Aerodynamics – formerly winglets, now “aero fairings”; specificity important – are another key component that teams must make a final decision on during the Qatar Test. This year it’s a simple choice of two fairings for the year, one of which must be decided upon before the season begins, the other mid-way through, and neither of which can be changed once homologated. And this time around, they also have to fit in a specially designed homologation unit that judges the legality of the fairing – if it doesn’t fit, it doesn’t race. At Sepang, Danilo Petrucci (Mission Winnow Ducati Team) and Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing) crashed on their different aero fairings they were trying so they’ll want to get a little more track time under their belts in Qatar before decisions are made, and past Ducati, traditionally the masters of aero innovation, we saw plenty of different options up and down pitlane. “There are always positives and negatives,” said Viñales of aero, and the Qatar Test is the last chance for teams to decide which positives outweigh which negatives.
“I’ve been looking forward to this moment, in which we see the fruits of our winter work,” adds new arrival Joan Olive, Team Estrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS Moto2 Team Coordinator. “I feel very lucky to be part of a project like this, made up of professionals who I know will give their all to achieve their objectives. The team are extremely high level, so our aim can be nothing less than to fight for the top spots. We don’t know what the final result will be, but our mentality is to go out and compete for everything in both Moto2 and MotoE. This is not just any project -it’s more special, as we are part of a big family. Team Estrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS are at the peak of the pyramid of great talent. We will look to do our best in Moto2, but will always be looking to help those in the smaller classes in everything possible.”
WorldSBK 2019 Phillip Island Test
Day 1 – PM Report
A stiff wind caused riders all sorts of problems this afternoon and of the morning top ten it was only Tom Sykes on the new BMW, and the man that replaced him on the KRT ZX-10R, Leon Haslam, that successfully battled the breeze to lower their markers this afternoon. Sykes moving up fourth quickest on combined times just ahead of Haslam.
Morning or afternoon, wind or no wind, the consistently fastest man of the day was Alvaro Bautista but it was his morning time that remained the fastest overall. The #19 Ducati Panigale V4 R the only machine to dip under the 1m31s benchmark today, a 1m30.743 the best of three laps in a row that the 34-year-old recorded in that 1m30s bracket during FP1.
Bautista’s best time is actually under the 1m30.848 race lap record set by Marco Melandri during last year’s second World Superbike race at Phillip Island on the V-Twin Panigale. The outright World Superbike lap record though belongs to Jonathan Rea who put in a 1m29.573 during qualifying here two years ago.
Bautista’s Ducati team-mate Chaz Davies has not had such an enjoyable day. A technical gremlin this morning saw his Panigale V4 R roll to a stop at Siberia, then this afternoon the Welshman was plagued by agonising back spasms. The 32-year-old ending day one 13th on combined times.
Another rider not having any fun today was Troy Herfoss as the Penrite Honda squad try to get a handle on the new bike they have built for this one-off World Superbike wildcard effort. Proceedings are not going well at all thus far and the team will be scratching their heads. Herfoss rounded out the tail end of the timesheets today with a 1m34.961 in FP1. Worryingly he could only muster a 1m35.475 from his 13 laps this afternoon.
The reigning ASBK Superbike Champion went more than two-seconds faster than today’s best in race trim aboard the ASBK, almost Superstock spec’, Fireblade here back in October. Some serious head scratching and spanner twirling going to be undertaken in that pit garage this evening…
Alex Lowes is showing encouraging speed on the Pata Yamaha to clock the second fastest time of the day ahead of Jonathan Rea.
Along with Tom Sykes in fourth, that made for four different brands filling the top four spots on the day’s combined times.
Marco Melandri was sixth quickest ahead of fellow Yamaha riders Michael Van der Mark and Sandro Cortese.
Markus Reiterberger and Toprak Razgatlioglu rounded out the top ten ahead of the leading Honda of Leon Camier.
WorldSBK RPM Limits
Overnight Dorna released updated RPM limits for the 2019 WorldSBK season that will be in place for the start of the season. If a single type of machine looks to have much of an advantage these limits will be reduced further during the season. The new BMW will start season 2019 with a 14,900 rpm limit while the Kawasaki will be pegged to 14,600 rpm.
The new Ducati Panigale V4 R will start with a 16,350 rpm limit, but with both Bautista and Davies clocking by far the fastest speeds in today’s morning session, one would expect that the Ducati rev limit to be reduced in due course…
World Supersport
In the World Supersport ranks it was a Yamaha 1-2 in both the morning and afternoon sessions but while Caricasulo topped FP1 it was team-mate Randy Krummenacher that went fractionally faster in FP2 to top the day on combined times.
Goulburn youngster Tom Toparis had been inside the top ten in the morning session but on combined times this afternoon the 18-year-old slipped to 14th. Still a highly creditable results in the 24-rider field. We spoke to him at the end of proceedings today and that interview can be found at this link.
WorldSBK Testing Phillip Island
Day One Combined Times / Best Speeds
Alvaro Bautista – Ducati 1m30.743 – 314.9 km/h
Alex Lowes – Yamaha 1m31.146 – 308.6 km/h
Jonathan Rea – Kawasaki 1m31.189 – 308.6 km/h
Tom Sykes – BMW 1m31.300 – 303.4 km/h
Leon Haslam – Kawasaki 1m31.399 – 308.6 km/h
Marco Melandri – Yamaha 1m31.445 – 314 km/h
Michael VanderMark – Yam 1m31.458 – 304.2 km/h
Sandro Cortese – Yamaha 1m31.639 – 304.2 km/h
Markus Reiterberger – BMW 1m31.992 – 300.0 km/h
Toprak Razgatlioglu – Kaw 1m32.050 – 302.5 km/h
Leon Camier – Honda 1m32.459 – 307.7 km/h
Jordi Torres – Kawasaki 1m32.670 – 300.0 km/h
Chaz Davies – Ducati 1m32.706 – 313 km/h
Leandro Mercado – Kaw 1m32.789 – 300.8 km/h
Eugene Laverty – Ducati 1m32.797 – 305.1 km/h
Ryuichi Kiyonari – Honda 1m32.962 – 306.8 km/h
Michael Rinaldi – Ducati 1m33.402 – 307.7 km/h
A Delbianco – Hon 1m33.949 – 292.7 km/h
Troy Herfoss – Honda 1m34.961 – 295.1 km/h
WorldSSP – Combined Practice Times
KRUMMENACHER Randy SUI Yamaha 1’33.820
CARICASULO Federico ITA Yamaha 1’33.882 +0.062
CLUZEL Jules FRA Yamaha 1’34.198 +.378
MAHIAS Lucas FRA Kawasaki 1’34.222 +0.402
DE ROSA Raffaele ITA MV Agusta 1’34.293 +0.473
OKUBO Hikari JPN Kawasaki 1’34.584 +0.764
BARBERA Hector ESP Yamaha 1’34.751 +0.931
GRADINGER Thomas AUT Yamaha 1’34.753 +0.933
PEROLARI Corentin FRA Yamaha 1’34.850 +1.030
VINALES Isaac ESP Yamaha 1’35.369 +1.549
SOOMER Hannes EST Honda 1’35.516 +1.696
SEBESTYEN Peter HUN CIA Honda 1’35.581 +1.761
CRESSON Loris BEL Yamaha 1’35.588 +1.768
TOPARIS Tom AUS Landbridge Transport Yamaha 1’35.690 +1.870
FULIGNI Federico ITA MV AGUSTA 1’35.762 +1.942
BADOVINI Ayrton ITA Kawasaki 1’35.974 +2.154
VAN SIKKELERUS Jaimie NED Honda 1’36.150 +2.330
HERRERA Maria ESP Yamaha 1’36.214 +2.394
DANILO Jules FRA Honda 1’36.421 +2.601
RUIU Gabriele ITA Honda 1’36.569 +2.749
COPPOLA Alfonso ITA Honda 1’36.629 +2.809
CALERO Nacho ESP Kawasaki 1’36.647 +2.827
HARTOG Rob NED Kawasaki 1’37.043 +3.223
VAN STRAALEN Glenn NED Kawasaki 1’37.273 +3.453
WorldSSP – Free Practice 2 Times / Speeds
F Caricasulo (ITA) Yamaha 1’33.882 – 272.7 km/h
R Krummenacher (SUI) Yam 1’34.226 +0.346 – 266.7 km/h
R De Rosa (ITA) MV Agusta 1’34.293 +0.411 – 270.0 km/h
J Cluzel (FRA) Yamaha 1’34.539 +0.657 – 266.0 km/h
H Okubo (JPN) Kawasaki 1’34.584 +0.702 – 272.0 km/h
L Mahias (FRA) Kawasaki 1’34.807 +0.925 – 270.0 km/h
I Vinales (ESP) Yamaha 1’35.369 +1.457 – 268 km/h
C Perolari (FRA) Yamaha 1’35.695 +1.814 – 264.7 km/h
T Toparis (AUS) Yamaha 1’35.725 +1.843 – 262.1 km/h
A Badovini (ITA) Kawasaki 1’35.974 +2.002 – 256.5 km/h
H Soomer (EST) Honda 1’36.305 +2.423 – 260.9 km/h
F Fuligni (ITA) MV Agusta 1’36.313 +2.431 – 264.7 km/h
L Cresson (BEL) Yamaha 1’36.313 +2.431 – 272 km/h
P Sebestyen (HUN) Honda 1’36.331 +2.449 – 265.4 km/h
H Barbera (ESP) Yamaha 1’36.636 +2.754 – 265.4 km/h
WorldSBK Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit
Event Schedule, 22 – 24 February 2019
FIM Track Safety Inspection
Safety Car TestTrack closed
All 1st Time RidersRiders Briefing
All ClassesTyre Stickers DistributionTechnical Bay
Wildcards Herfoss and Toparis 19th and 14th in respective categories.
Image: Russell Colvin.
After three weeks of rest the FIM Motul Superbike World Championship riders were back in action today at Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit for the final pre-season test before the season premiere.
Amidst chilly temperatures and winds, Ducati’s debutant Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) clocked in the fastest time of the day, over four tenths of a second faster than Alex Lowes Pata Yamaha Official WorldSBK Team) and Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK).
The Spaniard’s best lap of 1m30.743s could be interpreted as an early warning shot to the 17 other men on the grid. Race performance remains an unknown, but the 34-year-old is as fast as they come – and this was just his seventh day onboard the Superbike, with much of the focus for Bautista and his crew still centred around adapting to the softer WorldSBK tyres.
It was far from a flawless opener for the Aruba.it garage however, as Chaz Davies (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) lingered at the bottom end of the timesheets for both sessions. Still searching for an ideal base setup, the Welshman found some technical issues early on and was unable to match his teammate’s pace. Much work left to be done on day two for Davies who nonetheless, it’s worth noting, usually excels in race conditions.
The other two Panigale V4 Rs on the 2019 grid also continued developing and discovering the new red beast. Eugene Laverty (Team Goeleven) focused on base setup as well as improving the feeling on the rear of the bike, while Michael Ruben Rinaldi (BARNI Racing Team), making his Phillip Island debut, fixed his attention on their new Showa suspensions.
Jonathan Rea and Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) were the two first men out on track in the morning and showed similar pace, finishing the day in third and fifth respectively. The Englishman, fully adapted now to the WorldSBK-spec ZX-10RR, chose to test his tyre selection for Australia, while the four-time world champion overcame a crash at turn 10 to be the best Kawasaki on the day, while also trying out the new Pirellis.
Turkish Puccetti’s Toprak Razgatlioglu also appeared to be making ground with the 2019 ZX-10RR, as he set the tenth fastest lap on his first day with the new engine, rising above his fellow Kawasaki privateers.
A clear frontrunner for the title of ‘Mr Consistency’ during winter testing, Alex Lowes again finished inside the top two here at Phillip Island, 0.403s behind Bautista. Both the Englishman and Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha Official WorldSBK Team) – seventh on Monday – set out to confirm the good results from both January tests, the YZF R1 looking already like an incredibly competitive package.
The other two Yamahas on the grid also excelled on day one, as the Japanese manufacturer managed to place all four bikes inside the top eight. Marco Melandri (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK), sixth, tried out some new solutions before entering the finetuning stage tomorrow, while Sandro Cortese (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK) – eighth – rode his first laps on a Superbike at Phillip Island.
This was also a fruitful day for the two BMW bikes, fitted with a new chassis and swingarm link for the first time. Both riders continued to build confidence onboard the S1000 RR, with a stunning Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) in fourth position having the edge over Markus Reiterberger (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team), ninth fastest. The Yorkshireman was in fact second fastest in the second session – a sign that the BMW might be ready to fight for podiums right from the get-go.
After several months of swirling rumours and working outside the spotlight, Monday was also the day we finally got to see the Moriwaki Althea Honda Team in action. The first signs would seem promising, as Leon Camier (Moriwaki Althea Honda Team) edged close to the top ten with a bike still in an early development stage. Australian wildcard Troy Herfoss (Penrite Honda Racing) wound up 19th with a time of 1m34.961s.
In the WorldSSP category, Randy Krummenacher led a BARDAHL Evan Bros one-two over Federico Caricasulo, as the top five was rounded out by Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha), Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) and Raffaele De Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse). Australian Tom Toparis (Landbridge Transport Yamaha) was an impressive 14th in his wildcard appearance.
Tom Toparis talks Phillip Island Official WSBK Test Day 1
With Mark Bracks – Images by GeeBee
Tom Toparis kicked off Day 1 of the official Phillip Island WorldSBK Test today, setting the ninth fastest time in the initial session of the day, before finishing the day 14th overall on the combined timesheets.
Setting a final best of 1m35.690s on the Lambridge Transport Yamaha YZF-R6, Toparis was still coming to terms today with the additional power of the World Supersport spec’ machine, and the difference that makes compared to riding the Australian Supersport machinery. He will compete on both bikes in the double-header WorldSBK and ASBK season opener this weekend at Phillip Island.
We caught up with Tom Toparis on the conclusion of Day 1 of the Official Test to see how we was progressing.
Tom Toparis Interview
MCNews.com.au: Tom Toparis talk us through your day, you ended up 14th fastest?
Tom Toparis: “I don’t know where I ended up actually, we didn’t finish the session. It wasn’t a bad day, just struggled a little bit with overall grip on every corner. If we sort that out, I think that I will be a lot faster. I was following a lot of the fast guys, and the place I was losing time was on similar corners.
“If we can sort out the issues we’re trying to fix… tomorrow we have Adrian [Monty] coming so hopefully he can come up with something. Hopefully we can just sort that little bit in every turn and obviously hope for a big gain. The bike feels OK and the conditions are obviously good as everyone’s going quite fast. We still have a bit of work to do and I know we can go a lot faster than we did today.”
MCNews.com.au: What’s your speed like compared to the others when you’re in a slipstream?
Tom Toparis: “I haven’t looked at the actual times, in the first session I think I was just under 10km/h off, but that was with different gearing, now we’ve gone longer with the gearing, so it should be closer. And in a tow and everything you don’t know where everyone is at.
“I don’t think I’ve been passed in the straight yet, not that I’ve been riding with anyone particularly. I think the bike is pretty much there, in terms of power… there’s no real excuses from my side.”
MCNews.com.au: What is it like with the new gearbox?
Tom Toparis: “It’s not been a problem so far, I think when I mix it with the Aussie stuff – hopefully I don’t make too many mistakes. Basically it’s just one extra gear going into first into MG and Honda. It’s a little bit different through the Hayshed, but we still haven’t actually sorted out what we want to do yet.
“In the Hayshed… it’s just a close ratio, so it’s definitely different, going back five gears into Honda. So it’s a lot of work to do and I’m getting used to it. Tomorrow if everything goes our way, I think we’ll be able to get into the 1:34s I hope.”
MCNews.com.au: Has today refocused your ambition for the weekend?
Tom Toparis: “Not really, you know I really want to win the Aussie stuff straight away – that has to happen, but Sam and the guys are trying so hard to do well in the Worlds, I really want to do as good as I can.
“Obviously Aiden did really well when he was on the same motors – he was on the same motors as I’ve got, so if I can do something like he did on these motors, then I’ll be very happy. Still a little bit of work to do in certain places, but overall the bike is not too bad.
“I just want the bike to feel like it did the other day, when I was here on the Aussie bike. Just that little bit more power is upsetting me through the long corners with grip, at the moment, that’s pretty much the issue we’re having, but if we can get around that we’ll be sweet.”
MCNews.com.au: So you notice a big different in power from the [Australian] Supersport?
Tom Toparis: “Yep, it’s just that little bit everywhere. If you had an Aussie bike in there you could get away with it, but just that little bit extra power over an entire lap, that extra couple of km average across an entire lap, at the end of the lap it ends up being a second or two faster, so it’s definitely a different bike.
“We’re still trying to get comfortable. This weekend we have some new parts, new handlebars and rear sets and whatnot, so just trying to get comfortable with that. I think it’ll be alright.”
MCNews.com.au: The tyre you were using, is that new?
Tom Toparis: “Yep new tyre, same tyre, same compound as the Aussie one (190), but different carcass, because last year they had issues, people were blowing them up last year. So Pirelli made the same tyre with a much stiffer carcass, and the same compound.
“It’s not a lot different, but over the race distance it should be better, you would think – in theory. We didn’t use a lot of tyres today, so tomorrow hopefully I can come up with something, and see if we can do some good times.”
MCNews.com.au: Thanks!
Tom Toparis: “Cheers.”
WorldSSP – Combined Practice Times
KRUMMENACHER Randy SUI Yamaha 1’33.820
CARICASULO Federico ITA Yamaha 1’33.882 +0.062
CLUZEL Jules FRA Yamaha 1’34.198 +.378
MAHIAS Lucas FRA Kawasaki 1’34.222 +0.402
DE ROSA Raffaele ITA MV Agusta 1’34.293 +0.473
OKUBO Hikari JPN Kawasaki 1’34.584 +0.764
BARBERA Hector ESP Yamaha 1’34.751 +0.931
GRADINGER Thomas AUT Yamaha 1’34.753 +0.933
PEROLARI Corentin FRA Yamaha 1’34.850 +1.030
VINALES Isaac ESP Yamaha 1’35.369 +1.549
SOOMER Hannes EST Honda 1’35.516 +1.696
SEBESTYEN Peter HUN CIA Honda 1’35.581 +1.761
CRESSON Loris BEL Yamaha 1’35.588 +1.768
TOPARIS Tom AUS Landbridge Transport Yamaha 1’35.690 +1.870
FULIGNI Federico ITA MV AGUSTA 1’35.762 +1.942
BADOVINI Ayrton ITA Kawasaki 1’35.974 +2.154
VAN SIKKELERUS Jaimie NED Honda 1’36.150 +2.330
HERRERA Maria ESP Yamaha 1’36.214 +2.394
DANILO Jules FRA Honda 1’36.421 +2.601
RUIU Gabriele ITA Honda 1’36.569 +2.749
COPPOLA Alfonso ITA Honda 1’36.629 +2.809
CALERO Nacho ESP Kawasaki 1’36.647 +2.827
HARTOG Rob NED Kawasaki 1’37.043 +3.223
VAN STRAALEN Glenn NED Kawasaki 1’37.273 +3.453
WorldSSP – Free Practice 1 Times / Speeds
F Caricasulo (ITA) Yamaha 1’33.882 – 272.7 km/h
R Krummenacher (SUI) Yam 1’34.226 +0.346 – 266.7 km/h
R De Rosa (ITA) MV Agusta 1’34.293 +0.411 – 270.0 km/h
J Cluzel (FRA) Yamaha 1’34.539 +0.657 – 266.0 km/h
H Okubo (JPN) Kawasaki 1’34.584 +0.702 – 272.0 km/h
L Mahias (FRA) Kawasaki 1’34.807 +0.925 – 270.0 km/h
I Vinales (ESP) Yamaha 1’35.369 +1.457 – 268 km/h
C Perolari (FRA) Yamaha 1’35.695 +1.814 – 264.7 km/h
T Toparis (AUS) Yamaha 1’35.725 +1.843 – 262.1 km/h
A Badovini (ITA) Kawasaki 1’35.974 +2.002 – 256.5 km/h
H Soomer (EST) Honda 1’36.305 +2.423 – 260.9 km/h
F Fuligni (ITA) MV Agusta 1’36.313 +2.431 – 264.7 km/h
L Cresson (BEL) Yamaha 1’36.313 +2.431 – 272 km/h
P Sebestyen (HUN) Honda 1’36.331 +2.449 – 265.4 km/h
H Barbera (ESP) Yamaha 1’36.636 +2.754 – 265.4 km/h
AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, hosted the seventh round of the AMA Supercross Championship last weekend. KTM’s Cooper Webb came through the pack to sensationally steal the 450SX main event win from Ken Roczen by just half a wheel at the flag!
450SX Report
Eli Tomac pulled the holeshot ahead of Roczen and Marvin Musquin while Webb managed several key passes to come around the first lap in seventh place, two spots ahead of Zach Osborne who was making his 450SX class debut.
Tomac was pushing hard to try to get away from the pack but Roczen stalked the Kawasaki rider before moving his way to the lead on lap four, then immediately started to break into the 49-second lap times just as Webb moved into the top five.
Tomac dropped his Kawasaki on lap seven but remounted in seventh place allowing Musquin to move into second ahead of Joey Savatgy, Blake Baggett and Webb.
The race looked to be Roczen’s, the German enjoying a handy six-second lead over Musquin.
Webb soon moved up to second after getting the better of Musquin, then on the back of quad-jumping instead of triple-single jumping at the end of one of the rhythm lanes, he was suddenly on the back wheel of Roczen with a lap to go.
Webb then pulled alongside Roczen in the whoops, which gave him the opportunity to dive up the inside of Roczen and then out-drag the Honda rider to the finish line by a wheel length.
That is Webb’s second victory in succession, and his fourth from the seven rounds staged thus far this season. The Arlington victory earns Webb the red plate with a two-point lead over Roczen. The Honda star is still yet to win a main so far this season.
Webb now has the red plate with a two point lead over Roczen who in turn has a four point advantage over Musquin.
Cooper Webb – P1
“Tonight was incredible! I just never gave up out there. It was incredible for it to come to the last lap – the last turn even – and to be able to win with such a close finish was absolutely insane. That’s probably the best race ever for me.”
Ken Roczen – P2
“The whoops was one of the spots where I struggled all through the an event which really effected my flow so this is something we learn from, I am using it as fuel for the next race but it was fun, leading the whole race and losing it is not so much fun but we are healthy and still in the championship.”
Marvin Musquin – P3
“We are definitely looking for our first win but being on the podium for the last five is super important but to salvage third after such a poor heat race is important for the race and the championship. It’s good, but I was in a good position for better, so I am a little bit disappointed with that but I’m also happy that we were able to turn it around after the heat race.”
Justin Barcia – P7
“Crazy day of racing for me for sure. I felt good, the bike was working well. I had a pretty good practice, was right in the times, but in the heat race, didn’t get off to a good start. I was working my way through the pack and got taken out. In the main event, I was on the far outside and got a really good jump off the gate. I was right in it, but I was just so far outside I got pushed out and went into the hay bales and started last. I went from last to seventh. I was riding well, but again wasn’t able to make things happen that I needed to happen. I need to get a better start and put myself in front of the pack where I belong. We’re moving on from this weekend and will get ready for Detroit.”
Dean Wilson – P8
“My night was not amazing but not too bad either, I think the best part of my race was that I came through the pack really well and I passed a lot of good riders. By the time I got to the position I was in, there was really no one in front of me that I could catch so I ended up with an eighth. It’s not what I want but the beginning was promising with the speed I had. I just need to get a better start and get up there and we’ll be good. I’ll take it but we want to get on the podium for sure.”
Aaron Plessinger – P9
“We made big steps in the right direction at Dallas. The bike worked pretty good all day, I just need to get my starts dialed in. We’re going to go off to Florida and ride with Justin for a little bit and hopefully can build some intensity. All in all, I’m pretty happy with tonight and taking steps in the right direction. We’ll move forward from here, and on to Detroit.”
After going through the LCQ and then running off the track at the start, Justin Barcia put in a great ride to fight his way back to seventh while Chad Reed finished the night in 11th after passing Tomac.
Arlington 450SX Main Results
Cooper Webb – 25 Laps
Ken Roczen +00.028
Marvin Musquin +10.784
Blake Baggett +15.401
Joey Savatgy +18.360
Cole Seely +23.241
Justin Barcia +26.545
Dean Wilson +29.567
Aaron Plessinger +30.739
Justin Brayton +41.282
Chad Reed +45.767
Eli Tomac +49.446
Justin Hill – 24Laps
Kyle Chisholm +00.453
Ben Lamay +16.975
450SX Points Standings after Round 7 of 17
Cooper Webb – 150
Ken Roczen – 148
Marvin Musquin – 144
Eli Tomac – 134
Dean Wilson – 110
Justin Barcia – 104
Blake Baggett – 101
Cole Seely – 94
Chad Reed – 93
Aaron Plessinger – 93
250SX East Report
Austin Forkner scored the holeshot ahead of Kyle Peters, Chase Sexton and Jordon Smith but it wasn’t long before Peters was passed by Sexton and Smith, while Alex Martin was struggling to recover from his poor start and was back in 14th place.
Sexton managed to hold pace with Forkner for several laps as Justin Cooper jumped into fourth place ahead of Martin Davalos.
At the half way mark of the 15-minute race Forkner had a small gap over Sexton, who in turn had Smith and Cooper closing in on him while Davalos dropped a couple of seconds.
On lap 13 Sexton made a mistake that allowed Smith and Cooper into second and third. Only for Smith to then slide out of a turn which put him back to fifth, and promoted Cooper up into second place ahead of Sexton and Davalos. Smith got the better of Davalos in the closing stages of the race to claim fourth.
After the 19 laps it was Forkner that took the flag first, winning his second straight main event. Cooper, Sexton, Smith and Davalos rounded out the top five – Martin made it to back up to eighth place by race end.
Austin Forkner – P1
“At one point Chase and Jordan were reeling me in so I figured I could just push harder and potentially throw it all away or back it down a bit, ride in my comfort zone and if I get caught and passed so be it, luckily that didn’t happen, I caught my breath and pulled off the win. The tough thing for me is to try and ride own my lines, I found my focus about five minutes in, but I have plenty of stuff I can work on this week heading into Round 3. I felt like I struggled a little bit and still won so I’m ecstatic. It’s nice to know what we can go into the week and work on. I can’t wait to get back next week even better.”
Justin Cooper – P2
“I feel we rebuilt a little this week and we made one place up the podium from last week so we’ll take it, it is a long series and the tracks are going to challenge us but we will go back, try and fix a few things. It feels great to get two podiums in a row. Compared to last year we were sitting out the second round, so to start the season out like this is pretty cool. The track was pretty tough today, we just had to take what we could get out there. Still, big improvements, and we’re not going to stop here. The bike was great all day again. We’ll just keep searching for new things and keep trying to better our self each time we get out on the track.”
Chase Sexton – P3
“I had a pretty good start in the main, where I could make something happen and I felt really good on my bike but with five minutes left I made two mistakes which cost me big time.”
Martin Davalos – P5
“This race was one I wanted to get through healthy and I was able to do that. It was great to show that I’m capable of being up with the front runners and bounce back. I would love to get a better start next weekend and really contend for a podium spot.”
Mitchell Oldenburg – P6
“The track conditions were tough tonight; it was super soft and rutted. I kind of got off to a slow start in the main again this week, but I was able to regroup fairly well and finish with a decent sixth. I’m really pumped on my heat race and how the practices went this morning. So I’m looking to build on this race and go to Detroit for the Triple Crown next weekend and come out swinging.”
Heat race clash results in disqualification of Bowers.
Image: Supplied.
Justin Barcia says Arlington’s seventh round of Monster Energy AMA Supercross was a ‘crazy day’ of racing after he was forced to transfer to main event via the LCQ.
The Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing Rider was taken down Tyler Bowers (Kawasaki) in the second 450SX heat race of the night, resulting in the pair both being sent the LCQ.
Bowers’ pass, which has been linked to retaliation for an incident between the pair in Las Vegas last year, prompted officials to disqualify the Kawasaki rider for ‘overly aggressive riding’, pulling him from the line of the last chance qualifier.
Barcia was able to overcome the altercation, winning the LCQ before going onto finish seventh in the 25-lap encounter, positioning him sixth in the standings.
“Crazy day of racing for me for sure,” Barcia admitted. “I felt good, the bike was working well. I had a pretty good practice, was right in the times, but in the heat race, didn’t get off to a good start. I was working my way through the pack and got taken out.
“In the main event, I was on the far outside and got a really good jump off the gate. I was right in it, but I was just so far outside I got pushed out and went into the hay bales and started last. I went from last to seventh.
“I was riding well, but again wasn’t able to make things happen that I needed to happen. I need to get a better start and put myself in front of the pack where I belong. We’re moving on from this weekend and will get ready for Detroit.”
The main was ultimately won by new points leader Cooper Webb (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), who made a pass on Ken Roczen (Team Honda HRC) in the final turn to secure victory by 0.028s.
The first twin-cylinder Royal Enfields in six decades are now arriving in showrooms around the world and riders are lining up at dealerships for test rides.
Dealer principal Richard Nicholson asked if I could pick it up at close of business on Saturday and have it back first thing Monday morning as demo rides were booked solid.
Such is the hype and excitement in these new parallel twin models!
I’m happy to report that after thrashing the bike through traffic, down highways and over the Border Ranges, the Interceptor 650 lives up to most of the hype. Watch my brief video review below.
Royal twins
The learner-legal Royal twins are the Interceptor and the Continental GT. I will ride the latter next weekend, again between solidly booked demo rides.
The only differences are the straight bars, bench seat, tank badges and centre stand on the Interceptor while the GT has clip-ons, a humped seat, painted logos and no centre stand.
Here are the ride-away prices, depending on tank colours.
Interceptor 650
$9790 (solid colours — orange, black and silver);
$9990 two-tone (orange, white and gold pinstripe; red, black and white pinstripe);
$10,290 chrome tank.
Continental GT
$9990 (pale blue, black with gold GT stripes);
$10,190 (two-tone black/silver with yellow pinstripe, white with silver and blue stripe);
$10,490 (chrome).
Retro styling
Richard says the previous problems with Royal Enfield chrome tanks have been resolved.
A close inspection at the demo models substantiates a vast improvement in paint and chrome finish.
In fact, the overall quality is a substantial improvement. I pulled the locked seat off the bike and was pleased to find the paint extends right down the tank where you can’t see it and the welds are neat.
Even the initials of the bike builder responsible are hand painted on the end of the tank under the seat.
That’s pride of workmanship, with good reason.
Wiring and cabling is tidy, plastics are smooth, the vinyl seat is good quality and even the footpegs are nice rubber and alloy units.
The only build fault I could find was a slightly gummy weld joint where the headers leave the cylinder.
Those who love the retro look will appreciate that Royal Enfield didn’t go to town on the chrome which the original ‘50s/‘60s cafe racers didn’t have.
Instead of acres of chrome, the engine casings and wheel rims are brushed alloy (black rims on some models) which looks understatedly stunning. (Now there’s an oxymoron for you!)
For a $10,000 bike there are quite a few niceties and extras such as twin instrument pods with a tachometer, comprehensive toolkit and lockable fuel cap.
It also sits on retro-style Pirelli Phantom tyres originally made for the Ducati GT1000 and used on the new Triumph Bonneville.
And how many $10,000 bikes come with a centre stand as standard these days, let alone a toolkit? In fact, how many bikes twice the price have a centre stand and toolkit!
The latter is in a side panel which is locked with the ignition key. It also has a latch inside that unlocks the seat.
Speaking of which, it’s soft and quite comfortable, but after two hours in the neutral riding position you sink down into the seat and you can feel the supports underneath.
The seat is 804mm high, but it’s very narrow, so at 183mm tall I could easily get my flat feet on the ground with knees bent.
Pillions will enjoy the thick padding and the substantial grab handle at the back.
Royal Enfield has kept the price down by making this a lo-fi bike. No fancy traction controls and electronic wizardry, although it does have ABS, of course.
The instruments are basic with just two analogue pods (speedo and tacho) and a small LCD screen with readouts for odometer, trip A and B and a voltmeter when running. No clock, ambient temperature, weather forecast or stock market readouts!
And you have to reach over and touch a mode button between the two dials.
The indicators and taillight are also basic and the mirrors are cheap units that come loose over rough roads and blur at highway speed.
The rear tail features a cheap and ugly rubber fender extender that can easily be unscrewed and discarded.
Heartbeat
Many Royal Enfield enthusiasts are attracted by the slow and methodical pulse of the single-cylinder engine.
These parallel twins have a 270-degree crank like the new liquid-cooled Triumph Bonnevilles, so they are a totally different heartbeat.
And unlike the the 500 singles, you don’t need to schedule a slot in your diary to reach 100km/h. It will reach 100km/h in about six seconds.
Some say it will top 170km/h, but I managed 140 — under controlled conditions, of course!
It will certainly cruise at legal highway speeds in a relaxed manner with very little vibration or hand/feet tingle.
Riders in hot climates will also appreciate the fact that they do not run near as hot as the new scorching Bonnes. The cylinder heads still get quite hot, as you would expect, but there are coated metal protectors so you don’t burn your knees.
The 648cc twin is oil and air cooled with a modest 47 horsepower or 35kW at 7100rpm and 52Nm of torque at 4000rpm.
It doesn’t sound like much, but the midrange is smooth and meaty.
The engine is mated to a super-slick, six-speed gearbox and clutch with a moderate pull so it is easy to use in traffic.
You will need to feed the bike some revs in the first couple of gears for rapid acceleration from the front of the queue at the traffic lights.
If you continue to rev the bike to the limiter and dance on the gearshift you will get maximum results, but you may also hit a few false neutrals.
With such moderate horsepower there is not a lot of point in spinning it out to the red line every shift.
I found it yields satisfactory results if you short-shift through the gears and ride around town in fourth or fifth at 4000rpm.
Out on the highway, it cruises without stress at 4000 revs in sixth. Since the engine pulls lustily from 3000 revs, you can roll on the throttle without having to drop a cog.
I pushed it moderately hard through traffic and winding hills, yet the bike yielded impressive economy figures over about 500km of 3.6L/100km.
That means range of almost 350km from the 12.5-litre tank.
The Interceptor 650 I rode was fitted with aftermarket slip-on Emgo mufflers for an extra $300.
Richard regrets fitting them to the Interceptor, saying they don’t suit its more sedate image.
He says they should have gone on the more racey-looking Continental GT cafe racer.
They also sound a little nasty and anti-social when revved hard, although they do give the throttle improved response, he says.
There are S&S Cycle mufflers coming in about six months that promise a better sound.
Ride and handling
The twin cradle frame and twin-shock suspension set-up is as traditional as it gets, but it works.
It’s not the lightest 650 out there at 202kg dry, but the frame and suspension combine to provide a light-steering, agile bike.
I found the American-made Grabriel shocks a little on the soft side for my 80kg frame, even after pumping up the rear preload to the fourth of five settings.
You can adjust them by hand if you’re strong and put the bike on its centre stand, although there is a C spanner included in the toolkit.
It still managed to bottom out over some big bumps, bounced around at the rear and wobbled a little over mid-corner irregularities.
However, that was when it was pushed hard. If you trot along at legal pace, it’s all quite controllable with those wide, braced handlebars.
I believe Ohlins is working on suspension upgrades, but that could be overkill on a $10k bike.
The Interceptor turns in quite quickly and holds its line well on its narrow, 18-inch front and rear Pirelli Phantom tyres.
They have good corner and braking grip, although the front was found lacking on emergency stops with the bike’s single disc and hefty weight.
The brakes are Bybre which is a discount Brembo offshoot and they have braided steel lines for good feel. Still, a second front disc would be welcome.
Despite the heft, the bike is easy to lift onto the centre stand with a convenient handle beside the seat like on old bikes.
Conclusion
There has been a lot of pent-up demand for this bike since it was announced almost two years ago.
Thankfully the excitement and hype is justified.
Royal Enfield has done a good job of bringing a top-value product to the market that will equally excite old stagers, neo-classic hipsters, learners and novices, mature riders and those who are looking for a good donor bike for a custom.
This bike would be very easy to modify into a bobber, scrambler, street tracker or cafe racer.
No doubt Royal Enfield will also produce more model variants and we’d loved to see this engine in the Himalayan adventure bike.
2019 has started brightly for KTM with success at the Dakar at the slightly mangled hands of our own Toby Price, in the Supercross arena with Cooper Webb taking four wins already this season, and victory also on the French beach sand thanks to Briton Nathan Watson. Now it is the turn of the tarmac team to try and emulate some of the off-road glory that KTM are synonymous for.
Stefan Pierer – CEO KTM Group
“Racing is the core content of our DNA. That means forced innovation every week or every two weeks. We see on the TV or the internet how many tenths of a second are missing and that really drives us to do everything what we can in the end to touch the top of the podium. That’s our philosophy and that has driven us to success over the last thirty years but in this racing world we are still beginners: this is our third year. This is a five year programme and by the end we want to see podiums and for the upcoming racing season I’d like to see single digit results; that’s realistic because we are still collecting data and we miss all the experience of our competitors. For 2019 – in gambler’s speak – it’s ‘all in’.”
Two impressive fledgling seasons in MotoGP have seen the Austrian manufacturer grasp their first points, first top ten finishes and end the second term with their maiden podium trophy in Valencia.
Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Team Manager
“2019 is our third season in MotoGP and it is already a milestone thanks to the presence of Tech3 and a new rider in our factory team. It will be very challenging but we hope we can continue the road to the top. We’ll have some bumps on the road but we have worked well in the winter and should be able to look forward to some positive moments this season. I really hope the partnership with Tech3 will give us essential information to improve our MotoGP bike and the total KTM package in order to make the next step in positions and race results.”
The MotoGP effort has now doubled with the experienced Red Bull KTM Tech3 unit placing another two RC16s on the grid under the Tech3 umbrella.
Pit Beirer – KTM Motorsport Director
“For us this is another very special moment in our racing story and it’s a milestone for us to have that structure in place. Our road race project has been building consistently since 2012 in terms of structure, confidence and people. I would say we have an amazing ‘path’ in place where you can go from a Rookies bike through all the categories to a MotoGP bike. In the premier class two motorcycles is not enough to be able to develop technology up until the highest level so having a second team in the MotoGP gives us an amazing feeling that our system is in place. We will work with this programme and that doesn’t only mean young riders and trying to get them through but also the bikes for each category with a strong in-house line-up and effort. That’s why today is very special.”
Pol Espargaro (28 in June) will begin his third season with the factory RC16 and his sixth in the premier class.
Pol Espargaro
“We have a big target in front of us this year and I think we are in a good place. Johann has integrated into the team well and already looks fast. It means that we are set for the season. I thought Miguel was very fast at the test and that was surprising for a rookie and I know Hafizh is working really hard. All the info the Tech3 guys can bring will be helpful for me, the team and all the engineers. I know, from my experience, that Tech3 are good for helping and teaching the riders, and also improving the bike. 2019 will be about improvement: nobody is perfect and I learn something every year. I think with Johann as a teammate hopefully I can learn from him and apply it to myself to be a better rider and a better worker. I just want to give the best of myself in 2019 and the most I can to the team.”
He is joined for the first time by fellow former Moto2 World Champion Johann Zarco (29 in July) – the most successful Frenchman in Grand Prix history.
Johann Zarco
“I’m happy to be here, and this is my first factory team presentation! I discovered Mattighofen and the KTM factory for the first time in January and I was very impressed. After a few tests now I am very happy: I feel that the people in the team trust me and it’s nice to feel that confidence. We’ve done some good work so the motivation is high. Even when we make big improvements at a test we still see that we have a lot to do and have steps to make. It helps to move forward. I believe in what we can do. I would say I am a fast rider so I can give good information and I am very proud to be part of this story in KTM.”
Red Bull KTM Tech3 field the promise of Hafizh Syahrin (25 in May and the first Malaysian to compete in the premier class and now set for his second MotoGP year) and Miguel Oliveira. Oliveira is another ‘first’ for his country – Portugal – in MotoGP and the recently-turned 24 year old rookie is the first rider to have come up the Moto3 and Moto2 KTM ladder. MotoGP is backed up by the rapid test team duo of Mika Kallio and Dani Pedrosa.
Miguel Oliveira
“I’m very happy with the new colours, the bike is amazing. The look of everything is just incredible, quite different from what we are used to. It’s such a nice project, that KTM and Red Bull got together; to have two factory teams on the grid is something pretty unique and it shows clearly that KTM wants to try and dominate this class and road racing in general. I’m just really proud and I feel privileged to be a part of this project.”
Hafizh Syahrin
“I’m really excited about the new livery. I think it’s truly different than everything else on the track. I can’t wait to be on track with this bike in Qatar. It looks amazing and I guess even more so under the floodlights in the desert. I’m very delighted about this look and can’t wait to get the season started!”
Herve Poncharal, Red Bull KTM Tech3 Team Manager
“It’s been great to show the world our new livery. I saw the colours for the first time at the end of December I couldn’t believe it: this is such a cool bike. For sure, the most important for a racing bike is to be fast and we are working on that. The test we had in Sepang a few days ago was very interesting. But if the bike can be fast and good-looking, it’s a big bonus. Therefore, we are more than proud to have shown what our livery will finally be and I can’t wait to see it under the floodlights in Qatar because it will look even more amazing. Hopefully, we can see these bikes with this livery in strong positions.”
The MotoGP line-up will travel to Qatar for the last three-day dial-in test later this week before the 2019 MotoGP season gets underway in Qatar and just two weeks before the 19-round season begins at Losai on the weekend of March 10.
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