Tag Archives: News

Protests against Ducati referred to MotoGP Court of Appeals

Various protests lodged concerning Desmosedici GP19 aerodynamic devices.

Image: Supplied.

A number of teams lodged protests against Ducati’s Desmosedici GP19 riders at Qatar’s opening round of the 2019 MotoGP World Championship, which were initially rejected yet are now being referred to the MotoGP Court of Appeals.

At the Losail International Circuit round, the FIM MotoGP Stewards Panel received various protests concerning aerodynamic devices on the rear swing arm of Ducati machinery ridden by Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati Team), Danilo Petrucci (Mission Winnow Ducati Team) and Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing).

The protests were made by Aprilia Racing Team Gresini, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, Repsol Honda Team and Team Suzuki Ecstar, who presented their concerns to the FIM MotoGP Stewards Panel. Based on guidelines and regulations currently in force, the FIM MotoGP Stewards Panel rejected their protests.

An appeals process then began and the appeals panel has subsequently decided to refer the case to the MotoGP Court of Appeals in order to attain more information pertaining to the matter. At this stage, yesterday’s results still stand – which saw Ducati-mounted Dovizioso steal a narrow victory over defending champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda).

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Daytona crash sidelines premier class rookie Plessinger

Factory Yamaha rider injures heel at the 10th round of supercross.

Image: Supplied.

Aaron Plessinger has been sidelined after injuring himself in a heavy fall during Daytona’s 10th round of the 2019 Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship.

The Monster Energy Yamaha Factory Racing rider made a critical error while negotiating a rhythm section, forcing him to eject from his YZ450F.

The impact upon landing subsequently resulted in a broken heel, which was later determined when the 450SX rookie was transported to hospital.

“Well, as everyone seen I had a little get off in the main tonight, ended up breaking my heel,” Plessinger said in a social media statement. “Not much info right now, just X-rays, but I’ll keep y’all updated.”

Plessinger’s recovery time is still to be confirmed, however the injury now wipes out Yamaha’s factory line-up for the time being, with teammate Justin Barcia still not cleared to ride after suffering a concussion.


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Dovizioso edges Marquez in Qatar MotoGP thriller

Technical issue results in DNF for Miller, Gardner scores career-best Moto2 finish.

Image: Supplied.

Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati Team) has narrowly edged reigning champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda) for victory at Losail International Circuit’s opening round of the 2019 MotoGP World Championship in Qatar, just 0.023s separating the pair.

Behind that classic duel that defines a rivalry came another battle but this time of three, with Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) pulling out all the stops to complete the podium and fend off Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) and a late-charging Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP).

It was Dovizioso who got the holeshot from pole, he and Australian Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing) grabbing P1 and P2 into turn one as Marquez held position just behind. Polesitter Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) didn’t get the start he would have been aiming for as he dropped to sixth on lap one, with Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) and teammate Crutchlow catapulting through to the top five.

The race then began to settle into a rhythm, with a train of riders at the front led by Dovizioso keeping a steady pace at the front. Rins was the man on the move on lap four as the Spaniard made more progress after a sharp start from P10 on the grid, the Suzuki man coming through to take the lead by lap five before the Spaniard duelled Dovizioso for the pleasure. It remained a lead group of nine following each other line astern, however, with no one breaking rank just yet.

On lap 12 the number 04 was back at the front, and the pace then turned up a notch as he and Marquez started to create a gap back to third place Danilo Petrucci (Mission Winnow Ducati), who’d made his way through the group. The pace then slowed again, however, as Dovizioso went from a 1m55.3s to a 1m56.1s to bring the top eight back to within just over a second.

With seven to go, the top eight were covered 1.2 seconds and that’s when Rossi really started to make up ground, picking off his teammate first and then Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) to go up to P6. With three laps to go the fight for the win became a five-way scrap, with Petrucci, Viñales and Mir fading off the pacesetters.

Marquez had got the better of Dovizioso on the penultimate lap, but the Ducati struck back down the straight. Crutchlow held P3, Rins P4 and Rossi P5, menacing behind and waiting for the fireworks to begin in the lead. Pushing hard, Marquez had a slight moment with the front at turn three, before making a lunge up the inside of Dovi at Turn 10. He couldn’t keep it though as the Desmosedici was able to cut back up the inside on the exit, setting up another classic grandstand finish.

It looked like a carbon copy of 12 months ago at the final corner, but it was the same edge-of-the-seat heart-in-your-mouth moment as Marquez dove through on the inside, sitting up Dovi but running wide as he couldn’t quite get it stopped in time. From there it was another classic point and shoot contest to the line as both gunned it on the exit, but Dovizioso couldn’t be caught and made it out ahead.

It was closer than before though, with an infinitesimal 0.023s separating the two as the flag waved. Behind, Crutchlow kept his cool to take a remarkable podium on his first race back since his huge Australian GP crash, with Rins a valiant P4 and Rossi again proving you should never count ‘The Doctor’ out. P5 from P14 on the grid was another impressive race day showing from the nine-time World Champion.

Petrucci would have to settle for P6 on his maiden factory Ducati ride, 2.320s behind his teammate in the end, with polesitter Vinales crossing the line 0.161s back from ‘Petrux’, in P7. Mir produced a fantastic rookie ride to finish just over five seconds off the race win in P8, with the Spaniard beating ninth place Nakagami and tenth place Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) – and just 9.636s covering the top 10 in Qatar.

Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) was just 0.01s1 behind Espargaro in P11 on his debut ride for Yamaha, with Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team), Andrea Iannone (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) and Johann Zarco (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) completing the point scoring positions.

So who was the ride of the day? Far from the podium in the end and not scoring any points on his debut, an argument could be made for Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) regardless. The rookie was forced into a pitlane start after issues on the grid ahead of the warm up lap, and set about unleashing some almighty pace and nerves of steel for a first ever premier class appearance.

Fastest laps flowed from the Frenchman and he was soon into point-scoring contention, although sadly, it wouldn’t last. Too much too early in a bid to catch the group ahead saw Quartararo fade back to P16 by the flag – but only eight tenths off Zarco. Fellow debutant Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) also impressed and, for some time, was top KTM, before fading slightly, a fate that also befell Mir further forward as they all aim to gain more full-length race experience.

Final rookie Francesco Bagnaia (Alma Pramac Racing) suffered a DNF, with more to come from him in Argentina for sure, and his more veteran teammate Miller also suffered some bad luck. The Australian fell victim to some problem with his machine that saw him drop from podium contention to suddenly outside the top ten, then retiring before the end of the race.

Flexbox HP 40’s Lorenzo Baldassarri had to fight off huge last lap pressure from the returning Tom Luthi (Dynavolt Intact GP) to take Moto2 victory in Qatar, with the duel going down to the line. The Italian led from lap two but had to withstand some serious pressure in the final sector of the last lap to hold off a swarming Luthi, eventually taking the chequered flag just 0.026 clear of the Swiss rider. Dynavolt Intact GP’s Marcel Schrotter completed the podium from pole.

Australia’s Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Racing Team) was an impressive fourth – a career-best finish – after holding down third for a portion of the final lap, while the top five was rounded out by Flexbox HP 40’s Augusto Fernandez.

Kaito Toba (Honda Team Asia) became the first Japanese winner in Moto3 and the first in the lightweight class since Tomoyoshi Koyama took victory in the 125cc race at the 2007 Catalan GP after a stunning ride.

He’s also the first Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup xhampion to become a grand prix winner after duelling it out in style to the line against Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing), the man who just lost out, and polesitter Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), who completed the podium. The top five was completed by Marcos Ramirez (Leopard Racing) and Celestino Vietti (SKY Racing Team VR46).

The MotoGP World Championship now heads to Argentina on 31 March for round two of the series.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

AORC round two wins to Milner, Sanders and Snodgrass

Bacon and Gardiner again victorious in Toowoomba EJ and Women’s categories.

Image: Foremost Media.

A dust-filled second round of the 2019 Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship (AORC) was completed today in Toowoomba, Queensland, with Daniel Milner, Daniel Sanders and Lyndon Snodgrass emerging on top.

Milner was once again the class of the field to lead the way outright in the Sprints, resulting in an E2 class win for the KTM Enduro Racing Team rider.

Stepping across to the KTM 350 EXC-F in the mid-tier for this season, Milner topped Josh Green (Yamaha Active8 Yamalube Racing) and fellow Yamaha pilot Jeremy Carpentier for the round. Broc Grabham (Honda) and Brad Hardaker (Yamaha) rounded out the top five.

Image: Foremost Media.

In E3, now aboard the Husqvarna Enduro Racing Team FE 501, there was no stopping Sanders, well clear of Andy Wilksch (Motul Pirelli Sherco Team) and Husqvarna desert racer Beau Ralston. In fourth and fifth positions came Jesse Lawton (Husqvarna) and Matt Murry (Husqvarna).

The hard-fought E1 field was today topped by former E3 champion Snodgrass, edging defending title-holder Styke for position following a strong showing in the opening test. Behind that pair came newcomer Michael Driscoll (Yamaha Active8 Yamalube Racing), from Fraser Higlett (Husqvarna Enduro Racing Team) and Jonte Reynders (Yamaha).

Image: Foremost Media.

Four-time EnduroGP world champion Matthew Phillips (KTM) ended up well down the order in 16th today, understood to have injured his knee early on this morning. Only three special tests were carried out today due to the extreme dry conditions.

It was better news for Phillips’ stablemate Kyron Bacon (KTM) as he won the EJ class for the second day in a row, while the Women’s class once again saw Jessica Gardiner (Yamaha) shine on her way to the round win.

The 2019 AORC series will resume on 6-7 April when rounds three and four are hosted in Dongog, New South Wales. Both of those will be contested as Enduro formats.

Detailed results


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Third supercross win of the season for Tomac at Daytona

Forkner increases his advantage in 250SX East for Kawasaki double.

Image: Supplied.

Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Eli Tomac captured his third victory of the 2019 Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship with a pivotal win at Daytona International Speedway.

Tomac took charge of the 450SX final on lap four when he moved past early leader Blake Baggett (Rocky Mountain ATV/MC KTM) and was never headed. He climbs to second in the standings, 19 points from the lead.

Behind Tomac was current points-leader Cooper Webb (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), who increased his points advantage with another consistent effort, joined on the podium by teammate Marvin Musquin in third. Baggett eventually finished fourth.

Australian Chad Reed (JGRMX Yoshimura Suzuki Factory Racing) was 10th overall at the notorious Daytona round to open the second half of the season, currently seventh in the championship standings aboard his factory RM-Z450.

In the 250SX East division it was runaway points-leader Austin Forkner (Monster Energy Pro Circuit Kawasaki) who led all but two laps on his way to winning, now 22 points ahead in the series.

Joining Forkner on the podium at round five of the championship by Chase Sexton (Geico Honda) and Justin Cooper (Monster Energy Yamalube Star Racing Yamaha), who are both tied for second in the rankings behind the unstoppable Forkner.

Next Saturday night, 16 March, will mark round 11 of the season in Indianapolis, Indiana, with Webb the rider to catch in 450SX and Forkner on-track for his first-career supercross crown.

Detailed results


Source: MotoOnline.com.au

Q2 crash costs Miller opportunity to challenge for front row

News 10 Mar 2019

Pramac Racing rider confident he could have gone quicker on second flyer.

Image: Supplied.

An incident on his second flying lap in qualifying cost Australia’s Jack Miller the chance of fighting for the front row in Qatar’s opening round of MotoGP 2019.

The Alma Pramac Racing rider, armed with a factory specification Ducati for this season, will start as top Independent out of fourth on the grid.

Miller jumped to second on the time-sheets with a 1m53.809s, but went down soon afterwards on the entry into turn two and denied him any hope of improving further. In the end he wound up fourth, only 0.064s from world champion Marc Marquez in P3.

“Unfortunately the crash that didn’t allow me to complete the second lap,” Miller reflected. “I’m sure I could have ended up with the front row, however I am very satisfied with what we did today – especially in the FP4 with a long run where the race pace was very positive.”

It’s been a remarkable opening weekend of the season for Miller, third fastest overall on Friday and once again displaying a front-running pace throughout Saturday’s sessions under lights at the Losail Circuit.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Lorenzo expecting ‘race of survival’ from 15th on the grid

Repsol Honda debutant suffers two major incidents during Saturday at Losail.

Image: Supplied.

A battered Jorge Lorenzo will soldier on in tonight’s opening round of the 2019 MotoGP World Championship despite dealing with extensive back pain from a difficult Saturday at Losail.

The triple MotoGP champion crashed heavily at turn six in FP3 and then, later in Q1, he joined a number of riders in going down at turn two in tricky conditions.

Lorenzo’s time will see him start the Qatar Grand Prix from 15th on the grid, the two falls leaving him with pain in his back, arms and legs. As a result, he’s hoping to be as pain free as possible for Sunday’s race.

“I have some pain in my back and I need to rest and then see how I wake up tomorrow,” Lorenzo admitted. “It hasn’t been a great day today, very unlucky with the first crash. There were a combination of factors that made me have a very nasty crash which has created a lot of pain.

“Then in qualifying I crashed because it was too cold, it wasn’t a good day for us. It will be a race of survival, especially for me with my experience with the bike and also my pain.”

It’s been a bumpy start to his career at Repsol Honda for Lorenzo, still on the mend from a wrist injury sustained in the off-season and continuing to come to grips with the factory RC213V alongside reigning champion Marc Marquez.

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

First MotoGP pole of the season goes to Vinales in Qatar

Miller top Independent in fourth as Gardner secures fifth in Moto2.

Image: Supplied.

Monster Energy Yamaha’s Maverick Vinales has taken the first MotoGP pole position of the 2019 season at the VisitQatar Grand Prix.

The Spaniard recorded a 1m53.546s, enough to give him a little breathing space ahead of Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati) and Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team), who join him on the front row of the grid.

Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) impressed early as the rookie initially shot to the top of the times, only to be beaten almost immediately by Q1 graduate Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu). That’s when Vinales struck, storming to the summit with a lap that was 0.741s quicker than anyone else.

Quartararo and Nakagami exchanged second fastest laps to leave the Japanese rider 0.395s off as the field headed in for a change of tyres, but it was soon about to change. Vinales led the troops back out for their second runs and the goalposts were moved once more.

Three more tenths were shaved off his best time, with Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing) then slotting into P2 and just 0.2s off. The Australian crashed at turn two soon after though, ending his hopes of pole and leaving his time under threat.

Dovizioso needed no second invitation, making a move into second place soon after. The Italian looked set to challenge Vinales again as he went over a tenth under after the first split, but the lap was gone by the second sector – his qualifying effort over.

Attention then turned to Marquez, who was on the tail of Danilo Petrucci (Mission Winnow Ducati Team) as neither sat on the provisional front row with little time left. Tactics on point, the reigning world champion was able to snatch third from Miller.

Miller therefore heads up the second row as top Independent, but it was a pretty close challenge from Quartararo by the end of the session. The French rookie retained his stunning pace so far and lines up fifth, just a tenth and a half off the Aussie.

Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) completes an all-Independent second row, with plenty of honour up for grabs for each. Petrucci starts seventh and, after outpacing teammate Dovizioso for much of testing, will be gunning to move forward on race day and battle for his first victory.

Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) is P8, with Nakagami eventually knocked down to ninth. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) completes the top 10 and was a crasher on Saturday – another who’ll be looking for much more once the lights go out. Rookie teammate Joan Mir is right behind him.

Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) is 12th, ahead of rookie Francesco Bagnaia (Alma Pramac Racing). Then come two big surprises, Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) in P14 after a tough day and Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) in 15th. Lorenzo suffered two crashes, but is fit to race.

Marcel Schrotter (Dynavolt Intact GP) is set to start Moto2 from his first-ever pole position, setting a best time of 1m58.585s to beat Xavi Vierge (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) by 0.146s, with Lorenzo Baldassarri (Flexbox HP 40) completing the front row. Australian Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) starts fifth.

Sterilgarda Max Racing’s Aron Canet clinched the first Moto3 pole position of the season in impressive fashion with a 2m05.883s. The front row is completed by two men starting from there for the first time, Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) in second and Kaito Toba (Honda Team Asia) in third.

Detailed results

Source: CycleOnline.com.au

Grand Prix Motorcycle Racing’s Greatest Caper

In 1961, Ernst Degner was leading the 125cc world championship aboard an innovative MZ two-stroke designed in the GDR under the guidance of Walter Kaaden. In spite of racing glory, Degner was discontented with eking out a meager living behind the Iron Curtain. While his competitors arrived at continental events driving fancy cars, Degner came with Stasi secret police escorts. He was at a crossroads. Fortunately, so was Suzuki.

After its two-stroke RT60 finished 15 minutes behind the four-stroke MV Agusta in the 1960 Ultra-Lightweight TT, the Hamamatsu factory looked at the MZ and saw greatness; it looked at Degner and saw opportunity. When Degner’s bike failed during the Swedish GP, Suzuki’s western fixer plied the forlorn MZ team with drinks, enabling Degner to defect from East Germany—into Suzuki’s open arms. Degner arranged for his family to be smuggled across the border in the trunk of a Lincoln limousine.


RELATED: 2019 Suzuki Ecstar MotoGP Team And GSX-RR First Look


By integrating Degner’s expertise in riding two-strokes to GP victory into its own industrial-size R&D, Suzuki found the secret to victory—stolen or not. At the following year’s TT, Degner gave Suzuki its first world-championship victory aboard the RM62, and also the 1962 50cc world championship.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com

Milner, Sanders and Styke open Toowoomba AORC with victories

Bacon and Gardiner storm to wins in EJ and Women’s classes.

Image: Foremost Media.

Daniel Milner (KTM Enduro Racing Team), Daniel Sanders (Husqvarna Enduro Racing Team) and Luke Styke (Yamaha Active8 Yamalube Racing) have kicked off the 2019 Yamaha bLU cRU Australian Off-Road Championship (AORC) with victories in their respective classes at Toowoomba, finishing in that order in the outright classification.

Milner, who switched to the E2 division for 2019, proved to be unstoppable in the category at Queensland’s first round, defeating runner-up Josh Green (Yamaha Active8 Yamalube Racing) by over two minutes, winding up with a total time of 58m12.545s over the five-test Sprint format.

Yamaha-mounted contender Jeremy Carpentier was third, a minute off Green, while the top five was locked out by Broc Grabham (Honda) and Brad Hardaker (Yamaha).

Image: Foremost Media.

In the E3 division, it was all about Sanders, despite encountering a number of mistakes. He was able to rebound strongly, posting an overall time of 58m18.484s, four minutes clear of second’s Beau Ralston (Husqvarna). Andy Wilksch (Motul Pirelli Sherco Team) rounded out the podium ahead of Jesse Lawton (Husqvarna) and Matt Murry (Husqvarna).

The highly-competitive E1 class, which represented four positions inside the top 10 outright times, saw defending champion Styke take top honours, narrowly edging out Lyndon Snodgrass (KTM Enduro Racing Team) with an overall time of 1h0m11.804s.

Image: Foremost Media.

Rookie Michael Driscoll (Yamaha Active8 Yamalube Racing) landed on the podium while on debut, finishing just ahead of Fraser Higlett (Husqvarna Enduro Racing Team) followed by four-time EnduroGP world champion Matthew Phillips (KTM).

The EJ category was taken out by Kyron Bacon (KTM), as the Women’s class saw Jessica Gardiner (Yamaha) reign supreme. Racing recommences tomorrow for round two of the series.

Detailed results


Source: MotoOnline.com.au