 S. Deroue Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m58.158
41 J.  Jahnig KTM RC 390 R A 1m58.286
42 A. Pelikanova Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 1m58.343
43 B. Neila Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m58.661
44 F.  De Bruin Yamaha YZF-R3 B 1m59.060
45 T.  Finocchiaro KTM RC 390 R B 2m00.683
46 S. Naud Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 2m1.342
47 M. Pedeneau Yamaha YZF-R3 B 2m01.376
48 M. Garcia Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 2m01.429
49 L. Verwey Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 2m02.124
50 N. Kalinin Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 2m02.425
51 B. Molina Yamaha YZF-R3 A 2m03.203
52 E. Mcglinchey Kawasaki Ninja 400 A /

Source: MCNews.com.au

Mike Jones takes pole at Morgan Park with lap record

2019 ASBK
Round Four – Morgan Park

Images by TBG and Rob Mott


Wayne Maxwell was quickest on Friday at Morgan Park and was again atop the timesheets after Saturday mornings ‘Timed Practice’ session.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Wayne Maxwell TBG
Wayne Maxwell

Under a new qualifying format for ASBK this season the Saturday morning session is dubbed ‘Timed Practice’, and it is the times from this session that decided the nine riders that automatically qualify for the Q2 session.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Josh Waters TBG
Josh Waters

The riders from tenth back in the Timed Practice session had to fight it out in a Q1 session, with the top three in that session then being promoted into Q2, making for a final 12-rider tussle over the first four rows of the grid that which took place this afternoon at Morgan Park.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Mark Chioto TBG
Mark Chiodo

Some of those riders that had missed the cut for guaranteed promotion through to Q2 included Mark Chiodo and Alex Phillis who just missed the cut. Arthur Sissis, Damon Rees, Lachlan Epis and Brian Houghton were the other riders that made up the six riders to battle it out in Q1 to see which three of them would then get to take part in the Q2 session. With yesterday’s accident ruling Glenn Scott out of proceedings we were down to only 15 Superbike riders.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Arthur Sissis Alex Phillis TBG
Alex Phillis and Arthur Sissis

Mark Chiodo, Alex Phillis and Arthur Sissis were the trio that proved quick enough in Q1 to earn their promotion through to the Q2 session.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Arthur Sissis TBG
Aaron Morris

The big surprise in the morning practice session had come via the pace of Aaron Morris. Standing in for the injured Glenn Allerton, Morris was third quickest this morning, just behind Cru Halliday and outright pace-setter Wayne Maxwell.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK TP Mike JONES
Mike Jones

Mike Jones though was the first to dip into the 1m12s this weekend when he smashed out a 1m12.958s lap early in the session.

Daniel Falzon had done few laps in the morning practice session, as he saved his tyre for this Q2 session. The young South Australian’s tactics looked to have paid off as with four-minutes remaining in Q2 he was, provisionally, on the front row.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK TP Cru HALLIDAY
Cru Halliday

Cru Halliday though then dropped in a 1m13.13s lap to push Falzon off the front row, and Maxwell back to P3. On the following lap Halliday then went one better on the next lap to put the YRT machine on pole.  Mike Jones had just bettered his own time down to 1m12.92 but seconds later Halliday demoted him to P2 after recording a 1m12.855s.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Mike jones TBG
Mike Jones

Jones though was not to be out-done, coming straight back at Halliday with a 1m12.609s to set a new Morgan Park Superbike lap record.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens QP Trio Jones Halliday Maxwell
Morgan Park Qualifying 2019 – Mike Jones P1 – Cru Halliday P2 – Wayne Maxwell P3

Championship leader Troy Herfoss had been nowhere for much of the session but timed his run well in the end to secure P4 on the grid in the dying moments of the session. Bryan Staring and Daniel Falzon complete that second row.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK FP Troy Herfoss
Troy Herfoss

Josh Waters heads row three alongside Aaron Morris and Matt Walters while Mark Chiodo rounds out the top ten.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBK Q MIke JONES Parc
Mike Jones the new Morgan Park Superbike lap record holder and pole-sitter for tomorrow’s fourth round of the Australian Superbike Championship

Superbike Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Time
1 Mike JONES (QLD)  Ducati 1299 FE 1m12.609
2 Cru HALLIDAY (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R1M 1m12.855
3 Wayne MAXWELL (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R 1m13.046
4 Troy HERFOSS (QLD) Honda CBR SP 1m13.127
5 Bryan STARING (WA)  Kawasaki ZX10RR 1m13.337
6 Daniel FALZON (SA) Yamaha YZF-R1M 1m13.390
7 Josh WATERS (VIC) Suzuki GSXR-R 1m13.551
8 Aaron MORRIS (NSW) BMW S RR 1m13.552
9 Matt WALTERS (NSW) Kawasaki ZX10RR 1m13.673
10 Mark CHIODO (VIC)  Honda CBR SP 1m13.693
11 Alex PHILLIS (VIC)  Suzuki GSXR-R 1m14.555
12 Arthur SISSIS (SA) Suzuki GSXR-R 1m15.057
13 Damon REES (NZ) Q1 Honda CBR 1m14.844
14 Lachlan EPIS (NSW) Q1 Kawasaki ZX10RR 1m15.236
15 Brian HOUGHTON Q1 Honda CBR RR 1m17.803
ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens QP Trio Jones Halliday Maxwell
Morgan Park Qualifying 2019 – Mike Jones P1 – Cru Halliday P2 – Wayne Maxwell P3

Supersport Qualifying

Tom Toparis had looked unbeatable this weekend but late in the final qualifying session young South Australian Nic Liminton set fire to that theory after dropping in a 1m15.176 to steal pole positon. Still half-a-second off Cru Halliday’s stunning 1m14.609s lap record from last year, but good enough to top the time-sheets today.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Nic Liminton TBG
Nic Liminton took Supersport pole

Toparis was second quickest ahead of Reid Battye, Callum Spriggs with Oli Bayliss the only other rider in the 1m15s. Bayliss crashed his #1 bike in the opening session and was forced to qualify on his spare machine.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Tom Toparis TBG
Tom Toparis

Corey Turner will round out that second row while Broc Pearson heads row three ahead of Chris Quinn and Dallas Skeer.

ASBK TBG ASBK Round Morgan Park Broc Pearson TBG
Broc Pearson

Supersport Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Time
1 Nic LIMINTON (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m15.176
2 Tom TOPARIS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R6 1m15.406
3 Reid BATTYE (NSW)  Suzuki GSX-R 1m15.542
4 Callum SPRIGGS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m15.756
5 Oli BAYLISS (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R6 1m15.800
6 Corey TURNER (QLD)  Honda CBR 1m16.019
7 Broc PEARSON (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R6 1m16.146
8 Chris QUINN (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m16.309
9 Dallas SKEER (SA)  Suzuki GSXR 600 1m17.259
10 Aidan HAYES (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m17.716
11 Ty LYNCH (SA)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m17.795
12 Avalon BIDDLE (NZ) Yamaha YZF-R6 1m18.000
13 Jack PASSFIELD (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m18.103
14 Andrew EDSER (NSW) Kawasaki ZX6R 1m19.336
15 Jack HYDE (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R6 1m19.392

Supersport 300 Qualifying

Senna Agius took pole position in the YMI Australian Supersport 300 class by a country mile this afternoon at Morgan Park.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SS Q Senna AGIUS
Senna Agius

Kawasaki 400 mounted Agius dropped in a 1m22.959 to best the field by almost a full-second ahead of Yamaha YZF-R3 pilots John Lytras and Zac Levy.

Supersport 300 Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Lap
1 Senna AGIUS (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m22.959
2 John LYTRAS (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m23.818
3 Zac LEVY (QLD) / Yamaha R3 321 1m24.012
4 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m24.033
5 Hunter FORD (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 1m24.061
6 Max STAUFFER (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m24.107
7 Yannis SHAW (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m24.253
8 Callum O’BRIEN (WA)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m24.261
9 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m24.313
10 Locky TAYLOR (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m24.422
11 Harry KHOURI (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 1m24.443
12 Peter NERLICH (VIC) Kawasaki EX 300 1m24.798
13 Seth CRUMP (QLD)  KTM RC 390 1m24.814
14 Travis HALL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m25.106
15 Ben BAKER (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m25.147
16 Luke JOHNSTON (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 1m25.304
17 Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m25.480
18 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m26.512
19 Ryan SMITH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m26.740
20 Mitch KUHNE (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 1m26.767
21 Zylas BUNTING (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 1m26.951
22 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC)  Yamaha R3 321 1m27.485
23 Tom NEWTON (NZ)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m27.731
24 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 1m27.851
25 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m27.904
26 Brad TRIVETT (NSW) Kawasaki EX 300 1m28.081
27 Josh HALL (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 1m28.100
28 Laura BROWN (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 1m28.756
29 Jacob HATCH (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m28.983
30 Ryan MOSCARDINI (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 1m29.077
31 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 1m29.549
32 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 1m30.495
33 Jeremy CZMOK (VIC) Yamaha R3 321 1m31.501
34 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 1m31.772
35 Noel MAHON (VIC)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m31.780
36 Gregory FARRELL (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 300 1m32.204
37 Lachlan O’BRIEN (NT)  Yamaha R3 321 1m32.298
38 Hayden STIFF (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 1m32.355
39 Benjamin ANGELIDIS (ACT) Kawasaki EX 300 1m39.698

Supersport 300 Race One

Senna Agius capitalised on his pole position to lead the field away with John Lytras giving chase. That pair quickly broke away from the field.

Callum O’Brien went down at turn four on the opening lap while Harrison Voight retired to pit-lane early in the race.

Agius eventually broke away from Lytras and by half-race distance the Kawasaki 400 rider had a solid buffer over the Yamaha YZF-R3 competitors that were giving chase. The most formidable of those in this race was Lytras, but even he had no answer for Agius this afternoon, and was left to watch the Kawasaki romp away to a convincing six-second win. Agius and Lytras now on 154-points apiece and equal third in the championship.

Hunter Ford rounded out the podium ahead of Harry Khouri.

Championship leader Max Stauffer came home fifth after winning a battle to the line with Zac Levy and Brandon Demmery.

Supersport 300 Race One Results

Pos Name Machine Gap
1 Senna AGIUS (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 0.000
2 John LYTRAS (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +5.714
3 Harry KHOURI (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +9.273
4 Hunter FORD (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +9.332
5 Max STAUFFER (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +9.631
6 Zac LEVY (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +9.643
7 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +9.744
8 Seth CRUMP (QLD)  KTM RC 390 +11.712
9 Peter NERLICH (VIC) Kawasaki EX 300 +15.186
10 Locky TAYLOR (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +15.236
11 Luke JHONSTON (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +29.851
12 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +29.979
13 Travis HALL (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +30.094
14 Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +32.639
15 Ryan SMITH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 +40.341
16 Mitch KUHNE (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +40.426
17 Zylas BUNTING (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +40.649
18 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +45.415
19 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +55.964
20 Josh HALL (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +56.140
21 Jacob HATCH (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +56.268
22 Laura BROWN (NSW)  Yamaha R3 321 +58.897
23 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +59.812
24 Brad TRIVETT (NSW) Kawasaki EX 300 +1:04.164
25 Jeremy CZMOK (VIC)  Yamaha R3 321 +1:15.568
26 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD) Yamaha R3 321 +1:15.667
27 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha R3 321 +1:30.676
28 Noel MAHON (VIC) Kawasaki EX 400 +1 Lap
29 Gregory FARRELL (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 300 +1 Lap
30 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD)  Yamaha R3 321 +1 Lap
DNF Yannis SHAW (NSW)  Kawasaki EX 400 5 Laps
DNF Tom NEWTON (NZ)  Kawasaki EX 400 9 Laps
DNF Callum O’BRIEN (WA)  Kawasaki EX 400 10 Laps

Superbike Masters Qualifying

Veteran road race John Allen showed that age had not wearied his competitive bug as he piloted a TZ750 Yamaha around Morgan Park to a best of 1m20.893s.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBKM Q John ALLEN
John Allen

It was not quite enough for pole though as Allen was bettered in the final moments of qualifying by young Alex Pickett on an FZR1000.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens SBKM Q Alexander PICKETT
Alex Pickett

Superbike Masters Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Lap
1 Alexander PICKETT (NSS) Yamaha FZR 1000 1m20.836
2 John ALLEN (QLD)  Yamaha TZ 750 1m20.893
3 Murray CLARK (QLD) Suzuki GSXR 1m21.490
4 Gregory JAMES (NSW) Honda CB 1100 R 1m25.762
5 Mark RODDA (NSW) Suzuki GS 1000 S 1m26.516
6 Mark McVEIGH (NSW) Yamaha FZR 1000 1m27.792
7 Scott WEBSTER (VIC)  Suzuki GSX 1200 1m27.819
8 Richard EASTON (NSW) Suzuki GSX 1100 1m31.096
9 Darren LARK (VIC) Suzuki GSX 1150 1m47.086

Superbike Masters Race One

Alex Pickett streaked away from pole position as John Allen gave chase. Darren Lark took a tumble at turn four on the opening lap, while Gregory James fell at the same corner on lap two, both riders were unhurt.

The wily old fox that is John Allen got that TZ750 well and truly wound up on lap two to get the better of Alex Pickett. Allen picked up his pace further on the next circuit with his first 1m19s lap of the weekend, a 1m19.677s.

Pickett had no answer for the speed of Allen and was left to ride a somewhat lonely race to second place while Murray Clark had a similarly solo run on his way to third.


YMF R3 Cup Qualifying

John Lytras topped YMF R3 Cup qualifying ahead of Hunter Ford, Max Stauffer, Harry Khouri and Brandon Demmery.

ASBK Rnd Morgan Park RbMotoLens John Lytras
John Lytras

The QP2 session saw quite a few fallers.  Ben Baker crashed heavily at turn 12, Travis Hall had a tumble at turn six and Hunter Diplock went down at turn three.

YMF R3 Cup Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Lap
1 John LYTRAS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m23.953
2 Hunter FORD (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 124.016
3 Max STAUFFER (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m24.186
4 Harry KHOURI (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m24.217
5 Brandon DEMMERY (NSW) / Yamaha YZF-R3 1m24.229
6 Locky TAYLOR (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m24.377
7 Zac LEVY (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m24.822
8 Harrison VOIGHT (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.191
9 Travis HALL (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.531
10 Luke JOHNSTON (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.660
11 Ben BAKER (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.722
12 Mitch KUHNE (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.826
13 Kyle O’CONNELL (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m25.860
14 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m26.354
15 Zylas BUNTING (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m26.883
16 Ryan SMITH (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m27.257
17 Tristan ADAMSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m27.374
18 John BLENKIN (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m27.728
19 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m27.802
20 Laura BROWN (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m28.285
21 Josh HALL (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m28.301
22 Zak PETTENDY (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m28.745
23 Jeremy CZMOK (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m28.983
24 Stephany KAPILAWI-JAMES (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m29.103
25 Ryan MOSCARDINI (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m29.229
26 Hunter DIPLOCK (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R3 1m30.002
27 Sarah FAIRBROTHER (QLD) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m31.059
28 Josh ANDREWS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m31.334
29 Lachlan O’BRIEN (NT) Yamaha YZF-R3 1m32.277

YMF R3 Cup Race One

TBC

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Race One

TBC

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup Qualifying Results

Pos Name Machine Time
1 Angus GRENFELL (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m37.752
2 Carter THOMPSON (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m38.578
3 Lucas QUINN (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.070
4 Jacob ROULSTONE (NSW) Yamaha YZR-R15 1m39.097
5 Glenn NELSON (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.327
6 Max GIBBONS (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.330
7 Marianos NIKOLIS (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.473
8 Archie MCDONALD (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.564
9 Jacob HATCH (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.575
10 Thomas BROWN (QLD)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.649
11 Tom DRANE (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.902
12 Cros FRANCIS (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m39.981
13 Zak PETTENDY (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m40.123
14 Varis FLEMING (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m40.499
15 Alex KENWORTHY-JONES (NSW) Yamaha YZF-R15 1m40.507
16 Reece OUGHTRED (VIC)  Yamaha YZR-R15 1m40.590
17 Jai RUSSO (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m40.787
18 Cormac BUCHANAN (NZ)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m41.873
19 Patrick BOGNAR (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 1m42.013
20 Hunter DIPLOCK (NSW)  Yamaha YZR-R15 1m42.363
21 Lincoln KNIGHT (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m42.864
22 Jamie PORT (VIC)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m44.008
23 Tom CONNORS (NSW)  Yamaha YZF-R15 1m44.493
24 Toby JAMES (VIC) Yamaha YZR-R15 1m48.240
25 Natalie BARBATI (VIC) Yamaha YZF-R15 2m08.560

BODY

Source: MCNews.com.au

Wayne Maxwell tops Saturday ‘Timed Practice’ in QLD

2019 ASBK
Round Four – Morgan Park

Images by TBG and Rob Mott


Under a new qualifying format for ASBK this season the Saturday morning session is dubbed ‘Timed Practice’, and it is the times from this session that decided the nine riders that automatically qualify for the Q2 session. The riders from tenth back in the Timed Practice session having to fight it out in a Q1 session, scheduled for 1440 this afternoon, with the top three in that session then being promoted into Q2, making for a final 12-rider tussle over the first four rows of the grid that is set to take place at 1510.

One rider absent from the field today was Glenn Scott. His weekend had started with promise but a crash at turn three in the final session yesterday has left the Kawasaki rider with a dislocated hip and multiple fractures in his back. He is undergoing MRI scans in Brisbane today to assess the level of damage that has been sustained.

Scott had gone under the air-fence that is placed in front of a dangerous wall near the overpass at turn three, his ZX-10RR then followed him in.  On social media this morning Scott was highly critical of Morgan Park Raceway.

Glenn Scott

“These are the risks we take riding these unsafe circuits. Our passion to ride is so great when we roll into a circuit like Morgan Park you can see it is not fit for a national level of racing but we ignore the dangerous sections and go anyway. ASBK and MA need to step up and change this! If that wall wasn’t so close on the outside of turn 3 I’d be throwing a new set of fairing on my bike, dusting my leathers off and heading out for qualifying today..”

Glenn Scott Hospital
Glenn Scott is in hospital after a scary crash at Morgan Park on Friday

Troy Herfoss was also clearly unhappy on Friday at Morgan Park, but for very different reasons. Herfoss had been frustrated by the way his Penrite Honda was riding the bumps at this tricky 3-kilometre 12-turn circuit. We reported yesterday that the squad woud be working through the night to cure those ills, and it was immediately apparent that they had found a better direction when Herfoss went straight out in the 30-minute timed practice sessions this morning and dropped in a time almost half-a-second quicker than he managed at any point on Friday. Unfortunately though he did not better that time in the remaining 25-minutes, and following 12 laps,  he put in during the session and ended up sixth overall this morning.

Wayne Maxwell topped the Timed Practice session this morning after also topping the time-sheets on Friday. A 1m13.283s this morning a marginal step forward from the 1m13.334s he recorded yesterday.

Cru Halliday underlined his consistency also by going second quickest on Saturday morning, a 1m13.339s also a marginal improvement on his Friday best of 1m13.515s lap.

Other riders to quickly and more drastically improve their pace this morning were BCperformance Kawasaki’s Bryan Staring and NextGen BMW stand-in rider Aaron Morris.

Morris bettered his Friday time by more than a second in what is an amazing performance from the Sydneysider. Morris dropped in a brilliant 1m13.46s scorcher on the fifth of his seven laps to end the session third quickest.

Mikes Jones had a tumble early on after clocking in a 1m13.56s lap and then immediately trying to better it, but instead went down at turn six. Jones was quickly back on track and put in a total of 17 laps during the session but did not improve on that early time. Still, it was good enough for fourth quickest today.

Bryan Staring, the only leading rider on Dunlop rubber, completely dominated the previous round at The Bend and in doing so propelled himself into the series lead off the back of a 75-point haul in what was a triple-header weekend. Staring put in 18-laps this morning with his quickest a 1m13.591s on his fifth time around.

Josh Waters was seventh quickest ahead of Daniel Falzon, the South Australian the final rider to dip into the 1m13s this morning but only putting in four laps on the YRT machine. Instead Falzon choosing to conserve his front tyre for the qualifying session instead of burning up rubber that he then has to use in Timed Practice. That approach certainly has some merit as a top nine in this session is all that is required to automatically qualify straight through to the afternoon Q2 session.

Matt Walters the final man to make that cut-off while Mark Chiodo and Alex Phillis just missed the cut.

Tyre wear was critical here at Morgan Park last year, as it generally is at every circuit that ASBK visits, and no doubt it will be the same again tomorrow when the 2 x 16-lap races get underway.

Herfoss put in a masterful performance here last year to come from behind in both races after the team gave him a set-up that allowed him to conserve his tyres and then walk away from his pursuers in the closing stages of each race.  A set-up that will help the tyres make the race distance will be the holy grail every team is chasing here today at Morgan Park.

Pirelli had no answer for Dunlop at The Bend, in what was a big turn up for the books as in recent years the Italian rubber has largely dominated ASBK, where ever we went. Which brand will win the tyre war this weekend…? To throw another wildcard in to that question both Dunlop and Pirelli have a new spec’ rear here this weekend… The Pirelli in question sacrifices a small amount of ultimate edge grip in return for an increase in longevity, while the Dunlop option for this weekend is softer than what they dominated with at The Bend but Dunlop are still confident that it will last the 16-lap distance without a problem.

ASBK Morgan Park Saturday Timed Practice

Pos Rider Bike Time
1 Wayne Maxwell  Suzuki 1m13.283
2 Cru Halliday  Yamaha 1m13.399
3 Aaron Morris  BMW 1m13.461
4 Mike Jones  Ducati 1m13.566
5 Bryan Staring Kawasak 1m13.591
6 Troy Herfoss  Honda 1m13.703
7 Josh Waters  Suzuki 1m13.878
8 Daniel Falzon  Yamaha 1m13.963
9 Matt Walters  Kawasak 1m14.234
10 Mark Chiodo  Honda 1m14.251
11 Alex Phillis  Suzuki  1m14.762
12 Arthur Sissis Suzuki 1m15.011
13 Damon Rees  Honda  1m15.031
14 Lachlan Epis   Kawasak 1m15.420
15 Brian Houghton  Honda 1m18.484

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dean Ferris finishes up in America, for now…

Dean Ferris back in Australia

With Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing Team’s Aaron Plessinger returning to full fitness, the team and replacement rider Dean Ferris came to a mutual agreement to part ways for the remainder of this season.

AMA MX Utah Rnd Ferris JK MX HighPoint
Dean Ferris – AMA MX 2019 – High Point

Ferris returned to Australia this week and celebrated his 29th birthday with family and friends. In the coming weeks Ferris has stated that he will bed down his plans for the remainder of season 2019.

AMAMX Rnd Florida Ferris JK MX Florida
Dean Ferris – Florida National – 2019

The Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing Team will contest the rest of the 2019 Lucas Oil Pro Motocross Championship with its original two-man team of Justin Barcia and Plessinger, and thanked Dean for his very respectable results supporting the team while Plessinger was out with injury.

AMA MX Rnd Ferris JK MX Hangtown
Dean Ferris – Hangtown 2019

Ferris was currently ranking eighth on the AMA Pro Motocross 450cc Championship ladder with 136-points, ahead of the likes of Blake Baggett, Jason Bogle, Cole Seely and Joey Savatgy.

AMA MX Rnd Thunder Valley Ferris JK MX Lakewood
Dean Ferris – 2019 Thunder Valley National MX

Jim Perry
Monster Energy Yamaha Team Manager

“It was a pleasure to have Dean filling in for the opening rounds of the 2019 Lucas Oil Motocross Championship while Aaron was recovering from injury. Now that Aaron has returned to his #7 YZ450F, the Aussie national champ has decided to return home down under. The Monster Energy Factory Yamaha team appreciated his strong work ethic and commitment while in the states, we wish him all the best in the future.”

AMA MX Rnd Thunder Valley Ferris JK MX Lakewood
Dean Ferris – 2019 Thunder Valley National MX

Images by Hoppenworld

Source: MCNews.com.au