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Saturday wrap from Portimao WorldSBK | All classes

2020 WorldSBK – Round Three – Portimao
Saturday Wrap

Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) claimed a dominant five-second victory to reassert himself in the Championship fight at Portimao overnight.

A dominant five-second victory for Rea overnight

It was the perfect way to bounce back from Rea’s worst race finish in six years when he finished sixth at Jerez in Race 2 by taking a commanding victory from pole position, with no one able to match the Northern Irishman throughout the 20-lap race. Rea was initially challenged by Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha) but a stunning lap time on Lap 4, half a second quicker than Razgatlioglu, saw him pull away from the Turk.

2020 WorldSBK – Round Three – Portimao – Race One

Razgatlioglu finished a comfortable second, five seconds behind Rea but almost two seconds clear of his Pata Yamaha team-mate Michael van der Mark as Yamaha secured two spots on the podium; showing impressive pace in both Tissot Superpole and Race 1 to cement their status as front runners in WorldSBK.

2020 WorldSBK – Round Three – Portimao – Race One

Alex Lowes (KRT) finished in fourth place after starting the race in third, having battled his way back through the field in an epic battle with Loris Baz (Ten Kate Yamaha), Scott Redding (Aruba Ducati) and, initially, van der Mark. While van der Mark was able to escape after passing Baz and Lowes at Turn 2 on Turn 10, the rest continued their epic battle. Van der Mark also dramatically lost pace when he had a false neutral on his bike, losing around six tenths before fighting back for a podium.

2020 WorldSBK – Round Three – Portimao – Race One

Redding had initially made his way from eighth to fight for a podium but lost pace in the latter stages in the race, as he fell back to Lowes on Lap 15 before Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GoEleven) passed him on Lap 18 at Turn 1 before Baz followed him through at Turn 3. It meant Rinaldi finished fifth, continuing his impressive recent pace, ahead of Baz as the two Independent riders claimed a top six finish. Redding finished in seventh place, just holding off the challenge from Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad); Sykes claiming a top 10 finish after starting fourth.

2020 WorldSBK – Round Three – Portimao – Race One

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) finished in ninth place after showing some late-race pace to apply the pressure to Sykes and Redding, but the Spanish rider was unable to gain enough. Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad) claimed a top 10 finish as BMW scored a top 10 finish with both riders. Chaz Davies (Aruba Ducati) finished in 11th place, holding off the challenge from Leon Haslam (Team HRC) by one tenth as they crossed the line.

Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti) finishing in 13th place onboard his Kawasaki, holding off a late-race challenge from Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha); the pair having a drag race to the line with Spanish rider Fores holding on by just 0.042s. Gerloff’s team-mate, Federico Caricasulo, claimed the final point paying position in the race with 15th.

Sandro Cortese (OutDo Kawasaki TPR) was the only rider who crashed during the race, as he fell on the last lap at Turn 11, but Cortese is conscious following the accident. The German was transferred to Faro hospital following the incident where he will undergo surgery to stabilize a fractured vertebrae, with Cortese currently showing no signs of neurological impairment. He also suffered from a fracture of the right tibial bone.


Jonathan Rea – P1

A great weekend so far. We arrived focused on the race and we knew it was going to be a hot 20 laps. The work we have been doing in the summer in the ‘pre-season’ before the restart has been really good, especially in the heat. I was able to understand the level of tyre drop and adjust my position on the bike accordingly. I really enjoyed the race because when the gap on the pit board is increasing, it is a lot of fun. Thanks to all the Kawasaki Racing Team because I think we got the best out of the Ninja ZX-10RR today. We learned a lot for tomorrow as I think this is the first time I did 20 laps in succession this weekend. Just at the end of the race there are still some things we can try to improve for tomorrow. All-in-all, a really positive day.”

#PRTWorldSBK at Autódromo Internacional do Algarve – Race 1.
1. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)
2. Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Team) +5.142
3. Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Team) +7.029
Toprak Razgatlioglu – P2

We tried for a win today, but it wasn’t possible as Jonny was so fast. I tried for a good position, I followed Jonny for maybe four or five laps but after that he went. I started sliding too much, so finished in second position. I’m happy and tomorrow we try a different setup for a better position.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu
Michael van der Mark – P3

I’m really happy with this podium. If I look back at the race, I was really comfortable with the bike. My bike went in neutral, so I went off track, and I had some moments at Turn 9 so it wasn’t easy. I’m happy to get back on the podium, and it’s great to have Toprak on the podium as well. I think we just need to make some small changes on the bike for tomorrow, especially when it’s warm, but I’m happy with this podium and it feels great to see some fans around the track again.”

Rea and Van der Mark on the podium
Alex Lowes – P4

I chose the SCX rear tyre and to be honest I do not think it was working so well in the afternoon because I had so many big slides at the start. Like all the other guys I had some problems with the front grip at the end but I felt that I could manage quite well and I kept my pace. For my first proper go in attack mode around here on the Kawasaki, I have had quite a good day and I am hoping to make some improvements for tomorrow. I was hoping I could challenge for the podium but unfortunately not. I think I can improve myself a bit and we can also improve the bike set-up, so our target is to do a bit better on Sunday.”

Alex Lowes
Scott Redding – P7

Despite the problems in qualifying I got off to a good start and managed to get my way through the field to reach the podium positions. The feeling, though, wasn’t the best. I struggled to get the bike working in the right way throughout the race and in the last 6/7 laps things got worse. I gave my best to defend the position as long as I could. We have to work tonight to solve the problems and get in the right conditions to fight for the podium tomorrow“.

Tom Sykes – P8

To get P4 in qualifying today, I was a little disappointed, but realistically it was not a bad thing. Initially we had a good start, but as soon as I selected 2nd and 3rd gear into T1 we lost multiple track positions. We are still giving away some deficit in terms of horsepower, but if you look at sectors 2 and 3, we are extracting a good performance of the chassis on the BMW S 1000 RR. The only downside to the race was the fact that I had to ride the bike differently. I felt in the corner entry and in mid corners that I was being held up, which is fine, however it doesn’t allow me to carry the speed onto the straights as I am not able to sling shot out of the exits. I believe If we had the same engine performance as some of the competition we could of had great potential in that race.

Alvaro Bautista – P9

If you look at the final result it might not be so obvious, but I feel we made a step forward with our performance compared to Jerez. I lost some ground and positions in the very first laps of the race, but once I’d passed a few riders and could lap alone, my pace was in line with that of the guys fighting for the podium. So, although the result might not reflect it, I’m happy with our performance, aside from the early stages. Of course, the race is 20 laps long, so we must improve also over the first laps. My feeling, especially in terms of front grip, was better than in Jerez anyway, so we’ll keep working to fine tune the bike without making any major changes to the setup and we’ll see how it goes tomorrow.”

Alvaro Bautista
Eugene Laverty – P10

The team in the garage worked really hard today due to the engine problem in the morning. There was actually a big question mark if we even could get into the Superpole, so a big thanks to the team – the guys worked full gas, it was very close, but they made it in time. So the Superpole result today was the main thing after this morning and I was fine with it. Afterwards the race itself was hard, but okay for me. I lost a few positions at the start, had a good race in the middle, but lost the gap in the group in front. Tomorrow I will try to do another step and try to get the maximum out.”

Eugene Laverty
Chaz Davies – P11

It’s been a very difficult day and I must admit I’m disappointed, especially after the weekend in Jerez when feelings and results were very positive. I have had problems with the bike since the early laps and we will try to understand what happened to find a solution for tomorrow’s two races“.

Leon Haslam – P12

We had some small problems in qualifying, although the qualifying tyre helped us to some extent. I also made a small mistake, but overall lap times were pretty close and I was only a couple of tenths from fourth I think. Unfortunately, race 1 proved to be difficult for me. Right from the start, I was struggling with some small setup issues and with the rear grip and I felt I was going backwards rather than forwards. The lap times weren’t so bad, but it was tough and so we need to make some changes for tomorrow. We’ll see what we can do.


Superbike Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki  0.000
2 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +5.142
3 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha +7.029
4 A. Lowes Kawasaki +9.851
5 M. Rinaldi Ducati +10.705
6 L.  Baz Yamaha +12.226
7 S. Redding Ducati +12.485
8 T. Sykes BMW +12.829
9 A. Bautista Honda +14.233
10 E. Laverty BMW +16.208
11 C. Davies Ducati +22.477
12 L.  Haslam Honda +22.581
13 X. Fores Kawasaki +23.535
14 G. Gerloff Yamaha +23.577
15 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +30.728
16 L.  Mercado Ducati +39.137
17 M. Melandri Ducati +49.020
18 S. Barrier Ducati +55.510
19 T. Takahashi Honda +55.891
20 L.  Gabellini Honda +1m16.109
21 M. Scheib Kawasaki +1 Lap
Not Classified
RET S. Cortese Kawasaki 1 Lap
RET C. Ponsson Aprilia 4 Laps

WSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
1  Scott Redding  107
2  Jonathan Rea  99
3  Toprak Razgatlioglu  86
4  Alex Lowes  85
5  Michael Van Der Mark  63
6  Chaz Davies  62
7  Loris Baz  47
8  Alvaro Bautista  44
9  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  41
10  Tom Sykes  34
11  Leon Haslam  32
12  Garrett Gerloff  17
13  Marco Melandri  15
14  Sandro Cortese  14
15  Xavi Fores  14
16  Eugene Laverty  12
17  Maximilian Scheib  10
18  Federico Caricasulo  5
19  Christophe Ponsson  4
20  Leandro Mercado  1

Supersport Race One

Action in the FIM Supersport World Championship resumed with Race 1 at the Autodromo Internacional do Algarve as Andrea Locatelli (Bardahl Yamaha) claimed victory at the Motul Portuguese Round as he equalled a record set three years ago by WorldSSP legend Kenan Sofuoglu.

Supersport Race One

Sofuoglu won four consecutive races in WorldSSP on three occasions, the most recent time coming in 2017, a record Locatelli has now equalled following an epic battle throughout the first 11 laps of the 17-lap race to claim his fourth consecutive victory in his rookie season. Locatelli had been battling with Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) throughout the race and, despite pulling a gap of around one second, Cluzel was starting to come back at Locatelli.

Locatelli had been battling with Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) throughout the race

He pulled out around half-a-second on Lap 11 to close the gap to 0.6s but while pushing hard to close the gap and apply pressure, he came off his bike at Turn 5. He was able to remount and continue the race, re-joining in sixth place. Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti) was able to take advantage of Cluzel’s error to come home in second place with Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) completing the podium after a titanic three-way battle including a drag race to the line with Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) and Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing).

Raffaele de Rosa

Perolari and Cluzel initially jumped Locatelli at the start of the race, putting Locatelli under pressure to fight back. Locatelli was able to pass both at Turn 1 on Lap 2 before the Italian battled for a few laps with Cluzel, passing him on Lap 6 before pulling out a gap. It turned out to be the race-winning move to secure his fourth consecutive win; the first time it’s been done to start a season.

Perolari finished in fourth place, jumping Viñales on the run to the line after Viñales lost out to de Rosa and Perolari; the Spanish rider initially passing de Rosa on the final lap at Turn 12, an ambitious move that looked to clinch a podium. However, both de Rosa and Perolari were able to pass him on the run down to the line. The trio were separated by just 0.018s across the line. Cluzel finished the race in sixth place following his crash.

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti) finished the race in seventh place, having almost been in a race of his own as he finished six seconds behind Cluzel but more than one second clear of South African rider Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing). Odendaal had a titanic battle with Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) for eighth place, with the Estonian missing out by 0.096s as they raced to the line.

Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) completed the top 10 as the 2019 WorldSSP Champion continued his adaption to WorldSSP machinery, finishing 6.3s clear of Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing). Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) finished in 12th with Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) the highest-placed WorldSSP Challenge competitor with 13th overall.

Wildcard Miquel Pons (H43 Team NOBBY) finished in 14th place with Loris Cresson (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) picking up the final point. There were a number of incidents throughout the race with Kevin Manfredi (Altogoo Racing Ream), Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing), Luigi Montella (DK Motorsport), Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) and Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team) all failing to finish.

Australia’s Lachlan Epis kept his nose clean to cross the line in 18th place ahead of Maria Herrera.


P1 Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

I have no words because it is incredible. We work very well every time, every session. Winning is our objective and we have succeeded, so far, every time. The feeling today in the race is so difficult because the wind is not so easy, and we need to understand a bit more for tomorrow. I’m confident and we’ll push hard.”

P2 Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

It was not an easy race with the start. There was a lot of wind and my bike is not nice in these conditions. The bike is a little bit big and it’s very difficult. Also, the track temperature was a little bit warmer compared to the Free Practice and Superpole and the bike is a little bit strange. When I saw it was not possible to be at the front, I just tried to save the position. After Jules crashed, I reduced the pace because I was a little scared that I would crash because the conditions were really difficult. It’s nice for me, it’s nice for the Championship and also for Kawasaki. Thanks to my team for all this work.”

P3 Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse)

In the race, I’m very happy because from this morning I had a good feeling but I made a mistake and started from ninth on the grid. I concentrated and tried to get a good start, stay concentrated every lap and never gave up. In the end, I got the podium and I’m very happy. I want to say thank you to my family.”

#PRTWorldSBK WorldSSP at Autódromo Internacional do Algarve – Race 1
Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)
Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) +8.380
Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) +11.217

Supersport Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha 0.000
2 L.  Mahias Kawasaki +8.380
3 R. De Rosa MV +11.217
4 C. Perolari Yamaha  +11.228
5 I.  Viñales Yamaha +11.235
6 J.  Cluzel Yamaha +14.831
7 P. Oettl Kawasaki +20.736
8 S. Odendaal Yamaha  +22.123
9 H. Soomer Yamaha +22.219
10 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki +25.663
11 D. Webb Yamaha +31.941
12 P. Sebestyen Yamaha +32.159
13 A. Bassani Yamaha +39.769
14 M. Pons Yamaha +40.111
15 L.  Cresson Yamaha +41.845
16 P. Hobelsberger Honda +45.608
17 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha +48.714
18 L.  Epis Yamaha +53.121
19 M. Herrera Honda +1m08.613
Not Classified
RET C. Öncü Kawasaki 4 Laps
RET F. Fuligni MV 8 Laps
RET L.  Montella Yamaha 10 Laps
RET A. Verdoïa Yamaha 11 Laps
RET K. Manfredi Yamaha 14 Laps

Supersport Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  100
 2  Jules Cluzel  70
 3  Lucas Mahias  62
 4  Corentin Perolari  48
 5  Philipp Oettl  38
 6  Raffaele De Rosa  38
 7  Steven Odendaal  36
 8  Hannes Soomer  31
 9  Manuel Gonzalez  29
 10  Isaac Viñales  28
 11  Danny Webb  20
 12  Can Alexander Öncü  18
 13  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza  8
 14  Peter Sebestyen  8
 15  Patrick Hobelsberger  5
 16  Federico Fuligni  5
 17  Andy Verdoïa  4
 18  Loris Cresson  4
 19  Axel Bassani  3
 20  Miquel Pons  2
 21  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 22  Luigi Montella  1

WorldSSP 300 Race One

FIM Supersport 300 World Championship race action returned in sensational fashion at the Motul Portuguese Round with a titanic battle for the race win between 2018 Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec Racing) and Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) at the Autodromo Internacional do Algarve, in a race that was shortened following a crash on the start-finish straight.

WorldSSP 300 Race One

Carrasco and Buis took advantage of polesitter Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasako MOTOPORT) crashing in the early stages of the race at Turn 5 to make a break on the rest of the field. It meant Carrasco and Buis were able to pull a gap on the field, leaving them around two seconds clear as it became a two-way battle for victory. Carrasco held on for victory to claim the Championship lead ahead of Buis. Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM Racing) completed the podium after he battled his way through the field from the fifth row of the grid.

Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec Racing) and Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)

Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) missed out on the podium by just 0.006s from when the results were taken at the last completed timing point; the crash on the start and finish straight causing the red flag following Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) coming off his bike but his machine continuing down the track. Ieraci was able to get up of his own accord following the incident. Bahattin Sofuglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300) finished in fifth while Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) completed the top six.

Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) finished in seventh place despite running in the lead group during the early part of the race, a mistake meaning the Spanish rider fell back. He was able to battle his way back to seventh place, 0.024s ahead of Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil AD 78) who finished in eighth and Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) in ninth. Thomas Brianti (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) completed the top 10; with just five seconds separating the top 10.

Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) finished the shortened race in 11th place with Ukrainian rider Nick Kalinin (Battley-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) finishing in 12th place. Glenn van Straalen (EAB Ten Kate Racing), Alejandro Carrion (Smrz Racing – Willi Race) and Mirko Gennai (Team BrCorse) completed the points.

It was a race of attrition with a number of retirements throughout. There was a Lap 1 crash between Tomas Alonso (Team Tomas Alonso), Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO) and Tom Bercot (ProGP Racing).

Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) had a technical issue in the early stages of the race while countryman Tom Bramich didn’t quite make it to the Main after finishing eighth in the preceding Last Chance Race while a top six is required from promotion through to the Main.

Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) and Oliver König (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team) collided on Lap 2 while Okaya went down on Lap 4 of the race.

P1 Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec Racing)

“I’m really happy. The race was really difficult because it was very windy. We could not match the lap times we did in Free Practice, but I tried to push from the beginning. I thought I had some more pace than the others. The race was quite easy because from the first lap, I have a gap. I think we did a really good job throughout the weekend and now it’s important to focus on tomorrow’s race. I think we have to improve a little bit but we will be there so it’s going to be good to try to fight for the victory again.”

P2 Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)

“It was a difficult race at the beginning. I tried to follow Ana and it was okay, we made a little gap. It was a red flag that ended the race but it was a good race for me and I want to say thanks to my team and my family. Let’s go to the next race.”

P3 Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki)

“I didn’t really expect the podium so I’m pretty happy. The front two guys were on another level today. I’m happy with the result today despite making it hard for myself coming back from 13th today. It’s also a new circuit for me and it’s a little it difficult, I’ve not been here and it’s not the easiest place to learn. I’m happy to come away with third and keep aiming for the Championship as that’s the goal at the end of the year. Thanks to my team for putting a good bike out as always and Kawasaki.”

#PRTWorldSBK WorldSSP300 at Autódromo Internacional do Algarve – Race 1
1. Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec Racing)
2. Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) +0.057
3. Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) +4.123

WorldSSP 300 Race One Results

  1. Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec Racing)
  2. Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) +0.057
  3. Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) +4.123
  4. Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) +4.129
  5. Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300 +4.394
  6. Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) +4.408

WorldSSP 300 Championship Points

  1. Ana Carrasco (ESP) Kawasaki (54 points)
  2. Tom Booth-Amos (GBR) Kawasaki (52 points)
  3. Bahattin Sofuoglu (TUR) Yamaha (46 points)

Portimao WorldSBK Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Friday WorldSBK wrap from Portugal

2020 WorldSBK

Round Three – Portimao

WorldSBK riders took on the challenges of Portimao overnight for their first two practice sessions ahead of this weekend’s third round of the championship.

Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha) set the pace for the day; his time set in FP1 was good enough to top Friday proceedings ahead of Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha). Baz topped FP2 but his time of 1’42.522 was four-tenths off Razgatlioglu’s time from the morning. Razgatlioglu’s teammate, Michael van der Mark, ended the day sixth fastest overall.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

Fastest time on Friday is always a good start! I know in Jerez, for me it was a really bad start on Friday, and today I am feeling happy because the bike is incredible to ride here. We tried a different set-up and now we are ready for the race. Tyre choice will be important, because again we have hot conditions with the tyres sliding and so we will see tomorrow. Now I am feeling much better on the bike, so I will continue to ride like this, for the qualifying tyre we will change the set-up a little but the work we did today is very important for the race distance, which is my focus.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu
Michael van der Mark – P6

I’m quite happy with the bike now, and already from the start it felt quite good. We were struggling a little bit on corner entry and this morning we couldn’t really find the solution. In the afternoon, during the session we made a big change on the front of the bike and immediately I felt a lot better, I could stop the bike and this was what I was looking for from the R1. There are still some areas to improve, but to be honest my pace in the afternoon, after this morning, I was quite happy with it and the feeling of the bike means I can ride it easily and focus on the areas we have to improve.”

Michael van der Mark
Paul Denning – Pata Yamaha Team Principal

It’s been a really constructive Friday, probably the best one of this “strange” season so far! Given such a strong winter test performance for Toprak at this track, there was some doubt about going back to the winter test setting or continuing with some of the development settings we’ve used in Jerez. But finally, his R1 seems well balanced and he is able to produce good lap times on new tyres or old. We worked very hard to do a 14-lap race simulation in the heat of the afternoon. Certainly compared to last weekend in Jerez, Toprak and his crew are better prepared going into Saturday. Michael also had a very positive day with second position this morning. In the afternoon he chose not to use the softer tyre option and continued to work on bike balance, which allowed us to produce more rear grip and better corner entry with used tyres. We know here in Portimão that Michael is formidable and when he finds a consistent rhythm he can run with anybody! Let’s see what tomorrow brings, but right now, the Pata Yamaha team, the riders and the R1 are looking in good shape.

Third fastest was reigning Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) as he made it two manufacturers in the top three, Rea missing out on second place for the day by just 0.045s to French rider Baz. Rea’s Kawasaki team-mate, Alex Lowes, finished in eighth place overall.

Jonathan Rea – P3

Today has been interesting because there is a lot less grip on the track than there was last season when we were able to be super fast from the early laps. This race weekend it took a little bit of time for the track to get some rubber down and we were able to go faster in the afternoon, even with hotter temperatures. That means that the track is getting better and better. We have been understanding the tyre options that are available to us. I made a longer run in the second session to understand how the bike is behaving and to set-up the electronics a little bit better for the end of the race. We have our front tyre choice all set for tomorrow and there is still a question mark over which rear tyre to use. We have some more time in the morning to understand. But the bike is working well over race distance already and I am feeling a lot better than I did at Jerez. The bike is ‘talking’ to me a little bit more and I understand what is happening when the grip drops. It has been pretty positive.”

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes – P8

Our opening day was pretty good and I am quite happy with the bike, really. I want to improve a little bit in some of the longer, faster corners; I am just missing a little bit of position in the front with the bike set-up. But I felt quite good during my long run this afternoon and did a lot of laps at the same pace as my best lap. Obviously, it is my first time here with the Kawasaki. Because I have done so many laps here on other bikes it is quite a lot different in terms of how to ride my Ninja ZX-10RR to get the best from it, so it takes a bit of time to understand how to ride some parts of the track. I think almost all the other guys tested here in February. I found a good feeling this afternoon and I think I am quite a bit better than I was in Jerez, so that is quite positive.”

Alex Lowes

Michael Ruben Rinaldi’s impressive form continued as he finished fourth for the day, following on from his fourth-place finish at Jerez. The Italian rider was just 0.017s away from matching the time of five-time Champion Rea; Rinaldi continuing to show his rapid pace by being classified as the fastest Ducati rider.

Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) was fifth place while his team-mate Chaz Davies ended  the day in 12th.

Scott Redding – P5

It’s been a pretty good day. Maybe we struggled a bit in the FP1 where I couldn’t find my best rhythm. I was a bit worried about the gap at the end of the morning practice but in the afternoon – with the new tyre – things went much better. We still have some work to do ahead of Race 1 tomorrow but we are extremely confident“.

Scott Redding
Chaz Davies – P12

It’s a new challenge at a different circuit to Jerez. We have worked hard to figure out which tyres to use in tomorrow’s race. We probably didn’t go in the right direction in terms of set up this afternoon. They weren’t very productive FP2 but we will work a lot tonight to figure out how to fix some details and be ready for tomorrow“.

In seventh was Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) as he lapped around six-tenths slower than Razgatlioglu’s pace setting time. He was around four tenths quicker than Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) as the duo continue to battle it out for the one remaining BMW seat for 2021.

Tom Sykes – P7

I really feel as a team we are starting to get a good understanding now. Its quite clear to see we are having some little issues on track, we worked hard in Jerez in the hot conditions and got very little reward from it following two technical issues. We arrived here in Portimao with another plan and I have to say I am very happy with what we have achieved from the information gathered. This afternoon when we put more of a chassis package we wanted straight away in FP2 made a big improvement. We made 3 changes in the 3 exits we made in FP2 all in preparation for tomorrow so I am looking forward to tomorrows Superpole and Race 1.

Tom Sykes
Eugene Laverty – P10

We learned a lot today. We didn’t make any great performances but we are managing to figure out our woes from Jerez. At the Barcelona test the bike was working really good in long distance we just didn’t have that early pace on the fresh tyre in Jerez. Now we understand what we need to do, we made some changes today to chassis angle and looked at preserving the tyre for the end of the race. The first sector we are lacking, with the new tyre we are not so strong….and I think if I stayed out on the tyre longer and longer I would get faster, which is unusual and is something we are looking in to.”

Eugene Laverty

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) was the lead Honda rider on Friday as he finished the day in ninth place, around one tenth ahead of teammate Leon Haslam. Bautista had a crash at Turn 5 during Free Practice 2 but he was able to remount his Honda and continue lapping the Portimao circuit as Free Practice 2 continued.

Alvaro Bautista – P9

Today has been a positive day I’d say. My feeling this morning was not the best but we made some small adjustments this afternoon and these gave me more confidence. I was lapping more consistently even on used tyres and despite a small crash in turn 5, I can say I’m happy with what we’ve done. Perhaps the lap times could be better, but the feeling with the bike is good and I think we can take another step tomorrow. I’m looking forward to seeing what we can do.”

Alvaro Bautista
Leon Haslam – P11

I was happy with the morning’s work. We completed the whole session with one tyre and I was in the top three or four in terms of lap times, so it was all going well. Then this afternoon things were a little tougher, firstly physically, because I’ve been suffering from an abscess on a tooth which meant I had to visit the Clinica and get some medication from the doctors. And in addition, we tried a few things during the second session that perhaps took us in the wrong direction. So the aim for tomorrow is to reset; hopefully my tooth will be better too, and we can hit the ground running.”

Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) was 13th overall for the day aboard his Yamaha YZF R1 with him and teammate Federico Caricasulo completing the most laps of anyone for the day – with American rider Gerloff completing 42 and Caricasulo 45. The pair were separated by Sandro Cortese (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR), Leandro ‘Tati’ Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) and Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing).

Maximilian Scheib (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) finished the day in 18th place onboard his Kawasaki ZX-10RR, finishing around 0.030s faster than Marco Melandri (Barni Racing Team) as the Italian continued his WorldSBK comeback. Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) was 20th in the combined classification, ahead of Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team), wildcard Christophe Ponsson (Nuova M2 Racing) and Lorenzo Gabellini (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team).

WorldSBK Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha 1m42.103
2 L. Baz Yamaha +0.405
3 J. Rea Kawasaki +0.440
4 M. Rinaldi Ducati +0.457
5 S. Redding Ducati +0.550
6 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha +0.619
7 T. Sykes BMW +0.676
8 A. Lowes Kawasaki +1.100
9 A. Bautista Honda +1.106
10 E. Laverty BMW +1.256
11 L. Haslam Honda +1.259
12 C. Davies Ducati +1.446
13 G. Gerloff Yamaha +1.467
14 S. Cortese Kawasaki +1.764
15 L. Mercado Ducati +1.765
16 X. Fores Kawasaki +1.787
17 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +1.889
18 M. Scheib Kawasaki +2.208
19 M. Melandri Ducati +2.237
20 S. Barrier Ducati +2.354
21 T. Takahashi Honda +3.122
22 C. Ponsson Aprilia +3.661
23 L. Gabellini Honda +5.262

World Supersport

Andrea Locatelli bounced back from a crash to go quickest in the second practice session with a 1’45.598. He held off the challenge from Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) who finished the day in second place. Spanish rider Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) was third overall for the day, two-tenths away from Locatelli.

Andrea Locatelli

Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished the day in fourth place to show his pace towards the front of the field, fending off Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) by just one tenth. De Rosa finished ahead of Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha); the Frenchman rounding out the top six with a time of 1’46.260.

Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) finished the day in seventh place; clinching a spot in the top 10 of the combined standings by just a tenth of a second with strong competition throughout the field. The gap between Gonzalez in seventh and Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) in eighth was just 0.024s; showing just how competitive the WorldSSP field is. Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) was in ninth with Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) completing the top 10 despite a technical issue in the latter stages of Free Practice 2.

Hungarian rider Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) was 11th with Kevin Mandredi (Altogoo Racing Team) in 12th, the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider, just ahead of Turkish sensation Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team), Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) and Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing).

Australian newcomer Lachlan Epis was 18th quickest, 2.861-seconds from the benchmark set by Locatelli.

Dynavolt Honda duo Patrick Hobelsberger and Maria Herrera, making her return to WorldSSP, were 21st and 24th respectively, with Indonesian rider Galang Hendra Pratama (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) and teammate Andy Verdoïa in 22nd and 23rd respectively.

WorldSSP Friday Times

  1. Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)
  2. Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) +0.068
  3. Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) +0.202
  4. Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) +0.464
  5. Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) +0.550
  6. Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) +0.662
    18. Lachlan Epis (MPM Routz Yamaha) +2.861s
Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha 1m45.598
2 J. Cluzel Yamaha +0.068
3 I.  Viñales Yamaha +0.202
4 L. Mahias Kawasaki  +0.464
5 R. De Rosa MV Agusta +0.550
6 C. Perolari Yamaha +0.662
7 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki +0.801
8 H. Soomer Yamaha +0.825
9 S. Odendaal Yamaha +0.907
10 P. Oettl Kawasaki +0.924
11 P. Sebestyen Yamaha +1.347
12 K. Manfredi Yamaha +1.578
13 C. Öncü Kawasaki +1.582
14 D. Webb Yamaha +1.727
15 A. Bassani Yamaha +2.110
16 M. Pons Yamaha +2.147
17 F. Fuligni MV Agusta +2.421
18 L. Epis Yamaha +2.861
19 L. Cresson Yamaha +2.865
20 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha +3.206
21 P. Hobelsberger Honda +3.231
22 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha +3.268
23  A. Verdoïa Yamaha +3.302
24 M. Herrera Honda +3.386
25 L. Montella Yamaha +4.453

WorldSSP300

FIM Supersport World Championship’s season continued with the Championship heading to the Autodromo Internacional do Algarve for Round 2 of the 2020 season, the Motul Portuguese Round. The times were topped by Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) with a time set in the first free practice session as he struck first ahead of two races this weekend.

The Dutchman’s time of 1’57.400 was enough to be fastest for the day as he denied Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) top by just 0.006s; showing just how competitive the WorldSSP300 field is throughout the grid. Deroue’s MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT teammates, Jeffrey Buis, Koen Meuffels and Yuta Okaya finished 30th, eighth and 11th respectively.

Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) finished the day in third place, just half-a-tenth behind Deroue, Thomas Brianti (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) was fourth fastest after the two practice sessions, finish about three tenths off the lead pace from Deroue; but still within range of Deroue’s pace with the competitive field. Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) came home in fifth place with Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) rounding out the top six. Everyone in the top six managed to improve their lap times in Free Practice 2, with just Deroue lapping slower compared to Free Practice 1.

Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing by Yamaha WorldSSP300) finished the day classified in seventh place, less than half a second off the pace, despite a crash in Free Practice 2, as the race winner from Jerez continued his front running pace. Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil 78 AD) was classified ninth with Championship leader Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) rounding out the top 10.

Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished the day in 12th place ahead of another winner from Jerez, Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing). Oliver Konig (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team) was classified in 14th place after the day’s running with his teammate, Jan-Ole Jahing in 15th. The gap between Orradre and Jahing was just 0.002s; showing how close the field is in WorldSSP300.

Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO), who had shown great pace in the two Jerez races, was classified down in 20th place but within a second of the leading pace. Christian Stagne (Freuedenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) finished the day in 21st place.

Australians Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO) is in 32nd place after not setting a lap time in Free Practice 2 for some reason, while countryman Tom Bramich ranked 45th at the end of day one.

WorldSSP300 Group A and B Friday Times

  1. Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)
  2. Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) +0.006
  3. Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) +0.053
  4. Thomas Brianti (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) +0.325
  5. Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) +0.343
  6. Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) +0.369
    32. Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkInGo) +1.458s
    45. Tom Bramich (CarlCox RT SKM Kawasaki) +2.198s

Portimao WorldSBK Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

The delight that is Portimao presents WorldSBK this weekend

2020 WorldSBK

Round Three – Portimao

After having successfully completed the Pirelli Spanish Round at Jerez de la Frontera two weeks WorldSBK now heads to the wonderful circuit that is Portimao in what is one of my favourite countries in Europe, Portugal.

The third round of the Motul FIM Superbike World Championship will take place from 7th to 9th August and as per Jerez double races are scheduled over the weekend for the three Championship classes, as the riders will hit the track on Saturday for Race 1 and on Sunday for Race 2, in addition to the Tissot Superpole race for WorldSBK.

The Autódromo Internacional do Algarve was designed by architect Ricardo Pina and was inaugurated exactly ten years ago. This track is 4592 metres long, with 9 right-handers and six left-hand corners and a configuration with a maximum gradient of 57 metres, a long turn radii that goes from 23 metres to a maximum of 207 metres, and a finishing straight which has a total length of 835 metres. It is very demanding but a truly magnificent riders circuit and second only to Phillip Island in this scribes eyes.

The Portuguese circuit remains one of the circuits that best brings out the capacity of the tyre to operate in extremely different conditions because of its altitude changes and demanding blind entry curves. Specifically, the rear tyre must go from low to extremely high temperatures, the front must be able to come into the turns mentioned above quickly and precisely. Unlike the rear, which undergoes few but intense mechanical/thermal stresses, the front is always engaged in slow turns with a quick entry and small curvature radii (tight corner) which forces the rider to brake sharply, sometimes downhill.

The most challenging part for the tyres is the last turn which is 350 metres long and takes 6.5 seconds to navigate, and due to the wide turning radius (about 150 metres), the bike is in constant acceleration and goes from 150 to 250 kph at a lean angle of about 50-degrees. So there is a remarkable increase in temperature on the side of the tyre affected by the lean, particularly for the rear tyre which must withstand the high temperature while simultaneously ensuring strong lateral force and allowing the bike to accelerate, it is a ballsy corner… Corners 5, 8, 11, 13, and 14 have on the contrary a very tight radius (about 30 metres), which forces the rider to brake to an extremely low speed. Halfway through the turn the bike needs the rear tyre, which is very cold, to provide strong longitudinal acceleration up to 1G at a lean angle of 50°. The tyres are particularly cold, especially coming into the left handers (numbers 5 and 13).

Marco Zambenedetti – Ducati Corse Superbike Technical Coordinator

It’s a track with a very particular layout, with many ups and downs and for this reason, it will be important to interpret it well. One critical point is the presence of several bumps, while I think a strong point for us could be the exit from the last corner where we can exploit not only the engine but above all the aerodynamics, an aspect where Ducati has always been at the forefront even in bikes derived from production model“.

So far this year in WorldSBK we have had four different winners in the opening six races and new riders have been making their mark.  Championship leader by 24 points after the first two rounds, rookie Scott Redding (Ducati) heads to round three confident. The Brit took his first wins of his WorldSBK career at Jerez and with the Ducati Panigale V4 R winning Race 2 with Alvaro Bautista in 2019, he could add to that tally.

Scott Redding

Portimao is an almost new circuit for me. I only raced here once in my career, then I came back for the tests in January. I must admit, though, I had good feelings. It is a track that I really like, that I find fun and the feeling in the tests was positive. We’ve come from an exciting and satisfying weekend and I can’t wait to get on my Ducati Panigale V4 R on Friday morning“.

Team-mate Chaz Davies enjoyed a return to podium form at Jerez and finished second in Race 2 to Redding, securing Ducati’s first WorldSBK 1-2 since Assen in 2012. Davies was second in Race 1 at Portimao in 2019 and looks good in 2020; don’t discount him.

Chaz Davies

I hope I can confirm the positive trend we had in Jerez de la Frontera. Last year we achieved a good result on this track as I finished second in Race-1. I think we have improved a lot compared to that race and I am sure we have all the credentials to do well. The weather conditions will be different here. We are ready and determined to face this weekend“.

A contrasting weekend at Jerez for Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK); leader in Race 1 and Tissot Superpole Race winner, yet off the pace in Race 2 and outside the top five in a race for the first time since Laguna Seca in 2014. But if one track can host a Rea revival then Portimao is it, as he has the most wins (nine), most podiums (17) and shares the record for pole with Tom Sykes, (three).

Jonathan Rea

Portimao is a circuit that has been kind to us in the past and it suits the nature of our bike. There are a lot of areas where we can exploit the strengths of our Ninja ZX-10RR. I enjoy the challenge of the circuit as it is very undulating and it is the closest thing you get to a motocross track. The changes of elevation and blind corners; it really takes a lot of rider input and set-up to make a perfect lap. I am looking forward to starting on Friday with the team again and the emphasis will be on understanding how our base set-up works there, especially in the heat. We will possibly face hot temperatures like we have just had this past weekend. We will confirm everything because it was working pretty OK in Jerez. Our goal is to improve the feeling, work toward the races and at the end the target is to win.”

KRT team-mate Alex Lowes was the Championship leader coming into Jerez, but he’s third going to Portimao; he’ll be in the mix again after his first podium at the venue last year.

Alex Lowes

I am looking forward to Portimao after not the easiest weekend in Jerez but I learned a lot about the bike. I had not had too much experience of the Kawasaki in the heat so the past weekend was about understanding it and learning the best way to ride the bike and adapt my style to the bike rather than chasing a setting. We made some good steps and hopefully that will put us in a good position at Portimao. It is not the easiest track but it is one I really enjoy. I think that the Kawasaki is going to work well there. I am looking forward to trying it for the first time on the ZX-10RR. I am happy we have had only had a few days until we get back out, because we were building momentum over the weekend in Jerez. We can just focus on starting on Friday morning and building from there. It is going to be good fun.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) lies fourth and has four podiums so far this year, but two technical DNFs have left the Turk behind. He was a podium runner at Portimao in 2019 and set impressive times at the rollercoaster in testing on his Yamaha. If he can have a round without issues, it could transcend into something special. On the other side of the garage, Michael van der Mark also suffered a mechanical issue at Jerez but took a first rostrum of 2020 in the same meeting. He has a best result of second at Portimao; can he go one better in 2020?

Occupying seventh in the Championship is Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha), who is promising in 2020. In contention in Spain, Portugal and Portimao await the fastest Independent rider of 2020 so far. Just ten points behind van der Mark in sixth, a special duel awaits in the Algarve. Baz has his own threat for Independent honours; Michael Ruben Rinaldi’s (Team GOELEVEN) stunning Jerez results sent shockwaves through the paddock. A fourth place in Race 2 – after passing Lowes and Rea – gave a fairytale result for the Italian. Can both riders battle at the front again?

Lying between Baz and ninth-placed Rinaldi in the standings is Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC); the 2019 runner-up won Race 2 for Ducati last year. Two races in the points at Jerez and with potential there, Portimao’s intricacies will test Honda, but it should be a track that suits both rider and bike. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) has four podiums at Portimao, including one for Honda in 2008’s Race 2. Tenth overall and yet to finish outside the points, a strong weekend calls the ‘Pocket Rocket’.

Alvaro Bautista

In Jerez we collected a great deal of information to work with in Portimão. It will be very important to be able to combine this data with what we got from winter testing in order to try and be more competitive than we were in Jerez. We have some ideas and we’ll see if they work once we get there. Portimão is a challenging track as it’s bumpy and has a lot of undulation. It might not be easy, but we really need to take a step forward with respect to Jerez.

Leon Haslam

I think Portimão can be a good track for us as the Honda is very fast and the circuit’s main straight is one of the best places to pass. It also requires a lot of hard braking and one of the things we’ve been working on is our straight-line braking, so I can say I’m looking forward to it. It’s a real rollercoaster of a track, where we see some big wheelies, so there are various things to manage but I hope we can use our third event to better understand where we need to continue working.”

It was a dismal Jerez for BMW; Tom Sykes’ (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) third place start was the only real highlight after a Race 1 technical problem. Sixth in the Tissot Superpole Race was followed up by 11th in Race 2, so Sykes comes to Portimao in search of a much-needed result. Two wins at Portimao will lift his confidence and BMW’s best result in 2019 at Portimao was seventh. For teammate Eugene Laverty, Portimao’s almost been like a home event for him and like Sykes, has won there twice. 17th in the standings, the Irishman needs a turnaround in luck and form.


Portimao WorldSBK Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Redding and Rea share the wins on Sunday at Jerez

2020 WorldSBK

Superbike Race Two Report

Ducati’s Scott Redding claimed his second WorldSBK victory and his sixth consecutive podium on Sunday afternoon at Jerez while team-mate Chaz Davies came on strong to follow Redding home for Ducati’s first 1-2 finish since 2012.

Redding and Davies claim Ducati's first 1-2 since 2012 at Jerez
Redding and Davies claim Ducati’s first 1-2 since 2012 at Jerez

The opening laps featured battles across the top six, with Redding making an early move to pass polesitter Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki) on the second lap at the right-hander of Turn 1, while Turkish rider Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha) fought his way up from 10th to run in the top five in the early stages of the race.

Redding checked out at the front of the field to extend his lead to two seconds to Rea before the Northern Irishman got passed by Redding’s Ducati teammate Davies. The Welshman and Razgatlioglu both were able to get by Rea temporarily before an ambitious move by Alex Lowes (Kawasaki) meant Lowes outbraked himself at Turn 6; allowing Rea to move back into third place.

Scott Redding - Image by Graeme Brown
Scott Redding – Image by Graeme Brown

Razgatlioglu eventually got by Rea again and held on to third place while Davies was running in second, behind teammate Redding with the pair able to hold on to take a Ducati one-two. Davies did start closing the gap as the race entered the second half but Redding responded to extend the gap back out to over two seconds, holding on to take his second WorldSBK victory.

Razgatlioglu also held on to claim a podium at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, rebounding from a technical issue in the Tissot Superpole Race, for third place in Race 2; pulling away from Rea and Lowes as they fought with Michael Ruben Rinaldi (GoEleven Ducati).

Toprak Razgatlioglu
Toprak Razgatlioglu closed out the final podium position

Rinaldi passed Lowes at Turn 5 before setting his sights on five-time Champion Rea, making a move up the inside of the Turn 13 hairpin on Lap 13 on the brakes; moving into fourth place and securing his joint-best WorldSBK finish – which was claimed at Jerez in 2019.

Lowes and Rea came home in fifth and sixth place respectively ahead of Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha) in seventh place, the Dutch rider just over a second behind the reigning World Champion. He had a gap of over four seconds to Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), the highest placed Honda rider on the grid in eighth place. Marco Melandri’s (Barni Ducati) impressive race pace continued to show as he made up 10 places from 19th on the grid to finish ninth.

Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista was top Honda

American rider Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha) completed the top 10 with Tom Sykes the highest placed BMW rider in 11th place, finishing two seconds behind Gerloff. Leon Haslam (Team HRC) finished in 12th, around 10 seconds off his Honda team-mate.

Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti) finished in 13th place as he completed the 20-lap race just under a second behind Haslam, and also beating Sandro Cortese (OutDo Kawasaki TPR) by almost six seconds. Leandro ‘Tati’ Mercado (Motocorsa Kawasaki) picked up the final point available for Race 2, almost pipping Cortese as the pair were separated by two tenths.

Scott Redding leads Jonathan Rea
Scott Redding leads Jonathan Rea

Loris Baz (Ten Kate Yamaha) had been running in the lead group during the early stages of the race, but he came off his bike at Turn 13 on Lap 6 to take himself out of contention; the Frenchman eventually being classified in 17th place behind Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team).

Christophe Ponsson (Nuova M2 Racing) was not classified following a crash while Takumi Takahashi (MIE Althea Honda) suffered from a crash on Lap 6 at Turn 5. Eugene Laverty (BMW) and Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) were both also not classified in Race 2.

Redding's Race 2 victory makes it six consecutive wins
Redding’s Race 2 victory makes it six consecutive wins – Image by Graeme Brown

Scott Redding – P1 – (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati #45)

“I’m very excited about this weekend. We had two wins, a pole position and a second place. It’s a great result, and for this, I want to thank the whole Aruba.it Racing – Ducati team for putting me in a position to be competitive. The feeling with the bike was great, and I was able to take a good advantage in the first laps. I am very satisfied”.

Scott Redding celebrates a successful weekend in Jerez
Scott Redding celebrates a successful weekend in Jerez – Image by Graeme Brown
Chaz Davies – P2 – (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati #7)

“I’m very happy to be back on the podium. My goal was to fight for the top three positions in all the races, but unfortunately, I couldn’t do it. I think the start was a key factor in getting this result. I want to thank my team for the great work they have done on the bike since Friday morning. Now we go to Portimao with great enthusiasm and conviction”.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P3 – (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Official Team)

“I had a small crash on the out-lap which was a little bit crazy… but then in the race we had a really good start to be right near the front. 10th to third is really positive and we are happy with the performance of the R1, which allowed me to take a solid amount of points even if we could not quite match the winning pace. I’m looking forward to racing at Portimao next weekend, I know we can go well there, I like the circuit and I believe the Yamaha will too, so hopefully we can have a strong result.”

Michael Rinaldi – P4 – (Team GOELEVEN)

“What a race today! We went very fast on the race pace, I have to thank my team for this; we worked well all weekend! A bit of regret because when there are faster track conditions we cannot be so incisive and we had to start in the fourth row and in the Superpole Race we struggled a bit, too. Today’s race was spectacular, I went fast, I came up from behind and I did some good overtakings; I also fought with Rea, it never happened to me, and it’s a beautiful emotion! Let’s improve a little more in Portimao!”

Michael Rinaldi
Michael Rinaldi #21 – Image by Matteo Cavadini
Alex Lowes – P5 – (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)

“It has not been an easy weekend for me but in the end we took some points so it was not bad. This weekend was quite difficult because this is the first time for me to ride the Kawasaki in these extreme temperatures. But every race at Jerez I have improved and I am looking forward to Portimao already. In the Superpole race it was good because I started 14th, so to arrive in P7 I had quite a lot of confidence for the final race. I was stronger today but I was bit behind in terms of track time. We will try to improve for next week.”

Jonathan Rea – P6 –  (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)

“This morning was very good and I felt that it was my chance to go from the very beginning. I did a 1’40.6 from a standing start which was unbelievable. I had a really good rhythm so I was able to cruise the last few laps and really enjoy the race. In race two it was hard because as soon as I got the bike on its side in turn three and accelerated towards four, it was not pushing the tyre in and going forward. I was frustrated with that. We had the same set-up as we had in the Superpole race and the set-up change from yesterday was minimal, so we need to look at the data. This circuit is the one I feared the most, especially in the high temperatures, so it is not a bad outcome.”

Despite a dominant Superpole Race performance, Rea was regulated to sixth in Race 2
Despite a dominant Superpole Race performance, Rea was regulated to sixth in Race 2 – Image by Graeme Brown
Michael van der Mark – P7 – (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Official Team)

“After missing out on the podium in Phillip Island and yesterday, it was good to be back inside the top three for the Superpole Race. I wasn’t really happy with the bike and we tried to sort it out for the second race of the day, but with the conditions being a lot warmer I struggled with the front end, which was not helped by being in a group and the tyre temperature going out of range. We scored some decent points, but now we need to focus on a better result at Portimao. It’s a track I enjoy and I think we’ll be able to challenge at the front.”

Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R 0.000
2 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +3.082
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +5.472
4 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +8.709
5 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +10.772
6 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +12.501
7 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha YZF R1 +13.760
8 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000RR-R +17.472
9 M. Melandri Ducati Panigale V4 R +19.938
10 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +21.375
11 T.  Sykes BMW S1000 RR +23.555
12 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000RR-R +28.209
13 X. Fores Kawasaki ZX-10RR +29.128
14 S. Cortese Kawasaki ZX-10RR +35.062
15 L.  Mercado Ducati Panigale V4 R +35.269
16 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R1 +38.450
17 L.  Baz Yamaha YZF R1 +44.444
18 M. Scheib Kawasaki ZX-10RR +45.370
19 L.  Gabellini Honda CBR1000RR-R +1m08.007
Not Classified
RET S. Barrier Ducati Panigale V4 R 3 Laps
RET C. Ponsson Aprilia RSV4 1000 6 Laps
RET E. Laverty BMW S1000 RR 9 Laps
RET T. Takahashi Honda CBR1000RR-R 14 Laps

Superbike Superpole Race Report

Sunday morning’s 10-lap Tissot Superpole Race was won by five-time Champion Jonathan Rea after the Northern Irishman made a superb start to jump from third on the grid straight to the race lead and lead all 10 laps.

Sunday's Superpole Race proved Jonathan Rea's time to shine
Sunday’s Superpole Race proved Jonathan Rea’s time to shine – Image by Graeme Brown

It was a similar start to Saturday’s Race 1 with polesitter Scott Redding moving down to third at the start, losing out to Rea and Toprak Razgatlioglu. The trio separated out at the start and Rea continued to lead throughout the 10-lap race, with Rea taking victory ahead of Redding; Rea’s 90th victory in WorldSBK.

A technical issue for Razgatlioglu as he was battling with Redding meant he did not finish the race; team-mate Michael van der Mark claiming a podium. It means the front row of Race 2 lined up with Rea ahead of Redding and van der Mark.

Jonathan Rea celebrates his Superpole Race win
Jonathan Rea celebrates his Superpole Race win ahead of Redding and Van der Mark – Image by Graeme Brown

Loris Baz was once again the top Independent rider as the Frenchman claimed fourth on the grid for Race 2 ahead of Chaz Davies in fifth and Tom Sykes  bouncing back from issues in Race 1 to claim sixth on the grid for Race 2; although he did drop three places from his starting position.

Alex Lowes finished in seventh place with American rider Garrett Gerloff in eighth, the first time an American rider has been on the front three rows of the WorldSBK since Nicky Hayden at Buriram in 2017. Leon Haslam claimed the final points-paying position in the Tissot Superpole Race.

Superbike Superpole Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 J. Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 0.000
2 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.522
3 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha YZF R1 +2.701
4 L.  Baz Yamaha YZF R1 +4.804
5 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +6.471
6 T. Sykes BMW S1000 RR +8.561
7 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +11.951
8 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +14.122
9 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000RR-R +14.285
10 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000RR-R +14.554
11 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.337
12 X. Fores Kawasaki ZX-10RR +17.268
13 E. Laverty BMW S1000 RR +17.971
14 S. Cortese Kawasaki ZX-10RR +18.741
15 M. Scheib Kawasaki ZX-10RR +18.786
16 F. Caricasulo Yamaha YZF R1 +19.902
17 L.  Mercado Ducati Panigale V4 R +20.031
18 M. Melandri Ducati Panigale V4 R +25.819
19 C. Ponsson Aprilia RSV4 1000 +26.219
20 L.  Gabellini Honda CBR1000RR-R +36.568
21 S. Barrier Ducati Panigale V4 R +36.574
22 T. Takahashi Honda CBR1000RR-R +36.892
Not Classified
RET T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 4 Laps

WSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Scott Redding  98
 2  Jonathan Rea  74
 3  Alex Lowes  72
 4  Toprak Razgatlioglu  66
 5  Chaz Davies  57
 6  Michael Van Der Mark  47
 7  Loris Baz  37
 8  Alvaro Bautista  37
 9  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  30
 10  Leon Haslam  28
 11  Tom Sykes  26
 12  Marco Melandri  15
 13  Garrett Gerloff  15
 14  Sandro Cortese  14
 15  Xavi Fores  11
 16  Maximilian Scheib  10
 17  Eugene Laverty  6
 18  Christophe Ponsson  4
 19  Federico Caricasulo  4
 20  Leandro Mercado  1

Supersport Race Two Report

The second race of Supersport World Championship was full of drama both during the race and the warm-up lap as Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) claimed his third victory in WorldSSP and his second of the Pirelli Spanish Round; maintaining his 100% win record since moving to the WorldSSP grid and making history: Locatelli is the first Italian rider to three consecutive WorldSSP races.

Andrea Locatelli
Andrea Locatelli – Image by WorldSBK

Italian rookie Locatelli held his lead off the start and pulled away by around six tenths before extending his lead throughout the duration of the shortened race; the race distance reduced from 17 laps to 11 following a bizarre warm-up clash between Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) and Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse); Bassani running into the back of de Rosa on the run to Turn 1. Bassani was unable to take the delayed race start but MV Agusta were able to repair de Rosa’s bike and the Italian joined the race, finishing in fifth.

Locatelli beat Jules Cluzel (GMT94) to claim his third consecutive race victory, with Cluzel having finished second in all three WorldSSP races in 2020 as both Locatelli and Cluzel are showing remarkable consistency in the early stages of the season. Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed the final podium spot during the shortened race.

Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished a comfortable fourth place, with a gap of 3.4 seconds to Mahias in third but finishing just shy of two seconds clear of de Rosa; the Italian fighting his way through the field after the warm-up lap crash. He had a battle with Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha) for fifth place, the pair separated by just 0.152s.

Isaac Viñales
Isaac Viñales – Image by WorldSBK

Spanish rider Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) was seventh, making up for a disappointing Saturday where he had to start from the back of the grid before a retirement in Race 1 as he finished just three tenths behind Perolari. South African rider Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) and Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) had a drag race to the line with Odendaal just holding on to ninth place by just 0.002s.

Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) completed the top ten with the Spanish rider finishing two seconds clear of Danny Web (WRP Wepol Racing) in eleventh. Turkish sensation Can Öncü, who was the youngest rider to win a World Championship race while competing in Moto3, scored points with twelth place.

Hannes Soomer
Hannes Soomer – Image by WorldSBK

Alejandro Ruiz (EMPERADOR Racing Team), who battled from the back of the grid yesterday, finished thirteenth ahead of Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) with Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) claiming the final point ahead of teammate Galang Hendra Pratama who finished in 16th place.

Australian Lachlan Epis was once again just outside the points, this time in 17th, four-seconds off sixteenth place, and finishing ahead of Cresson and Montella.

Lachlan Epis - Image by Graeme Brown
Lachlan Epis – Image by Graeme Brown

Dynavolt Honda duo Patrick Hobelsberger and Hikari Okubo both retired from the race with incidents; Okubo being taken to the medial centre following his crash on Lap 3 for a check-up. Bassani did not start the race following the warm-up crash with de Rosa, the only three riders who were not classified in the race.

Andrea Locatelli – P1 – (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

“We did an incredible job today and I’m really, really happy. The conditions are so difficult, but we can push every time and the work of the team is good. Now we focus on Portimao and I look forward to the round.”

Jules Cluzel – P2 – (GMT94 Yamaha)

“The podium was a target, so job done. To be honest, I struggled because I was not able to follow Andrea or to pass him, but we knew before we came here that we thought it was our worst circuit so it’s good to score 40 points. We now go to Portimao with two podiums. We are not so far away. Between races, we need to improve a little bit and in Portimao, hopefully we can do it there.”

Lucas Mahias – P3 – (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

“For sure it’s a nice result. It’s good. Not the perfect race, I think if maybe I had maybe three or four laps more like a normal race, it’s possible to finish second. I think it’s not the time to crash in the last corner on the last lap, and I keep third position. It’s nice for the team and for me in the Championship.”

Supersport Race Two Results

Pos No. Rider Bike Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R6 0.000
2 16 J.  Cluzel Yamaha YZF R6 +1.867
3 44 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-6R +2.146
4 P. Oettl Kawasaki ZX-6R +5.553
5 R. De Rosa MV Agusta F3 +7.190
6 C. Perolari Yamaha YZF R6 +7.342
7 I.  Viñales Yamaha YZF R6 +7.705
8 S. Odendaal Yamaha YZF R6 +8.676
9 H. Soomer Yamaha YZF R6 +8.678
10 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki ZX-6R +11.356
11 D. Webb Yamaha YZF R6 +14.031
12 C. Öncü Kawasaki ZX-6R +14.326
13 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha YZF R6 +17.715
14 F. Fuligni MV Agusta F3 675 +23.282
15 A. Verdoïa Yamaha YZF R6 +26.368
16 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha YZF R6 +29.415
17 L.  Epis Yamaha YZF R6 +33.596
18 L.  Cresson Yamaha YZF R6 +37.772
19 L.  Montella Yamaha YZF R6 +44.709
Not Classified
RET H. Okubo Honda CBR600RR 9 Laps
RET P. Hobelsberger Honda CBR600RR 10 Laps
RET A. Bassani Yamaha YZF R6

Supersport Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  75
 2  Jules Cluzel  60
 3  Lucas Mahias  42
 4  Corentin Perolari  35
 5  Philipp Oettl  29
 6  Steven Odendaal  28
 7  Hannes Soomer  24
 8  Manuel Gonzalez  23
 9  Raffaele De Rosa  22
 10  Can Alexander Öncü  18
 11  Isaac Viñales  17
 12  Danny Webb  15
 13  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza 8
 14  Patrick Hobelsberger  5
 15  Federico Fuligni  5
 16  Peter Sebestyen  4
 17  Andy Verdoïa  4
 18  Loris Cresson  3
 19  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 20  Luigi Montella  1

 


WorldSSP 300 Race Two Report

Competitive track action at the Pirelli Spanish Round continued with the FIM Supersport 300 Championship as the class continued to deliver typically thrilling and chaotic racing with an 11-strong lead group during the early part of the race doing their best to all claim victory at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto.

Bahattin Sofuoglu
Bahattin Sofuoglu – Image by WorldSBK

Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300 claimed victory after a battle at the front in of the field containing 36 riders, moving to the front of the field before a battle with Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO) on the last lap with Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) also fighting for victory; making up seven tenths of a second on the final lap. De Cancellis was penalised with a five-second time penalty, promoting Carrasco to second place with Sofuoglu, the nephew of WorldSSP legend Kenan Sofuoglu, claiming his first victory.

With Carrasco second and de Cancellis penalised, Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claimed third position for his second podium at Jerez; moving into the Championship leader after his first weekend in WorldSSP300. Booth-Amos started the race in 15th, moving up 12 places throughout the race.

Ana Carrasco - Image WSBK
Ana Carrasco – Image by WorldSBK

Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) claimed fourth place in the thrilling race, finishing a second behind Booth-Amos, but finishing just ahead of Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil AD 78); a tenth between the pair. Kawakami had started from pole position but lost the lead early on but was unable to fight for the victory when the front four of Sofuoglu, Carrasco and de Cancellis broke away. Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) finished in sixth place with just two tenths between Deroue, Kawakami and Orradre.

Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished in seventh place after a tight battle with Ukrainian rider Nick Kalinin (Battley-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) and Thomas Brianti (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300), another group of riders separated by the smallest of margins. De Cancellis was classified in 10th place following his five-second penalty, having been in second place across the line.

Scott Deroue
Scott Deroue – Image by WorldSBK

Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished in 11th place, seven tenths behind de Cancellis and more than three seconds behind Brianti, who was the next rider ahead of him on track. There were three tenths separating Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing)and Sabatucci as they crossed the line.

Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) was also penalised with a five-second time penalty during the race which demoted him from a top-five battle to 13th place with Filippo Rovelli (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) and Alvaro Diaz (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300) rounding out the points in the exciting race.

Meikon Kawakami
Meikon Kawakami – Image by WorldSBK

Tom Edwards bounced back from his DNF on Saturday to cross the line 11-seconds behind the race winner but such is the intensity of WorldSSP 300 competition that was only good enough for 25th place. Countryman Tom Bramich did not earn a spot on the start grid after the young Victorian was taken out in Saturday’s Last Chance Race that cost him his chance to make the Main.

Christian Stange (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) had an off in the early stages of the race which dropped him down to the back of the field and was eventually classified in 31st place. Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) had a crash which took him out of contention for the race victory while Oliver König (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team) also had an off before retiring from the race. Other retirements included Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) and Alejandro Carrion (Smrz Racing – Willi Race).

WorldSSP 300 Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Class Gap
1 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 B 0.000
2 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +0.161
3 T. Booth Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +0.511
4 S. Deroue Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +1.598
5 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 B +1.627
6 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF-R3 A +1.76
7 B. Ieraci Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +2.172
8 N. Kalinin Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +2.395
9 T.Brianti Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +2.401
10 H. De Cancellis Yamaha YZF-R3 B +5.03
11 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +5.77
12 T.Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 B +6.095
13 J.Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +6.707
14 F.Rovelli Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +7.449
15 A. Diaz Yamaha YZF-R3 A +7.477
16 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +7.808
17 25 A. Kroh Yamaha YZF-R3 A +7.815
18 I.Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +7.927
19 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +8.62
20 G Van Straalen Yamaha YZF-R3 A +9.182
21 A. Coppola Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +9.297
22 J.Jahnig KTM RC 390 R A +9.383
23 E. De La Vega Yamaha YZF-R3 B +10.927
24 G. Mastroluca Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +11.013
25 T.Edwards Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +11.463
26 F.Macan Yamaha YZF-R3 A +11.555
27 P.Grassia Yamaha YZF-R3 A +11.838
28 J.Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +18.391
29 T.Bercot Yamaha YZF-R3 B +18.408
30 K. Aloisi Yamaha YZF-R3 A +23.79
31  C. Stange KTM RC 390 R A +37.987
Not Classified
Ret Y.Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 2 Laps
Ret M. Perez Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 2 Laps
Ret S. Markarian Yamaha YZF-R3 B 4 Laps
Ret O. König KTM RC 390 R B 5 Laps
Ret A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 A

WorldSSP 300 Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Tom Booth-Amos  36
 2  Bahattin Sofuoglu  35
 3  Unai Orradre  35
 4  Ana Carrasco  29
 5  Scott Deroue  29
 6  Thomas Brianti  18
 7  Nick Kalinin  14
 8  Yuta Okaya  13
 9  Kevin Sabatucci  13
 10  Meikon Kawakami  11
 11  Bruno Ieraci  9
 12  Ton Kawakami  9
 13  Alvaro Diaz  8
 14  Hugo De Cancellis  6
 15  Samuel Di Sora  4
 16  Jeffrey Buis  3
 17  Kim Aloisi  3
 18  Filippo Rovelli  2
 19  Alejandro Carrion  2
 20  Koen Meuffels  1

2020 WorldSBK calendar

  1. March 1 – Phillip Island, Australia
  2. August 2 – Jerez, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  3. August 9 – Portimao, Portugal (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  4. August 30 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  5. September 6 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  6. September 20 – Catalunya, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  7. October 4 – Magny-Cours, France (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  8. October 11 – Circuito San Juan Villicum, Argentina (TBC) (WSBK-WSSP)
  9. November 8 – Misano, Italy (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)

Source: MCNews.com.au

Saturday wrap from Jerez WSBK | All classes

2020 WorldSBK – Jerez

Superbike Race One Report

Reigning Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) made a good start from the front row to take the lead from polesitter Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) while Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) was also able to jump from fifth to move into second; pushing Redding down into third place.

Rea leads early on

Redding had to fight his way past Toprak Razgatlioglu on Lap 11 to move back into second place, passing Turkish rider into Turn 6 to move into second place before instantly starting to apply the pressure to Rea.

Redding had to fight his way past Toprak Razgatlioglu on Lap 11

It took just three more laps before Redding would make the move for the lead.

Redding leads from Rea

The race winning move came on Lap 14 out of 20 when Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) passed Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) down into Turn 6; using the power of his Ducati to get alongside before forcing the five-time WorldSBK Champion wide to claim the race lead and his first victory since moving to WorldSBK.

Rea came home in second place ahead of Razgatlioglu, who had to fend off a last-lap charge from Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) to hold on to third place. Davies tried to make moves at the right-hander of Turn 1 and around the outside of the Turn 6 hairpin, but he ran wide; Razgatlioglu holding on to take third place with Davies in fourth.

Toprak Razgatlioglu

Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) was the top Independent rider in the race with fifth place, running in the lead quartet for the majority of the race before a late charge from Davies moved him down to fifth place. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GOELEVEN) continued his impressive weekend with a sixth-place finish from a 10th place start.

Michael Ruben Rinaldi

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) finished in seventh place, four seconds away from Rinaldi and almost in a race of his own in the latter stages as he finished eight seconds clear of eighth-placed Marco Melandri (Barni Racing); the Italian finishing an impressive eighth place after making up 11 places throughout the race. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), who led the Championship coming into the race, finished in ninth after being passed by Melandri in the latter stages.

Marco Melandri

Bautista’s HRC team-mate, Leon Haslam, was 10th ahead of Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) and Christophe Ponsson (Nuova M2 Racing) scoring points on his return to the Championship as the privateer team brought Aprilia back to the Championship as part of a wildcard plan.

The WorldSBK leading pack early on in the race

Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished in 13th place with Sandro Cortese (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) and Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) rounding out the points-paying positions. Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance), debutant Lorenzo Gabellini (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team) and team-mate Takumi Takahashi were the last classified runners.

Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was running in the leading group but suffered a technical issue as he approached Turn 1 in the early stages of the race, ruling him out of contention in the early stages of the race. He was able to take the bike back to the pit lane despite the issue. Sykes was able to re-join the race on Lap 12; the issue not proving to be terminal.

Sykes’ issue was not the only issue during the race as Michael van der Mark (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) retired from the race on Lap 8, lots of smoke coming out the back of his bike forcing him to retire from Race 1 as he was running in the top 10. Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) suffered a high speed crash at Turn 4 but was able to ride the bike back to the pit lane, although it ended his race, while Leandro ‘Tati’ Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) also suffered a crash at Turn 6.


Scott Redding – P1

It’s a great day for me: pole position and victory, couldn’t have done better. The race was very hard because of the temperature. In some moments I suffered a lot. I would like to thank the team for providing me with a bike that has worked very well. When did I start to suffer? Since I entered the pit lane. These are extreme conditions and tomorrow it will be even more difficult. But this is a problem all riders have to deal with.

#ESPWorldSBK at Circuito de Jerez – Ángel Nieto – Race 1.
Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati)
Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +1.147
Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) +2.252
Jonathan Rea – P2

That is probably the best performance we have done in Jerez for a number of years now. We have got to be really happy with our effort but I am a little bit disappointed that I had nothing left at the end for Scott. I had a few front slides in turn two and it was enough just to knock my confidence a little bit to start thinking to bring it home. We are not loading the front enough so we have some areas to improve for tomorrow. The good thing is that the rear tyre was working really well all race and had a lot of traction. This is not the strongest circuit for us but I was right there in the mix until the last few laps.”

Jonathan Rea
Toprak Razgatlioglu – P3

Today was very tough for all the riders, it was incredibly hot. I was fighting for the win, but it was just out of reach because in the closing stages the bike began to slide a lot. I tried my best and finishing third means we can take good points for the championship. I was fighting with Chaz Davies in the closing stages, but I managed to hold him off with some defensive riding. After practice I wasn’t completely happy, but it’s good to know that we can fight for wins even after a difficult Friday, so I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu
Chaz Davies – P4

Unfortunately the start wasn’t the best and it compromised the possibility of fighting for the podium from the very first laps. During the race, however, the pace was good and allowed me to recover many positions. Satisfied? I would be if I raised a trophy. We have to work tomorrow morning to try and work out some small details that will allow me to be more incisive“.

Chaz Davies
Loris Baz – P5

Not quite a podium yet, but I’m still happy. We have to take the most points we can without making mistakes, and fighting with factory guys is always good. The qualifying was OK, I felt there was a bit more left but it still wasn’t a bad position. In the race, I struggled at the beginning, it took me three laps or so to be on the pace. The bike was sliding a lot and I had to stop using the rear brake, which is unusual for me. Then I started to come back towards the front three, but I couldn’t find a way to pass. In the slipstream the tyres overheated quite a lot and I dropped to fifth, but overall I’m happy with the job we’ve done today.

Loris Baz
Alvaro Bautista – P7

I was hoping for better feeling during the race, similar to what I had during the practices. I’m not thinking to the race result here, I’m referring to my feeling with the bike because we’d worked well until this point of the weekend. My Superpole lap time was not so bad even though I didn’t exploit my qualifying tyre to its full potential. So we expected more from this race. Instead we struggled with front feeling and the bike’s turning, something that we had partially solved in the test in Aragon but that here, with higher temperatures and such a slippery track due to the extreme conditions, prevented us from pushing as we wanted during the race. So even though I’m not happy with the feeling I had today on the bike, on another hand I’m happy that we are very clear on where we need to work and the problem we have to solve.”

Bautista showed bursts of speed
Alex Lowes – P9

I tucked the front in the first lap of Superpole, which was a shame, as it put pressure on for the one lap on the qualifying tyre. In the race I struggled a lot more than I expected. The SC2 front tyre worked really well for me on Friday afternoon and I did a lot of laps on it, but today it did not seem to work as well. I think I need a bit more experience of the Kawasaki in hot conditions to get the most out of it. It is easy to forget that this is my second proper ride on it. When you go around Jerez in the winter and the weather is cool you just ride around, can do loads of laps, and everything feels good. The you come here in these temperatures and everything feels a bit different. I had to just manage the race the best I could and we will try to improve a bit for tomorrow.

Alex Lowes
Leon Haslam – P10

It felt like a very long race to be honest. We suffered a similar problem to Australia, which began in the opening laps and gradually got worse throughout the race. I struggled to manage the front and the grip and essentially went backwards. So we need to make a new plan for tomorrow, hopefully rectifying some of these problems. I think our pace through the opening laps can see us up with the top five so I’m confident we can take a step forward tomorrow.”

Leon Haslam

Superbike Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 S. Redding Ducati 0.000
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki +1.147
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha +2.252
4 C. Davies Ducati +2.699
5 L.  Baz Yamaha +3.301
6 M. Rinaldi Ducati +6.367
7 A.Bautista Honda +10.228
8 M. Melandri Ducati +18.713
9 A. Lowes Kawasaki +20.421
10 L.  Haslam Honda +24.361
11 G. Gerloff Yamaha +26.610
12 C. Ponsson Aprilia +34.651
13 X. Fores Kawasaki +34.709
14 S. Cortese Kawasaki +38.138
15 E. Laverty BMW +38.365
16 S. Barrier Ducati +49.601
17 L.  Gabellini Honda +52.357
18 T. Takahashi Honda +53.802

WSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Scott Redding  64
 2  Alex Lowes  58
 3  Jonathan Rea  52
 4  Toprak Razgatlioglu  50
 5  Chaz Davies  32
 6  Michael Van Der Mark  31
 7  Loris Baz  31
 8  Alvaro Bautista  29
 9  Leon Haslam  23
 10  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  17
 11  Tom Sykes  17
 12  Sandro Cortese  12
 13  Maximilian Scheib  10
 14  Marco Melandri  8
 15  Xavi Fores  8
 16  Garrett Gerloff  7
 17  Eugene Laverty  6
 18  Christophe Ponsson  4
 19  Federico Caricasulo  4

Supersport Race One Report

With track temperatures hitting and exceeding 60°c during the FIM Supersport World Championship Race 1, the opening WorldSSP race from the Pirelli Spanish took place in sweltering conditions but that did not stop Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) taking victory despite an early-race battle with Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha).

P1 Andrea Locatelli

Locatelli held the lead off the line but French rider Cluzel made the move to take the lead on the opening lap of the race. He was able to hold the lead until lap five when Locatelli was able to make a move back to take the lead and promptly extended his lead to Cluzel to take the Italian rider out of range; eventually finishing the race three seconds clear of Cluzel.

Soomer

Cluzel finished a comfortable second, with a margin of almost five seconds, despite the lead group of three to break away along with Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing); Cluzel able to finish X seconds clear of German rider Oettl. Oettl also had a comfortable run to the podium on his Kawasaki ZX-6R, the top Kawasaki rider in Race 1 with both Locatelli and Cluzel both riding Yamaha YZF R6 machines.

Perolari

Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed a hard-fought fourth place ahead of Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) in Race 1; the pair fighting on the last lap with Mahias making a move through the fast right-handers towards the end of the lap to secure fourth place. De Rosa had been closing in on Mahias throughout the latter stages and passed him at Turn 6, the pair getting their elbows out as they made their way through the corner.

Locatelli leading earlier on

Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) finished in sixth place as he held off a challenge from Corentin Perolari (GMT94 Yamaha). The pair were separated by just three tenths of a second as they crossed the line with 2019 WorldSSP300 Champion Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) finishing in eighth. Spaniard Gonzalez had to fight off Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team) and Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) who rounded out the top 10; the trio separated by seven tenths as they crossed the line.

Andrea Locatelli takes the win

Alejandro Ruiz (EMPERADOR Racing Team) finished an impressive 11th place after starting at the back of the grid following a penalty for incorrect tyre pressures; making up a number of positions throughout the 17-lap race to secure a points finish. Ruiz, the highest-placed finisher in the WorldSSP Challenge, finished two-and-a-half seconds clear of Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) in 12th.

Can Oncu

Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) finished in 13th place, three seconds behind Webb but a comfortable nine seconds clear of Belgian rider Loris Cresson (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth). Cresson was 16 seconds clear of WorldSSP Challenge competitor Luigi Montella (DK MOTORSPORT), who claimed the final point to be awarded in the race with 15th.

Locatelli leading early on in the race

Australian newcomer Lachlan Epis as stand-in rider for the MPM Routz Racing Team was the last finisher home in 16th place, just missing out on a World Championship point after struggling with a lack of set-up time to make the tyres last in the hot conditions.

Lachlan Epis – GeeBee Image

Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) was running strongly in the points during his race but the WorldSSP Challenge competitor had a crash late in the race; the Italian taken to the medical centre for checks following the incident but was declared fit after the check-up. Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) and Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) had an incident at Turn 4 which meant Hungarian rider Sebestyen retired from the race and was taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the incident; later being declared unfit due to concussion. Verdoïa was able to continue in the race but later had an issue which meant he temporarily stopped on track.

Other retirements in the race included Indonesian rider Galang Hendra Pratama (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing), Hikari Okubo (Dynavolt Honda), Patrick Hobelsberger (Dynavolt Honda) and Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing); the Spanish rider starting from the back of the grid following a stewards’ decision for incorrect tyre pressures.


P1 Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)

It’s a fantastic day today, we did a good job, but the conditions are very crazy. It’s so hot and so difficult to push on the bike but we need to understand to take a bit more confidence in these conditions because it’s important for tomorrow and the second race. I think we did a really good job today and this is important for the Championship and also for me.”

#ESPWorldSBK WorldSSP at Circuito de Jerez – Ángel Nieto – Race 1
Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team)
Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) +3.052
Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) +7.766
P2 Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha)

I’m happy. It was the target after practice and qualifying. We knew we could not really follow the rider of the BARDAHL but I gave my best to be second. I tried my best, for sure, to be first but today was too difficult, too much risk. With the hot conditions I was sliding the front, sliding the rear. Actually, I’m happy, I’m proud because I trained hard for these hot conditions. I knew more or less the feeling and I tried to improve the bike in these conditions. It worked today so second is a good result. We still have a race tomorrow so we have to improve a little bit tomorrow and maybe I can fight with him.”

P3 Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing)

I am very happy with my first WorldSSP podium. Manuel Puccetti gave me the opportunity to ride in this team and after one and a half difficult years before then it was a good sign that I can still ride a bike. At the first round in Phillip Island I had a good feeling with the bike and I thought I could be on the podium, but I threw it away. I thought today I could stay calm. I had a good start and immediately we were in front and the gap was already there. I said to myself to keep calm and do not throw it way again. The front was difficult in the race as we had 62°C on the asphalt. The heat was terrible but I am happy.”


Supersport Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 A. Locatelli Yamaha 0.000
2 J.  Cluzel Yamaha +3.052
3 p. Oettl Yamaha +7.766
4 L.  Mahias Yamaha +10.908
5 R. De Rosa MV Agusta +11.979
6 S. Odendaal Yamaha +17.464
7 C. Perolari Yamaha +17.738
8 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki +23.083
9 C. Öncü Kawasaki +23.419
10 H. Soomer Yamaha +23.736
11 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha +28.948
12 D. Webb Yamaha +31.363
13 F. Fuligni MV Agusta +34.001
1+4 L.  Cresson Yamaha +43.027
15 L.  Montella Yamaha +59.311
16 L.  Epis Yamaha +1m07.891
Not Classified
RET A. Bassani Yamaha 2 Laps
RET A. Verdoïa Yamaha 4 Laps
RET P. Hobelsberger Honda 5 Laps
RET H. Okubo Honda 6 Laps
RET I.  Viñales Yamaha 11 Laps
RET P. Sebestyen Yamaha 12 Laps
RET G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha 15 Laps

Supersport Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Andrea Locatelli  50
 2  Jules Cluzel  40
 3  Lucas Mahias  26
 4  Corentin Perolari  25
 5  Steven Odendaal  20
 6  Hannes Soomer  17
 7  Manuel Gonzalez  17
 8  Philipp Oettl  16
 9  Can Alexander Öncü  14
 10  Raffaele De Rosa  11
 11  Danny Webb  10
 12  Isaac Viñales  8
 13  Alejandro Ruiz Carranza  5
 14  Patrick Hobelsberger  5
 15  Peter Sebestyen  4
 16  Federico Fuligni  3
 17  Andy Verdoïa  3
 18  Loris Cresson  3
 19  Jaimie Van Sikkelerus  2
 20  Luigi Montella  1

WorldSSP 300 Race One Report

Thrilling racing and scorching temperatures greeted FIM Supersport 300 World Championship riders for the start of the 2020 WorldSSP season at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, with the delayed season getting underway with a chaotic race, with Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) breaking away from the lead group at around half distance before going on to take victory.

Orradare leads

Orradre took advantage of Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) running wide on Lap 5 to move into the lead before pulling out around half a second to break the slipstream effect, enabling the Spanish rider to control the race without pressure from the chasing pack. Until Carrasco ran wide, there had been a lead group of nine riders.

Ana Carrasco

The battle for second went down to the last corner of the last lap between Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT), Carrasco, Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) and Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT), Thomas Brianti (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) and Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WSSP300).

Nick Kalinin

Carrasco was second heading into the final corner after an aggressive move on Deroue on the final lap but the 2018 Champion ran wide at the final corner; moving her down to seventh place. Booth-Amos took advantage of this to move into second place while Deroue finished third, Okaya fourth and Brianti fifth; just 0.058s separating the trio at the line. Booth-Amos had a Margin of 0.087s ahead of Deroue.

WorldSSP 300

Behind Carrasco in seventh, Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project) finished in eighth place around four seasons behind Carrasco but in a tight battle with Alvaro Diaz (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WSSP300) with the pair separated by 0.002s at the line. Sabatucci and Diaz were part of a second group of riders behind the leaders which also featured Nick Kalinin (Battley-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) and Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing); the pair finishing tenth and 11th respectively. The top 11 were separated by just 7.836s after the 10-lap race.

Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing)

Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) was 12th after making his way through the Last Chance Race to claim a point-scoring finish, finishing two tenths clear of Kim Aloisi (ProGP Racing). Alejandro Carrion (Smrz Racing – Willi Race) finished in 14th place with Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) claiming the final point. Like Di Sora, he had to fight his way through the Last Chance Race to make it onto the grid.

There was an incident involving Johan Gimbert (GP Project) and Hugo De Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO) in the race with a battle on track, with both riders retiring from the race following the crash after completing one lap. De Cancellis had been at the back of the grid following a penalty for a tyre pressure infringement and had made his way into 24th position before the incident. Other retirements include Tom Bercot (ProGP Racing) on the opening lap, Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) who had came off his bike of his own accord.

Tom Edwards had fought to earn his spot in the main WorldSSP300 race but ultimately failed to finish – GeeBee Image

Australian Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) also failed to finish while countryman Tom Bramich did not make the WorldSSP300 Main after going out of the earlier Last Chance Race.

Tom Bramich did not make the WorldSSP300 Main after going out of the earlier Last Chance Race – GeeBee Image

P1 Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing)

To take my first world championship win here today is an incredible feeling and I’m very happy. In the first part of the race I stayed in the lead group, but just after the halfway point I decided to try to go alone and I managed to pull a bit of a gap at the front. From then it was just a case of trying to maintain the advantage, but I actually managed to extend the gap over the final laps. To win today was amazing, but now we need to focus on Race 2 tomorrow, where I hope we can be in the lead group again and in a position to fight for another victory. Thank you to both the MS Racing Team and Yamaha for their incredible support.”

#ESPWorldSBK WorldSSP 300 at Circuito de Jerez – Ángel Nieto – Race 1
Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing)
Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) +2.341
Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) +2.428
P2 Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki)

Obviously it’s nice to be on the podium but I had the pace to win today. Unfortunately in qualifying I was on my fast lap and the red flag came out, so I started 15th today. I made some mistakes but it was my first Supersport 300 race coming from GP. I made some mistakes, dropped back to 17th then pushed my way forwards and finally it worked. I think tomorrow we can get a better start and push for the win.”

P3 Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT)

“I had a good start from 13th position and my first lap was good too, then I was just looking at what was my pace, what was the pace of the others and it wasn’t too bad. But my bike was getting really hot and in the end, I was thinking “okay, I go first” but I didn’t have the pace to be first to be honest. Then Unai overtook me, I made a mistake, Unai had a gap and I made another mistake and then there was a gap. Second was the ideal to finish. On the last lap, Ana overtook me on the straight and the next corner she touched me, then we came together at the last corner. I took the inside; she went for the inside too and we touched again so I outbraked myself and finished third. I’m happy with that but I was hoping for second.”


WorldSSP 300 Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Class Gap
1 U. Orradre Yamaha YZF-R3 A 0.000
2 T.Booth-Amos Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +2.341
3 S. Deroue Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +2.428
4 Y.Okaya Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +2.483
5 T.Brianti Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +2.486
6 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha YZF-R3 B +2.614
7 A. Carrasco Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +3.278
8 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +7.255
9 A. Diaz Yamaha YZF-R3 A +7.257
10 N. Kalinin Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +7.440
11 Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 B +7.836
12 S. Di Sora Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +11.855
13 K. Aloisi Yamaha YZF-R3 A +12.146
14 A. Carrion Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +12.440
15 K. Meuffels Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +13.124
16 A. Kroh Yamaha YZF-R3 A +13.132
17 Jahnig KTM RC 390 R A +14.175
18 O. König KTM RC 390 R B +14.330
19 S. Markarian Yamaha YZF-R3 B +14.713
20 Van Straalen Yamaha YZF-R3 A +17.540
21 E. De La Vega Yamaha YZF-R3 B +17.551
22 B. Ieraci Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +17.580
23 A. Coppola Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +17.594
24 Iglesias Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +17.643
25 Grassia Yamaha YZF-R3 A +17.908
26 Macan Yamaha YZF-R3 A +18.345
27 C. Stange KTM RC 390 R A +20.986
28 Rovelli Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +22.816
29 G. Mastroluca Kawasaki Ninja 400 B +27.911
30 Buis Kawasaki Ninja 400 A +1m33.926
31 M. Kawakami Yamaha YZF-R3 B +1m45.246
Not Classified
RET T,Edwards Kawasaki Ninja 400 B 2 Laps
RET 8 M. Perez Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 8 Laps
RET 7 J.  Gimbert Kawasaki Ninja 400 A 9 Laps
RET 64 H. De Cancellis Yamaha YZF-R3 B 9 Laps

WorldSSP 300 Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Unai Orradre  25
 2  Tom Booth-Amos  20
 3  Scott Deroue  16
 4  Yuta Okaya  13
 5  Thomas Brianti  11
 6  Bahattin Sofuoglu  10
 7  Ana Carrasco  9
 8  Kevin Sabatucci  8
 9  Alvaro Diaz  7
 10  Nick Kalinin  6
 11  Ton Kawakami  5
 12  Samuel Di Sora  4
 13  Kim Aloisi  3
 14  Alejandro Carrion  2
 15  Koen Meuffels  1

WorldSBK Sunday Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

MV Agusta riders disqualified from Phillip Island results

WorldSSP 2020

A curious development unfolded overnight with Dorna releasing a statement, which we include at the bottom of the page, that details a decision to exclude all three MV Agusta riders, Raffaele De Rosa, Federico Fuligni and Randy Krummenacher, from the results of the opening Phillip Island round of the 2020 World Supersport Championship.

De Rosa had finished second in that opening round, Fuligni was ninth while Krummenacher crashed out early on in the race. 

We reported early last month that Randy Krummenacher had walked away from his contract with MV Agusta Reparto Corse for what the 30-year-old alleged were ‘serious breaches on the part of the company that compromise both the rider‘s performance as well as his professionalism, reputation and personal integrity‘.

Krummenacher also stated that he ‘has also moved to inform the competent bodies, responsible for verifying any technical irregularities.’

MV Agusta put out a tersely worded statement in response to a seemingly snap decision by the Swiss rider to walk away from his contract with MV Agusta Reparto Corse after alleging ‘serious breaches on the part of the company that compromise both the rider‘s performance as well as his professionalism, reputation and personal integrity‘.

Krummenacher also stated that he ‘has also moved to inform the competent bodies, responsible for verifying any technical irregularities.’


Randy Krummenacher

This is not a pleasant situation and I never wanted any of this. The aim was to fight for the world title once more but unfortunately, the foundations needed to move ahead with the project with MV Agusta Reparto Corse are not there. I have had to take this decision in order to preserve my moral and professional integrity, as well as my safety. Throughout my career, I have always tried to do the right thing, giving it my all in any situation, even the most challenging. But this time there was only one decision I could make. I cannot say more about my motives at this time, but further details will be communicated in due course.


We mentioned when first publishing those remarks from Krummenacher that you could perhaps read into that what you would, but that reading between the lines one could surmise that Krummenacher was accusing the MV backed team of perhaps not following the rules…MV Agusta then put out the following terse statement, distancing themselves from the team organisation, and strongly denying any wrong-doing.


MV Agusta Statement

MV Agusta Motor S.p.A. had no knowledge of the rider Randy Krummenacher’s decision to terminate his contract with MVRC S.r.l. after only competing in the first race of the 2020 Supersport World Championship.

It being understood that this decision comes as a total surprise to MV Agusta Motor S.p.A., who learned about it through the media. MV Agusta Motor S.p.A. points out that MVRC S.r.l. is a completely independent company which participates in the Supersport World Championship as a private external team.

This apparently sudden decision by the rider was completely unexpected as the company had received no prior warning signs about a possible contentious situation from either Krummenacher nor from the MVRC team.

Following the very encouraging results obtained during the first race of the 2020 World Supersport Championship in Phillip Island, with a front row position on the race’s starting grid, as well as a second place finish by Raffaele De Rosa in the race, MV Agusta was entirely satisfied with the performance and competitiveness of the F3 Supersport bike. Since its inception the F3 Supersport project has brought MV Agusta several vice-World-Championship titles and numerous race wins and podium finishes.

Due to the fact that MV Agusta Motor S.p.A. has no direct contractual relationship with the rider, we will start a comprehensive investigation concerning this matter and reserve any and all rights to take all proper legal actions to protect our brand image and reputation.

MV Agusta Reparto Corse Fuligni De Rosa
2020 MV Agusta Reparto Corse WSSP – Fuligni & De Rosa

And then overnight we receive this statement from Dorna outlining the removal of the MV riders from the results of the opening round.  The Dorna statement does not allege any intentional wrong doing by MV Agusta but instead mentions ‘an unintentional engine infringement.’


Decision of the FIM World Superbike Stewards
Penalty notice for MV Agusta Reparto Corse team

Following an investigation, the MV Agusta Reparto Corse team’s results from Phillip Island will not stand due to an unintentional engine infringement.

On July 30th 2020, the FIM World Superbike Stewards received a report from the FIM Superbike World Championship Technical Director, stating that some engines belonging to the MV Agusta Reparto Corse team were unsealed without prior permission after the Yamaha Finance Australian Round. This is an infringement of the 2020 FIM Superbike, Supersport and Supersport 300 World Championships regulations and specifically, article 2.3.10 in general and paragraph d.

FIM WorldSBK Stewards understood that the team’s act didn’t occur with an intention to make an infringement nor to gain an advantage in any way. This was more of a visual mechanical check and the result of a miscommunication.

The team brought it upon themselves to contact the FIM about the issue. Nonetheless, the process was not performed as per the Championship regulations and therefore, article 2.3.10.d is very clear and must be applied in any case.

For the above reasons, the Stewards, in accordance to the FIM Disciplinary and Arbitration code, have decided to penalise the team with the disqualification from all events in which the below engines have been used 2 from Randy Krummenacher and 1 each from Raffaele De Rosa and Federico Fulligni.


A curious sequence of events indeed, and one that has changed the results of the Phillip Island season opener and thus the championship points standings. Jules Cluzel is promoted to second in the championship and the riders behind him also gain more points due to the removel of the MV Agusta riders from the results and move up the order.

2020 World Supersport Championship Points

  1. Locatelli 25
  2. Cluzel 20
  3. Perolari 16
  4. Mahias 13
  5. Soomer 11
  6. Odendaal 10
  7. Gonzalez 9
  8. Vinales 8
  9. Oncu 7
  10. Webb 6
  11. Hobelsberger 5
  12. Sebestyen 4
  13. Verdoia 3
  14. Van Sikkelerus 2
  15. Cresson 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

WorldSBK wrap up from day one at Jerez

2020 WorldSBK

The 2020 Motul FIM Superbike World Championship’s resumed overnight under the scorching Spanish sun at Jerez and it was Ten Kate Yamaha’s Loris Baz quickest in the heat to top the day’s running ahead of the Pirelli Spanish Round.

Baz’s time of 1’40.249s was just over a tenth faster than Italian rider Rinaldi’s time from the second practice session, but Rinaldi was able to bounce back from a crash in Free Practice 1 to top the second practice session. As temperatures got higher throughout the day, so did the action on track with 15 out of the 23 riders separated by one second in the combined times.

Loris Baz – P1

It was a good first day back, even if it was a bit up and down this morning with a small technical issue. We decided after the tests in Barcelona and Assen that we have to change something on the bike, especially for the heat, so we made some adjustments this morning and I’m confident ahead of the race tomorrow. It’s always great to finish a session in first and to improve the lap times, even if it’s only a Friday. This afternoon we did 20 laps on one set of tyres and it felt pretty good, so I think we’re in a strong position.”

Reigning Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki) was second fastest overall with a 1’41.311s; less than a tenth behind Baz’s fastest overall time. Championship leader and Rea’s KRT teammate, Alex Lowes, was 10th fastest but within four-tenths of the fastest time of the day; showing the competitive nature of the field and machines in action at Jerez.

Jonathan Rea – P2

We still have some work to do but I felt quite good out there today. Pirelli brought three possible race tyres for the longer races so we tried to understand what the best one would be. We did enough laps on each to draw some conclusions for tomorrow, and we narrowed it down to two rear options. The bike is working quite OK. We have moved away from our base set-up this summer, with two recent tests in Misano and Montmelo and the bike is turning well. We never really went for a time attack in the second session so this was just a working day really, to understand where we are.”

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes – P10

I think the biggest challenge is going to be tyres in these kinds of temperatures, so in the afternoon session I just used the same tyre and tried to adapt the bike a little bit. We made a few small changes and rode until the end of the session. My pace was not too bad and I did my best laps at the end. That was quite good and I just need to improve the front set-up of the bike, during the trail-braking phase. If we can improve that for tomorrow I think we will be not too bad. This afternoon’s session was better than this morning’s session and I think it was more relevant for temperature. I felt a bit more comfortable and the races should be held in hotter conditions, later in the day.”

Alex Lowes

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) was fourth fastest overall for the day as he continued his impressive pace at Jerez, with his team-mate Leon Haslam finishing the day with the ninth fastest time.

Alvaro Bautista – P4

My feeling with the bike is much better than it was in Australia. Conditions were tough today with a slippery track and very high temperatures. I’m happy though because we tested many things, especially in terms of the tyres, to understand the range available and see what might work in the hot conditions here; consumption will be key. I think we’ve taken a step forward and now need to continue in this direction, making small adjustments to build our confidence. Our rhythm is not bad, and I think we need to focus on being constant in this weekend’s races, considering the track conditions. We still have some small changes to make tomorrow of course but, all in all, an encouraging first day’s work.”

Alvaro Bautista
Leon Haslam – P9

Today’s been tough to be honest. The lap times were coming easily during our first exit but then we tried a few things and perhaps went in the wrong direction with a few items. It was tricky in the afternoon and although we tested something else, we ended up going back to the morning setting, with which we got closer in terms of the lap times. We tried many of the tyre options and I’m clear as far as that’s concerned, but we still have more to understand and also need to do a long-run. So, we still have work to do but I don’t think we’re far off though and today has definitely had its positives, which we’ll take into Saturday.”

Bautista headed Aruba Ducati duo Scott Redding and Chaz Davies, who were sixth and seventh respectively. The two British riders were separated by just 0.030s as the day ended, although Davies did have an incident at Turn 2 but was able to continue.

Scott Redding – P5

It’s been a very good day even though the conditions are really extreme, especially for the tyres. I tried to work in this direction this afternoon and we had positive results. I think that this weekend it will be very important to manage not only the tyres but also our body as we’ll have three races and they will all be particularly demanding. I am very confident though: I feel I am in the best possible condition“.

Scott Redding
Chaz Davies – P6

I think today we have seen the improvements we made in the last two tests in Misano and Barcelona. The bike has worked pretty well and the feeling is extremely positive. The objective for this weekend? I want to fight for the podium in every race. The pace is good even if in the race it is always a different story. In FP3 tomorrow morning we will continue to work to improve the feeling and get to the Superpole in the best conditions“.

Chaz Davies

Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha) was seventh fastest with a 1’40.507s, beating Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha) by less than a tenth of a second. With the top 10 so close, the action throughout Tissot Superpole and racing is sure to be exciting.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P7

Today was good start, but we were trying new set-ups on the bike that didn’t always give us the improvements we maybe expected. It’ll be a long race and very hot and, while we don’t have the best feeling at the moment, hopefully tomorrow we can make another step. Because of the track conditions, the bike is sliding quite a lot, but we will work to improve in this area tomorrow morning ahead of qualifying and Race 1.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu
Michael van der Mark – P8

It’s awesome to be back on track with all the other guys again. To be honest I couldn’t find a good rhythm this morning and struggled with set-up, but in the afternoon we changed quite a lot on the bike. I didn’t feel too comfortable with it under braking but then we made another big step during the session. We did a longer run and I felt much more comfortable. We’re missing a few tenths from the race pace, but at least I’m feeling more confident with . Tomorrow morning, we should be able to make another big step, but qualifying and the race are the most important and, as I said, we just need to find a couple of tenths for both.”

Michael van der Mark

Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha) and teammate Federico Caricasulo were 11th and 12th respectively for the day, with both riders able to show their pace throughout the two practice sessions; Italian rider Caricasulo able to improve slightly throughout Free Practice 2.

Garrett Gerloff – P11

It was definitely a positive start, it felt good right off the bat. We made some changes in Barcelona that have definitely worked here. This afternoon with the track much hotter, we struggled to maintain the same consistency and outright pace, but we made some good progress in the end. We will focus on improving in the hotter temperatures, as that is what the race conditions will be tomorrow. I’m looking forward to tomorrow and I’m confident that we have a good bike. The race pace isn’t bad, we’re not far off so after a few changes we’ll be right where we need to be.”

Federico Caricasulo – P12

Today was very tough, as it was really hot and FP2 was particularly hard. We did a good job because we improved the bike between the practice sessions and managed the same lap time, despite the hotter temperatures. I’m happy because I didn’t use the soft tyre, I just focused on race runs. I think we are very close to all of the other Yamaha riders, which is good, and I am looking forward to tomorrow.

Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad) was the highest-placed BMW rider in 13th place, with Eugene Laverty (BMW Motorrad) in 15th after suffering some clutch problems early on before then crashing at turn two.

Shaun Muir – BMW Team Principal

“We hit a few unexpected problems today, however, despite that in the more difficult session of FP2, both riders were able to put some really good race simulations in which overall potentially placed them P6,P7 so on paper that was very promising.
Overall, we had a few issues to sort out which I’m glad happened today and not tomorrow. I feel FP3 will be a good session for us to go do another race simulation. Thereafter we go into Superpole where hopefully we can get both riders onto the front two rows which will put in good stead for the race.”

Tom Sykes – P13

This morning was just one of those sessions, we had some bedding in to do with the braking system which wasn’t ideal and had a few changes to do, so this morning I wouldn’t say was a wasted session but we got a lot of things out of the way ready for FP2. The afternoon session we focused on working towards a race time and estimating the tyres and temperatures which I felt pretty good in, especially during that first exit so I am looking forward to tomorrow to see what we can do on the BMW S 1000 RR.

Eugene Laverty – P15

Its nice to be back at a race weekend, we’ve been testing a fair bit recently but nothing compares to it when your against the clock. Unfortunately this morning that didn’t work well for me as a I had a small issue with the clutch, which lost us a lot of time which is never easy as your up against it from the word go. FP2 was really good in the first half, we were able to push and put some good laps in which were towards to top of the leader board but unfortunately I had a crash at T2 which again set us back in the session. We are a little behind in the sessions but ideally I am pushing to get myself into those first two rows which will help us hugely for the race.”

WorldSBK returnee Marco Melandri continued to get up to speed throughout the day by finishing between the two BMW riders.

In 16th was Chilean Maximilian Scheib (Orelac Kawasaki) as he posted a 1’41.230, the last rider within one second of Baz’s fastest time of the day as he Leandro ‘Tati’ Mercado (Motocorsa Ducati) in 17th place. Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti) and Sandro Cortese (OutDo Kawasaki) were 18th and 19th, just edging Nuova M2 Racing’s Christophe Ponsson, a wildcard entry on an Aprilia RSV4.

Takumi Takahashi (MIE Althea Honda), WorldSBK debutant Lorenzo Gabellini (MIE Althea Honda) and Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Ducati) completed the 23-rider field.

Takumi Takahashi – P21

I’ve ridden in some very hot conditions before, but I must say today was extreme and tomorrow’s forecast is similar if not even tougher. Anyway, it’s the same for everyone and I have to say that, despite the high temperatures, I had slightly better feeling on the bike compared to how I felt during the test we completed at Aragon. We have taken a little step forward with the setup and although we are still far from where we want to be, it’s good to see some gradual progress being made.

Lorenzo Gabellini – P22

It’s been a useful day in terms of getting to grips with everything – the pace of the category, the bike’s setup and the track, which although I have ridden once in the past now seems like a completely new circuit. When I came here last it was winter, and only about 20 degrees. Today I was able to take a few references from the others but to be honest, I have a lot of things to get used to. I like the fact I was able to shave off about six tenths between the first and second session, with much more difficult conditions in FP2. I’m basically learning step by step and have to adapt to many things“.

Friday WorldSBK Practice Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 L. Baz YZF R1 1m40.249
2 J. Rea ZX-10RR +0.062
3 M. Rinaldi V4 R +0.076
4 A. Bautista CBR1000RR-R +0.143
5 S. Redding V4 R +0.193
6 C. Davies V4 R +0.223
7 T. Razgatlioglu YZF R1 +0.258
8 M. Van Der Mark YZF R1 +0.316
9 L. Haslam CBR1000RR-R +0.354
10 A. Lowes  ZX-10RR +0.357
11 G. Gerloff YZF R1 +0.484
12 F. Caricasulo YZF R1 +0.722
13 T. Sykes S1000 RR +0.885
14 M. Melandri V4 R +0.893
15 E. Laverty  S1000 RR +0.952
16 M. Scheib ZX-10RR +0.981
17 L. Mercado V4 R +1.047
18 X. Fores ZX-10RR +1.455
19 S. Cortese ZX-10RR +1.772
20 C. Ponsson RSV4 1000 +1.777
21 T. Takahashi CBR1000RR-R +2.334
22 L. Gabellini CBR1000RR-R +2.702
23 S. Barrier  V4 R +3.188

Locatelli WorldSSP on Friday

The FIM Supersport World Championship’s season resumed with two practice sessions and Italian rookie Andrea Locatelli (Badahl Yamaha) continued exactly where he left off at Phillip Island, dominating the field as he topped both practice sessions at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto.

Andrea Locatelli

Locatelli’s best time was set in the morning session with a 1’42.988, the only rider to dip below 1’43 all day. In Free Practice 2 he was the only rider in the 1’43s as he posted a time that was over one second faster than Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti) in Free Practice 2. Overall, he was fourth tenths faster than Steven Odendaal (Ten Kate Yamaha), who was second faster for the day with his time of 1’43.399.

Steven Odendaal

South African rider Odendaal was four tenths faster than Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti) as the trio rounded out the top three; the riders directly behind Locatelli very close in terms of lap time. Oettl’s Kawasaki Puccetti Racing teammate, Lucas Mahias, was fifth fastest with fellow Frenchman Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) in fourth between Oettl and Mahias. Cluzel’s GMT94 Yamaha team-mate, Corentin Perolari was in eighth place after the two sessions.

Lucas Mahias

Isaac Viñales (Kallio Yamaha) was sixth fastest overall over the two practice sessions, three tenths ahead of his Kallio Racing team-mate, Hannes Soomer in seventh. Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) was the highest placed rider competing in the World Supersport Challenge with ninth overall. Hikari Okubo (Dynavolt Honda) rounded out the top 10 while his teammate, German Patrick Hobelsberger, was 21st overall.

Raffaele De Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) was 11th fastest overall for the day, having posted a 1’44.497 in the second practice session; one of only a handful of riders to improve their time from the opening practice session. Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) was classified in 20th place for the day.

Alejandro Carranza Ruiz (Emperador Racing Team) finished the day in 12th overall as he beat Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO) by just 0.005s; showing just how close it is in WorldSSP. Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Yamaha) was 14th fastest after both sessions, with Peter Sebestyen (Oxxo Yamaha Toth) in 15th. Hungarian Sebestyen’s team-mate, Loris Cresson, was 23rd fastest for the day.

Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU Yamaha) finished in 16th with his team-mate, Galang Hendra Pratama in 19th place. Between them was Turkish sensation Can Öncü (Kawasaki) and Christoffer Bergman (Yamaha); the Swedish rider returning to action after suffering from two broken legs.

Lachlan Epis (MPM Routz Yamaha) was 22nd out of 24 riders, with Luigi Montella (DK Yamaha) rounding out the 24-rider field.

WorldSSP Friday Practice Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 A. Locatelli YZF R6 1m42.988
2 S. Odendaal YZF R6 +0.411
3 P. Oettl ZX-6 +0.457
4 J. Cluzel YZF R6 +0.463
5 L. Mahias YZF R6 +0.589
6 I.  Viñales YZF R6 +0.730
7 H. Soomer YZF R6 +1.071
8 C. Perolari YZF R6 +1.118
9 A. Bassani YZF R6 +1.448
10 H. Okubo CBR600RR 1.499
11 R. De Rosa F3675 +1.509
12 A. Ruiz Carranza YZF R6 +1.551
13 M. Gonzalez ZX-6R +1.556
14 D. Webb YZF R6 +2.037
15 P. Sebestyen YZF R6 +2.184
16 A. Verdoïa YZF R6 +2.264
17 C. Öncü  ZX-6R +2.641
18 C. Bergman YZF R6 +2.923
19 G. Hendra Pratama YZF R6 +2.981
20 F. Fuligni F3675 +3.011
21 P. Hobelsberger CR600RR +3.709
22 L. Epis YZF R6 +3.808
23 L. Cresson YZF R6 +3.901
24 L. Montella YZF R6 +6.596

WorldSSP300

Home rider Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team WorldSSP300) topped the 300 Supersport time-sheets at Jerez overnight. Times between riders were minimal across Friday’s two practice sessions as Perez made the first move with the fastest time of the day in the first Free Practice session.

Mika Perez

Perez’s time of 1’53.609, set in the first practice session, was enough to be the fastest time of the day as he beat Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki), whose best time came in Free Practice 2 at Jerez.

Unai Orradre

Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) was third fastest across both sessions with a time of 1’53.770s; just over a tenth separating the top three after the first day of WorldSSP300 action.

Tom Booth-Amos

Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil AD78) was fourth fastest for the day’s track action with a time of 1’53.907 on his WorldSSP300 debut, beating Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) by around one tenth of a second.

Scott Deroue

Hugo de Cancellis (Team TRASIMENO), entering his third season in World Supersport 300, was sixth fastest. The top six in the highly-competitive field were separated by less than half a second, showing how close racing will be in the 2020 WorldSSP300 season.

Meikon Kawakami

Deroue’s MTM Kawasaki Motoport team-mate, Yuta Okaya, finished the day with the seventh fastest time, around a tenth off Deroue, after setting a time of 1’54.113s in Free Practice 2. Italian rider Gabriele Mastroluca (GP Project) was eighth after setting his best time in Free Practice 1; beating Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) by 0.003s – Edwards setting his best time in Free Practice 1. Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) rounded out the top 10 of the WorldSSP field.

2018 World Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) finished the day in 15th place while Ukrainian rider Nick Kalinin (Battley-RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki) and Johan Gimbert finished the day 18th and 19th respectively; Gimbert finishing just over one second off the pace of Perez.

Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki Motoport) finished the session in 26th place, with more to come from the Dutch rider who has one win and two podiums to his name in WorldSSP300.

Australia’s Tom Bramich was 33rd quickest on the Carl Cox backed RT Motorsports SKM Kawasaki in what is a massive 53-rider field.

WorldSSP300 Combined Results

Pos Rider Bike Class Time/Gap
1 M. Perez Ninja 400 A 1m53.609
2 T. Booth-Amos  Ninja 400 B +0.147
3 U. Orradre YZF-R3 A +0.161
4 M. Kawakami YZF-R3 B +0.298
5 S. DeroueNinja 400 Ninja 400 B +0.392
6 H. De Cancellis YZF-R3 B +0.434
7 Y. Okaya Ninja 400 B +0.504
8 G. Mastroluca Ninja 400 B +0.507
9 T. Edwards Ninja 400 B +0.635
10 B. Ieraci Ninja 400 A +0.729
11 K. Sabatucci Ninja 400 B +0.733
12 A. Coppola Ninja 400 B +0.744
13 T. Kawakami YZF-R3 B +0.782
14 S. Markarian YZF-R3 B +0.785
15 A. Carrasco Ninja 400 B +0.799
16 84 K. Aloisi YZF-R3 A +0.867
17 6 J. Buis Ninja 400 A +0.972
18 22 N. Kalinin Ninja 400 A +0.980
19 7 J. Gimbert Ninja 400 A +1.022
20 J. Jahnig RC390R A +1.070
21 B. Sofuoglu YZF-R3 B +1.199
22 T. Brianti Ninja 400 B +1.205
23 C. Stange RC390R A +1.358
24 T. Bercot YZF-R3 B +1.399
25 0. Konig KTMRC390R B +1.399
26 K. Meuffels Ninja 400 A +1.571
27 P. Grassia YZF-R3 A +1.615
28 I.  Iglesias Ninja 400 B +1.630
29 S. Di Sora Ninja 400 A +1.631
30 F. Rovelli Ninja 400 A +1.661
31 A. Carrion Ninja 400 A +1.672
32 A. Kroh YZF-R3 A +1.938
33 T. Bramich Ninja 400 A +2.010
34 F. Macan YZF-R3 A +2.016
35 E. De La Vega YZF-R3 B +2.064
36 E. Vocino Ninja 400 B +2.185
37 G. Van Straalen YZF-R3 A +2.245
38 M. Gaggi YZF-R3 A +2.357
39 M. Gennai YZF-R3 A +2.674
40 M. Kappler KTM RC 390 R B +2.713
41 J. Ioverno Ninja 400 B +2.966
42 J. Perez Gonzalez YZF-R3 B +3.111
43 A. Diaz YZF-R3 A +3.124
44 A. Quinet Ninja 400 B +3.201
45 E. Mcglinchey Ninja 400 A +3.366
46 G. Matern YZF-R3 A +3.796
47 R. Dore YZF-R3 B +3.885
48 D. Blin YZF-R3 A +3.947
49 M. Hrava Ninja 400 B +4.253
50 M. Cervenka Ninja 400 B +4.685
51 I.  Offer Ninja 400 A +5.801
52 L. Gruau Ninja 400 A +7.679
53 S. Sanchez Tamayo YZF-R3 B /

WSBK Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

WorldSBK heads to Jerez along with WorldSSP and SSP300

WorldSBK readying to race in the Spanish sun

After the hardest of times away, the 2020 Motul FIM Superbike World Championship is back this weekend at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, Spain. The Championship’s first round of the season got underway with plenty of drama in Australia back in early March, bringing three different winners in one weekend for the first time in history. Now, with the heat of Jerez looming, who will be able to keep their cool as the battle for the title resumes.

WorldSBK Rnd R R Phillip Island WorldSBK Sunday LowesGB
WorldSBK Race Two podium at Phillip Island

Leading the Championship is Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), after a phenomenal Kawasaki debut Down Under. Victorious in Race 2 and a podium in Race 1, Lowes’ consistency means he is the man to beat coming into Spain. However, bad luck during the 2019 Spanish Round at Jerez saw himself and current teammate Jonathan Rea clash at the final corner on the last lap, sparking a rivalry which is yet to reignite in 2020. Two fourth places are the best he’s managed, whilst fourth-placed in the Championship Rea has two wins to his name at Jerez, whilst he wrapped his first title up there in 2015. Last year, he achieved just one podium with second in Race 2.

Three third-places cement Scott Redding’s (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) in second overall, with the rookie Brit showing consistency in abundance at Phillip Island. Having tested at the Jerez circuit back in January and raced their numerous times in his MotoGP career, Redding knows the venue, although very few have raced there in the high heat of summer; another new test for him to tackle. Team-mate Chaz Davies lies eighth in the Championship and has previously secured three wins at Jerez and was in the podium battle in Race 2 last year until a crash with Marco Melandri.

Third in the standings and the first race winner of the year, Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Official Team) was a prominent feature at Phillip Island. The first Turkish rider to lead the standings after Race 1, he is ready to keep on breaking records. His teammate Michael van der Mark is fifth overall and will aim for his first podium of the season at a track at which he won at in 2019 in Race 2. The 2014 WorldSSP Champion goes into the return to action with his future secured, as he heads to BMW for 2021. Is the pressure off him for the remainder of the season?

WSBK Rnd Pits TH Bautista Honda
Will Honda have some more speed in the heat of Jerez…?

Following on from a successful opening round at Phillip Island and good testing at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya and MotorLand Aragon, Team HRC are determined for a strong Jerez meeting. Home hero Alvaro Bautista lies sixth overall and took two wins at the track in 2019 and hopes to give Honda a first podium at the track since Michael van der Mark in Race 1 of 2015. For Leon Haslam, he topped the times at Aragon and aims for his first podium at Jerez since Race 2 of 2015. Will they be able to conquer the Honda at Jerez and make a return to the front of the WorldSBK field?

The BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team have been busy with testing schedules in the break. From a private test at the EuroSpeedway Lausitz to joining the field at Catalunya, they’ve worked hard on perfecting their bike setting. Tom Sykes and Eugene Laverty will now do battle to try and secure a seat alongside Michael van der Mark for 2021; Sykes won his 2013 Championship at Jerez in the same race Laverty won before taking his only win at the circuit in 2015, so it should be a closely-fought battle between the BMW stars.

Tom Sykes

It is absolutely fantastic that finally the time has arrived after this very difficult period. We did some testing but racing is racing, so I am really happy to head into the double header, straight into things, at Jerez and Portimão. The characteristics of these tracks are really quite different, Jerez is pretty flowing and then Portimão up and down really considered a rollercoaster of a track, so we have certainly exciting but for sure also hot venues approaching. The target going into the weekend is to work on the bike set-up to ensure we have a good package on the BMW S 1000 RR for the warm conditions and go from there. The goal is always so achieve the maximum that we can as a team during the race weekend and to get the results that we can achieve together. I am really looking forward to getting back to racing and a big thanks goes to the organisers and all involved to manage to organise that calendar during this very difficult period.

Tom Sykes – BMW S 1000 RR

Leading the Independent battle, Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha), was race leader in Australia. Baz will be keen to break into the top six and continue his fight with the factory bikes at a track he made his Ten Kate debut on last year, giving him ninth in Race 2. Behind Baz is Maximilian Scheib (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) in tenth overall, after a stunning Race 2 saw the Chilean finished seventh. Scheib has one STK1000 victory to his name at Jerez and is one to watch.

Sandro Cortese (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) took a career-best result at Jerez last year with sixth, whilst Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Team GoEleven) enters the round after a strong Misano test, where he was under the lap record. GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team’s Garrett Gerloff gets a first racing taste of Jerez, whilst team-mate Federico Caricasulo knows the circuit well after WorldSSP wins there in 2017 and 2019. Spanish ace Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) has done limited testing but will be keen to get back to Jerez, a track he has a best result of seventh.

In other news ahead of racing, Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing Althea Honda Team) will have a teammate in Italian Lorenzo Gabellini. Marco Melandri (Barni Racing Team) replaces the injured Leon Camier for the remainder of 2020, at a track he scored his last podium. For Leandro Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) and Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance), it’ll be their first round of the season.

WSBK Test Jan Portimao Marco Melandri SnapGeeBee
Marco Melandri (Barni Racing Team) replaces the injured Leon Camier for the remainder of 2020 – Image by GeeBee

2020 WorldSBK Championship Standings

  1. Alex Lowes – Kawasaki 51
  2. Scott Redding – Ducati 39
  3. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Yamaha 34
  4. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 32
  5. Michael van der Mark – Yamaha 31
  6. Alvaro Bautista – Honda 20
  7. Loris Baz – Yamaha 20
  8. Chaz Davies – Ducati 19
  9. Leon Haslam – Honda 17
  10. Tom Sykes – BMW 17

WorldSSP

After an enforced hiatus after the season-opening Yamaha Finance Australian Round, FIM Supersport World Championship return to track action at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto for the Pirelli Spanish Round. It marks the start of the WorldSSP Challenge as well as the introduction of a second race for WorldSSP competitors.

The introduction of the two-race format will provide extra challenges for both teams and riders with the first WorldSSP race scheduled to take place on Saturday afternoons, just a few hours after Superpole. The extra race means more points available in a Round with full points to be awarded in both races.

Andrea Locatelli (Bardahl Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) leads the Championship after taking a dominant victory at Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit; and recently competed in the Italian Supersport championship as a wildcard at Mugello where he claimed two victories. The former Moto2 rider also set blistering WorldSSP pace in a recent test at Mugello as he looks to continue his sensational start to the season.

WorldSBK Rnd R R Phillip Island WorldSSP Sunday Locatelli
Andrea Locatelli is in great form

Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) will be looking to go one better than he did at Phillip Island as he looks for victory in Spain to cement his place as a Championship contender; showing impressive race pace Down Under to claim a second place after starting the race in fifth.

De Rosa held off a challenge from Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) in Australia, with the Frenchman hoping he can challenge at the front as the season resumes. Cluzel did some training at Carole Circuit in France, including breaking the one-minute barrier to take the lap record; a confidence booster heading into the restart of the season. Cluzel claimed a podium in the 2019 Round at Jerez; form he will be hoping to replicate as the season resumes.

Cluzel’s GMT94 teammate, Corentin Perolari, was just short of a podium in Australia but comes into the Spanish Round fourth in the Championship. Perolari is in his third year of WorldSSP action and has taken one pole position in his career so far but is yet to step on the podium. The French rider claimed his equal best finish at Phillip Island with fourth and will be looking to continue that form into Jerez.

2017 Champion Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) is currently sitting in fifth in the standings following his fifth place finish Down Under. Fifth matches Mahias’ best result at Jerez in his WorldSSP career although he did pick up a podium when competing in European Superstock 1000. Mahias competed in an Italian Supersport race at Misano recently, claiming two victories in the two races alongside teammate Philipp Oettl, who finished sixth and fifth in the two races respectively.

Estonian rider Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) currently sits in sixth place following the season-opening round in Australia. Soomer, now in his sixth season on WorldSSP, started off the season with a strong performance and his best ever result at Phillip Island; having retired from his previous two races Down Under. Soomer’s Kallio Racing teammate, Isaac Viñales will be competing in his home race at the Spanish Round; looking to move up the field from his 10th place finish in Australia. Viñales finished eighth in the 2019 Round at Jerez, and also finished fifth in 2014 while competing in Moto2.

South African rookie Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) had a strong WorldSSP debut race in Australia as he finished in seventh place at a tricky circuit. Odendaal has competed at Jerez before he joined WorldSSP where he claimed a pole position and a second place in his 2016 Championship-winning CEV Moto2 campaign. He raced at Jerez as recently as 2019 in Moto2, finishing 18th after making up six places during the race.

Like Odendaal, 2019 FIM Supersport 300 World Championship winner Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) had a strong WorldSSP debut as he finished in eighth place, finishing just behind Odendaal after the 16-lap race. Gonzalez was just one second ahead of Federico Fuligni (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) who secured his best-ever finish at Phillip Island with ninth place.

The Pirelli Spanish Round means the start of the rebranded WorldSSP Challenge with entries from Xavier Navand (Altogoo Racing Team), Luigi Montella (DK MOTORSPORT), Alejandro Ruiz Carranza (EMPERADOR Racing Team) and Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing).

In other news from the gap between the races, 2019 Champion Randy Krummenacher has announced he will not race with MV Agusta Reparto Corse in the 2020 season while young Australian Lachlan Epis has joined the MPM Routz Racing Team and will race a YZF-R6 at Jerez this weekend.

ASBK Test Phillip Island RbMotoLens ASBK Test SBK Lachlan EPIS
Lachlan Epis has swapped his ASBK Superbike for an MPM Yamaha YZF-R6 and will race at Jerez this weekend.

2020 WorldSSP Championship Standings

  1. Andrea Locatelli – Yamaha 25
  2. Raffaele De Rosa – MV Agusta 20
  3. Jules Cluzel – Yamaha 16
  4. Corentin Perolari – Yamaha 13
  5. Lucas Mahias – Kawasaki 11

2020 WorldSSP 300

The 2020 FIM Supersport 300 World Championship is ready to fire up for a new season, eagerly anticipated with plenty of heated action to come. The quick-fire season kicks off this weekend at the Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto in the extreme heat of southern Spain, where fitness, reliability, race craft and endurance will all be tested. With two races to scrap it out over, the WorldSSP300 field is as unpredictable as ever.

With reigning Champion Manuel Gonzalez moving on to WorldSSP, all eyes are on 2018 Champion Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300), who returns to reclaim her crown once again. The five-time race winner picked up her first podiums of 2019 at Jerez last year, with two third places secured in style, and hopes to start her season in fine form. Another favourite is Dutchman Scott Deroue (MTM Racing Team), who won the last race of 2019 at Losail; a best result at Jerez of second – achieved in 2017 and 2019’s Race 1 – means the he aims to go one better in 2020, whilst teammate Koen Meuffels is eager to continue on from second place in Qatar at the end of 2019.

Frequent top ten finisher at Jerez last year, Jan-Ole Jahnig (Freudenberg KTM Junior Team) also hopes for a strong Jerez season-opener, along with team-mate Oliver König. Mika Perez (Prodina Ircos Team) has a good history at Jerez, with it being his best finish of the whole of last year. The 2018 runner-up will be eager to recapture the form of that season, whilst Nick Kalinin (RT Motorsport by SKM – Kawasaki) also searches for a strong start to the new season. The Ukrainian was on the rostrum last year at Donington Park and despite yet to crack the top ten at Jerez, has been testing extensively ahead of the new year and has set his sights on a solid start to the year.

Other names certain to feature include Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project), his returning teammate Alfonso Coppola, Hugo De Cancellis (Team Trasimeno), Livio Loi (2R Racing) and another returnee in Glenn van Straalen (EAB Ten Kate Racing). All riders have good experience of Jerez, with Livio Loi’s Moto3 experience sure to come in handy, whilst De Cancellis achieved two top-eight finishes at the circuit last year. There’re also the likes of Britain’s Tom Booth-Amos to keep an eye on, as he makes his debut in the class. 2019 race winner Kevin Sabatucci (Kawasaki GP Project) is back for more too, as is Jeffrey Buis (MTM Racing Team), who took his first top ten at Jerez last year.

Since its inception in 2017, many a rider has gone on to achieve great things and make history in motorcycle racing; the Championship showcased the youngest ever FIM Solo Road Racing World Champion last year in Manuel Gonzalez at just 17, whilst the first female FIM Solo Road Racing World Champion came in 2018 with Ana Carrasco. The search is on for the next history-maker in its fourth season, with 13 nationalities from around the world ready to battle across three different manufacturers.

ASBK Rnd Phillip Island RM SS Tom Bramich
Tom Bramich will race a Carl Cox-RT Motorsports by SKM Kawasaki – Image by Rob Mott

Australian hopes rest on the shoulders of Tom Edwards and Tom Bramich.

WorldSBK Portimao WSS Pole Tom Edwards
Tom Edwards will race a ParkinGO Kawasaki

There’re new rules for 2020 too, with the top 30 from Free Practice (not Tissot Superpole as was the case in 2019) will be seeded directly into Tissot Superpole and then the race. Then, the remaining riders will shoot it out in the Last Chance Race which will come directly after the Tissot Superpole session. The top six from the Last Chance Race will join the already-seeded top thirty and then do battle throughout the new two race format, making up for lost rounds. The Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto welcomed two races at the track last year, making up for the cancelled Imola race due to weather.


Updated 2020 WorldSBK calendar

  1. March 1 – Phillip Island, Australia
  2. August 2 – Jerez, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  3. August 9 – Portimao, Portugal (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  4. August 30 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  5. September 6 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  6. September 20 – Catalunya, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  7. October 4 – Magny-Cours, France (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  8. October 11 – Circuito San Juan Villicum, Argentina (TBC) (WSBK-WSSP)
  9. November 8 – Misano, Italy (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)

Source: MCNews.com.au

Pirelli to take on the heat of Jerez with WSBK

Another hot weekend in Spain greets WorldSBK this weekend

Pirelli is ready to return to the track for the second round of the Motul FIM Superbike World Championship and the event will take place at the Spanish track of Jerez – Angel Nieto from this Friday 31 July to Sunday 2 August 2020 and will see for the first time this year all classes of the production derived series in action.

Both WorldSBK and WorldSSP600 riders will be able to count on new development solutions which will have to contend with ambient temperatures that are forecast to approach 40-degrees Celsius which in similar conditions for the most recent MotoGP round saw track temperatures exceed 60-degrees.

The Jerez round is normally scheduled for September and October, except for 2019 when the event was ran in June. The Jerez circuit has long, fast straights, in fact for a length equal to 69 per cent of the entire track, alternating with slow, tight corners. The 600-metre long start-finish straight has a width of 12-metres, slightly wider than the rest of the track, where the width is 11-metres. As well as the aspect of the track, the radius of the curves is also variable, ranging from 30 to 116 metres, while the maximum gradient is 5 per cent exiting turn 5. The gradients are also different, with the maximum lateral gradient of 7.46 per cent out of turns 2, 6 and 13, while the minimum is 4.70 per cent at turns 4 and 12.

WSBK Rnd Jerez Sat Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista – Jerez WorldSBK 2019 – The Spaniard set the fastest race lap of the weekend at 1’39.004

In the WorldSBK class, riders will have both standard and development solutions available, some of which have been already tested last year and others which are new.

There are three options for the front, two standard and one development solution. The standard SC1 represents the most successful front tyre during the last season of the Championship, while the standard SC2 is an evolution of the development SC2 X1071 used in 2019. The news is a new soft development solution SC1 Y1231, which has a new structure designed to increase lateral thrust when cornering.

As for the rear options, the standard soft SC0 is joined by two development solutions of the same compound but with different characteristics. The soft development solution X1351 was introduced the previous year in Jerez, well appreciated by the majority of the grid. The soft development solution Z0121 makes its debut here in Jerez and has important changes in the shoulder area to improve the footprint and increase the lateral thrust at maximum lean angles. In addition to these solutions, at the rear the riders will also be able to use the SCX tyre in super soft compound that can be used during the qualifying session in preparation for the use of the only Superpole tyre available to the riders, and possibly for the Tissot Superpole Race if the circuit allows it.


Fun Facts – MotoGP/WSBK Top Speeds

Fun #MotoGP fact. Last weekend the fastest top speed by a MotoGP bike at Jerez was 295 km/h set by Bagnaia.

Race winner Fabio Quartararo was the slowest through the speed trap over the entire weekend with a best of 286.4 km/h.

All four Yamaha MotoGP machines were the slowest bikes in the field yet finished 1-2-3 in the race….

Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Ducati V4 R) was fastest #WorldSBK during the race at Jerez last year at 283.6 km/h. Maximum race speed reached in the WorldSSP race was 249.2 km/h by Federico Caricasulo (Yamaha YZF R6).

Michael Ruben Rinaldi
Michael Ruben Rinaldi holds the WorldSBK top speed record at Jerez

The last rear option is the Superpole tyre that will allow riders to make a lap during the Superpole in search of the absolute best time to position themselves on the starting grid.

In the WorldSSP600 category, on the other hand, there will be four dry solutions available to riders, two front and as many rear options, which are all standard solutions. For the front there will be the standard SC1 soft compound, and the standard SC2 medium compound that allows more wear resistance than the first option.

As for the rear, for the first time the WorldSSP600 riders will have available the solutions of the Pirelli Diable Superbike slick range, in the larger size 190/60 introduced during the previous year. Riders will be able to choose between the standard SC0 soft compound, further improved to offer maximum performance, and the standard SC1 medium compound, designed to offer the right compromise between top, constant performance and limited wear.

As always, in case of bad weather, riders of all classes will have rain and intermediate tyres available.


The 2019 Pirelli statistics for Jerez

  • Total number of tyres brought by Pirelli: 3520
  • Number of solutions (including dry, intermediate and wet) for the WorldSBK class: 5 front and 8 rear
  • Number of tyres available for each WorldSBK rider: 35 front and 38 rear
  • Number of solutions for the WorldSSP600 class (including dry, intermediate and wet): 4 front and 4 rear
  • Number of tyres available for each WorldSSP600 rider: 22 front and 23 rear
  • WorldSBK Best Lap Awards both won by: Álvaro Bautista (Ducati Panigale V4 R) in 1’39.305 (Race 1, 2nd lap) and a 1’39.004 (Superpole Race, 2nd lap)
  • WorldSSP Best Lap Award won by: Federico Caricasulo (Bardahl Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team / Yamaha YZF R6) with a 1’42.532 at the 19th lap
  • Temperature in Race 1: air 29° C, asphalt 48° C
  • Temperature in Race 2: air 14° C, asphalt 23° C
  • Maximum race speed reached in WorldSBK: 283,6 km/h, by Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Ducati Panigale V4 R)
  • Maximum race speed reached in WorldSSP: 249,2 km/h, by Federico Caricasulo (Yamaha YZF R6)

Updated 2020 WorldSBK calendar

  1. March 1 – Phillip Island, Australia
  2. August 2 – Jerez, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  3. August 9 – Portimao, Portugal (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  4. August 30 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  5. September 6 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  6. September 20 – Catalunya, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  7. October 4 – Magny-Cours, France (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  8. October 11 – Circuito San Juan Villicum, Argentina (TBC) (WSBK-WSSP)
  9. November 8 – Misano, Italy (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)

2020 WorldSBK Championship Standings

  1. Alex Lowes – Kawasaki 51
  2. Scott Redding – Ducati 39
  3. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Yamaha 34
  4. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 32
  5. Michael van der Mark – Yamaha 31
  6. Alvaro Bautista – Honda 20
  7. Loris Baz – Yamaha 20
  8. Chaz Davies – Ducati 19
  9. Leon Haslam – Honda 17
  10. Tom Sykes – BMW 17

2020 WorldSSP Championship Standings

  1. Andrea Locatelli – Yamaha 25
  2. Raffaele De Rosa – MV Agusta 20
  3. Jules Cluzel – Yamaha 16
  4. Corentin Perolari – Yamaha 13
  5. Lucas Mahias – Kawasaki 11

Source: MCNews.com.au

British, Dutch and Qatari WorldSBK rounds cancelled

Three more rounds get the chop

After extensive discussions and the assessment of a multitude of possibilities and scenarios, the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM) and Dorna WSBK Organization (DWO) regret to announce the cancellation of three events that were previously to be determined (TBD) and to be confirmed (TBC). The safety of all parties within the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship paddock is of top priority and whilst the season is carrying on, a solution was not possible to incorporate every venue, given the challenge of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The UK Round at Donington Park (previously postponed and TBD), the Dutch Round at the TT Circuit Assen (previously rescheduled, then postponed and TBD) and the Qatar Round at the Losail International Circuit (previously postponed and TBD) have been cancelled. It will be the first time in WorldSBK history that there won’t be a round in the United Kingdom, whilst the TT Circuit Assen has been a permanent fixture on the calendar since 1992, ending a streak of the longest continually serving venue in WorldSBK.

Gregorio Lavilla
Director of Sporting/Organisation Departments

I am personally very sad to announce the subsequent cancellations of the three rounds. As a fan of our sport, I am extremely saddened not to go to WorldSBK’s birthplace at Donington Park and the ‘Cathedral of Speed’ at Assen, a track which has featured on our calendar uninterrupted since 1992. I am equally as sad not to not have the spectacle of a night race in Qatar, always something we look forward to. We explored all avenues in order to find a solution but unfortunately, one could not be found. However, this mustn’t cast a cloud over the Championship. The majority of our events in 2020 will happen and plans for a full, complete 2021 are well underway. We would like to thank everyone involved for their tireless work and cooperation, and also the fans for waiting patiently before our season resumes.”

Updated 2020 WorldSBK calendar

  1. March 1 – Phillip Island, Australia
  2. August 2 – Jerez, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  3. August 9 – Portimao, Portugal (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  4. August 30 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  5. September 6 – Aragon, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  6. September 20 – Catalunya, Spain (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  7. October 4 – Magny-Cours, France (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)
  8. October 11 – Circuito San Juan Villicum, Argentina (TBC) (WSBK-WSSP)
  9. November 8 – Misano, Italy (WSBK-WSSP-WSSP300)

Source: MCNews.com.au