Tag Archives: WorldSBK

Bautista makes history at Aragon | Nine in a row!

Alvaro Bautista sweeps Aragon WSBK

Matches Neil Hodgson’s nine on a roll winning streak

Randy Krummenacher claims Supersport win – Gonzalez heads WSSP300

Tom Edwards 19th – Tom Bramich 24th in WSSP300


Alvaro has further cemented his place in the history books over the weekend, continuing his unbeaten run at Aragon with two more race wins and the Tissot Superpole Sprint victory for a clean sweep of the weekend.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alvaro Bautista Chaz Davies
Alvaro Bautista cleaned up at Aragon WSBK

This makes it nine wins in a row for the 34-year-old from Talavera de la Reina, matching the record of 2003 WorldSBK champion Neil Hodgson in opening race wins, as well as claiming Ducati’s 350th win in World Superbikes, while his eighth race win earlier in the day matched Troy Bayliss’s record for Ducati from 2006.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista
Álvaro Bautista – P1

“It has been an extraordinary weekend for me. Winning three races here in Spain in front of my family, my friends and the Spanish fans was really great. In all three, I was able to make my own strategy, that is get a fast start and maintain my own pace. For sure the conditions in the three races were different, especially today in the Superpole Race which took place in the morning when it was very cold. Luckily it got a bit warmer for Race 2, but you could really feel the wind. Despite this, I was able to stay focussed, understand the situation on the track and push hard all the way. In the end we have won nine races out of nine and I’m so happy about that. The team has done an incredible job, we are on the right path and I’d like to thank Aruba, all Ducati and my team because the congratulations should also go to them.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Tissot Superpole Race

The Tissot Superpole Race for the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship provided exciting action from lights-out to the chequered flag. Off the line Bautista was yet again the rider with the best start, leading into turn one. However, there was mayhem behind as Michael Ruben Rinaldi and Michael van der Mark collided and crashed, ending the Dutchman’s 22-race streak of point-scoring positions. He finished 15th in the end, whilst Rinaldi went to the medical centre.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Superpole Race GB Motocard Start GB
Superpole Race Start

Bautista soon streaked away, leaving the battle for second to rage on. Sandro Cortese was running second until Alex Lowes made his way ahead at turn 12. Chaz Davies tried a similar move a lap later at turn 16 but couldn’t make the apex, running wide and dropping down to fifth – allowing rival Jonathan Rea to make up a position.

Tom Sykes and Eugene Laverty battled hard. Ahead of them, Sandro Cortese was starting to drop back as Lowes, Rea and Davies made their respective moves on the German Rookie.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Chaz Davies
Chaz Davies

With five laps to go, there was another retirement as Markus Reiterberger’s miserable weekend continued, this time with mechanical gremlins. His teammate Tom Sykes was enjoying a much better race, having dropped down to seventh after the opening lap, he was now fifth and pushing hard for a second consecutive top five of the year.

The battle for second was starting to take place though, as Lowes slipstreamed his way passed Rea down the back straight, achieving the move at turn 16 with just five laps left to go. Two laps later, Rea almost hit the rear end of the Yamaha-man at turn one, allowing Chaz Davies to now get in on the action.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Rea GB
Jonathan Rea

A lap later, it was a shoot-out and Rea tried to get ahead of Lowes at turn one, but the Englishman fought back. At turn four, Rea finally fired his way through and despite Lowes looking to fight back, Rea held on. The final lap soon beckoned but no moves were made, despite Lowes’ best efforts.

However, it was the dominant Alvaro Bautista who took yet another win in his WorldSBK career, holding off Rea and Lowes. Chaz Davies was a solid fourth, whilst Tom Sykes and Eugene Laverty completed the top six; the front two rows for the last race of the weekend.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Row three saw Leon Haslam in seventh, after a fairly quiet weekend which has seen him absent from the front. Joining him would be Jordi Torres and Sandro Cortese in eighth and ninth respectively.

World Superbike Tissot Superpole Race Top 10 – Aragon

  1. A. BAUTISTA ESP
  2. J. REA GBR +5.791
  3. A. LOWES GBR +5.906
  4. C. DAVIES GBR +6.052
  5. T. SYKES GBR +9.217
  6. E. LAVERTY IRL +9.921
  7. L. HASLAM GBR +10.221
  8. J. TORRES ESP +11.961
  9. S. CORTESE GER +13.712
  10. T. RAZGATLIOGLU TUR +14.218

Superbikes Race 2

Alvaro Bautista took his ninth consecutive race win in the final Aragon battle to equal 2003 WorldSBK champion Neil Hodgson in winning the opening nine races of the season, as well as giving Ducati their 350th WorldSBK win.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun ReaJM
WorldSBK Race 2 Start – Sunday Aragon

Bautista took the lead from pole position, seeing-off Jonathan Rea into turn one. For the first time this weekend, every rider made it through the opening corners without drama. Chaz Davies was an early improver and up to third place, while Alex Lowes was a strong fourth despite dropping back. Tom Sykes wasn’t the fastest starter and dropped back, allowing a rapid-starting Jordi Torres and Eugene Laverty to get in close proximity.

Davies made his move on lap two, to pass Rea and push the reigning four-time champion back into the jaws of the chasing pack. An action-packed second lap saw passes galore, with Tom Sykes making an error at turn 12 to allow Leon Haslam and Jordi Torres through – Torres now sixth from eighth on the grid, one of the strongest showings in WorldSBK by the Team Pedercini Racing Kawasaki.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Chaz Davies
Chaz Davies

Alex Lowes was starting his comeback through the order, up to third position and ahead of Rea, who was starting to look vulnerable. Rea was now in fourth and his teammate, Leon Haslam and Eugene Laverty, were closing in.

On lap eight, Davies began to pull away and put some distance between himself and Lowes. Rea ran wide and took teammate Haslam with him; the Kawasaki riders were not looking like they were going to be able to mount a podium challenge. Lowes challenged Davies but was not able to make a pass. Further down the order, Toprak Razgatlioglu retired.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Haslam GB
Leon Haslam

With Laverty dropping back from the battle for second and not able to initiate a challenge for the podium, Rea was starting his own resurgence, passing Lowes and pursuing Davies. Two laps later, and Haslam made his way past Lowes at turn one, pursuing his teammate and Davies in second.

Whilst Rea looked set for a guaranteed podium, teammate Haslam had other ideas and got ahead of the Ulsterman, taking over as the leader in the Kawasaki challenge. A lap later, and Rea repaid the compliment in identical fashion.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun ReaCQ
Rea chases down Bautista

The penultimate lap beckoned, and it was Rea and Davies who renewed their rivalry. Rea put his trademark passing move on Davies at turn 4, slicing under the Welshman, only for the 2011 WorldSSP champion to fight back at turn 5. Leon Haslam, after initially being dropped by half-a-second, was now right back in the battle for the podium.

On the final lap, a mistake by Davies at turn one allowed Rea to come straight through and put in the lap of his life to put distance into Davies. Haslam wasn’t able to capitalise on the mistake by Davies and whilst Davies was coming back towards Rea into the final corner, there was nothing he could do to get ahead.

Bautista took the win, ahead of Rea by another huge margin; the ninth time that those two have finished in that order in 2019.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alvaro Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Davies completed the podium for the second time at the Aragon Round, whilst Haslam and Lowes completed the top five. Laverty took sixth, ahead of Jordi Torres, Michael van der Mark, Michael Ruben Rinaldi and Sandro Cortese.

Marco Melandri was a dejected 11th, with Sykes right behind, having faded mid-race. Leon Camier and teammate Kiyonari were 13th and 14th respectively, whilst Markus Reiterberger finally finished at MotorLand Aragon, with 15th.

Alvaro Bautista – P1

“It has been a very special weekend for me, winning the three races in front of my fans! I enjoyed a lot the weekend. It was special for me here in Spain. Now we go to Assen, a race track which is different from this and where the weather changes so fast. It will be also my first time with the new bike, but we go there very confident and I can’t wait to be on the bike again.”

WSBK Aragon Bautista
Alvaro Bautista
Jonathan Rea – P2

“It was a tougher Sunday than I expected and the strategy was different. Especially in the sprint race, I lost a lot of rear traction at the end. We think it was a consequence of being so fast in the beginning. During the 18-lap race I decided to be calmer in the beginning but when Alex Lowes came through he had a good pace with Chaz Davies. I started to panic a little bit that maybe these guys had an extra gear. And then Leon came past, so I had to step up and really use the tyre that I was conserving. My body language was a lot different at the end of the race because I really put my head down and maximised where we were strong. It looks like our bike is really creating a lot of traction in the long corners, which is positive. Our corner entry is not so bad. It was nice to see Leon in the front as well because our data becomes more relevant to compare and we can try to move the bike set-up forward together.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Rea GB
Jonathan Rea
Chaz Davies – P3

“It was a strong weekend for me, but I’m a bit disappointed about losing second place in Race 2. At the start of the last lap, I went in deep at Turn 1 and left the door open for Johnny, after which there wasn’t much chance of getting it back. At any rate, I was happy to back up yesterday’s result with another third position. It wasn’t easy in the wind, but we worked well this weekend to make big progress and I hope to build on that next weekend at Assen.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Chaz Davies
Chaz Davies
Stefano Cecconi – Aruba.it Racing – Ducati Team Principal

“It was another perfect weekend for Álvaro, which makes us really happy, but we are just as satisfied by the fact that Chaz got back on the podium and that he is getting more and more accustomed to the new Panigale V4 R. We hope that he will continue this string of positive results in the next few races.”

Leon Haslam – P4

“Starting from the fourth row was not ideal in the first two races so we used the sprint race to get back into it. The team has done mega-well from really struggling on Saturday morning to being able to battle for second place for Johnny. What a turnaround. I am really happy about what we have done here and I feel quite positive. In the sprint race I did not get the best of starts but it got me a better grid position for the final race. We made some steps in being able to pass people in the last race as well.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun HaslamJM
Leon Haslam
Alex Lowes – P5

“After the podium in the sprint race this morning I was a little bit disappointed with fifth in Race 2, as I was expecting to be able to fight a little bit harder and longer with Jonathan and Chaz. It was nice to be battling with Leon again, after a couple of tough races for him, and we were nice and close a few times, especially into turn one! It was good fun, but I just didn’t have enough to stay in the battle until the end. The last two rounds have been strong ones for us and I’ve really enjoyed riding the R1, but now we just need to find small improvements so that we can fight it out over the last few laps of the race. Now I can’t wait to get to Assen, a track I and the Yamaha enjoy.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Alex Lowes
Alex Lowes
Tom Sykes – P12

“Honestly, it has been a very positive weekend for the entire BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team. I feel that we have again made some steps forward. I am very impressed and also there have been a lot of people inside the racing paddock who have commented on the potential of the BMW S 1000 RR, so I think we are heading in the right direction and are definitely making good progress. Everything was good, we were top five in most of the sessions and with the exception of my mistake in Superpole almost could have had pole. In the final race we did not have the correct rear traction, which is a shame because the bike did not change and on the same tyre I was so fast during the race weekend, so with my honest opinion and with my experience I certainly feel we perhaps did not have a tyre that was to its full potential. It was a bit of a disappointment on a great weekend but this is part of racing. Sometimes these things happen and we will be making up for this moving forward.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Tom Sykes
Tom Sykes

World Superbike Race 2 Top 10 – Aragon

  1. A. BAUTISTA ESP
  2. J. REA GBR +6.867
  3. C. DAVIES GBR +7.127
  4. L. HASLAM GBR +7.581
  5. A. LOWES GBR +11.549
  6. E. LAVERTY IRL +16.797
  7. J. TORRES ESP +17.825
  8. M. VAN DER MARK NED +18.788
  9. M. RINALDI ITA +19.329
  10. S. CORTESE GER +20.351

World Superbike standings following Aragon

  1. Alvaro Bautista 186 points
  2. Jonathan Rea 147
  3. Alex Lowes 100
  4. Michael Van Der Mark 79
  5. Leon Haslam 74
  6. Marco Melandri 63
  7. Chaz Davies 56
  8. Sandro Cortese 56
  9. Tom Sykes 39
  10. Jordi Torres 35
  11. Michael Ruben Rinaldi 35
  12. Toprak Razgatlioglu 32
  13. Eugene Laverty 27
  14. Leon Camier 17
  15. Markus Reiterberger 15
  16. Leandro Mercado 11
  17. Ryuichi Kiyonari 9
  18. Alessandro Delbianco 3

World Supersport

The FIM Supersport World Championship saw an intriguing race in the first part of the 16-lap encounter, before a traditional fairing-bashing battle took place in the final part of the race. Eventually, it was Randy Krummenacher who took the win to extend his championship lead at the top of the WorldSSP title race!

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Mahias Okubo GB
World Supersport kicks off at Aragon

Starting well from pole position, 22-year-old Austrian Thomas Gradinger couldn’t fend off a courageous Federico Caricasulo into Turn 1, as the Italian took the lead. For Caricasulo’s teammate, Randy Krummenacher, it was another poor start, which saw Jules Cluzel take advantage. One rider who achieved a good start was Raffaele De Rosa, who, from sixth on the grid, was soon into fifth, ahead of Lucas Mahias and his Japanese teammate, Hikari Okubo.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Randy Krummenacher
Randy Krummenacher

Caricasulo and Gradinger pulled away, with a 1.7 second gap after just two laps of the MotorLand Aragon circuit. The battle for third saw Randy Krummenacher take advantage of Jules Cluzel at Turn 1 on lap three, and a lap later, it was De Rosa’s turn to pick off the fading Frenchman.

However, with the gaps forming, it was the riders in third and fourth who soon started lapping the faster times, and soon the 1.7s gap soon evaporated, with two back-to-back fastest laps coming from De Rosa on laps six and seven.

WSBK Aragon Cluzel
Jules Cluzel

Despite Cluzel languishing in an isolated fifth position, the battle raged behind him, with Mahias, Okubo and Corentin Perolari and Europe Supersport Cup rider, Kyle Smith. Smith was able to get as high as sixth before dropping back, with Perolari coming through towards the end.

The battle at the front was now between four bikes and also, with a different race leader. Thomas Gradinger came through and passed Caricasulo at Turn 4, to become the first Austrian rider to lead a WorldSSP race. Austria’s dream of a WorldSSP race winner started to look like it was finally going to come to reality.

With four laps remaining, it was a wild WorldSSP race which saw Gradinger make a mistake at the final corner, dropping from first to fourth. Four riders abreast down the main straight, Caricasulo and De Rosa took over, whilst Krummenacher watched on holding his breath in third. The last lap was set to be a thriller, as De Rosa took the lead when Krummenacher made a mistake at Turn 12. Were we about to see the first non-Yamaha win for the first time in almost a year-and-a-half?

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Federico Caricasulo
Federico Caricasulo leads

The last lap came around quickly and soon, the gloves were off! Krummenacher passed his teammate at Turn 1 and soon went in pursuit of race leader De Rosa. Gradinger was still in the battle in fourth, but unable to make any passes on the final lap, achieving his joint-best result.

Down the back straight and Krummenacher slipstreamed his way through, before slamming his Yamaha down the inside of De Rosa’s MV Agusta. Through the final corner and over the rise to the finish line, Krummenacher took a second win of the season, whilst De Rosa took his first podium of the year, with fellow countryman Federico Caricasulo in third. Gradinger was fourth.

Behind the leading quartet, Jules Cluzel’s damage limitation efforts saw him conclude in fifth position, with teammate Corentin Perolari, who took his best finish of the season. Lucas Mahias finally got the better of his teammate Hikari Okubo for seventh place, whilst Kyle Smith was top ESS rider in ninth. Completing the top ten was Isaac Viñales, who recovered to tenth after running wide in the early stages.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Smith CQ
Kyle Smith

Completing the points was Peter Sebestyen, who was top Honda in the race after Hannes Soomer crashed on the final lap. Teammate Jules Danilo was just 0.116s behind him, whilst Federico Fuligni was a further 0.314s back. 14th and 15th went to Loris Cresson and Maria Herrera respectively.

Krummenacher gave Yamaha their 81st WorldSSP win, whilst giving Switzerland their first win on European soil, as well as achieving the nation’s 16th podium – putting them one behind the United States overall, 22 years after the first Swiss rider achieved a podium, with Yves Briguet at Monza, 1997.

Randy Krummenacher

“It was a really tough race. After the warm-up, I felt like I could have the chance to go away in the race, but the final laps were not that easy for me. When I finally got to the front, I tried hard to go away, but I made a little mistake and went wide. Fortunately, the final lap came out perfectly. I came out of the slipstream, brake a little bit later and I won! Thanks to my team and my family that always support me”.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Randy Krummenacher
Randy Krummenacher

World Supersport Race Results – Aragon

  1. R. KRUMMENACHER SUI
  2. R. DE ROSA ITA +0.094
  3. F. CARICASULO ITA +0.158
  4. T. GRADINGER AUT +0.732
  5. J. CLUZEL FRA +3.312
  6. C. PEROLARI FRA +12.626
  7. L. MAHIAS FRA +12.890
  8. H. OKUBO JPN +12.996
  9. K. SMITH GBR +14.331
  10. I. VINALES ESP +17.653
WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Podium
Aragon WSBK Supersport Podium – 1) Krummenacher, 2) De Rosa, 3) Caricasulo

World Supersport Standings following Aragon

  1. Randy Krummenacher 70 points
  2. Jules Cluzel 56
  3. Federico Caricasulo 48
  4. Raffaele De Rosa 31
  5. Hikari Okubo 28
  6. Thomas Gradinger 24
  7. Corentin Perolari 24
  8. Hector Barbera 22
  9. Lucas Mahias 21
  10. Isaac Vinales 19

World Supersport 300

It was a crazy return to action for the WorldSSP300 championship at the Motocard Aragon Round in 2019, with a flurry of action from the start to the end, making for an incredibly exciting season in prospect. The winner of the first race of the season was 16-years-old Manuel Gonzalez, whilst defending champion Ana Carrasco crashed out at Turn 13, making her title defence even harder work for the remainder of the season.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Tom Edwards WorldSSP Aragon
WorldSSP 300 at Aragon – Image by GeeBee Images/2Snap

From lights out, it was a great start from Indonesian rider, Galang Hendra Pratama took the lead and to the amazement, led the field safely through the opening corners, with no casualties in a packed grid. Gonzalez took the lead early on but there was no escaping, as he oscillated back-and-forth, as riders passed each other to try and establish a constant running order.

As the race went on, Victor Steeman, Hugo De Cancellis and Maximilian Kappler all battled it out, whilst Andy Verdoia and Jan-Ole Jahnig joined the leading group.

It was a disaster in the middle of the race for the reigning champion, Ana Carrasco, as she crashed out after tangling with Koen Meuffels, who in-turn was having a tricky race having won at the track last season. Other falls consisted of sole Turkish rider Bahattin Sofuoglu crashing at Turn 2, as well as Indonesian Hendra Pratama, who crashed after contact with Verdoia at Turn 10; the Marc Marquez corner.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun WorldSSP Race GB Deroue GB
Scott Deroue

As the race reached the closing stages, all kinds of different riders entered the battle, with Omar Bonoli, Scott Deroue and Nick Kalinin all got in on the action. All three of them had raced through the field from 14th, 15th and 16th, all looking to take the opening win of the season from the lowest grid positions in WorldSSP300 history (that record held by Manuel Bastianelli of Prodina IRCOS Kawasaki, from 13th on the grid at Misano in 2018.

Into the last lap and it looked like we would get a victory from 14th, as Omar Bonoli took over at the front; the 17-year-old looking like he had the pace, before De Cancellis came passed at Turn 7 and immediately looked to break away. However, a fantastic move at Turn 9 by Manuel Gonzalez soon saw a last lap battle.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Race Gonzalez CQ
Manuel Gonzalez

Into the final corner and Gonzalez made a move to the lead and pushed De Cancellis wide, holding on to the lead to take his first ever win as the second-youngest rider in the class! Completing the podium was Scott Deroue, starting his championship challenge off in fine style.

Behind them, Jahnig, Verdoia and Steeman, whilst completing the top ten was Bonoli, Bruno Ieraci who in-turn had come from the back of the grid after a penalty, 2018 Aragon winner Koen Meuffels and Maximilian Kappler.

Outside of the top ten were Robert Schotman, Mateo Perdeneau, Filippo Rovelli, Nick Kalinin and 2018 runner-up, Mika Perez. 2017 champion, Marc Garcia (DS Junior Team) could only manage 25th position on his return to the championship.

Manuel Gonzalez – P1

“I don’t have words to describe how happy I am. I really enjoyed riding today. The race was not easy, and especially the final lap was extremely difficult. There were many riders taking advantage of the slipstream on the straight, and it made it hard to keep the position. In the last corner, I was able to overtake De Cancellis and take victory. Thanks to my team for all the work they have done during this weekend”.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Race Gonzalez CQ
Manuel Gonzalez
Scott Deroue – P3

“Yes it was incredible to come through for a podium. This weekend was quite hard and in qualifying I was not really good. I was not in the best place on the grid so I knew we had to something. I was just pushing, pushing – like unbelievably hard. I think this is one of my best races ever. I already won some races in this class but I think this race was the best ever.”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Race Deroue CQ
Scott Deroue
Ana Carrasco – DNF

“It is a pity to not score. We had some issues in the practice sessions and I started the race from the fourth row. In the race itself I felt myself to be very fast, and comfortable, so much so that we actually set a new lap record. Some bikes had better acceleration but in braking and top speed I was super strong. In the crash two guys in front of me touched and I had to close the throttle – then someone hit me from the back. It is a shame because I am sure I could have finished on top. I just want to say thanks to all people that came to see me here at Motorland, to my team and Kawasaki. I am on the bike again in only four days, at Assen – I can’t wait!”

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun SSP Race Carrasco CQ
Ana Carrasco

Top performing Australian was Tom Edwards (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) in 19th, while Tom Bramich (Carl Cox-RT Motorsports by SKM-Kawasaki) claimed 24th. Jack Hyde didn’t make the cut into the main race, finishing ninth in the Last Chance Race.

WorldSBK Rnd Aragon Sun Tom Edwards Kawasaki
Tom Edwards – Image by GeeBee/2Snap

World Supersport 300 Race Results – Aragon

  1. M. GONZALEZ ESP
  2. H. DE CANCELLIS FRA +0.058
  3. S. DEROUE NED +0.494
  4. J. JAHNIG GER +0.545
  5. A. VERDOÏA FRA +0.767
  6. V. STEEMAN NED +0.865
  7. O. BONOLI ITA +0.891
  8. B. IERACI ITA +2.364
  9. K. MEUFFELS NED +2.477
  10. M. KAPPLER GER +2.544
  11. R. SCHOTMAN NED +3.039
  12. M. PEDENEAU FRA +3.043
  13. F. ROVELLI ITA +3.268
  14. N. KALININ UKR +3.392
  15. M. PEREZ ESP +3.395
  16. J. BUIS NED +4.141
  17. D. IOZZO RSA +4.368
  18. G. ERILL ESP +6.129
  19. T. EDWARDS AUS +6.135
  20. B. NEILA ESP +6.347
  21. F. GOMEZ ESP +10.260
  22. E. TOM KAWAKAMI BRA +10.412
  23. K. ARDUINI ITA 17.357
  24. T. BRAMICH AUS +23.896
  25. M. GARCIA ESP +23.915
  26. M. BASTIANELLI ITA +36.500
  27. J. FORAY FRA +36.510

World Supersport 300 standings following Aragon

  1. Manuel Gonzalez 25 points
  2. Hugo De Cancellis 20
  3. Scott Deroue 16
  4. Jan-Ole Jahnig 13
  5. Andy Verdoïa 11
  6. Victor Steeman 10
  7. Omar Bonoli 9
  8. Bruno Ieraci 8
  9. Koen Meuffels 7
  10. Maximilian Kappler 6

Source: MCNews.com.au

Bautista in control as WSBK heads to his backyard, Aragon

2019 WSBK – Round Three – Aragon

Alvaro Bautista carries 26-point lead into Aragon

The first stop back in Europe for WorldSBK season 2019 sees the Spanish circuit of Aragon welcoming riders this weekend.

Aragon WSBK
WorldSBK heads to Aragon

MotorLand Aragón has historically aggressive asphalt, especially harsh to rear tyres, in fact, the surface together with temperatures that are not too high in April, can cause many tyre problems. In addition, the sand that is sometimes carried by the wind and deposited on the asphalt can affect grip and drifts towards the centre of the curve.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

The obvious favourite is a seemingly unstoppable Alvaro Bautista has recorded six wins out of six races in this beginning of the season, matching the rocket starts of Troy Bayliss in 2002 and Neil Hodgson in 2003: the latter went on to win the first nine races that year.

In Aragon Bautista will be already aiming for the second all-time string of wins, 9, recorded by Colin Edwards from Laguna Seca/2, 2002 to Imola/2, 2002, and repeated by Neil Hodgson in the aforementioned start of the 2003 season. The all-time record sequence was set by Jonathan Rea in the last 11 races of 2018.

However, funnily enough Spaniards do not have a great track record at Aragon. Carlos Checa is the only Spanish rider who achieved a pole, win or fastest lap in Aragon, he also recorded the fastest race lap in the very first race held here in 2011.

The last 12 wins in Aragon were all scored by British riders: since the first race in 2014 the winners have been Chaz Davies (7 times); Jonathan Rea (3); Tom Sykes (2). The Brits had taken over from Italy, which won the first four races at Aragon with Melandri (2) and Max Biaggi (2).

Ducati also has the first chance to reach the milestone of 350 WorldSBK wins during the Aragon race weekend.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Rea
Jonathan Rea

It feels odd to be mentioning history-making opportunities and not be referring to one of Jonathan Rea’s latest exploits with the Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK, but that has been the nature so far of the 2019 season.

Jonathan Rea

“It’s been a nice break since Buriram and Motorland is a good place to get back to business. I enjoy the track layout and we made some good progress last year during winter testing. We will continue to work on making more progress during Friday’s practice sessions. The layout is nice and flowing with lots of challenges during the lap, so finding a good set up for the race is crucial. It’s an important race for my team too, as their headquarters are just a few hours away in Granollers, near Barcelona. I expect lots of support and I’m excited to give it my all.”

But as they say, opportunity knocks at every man’s door, and the Northern Irishman has built much of his success on remaining cold and calculating through the toughest of times. MotorLand Aragon is not one of the four-time champion’s favourite tracks – in fact it’s one of just two on the 2019 calendar where he hasn’t achieved a double – but his focus will stay intact; Rea will be ready to pounce should the chance arise, as will team-mate Leon Haslam, who took pole position last time out in Aragon in 2015.

Leon Haslam

“Aragon is a circuit I last raced at in 2015 but I was on pole. I managed to score a podium there, so those are not bad memories. It has not been one of my favourite circuits but the lap times have been pretty competitive. My very first test with KRT was at Aragon last year, even though we lost some track time due to the weather. But the lap times still came pretty good. I am predicting that it is going to be a tough weekend this time. Jonathan’s record around there is really competitive. Chaz Davies goes pretty well there and Alvaro Bautista is going to be the man to beat, especially with the couple of big straights that there are at this circuit. I think it is going to be a big fight to get on that podium but obviously that is always my aim. My back is better, definitely ten times better, than it was in Thailand.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand R Haslam
Leon Haslam

Finding opportunity in adversity is what separates the greats from the rest, and few have suffered more setbacks in recent months than Chaz Davies on the Ducati with Aruba.it Racing. Come Race 1 it will have been nearly a year since the Welshman’s last race win, which happened precisely at the Alcañiz circuit.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Chaz Davies TBG
Chaz Davies – TBG Image

Davies has built up a treasure trove of performances in Aragon, with seven hard-fought race wins and an additional three podiums. It may arrive a bit early for the Brit in his personal adaptation to the V4 R, but expect him to make several steps forward on his own road to redemption.

WSBK Rnd Thailand R Lowes
Alex Lowes

There was a certain sense of dèja-vu in Thailand as Yamaha’s Alex Lowes and Michael van der Mark crossed the line in Race 2 in third and fourth, respectively, for the third time in a row; the same applies to independent standings runaways Marco Melandri and Sandro Cortese in sixth and seventh.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday VanDerMark
Michael van der Mark

All four Yamaha riders have performed impeccably since Round One – in particular the Englishman, who has brought his superb pre-season form into the new season – but how much margin for growth is there? The first European showdown of the year could be an ideal moment to make that final step towards the top of the rostrum.

Alex Lowes

“I’m Looking forward to getting back to Europe and heading to Aragon this weekend. Normally when we arrive back to start the European phase of the championship it settles down a bit, but this year we have back-to-back races in Aragon and Assen, so it’s going to be a busy start. Aragon is a track that the majority of the riders enjoy; it’s a long lap, with quite a few changes in elevation and it’s quite technical, which means a lot of work with the guys on Friday to get the bike working really well. With the WorldSSP300 guys racing for the first time in Aragon the schedule is different compared to the two flyaway races, with less time between sessions, so we need to see how that works out. Thailand was a good weekend for us, with a podium finish in all three races, and I’m looking forward to carrying that momentum into the first European race weekend in Spain.”

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Marco Melandri TBG
Marco Melandri – TBG Image

Another manufacturer looking for the final piece to the puzzle is BMW, although Tom Sykes and Markus Reiterberger with the BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team should find it in the form of an engine upgrade scheduled for later in the season. In the meantime, both men can look to the past to find inspiration: the former World Champion secured a dominant double here in 2014, while his partner emerged victorious last season from Spain on the road to the 2018 STK1000 title.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Sykes
Tom Sykes

Perseverance will be key for the BMW riders and much of the same can be said for the Moriwaki Althea Honda Team. Still recovering from a blameless crash in Thailand, Leon Camier will simply aiming to be on the grid in Spain. If the 32-year-old gets the go-ahead to race, expect him to keep on pushing the Fireblade to its limits, as the HRC-backed outfit continues seeking answers to find its groove in 2019.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Camier
Leon Camier

WorldSBK Championship Points Standings

Pos Driver Team Points
1. Bautista Alvaro Ducati 124
2. Rea Jonathan Kawasaki 98
3. Lowes Alex Yamaha 69
4. Van Der Mark Michael Yamaha 61
5. Melandri Marco Yamaha 54
6. Haslam Leon Kawasaki 51
7. Cortese Sandro Yamaha 40
8. Rinaldi Michael Ruben Ducati 40
9. Razgatlioglu Toprak Kawasaki 25
10. Sykes Tom BMW 19
11. Davies Chaz Ducati 18
12. Tore Jordi Kawasaki 18
13. Reirerberger Markus BMW 14
14 Laverty Eugene Ducati 12
15 Mercado  Leandro Kawasaki 11
16 Camier Leon Honda 9
17 Kiyonnari Ryuichi Honda 5
18 Delbianco Alessandro Honda 3


World Supersport

After two edge-of-your-seat races to kick off the year, MotorLand Aragon is ready to host the third race of the FIM Supersport World Championship. If the last few years are anything to go by, the Motocard Aragon Round could play a decisive role in the fate of this year’s championship race. The last four winners of the Spanish race have gone on to clinch the title later in the season – and in unfavourable news for the co-championship leaders, none of them entered Aragon at the top of the standings.

WSBK Rnd WorldSSP Krummenacher GB
Randy Krummenacher

Two men have been the outstanding stars of the early stages of the World Supersport season. Randy Krummenacher proved to be utterly dominant in the first round at Phillip Island, following that up with a conquering comeback to second position at Buriram. But Krummenacher has always finished the second round at the top of the standings – can he keep up the pace at the third time of asking, after eventually falling back in both 2016 and 2018?

WSBK Buriram Jules Cluzel
Jules Cluzel

Jules Cluzel meanwhile has enjoyed his best start to a WorldSSP season, sitting on 45 points alongside Krummenacher. The Frenchman was unshakeable in Thailand, fending off countless attacks from the riders preceding him, and seems determined to take the crown this year after last year’s dramatic finale. But MotorLand Aragon is a bit of a bogey circuit for the Frenchman, with three DNFs and a solitary podium in six races. Could Cluzel’s luck change for the better in 2019?

WSBK Rnd Phillip Island GeeBee Caricasulo
Federico Caricasulo – Image by GeeBee

The men following them in the standings will be hopeful of extending the WorldSSP Spanish streak, starting with the man sat third in the standings. After two consecutive third-place finishes, Federico Caricasulo finds himself 13 points adrift, nonetheless also consolidating his best start to a WorldSSP season. The young Italian finished runner-up in Spain in 2018 and is the only rider to have led in both races this year. Caricasulo will certainly be in contention in every session.

The home fans will also have two strong contenders to rally on. Héctor Barberà and Isaac Viñales have both finished a race in fourth position in 2019 and are guaranteed to fight for the rostrum positions at a track which both men know to perfection, albeit not on World Supersport machinery.

WSBK Test PI Day GB Mahias
Lucas Mahias – Image by GeeBee

The switch over to Kawasaki machinery may not have worked out yet for 2017 world champion Lucas Mahias, but the Frenchman will remain spirited and combative, seeking inspiration from his 2017 Aragonese win. Teammate Hikari Okubo  also with the Kawasaki Puccetti Racing Team meanwhile will continue pushing the limits of his ZX-6R, after two strong performances in Australia and Thailand.

Raffaele De Rosa and MV Agusta Reparto Corse are seeking a first podium at the Spanish track, coming off a strong top-five performance in Thailand, while both CIA Landlord Insurance Honda representatives push to close the gap with their rival machinery.

The FIM European Supersport Cup riders will also make their first appearance on the calendar, with a former race winner in Kyle Smith joined by two French newcomers: Xavier Navand and Gaetan Matern.

The third round of the World Supersport season gets underway on Friday 5th with free practice, followed by the Superpole on Saturday.

World Supersport Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Jules Cluzel Yamaha 45
2 Randy Krummenacher Yamaha 45
3 Federico Caricasulo Yamaha 32
4 Hector Barbera Yamaha 22
5 Hikari Okubo Kawasaki 20
6 Corentin Perolari Yamaha 14
7 Isaac Vinales Yamaha 13
8 Loris Cresson Yamaha 13
9 Lucas Mahias Kawasaki 12
10 Peter Sebestyen Honda 12
11 Raffaele De Rosa MV 11
12 Thomas Gradinger Yamaha 11
13 Jules Danilo Honda 7
14 Hannes Soomer Honda 6
15 Jaimie Van Sikkelerus Honda 6
16 Tom Toparis Yamaha 5
17 Rob Hartog Kawasaki 2
18 Glenn Van Straalen Kawasaki 2
19 Maria Herrera Yamaha 1
20 Ayrton Badovini Kawasaki 1

World Supersport 300

Since 2017, the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship has been a very welcome addition to the WorldSBK paddock, with 10 race winners and a further nine podium finishers in just two seasons of racing. This year over 50 men and women from 16 different countries and five continents will challenge for the WorldSSP300 crown.

A lone KTM leads a brace of Kawasaki Ninja 400s at Aragon overnight
Aragon Supersport 300 – 2018 WSBK

Reigning champion Ana Carrasco is looking to kick off her title defense in fine style at her home circuit – the Spaniard looking to make more history and become the first rider ever to win back-to-back WorldSSP300 titles, as well as looking to become the first female solo rider to do so. Carrasco has yet to achieve a podium placing at MotorLand Aragon, so whatever the result after the opening race, the championship looks set to come alive.

Tough opposition is led in the form of Marc Garcia, who returns to the 2019 line-up, looking to take back his crown he earned in 2017. Garcia failed to finish in Aragon in 2017 so will be looking to start his season strongly.

Previous race winners at MotorLand Aragon, Scott Deroue in 2017 and Koen Meuffels in 2018, will also be part of the battle again in Spain, with both showing great potential towards the close of 2018. Meuffels is hoping to give KTM a win in the class again, whilst Deroue will hope to head to the Netherlands a week later in fine form.

2018 championship runner-up Mika Perez will be hoping to improve his championship position this year and kick-start his title-tilt from MotorLand Aragon, where he has finished third for the past two seasons. South African rider Dorren Loureiro had a strong end to 2018 and has been eighth in the past two seasons at MotorLand Aragon, making him a protagonist at the sharp end.

Popular Indonesian rider Galang Hendra Pratama is leading the Yamaha charge and looking to secure a third class-victory in as many seasons. MotorLand Aragon will be a test for the 20-year-old, as he has never scored points at the venue before.

Other notable names include Borja Sanchez, who is without a win in his WorldSSP300 career but has gathered three podiums. Manuel Gonzalez also comes into the season as one of the potential front-runners, having ended his 2018 campaign with three third-places.

Riders will be split into two groups from Friday for Free Practice and Qualifying the following day, with the first-ever Last Chance Race taking place on Saturday afternoon.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Thai WSBK Sunday Races | Bautista continues unbeaten run

WorldSBK 2019 – Round Two
Chang International Circuit, Buriram

Superbike Superpole Sprint Race


WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday SprintRace Start
Sprint Race Start

A frenetic opening lap started Sunday’s 10-lap Tissot Superpole Race, with Rea bolting into the lead and Bautista slotting in behind.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Rea Bautista
Jonathan Rea, Alvaro Bautista

It wasn’t long until the Spaniard made his way ahead but in a similar style to their collision at turn three yesterday, ran wide and Rea sliced back under him. Bautista got back ahead at turn four whilst Alex Lowes (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) began closing in too. Lap one completed, the top five consisted of Bautista, Rea, Lowes, followed by Marco Melandri (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK) and Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK).

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Haslam VdMark
Leon Haslam

Bautista started to pull away from the reigning four-time WorldSBK Champion, who had a lot on his hands with Alex Lowes’ pressure. Ryuichi Kiyonari (Moriwaki Althea Honda Team) retired from the Tissot Superpole Race, having retired from Race 1 yesterday. Leon Haslam was making moves and got into fourth position ahead of Marco Melandri at turn three.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Rea Lowes Haslam
Jonathan Rea, Alex Lowes

Lap three and the race looked like it was coming alive, because whilst Bautista was pulling away, it was Jonathan Rea who set the fastest lap of the race, slashing the Spaniard’s initial gap down to under half-a-second.

On lap four, Van der Mark got his chance to get ahead of Melandri, as the Italian ran wide at turn eight and allowed the Dutch star through. Melandri then ran wide again at the final corner, allowing his teammate Sandro Cortese through. Melandri would take the place back a few laps later.

Whilst one Ducati was out front, Chaz Davies’ difficulties continued but he was able to close down Toprak Razgatlioglu (Turkish Puccetti Racing) throughout the race and eventually got ahead of the Turk. Soon after, the red flag was shown after an incident at turn three, halting Davies’ charge ahead.

Leon Camier (Moriwaki Althea Honda Racing) and Thitipong Warokorn (Kawasaki Thailand Racing Team) had a collision at turn three, bringing the red flag out and the race to a close. The Thai rider had been taken to the medical centre but has been sent to hospital for further assessments.

Bautista was declared winner ahead of Rea and Alex Lowes, who was just a fraction behind the Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK rider. Michael van der Mark was arguably the biggest beneficiary, moving from tenth on the grid to fourth after finishing just outside the podium placings. Completing the top five was Leon Haslam.


Superbike Superpole Sprint Race Results
Pos  Rider Bike R Gap Speed
1 A. Bautista V4 R 0.000 309,5
2 J.  Rea ZX-10RR 2.042 301,7
3 A. Lowes YZF R1 0.415 299,2
4 M. Van Der Mark YZF R1 2.661 301,7
5 L.  Haslam ZX-10RR 0.669 303,4
6 M. Melandri YZF R1 0.280 303,4
7 S. Cortese YZF R1 0.330 301,7
8 C. Davies Panigale V4 R / 309,5
9 T. Razgatlioglu ZX-10RR 0.619 300,0
10 T. Sykes S1000 RR 2.335 297,5
11 M. Rinaldi Panigale V4 R 1.182 302,5
12 L.  Mercado  ZX-10RR 2.071 295,1
13 J.  Torres ZX-10RR 0.534 301,7
14 M. Reiterberger S1000 RR 1.691 296,7
15 A. Delbianco CBR1000RR / 284,2
Not Classified
RE T. Warokorn ZX-10RR / 300,0
RE L.  Camier CBR1000RR / 300,8
RE R. Kiyonari CBR1000RR / 265,4
NS E. Laverty V4 R / /

WorldSBK 2019 – Round Two
Chang International Circuit, Buriram

Superbike Main Race Two

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Start Bautista Rea
Superbike Main Race Two

The third and final Superbike race of the Thai weekend saw Bautista lead from start to finish.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Rea Lowes
Jonathan Rea, Alex Lowes

Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) couldn’t take a challenge to Bautista but had to deal with Alex Lowes (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) in the early stages. At the end of the first lap the leading trio had a slight gap over Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) and Marco Melandri (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK).

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Soon, the big battle came from the scrap for fifth position, with Van der Mark, Melandri, Sandro Cortese (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK) and Chaz Davies (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati). Turn 3 was once again a prime overtaking area, with Melandri trying a move on van der Mark at Turn 3, with both running wide and allowing Chaz Davies to get a better drive down the straight and by Turn 4, the Welshman had got ahead of both Yamaha riders!

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Haslam Melandri VDMark
Leon Haslam

Melandri re-took Davies at Turn 8 but the race winner from Buriram in 2018 fought back at Turn 12. Cortese and van der Mark made the exact same succession of moves; a thrilling spectacle in the early stages.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Alex Lowes
Alex Lowes

Luck wasn’t going the way of Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team), who had to retire his S 1000 RR on lap four. Melandri and Davies had a close call on the same lap, with the Italian forcefully moving aside his former teammate at Turn 9, allowing van der Mark to go through, whilst Chaz Davies had to recover right at the back of the group. It wasn’t long however before Davies himself would suffer the same fate as Sykes. The 29-time WorldSBK race winner retired on lap eight, a wretched start to the season for the Welshman in contrast to the perfect run from his new team-mate.

Bautista dominated to take the victory by more than ten-seconds, ahead of Jonathan Rea and Alex Lowes. Michael van der Mark was able to hold off a late charge by Leon Haslam, whilst Marco Melandri finished in sixth position for a fifth race in a row. Van der Mark’s fourth place means he stretches his finishing run to 21.

Behind the leading six, Sandro Cortese became the first German since Max Neukirchner in 2008 to finish six consecutive races inside the top eight, with his seventh position.

Eighth belonged to Michael Ruben Rinaldi (BARNI Racing Team), a great performance on his debut in Thailand. Razgatlioglu managed to hold off Jordi Torres as they completed the top ten.


Superbike Rider Quotes

Álvaro Bautista

“Three wins, three fastest laps and Superpole means that it has been a perfect weekend for me! We knew that it was going to be an important race because Kawasaki have won here so many times, but the whole team worked well with the bike over the weekend and it all came good. It wasn’t easy however because the Panigale V4 R is new everywhere we go and everything has to be discovered from scratch. Right from the beginning I had great confidence with the bike and only made small adjustments for the set-up we know. I just want to say thanks to my team and all the people in Ducati because they have done a fantastic job, I’m so happy! Now we have some time to rest before we go to my home race. I’m really looking forward to that and can’t wait to race at Aragón in front of my Spanish fans.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Bautista
Álvaro Bautista

Chaz Davies

“I’m obviously disappointed not to have been able to finish the race and see the true potential that we had today especially after the progress we made this morning. Regarding the technical problem, after feeling something was a little bit amiss when I lost some speed, I decided to save the engine and think about the season ahead. It was disappointing not to capitalize on our improvement, because today I had a good race pace and the feeling with the bike was much better. We’ve got some clear ideas on the direction to take and there’s some light at the end of the tunnel. Now we have the test at Aragon before the race, which is a good opportunity for us to make some more gains.”

Jonathan Rea

“The best we could hope for today was a brace of second places and we managed to achieve that, albeit with a lot of pressure from Alex in the final race. He kept really pushing, as he had in the sprint race, but I just had that little bit extra in the end of race three to go away. I want to thank my team for giving me a good bike this weekend and there is always some work to do to improve the package. I felt this weekend we struggled a little bit with front end stability, especially when the front was moving a little bit in that second part of the final race, in the sectors where I was strong. Behind my visor I was giving it 110% especially in those early laps to try and keep in the slipstream as long as I could. As soon as I lost that it was back to managing my own race. I am taking home 49 points again and we will try to build on that in Europe.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Rea
Jonathan Rea

Leon Haslam

“It was more consistent for me in the second race today. We were running the bigger brake discs, which I did not have the best of feelings with this weekend, but in general we made a big step with the bike. I can say now that I have been suffering with a tapped nerve in my back, which flared up just before I came here, and I have had to take painkilling injections. I struggled a lot this weekend and I am glad it is over, in some ways. I need some rest and then we can start again in Aragon. I had not been to Chang for four years. It was always going to be tough with just two 50-minute sessions and going straight into it. So to get three fifth places, I am quite happy.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Haslam Melandri
Leon Haslam

Alex Lowes

“I was really happy with Race 2 today. I felt really good for 12 or 13 laps and I thought I might be able to challenge Johnny for second with the pace I had, but then I started struggling a bit near the end and had to roll off a little and take advantage of the gap to the group behind. Overall, it’s been a great weekend, for me and for Michael. He pushed me really hard in the race yesterday and to come from tenth on the grid to finish fourth in the Superpole race was difficult for him. We’ve both done a really solid job for the team, but we need to continue working just as hard when we get back to Europe if we’re to close the gap to the front two guys.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Alex Lowes
Alex Lowes

Michael van der Mark

“In warm-up this morning I felt good on the bike and when we made some small changes for the Superpole race I felt quite strong. The fourth place in the Superpole race was really important, because it meant I started this afternoon from the second row of the grid. I got a good launch from the start and then worked a bit with Alex, which was good, but already from the first lap I didn’t feel so comfortable with the front of the bike, maybe because the temperature was so much higher. I struggled a little, so couldn’t stay with Alex and then I made a small mistake and lost a lot of places. From there I had to work my way back to the front of the group, where I was able to maintain a consistent pace to finish fourth once again. I think we can be really proud about this weekend, with Alex’s three podiums and my three fourth place finishes. We’ve made some progress and, hopefully, we can make another step in Aragon.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday VanDerMark
Michael van der Mark

Marco Melandri

“It was a very difficult weekend for me, because from the first session we struggled a lot with the stability of the bike. Also I wasn’t confident, as I had a lot of trouble to make the bike turn in the very long corner and the bike was moving a lot everywhere. Coming back to Europe I think we need to refresh the mind and start from zero, because I understand what I need, but it will take us some time. What is important is to keep working and making improvements step-by-step.”

Sandro Cortese

“I’m happy about the work we’ve done today. Yesterday the gap to the group in P4, with Marco and Leon Haslam, was ten seconds. Today, until four laps from the end, I was with the group fighting for fourth place. Unfortunately, in the closing stages I had a big near high-side and lost contact with the group. But we made a very big step on the performance; it might be two seventh places on paper but in reality, the two results were completely different. I think our work paid off and for that I have to say thanks to my crew. Now I’m looking forward to the next race in Aragon.”

Tom Sykes

“After a couple of laps I felt that something was wrong. It’s a bit frustrating because we had made a change to the bike and it really felt good. On the positive side I’m really surprised to come here to this race circuit and to be inside the top ten with our disadvantage on the straight. So to be inside the top ten is really promising in my opinion. Honestly, in the approach and entry of many corners, the chassis and the set-up on the BMW S 1000 RR is really an advantage compared to our competition. So overall there are quite a lot of positives for me to take. The negative is obviously, as we saw in Phillip Island, that we are giving a lot away on the straights but hopefully that won’t be a problem anymore in the not so distant future.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Sykes
Tom Sykes

Markus Reiterberger

“In the Superpole Race, I had a great start and was right behind Tom after the first corner. I also had nice battles on the opening laps, but then another rider almost got me off the bike and I had to go straight. As a result, I lost six positions. When I then made a mistake, the race was more or less over for me. In the main race I struggled with the issue that has been causing us difficulties all weekend: that I could not delay the bike well enough and I had no feeling for the front of the bike. We tried to get a grip on that and improved things step by step, but unfortunately it just was not enough over the distance, especially when it got hotter and the grip level went down. Our gap towards the front mainly results from the time lost on the straights, but I’m not worried about that. Here I trust the guys in the factory that we get more power, and then the results will be better as well. But I have to continue to work on getting confidence in the front wheel when turning in and in the corners.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Reiterberger
Markus Reiterberger

Ryuichi Kiyonari

“Let’s start with the positive part of this weekend, which is the fact that we made a little progress both in terms of my feeling with the bike and my lap times. Not as much progress as we want of course, but we have been fairly consistent. Unfortunately, I didn’t have the same feeling during the race and I felt very frustrated. I just kept trying and doing my best, but I cannot say I’m satisfied with my race weekend. I’ve felt great support over the weekend from our fans, everyone in the team and in Honda and I want to repay them all with more than this. I have understood more about certain aspects which I hope will allow me to improve both my riding style and my bike setup. I’ll continue working hard to improve”.

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Kiyonari
Ryuichi Kiyonari

Leon Camier

“I think Warokorn hit Mercado in front of me. He went down and I literally had nowhere to go and unfortunately I hit him and crashed. He seemed out in that moment, so I tried to get the race stopped immediately. I just hope he is ok. I also damaged my knee in the crash and so could not take part in Race 2. I need to go back to Andorra, and have it checked by my doctor, then we will see what we need to do and make a plan for my recovery. As for the race, up until that moment, I was suffering with similar issues to yesterday to be honest, so I was struggling although I was trying to do the best I could.”

WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Camier
Leon Camier

Superbike Main Race Two Results
Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed
1 A. Bautista V4 R 0.000 308,6
2 J.  Rea ZX-10RR 10.053 300,0
3 A. Lowes YZF R1 12.368 300,8
4 M. Van Der Mark YZF R1 17.378 302,5
5 L.  Haslam ZX-10RR 17.518 303,4
6 M. Melandri YZF R1 18.925 305,1
7 S. Cortese YZF R1 23.281 300,0
8 M. Rinaldi V4 R 28.444 305,1
9 T. Razgatlioglu ZX-10RR 33.156 299,2
10 J.  Torres ZX-10RR 33.224 302,5
11 M. Reiterberger S1000 RR 40.164 297,5
12 R. Kiyonari CBR1000RR 53.511 300,0
13 A. Delbianco CBR1000RR 1’08.576 287,2
Not Classified
RET 7 C. Davies V4 R 13 Laps 305,9
RET 66 T. Sykes S1000 RR 17 Laps 298,3
RET 36 L.  Mercado ZX-10RR / /
RET 50 E. Laverty V4 R / /

WorldSBK Championship Points Standings
Pos Driver Team Points
1. Bautista Alvaro Ducati 124
2. Rea Jonathan Kawasaki 98
3. Lowes Alex Yamaha 69
4. Van Der Mark Michael Yamaha 61
5. Melandri Marco Yamaha 54
6. Haslam Leon Kawasaki 51
7. Cortese Sandro Yamaha 40
8. Rinaldi Michael Ruben Ducati 40
9. Razgatlioglu Toprak Kawasaki 25
10. Sykes Tom BMW 19
11. Davies Chaz Ducati 18
12. Tore Jordi Kawasaki 18
13. Reirerberger Markus BMW 14
14 Laverty Eugene Ducati 12
15 Mercado  Leandro Kawasaki 11
16 Camier Leon Honda 9
17 Kiyonnari Ryuichi Honda 5
18 Delbianco Alessandro Honda 3

World Supersport – Thailand

Jules Cluzel got a brilliant start from pole position but slotting in behind him at Turn 1 was Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing), who got a rapid start from sixth position. Federico Caricasulo remained third after the start initially before Hikari Okubo (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) pushed his way through into the leading three.

WSBK Buriram Jules Cluzel
Jules Cluzel

Isaac Viñales lost his initial advantage down the straight and by the end of the opening lap, was fourth, behind Cluzel, Caricasulo and Japanese sensation, Okubo. 2nd place starter, Randy Krummenacher (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) had a terrible start and was down in eighth.

In the early stages of the race, two-seconds covered the leading eight riders. Austrian rider Thomas Gradinger was making good progress, lapping the fastest rider on track on lap two. However, just a few laps later, his Yamaha YZF R6 was forced to retire at Turn 3, after it began smoke began to emit from it.

Isaac Viñales was continuously impressing throughout the race, making a brilliant pass at Turn 4 ahead of Federico Caricasulo, before challenging Jules Cluzel at the final corner for the lead, before running wide and allowing Cluzel to take him back on the run down the front straight. Meanwhile, Randy Krummenacher began to recover from his bad start, fighting his way ahead of Hector Barbera (Team Toth by Willirace) and Raffaele de Rosa (MV AGUSTA Reparto Corse).

As the race battle continued on, Turn 3 was a hub of overtaking activity, with little success making it a great spectacle, resulting in the eventual drag-race to Turn 4. With the leaders tripping themselves up, Hikari Okubo and Randy Krummenacher were able to close down the margin to the front. Krummenacher managed to get ahead of Okubo with five laps left.

Out front, hard moves were now being placed, with Jules Cluzel and Federico Caricasulo continuously swapping positions, resulting twice in Caricasulo being pushed wide at Turn 8 – both occasions seeing him lose more places. The top three battling was a fantastic spectacle, but Randy Krummenacher continued to close, in his quest to give Switzerland its first back-to-back WorldSSP wins.

On the penultimate lap, just 0.7s covered the leading four, with Hikari Okubo now being dropped in fifth. Caricasulo went for a move at Turn 3 for the lead, holding it until yet again being pushed wide at Turn 8. This allowed teammate Krummenacher to come through into second, with the battling behind Cluzel starting to pave the way for the Frenchman to have an easier final lap.

With the last lap, Caricasulo started to push in what was now just a battle for second place, taking his teammate at Turn 3, before Krummenacher took him back down the straight to Turn 4. Isaac Viñales wasn’t out of it yet either, as he tried at Turn 8, only with Caricasulo to fight back straight away at Turn 9.

Jules Cluzel took his 18th WorldSSP race win and Yamaha’s 80th in the class! Krummenacher fought back to finish second, with Caricasulo holding on for third. Viñales, De Rosa and Okubo were just behind, whilst completing the top ten was Hector Barbera, Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) who started from the back of the grid, Loris Cresson (Kallio Racing) and Hannes Soomer (MPM WILSport Racedays) rounding out the top ten.

Jules Cluzel – P1

“There was no way I could pull away from the group because they are so strong, as we’ve seen since the start of the season, and I knew this was going to be the case today. The pace was a little slower than on the long run I did on Friday and even warm-up this morning; I was expecting many 1’37 laps in the race, but I didn’t manage this once. I believe we didn’t make the best tyre choice, but I still won the race, so I’m happy about that. I want to thank the GMT94 team and Yamaha for giving me a winning bike here. Obviously I’ll be looking for the same result in the future, but I know it will be difficult as everyone is so strong, but that’s the aim.”

WSBK Buriram Jules Cluzel
Jules Cluzel

Randy Krummenacher – P2

“It wasn’t the best start for me, as I got pushed wide, but that’s racing. Everyone was really fast in the first laps, all pushing hard, but then I found my rhythm and was able to start to move up through the field until I caught the leading group. To be honest, second was the maximum, as Jules was the best today, but I’m happy with second place; the season is long and we are on the right way.”

WSBK Buriram Randy Krummenacher
Randy Krummenacher
World Supersport Race Results
Pos Rider Bike Gap Speed
1 J.  Cluzel YZF R6 0,000 263,4
2 R. Krummenacher YZF R6 0.939 268,0
3 F. Caricasulo YZF R6 1.496 270,7
4 I.  Vinales YZF R6 1.572 266,0
5 R. De Rosa F3 675 2.861 267,3
6 H. Okubo ZX-6R 4.599 260,9
7 H. Barbera YZF R6 9.047 266,7
8 L.  Mahias  ZX-6R 15.821 260,2
9 L.  Cresson YZF R6 16.933 270,0
10 H. Soomer CBR600RR 17.220 263,4
11 C. Perolari YZF R6 18.160 262,8
12 P. Sebestyen CBR600RR 24.255 260,2
13 J.  Van Sikkelerus CBR600RR 25.188 262,8
14 R. Hartog ZX-6R 27.764 259,0
15 M. Herrera YZF R6 42.143 264,7
16 G. Van Straalen ZX-6R 48.038 266,0
17 A. Coppola CBR600RR 48.272 260,9
18 N. Calero ZX-6R 52.497 259,6
19 R. Nakcharoensri YZF R6 / 252,9
WSBK Rnd Thailand Sunday Supersport Podium Cluzel
World Supersport Podium – Thailand
World Supersport Championship Points Standings
Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Jules Cluzel Yamaha 45
2 Randy Krummenacher Yamaha 45
3 Federico Caricasulo Yamaha 32
4 Hector Barbera Yamaha 22
5 Hikari Okubo Kawasaki 20
6 Corentin Perolari Yamaha 14
7 Isaac Vinales Yamaha 13
8 Loris Cresson Yamaha 13
9 Lucas Mahias Kawasaki 12
10 Peter Sebestyen Honda 12
11 Raffaele De Rosa MV 11
12 Thomas Gradinger Yamaha 11
13 Jules Danilo Honda 7
14 Hannes Soomer Honda 6
15 Jaimie Van Sikkelerus Honda 6
16 Tom Toparis Yamaha 5
17 Rob Hartog Kawasaki 2
18 Glenn Van Straalen Kawasaki 2
19 Maria Herrera Yamaha 1
20 Ayrton Badovini Kawasaki 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Alvaro Bautista underlines pace on day one in Thailand

Bautista still blitzing them

Round one dominator, Alvaro Bautista steadily improved the Ducati Panigale V4 R settings before consolidating his position as the man to beat with a 1m32.971s lap to top Friday ahead of Jonathan Rea.


Álvaro Bautista – P1

“For sure it’s only Friday, but I’m quite happy because the most important thing was to confirm our potential on a track that is different from Australia. This morning I started to understand the track and the reference markers, which are a little bit different from the MotoGP bike, so I needed some laps to adapt my riding style. Then I just worked on the bike settings without making any big changes, just some adjustments for the set-up on this track. In the afternoon we tried a different type of rear tyre to see what the new compound was like. There were positives and negatives, so we still have to decide for the race tomorrow. The feeling with the Panigale V4 R is good and I’m satisfied with the result of this first day.”

WSBK Test PI Final GB Bautista
Álvaro Bautista – Image by Geebee

Seven-time Buriram race-winner Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) has an impeccable record in Buriram and will look to retain that mantle come racing on Saturday and Sunday.

Jonathan Rea

“We were building into it this morning and we got off to a good start. Step-by-step we improved the bike and were getting into a rhythm in that second free practice session, where we started to make some steps with set-up. I wanted to do a consistent long run but we had to confirm which tyre we will use for tomorrow, at the front and the rear. In some areas of this track I also want to improve my braking. We found some positives in all that so – putting it together – I felt pretty good out there. We can look at the finer details tonight but already we are on the way.”


Teammate Leon Haslam was one of the biggest improvers in the session, taking just under a second off of his morning time to finish seventh.


Leon Haslam

“I thought I had a good handle on the track after racing here four years ago but it has taken me a little bit of time to get my head around the layout again. We stuck to our strategy and just used one tyre in each session, feeling a good rhythm, but we just need to find a little bit more pace. There is a lot of different tarmac from when I last rode here in 2015, so I am working out where those new bumps are, where it is grippy and where it is not. I am still finding braking points, which is just taking a bit of time. We are chipping away every lap, feeling better and better. It is hot out there but it is the same for everyone.”


Rookie Sandro Cortese (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK) took over as leading Yamaha rider, with a stunning charge to third positionin what is his first visit to Thailand.

Veteran teammate Marco Melandri was firmly inside the top six.

Leading the Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team charge is Alex Lowes, fourth on the combined timesheets.

Eugene Laverty (Team Goeleven) finished in eighth position and as second Ducati rider. The Irishman, who has never managed a race finish better than ninth in Thailand, will hope to translate his pace from today into Saturday’s Tissot Superpole Session.

Britain’s Leon Camier (Moriwaki Althea Honda Team) placed ninth on combined times and at one point of the session, had the track to himself, enabling him to put in some fast times and work on race pace.


Leon Camier

“I feel we had a good second session after having spent some time sorting out a few little things with the bike setup this morning. In the afternoon I feel we made some progress, I was feeling much better on my bike and was able to put some good laps together at the end of the session. There a few key areas where we are still losing but we know what these areas are and will keep working to try and improve them. All in all, I think we are not doing a bad job at the moment, but it will be a big fight for sure. Weather conditions are incredible, it’s so hot! The end of the race will be tough for everyone!”


Teammate Ryuichi Kiyonari improved his time but dropped places. The Japanese star was only 16th at the end of Friday’s track action.

Making it five manufacturers inside the top ten, Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was tenth as he continues to develop the new S1000RR. The 2013 WorldSBK champion completed an important 34 laps throughout the day, whilst German teammate Markus Reiterberger finished in 12th position, just 1.3s from Bautista.


Shaun Muir – BMW Team Principal

“FP1 was really good for us today. Tom and Markus both found a good direction, so everything went positive. We had three exits for each rider and all took steps forward so that was promising. In FP2 we had more test items. While we were pretty happy after FP1 we did not make quite the progress we had hoped for in FP2. We went in a different direction with Tom which unfortunately was the wrong way so had to come back, FP3 tomorrow we will hopefully go in a better direction. Markus had some gremlins that cost a bit of time but overall we can’t be too disappointed. We did not use any additional tyres in FP2 so the times that we put in were pretty much on 15 to 20 lap tyres, so overall I am quite happy with that. Regarding our expectations for Superpole, I think the group from third down to tenth is quite tight and is achievable, so to have a top six for Tom and a top nine for Markus would be a realistic target.”


WSBK Combined Times
Pos No.   Rider FP1 FP2 Best Gap
1 19 A. Bautista 1’33.089 1’32.971 1’32.971 0.000
2 1 J. Rea 1’33.288 1’33.269 1’33.269 0.298
3 11 S. Cortese 1’34.189 1’33.465 1’33.465 0.494
4 22 A. Lowes 1’34.150 1’33.550 1’33.550 0.579
5 60 M. Van Der Mark 1’33.911 1’33.562 1’33.562 0.591
6 33 M. Melandri 1’34.025 1’33.624 1’33.624 0.653
7 91 L. Haslam 1’34.556 1’33.797 1’33.797 0.826
8 50 E. Laverty 1’34.291 1’33.899 1’33.899 0.928
9 2 L. Camier 1’34.853 1’33.947 1’33.947 0.976
10 66 T. Sykes 1’34.029 1’34.022 1’34.022 1.051
11 7 C. Davies 1’34.244 1’34.093 1’34.093 1.122
12 28 M. Reiterberger 1’34.933 1’34.327 1’34.327 1.356
13 81 J. Torres 1’34.741 1’34.520 1’34.520 1.549
14 21 M. Rinaldi 1’35.688 1’34.550 1’34.550 1.579
15 36 L. Mercado 1’35.199 1’34.666 1’34.666 1.695
16 23 R. KIYONARI 1’34.967 1’34.783 1’34.783 1.812
17 99 T. WAROKORN 1’35.927 1’34.945 1’34.945 1.974
18 54 T. RAZGATLIOGLU 1’35.208 1’34.971 1’34.971 2.000
19 52 A. DELBIANCO 1’36.972 1’35.727 1’35.727 2.756

World Supersport Times

WSSP Combined Times
Pos No.   Rider FP1 FP2 Best Gap
1 16 J. Cluzel 1’38.274 1’37.641 1’37.641 0.000
2 21 R. Krummenacher 1’38.219 1’37.831 1’37.831 0.190
3 64 F. Caricasulo 1’37.923 1’37.866 1’37.866 0.225
4 80 H. Barbera 1’38.723 1’38.239 1’38.239 0.598
5 36 T. Gradinger 1’38.449 1’38.343 1’38.343 0.702
6 3 R. De Rosa 1’39.052 1’38.460 1’38.460 0.819
7 32 I.  Vinales / 1’38.479 1’38.479 0.838
8 78 H. Okubo 1’38.599 1’38.768 1’38.599 0.958
9 44 L. Mahias 1’38.680 1’38.670 1’38.670 1.029
10 86 A. Badovini 1’38.983 1’39.317 1’38.983 1.342
11 74 J. Van Sikkelerus 1’40.084 1’39.022 1’39.022 1.381
12 95 J. Danilo 1’39.684 1’39.068 1’39.068 1.427
13 38 H. Soomer 1’39.318 1’39.174 1’39.174 1.533
14 84 L. Cresson 1’39.780 1’39.277 1’39.277 1.636
15 94 C. Perolari 1’40.335 1’39.704 1’39.704 2.063
16 22 F. Fuligni 1’40.722 1’39.798 1’39.798 2.157
17 56 P. Sebestyen 1’40.269 1’40.382 1’40.269 2.628
18 6 M. Herrera 1’41.399 1’40.349 1’40.349 2.708
19 47 R. Hartog 1’44.273 1’41.034 1’41.034 3.393
20 15 A. Coppola 1’41.312 1’41.036 1’41.036 3.395
21 10 N. Calero 1’41.233 1’42.900 1’41.233 3.592
22 30 G. Van Straalen 1’42.183 1’41.590 1’41.590 3.949
23 46 R. Nakcharoensri 1’44.435 1’44.519 1’44.435 6.794
24 4 C. Stange 1’51.894 1’51.894 14.253

Source: MCNews.com.au

Bautista Blitz of Phillip Island complete | WSBK Race 3

2019 WorldSBK
Round One – Phillip Island
Race Three


Alvaro Bautista again sprinted away from the field when the lights went out at 1500 on Sunday afternoon for the third and final World Superbike race of the opening round of the championship staged at Phillip Island over the last weekend in February.

KRT duo Leon Haslam and Jonathan Rea gave chase, but a consistent string of 1m30s from Bautista across the opening laps proved too much for them to contend with.

Behind the Kawasaki Racing Team pair it was a battle for supremacy amongst the Yamaha riders. Melandri and Van Der Mark proving too quick for Lowes in this one as they tussled over fourth position.

Melandri won the battle for Yamaha supremacy, breaking away from Van Der Mark and as the race approached the halfway marker Melandri was starting to attack the KRT double-act. Up front Bautista was leading by eight-seconds, and in a different race…

Rea had followed Haslam for the first 15 laps before finally making his way past his team-mate, Haslam was having none of it though and pushed back through at turn four. That little tussle had allowed Melandri to really start nipping at their heels. Early on the next lap though Haslam ran in way too deep at turn one allowing Rea back through, it was a great recovery though and Haslam was back with him by the exit of Southern Loop.  Bautista was halfway to the airport by this time…

The battle for the other spots on the rostrum though was really warming up. With four laps remaining nothing separated Rea, Haslam and Melandri while Michael Van der Mark has also joined that party.

Haslam and Rea responded to the Yamaha challenge though by pulling their finger out and gapping Melandri and Van der Mark.

As Rea and Haslam got the last lap board Bautista was boarding his plane home…  In reality he led by almost 20-seconds, despite backing the pace right off in the closing laps, and rolling out of the throttle to cruise to the line and take the chequered flag still with a buffer of 12-seconds over the KRT duo.

World Superbike Sunday Main Race Results
  1. Alvaro Bautista – Ducati
  2. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki +12.195
  3. Leon Haslam – Kawasaki +12.454
  4. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha +16.574
  5. Alex Lowes – Yamaha +16.859
  6. Marco Melandri – Yamaha +17.329
  7. Chaz Davies – Ducati +26.823
  8. Sandro Cortese – Yamaha +27.580
  9. Eugene laverty – Ducati +29.116
  10. Leon Camier – Honda +29.178
  11. Leandro Mercado – Kawasaki +29.460
  12. Markus Reiterberger – BMW +29.460
  13. Tom Sykes – BMW +31.231
  14. Jordi Torres – Kawasaki +40.926
  15. Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda +41.616
World Superbike Championship Points Standings
  1. Alvaro Bautista 62
  2. Jonathan Rea 49
  3. Marco Melandri 30
  4. Alex Lowes 30
  5. Michael Van der Mark 29
  6. Leon Haslam 24
  7. Sandro Cortese 19
  8. Chaz Davies 15
  9. Tom Sykes 12
  10. Eugene Laverty 12

Source: MCNews.com.au

Alvaro Bautista blitzes them to win WSBK race one at P.I.

2019 WorldSBK
Round One – Phillip Island
WSBK Race One


Alvaro Bautista had stolen most of the headlines this week but it was Jonathan Rea that produced a record-breaking Superpole qualifying lap to claim pole position for the season-opening Motul FIM Superbike World Championship, Yamaha Finance round today at Phillip Island.

The 32-year-old’s qualifying lap of 1m29.413s on the KRT ZX-10RR the fastest that a production-based superbike has ever circulated around the 4.448km grand prix circuit, besting his previous benchmark (1m29.573s) set in 2017. It’s Rea’s 17th pole position in WorldSBK racing, and his third at Phillip Island.

Leon Haslam (1m29.626s) and Alvaro Bautista (1m29.729s), joined Rea on the front row for opening 22-lap race of WSBK season 2019.

It was clear that Bautista and the new Ducati Panigale V4 R had the pace over one lap, but could it look after its tyres well enough to be in contention over a full 22-lap race distance…?

They are away!

Jonathan Rea got the holeshot and led the field through Southern Loop for the first time but Alvaro Bautista pounced at turn three to move into the lead. Haslam was third, Lowes fourth, Sykes fifth and Melandri sixth.

On lap two Haslam moved past Rea but a small mistake allowed Rea back through to second place shortly thereafter. Up front though Bautista was breaking away…  By lap four his advantage had grown to a full 2.5-seconds while Haslam and Rea continued to dust each other up while they themselves were being closely stalked by Razgatlioglu, Lowes and Sykes.

Bautista pulling away…

Four laps later that advantage was out to almost five-seconds. Haslam was leading Rea and Toprak Razgatlioglu was in a strong fourth place ahead of Alex Lowes and Tom Sykes.

At half race distance, Bautista led by nine-seconds. Jonathan Rea and Leon Haslam were virtually attached to one another in an ongoing tussle for second place, while Alex Lowes had moved forward to fourth place and was right on the tail of the KRT pair.

Haslam down!

Leon Haslam then slid off softly at turn four, losing the front end mid-turn while in front of Rea. Haslam rejoined the race in 16th place.

Jonathan Rea and Alex Lowes had managed to break away from Sykes, Melandri, Van der Mark and Razgatlioglu as that quartet battled over fourth place.

As the race wore on Rea streadily eked away from Lowes little by little. A little further behind Melandri had got the better of Van der Mark, Razgatlioglu and Sykes, pulling away from them and edging his way forwards towards Lowes in order to make a late challenge for the podium. Melandri did exactly that, over the course of the following lap he pushed his GRT Yamaha past the Pata Yamaha of Lowes but the Briton was not going to relent, and battled the Italian all the way to the flag for that final step on the rostrum.

Last lap

Alvaro Bautista completes his domination of the race, despite backing off on the final lap his victory a massive 15-seconds over Jonathan Rea. Tellingly, Bautista was more than 25-seconds quicker over race distance than the next best Ducati, Michael Rinaldi in ninth.

Marco Melandri managed to outsmart Alex Lowes to the flag by less than a tenth-of-a-second to finish as top Yamaha and make it three different manufacturers on the rostrum.


WSBK Race One Results

  1. Alvaro Bautista – Ducati
  2. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki +14.983
  3. Marco Melandri – Yamaha +16.934
  4. Alex Lowes – Yamaha +16.984
  5. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha +19.179
  6. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Kawasaki +21.203
  7. Tom Sykes – BMW +21.488
  8. Sandro Cortese – Yamaha +23.018
  9. Michael Rinaldi – Ducati +25.580
  10. Chaz Davies – Ducati +27.124
  11. Jordi Torres – Kawasaki +28.214
  12. Eugene Laverty – Ducati +30.055
  13. Markus Reiterberger – BMW +31.859
  14. Leandro Mercado – Kawasaki +34.793
  15. Leon Haslam – Kawasaki +41.009
  16. Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda +45.523

Tickets and on-circuit camping for the Yamaha Finance-sponsored WorldSBK round are available at Ticketek or at the gate. Gates open 8am Sunday. On-circuit camping open 24/7 for arrival and check in at any time… via gate 2.

WorldSBK Australia Promo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Bautista tops Friday WSBK practice at Phillip Island

2019 WorldSBK
Round One – Phillip Island
Friday


Despite a concerted time attack from Jonathan Rea towards the end of FP2, it was Alvaro Bautista that remained atop the timesheets when the 50-minute session came to a close just after 1550 this afternoon at Phillip Island.

Bautista’s benchmark was a 1m30.327 to Rea’s 1m30.341.  KRT’s Leon Haslam was also right there with a 1m30.482.

While Bautista put in plenty of very fast laps it would be a brave man to bet against the KRT duo when it comes to race pace over a 22-lap race distance come tomorrow.

Tom Sykes heads the second row as the fastest BMW rider alongside Alex Lowes (Yamaha) and Leon Camier (Honda), which makes it five different manufacturers across the front two rows of the grid.

Wildcard entrant Troy Herfoss is obviously still not comfortable with this WorldSBK spec’ bike, lapping more than a second slower than he managed only an hour earlier on his ASBK Superbike spec’ Fireblade.

WorldSBK Friday Practice Combined Times
  1. Alvaro Bautista – Ducati 1m30.327
  2. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 1m30.341
  3. Leon Haslam – Kawasaki 1m30.482
  4. Tom Sykes – BMW 1m30.664
  5. Alex Lowes – Yamaha 1m30.783
  6. Leon Camier – Honda 1m30.792
  7. Sandro Cortese – Yamaha 1m30.850
  8. Markus Reiterberger – BMW 1m30.862
  9. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha 1m31.049
  10. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Kawasaki 1m31.125
  11. Jordi Torres – Kawasaki 1m31.146
  12. Michael Rinaldi – Ducati 1m31.238
  13. Marco Melandri – Yamaha 1m31.259
  14. Chaz Davies – Ducati 1m31.334
  15. Eugene Laverty – Ducati 1m31.403
  16. Leandro Mercado – Kawasaki 1m31.545
  17. Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda 1m31.790
  18. Alessandro Delbianco – Honda 1m32.669
  19. Troy Herfoss – Honda 1m34.314

World Supersport

Compulsory pit-stop introduced for Phillip Island race

It has been announced that the first race of the FIM Supersport World Championship season will take place under flag-to-flag rules, with a mandatory entry to the pits to change tyres for all bikes.

After speaking with the teams and based on the information gathered during the official two-day test here at Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit, FIM and Dorna WSBK Organization have decided to implement this format for Sunday’s race, adding a new challenge for the 24 riders set to line up on the grid.

Riders are free to choose when to do their pit-stop, under the condition that no tyre is used for more than 10 laps. Race distance has also been shortened to 16 laps.

This decision does not affect any of the three World Superbike races, which are scheduled to be run in regular conditions as more flexible regulations for teams ensure that proper safety conditions will be met.

Gregorio Lavilla
WorldSBK Executive Director of Sporting & Organization

“Due to specific track conditions seen at Phillip Island since Monday and some concerns regarding tyre life in race conditions, we decided that the best way to fully guarantee the safety of the WorldSSP riders and avoid any problems would be to do a flag-to-flag, which is in compliance with WorldSSP rules. This is unfortunate, but we believe that it is the best course of action and will guarantee an exciting race this weekend”.

World Supersport Friday Practice Combined Times
  1. Krummenacher – Yamaha 1m32.777
  2. Gradinger – Yamaha 1m33.150
  3. Caricasulo – Yamaha 1m33.166
  4. Cluzel – Yamaha 1m33.208
  5. De Rosa – MV Agusta 1m33.257
  6. Mahias – Kawasaki 1m33.521
  7. Okubo – Kawasaki 1m33.631
  8. Barbera – Yamaha 1m33.809
  9. Perolari – Yamaha 1m33.885
  10. Fuligni – MV Agusta 1m34.098
  11. Vinales – Yamaha 1m34.218
  12. Soomer – Honda 1m34.459
  13. Sebestyen – Honda 1m34.547
  14. Herrera – Yamaha 1m34.585
  15. Toparis – Yamaha 1m34.658
  16. Cresson – Yamaha 1m34.754
  17. Danilo – Honda 1m34.854
  18. Van Sikkelerus – Honda 1m34.937
  19. Coppola – Honda 1m35.076
  20. Badovini – Kawasaki 1m35.159
  21. Calero – Kawasaki 1m35.183
  22. Ruiu – Honda 1m35.232
  23. Hartog – Kawasaki 1m35.276
  24. Van Straalen – Kawasaki 1m35.362

Tickets and on-circuit camping for the Yamaha Finance-sponsored WorldSBK round are available at Ticketek or at the gate. Gates open 8am Saturday and Sunday. On-circuit camping open 24/7 for arrival and check in at any time… via gate 2.

WorldSBK Australia Promo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Riders reflect on WSBK Testing at Phillip Island

WorldSBK 2019 Phillip Island Test
Quotes


Álvaro Bautista
Aruba.it Racing Ducati – P1 – 1’30.303

“Today was another very positive day. This morning we made a change to the bike’s geometry but we didn’t find what we were looking for so we went back to yesterday’s setting. In the afternoon the aim was to do a long-run, to see how the tyres behaved after a number of laps in race trim. I’m pleased because I kept a very good pace throughout the entire long-run. These have been two very positive days, and I’d like to thank the whole team, which did a perfect job. We’re ready to tackle the first race, and I can’t wait to start!”

WSBK Test PI Final GB Bautista
Álvaro Bautista

Tom Sykes
BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team – P2 – 1’30.539

“Testing has gone really well and after these two test days here at Phillip Island, I want to thank the whole BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team because we worked very well, we worked through a comprehensive list of items and possibilities and certainly boxed off a lot of things. So I am very happy and I really feel that given the limited time on the project everyone has been doing an incredible job. I don’t think that we could have asked for anything more during this testing period. Going into the race weekend now we know that it’s not going to be easy, obviously we need to work a little bit more in some areas, but I really do feel that we are heading in the right direction. We will go out on track, work on further improving the package on our BMW S 1000 RR and enjoy the racing. I feel that the potential is higher than we could have expected when starting the project.”

WSBK Test PI Final Tom Sykes
Tom Sykes

Leon Haslam
Kawasaki Racing Team – P3 – 1’30.668

“Up until today we probably used the least amount of tyres compared to anyone else. We were just looking at race set-up and looking at a real specific plan of what we wanted to do, hence we were not posting really good one-off lap times and putting new tyres in. Our race times have been pretty competitive over both days. I had a bit of a go for a lap time at the end there but I got traffic on my first two laps and I think it was my fourth flying lap I did the 1’30.6. I think if we could have maximised the early laps, like everyone else seemed to be doing, we could have been a little closer. The biggest thing about this test for me was the average of the base pace, looking after the tyres, and managing that side of things. We are in a good place, I think. I am not looking to the races just yet; I am looking to the practice session on Friday, because there are still a few things we want to try. I feel good and we are making the steps.”

WSBK Test PI Final GB Haslam
Leon Haslam

Jonathan Rea
Kawasaki Racing Team – P4 – 1’30.722

“This has been a really positive test and we have been able to analyse a lot of items and changing things in the bike to see exactly what the track requests. This track is so unique because of the energy and load we put into the rear tyre, because of those fourth and fifth gear corners. Now we have a lot of data but unfortunately today there were a lot of red flags and we were not able to complete a long run or maximise a time attack. So this has been a huge data gathering two day test and it will prove very valuable for race weekend. With three races this year we need to be clever with the timetable and Sunday will be very a tight day for many reasons. The racing itself, trying to take on board food and – being in a factory team – the media commitments. So Sunday will be busy. From a racing point of view, I am quite happy.”

WSBK Test PI Final GB Rea
Jonathan Rea

Markus Reiterberger
BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team – P12 – 1’31.376

“I am pretty satisfied with the two test days in Australia. I immediately had a good feeling on the bike, and we worked well through our testing programme, so we can soon focus on fine-tuning the performance. The anticipation for the first race weekend is of course huge, because racing is always something special. On the other hand, I would not mind having a few more test laps to really get the maximum out of myself and the BMW S 1000 RR. We just need a little bit of time to understand the whole package, but I’m pretty happy so far, and I feel great in the team. The guys really give everything and work extremely hard. We also continuously get new options and things from Munich that we can test. You can really see how things are progressing well. Personally, I worked intensively on my fitness during the winter, and I am ready to kick off the season.”

WSBK Test PI Final Markus Reiterberger
Markus Reiterberger

Leon Camier
Moriwaki Althea Honda Team – P13 – 1’31.443

“We are working really hard on different aspects of the bike, from the electronics to the chassis’ setup. The feeling on the bike is not at all bad but we need to keep working hard on the setup. It’s important to work methodically because we want to be sure that every change we make is taking us in the right direction. The bike has a lot of strong points and is very nice to ride, very stable. The team is working really hard and I’m sure things will improve though it may take a little time.”

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Leon Camier TBG
Leon Camier – TBG Image

Chaz Davies
Aruba.it Racing Ducati – P14 – 1’31.796

“We’re not quite there yet to be honest. We made some strides this morning and I was quite happy with that. In the afternoon we wanted to change a few things but we ended up going back to this morning’s setting because everything we tried didn’t give me the right feeling. We have to put all the data together in the next two days and hopefully on Friday we’ll turn up with a better setting. The good news is that last year we also had a difficult test, but then I raced a lot better than I did at the tests. We’ll take the weekend as it comes and prepare for the race in the best possible way.”

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Chaz Davies TBG
Chaz Davies – TBG Image

Ryuichi Kiyonari
Moriwaki Althea Honda Team – P15 – 1’31.860

“Today I feel better compared to yesterday. This morning especially, we worked well on the suspension and electronic settings and I immediately had better feeling. Of course, we are still a bit far from the front, but all in all I’m happy with the progress we’ve made. During the afternoon session, we had some grip issues to deal with but in the end, we were able to sort that out, even if we did not improve on the morning’s best time. I’m highly motivated to improve and know that I am asking a lot of my team, so I wish to thank everyone for their effort and all their hard work.”

Alessandro Delbianco
Althea MIE Racing Team – P18 – 1’32.979

“I’m pleased with the work we’ve done here, despite finishing up the test a little earlier than everyone else. I feel as if I’ve got on much better than I did during the Portimao and Jerez tests. This is one of those tracks that requires courage and I feel comfortable riding here, I find the wide turns really help me. Compared to the last tests, I’m closer to my rivals and know that I can only improve, so I’m feeling optimistic about the upcoming race weekend.”


Team Quotes

Marcel Duinker, Crew Chief for Leon Haslam

“We had a very good winter test programme and this final test was all about preparation for race weekend. We wanted to give Leon as many laps as possible to give him more time to adjust to this bike. We made an agreement together that in every session we needed to improve our pace and that is what we did. I think we were the only riders to improve the lap time and the pace, session-by-session. To be third right now makes me very confident but I am more convinced about our consistency. We have no problems with rear tyre endurance. We are, after ten or 12 laps, at least as fast or faster than our competition so I am looking forward to the weekend. With three races the weekend will be as busy as usual, but more exciting.”

WSBK Test PI Final GB KRT Duinker
Marcel Duinker, Crew Chief for Leon Haslam

Pere Riba, Crew Chief for Jonathan Rea

“The test has been the same as each previous year in Phillip Island. This is a unique track, completely different and we have been preparing the base bike and the starting point for 2019. In the winter tests it has been very good and then when we arrived here, as we expected from previous years, everything has been different. So we started to focus on the base setup for this track and then focus with the tyres. This is one of the main things we have to focus on here, especially the rear tyre. This has been the target to try to find a good balance for Johnny and also for durability for the rear tyre. As for race weekend we have to analyse everything, and I already have some ideas. On Friday we still want to try something to give Johnny a little bit more confidence and understanding.”

WSBK Test PI Final GB KRT Riba
Pere Riba, Crew Chief for Jonathan Rea

Marc Bongers, BMW Motorrad Motorsport Director

“The results of the two days of testing at Phillip Island are very positive. They confirmed the performance at the test days that we had over winter. We are very proud of the collaboration within the team, which first had to gel in this new configuration. We have all pulled together over the past few months, and we now can see the result of this good teamwork. That’s motivating! But we have to stay realistic and look ahead to the first race. That will be the first time for us to see where we really stand in race trim. We also know that we still have a lot of work ahead of us, but the base of the new BMW S 1000 RR offers a lot of potential. We are happy to be back and we really can’t wait to start the first race.”

WSBK Test PI Final BMW SRR Logo
BMW Motorrad Superbike Team – BMW S 1000 RR

Shaun Muir, Team Principal BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team

“We left the European tests in a very good position and a lot of hard work was carried out to make further improvements at Phillip Island. At the two days of testing here we could clearly see the benefits of the small but very significant improvements to the chassis. Tom went through all the things he wanted to test and had his best package which he ran on Tuesday afternoon in its final configuration. That is a very good base setting for him now to start the season. Markus has taken a big step forward after Portimão and is in a very strong position where we feel he can definitely compete for the top ten in the races at the coming weekend.”

WSBK Test PI Final Tom Sykes
Tom Sykes

WSBK Phillip Island Test February 2019
Final Combined Times

  1. BAUTISTA Alvaro – Ducati 1’30.303
  2. SYKES Tom – BMW 1’30.539
  3. HASLAM Leon – Kawasaki 1’30.668
  4. REA Jonathan – Kawasaki 1’30.722
  5. MELANDRI Marco – Yamaha 1’30.760
  6. RAZGATLIOGLU Toprak – Kawasaki 1’30.840
  7. VAN DER MARK Michael – Yamaha 1’30.911
  8. CORTESE Sandro – Yamaha 1’31.077
  9. LOWES Alex – Yamaha 1’31.168
  10. TORRES Jordi – Kawasaki 1’31.224
  11. MERCADO Leandro – Kawasaki 1’31.328
  12. REITERBERGER Markus – BMW 1’31.376
  13. CAMIER Leon – Honda 1’31.443
  14. DAVIES Chaz – Ducati 1’31.796
  15. KIYONARI Ryuichi – Honda 1’31.860
  16. LAVERTY Eugene – Ducati 1’31.986
  17. RINALDI Michael Ruben – Ducati 1’32.083
  18. DELBIANCO Alessandro – Honda 1’32.979
  19. HERFOSS Troy – Honda 1’33.130

WorldSBK Australia Promo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Alvaro Bautista dominates Phillip Island pre-season test

Bautista dominates Phillip Island pre-season test

WorldSBK 2019 Phillip Island Test
Day 2 – PM Report


Alvaro Bautista has used the power and poise of the new Ducati Panigale V4 R, and a hefty dose of skill and bravery, to top every session of the two-day official World Superbike pre-season test at Phillip Island this week.

WSBK Test PI Day Bautista
Alvaro Bautista

Come conclusion of the afternoon session on Day 2, there was five riders under the lap record in an impressive turn of events, while some problems with tyres had been noted, with blistering occurring.

The new Ducati was also fastest through the speed traps by a considerable margin. That might cause organisers to question their recently released RPM limits for season 2019. If a single brand of machine looks to have much of an advantage these limits will be reduced further during the season, as has happened to Kawasaki in recent seasons due to their domination of the class.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Alvaro Bautista TBG
Alvaro Bautista – Image by TBG Sport

The new BMW will start season 2019 with a 14,900 rpm limit while the Kawasaki will be pegged to 14,600 rpm. The new Ducati Panigale V4 R will start with a 16,350 rpm limit, but with both Bautista and Davies clocking by far the fastest speeds during this Phillip Island test, one would expect that the Ducati rev limit to be reduced in due course…

Somewhat curiously BMW’s Tom Sykes and Markus Reiterberger are amongst the slowest bikes in the field through the speed trap. One would imagine that lack of top end speed would stem from poor drive off turn 12, and thus a deficit of rear grip from their current set-up with the new bike, with Tom Sykes claiming he’s still got a standard engine in their current test machines, and has given him inspiration for when the bike’s fully spec’d.

WSBK Test PI Day Sykes
Tom Sykes

It is early days yet with the new bike though and the lap-times are already quite encouraging, for Sykes in particular, who completed the final session of the day in second place, after putting in a 1’30.539 late in the session.

Many of the fastest times over the two days were set this morning, despite a few red flags because of Cape Barren Geese on circuit. This afternoon though there was wind, along with a few fine sprinkles of rain from time to time, with only a late push by Tom Sykes and Leon Haslam propelling them up the charts into second and third respectively, while Rea shaved his best time down to 1’30.722, a 0.038s improvement and retaining the number four position. Bautista also noted that he was going for race distance this afternoon, rather than outright fastest time.

Yamaha have looked strong across the two days with Pata Yamaha’s Alex Lowes quick out of the box on Monday, but it was Marco Melandri that ended up quickest overall for the tuning fork brand on a GRT Yamaha.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Marco Melandri TBG
Marco Melandri – TBG Image

The weather this afternoon put dampers on any sort of time attack from Jonathan Rea to gain bragging rights but he has been right there across both days, and on race pace it would be a brave man to bet against him, especially after he shaved down his time in the afternoon session. Leon Haslam also looks to be adapting to the WorldSBK spec’ ZX-10RR well and is in the hunt, coming in just ahead of Rea on the sheets.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Jonathon Rea TBG
Jonathan Rea – Image by TBG Sport

The new Althea Moriwaki Honda squad will, I think, be mainly satisfied with the pace of Leon Camier and Ryuichi Kiyonari at this early stage of the game. The pair have started behind the eight-ball as the new look team did not have bikes ready for the earlier test sessions this year, thus it was the first real hit-out for the team and their riders.

Troy Herfoss had a disastrous day one with teething problems on the freshly built Penrite Honda on Monday but did make some headway this morning and at least now has a direction to follow. Herfoss though is yet to match the times he did here a few weeks ago on his lesser spec’ ASBK Superbike. Their eager anticipation towards this wildcard appearance may have waned a little on the back of their problems this week.

WSBK Test PI Day GeeBee Troy Herfoss
Troy Herfoss – GeeBee Image

WSBK Phillip Island Test February 2019
Final Combined Times

  1. BAUTISTA Alvaro – Ducati 1’30.303
  2. SYKES Tom – BMW 1’30.539
  3. HASLAM Leon – Kawasaki 1’30.668
  4. REA Jonathan – Kawasaki 1’30.722
  5. MELANDRI Marco – Yamaha 1’30.760
  6. RAZGATLIOGLU Toprak – Kawasaki 1’30.840
  7. VAN DER MARK Michael – Yamaha 1’30.911
  8. CORTESE Sandro – Yamaha 1’31.077
  9. LOWES Alex – Yamaha 1’31.168
  10. TORRES Jordi – Kawasaki 1’31.224
  11. MERCADO Leandro – Kawasaki 1’31.328
  12. REITERBERGER Markus – BMW 1’31.376
  13. CAMIER Leon – Honda 1’31.443
  14. DAVIES Chaz – Ducati 1’31.796
  15. KIYONARI Ryuichi – Honda 1’31.860
  16. LAVERTY Eugene – Ducati 1’31.986
  17. RINALDI Michael Ruben – Ducati 1’32.083
  18. DELBIANCO Alessandro – Honda 1’32.979
  19. HERFOSS Troy – Honda 1’33.130

WorldSBK – Tuesday AM – Times / Speeds

  1. Alvaro Bautista – Ducati 1m30.303 – 316.7 km/h
  2. Marco Melandri – Yamaha 1m30.760 – 306.8 km/h
  3. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 1m30.761 – 310.3 km/h
  4. Tom Sykes – BMW 1m30.777 – 302.5 km/h
  5. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha 1m30.911 – 312.1 km/h
  6. Leon Haslam – Kawasaki 1m30.947 – 309.5 km/h
  7. Sandro Cortese – Yamaha 1m31.077 – 308.6 km/h
  8. Alex Lowes – Yamaha 1m31.272 – 310.3 km/h
  9. Markus Reiterberger – BMW 1m31.376 – 301.7 km/h
  10. Leon Camier – Honda 1m31.443 – 309.5 km/h
  11. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Kawasaki 1m31.445 – 306.8 km/h
  12. Chaz Davies- Ducati 1m31.796 – 314.0 km/h
  13. Jordi Torres – Kawasaki 1m31.808 – 300.0 km/h
  14. Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda 1m31.860 – 306.8 km/h
  15. Leandro Mercado – Kawasaki 1m31.942 – 303.4 km/h
  16. Eugene Laverty – Ducati 1m31.986 – 303.4 km/h
  17. Michael Rinaldi – Ducati 1m32.428 – 314 km/h
  18. Alessandreo Delbianco – Honda 1m32.979 – 294.3 km/h
  19. Troy Herfoss – Honda 1m33.130 – 300.8 km/h

World Supersport – Tuesday AM – Times

  1. Krummenacher – Yamaha 1m33.111
  2. Caricasulo – Yamaha 1m33.417
  3. Cluzel – Yamaha 1m33.791
  4. Mahias – Kawasaki 1m33.872
  5. De Rosa – MV Agusta 1m33.935
  6. Gradinger – Yamaha 1m34.184
  7. Barbera – Yamaha 1m34.282
  8. Soomer – Honda 1m34.340
  9. Perolari – Yamaha 1m34.361
  10. Okubo – Kawasaki 1m34.374
  11. Vinales – Yamaha 1m34.491
  12. Sebestyen – Honda 1m34.784
  13. Fuligni – MV Agusta 1m34.864
  14. Van Sikkelerus – Honda 1m34.872
  15. Cresson – Yamaha 1m34.918
  16. Danilo – Honda 1m35.008
  17. Toparis – Yamaha 1m35.165
  18. Herrera – Yamaha 1m35.282
  19. Badovini – Kawasaki 1m35.437
  20. Ruiu – Honda 1m35.506
  21. Hartog – Kawasaki 1m35.783
  22. Calero – Kawasaki 1m35.855
  23. Coppola – Honda 1m35.909
  24. Van Straalen – Kawasaki 1m36.765

WorldSBK Australia Promo


WorldSBK  Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit

Event Schedule, 22 – 24 February 2019
Thursday 21 February 2019
Time Duration Category Schedule
9:00 10:00 1:00 World SSP Riders Briefing
10:00 FIM Track Safety Inspection
10:00 11:30 1:30 All Riders Riders Track Familiarization
12:00 13:00 1:00 Safety Car Test Track closed
13:50 14:20 0:30 Aus SS 300 Free Practice 1
14:25 14:55 0:30 Aus SS Free Practice 1
15:00 15:30 0:30 Australian Sup Free Practice 1
15:40 15:50 0:10 Parade Laps Black Dog Ride
14:30 15:30 1:00 WorldSBK Riders Briefing
16:00 17:00 1:00 WorldSBK Official Photo Start/Finish Straight
16:00 17:00 1:00 WorldSSP Technical/Sporting Checks Pit Garages
17:00 18:00 1:00 WorldSSP Official Photo Start/Finish Straight
17:00 18:00 1:00 WorldSBK Technical/Sporting Checks Pit Garages
18:00 All 1st Time Riders Riders Briefing
TBC All Classes Tyre Stickers Distribution Technical Bay
Friday 22 February 2019
Time Duration Category Schedule
8:30 8:40 0:10 Timekeeping Racing Track System Test
9:10 9:25 0:15 Aus SS Free Practice 2
9:30 9:45 0:15 Aus SBK Free Practice 2
9:50 FIM Medical Inspection
10:00 FIM Track Inspection
10:30 11:20 0:50 WorldSBK Free Practice 1
11:30 12:15 0:45 WorldSSP Free Practice 1
12:25 12:55 0:30 Pit Walk 1
13:15 13:30 0:15 Aus SS 300 Free Practice 2
13:35 13:50 0:15 Aus SBK Qualifying
13:55 14:10 0:15 Aus SS Qualifying
14:15 14:30 0:15 Aus SS300 Qualifying
15:00 15:50 0:50 WorldSBK Free Practice 2
16:00 16:45 0:45 WorldSSP Free Practice 2
Saturday 23 February 2019
Time Duration Category Schedule
8:15 8:25 0:10 Timekeeping Racing Track System Test
8:45 9:15 0:30 Australian SSP Race 1 10 Laps 
9:20 FIM Medical Inspection
9:30 FIM Track Inspection
10:00 10:20 0:20 WorldSBK Free Practice 3
10:35 10:55 0:20 WorldSSP Free Practice 3
11:05 11:25 0:20 Aus SS 300 Race 1 8 Laps –
11:30 12:00 0:30 Aus SBK Race 1 12 Laps 
12:15 12:40 0:25 WorldSBK Tissot Superpole
12:55 13:20 0:25 WorldSSP Tissot Superpole
13:40 14:10 0:30 Pit Walk 2 & Safety Car Laps
15:00 WorldSBK RACE 1 22 Laps Pit Opens: 14:40
16:15 16:45 0:30 Aus SBK Race 2 12 Laps 
16:50 17:10 0:20 Aus SS 300 Race 2 8 Laps 
17:15 17:45 0:30 Aus SSP Race 2 10 Laps 
Sunday 24 February 2019
Time Duration Category Schedule
7:45 7:55 0:10 Timekeeping Racing Track System Test
8:15 8:45 0:30 Aus SSP Race 3 10 Laps
8:50 FIM Medical Inspection
9:00 FIM Track Inspection
09:30 09:45 0:15 WorldSBK Warm Up
09:55 10:10 0:15 WorldSSP Warm Up
10:30 11:00 0:30 Aus SBK Race 3 12 Laps
11:05 11:35 0:30 Pit Walk 3 & Safety Car Laps
12:00 WorldSBK S-pole Race 10 Laps Pit Opens: 11:45
13:15 WorldSSP Race 18 Laps Pit Opens: 13:00
15:00 WorldSBK Race 2 22 Laps Pit Opens: 14:40
16:15 16:35 0:20 Aus SS 300 Race 3 8 laps
1 Lap 4,445 km Issued: 28 November 2018 13:00h

Source: MCNews.com.au

Tuesday morning wrap from WSBK Phillip Island Test

Alvaro Bautista tops again

Marco Melandri makes progress

WorldSBK 2019 Phillip Island Test
Day 2 – AM Report


Cape Barren Geese put a temporary halt to proceedings with an hour remaining in the sessions, as so often happens when these big 4-kilogram birds start waddling around the track. The red flag then had to come out a few more times to clear the birds in the final hour of the morning session, frustrating riders and teams no end.

One thing riders did not have to contend with this morning was the blustery wind that plagued them on Monday afternoon. As a result we had four riders under the previous race lap record, and on four different brands of machinery. The outright qualifying record has not yet been broached though, the 1m29.573 set by Jonathan Rea here two years ago not yet threatened.

WSBK Test PI Day GeeBee Jonathan Rea
Jonathan Rea – GeeBee Image

Again it was Alvaro Bautista on the Ducati Panigale V4 R setting the pace, a 1m30.303 to the Spaniard, but the big improver this morning was Marco Melandri on the satellite GRT Yamaha. The hugely experienced Italian picked up seven-tenths to finish the morning session with a best of 1m30.760, besting Jonathan Rea by a thousandth-of-a-second.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Marco Melandri TBG
Marco Melandri – TBG Image

Fourth quickest was Tom Sykes on the new BMW S 1000 RR. The German machine obviously to the Briton’s liking as he adapts to a new motorcycle after many years on the dominant ZX-10RR machines with KRT. BMW have neven been known to be short of horsepower, but curiously both Sykes and his team-mate Reiterberger are amongst the slowest bikes in the field through the speed trap.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Tom Sykes TBG
Tom Sykes – TBG Image

Michael Van der Mark and Leon Haslam were also under the 1m31s barrier.

Alex Lowes did not make much progress this morning, presumably working on new developments after his great showing yesterday. The Pata Yamaha man eighth ahead of BMW’s Markus Reiterberger while Althea Moriwaki Honda recruit Leon Camier rounded out the top ten.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Leon Camier TBG
Leon Camier – TBG Image

Wildcard entrant Troy Herfoss made some progress after major problems yesterday fail to make any impact. A busy session in the garage overnight from the Penrite Honda squad has obviously started to allow them to find the right direction with their times now starting to drop, but are yet to match what Herfoss did here a few months ago on his lesser spec’ ASBK Superbike.

WSBK TBG WSBKPI PI Troy Herfoss TBG
Troy Herfoss – Penrite Honda – TBG Image

WorldSBK – Tuesday AM – Times / Speeds

  1. Alvaro Bautista – Ducati 1m30.303 – 316.7 km/h
  2. Marco Melandri – Yamaha 1m30.760 – 306.8 km/h
  3. Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 1m30.761 – 310.3 km/h
  4. Tom Sykes – BMW 1m30.777 – 302.5 km/h
  5. Michael Van der Mark – Yamaha 1m30.911 – 312.1 km/h
  6. Leon Haslam – Kawasaki 1m30.947 – 309.5 km/h
  7. Sandro Cortese – Yamaha 1m31.077 – 308.6 km/h
  8. Alex Lowes – Yamaha 1m31.272 – 310.3 km/h
  9. Markus Reiterberger – BMW 1m31.376 – 301.7 km/h
  10. Leon Camier – Honda 1m31.443 – 309.5 km/h
  11. Toprak Razgatlioglu – Kawasaki 1m31.445 – 306.8 km/h
  12. Chaz Davies- Ducati 1m31.796 – 314.0 km/h
  13. Jordi Torres – Kawasaki 1m31.808 – 300.0 km/h
  14. Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda 1m31.860 – 306.8 km/h
  15. Leandro Mercado – Kawasaki 1m31.942 – 303.4 km/h
  16. Eugene Laverty – Ducati 1m31.986 – 303.4 km/h
  17. Michael Rinaldi – Ducati 1m32.428 – 314 km/h
  18. Alessandreo Delbianco – Honda 1m32.979 – 294.3 km/h
  19. Troy Herfoss – Honda 1m33.130 – 300.8 km/h

WorldSBK Australia Promo


WorldSBK RPM Limits

Dorna has released updated RPM limits for the 2019 WorldSBK season that will be in place for the start of the season. If a single type of machine looks to have much of an advantage these limits will be reduced further during the season.  The new BMW will start season 2019 with a 14,900 rpm limit while the Kawasaki will be pegged to 14,600 rpm.

The new Ducati Panigale V4 R will start with a 16,350 rpm limit, but with both Bautista and Davies clocking by far the fastest speeds during this Phillip Island test, one would expect that the Ducati rev limit to be reduced in due course…


Source: MCNews.com.au