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Australian Superbike: Race Results From Phillip Island

ASBK R1
ASBK R2

 

 

More, from a press release issued by ASBK:

Waters and Herfoss all square heading into ASBK Superbike final round 

 

Cru Halliday (65). Photo courtesy ASBK.
Race One winner Cru Halliday (65). Photo courtesy ASBK.

 

It was a day of high drama and contrasting fortunes in the penultimate round of the 2023 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship, presented by Motul (ASBK), at Phillip Island on Sunday, October 29.

The premier Alpinestars Superbike class again produced tension and excitement aplenty, with the victories shared by Yamaha Racing Team’s Cru Halliday (YZF-R1) and Josh Waters (McMartin Racing with K-Tech Ducati V4R).

Waters now shares the championship lead with Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda CBR1000RR-R) heading into the round final at The Bend Motorsport Park (SA) from December 1-3. Herfoss could only manage a 7-4 scorecard at Philip Island, while Waters’ 2-1 results were a massive shot in the arm for his championship aspirations.

Like Superbike, the Michelin Supersport class is another one that will go down to the wire at The Bend, with Cameron Dunker (GTR MotoStars Yamaha YZF-R6) and Olly Simpson (YZF-R6) galvanising for one final effort.

With the Phillip Island weather turning it on, the remaining ASBK classes – Supersport 300, Yamaha Finance R3 Cup, bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup and the booming Sureflight Superbike Masters – were able to put on a treat for the spectators and will all be ‘live’ rubbers at The Bend as well.

Alpinestars Superbike

The two 12-lap races were tough for tipsters, especially the opener where Halliday snapped his six-year – or 2254-day – drought since his last victory after outlasting early leader Waters in a tight finish, while Max Stauffer (GTR MotoStars Yamaha YZF-R1) was jubilant after finishing on a Superbike podium for the first time.

It was a disappointing race for Herfoss after he ran off at turn one on lap four – recovering to finish seventh – while Jones’ challenge – and his title defence – evaporated after he crashed out of the lead at turn four on lap 10.

Jones’ demise promoted Stauffer into third, where he had plenty to spare at the conclusion of proceedings over Glenn Allerton (GT Racing BMW M 1000 RR), who was in close company with Bryan Staring (MotoGo Yamaha YZF-R1).

Pole-sitter Broc Pearson (DesmoSport Ducati V4R) was sixth after a tardy getaway, with Herfoss, Ted Collins (Livson Racing M 1000 RR), Anthony West (Addicted to Track YZF-R1) and Arthur Sissis (Unitech Racing YZF-R1) completing the top 10.

But this one was all about Halliday’s return to the Superbike top step.

“Everyone is riding really well, but of course I’m delighted to get the win,” said Halliday. “It was a bit of strange race, and the track has thrown us a bit of a curve ball by being so green.

“It’s really a matter of who can do what on an old tyre, slide it the most and bring it home.”

Waters, still clearly troubled by a number of injuries – broken right wrist, dislocated shoulder and fractured humerus – he sustained at the Suzuka 8 Hours world endurance race in late July, gritted his teeth in race two and led the whole way despite huge dollops of late pressure from Halliday and Jones.

However, the three-time Aussie Superbike champion kept the shutters down, with the trio flashing over the finish line just over half a second apart.

The scene is now set for a barnstorming finale in South Australia.

“I’m rapt to come away with the win there because I honestly didn’t think I’d win,” said Waters. “The conditions were tough in race two with the wind and we’ve had no grip all weekend, but everyone has been in the same boat.

“It’s great for the championship that we’re tied on points heading into the final round. I’ll be going in hard there.”

Herfoss picked his way through to fourth in race two, with Stauffer fifth from Pearson, Staring, Allerton, West and Collins.

Stauffer was third overall in round six, with Waters the victor on a countback over Halliday courtesy of a better finishing position in race two.

Michelin Supersport
 

Tom Toparis (Cube Racing YZF-R6) and Dunker were the two winners in the Michelin Superport program, but the day ended early for the former in race two after a nasty highside at turn 12 resulted in a broken wrist.

The race was red-flagged and, with Toparis out of action and Simpson frying a clutch in the restart, Dunker took full advantage to claim the spoils ahead of Jonathan Nahlous (YZF-R6) and Jake Farnsworth (YF-R6), followed by Ty Lynch (AMR Motorsports YZF-R6), Dallas Skeer (YZF-R6) and Scott Nicholson (Traction Control Motorsport YZF-R6).

Dunker’s maximum-point result and Simpson’s DNF saw him move into the championship lead on 196pts. Simpson (182pts), the former Red Bull Rookies rider, is still well and truly in touch, and takes extra comfort from knowing the final round will be held at his home circuit.

Lynch (180pts) is also lurking, in what is shaping as a nerve-wracking last-round battle of speed and temperament.

Dunker was delighted with his round six heroics, especially his race two victory. He said: “The race turned out very well, although the track was a bit more slippery.

“The championship has turned on its head with Olly (Simpson) not finishing the race, so I’m looking forward to the last round at The Bend.”

Earlier in the day, Toparis showed the field a clean pair of heels with a searing race-one victory.

Simpson tried his best to remain on Toparis’ tail early on before running wide at turn four, which allowed Dunker into second – and that was the top three carved in stone for the balance of the race. Nahlous, Lynch and Farnsworth saw out the top six.

“I was actually caught out by the start procedure, which is a little bit different to what I have been used to racing in the UK,” said Toparis. “But I settled and then really pushed on the first flyer by doing a 1:35.2, which was close to where I needed to be. After that, I worked into a nice rhythm and was really happy with my performance.”

Supersport 300 and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup

Another normal day of wonderfully entertaining rolling scrums at the sharp ends of the Yamaha Finance R3 Cup and Supersport 300 fields.

In the R3 Cup, Cameron Swain’s lead has been cut to 4pts (231 to 227) after a topsy-turvy round, with Brodie Gawith second ahead of Henry Snell (226) and Brandon Demmery (221). There will be fireworks at The Bend! Snell (2-1-1) was the overall winner at Phillip Island.

In Supersport 300, Snell (two wins) and Gawith (one) shared the honours across the weekend, and this one will also be a cliff-hanger to the very end with Snell (261pts) just ahead of Swain (260), Marcos Hamod (259) and Demmery (241).

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup

After three doses of no-holds-barred racing, there’s a new leader in the bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup with Archie Schmidt to take a 1pt (252 to 251) lead over Bodie Paige into The Bend.

Haydn Fordyce (2-4-1) claimed overall honours at Phillip Island, from Schmidt (5-1-5) and Valentino Knezovic (7-2-2).

Fordyce is third in the championship on 242pts, with Riley Nauta (220) still clinching to hope.

Sureflight Superbike Masters

The balance of the weekend’s Sureflight Superbike Masters Cup races delivered some great contests, with Ryan Taylor (Suzuki GSX-R1100) at the top of the mountain with his 3-1-1 scorecard, ahead of Keo Watson (Yamaha FZR1000) and Murray Clark (GSX-R1100).

Watson has a seemingly impenetrable lead with one round remaining and also holds an iron grip on the Period 6 Formula 1300 class. The other class leaders are Scott Webster (Suzuki XR69, Period 5 F1), Brad Phelan (Suzuki Katana, Period 5 Unlimited) and Robert Young (Ducati 888, Period 6 F750).

MotoGP: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

Jorge Martin won the MotoGP World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati, Martin came out on top of a three-way fight that wasn’t decided until the 26th and final lap of the race. It was Martin’s fourth full-length race win of 2023.

Defending World Champion Francesco Bagnaia was scored second on his Lenovo Team Ducati, just 0.253 second behind Martin.

Red Bull KTM’s Brad Binder crossed the finish line second, but the South African was demoted one position after the race due to exceeding track limits on the final lap.

 

MotoGP Race
MotoGP Points after Race

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Instant classic: Martin beats Bagnaia and Binder in a battle to remember in Buriram

History-making margins decide the difference in Thailand as Martin gets the gloves off to cut the Championship gap to 13 points

 

Jorge Martin (89) held off Brad Binder (33) and Francesco Bagnaia (1) to win Sunday in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jorge Martin (89) held off Brad Binder (33) and Francesco Bagnaia (1) to win Sunday in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Sunday, 29 October 2023

It’s turning out to be an absolute dog fight for the 2023 MotoGP™ Championship as the gap in the standings is reduced back down to just 13 points with three rounds remaining. How? Pure magic, with Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) coming out on top against Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) in a nail-biting, gloves off and all-out awesome battle for victory at Buriram. Martin won and Binder crossed the line in P2 but exceeded track limits on the final lap, so Bagnaia takes those sweet, sweet 20 points. And did we mention it was also the fourth closest premier class podium finish of all time? Just 0.253 covered the top three.

No holds barred on the opening laps

It was a tense affair as the riders lined up on the grid ready for battle in Buriram, with clouds looming but the skies staying dry as another 25 points went into play.

When the lights went out, Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) got the jump on Martin off the line, but the polesitter held firm into Turn 1 as he stuck it around the outside of the Italian. Bagnaia was fast-starting as well, in contrast to 24 hours earlier in the Sprint, as he got the launch that he needed to fly up from sixth on the grid to fourth.  

The gloves were off in the opening laps as Martin led the way. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) pushed his way past Marini for second, whilst Binder was on an absolute mission further back. The South African lunged up the inside of Bagnaia for fourth as he sent the World Champion wide, that also allowing Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) to further demote the number-one-plated Ducati to sixth. 

Martin didn’t bolt in the early stages as the Spaniard has done before. Instead, the elbows were out in the leading group as Bagnaia was under pressure and Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) soon joined the party, going wheel to wheel with the #1.

Some close exchanges were made between the two Champions as they battled it out for sixth, until Bagnaia ran the Repsol Honda to the edge of the circuit with his sights firmly set on the bikes ahead, message forcibly received as he was then able to start pulling away.  

With 20 laps remaining the race began to calm slightly, albeit briefly, as Martin led the way from Binder. Behind, Alex Marquez had made his way into third but had Marini, Aleix Espargaro, Bagnaia, and Marc Marquez for company.

As Binder shadowed Martin, however, Bagnaia was getting in the groove. He proceeded to carve his way through the group as he set fastest lap after fastest lap, and by 17 laps remaining the reigning Champion had made his way back up to fourth, with Alex Marquez locked in his sights.  

Bagnaia was making steady progress on third, but then it changed anyway. AM73’s glorious charge was done as he slid out, rider ok but that promoting Pecco to P3. All that lay up ahead was a KTM and one more Ducati.

Martin vs Binder vs Bagnaia

Binder waited until the final seven laps to show his first hand. He lunged his way through on the Spaniard, but couldn’t quite make it stick as Martin got the cutback. The two then proceeded to exchange paintwork over the course of the next lap. Bagnaia, meanwhile, had long since caught the duo and watched on.

Eventually Binder did get the better of Martin as he replicated his Turn 8 move with five laps to go, this time leaving no room for Martin to bite back and taking the race lead. The roles were reversed, with the number 89 now piling on the pressure.

It stayed tense as close as ever until Turn 2 on the penultimate lap. Martin shot back through on Binder on the brakes, choosing his strategy for the final lap clearly enough: he would defend. And that as Bagnaia tried to sweep past both in one on the penultimate go round the final corner.

The final lap was tense as Martin dug in, but it was far from enough breathing space to relax. Binder was harrying the number 89 apex after apex, and Bagnaia was looking for his own gap. Streaming down into the final corner for the very final time, three machines dropped anchor and piled into the apex, but there was no open door, no quarter given, and no mistakes made from the trio.

Martin took the victory after soaking up that stunning amount of pressure, completing his fourth double of the season. Binder crossed the line second but his error had come earlier on the final lap with track limits biting him once again, demoting the South African to third. Still, he becomes the rider from South Africa with the most premier class podiums, taking his ninth. 

Bagnaia takes that 20 points for second to keep his lead at 13 points, after once again getting his elbows out all the way home.

Fights up and down the field

Just two seconds back from the podium battle was Marco Bezzecchi (Mooney VR46 Racing Team). The Italian was making some big moves as he climbed up to fourth place, including a mid-race battle with his teammate Marini which saw the pair exchanging paintwork corner after corner. 

Marini faded in the latter stages and dropped down to seventh position, with Aleix Espargaro first to pick up the pieces as he crossed the line in 5th. A post-race penalty for a second tyre pressure offence demoted the Aprilia rider to eighth in the end however. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) and Marc Marquez therefore take fifth and sixth, and Quartararo vs Marc Marquez was also an electriyfing duel later in the race, and one the Frenchman won.

Fabio Di Giannantonio (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) was next across the line as he took ninth place, with Phillip Island victor Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing) rounding out the top ten.

The OR Thailand Grand Prix marks the end of what has been an action-packed triple header, with title fight constantly evolving over the past three rounds. There are now just three to go as one more rush for glory awaits the field… and it all begins at Sepang. Do NOT miss it as MotoGP™ returns to Malaysia in two weeks!

 

Fermin Aldeguer (54). Photo courtesy Dorna.
Fermin Aldeguer (54). Photo courtesy Dorna.

 
Aldeguer outpaces Acosta as Chantra takes home podium to rapturous reception

Fermin Aldeguer (Beta Tools SpeedUp) was simply unstoppable at the OR Thailand Grand Prix as he hit the front, hit the gas and didn’t look back – leaving Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) waiting for another shot at the crown in Malaysia as the number 37 was forced to settle for second in Buriram. Somkiat Chantra (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) took the final spot on the podium as he put in a stunner on home turf, delighting the home crowd.

Polesitter Aldeguer took the holeshot, with Acosta holding second. Marcos Ramirez (OnlyFans American Racing) had his elbows out as the lights went out, the Spaniard initially flying up to third from the second row.

Aldeguer put the hammer down right from the off, asking big questions of the Championship leader. Acosta did all he could to stick with the Boscoscuro, but Aldeguer began to sail away and from there, only one small mistake at the final corner denied the number 54 true perfection on his way to an incredible win. 

Behind the top two, the home fans were enthralled as a tantalising battle for the podium began to emerge with the home hero Chantra putting Ramirez under pressure. The move came from Chantra with 17 laps remaining as a perfectly executed Turn 2 overtake ignited the home crowd.

There was drama elsewhere though, with Jake Dixon (Inde GASGAS Aspar Team) crashing out after making big contact with Celestino Vietti (Fantic Racing).

Meanwhile, Tony Arbolino (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) was a rider on a mission as the Italian was slowly picking his way through the pack, determined not to let his title rival seal the deal in Thailand. Ai Ogura (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) was also on a charge after a tough qualifying, slicing up through the order.

At the front though, Aldeguer couldn’t be stopped and took a stunning second GP win, with Acosta using his “head not heart” to settle for those very valuable 20 points for second. Chantra, meanwhile, had his own breathing space to control and the home hero did just that, bringing home a podium to a rapturous reception.

Arbolino fought his way through to fourth, and Ogura’s charge saw him get into the top five as Ramirez faded to a still notable sixth place finish.

The attention now turns to the Petronas Grand Prix of Malaysia as the next challenge on the GP calendar awaits the Moto2™ grid. If Acosta finishes in the top four, he is the World Champion. Join us there!

 

David Alonso (80) led a swarm of Moto3 riders across the finish line in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
David Alonso (80) led a swarm of Moto3 riders across the finish line in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Magic Alonso, milestones for Furusato & Veijer, an increased lead for Masia and heartbreak for Sasaki

The incredible Moto3™ action defies character limits in Buriram as the title fight takes another twist

David Alonso (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) is now a four-time Grand Prix winner, the Moto3™ Rookie of the Year AND a serious contender for the 2023 Championship after the Colombian came out on top in an awesome showdown at the OR Thailand Grand Prix. The number 80 was able to just stay ahead of a three-way drag to the line to decide the podium positions behind him, with Taiyo Furusato (Honda Team Asia) and Collin Veijer (Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP) taking second and third, respectively – awesome maiden podiums for both.

Championship leader Jaume Masia (Leopard Racing) may not have taken a podium but he did increase his lead as disaster struck for Ayumu Sasaki (Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP) through no fault of his own, unable to avoid contact with David Muñoz (BOE Motorsports) after an apparent mechanical for the Spaniard – and Sasaki rejoining before later retiring and taking home nil points.

As the lights went out, polesitter Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took the holeshot before Sasaki sliced through, but Masia was the early big mover as he grabbed a handful of places off the line to take over in second. It was early doors though, with a huge group at the front – and big drama right around the corner.

What seemed to be a mechanical issue for Muñoz saw the BOE machine drop like a stone round Turn 4, and right on the racing line… with Sasaki the first rider who couldn’t avoid contact, along with Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Tech3) as the Spaniard was forced wide. Riders all ok, but Holgado rejoined in P27 and set off on an almighty charge, Muñoz later headed back out but was forced in, and Sasaki first carried on before being forced to retire in a huge title twist.

Back at the front, the gloves were off in a classic big leading group. But lap by lap it became a battle of five by the final five laps – until the elbows came out again, allowing those behind to close back in. Meanwhile on Holgado watch, the Spaniard was on an absolute charge up into P8 by two to go, as at the very front Veijer led Masia, Alonso and Furusato. 

Onto the final lap, a bobble between Öncü and Holgado at the final corner created a small gap behind the leading four of Veijer, Alonso, Masia and Furusato, but soon they had closed back in. 

Most of the front quartet headed a little wide with few moves, only Masia able to move through. Then it suddenly looked like Veijer was out of the fight for the win after a huge moment out the seat at the exit of Turn 4, leaving Alonso leading Furusato – with Masia shadowing the Japanese rider. But it wasn’t over. By the braking zone into the final corner, the Dutchman was right back into it.

Alonso retained the lead into that final corner, with Masia attacking Furusato just behind. The Championship leader got it done but then found Alonso on the apex and overcooked it, and that allowed Furusato to cut back up the inside – as did Veijer.

As Alonso took that magical fourth win of the year and confirmed himself the 2023 Rookie of the Year as well as a serious title threat, the fight for second became a drag to the line. And Furusato won it, taking his first Grand Prix podium in incredible style – the exact same phrase that can be said of Veijer as both hit a milestone. 

Masia was forced to settle for fourth but with the disaster for Sasaki still increases his lead – now 17 points ahead of the Japanese rider. Alonso is now third, 25 points back and equal on points with Holgado in fourth after the Tech3 rider’s incredible comeback charge. Öncü took fifth in the race and is fifth in the Championship, now 39 off the top.

Behind Holgado in that impressive P6, Matteo Bertelle (Rivacold Snipers Team) beat Riccardo Rossi (SIC58 Squadra Corse), Ryusei Yamanaka (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) and Kaito Toba (SIC58 Squadra Corse) as they completed the top ten just ahead of Ivan Ortola (Angeluss MTA Team), the final rider in that front group.

Now it’s destination Sepang for the final triple header of a blockbuster 2023. 25 points cover four riders, with Masia back ahead of the game by some margin. What awaits in Malaysia? Join us for more Moto3™ in two weeks to find out!

Moto2: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

Fermin Aldeguer won the Moto2 World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Beta Tools SpeedUp Boscoscuro machine, the Spaniard won the 22-lap race by 3.481 seconds.

Red Bull KTM Ajo rider Pedro Acosta expanded his Championship point lead by finishing second, and Thai star Somkiat Chantra thrilled the home crowd by taking third on his Idemitsu Honda Team Asia Kalex.

American Joe Roberts crashed his Italtrans Racing Kalex early in the race and Did Not Finish (DNF).

 

Moto2 Race
Moto2 Points

Moto3: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

David Alonso won the Moto3 World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Gaviota Aspar Team GASGAS, the Colombia racer won the 19-lap contest by a scant 0.266 second. It was Alonso’s fourth win of the season.

Japan’s Taiyo Furusato was the runner-up his Honda Team Asia machine, and Dutchman Collin Veijer was a very close third on a Liqui Moly Intact GP Husqvarna.

Just 0.557 second covered the top five finishers, and only 1.468 seconds separated the top 11 riders at the checkered flag.

 

Moto3 Race
Moto3 Points

Hanging With 2021 Baggers Champion Kyle Wyman, In The October Issue

Featured In the October 2023 issue of Roadracing World:

        It may look like Harley-Davidson factory rider Kyle Wyman is living a fairy tale life, but everything Wyman enjoys now has come from working hard, taking on challenges, and making leaps of faith that paid off. 

        Kyle is a third-generation racer from Macedon, New York, just east of Rochester. That’s where his maternal grandfather, Harv Rousseau, a NASCAR race license holder, owned a farm and decided in 1962 to start selling Harley-Davidsons out of an old chicken coop that became Harv’s Harley-Davidson. 

        Kyle Wyman started racing at age eight, and before he was out of high school, he had won an AMA Grand National Pro Sport Singles race at the Lima Half-Mile and moved up to racing a Harley-Davidson XR750 in AMA Basic Expert Twins…

 

            “Hanging With: Kyle Wyman,” by David Swarts

 

            After watching AMA Pro Road Races at Mid-Ohio in 2007, Kyle Wyman, middle brother Travis, and youngest brother Cody all decided to go road racing. It’s been a wild but successful ride for Kyle, winner of the 2019 Daytona 200 and an entrepreneur in the racing business to boot. Read about his unusual, creative and fascinating race to success in the latest issue of Roadracing World!

 

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine is available in print and digital formats.

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MotoGP: Sprint Race Results From Thailand (Updated)

Jorge Martin won the MotoGP World Championship Sprint Race Saturday afternoon at Chang International Circuit, in Thailand. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati, the Spaniard won the 13-lap race by 0.933 second.

Red Bull KTM’s Brad Binder was the runner-up on his RC16, and Luca Marini earned a close third-place result on his Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati. 

Martin’s win, his seventh Sprint Race win of the season, combined with defending World Champion Francesco Bagnaia’s seventh-place finish, allowed Martin to reduce his deficit to Bagnaia to just 18 points atop the World Championship standings.

 

MotoGP Sprint Race Results
MotoGP Points after Sprint Race

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

18 points: Martin cuts the gap with stunning Sprint victory in Buriram

The number 89 escapes Binder and Marini for more Saturday glory as Bagnaia takes seventh – putting the Championship lead back on the line on Sunday 

 

Jorge Martin (89) won Saturday's MotoGP Sprint Race in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jorge Martin (89) won Saturday’s MotoGP Sprint Race in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Saturday, 28 October 2023

The pressure is well and truly back on for reigning Champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) as key title rival Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) bounced back from Australian GP disappointment to take a statement Tissot Sprint victory at the OR Thailand Grand Prix. That brings the gap down from 27 to just 18 points, with Bagnaia only managing P7 on Saturday… meaning the Championship lead goes back on the table on Sunday.

There was more to the Sprint than a Martin masterclass, however, as Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) duelled Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) and was then able to close the gap the winner to less than a second. Headlines were made just behind that battle too as Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) made a stunning final corner dive on Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) for fourth. 

 

The start of the Sprint Race with Jorge Martin (89) and Luca Marini (10) fighting for first place. Photo courtesy Dorna.
The start of the Sprint Race with Jorge Martin (89) and Luca Marini (10) fighting for first place. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Lights out in Buriram 

As the lights went out, it wasn’t the best start for Martin but it was enough for the number 89 to head off a Turn 1 charge from Marini. From there it was hammer down for the Spaniard, with the Mooney VR46 machine denied and settling into second ahead of Aleix Espargaro and Binder, who had moved up into fourth.

The bigger drama was for Bagnaia as he dropped down to ninth, and Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) also had a tougher start as he was pushed wide and lost out too. The big winner? Marc Marquez as he moved up into fifth early doors.

The first big moves saw Aleix Espargaro attack Marini but find the door shut, a problem not encountered by Binder soon after as the KTM shot past the Aprilia, up into third. That set up what would become the duel behind Martin, with the number 33 tailgating Marini lap after lap.

Meanwhile, Marc Marquez was on the move. A brilliant dive up the inside of Aleix Espargaro saw the number 93 take over in fourth, but the number 41 repaid the favour not long after to take it back and then extend a little – very little – breathing space.

Up at the front, Martin was starting to build his own clear air. The number 89 was edging away tenth by tenth, with Marini still holding on ahead of Binder and the KTM looking a little impatient with it.

 

Brad Binder (33) and Luca Marini (10) battled over the final two podium positions. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Brad Binder (33) and Luca Marini (10) battled over the final two podium positions. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Gloves off in the podium battle 

With Martin over 1.5s up the road, Marini and Binder were left to battle it out as the laps ticked away. Binder was all over the back of the VR46 machine but couldn’t find a way through until eight laps to go. The South African made a first move but headed wide, with Marini slicing straight back through. Next lap around though, it was time for take two. The KTM shot through at the final corner and the two headed side-by-side down the straight, mission accomplished and a new one unlocked: hold Marini off.

The Italian latched himself onto the back of the KTM ahead as Aleix Espargaro also joined the party, shadowing Marini’s every move, and the same was true of Marc Marquez harrying Bezzecchi just behind. 

Bagnaia, down in P7, was the rider on the move in terms of pace though, homing in on the VR46-MM93 duel. Before he arrived, Marc Marquez was able to make a move stick on Bezzecchi though, and from there the Repsol Honda headed off on the chase behind Aleix Espargaro.

Two duels, one final corner

Over a second clear as the final lap began, the number 41 then made a big mistake and all-of-sudden he had Marc Marquez for more than close company. The number 93 was side by side by side with the Aprilia but denied, leaving it all going down to the final corner.

As Martin crossed the line just under a second clear of Binder and Marini secured third, the focus shifted to the final apex. Marc Marquez was right on Aleix Espargaro and Bagnaia was right on Bezzecchi, and it looked like it could be two parallel lunges as the four riders all dropped anchor. However, it was only the Repsol Honda who decided to go for it and he made it stick, nabbing fourth from Aleix Espargaro and holding it to the line as Bezzecchi held off Bagnaia in the fight for sixth.

Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) came home eighth after getting his own elbows out both in the group and against Phillip Island winner Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing), with the Frenchman forced to settle for ninth. Jack Miller (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) just missed out on a point in P10.

If Saturday’s action at the OR Thailand Grand Prix is anything to go by, you do not want to miss any of the action on Sunday’s billing! It’s now officially a three-horse race as Binder falls out of contention. Can Bagnaia bounce back, or will Martin continue his dominant title charge? It’s now less than one Grand Prix race of points separating the two at the top once more, so you do NOT want to miss it! Join us for lights out at 15:00 local time (GMT +7) on Sunday!

WorldSBK: Race One Results From Jerez

WSBK R1
WSBK Points after R1

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Race 1 glory and Championship conquest for Bautista at Jerez

 

Alvaro Bautista (1) won Race One, clinching his second straight Superbike World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Alvaro Bautista (1) won Race One, clinching his second straight Superbike World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) delivered a stellar performance in Race 1 at Jerez to claim not only the race victory but also the 2023 WorldSBK title. Bautista needed just two points to secure the title, and he did so with his 25th win of the season. His domination is now etched in history as he becomes the first Ducati rider to retain the title since Carl Fogarty in 1998 and 1999.

While Bautista seized the championship, Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK) valiantly chased him to a second-place finish. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK) fought his way from the fourth row to take third, marking his 14th career podium. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) took fourth place. Danilo Petrucci’s (Barni Spark Racing Team) fifth-place performance showcased his prowess in the Independent Riders’ Championship as he closed the gap on Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing), whose race took an unfortunate turn as he crashed out following an incident with Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati).

Alvaro Bautista’s flawless performance in Race 1 secured his second consecutive WorldSBK title. His victory marked his 25th win of the season, establishing a new record.

P1 | Alvaro Bautista | Aruba.it Racing – Ducati

 “I feel so happy! Now I’m starting to realise what we have achieved. I’m really happy and so proud of my team and people, because we had an incredible year. We won a lot of races, our performance in almost all situations was good. The best way to end the season is to defend the title. My two previous titles were won in Australia and Indonesia, so a bit far from home. It’s okay, you enjoy it with your team and friends there but it’s not the same as celebrating with your family, real friends, with your team and all the fans. It’s like a dream come true! It’s not easy to win a title at home. I’m so happy to win, but so happy to have the chance to celebrate with everyone!

To do it here at Jerez was very, very special. Many people said, ‘you only need two points, keep calm’. I said, ‘I don’t think about the points or the results or the Championship’. I wanted to stay free and just enjoy it. Maybe, if you’re thinking about that kind of target which can be easy to do, it’s worse because then you relax and you lose your focus, lose your performance. I preferred to just forget about everything and try to focus on myself, enjoy my riding. I felt so good from the beginning, and I could keep my pace. In the last laps, I started to think about the Championship more but that’s normal! Now I can be more relaxed especially from the outside, especially because a lot of people put a lot of pressure on me.”

 

 

 

More, from another press release issued by Dorna:

Title Defence Achieved: Alvaro Bautista clinches second consecutive WorldSBK title

A remarkable season saw the now two-time WorldSBK Champion establish new records and solidify his legacy

 

2023 Superbike World Champion Alvaro Bautista. Photo courtesy Dorna.
2023 Superbike World Champion Alvaro Bautista. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Alvaro Bautista’s exceptional performance throughout the 2023 WorldSBK season culminated in his second WorldSBK title claimed in Race 1 of the Prometeon Spanish Round. Demonstrating a remarkable consistency and determination, Bautista secured 25 race victories aboard his Ducati Panigale V4R, establishing a new all-time record for the highest number of wins in a single season in the WorldSBK history.

From the very start of the season at Phillip Island to the intense battles at iconic tracks like Assen, Misano, Imola and more recently at Portimao, Bautista firmly established himself as the strongest contender in a range of racing conditions. His dominance, marked by commanding performances, enabled him to forge a substantial lead in the Championship standings, which proved crucial in the face of adversity. For instance, following a DNF in Race 1 at Aragon, the gap between him and Toprak Razgatlıoğlu narrowed to just 37 points. However, Bautista’s resilience shone through as he made a remarkable comeback with two victories on Sunday at Aragon and a solid Portuguese Round arriving at Jerez still holding a 60-point advantage.

Bautista’s triumphs not only highlighted his individual excellence but also the seamless harmony between his exceptional riding abilities and the consistent performance of the Aruba.it Racing – Ducati team, as they look ahead to a promising partnership in 2024. As he stood atop the podium on numerous occasions, Alvaro Bautista demonstrated a mastery of his machine and a deep understanding of the tracks, further solidifying his status as one of WorldSBK’s premier riders. With this second title, Bautista’s legacy in the world of motorcycle racing continues to grow, leaving an indelible mark on the history of the World Superbike Championship.

P1 | Alvaro Bautista | Aruba.it Racing – Ducati

 “I feel so happy! Now I’m starting to realise what we have achieved. I’m really happy and so proud of my team and people, because we had an incredible year. We won a lot of races, our performance in almost all situations was good. The best way to end the season is to defend the title. My two previous titles were won in Australia and Indonesia, so a bit far from home. It’s okay, you enjoy it with your team and friends there but it’s not the same as celebrating with your family, real friends, with your team and all the fans. It’s like a dream come true! It’s not easy to win a title at home. I’m so happy to win, but so happy to have the chance to celebrate with everyone!”

World Supersport: Race One Results From Jerez

WSS Race One Results
WSS points after R1

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Bulega dominates Race 1, Manzi and Caricasulo fight for second

 

Nicolo Bulega (11). Photo courtesy Dorna.
Nicolo Bulega (11). Photo courtesy Dorna.

Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing WorldSSP Team) continued his dominant form in the FIM Supersport World Championship by clinching another commanding victory at Jerez, marking his 15th win of the season. Bulega’s early race pace allowed him to build a significant lead, and he crossed the line more than four seconds ahead of his closest rivals.

Stefano Manzi (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Federico Caricasulo (Althea Racing Team) engaged in a thrilling battle for second place, with Manzi ultimately securing the runner-up spot, less than a tenth of a second ahead of Caricasulo.
 
Jorge Navarro (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) managed to secure a solid fourth-place finish in WorldSSP Race 1 at Jerez after a hard-fought battle with Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha). Navarro demonstrated his determination in the late stages of the race, narrowly defeating Debise by just 0.055 seconds as they crossed the line. The Ten Kate Racing duo’s performances also had broader implications as their results allowed the team to clinch the 2023 Teams’ Championship. Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) delivered a respectable performance, securing sixth place.

Bulega asserted his dominance with an impeccable performance in Race 1. He’s on course to break records with his 15th win this season.

P1 | Nicolo Bulega | Aruba.it Racing WorldSSP Team

“It was a very good race. I had a good pace, and I started very well. I think I was first from the first corner, and then I had a good feeling with my bike, so I could push like I wanted, and this was very important. Thanks to my team because we are enjoying our last weekend together. Fifteen victories in one season are very good. And, ten pole positions; it’s incredible, and this is a fantastic season for me. So, I’m very happy, and I will remember this season for all my life. Tomorrow I will try for another win, but it won’t be easy. We already had the party when I won the title, but for sure, winning one more race is always nice.”

Australian Superbike: Pearson Takes Pole Position At Phillip Island

ASBK Qual

 

 

More, from a press release issued by ASBK:

Pearson stuns in Phillip Island ASBK Superbike qualifying, Toparis dominating Supersport

Queenslander Broc Pearson has fired a sensational qualifying salvo in the 2023 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship, presented by Motul, at Phillip Island today.

Pearson rose to the challenge on his Ducati to defeat all comers in a tense Alpinestars Superbike qualifying session, while Tom Toparis (Yamaha) wasn’t under as much heat as he soared to pole position in Michelin Supersport.

While the Superbike and Supersport riders fought for grid positions, the remaining ASBK Championship classes started their race campaigns, with intense action across all parts of the 4.448km grand prix circuit.

That’s set the scene for a gripping 11-race Sunday program, including two races apiece for Superbike and Supersport in superb Phillip Island spring weather.

Tickets are still on sale here, and can also be purchased at the gate. Live streaming begins at 10:00am (AEDT) tomorrow, and live TV on SBS and Stan Sport from 1:00pm (AEDT).

Alpinestars Superbike

Pearson claimed his maiden AMX Superstores pole position in the Alpinestars Superbike class with a ‘catch me if you can’ approach.

Pearson took full advantage of the blustery conditions to produce a stunning 1:32.156 lap with five minutes remaining in the second Superbike qualifier and, despite inevitable late charges by the likes of Josh Waters (McMartin Racing with K-Tech Ducati V4R) and defending champion Mike Jones (Yamaha Racing Team YZF-R1), he couldn’t be dislodged.

Pearson is now the fourth rider to score pole honours in 2023, and he’ll lead the field away in tomorrow’s 12-lap races as he tries his utmost to keep the marauding pack behind him.

“We haven’t had the best lead-up in terms of practice, so I’m really surprised to claim pole today,” said Pearson. “I am especially happy to put in a good performance at a track where I feel like I haven’t really had any good results.

“The team has helped me so much to move forward by showcasing more of my performance. I hope this can translate into some good results tomorrow.

Waters, who took the sword to the Superbike field in February’s opening Phillip Island round, will start alongside Pearson after setting a best lap of 1:32.276. It’s tight at the top, with the next five riders all within 0.4sec of Waters: Jones, practice pacesetter Cru Halliday (Yamaha Racing Team YZF-R1), Max Staffer (GTR MotoStars Racing YZF-R1), championship leader Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda CBR1000RR-R) and Bryan Staring (MotoGo Yamaha YZF-R1).

In a late charge for the top slot, Herfoss ran off at the blindingly fast turn one but managed to keep the Penrite Honda upright and return to the pits. He will start will start from fifth place in the middle of the second row tomorrow. Mark Chiodo (CBR1000RR-R) and Jed Metcher (YZF-R1M) also hit the deck in qualifying.

Herfoss takes a 14pt title lead into race day over Waters, while Jones will begin an unlikely – but still mathematically possible – late charge for championship glory.

Meanwhile, Glenn Allerton (GT Racing BMW M 1000 RR), Anthony West (Addicted to Track YZF-R1) and Ted Collins (Livson Racing M 1000 RR) saw out the top 10 in qualifying, with 20 riders set to do battle tomorrow.

Michelin Supersport
 

Tom Toparis (Stop & Seal Cube Racing Yamaha YZF-R6) is back and producing gold standard work in the Michelin Supersport class. Today, the Goulburn charger maintained a vice-like grip on top spot in both Supersport qualifying sessions. A 1:35.495 in the opener was his ultimate ticket to pole position, only marginally in arrears of Senna Agius’ class qualifying benchmark of 1:35.307.

The front row for tomorrow’s pair of 10-lap races will be completed by championship leader Olly Simpson (YZF, R6) 1:36.134) and Cameron Dunker (GTR MotoStars YZF-R6, 1:36.502), who’s only 13pts in arrears in second spot.

While it will be a balancing act for Simpson and Dunker on race day, Toparis has no such constraints and is relishing as return to Australian competition after a long absence. He’s also added the Alpinestars Superbike to his repertoire, but had an electrical problem which derailed his qualifying charge.

The ultra-consistent Jonathan Nahlous (YZF-R6) will lead away the second row, with the Michelin-shod duo of Ty Lynch (AMR Motorsports YZF-R6) and Scott Nicholson (Traction Control Motorsport) completing the top six.

Early-season title leader Lynch crashed at turn six late in qualifying, but will be back tomorrow alongside his 17 Michelin Supersport colleagues.

Supersport 300 and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup

The Supersport 300 class and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup provided contrasting fortunes for 15-year-old Cameron Swain (Yamaha YZF-R3). In the opening leg of the R3 Cup the pole-sitter increased his points lead with victory over Henry Snell (YZF-R3) and Brandon Demmery (YZF-R3), but then crashed in the follow-up Supersport 300 race.

The two production classes again came to the nail-biting party, with a group of six riders in each race who swapped paint and positions at every corner. With Swain a DNF, Snell and team-mate Brodie Gawith (YZF-R3) finished 1-2 in Supersport 300, with Ryan Larkin (YZF-R3) third.

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup 
 

The young stars of the future also came to play today in the bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup.

Hayden Fordyce started from pole position in race one, having recorded a time of 2:10.479 in qualifying, but it was Riley Nauta who took the ascendacy in the opening encounter by crossing the line first ahead of Fordyce and Bodie Paige.

Sureflight Superbike Masters

The two Sureflight Superbike Masters Cup races were absolute crackers. Keo Watson (Yamaha FZR1000) won the first race from Suzuki GSX-R1100 campaigners Murray Clark and Nigel Taylor, with Scott Campbell on the underpowered Honda RC30 just behind the trio in fourth.

In the second leg, the action was more intense as Clark took the win by 0.009sec from Taylor, with Watson third and Campbell leading the way in the P6 750cc class in fourth.

WorldSBK: Bautista Takes Pole Position In Tight Superpole Qualifying At Jerez

Defending World Champion Alvaro Bautista captured pole position during World Superbike Superpole qualifying Saturday at Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, in Spain. Riding his Aruba.it Racing Ducati Panigale V4 R, the Spaniard lapped the 2.75-mile (4.42 km) track in 1:38.635 to top the field of 24 riders.

Dominique Aegerter was second-best with a 1:38.845 on his GYTR GRT Yamaha YZF-R1, and Alex Lowes claimed the third and final spot on the front row with a lap at 1:38.905 on his factory Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10RR.

American Garrett Gerloff qualified ninth with a time of 1:39.190 on his Bonovo Action BMW M 1000 RR.

Just 0.844 second separated the top 13 qualifiers.

 

WSBK Superpole Qual

Australian Superbike: Race Results From Phillip Island

The start of Australian Superbike Race Two at Phillip Island. Photo by Russell Colvin, courtesy ASBK.
The start of Australian Superbike Race Two at Phillip Island. Photo by Russell Colvin, courtesy ASBK.
ASBK R1
ASBK R2

 

 

More, from a press release issued by ASBK:

Waters and Herfoss all square heading into ASBK Superbike final round 

 

Cru Halliday (65). Photo courtesy ASBK.
Race One winner Cru Halliday (65). Photo courtesy ASBK.

 

It was a day of high drama and contrasting fortunes in the penultimate round of the 2023 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship, presented by Motul (ASBK), at Phillip Island on Sunday, October 29.

The premier Alpinestars Superbike class again produced tension and excitement aplenty, with the victories shared by Yamaha Racing Team’s Cru Halliday (YZF-R1) and Josh Waters (McMartin Racing with K-Tech Ducati V4R).

Waters now shares the championship lead with Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda CBR1000RR-R) heading into the round final at The Bend Motorsport Park (SA) from December 1-3. Herfoss could only manage a 7-4 scorecard at Philip Island, while Waters’ 2-1 results were a massive shot in the arm for his championship aspirations.

Like Superbike, the Michelin Supersport class is another one that will go down to the wire at The Bend, with Cameron Dunker (GTR MotoStars Yamaha YZF-R6) and Olly Simpson (YZF-R6) galvanising for one final effort.

With the Phillip Island weather turning it on, the remaining ASBK classes – Supersport 300, Yamaha Finance R3 Cup, bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup and the booming Sureflight Superbike Masters – were able to put on a treat for the spectators and will all be ‘live’ rubbers at The Bend as well.

Alpinestars Superbike

The two 12-lap races were tough for tipsters, especially the opener where Halliday snapped his six-year – or 2254-day – drought since his last victory after outlasting early leader Waters in a tight finish, while Max Stauffer (GTR MotoStars Yamaha YZF-R1) was jubilant after finishing on a Superbike podium for the first time.

It was a disappointing race for Herfoss after he ran off at turn one on lap four – recovering to finish seventh – while Jones’ challenge – and his title defence – evaporated after he crashed out of the lead at turn four on lap 10.

Jones’ demise promoted Stauffer into third, where he had plenty to spare at the conclusion of proceedings over Glenn Allerton (GT Racing BMW M 1000 RR), who was in close company with Bryan Staring (MotoGo Yamaha YZF-R1).

Pole-sitter Broc Pearson (DesmoSport Ducati V4R) was sixth after a tardy getaway, with Herfoss, Ted Collins (Livson Racing M 1000 RR), Anthony West (Addicted to Track YZF-R1) and Arthur Sissis (Unitech Racing YZF-R1) completing the top 10.

But this one was all about Halliday’s return to the Superbike top step.

“Everyone is riding really well, but of course I’m delighted to get the win,” said Halliday. “It was a bit of strange race, and the track has thrown us a bit of a curve ball by being so green.

“It’s really a matter of who can do what on an old tyre, slide it the most and bring it home.”

Waters, still clearly troubled by a number of injuries – broken right wrist, dislocated shoulder and fractured humerus – he sustained at the Suzuka 8 Hours world endurance race in late July, gritted his teeth in race two and led the whole way despite huge dollops of late pressure from Halliday and Jones.

However, the three-time Aussie Superbike champion kept the shutters down, with the trio flashing over the finish line just over half a second apart.

The scene is now set for a barnstorming finale in South Australia.

“I’m rapt to come away with the win there because I honestly didn’t think I’d win,” said Waters. “The conditions were tough in race two with the wind and we’ve had no grip all weekend, but everyone has been in the same boat.

“It’s great for the championship that we’re tied on points heading into the final round. I’ll be going in hard there.”

Herfoss picked his way through to fourth in race two, with Stauffer fifth from Pearson, Staring, Allerton, West and Collins.

Stauffer was third overall in round six, with Waters the victor on a countback over Halliday courtesy of a better finishing position in race two.

Michelin Supersport
 

Tom Toparis (Cube Racing YZF-R6) and Dunker were the two winners in the Michelin Superport program, but the day ended early for the former in race two after a nasty highside at turn 12 resulted in a broken wrist.

The race was red-flagged and, with Toparis out of action and Simpson frying a clutch in the restart, Dunker took full advantage to claim the spoils ahead of Jonathan Nahlous (YZF-R6) and Jake Farnsworth (YF-R6), followed by Ty Lynch (AMR Motorsports YZF-R6), Dallas Skeer (YZF-R6) and Scott Nicholson (Traction Control Motorsport YZF-R6).

Dunker’s maximum-point result and Simpson’s DNF saw him move into the championship lead on 196pts. Simpson (182pts), the former Red Bull Rookies rider, is still well and truly in touch, and takes extra comfort from knowing the final round will be held at his home circuit.

Lynch (180pts) is also lurking, in what is shaping as a nerve-wracking last-round battle of speed and temperament.

Dunker was delighted with his round six heroics, especially his race two victory. He said: “The race turned out very well, although the track was a bit more slippery.

“The championship has turned on its head with Olly (Simpson) not finishing the race, so I’m looking forward to the last round at The Bend.”

Earlier in the day, Toparis showed the field a clean pair of heels with a searing race-one victory.

Simpson tried his best to remain on Toparis’ tail early on before running wide at turn four, which allowed Dunker into second – and that was the top three carved in stone for the balance of the race. Nahlous, Lynch and Farnsworth saw out the top six.

“I was actually caught out by the start procedure, which is a little bit different to what I have been used to racing in the UK,” said Toparis. “But I settled and then really pushed on the first flyer by doing a 1:35.2, which was close to where I needed to be. After that, I worked into a nice rhythm and was really happy with my performance.”

Supersport 300 and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup

Another normal day of wonderfully entertaining rolling scrums at the sharp ends of the Yamaha Finance R3 Cup and Supersport 300 fields.

In the R3 Cup, Cameron Swain’s lead has been cut to 4pts (231 to 227) after a topsy-turvy round, with Brodie Gawith second ahead of Henry Snell (226) and Brandon Demmery (221). There will be fireworks at The Bend! Snell (2-1-1) was the overall winner at Phillip Island.

In Supersport 300, Snell (two wins) and Gawith (one) shared the honours across the weekend, and this one will also be a cliff-hanger to the very end with Snell (261pts) just ahead of Swain (260), Marcos Hamod (259) and Demmery (241).

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup

After three doses of no-holds-barred racing, there’s a new leader in the bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup with Archie Schmidt to take a 1pt (252 to 251) lead over Bodie Paige into The Bend.

Haydn Fordyce (2-4-1) claimed overall honours at Phillip Island, from Schmidt (5-1-5) and Valentino Knezovic (7-2-2).

Fordyce is third in the championship on 242pts, with Riley Nauta (220) still clinching to hope.

Sureflight Superbike Masters

The balance of the weekend’s Sureflight Superbike Masters Cup races delivered some great contests, with Ryan Taylor (Suzuki GSX-R1100) at the top of the mountain with his 3-1-1 scorecard, ahead of Keo Watson (Yamaha FZR1000) and Murray Clark (GSX-R1100).

Watson has a seemingly impenetrable lead with one round remaining and also holds an iron grip on the Period 6 Formula 1300 class. The other class leaders are Scott Webster (Suzuki XR69, Period 5 F1), Brad Phelan (Suzuki Katana, Period 5 Unlimited) and Robert Young (Ducati 888, Period 6 F750).

MotoGP: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Jorge Martin won the MotoGP World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati, Martin came out on top of a three-way fight that wasn’t decided until the 26th and final lap of the race. It was Martin’s fourth full-length race win of 2023.

Defending World Champion Francesco Bagnaia was scored second on his Lenovo Team Ducati, just 0.253 second behind Martin.

Red Bull KTM’s Brad Binder crossed the finish line second, but the South African was demoted one position after the race due to exceeding track limits on the final lap.

 

MotoGP Race
MotoGP Points after Race

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Instant classic: Martin beats Bagnaia and Binder in a battle to remember in Buriram

History-making margins decide the difference in Thailand as Martin gets the gloves off to cut the Championship gap to 13 points

 

Jorge Martin (89) held off Brad Binder (33) and Francesco Bagnaia (1) to win Sunday in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jorge Martin (89) held off Brad Binder (33) and Francesco Bagnaia (1) to win Sunday in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Sunday, 29 October 2023

It’s turning out to be an absolute dog fight for the 2023 MotoGP™ Championship as the gap in the standings is reduced back down to just 13 points with three rounds remaining. How? Pure magic, with Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) coming out on top against Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) in a nail-biting, gloves off and all-out awesome battle for victory at Buriram. Martin won and Binder crossed the line in P2 but exceeded track limits on the final lap, so Bagnaia takes those sweet, sweet 20 points. And did we mention it was also the fourth closest premier class podium finish of all time? Just 0.253 covered the top three.

No holds barred on the opening laps

It was a tense affair as the riders lined up on the grid ready for battle in Buriram, with clouds looming but the skies staying dry as another 25 points went into play.

When the lights went out, Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) got the jump on Martin off the line, but the polesitter held firm into Turn 1 as he stuck it around the outside of the Italian. Bagnaia was fast-starting as well, in contrast to 24 hours earlier in the Sprint, as he got the launch that he needed to fly up from sixth on the grid to fourth.  

The gloves were off in the opening laps as Martin led the way. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) pushed his way past Marini for second, whilst Binder was on an absolute mission further back. The South African lunged up the inside of Bagnaia for fourth as he sent the World Champion wide, that also allowing Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) to further demote the number-one-plated Ducati to sixth. 

Martin didn’t bolt in the early stages as the Spaniard has done before. Instead, the elbows were out in the leading group as Bagnaia was under pressure and Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) soon joined the party, going wheel to wheel with the #1.

Some close exchanges were made between the two Champions as they battled it out for sixth, until Bagnaia ran the Repsol Honda to the edge of the circuit with his sights firmly set on the bikes ahead, message forcibly received as he was then able to start pulling away.  

With 20 laps remaining the race began to calm slightly, albeit briefly, as Martin led the way from Binder. Behind, Alex Marquez had made his way into third but had Marini, Aleix Espargaro, Bagnaia, and Marc Marquez for company.

As Binder shadowed Martin, however, Bagnaia was getting in the groove. He proceeded to carve his way through the group as he set fastest lap after fastest lap, and by 17 laps remaining the reigning Champion had made his way back up to fourth, with Alex Marquez locked in his sights.  

Bagnaia was making steady progress on third, but then it changed anyway. AM73’s glorious charge was done as he slid out, rider ok but that promoting Pecco to P3. All that lay up ahead was a KTM and one more Ducati.

Martin vs Binder vs Bagnaia

Binder waited until the final seven laps to show his first hand. He lunged his way through on the Spaniard, but couldn’t quite make it stick as Martin got the cutback. The two then proceeded to exchange paintwork over the course of the next lap. Bagnaia, meanwhile, had long since caught the duo and watched on.

Eventually Binder did get the better of Martin as he replicated his Turn 8 move with five laps to go, this time leaving no room for Martin to bite back and taking the race lead. The roles were reversed, with the number 89 now piling on the pressure.

It stayed tense as close as ever until Turn 2 on the penultimate lap. Martin shot back through on Binder on the brakes, choosing his strategy for the final lap clearly enough: he would defend. And that as Bagnaia tried to sweep past both in one on the penultimate go round the final corner.

The final lap was tense as Martin dug in, but it was far from enough breathing space to relax. Binder was harrying the number 89 apex after apex, and Bagnaia was looking for his own gap. Streaming down into the final corner for the very final time, three machines dropped anchor and piled into the apex, but there was no open door, no quarter given, and no mistakes made from the trio.

Martin took the victory after soaking up that stunning amount of pressure, completing his fourth double of the season. Binder crossed the line second but his error had come earlier on the final lap with track limits biting him once again, demoting the South African to third. Still, he becomes the rider from South Africa with the most premier class podiums, taking his ninth. 

Bagnaia takes that 20 points for second to keep his lead at 13 points, after once again getting his elbows out all the way home.

Fights up and down the field

Just two seconds back from the podium battle was Marco Bezzecchi (Mooney VR46 Racing Team). The Italian was making some big moves as he climbed up to fourth place, including a mid-race battle with his teammate Marini which saw the pair exchanging paintwork corner after corner. 

Marini faded in the latter stages and dropped down to seventh position, with Aleix Espargaro first to pick up the pieces as he crossed the line in 5th. A post-race penalty for a second tyre pressure offence demoted the Aprilia rider to eighth in the end however. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) and Marc Marquez therefore take fifth and sixth, and Quartararo vs Marc Marquez was also an electriyfing duel later in the race, and one the Frenchman won.

Fabio Di Giannantonio (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) was next across the line as he took ninth place, with Phillip Island victor Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing) rounding out the top ten.

The OR Thailand Grand Prix marks the end of what has been an action-packed triple header, with title fight constantly evolving over the past three rounds. There are now just three to go as one more rush for glory awaits the field… and it all begins at Sepang. Do NOT miss it as MotoGP™ returns to Malaysia in two weeks!

 

Fermin Aldeguer (54). Photo courtesy Dorna.
Fermin Aldeguer (54). Photo courtesy Dorna.

 
Aldeguer outpaces Acosta as Chantra takes home podium to rapturous reception

Fermin Aldeguer (Beta Tools SpeedUp) was simply unstoppable at the OR Thailand Grand Prix as he hit the front, hit the gas and didn’t look back – leaving Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) waiting for another shot at the crown in Malaysia as the number 37 was forced to settle for second in Buriram. Somkiat Chantra (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) took the final spot on the podium as he put in a stunner on home turf, delighting the home crowd.

Polesitter Aldeguer took the holeshot, with Acosta holding second. Marcos Ramirez (OnlyFans American Racing) had his elbows out as the lights went out, the Spaniard initially flying up to third from the second row.

Aldeguer put the hammer down right from the off, asking big questions of the Championship leader. Acosta did all he could to stick with the Boscoscuro, but Aldeguer began to sail away and from there, only one small mistake at the final corner denied the number 54 true perfection on his way to an incredible win. 

Behind the top two, the home fans were enthralled as a tantalising battle for the podium began to emerge with the home hero Chantra putting Ramirez under pressure. The move came from Chantra with 17 laps remaining as a perfectly executed Turn 2 overtake ignited the home crowd.

There was drama elsewhere though, with Jake Dixon (Inde GASGAS Aspar Team) crashing out after making big contact with Celestino Vietti (Fantic Racing).

Meanwhile, Tony Arbolino (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) was a rider on a mission as the Italian was slowly picking his way through the pack, determined not to let his title rival seal the deal in Thailand. Ai Ogura (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) was also on a charge after a tough qualifying, slicing up through the order.

At the front though, Aldeguer couldn’t be stopped and took a stunning second GP win, with Acosta using his “head not heart” to settle for those very valuable 20 points for second. Chantra, meanwhile, had his own breathing space to control and the home hero did just that, bringing home a podium to a rapturous reception.

Arbolino fought his way through to fourth, and Ogura’s charge saw him get into the top five as Ramirez faded to a still notable sixth place finish.

The attention now turns to the Petronas Grand Prix of Malaysia as the next challenge on the GP calendar awaits the Moto2™ grid. If Acosta finishes in the top four, he is the World Champion. Join us there!

 

David Alonso (80) led a swarm of Moto3 riders across the finish line in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
David Alonso (80) led a swarm of Moto3 riders across the finish line in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Magic Alonso, milestones for Furusato & Veijer, an increased lead for Masia and heartbreak for Sasaki

The incredible Moto3™ action defies character limits in Buriram as the title fight takes another twist

David Alonso (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) is now a four-time Grand Prix winner, the Moto3™ Rookie of the Year AND a serious contender for the 2023 Championship after the Colombian came out on top in an awesome showdown at the OR Thailand Grand Prix. The number 80 was able to just stay ahead of a three-way drag to the line to decide the podium positions behind him, with Taiyo Furusato (Honda Team Asia) and Collin Veijer (Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP) taking second and third, respectively – awesome maiden podiums for both.

Championship leader Jaume Masia (Leopard Racing) may not have taken a podium but he did increase his lead as disaster struck for Ayumu Sasaki (Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP) through no fault of his own, unable to avoid contact with David Muñoz (BOE Motorsports) after an apparent mechanical for the Spaniard – and Sasaki rejoining before later retiring and taking home nil points.

As the lights went out, polesitter Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took the holeshot before Sasaki sliced through, but Masia was the early big mover as he grabbed a handful of places off the line to take over in second. It was early doors though, with a huge group at the front – and big drama right around the corner.

What seemed to be a mechanical issue for Muñoz saw the BOE machine drop like a stone round Turn 4, and right on the racing line… with Sasaki the first rider who couldn’t avoid contact, along with Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Tech3) as the Spaniard was forced wide. Riders all ok, but Holgado rejoined in P27 and set off on an almighty charge, Muñoz later headed back out but was forced in, and Sasaki first carried on before being forced to retire in a huge title twist.

Back at the front, the gloves were off in a classic big leading group. But lap by lap it became a battle of five by the final five laps – until the elbows came out again, allowing those behind to close back in. Meanwhile on Holgado watch, the Spaniard was on an absolute charge up into P8 by two to go, as at the very front Veijer led Masia, Alonso and Furusato. 

Onto the final lap, a bobble between Öncü and Holgado at the final corner created a small gap behind the leading four of Veijer, Alonso, Masia and Furusato, but soon they had closed back in. 

Most of the front quartet headed a little wide with few moves, only Masia able to move through. Then it suddenly looked like Veijer was out of the fight for the win after a huge moment out the seat at the exit of Turn 4, leaving Alonso leading Furusato – with Masia shadowing the Japanese rider. But it wasn’t over. By the braking zone into the final corner, the Dutchman was right back into it.

Alonso retained the lead into that final corner, with Masia attacking Furusato just behind. The Championship leader got it done but then found Alonso on the apex and overcooked it, and that allowed Furusato to cut back up the inside – as did Veijer.

As Alonso took that magical fourth win of the year and confirmed himself the 2023 Rookie of the Year as well as a serious title threat, the fight for second became a drag to the line. And Furusato won it, taking his first Grand Prix podium in incredible style – the exact same phrase that can be said of Veijer as both hit a milestone. 

Masia was forced to settle for fourth but with the disaster for Sasaki still increases his lead – now 17 points ahead of the Japanese rider. Alonso is now third, 25 points back and equal on points with Holgado in fourth after the Tech3 rider’s incredible comeback charge. Öncü took fifth in the race and is fifth in the Championship, now 39 off the top.

Behind Holgado in that impressive P6, Matteo Bertelle (Rivacold Snipers Team) beat Riccardo Rossi (SIC58 Squadra Corse), Ryusei Yamanaka (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) and Kaito Toba (SIC58 Squadra Corse) as they completed the top ten just ahead of Ivan Ortola (Angeluss MTA Team), the final rider in that front group.

Now it’s destination Sepang for the final triple header of a blockbuster 2023. 25 points cover four riders, with Masia back ahead of the game by some margin. What awaits in Malaysia? Join us for more Moto3™ in two weeks to find out!

Moto2: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Fermin Aldeguer won the Moto2 World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Beta Tools SpeedUp Boscoscuro machine, the Spaniard won the 22-lap race by 3.481 seconds.

Red Bull KTM Ajo rider Pedro Acosta expanded his Championship point lead by finishing second, and Thai star Somkiat Chantra thrilled the home crowd by taking third on his Idemitsu Honda Team Asia Kalex.

American Joe Roberts crashed his Italtrans Racing Kalex early in the race and Did Not Finish (DNF).

 

Moto2 Race
Moto2 Points

Moto3: World Championship Race Results From Thailand

Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

David Alonso won the Moto3 World Championship race Sunday at Chang International Circuit, in Buriram, Thailand. Riding his Gaviota Aspar Team GASGAS, the Colombia racer won the 19-lap contest by a scant 0.266 second. It was Alonso’s fourth win of the season.

Japan’s Taiyo Furusato was the runner-up his Honda Team Asia machine, and Dutchman Collin Veijer was a very close third on a Liqui Moly Intact GP Husqvarna.

Just 0.557 second covered the top five finishers, and only 1.468 seconds separated the top 11 riders at the checkered flag.

 

Moto3 Race
Moto3 Points

Hanging With 2021 Baggers Champion Kyle Wyman, In The October Issue

Kyle Wyman (33) at speed on his Screamin' Eagle Harley-Davidson Road Glide at Daytona in March 2023. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.
Kyle Wyman (33) at speed on his Screamin' Eagle Harley-Davidson Road Glide at Daytona in March 2023. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Featured In the October 2023 issue of Roadracing World:

        It may look like Harley-Davidson factory rider Kyle Wyman is living a fairy tale life, but everything Wyman enjoys now has come from working hard, taking on challenges, and making leaps of faith that paid off. 

        Kyle is a third-generation racer from Macedon, New York, just east of Rochester. That’s where his maternal grandfather, Harv Rousseau, a NASCAR race license holder, owned a farm and decided in 1962 to start selling Harley-Davidsons out of an old chicken coop that became Harv’s Harley-Davidson. 

        Kyle Wyman started racing at age eight, and before he was out of high school, he had won an AMA Grand National Pro Sport Singles race at the Lima Half-Mile and moved up to racing a Harley-Davidson XR750 in AMA Basic Expert Twins…

 

            “Hanging With: Kyle Wyman,” by David Swarts

 

            After watching AMA Pro Road Races at Mid-Ohio in 2007, Kyle Wyman, middle brother Travis, and youngest brother Cody all decided to go road racing. It’s been a wild but successful ride for Kyle, winner of the 2019 Daytona 200 and an entrepreneur in the racing business to boot. Read about his unusual, creative and fascinating race to success in the latest issue of Roadracing World!

 

Roadracing World & Motorcycle Technology magazine is available in print and digital formats.

PREVIEW  October 2023 Issue of Roadracing World

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MotoGP: Sprint Race Results From Thailand (Updated)

Chang International Circuit in Thailand.
Chang International Circuit in Thailand. Photo courtesy Michelin.

Jorge Martin won the MotoGP World Championship Sprint Race Saturday afternoon at Chang International Circuit, in Thailand. Riding his Prima Pramac Racing Ducati, the Spaniard won the 13-lap race by 0.933 second.

Red Bull KTM’s Brad Binder was the runner-up on his RC16, and Luca Marini earned a close third-place result on his Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati. 

Martin’s win, his seventh Sprint Race win of the season, combined with defending World Champion Francesco Bagnaia’s seventh-place finish, allowed Martin to reduce his deficit to Bagnaia to just 18 points atop the World Championship standings.

 

MotoGP Sprint Race Results
MotoGP Points after Sprint Race

 

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

18 points: Martin cuts the gap with stunning Sprint victory in Buriram

The number 89 escapes Binder and Marini for more Saturday glory as Bagnaia takes seventh – putting the Championship lead back on the line on Sunday 

 

Jorge Martin (89) won Saturday's MotoGP Sprint Race in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jorge Martin (89) won Saturday’s MotoGP Sprint Race in Thailand. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Saturday, 28 October 2023

The pressure is well and truly back on for reigning Champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) as key title rival Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) bounced back from Australian GP disappointment to take a statement Tissot Sprint victory at the OR Thailand Grand Prix. That brings the gap down from 27 to just 18 points, with Bagnaia only managing P7 on Saturday… meaning the Championship lead goes back on the table on Sunday.

There was more to the Sprint than a Martin masterclass, however, as Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) duelled Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) and was then able to close the gap the winner to less than a second. Headlines were made just behind that battle too as Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) made a stunning final corner dive on Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) for fourth. 

 

The start of the Sprint Race with Jorge Martin (89) and Luca Marini (10) fighting for first place. Photo courtesy Dorna.
The start of the Sprint Race with Jorge Martin (89) and Luca Marini (10) fighting for first place. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Lights out in Buriram 

As the lights went out, it wasn’t the best start for Martin but it was enough for the number 89 to head off a Turn 1 charge from Marini. From there it was hammer down for the Spaniard, with the Mooney VR46 machine denied and settling into second ahead of Aleix Espargaro and Binder, who had moved up into fourth.

The bigger drama was for Bagnaia as he dropped down to ninth, and Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) also had a tougher start as he was pushed wide and lost out too. The big winner? Marc Marquez as he moved up into fifth early doors.

The first big moves saw Aleix Espargaro attack Marini but find the door shut, a problem not encountered by Binder soon after as the KTM shot past the Aprilia, up into third. That set up what would become the duel behind Martin, with the number 33 tailgating Marini lap after lap.

Meanwhile, Marc Marquez was on the move. A brilliant dive up the inside of Aleix Espargaro saw the number 93 take over in fourth, but the number 41 repaid the favour not long after to take it back and then extend a little – very little – breathing space.

Up at the front, Martin was starting to build his own clear air. The number 89 was edging away tenth by tenth, with Marini still holding on ahead of Binder and the KTM looking a little impatient with it.

 

Brad Binder (33) and Luca Marini (10) battled over the final two podium positions. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Brad Binder (33) and Luca Marini (10) battled over the final two podium positions. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Gloves off in the podium battle 

With Martin over 1.5s up the road, Marini and Binder were left to battle it out as the laps ticked away. Binder was all over the back of the VR46 machine but couldn’t find a way through until eight laps to go. The South African made a first move but headed wide, with Marini slicing straight back through. Next lap around though, it was time for take two. The KTM shot through at the final corner and the two headed side-by-side down the straight, mission accomplished and a new one unlocked: hold Marini off.

The Italian latched himself onto the back of the KTM ahead as Aleix Espargaro also joined the party, shadowing Marini’s every move, and the same was true of Marc Marquez harrying Bezzecchi just behind. 

Bagnaia, down in P7, was the rider on the move in terms of pace though, homing in on the VR46-MM93 duel. Before he arrived, Marc Marquez was able to make a move stick on Bezzecchi though, and from there the Repsol Honda headed off on the chase behind Aleix Espargaro.

Two duels, one final corner

Over a second clear as the final lap began, the number 41 then made a big mistake and all-of-sudden he had Marc Marquez for more than close company. The number 93 was side by side by side with the Aprilia but denied, leaving it all going down to the final corner.

As Martin crossed the line just under a second clear of Binder and Marini secured third, the focus shifted to the final apex. Marc Marquez was right on Aleix Espargaro and Bagnaia was right on Bezzecchi, and it looked like it could be two parallel lunges as the four riders all dropped anchor. However, it was only the Repsol Honda who decided to go for it and he made it stick, nabbing fourth from Aleix Espargaro and holding it to the line as Bezzecchi held off Bagnaia in the fight for sixth.

Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) came home eighth after getting his own elbows out both in the group and against Phillip Island winner Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing), with the Frenchman forced to settle for ninth. Jack Miller (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) just missed out on a point in P10.

If Saturday’s action at the OR Thailand Grand Prix is anything to go by, you do not want to miss any of the action on Sunday’s billing! It’s now officially a three-horse race as Binder falls out of contention. Can Bagnaia bounce back, or will Martin continue his dominant title charge? It’s now less than one Grand Prix race of points separating the two at the top once more, so you do NOT want to miss it! Join us for lights out at 15:00 local time (GMT +7) on Sunday!

WorldSBK: Race One Results From Jerez

Circuito de Jerez - Angel Nieto, in Spain. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Circuito de Jerez - Angel Nieto, in Spain. Photo courtesy Dorna.
WSBK R1
WSBK Points after R1

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Race 1 glory and Championship conquest for Bautista at Jerez

 

Alvaro Bautista (1) won Race One, clinching his second straight Superbike World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Alvaro Bautista (1) won Race One, clinching his second straight Superbike World Championship. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) delivered a stellar performance in Race 1 at Jerez to claim not only the race victory but also the 2023 WorldSBK title. Bautista needed just two points to secure the title, and he did so with his 25th win of the season. His domination is now etched in history as he becomes the first Ducati rider to retain the title since Carl Fogarty in 1998 and 1999.

While Bautista seized the championship, Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK) valiantly chased him to a second-place finish. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha Prometeon WorldSBK) fought his way from the fourth row to take third, marking his 14th career podium. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) took fourth place. Danilo Petrucci’s (Barni Spark Racing Team) fifth-place performance showcased his prowess in the Independent Riders’ Championship as he closed the gap on Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing), whose race took an unfortunate turn as he crashed out following an incident with Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati).

Alvaro Bautista’s flawless performance in Race 1 secured his second consecutive WorldSBK title. His victory marked his 25th win of the season, establishing a new record.

P1 | Alvaro Bautista | Aruba.it Racing – Ducati

 “I feel so happy! Now I’m starting to realise what we have achieved. I’m really happy and so proud of my team and people, because we had an incredible year. We won a lot of races, our performance in almost all situations was good. The best way to end the season is to defend the title. My two previous titles were won in Australia and Indonesia, so a bit far from home. It’s okay, you enjoy it with your team and friends there but it’s not the same as celebrating with your family, real friends, with your team and all the fans. It’s like a dream come true! It’s not easy to win a title at home. I’m so happy to win, but so happy to have the chance to celebrate with everyone!

To do it here at Jerez was very, very special. Many people said, ‘you only need two points, keep calm’. I said, ‘I don’t think about the points or the results or the Championship’. I wanted to stay free and just enjoy it. Maybe, if you’re thinking about that kind of target which can be easy to do, it’s worse because then you relax and you lose your focus, lose your performance. I preferred to just forget about everything and try to focus on myself, enjoy my riding. I felt so good from the beginning, and I could keep my pace. In the last laps, I started to think about the Championship more but that’s normal! Now I can be more relaxed especially from the outside, especially because a lot of people put a lot of pressure on me.”

 

 

 

More, from another press release issued by Dorna:

Title Defence Achieved: Alvaro Bautista clinches second consecutive WorldSBK title

A remarkable season saw the now two-time WorldSBK Champion establish new records and solidify his legacy

 

2023 Superbike World Champion Alvaro Bautista. Photo courtesy Dorna.
2023 Superbike World Champion Alvaro Bautista. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Alvaro Bautista’s exceptional performance throughout the 2023 WorldSBK season culminated in his second WorldSBK title claimed in Race 1 of the Prometeon Spanish Round. Demonstrating a remarkable consistency and determination, Bautista secured 25 race victories aboard his Ducati Panigale V4R, establishing a new all-time record for the highest number of wins in a single season in the WorldSBK history.

From the very start of the season at Phillip Island to the intense battles at iconic tracks like Assen, Misano, Imola and more recently at Portimao, Bautista firmly established himself as the strongest contender in a range of racing conditions. His dominance, marked by commanding performances, enabled him to forge a substantial lead in the Championship standings, which proved crucial in the face of adversity. For instance, following a DNF in Race 1 at Aragon, the gap between him and Toprak Razgatlıoğlu narrowed to just 37 points. However, Bautista’s resilience shone through as he made a remarkable comeback with two victories on Sunday at Aragon and a solid Portuguese Round arriving at Jerez still holding a 60-point advantage.

Bautista’s triumphs not only highlighted his individual excellence but also the seamless harmony between his exceptional riding abilities and the consistent performance of the Aruba.it Racing – Ducati team, as they look ahead to a promising partnership in 2024. As he stood atop the podium on numerous occasions, Alvaro Bautista demonstrated a mastery of his machine and a deep understanding of the tracks, further solidifying his status as one of WorldSBK’s premier riders. With this second title, Bautista’s legacy in the world of motorcycle racing continues to grow, leaving an indelible mark on the history of the World Superbike Championship.

P1 | Alvaro Bautista | Aruba.it Racing – Ducati

 “I feel so happy! Now I’m starting to realise what we have achieved. I’m really happy and so proud of my team and people, because we had an incredible year. We won a lot of races, our performance in almost all situations was good. The best way to end the season is to defend the title. My two previous titles were won in Australia and Indonesia, so a bit far from home. It’s okay, you enjoy it with your team and friends there but it’s not the same as celebrating with your family, real friends, with your team and all the fans. It’s like a dream come true! It’s not easy to win a title at home. I’m so happy to win, but so happy to have the chance to celebrate with everyone!”

World Supersport: Race One Results From Jerez

Circuito de Jerez. Photo courtesy of Dorna.
Circuito de Jerez, as seen in 2019. Photo courtesy Dorna.
WSS Race One Results
WSS points after R1

 

 

More, from a press release issued by Dorna:

Bulega dominates Race 1, Manzi and Caricasulo fight for second

 

Nicolo Bulega (11). Photo courtesy Dorna.
Nicolo Bulega (11). Photo courtesy Dorna.

Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing WorldSSP Team) continued his dominant form in the FIM Supersport World Championship by clinching another commanding victory at Jerez, marking his 15th win of the season. Bulega’s early race pace allowed him to build a significant lead, and he crossed the line more than four seconds ahead of his closest rivals.

Stefano Manzi (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) and Federico Caricasulo (Althea Racing Team) engaged in a thrilling battle for second place, with Manzi ultimately securing the runner-up spot, less than a tenth of a second ahead of Caricasulo.
 
Jorge Navarro (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) managed to secure a solid fourth-place finish in WorldSSP Race 1 at Jerez after a hard-fought battle with Valentin Debise (GMT94 Yamaha). Navarro demonstrated his determination in the late stages of the race, narrowly defeating Debise by just 0.055 seconds as they crossed the line. The Ten Kate Racing duo’s performances also had broader implications as their results allowed the team to clinch the 2023 Teams’ Championship. Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) delivered a respectable performance, securing sixth place.

Bulega asserted his dominance with an impeccable performance in Race 1. He’s on course to break records with his 15th win this season.

P1 | Nicolo Bulega | Aruba.it Racing WorldSSP Team

“It was a very good race. I had a good pace, and I started very well. I think I was first from the first corner, and then I had a good feeling with my bike, so I could push like I wanted, and this was very important. Thanks to my team because we are enjoying our last weekend together. Fifteen victories in one season are very good. And, ten pole positions; it’s incredible, and this is a fantastic season for me. So, I’m very happy, and I will remember this season for all my life. Tomorrow I will try for another win, but it won’t be easy. We already had the party when I won the title, but for sure, winning one more race is always nice.”

Australian Superbike: Pearson Takes Pole Position At Phillip Island

Broc Pearson (4). Photo courtesy ASBK.
Broc Pearson (4). Photo courtesy ASBK.
ASBK Qual

 

 

More, from a press release issued by ASBK:

Pearson stuns in Phillip Island ASBK Superbike qualifying, Toparis dominating Supersport

Queenslander Broc Pearson has fired a sensational qualifying salvo in the 2023 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship, presented by Motul, at Phillip Island today.

Pearson rose to the challenge on his Ducati to defeat all comers in a tense Alpinestars Superbike qualifying session, while Tom Toparis (Yamaha) wasn’t under as much heat as he soared to pole position in Michelin Supersport.

While the Superbike and Supersport riders fought for grid positions, the remaining ASBK Championship classes started their race campaigns, with intense action across all parts of the 4.448km grand prix circuit.

That’s set the scene for a gripping 11-race Sunday program, including two races apiece for Superbike and Supersport in superb Phillip Island spring weather.

Tickets are still on sale here, and can also be purchased at the gate. Live streaming begins at 10:00am (AEDT) tomorrow, and live TV on SBS and Stan Sport from 1:00pm (AEDT).

Alpinestars Superbike

Pearson claimed his maiden AMX Superstores pole position in the Alpinestars Superbike class with a ‘catch me if you can’ approach.

Pearson took full advantage of the blustery conditions to produce a stunning 1:32.156 lap with five minutes remaining in the second Superbike qualifier and, despite inevitable late charges by the likes of Josh Waters (McMartin Racing with K-Tech Ducati V4R) and defending champion Mike Jones (Yamaha Racing Team YZF-R1), he couldn’t be dislodged.

Pearson is now the fourth rider to score pole honours in 2023, and he’ll lead the field away in tomorrow’s 12-lap races as he tries his utmost to keep the marauding pack behind him.

“We haven’t had the best lead-up in terms of practice, so I’m really surprised to claim pole today,” said Pearson. “I am especially happy to put in a good performance at a track where I feel like I haven’t really had any good results.

“The team has helped me so much to move forward by showcasing more of my performance. I hope this can translate into some good results tomorrow.

Waters, who took the sword to the Superbike field in February’s opening Phillip Island round, will start alongside Pearson after setting a best lap of 1:32.276. It’s tight at the top, with the next five riders all within 0.4sec of Waters: Jones, practice pacesetter Cru Halliday (Yamaha Racing Team YZF-R1), Max Staffer (GTR MotoStars Racing YZF-R1), championship leader Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda CBR1000RR-R) and Bryan Staring (MotoGo Yamaha YZF-R1).

In a late charge for the top slot, Herfoss ran off at the blindingly fast turn one but managed to keep the Penrite Honda upright and return to the pits. He will start will start from fifth place in the middle of the second row tomorrow. Mark Chiodo (CBR1000RR-R) and Jed Metcher (YZF-R1M) also hit the deck in qualifying.

Herfoss takes a 14pt title lead into race day over Waters, while Jones will begin an unlikely – but still mathematically possible – late charge for championship glory.

Meanwhile, Glenn Allerton (GT Racing BMW M 1000 RR), Anthony West (Addicted to Track YZF-R1) and Ted Collins (Livson Racing M 1000 RR) saw out the top 10 in qualifying, with 20 riders set to do battle tomorrow.

Michelin Supersport
 

Tom Toparis (Stop & Seal Cube Racing Yamaha YZF-R6) is back and producing gold standard work in the Michelin Supersport class. Today, the Goulburn charger maintained a vice-like grip on top spot in both Supersport qualifying sessions. A 1:35.495 in the opener was his ultimate ticket to pole position, only marginally in arrears of Senna Agius’ class qualifying benchmark of 1:35.307.

The front row for tomorrow’s pair of 10-lap races will be completed by championship leader Olly Simpson (YZF, R6) 1:36.134) and Cameron Dunker (GTR MotoStars YZF-R6, 1:36.502), who’s only 13pts in arrears in second spot.

While it will be a balancing act for Simpson and Dunker on race day, Toparis has no such constraints and is relishing as return to Australian competition after a long absence. He’s also added the Alpinestars Superbike to his repertoire, but had an electrical problem which derailed his qualifying charge.

The ultra-consistent Jonathan Nahlous (YZF-R6) will lead away the second row, with the Michelin-shod duo of Ty Lynch (AMR Motorsports YZF-R6) and Scott Nicholson (Traction Control Motorsport) completing the top six.

Early-season title leader Lynch crashed at turn six late in qualifying, but will be back tomorrow alongside his 17 Michelin Supersport colleagues.

Supersport 300 and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup

The Supersport 300 class and Yamaha Finance R3 Cup provided contrasting fortunes for 15-year-old Cameron Swain (Yamaha YZF-R3). In the opening leg of the R3 Cup the pole-sitter increased his points lead with victory over Henry Snell (YZF-R3) and Brandon Demmery (YZF-R3), but then crashed in the follow-up Supersport 300 race.

The two production classes again came to the nail-biting party, with a group of six riders in each race who swapped paint and positions at every corner. With Swain a DNF, Snell and team-mate Brodie Gawith (YZF-R3) finished 1-2 in Supersport 300, with Ryan Larkin (YZF-R3) third.

bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup 
 

The young stars of the future also came to play today in the bLU cRU Oceania Junior Cup.

Hayden Fordyce started from pole position in race one, having recorded a time of 2:10.479 in qualifying, but it was Riley Nauta who took the ascendacy in the opening encounter by crossing the line first ahead of Fordyce and Bodie Paige.

Sureflight Superbike Masters

The two Sureflight Superbike Masters Cup races were absolute crackers. Keo Watson (Yamaha FZR1000) won the first race from Suzuki GSX-R1100 campaigners Murray Clark and Nigel Taylor, with Scott Campbell on the underpowered Honda RC30 just behind the trio in fourth.

In the second leg, the action was more intense as Clark took the win by 0.009sec from Taylor, with Watson third and Campbell leading the way in the P6 750cc class in fourth.

WorldSBK: Bautista Takes Pole Position In Tight Superpole Qualifying At Jerez

Alvaro Bautista (19). Photo courtesy Aruba.it Racing Ducati.
Alvaro Bautista (19). Photo courtesy Aruba.it Racing Ducati.

Defending World Champion Alvaro Bautista captured pole position during World Superbike Superpole qualifying Saturday at Circuito de Jerez – Angel Nieto, in Spain. Riding his Aruba.it Racing Ducati Panigale V4 R, the Spaniard lapped the 2.75-mile (4.42 km) track in 1:38.635 to top the field of 24 riders.

Dominique Aegerter was second-best with a 1:38.845 on his GYTR GRT Yamaha YZF-R1, and Alex Lowes claimed the third and final spot on the front row with a lap at 1:38.905 on his factory Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10RR.

American Garrett Gerloff qualified ninth with a time of 1:39.190 on his Bonovo Action BMW M 1000 RR.

Just 0.844 second separated the top 13 qualifiers.

 

WSBK Superpole Qual
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