Knee slider and a fist pump. Cheers kid! 🤙
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📸 @worldsbk
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
What a weekend! – thanks WorldSBK | Assen blog drops tomorrow on my YouTube channel.
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
#motivationmonday
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📸 @geebeeimages
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
Toprak Razgatlioglu moved into the lead at turn one but was challenged straight away by Michael Ruben Rinaldi and Jonathan Rea. Rinaldi and Toprak traded the lead numerous times on the opening lap. Rea moved past Toprak and up into second place late on that opening lap before taking another three laps to then move past Rinaldi and into the race lead.
Scott Redding then moved past Toprak into third place while Andrea Locatelli then tagged on while Alex Lowes was a little late to the party.
Rea pulled away over the latter half of the race and left the rest to battle for second and do battle they did. The last lap was a thriller for second between Michael Ruben Rinaldi, Toprak Razgatlioglu and Andrea Locatelli with the Yamaha riders coming out on top, finishing second and third respectively, but then both were penalised one position subsequently for exceeding the track limits on the run to the flag. This promoted Michael Ruben Rinaldi up to second and demoted Toprak Razgatlioglu to third and Locatelli was pushed off the podium.
Pos | Rider | Bike……………………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | J. Rea | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | / |
2 | M. Rinaldi | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +3.542 |
3 | T. Razgatlioglu | Yamaha YZF R1 | +3.600 |
4 | A. Locatelli | Yamaha YZF R1 | +4.343 |
5 | S. Redding | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +4.501 |
6 | A. Lowes | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +5.215 |
7 | T. Sykes | BMW M 1000 RR | +8.010 |
8 | G. Gerloff | Yamaha YZF R1 | +9.126 |
9 | C. Davies | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +11.891 |
10 | A. Bassani | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +12.103 |
11 | T. Rabat | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +13.553 |
12 | L. Haslam | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +15.585 |
13 | I. Vinales | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +20.175 |
14 | L. Mercado | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +23.075 |
15 | K. Nozane | Yamaha YZF R1 | +23.130 |
16 | A. Mantovani | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +28.596 |
17 | L. Cresson | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +43.204 |
18 | A. Bautista | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +1m08.267 |
Not Classified | |||
RET | M. Van Der Mark | BMW M 1000 RR |
A dramatic Sunday afternoon race came to an end with Jonathan Rea claiming his third win of the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round and the fourth hat-trick of his career despite finding himself in eighth place after Turn 1 after starting from first. Behind him, Scott Redding came home in second with rookie Andrea Locatelli claiming his maiden podium.
Toprak Razgatlioglu got a good start but found himself out of the race after American Garrett Gerloff made contact with the Turkish rider at Turn 1, with the American placed under investigation for the incident by the FIM WorldSBK Stewards and given a ride-through penalty for the incident. The crash put Razgatlioglu out of the race.
The incident forced Jonathan Rea down into eighth place while Andrea Locatelli, running the SCX tyre, found himself leading a WorldSBK race for the first time in his short career. It took until the fourth lap for Rea to be back in second place, as he looked to secure a hat-trick at Assen. Locatelli led the first half of the race as Rea closed the gap to Locatelli with the six-time Champion able to take the lead on Lap 12 of 21, with Rea on the SC0 tyre, on the run to Turn 1.Rea’s victory means he is now on 199 WorldSBK podiums, one away from a historical 200 podiums.
Locatelli was able to stick with Rea for the next few laps, but Rea soon found himself extending the lead over the rookie, with Locatelli having to start watch out for Scott Redding in third as the British rider closed in.
On Lap 19, Redding made his move in the final sector of the lap to move into second place, with Locatelli coming home in third for his maiden WorldSBK podium. Locatelli becomes the first WorldSSP Champion to claim a WorldSBK podium as a rookie since Michael van der Mark in 2015, also at Assen.
Chaz Davies missed out on his 100th WorldSBK podium on his 200th start for Ducati with fourth place after charging through the field, fending off the challenge from Alvaro Bautista by just one second with the Spanish rider claiming his best result of the season so far.
Behind Bautista, there was a titanic battle for sixth place that culminated with Tom Sykes crashing out at the final chicane while battling with teammate Michael van der Mark, Alex Lowes and Michael Ruben Rinaldi; The Ducati man falling down the order on the SCX tyre. Dutchman van der Mark claimed sixth ahead of Lowes and Rinaldi. Axel Bassani claimed another top ten finish with ninth as Leon Haslam rounded out the top ten.
Tito Rabat claimed 11th place in Race 2 at Assen with Kohta Nozane securing another points-paying position with 12. Leandro Mercado was 13th on his return to the Championship after undergoing a testing programme with the team. Isaac Viñales finished in 14th place, ending a run of results for the Spanish rider of finishing in odd-numbered positions, while Sykes claimed 15th after his crash.
Andrea Mantovani missed out on a second points finish of the weekend with 16th place, with Loris Cresson the last of the classified runners. Gerloff’s race came to an end after he had taken his ride-through penalty after he crashed at turn 9 on his Yamaha machine, joining Razgatlioglu as a retirement from Race 2.
Pos | Rider | Bike…………………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | J. Rea | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | / |
2 | S. Redding | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +1.605 |
3 | A. Locatelli | Yamaha YZF R1 | +3.431 |
4 | C. Davies | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +8.695 |
5 | A. Bautista | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +9.584 |
6 | M. Van Der Mark | BMW M 1000 RR | +12.691 |
7 | A. Lowes | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +12.992 |
8 | M. Rinaldi | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +13.752 |
9 | A. Bassani | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +19.087 |
10 | L. Haslam | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +19.629 |
11 | T. Rabat | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +20.974 |
12 | K. Nozane | Yamaha YZF R1 | +34.615 |
13 | L. Mercado | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +35.640 |
14 | I. Vinales | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +38.917 |
15 | T. Sykes | BMW M 1000 RR | +47.840 |
16 | A. Mantovani | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +56.387 |
17 | L. Cresson | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +1m09.598 |
Not Classified | |||
RET | G. Gerloff | Yamaha YZF R1 | 9 Laps |
RET | T. Razgatlioglu | Yamaha YZF R1 |
“It was nice to make it three-from-three here at Assen. We achieved it after we changed the rear tyre choice from yesterday. With the overnight rain the track’s grip level was a little bit lower and the temperature was maybe three or four degrees lower. We figured that would be the crossover point to run the SC0. It was nice to win with the soft tyre choice yesterday and the standard race tyre option today. It is a massive testament to the guys in the pitbox and what they have done. We made quite a big chassis change in the set-up this weekend and it was easier to ride. You could see in my passes, I could put the bike where I wanted and it was very nimble, yet stable in the fast sections as well. I went over to see the flooding on the track first thing this morning, considering how much rain there was last night – and there was a lake on the inside of turn five! So massive respect to the track and everybody at Assen because they had lots of machines there, two fire trucks, three tankers and I think we were only delayed 45 minutes this morning. They did an incredible job.”
“I’m happy to end the weekend with another podium. I struggled a lot to find the feeling with the front tire but in Race 2 we were able to make that small step that allowed me to keep a better pace. In the beginning, I tried not to push hard to save the front tyre and for this reason, I lost a little bit of ground compared to the lead. The pace has improved a lot since the middle of the race but the gap with Rea was too wide to fight for the victory”.
“I immediately forgot the situation from this morning because I had another chance to race today, and you still focus to get the maximum when you can do it. I’m really happy because we got the first podium, also to do it in the long race, it’s really an amazing feeling. In the short race, you need to push hard but also it’s a shame to make the tiny mistake with the track limits, it was only a few millimetres! Then in Race 2, I got the lead immediately and was able to keep a good pace but in the end I fought a lot with the softer rear tyre. With the conditions like today and yesterday with some sun, we can push in all sessions and I learned and improved every time – now we are faster and I was in front! We have been close to the front all weekend and I am so happy also for my crew. We work so well together, they work hard and we make no mistakes, and also the R1 is working so well. It’s nice to ride here in Assen and we have another chance very soon to continue in this way and try to get some more podiums!”
“Honestly I can’t be satisfied with this weekend. Yesterday I gave my best but I crashed, while today I never had the feeling to be in the ideal conditions. The result of the Superpole Race is clearly positive, but it came after the penalisation of Razgatlioglu and Locatelli; after a good start in the afternoon, since the tire performance started dropping, I have been no longer efficient. It’s a bit frustrating: we have to work to find a solution that will allow us to be more consistent”.
“It was not an easy day or an easy weekend for us. I have had some physical restrictions which have been tough and this track is quite tough anyway, with lots of changes of direction. My tyre in Race Two was in better condition than Michael Ruben Rinaldi’s but the trouble was passing him. I did make a move on him and ran out wide, which allowed Michael van der Mark to pass, but in those last five or six laps I was getting held up a little bit. I could have maybe gone a bit quicker but I still enjoyed the battle through the second race. I was quite happy with sixth and seventh, as I was struggling quite a lot. That is a shame, but my target is to go out and rest and come back 100% for the next race at a new track in the Czech Republic. Sixth and seventh are not where I want to be finishing but all things considered, it was a better day than Saturday! This was the most we could do this weekend.”
“This morning’s crash was a stupid mistake by myself. I really wanted to go for it, and on the fastest corners of the track I tried to go even faster which was a silly mistake on my behalf. In race two, I had an okay start. I had a bit of luck at T1 starting in P11 and by the end of lap one I was in fifth but I didn’t have the pace or the grip I was hoping for. I was struggling to keep the bike on track and I just didn’t have any more to give so it was quite tough. But at the end of the race I found a little extra pace and managed to catch and pass Michael Ruben Rinaldi and Alex Lowes so P6 wasn’t too bad in the end. But I really wanted more.”
“We managed to start race two on the third row which was a lot better. We got a much cleaner start to the race as the guys did a bit of work to the BMW M 1000 RR. We used the harder rear tyre and just couldn’t find the grip we needed at the beginning of the race but having said that, the bike stayed very constant throughout the race. Unfortunately coming into the last corner before entering the final lap, I tried to close the line and square the corner off and lost the front. It was such a slow speed crash, but I wasn’t able to save it. It’s such a shame, the bike today was good enough for that top-six and it would have been nice to be consistent the whole weekend. It certainly seemed we have made some good improvements including both me and Michael. A disappointing end to the weekend but we can take the positives from it, and we will focus on that and try to build on it for the next round.”
“In the second race, Garrett made a bad mistake, I am not sure why he tried to do hard braking like this in the first corner – I was surprised and I only feel angry because we lost so many points for the championship. At the start, I passed Rinaldi into the corner but it was not “easy”, it was difficult to stop my own bike so I cannot understand why Garrett arrived inside me. In Most I will only be looking to fight for the win, I am not looking at championship points any more. This weekend, maybe I just had some bad luck, but we fight hard again for the next race.”
“I’m devastated and I can only apologise to Toprak and to Yamaha for today. I got a good start from the third row of the grid, I felt the contact in turn one, but I didn’t realise it was Toprak until I looked back. I’m sorry for him, as he paid a big price for my mistake, but also for Yamaha, who have worked tirelessly to mount a championship challenge. I can only apologise to both, although I am well aware that this won’t change the outcome.”
“It has been a challenging weekend for us with two crashes in the first two races, something that quite annoys me honestly, because I think that our performance in those races could have been similar to what we did in race 2. For now, when I try to ride more naturally, I fall. Having said that, we finished the weekend with a positive result, a hard-fought top five, with some nice passes, and I think that this stems from the work we are doing. During the weekend we improved a lot on the electronics side, especially on the lower area of the throttle which gives me more confidence now. Maybe it’s not so apparent yet, but I hope it’s just a starting point for the upcoming races.”
“In the Superpole race, a rider caused me to lose many positions through the first turn. It was a difficult race and we struggled with both the front of the bike and power delivery too. In the second race, I made a good start but then Toprak crashed and I had to avoid him, which meant I lost ground again. I felt like I had good rhythm through the first part of the race anyway, but then from about lap ten I started to lose a lot of time, more than one second per lap. Overall, it’s been a tough weekend and I’m left frustrated as I expected top five results at this circuit.”
“Today my Superpole Race was not that good and I discussed with the team about how we could make some set-up improvements for Race 2. These changes worked and I was very happy, my time in the race was quicker than my qualifying time. Unfortunately, my finger is not recovered 100 per cent still and with 16 laps to go I found it very difficult to keep my pace until the end, so it was tough to keep the rider behind. In the end, I finished 12th but of course at Yamaha everyone is riding the same bike, so when I see the others, I think that even though I’m a rookie, I have to convince myself to aim higher. To the next race in Czech Republic, it’s the first time for everyone, so there I hope to be able to reach another level to get closer to the other Yamaha riders.”
“It was a really great weekend – until the crash. I am delighted that we were able to show once again that we have the speed and that we can really compete. That did us all a lot of good. I actually wanted to race today. I am still in some pain and a bit stiff walking, but I felt ready. Unfortunately, the race doctors did not give me the OK. I would like to thank the team for their great work nonetheless and for getting us back on track. Thanks also to everyone who has sent their best wishes after my crash. Now it’s time for a few days of recovery and then we will go back on the attack at Most the weekend after next.”
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Jonathan Rea | 243 |
2 | Toprak Razgatlioglu | 206 |
3 | Scott Redding | 162 |
4 | Alex Lowes | 127 |
5 | Michael Ruben Rinaldi | 111 |
6 | Garrett Gerloff | 105 |
7 | Michael Van Der Mark | 104 |
8 | Tom Sykes | 102 |
9 | Chaz Davies | 85 |
10 | Andrea Locatelli | 84 |
11 | Alvaro Bautista | 68 |
12 | Axel Bassani | 60 |
13 | Leon Haslam | 55 |
14 | Lucas Mahias | 36 |
15 | Tito Rabat | 23 |
16 | Kohta Nozane | 21 |
17 | Isaac Vinales | 15 |
18 | Eugene Laverty | 14 |
19 | Jonas Folger | 8 |
20 | Leandro Mercado | 7 |
21 | Loris Cresson | 3 |
22 | Andrea Mantovani | 2 |
23 | Luke Mossey | 2 |
24 | Christophe Ponsson | 1 |
Racing for the FIM Supersport World Championship at the TT Circuit Assen came to a thrilling conclusion in the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round as Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) claimed his fifth consecutive victory and his second in his team’s home race, while Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) battled his way to the podium for the first time since 2019.
In a typical 2020 WorldSSP race start, the lead group were battling nose-to-tail and elbow-to-elbow throughout the opening few laps, with Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) able to take the lead on the opening lap despite Aegerter getting a good start from pole position into Turn 1.
German Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) was able to take the lead of the race as he did in Race 1 on Saturday, but soon found himself behind Aegerter when the Swiss rider passed Oettl on the fifth lap, having passed Odendaal the lap before to move into second place as he looked to make it two wins in his special yellow livery.
After Aegerter passed Oettl, Aegerter was able to drag the German rider away from the chasing pack as they looked to secure their places on the podium. Odendaal’s race came undone on Lap 9 of 18 when he crashed at Turn 5, falling down to 20th place and had to battle his way through the field, eventually finishing in 13th.
Like in Race 1, Aegerter was able to start pulling away from everyone as he ramped up the pace to start pulling away from Oettl, leading by almost two seconds as Lap 13 got underway. Oettl was able to take advantage of the chasing group to claim second place and his second podium of the weekend.
The final podium place battled raged on throughout the 18-lap race between Luca Bernardi (CM Racing), Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team), Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha), Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) and Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing). Krummenacher had been running third before Sammarinese rider Bernardi passed the 2019 WorldSSP Champion, although the Swiss rider was able to respond later on in the race.
On Lap 15, Gonzalez made his move on Bernardi to move into fourth in the hunt for his first WorldSSP podium before setting his sights on Krummenacher, but Bernardi soon made a return to fourth with an aggressive move on the 2019 WorldSSP300 Champion. Bernardi then made his move on Krummenacher at Turn 8 to move into third with two laps to go, but Krummenacher responded ay Turn 15; an error at the chicane meant Öncü was able to move into fourth. At the end, Krummenacher finished in third place to return to the podium in WorldSSP, with Bernardi in fourth. Krummenacher’s podium means it’s the first time two Swiss riders have stood on the rostrum in WorldSSP, while Switzerland now has as many wins as Germany in WorldSSP with 11.
Despite dropping to the back of the lead group, Cluzel was able to take fourth place after Bernardi was penalised with a one-place demotion for exceeding track limits on the final lap. Gonzalez claimed sixth place with Öncü in seventh after he was on the receiving end of an overtake by Bernardi which forced him wide.
Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) finished in eighth place with Marco Alcoba (Yamaha MS Racing) in ninth and Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) completing the top ten; Tuuli and Alcoba around four seconds back from the group chasing down the podium.
Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) was the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider with 11th place, while Peter Sebestyen finished in 13th place ahead of teammate Odendaal. Sheridan Morais’ (Wojcik Racing Team) secured another points finish with 14th place as he stood in for the injured Christoffer Bergman, with Michel Fabrizio (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) completing the points.
WorldSSP Challenge rider Leonardo Taccini (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) missed out on a points finish by just 0.017s as he chased down Fabrizio, with Eemeli Lahti (HRP Suzuki) in 18th place. Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse) was just 0.053s behind Lahti in 18th place, with Luigi Montella (Chiodo Moto Racing), Maria Herrera (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing), Eduardo Montero Huerta (DK Motorsport) and Pawel Szkopek (Yamaha MS Racing) the last of the classified finishers.
The first lap was an eventful affair in WorldSSP with Indonesian rider Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) a Lap 1 retirement following a crash, while Raffaele De Rosa (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) and Federico Caricasulo (GMT94 Yamaha) came together at Turn 10, with both retiring from the race. Daniel Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) was also a retirement from the race, as was Mattia Casadei (VFT Racing). Federico Fuligni (VFRT Racing) retired from the race in the closing stages of the 18-lap race.
“It was a very great race. At the start, we had some small fights with Oettl and Odendaal. I could make the pace afterwards. The track condition was not like in the Tissot Superpole but the lap time was quite fast and I could make a gap. Thanks to the Ten Kate Race team, they gave me a perfect bike for their home Round. It’s very nice with the special livery. For sure, this weekend we made some history for Ten Kate and I hope the fans here enjoyed the nice weather in the Netherlands and thanks for your support.”
“It was a really good weekend for the team. We had some problems towards the end of the race because I chose again the softer tyre. Like yesterday, I wanted to stay with Domi as long as possible and create a gap. It was an intense race. The tyre moved on the rim a little bit, so I lost the weight, I had a lot of vibrations in the last few laps and lost a lot of time. In the end, it was a similar race to yesterday. Domi is in a league of his own but I think in Most we can work in the Free Practice sessions to have more grip towards the end of the race and the next step will be to stay with him for the whole race.”
“It’s really nice to be back on the podium. Thanks to everyone who supported me in this difficult time. It was a long time. I want to thank you and it’s so good, so nice to be back on the podium.”
Pos | Rider | Bike……………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | D. Aegerter | Yamaha YZF R6 | / |
2 | P. Oettl | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +7.697 |
3 | R. Krummenacher | Yamaha YZF R6 | +8.119 |
4 | J. Cluzel | Yamaha YZF R6 | +9.852 |
5 | L. Bernardi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +9.870 |
6 | M. Gonzalez | Yamaha YZF R6 | +9.952 |
7 | C. Oncu | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +10.360 |
8 | N. Tuuli | MV F3 675 | +14.282 |
9 | M. Alcoba | Yamaha YZF R6 | +14.305 |
10 | V. Takala | Yamaha YZF R6 | +26.475 |
11 | K. Manfredi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +26.679 |
12 | P. Sebestyen | Yamaha YZF R6 | +26.899 |
13 | S. Odendaal | Yamaha YZF R6 | +27.540 |
14 | S. Morais | Yamaha YZF R6 | +28.443 |
15 | M. Fabrizio | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +33.004 |
16 | L. Taccini | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +33.021 |
17 | E. Lahti | Yamaha YZF R6 | +45.727 |
18 | S. Frossard | Yamaha YZF R6 | +45.780 |
19 | L. Montella | Yamaha YZF R6 | +50.786 |
20 | M. Herrera | Yamaha YZF R6 | +51.649 |
21 | E. Montero Huerta | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1m26.567 |
22 | P. Szkopek | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1m38.364 |
Not Classifieds | |||
RET | F. Fuligni | Yamaha YZF R6 | 4 Laps |
RET | M. Casadei | Yamaha YZF R6 | 10 Laps |
RET | D. Webb | Yamaha YZF R6 | 11 Laps |
RET | R. De Rosa | Kawasaki ZX-6R | 16 Laps |
RET | F. Caricasulo | Yamaha YZF R6 | 17 Laps |
RET | Hendra Pratama | Yamaha YZF R6 | / |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Dominique Aegerter | 169 |
2 | Steven Odendaal | 125 |
3 | Philipp Oettl | 108 |
4 | Luca Bernardi | 97 |
5 | Jules Cluzel | 91 |
6 | Manuel Gonzalez | 84 |
7 | Randy Krummenacher | 62 |
8 | Hannes Soomer | 47 |
9 | Raffaele De Rosa | 46 |
10 | Can Alexander Oncu | 43 |
11 | Marc Alcoba | 40 |
12 | Federico Caricasulo | 39 |
13 | Christoffer Bergman | 34 |
14 | Niki Tuuli | 28 |
15 | Vertti Takala | 19 |
16 | Kevin Manfredi | 19 |
17 | Galang Hendra Pratama | 14 |
18 | Peter Sebestyen | 9 |
19 | Sheridan Morais | 8 |
20 | Maria Herrera | 7 |
21 | Filippo Fuligni | 6 |
22 | Michel Fabrizio | 6 |
23 | Roberto Mercandelli | 5 |
24 | Massimo Roccoli | 4 |
25 | Matteo Patacca | 3 |
26 | Stephane Frossard | 3 |
27 | Luca Ottaviani | 1 |
28 | Leonardo Taccini | 1 |
29 | Davide Pizzoli | 1 |
30 | Pawel Szkopek | 1 |
The final race of the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship was full of action at the TT Circuit Assen for the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round with British rider Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claiming a victory as he looked to make up for recent errors that cost him high-scoring points in the last two races.
Booth-Amos claimed victory after being given a nine-place grid penalty for slow riding earlier in the weekend, one of nine riders to be given that penalty for the same offence, as he looked to close the gap to Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) at the top of the Championship. Booth-Amos claimed Kawasaki’s 90th podium in WorldSSP300 with his second victory of the season. Hugo de Cancellis (Prodina Team WorldSSP300) claimed his second podium of the season with second place, ahead of fellow French rider Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo); the first time two French riders have been on the WorldSSP300 podium together.
Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki) finished in fourth place after being demoted two positions for exceeding track limits twice on the final lap, with teammate Adrian Huertas in fifth; the Spanish rider given the same penalty as Buis for the same offence. Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki) was sixth as MTM Kawasaki secured a top six finish with three of their four riders; Koen Meuffels finishing in ninth.
Italian Mirko Gennai (BRcorse) was in seventh place ahead of polesitter Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) in eighth after the local hero dropped down the order as the race progressed. Steeman was promoted to eighth after the chequered flag when Meuffels was demoted one place for exceeding track limits on the final lap. Meikon Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) completed the top ten, the first rider more than one second away from Booth-Amos.
South African rider Dorren Loureiro (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claimed 11th place, missing out on a top ten finish by just one tenth of a second, with Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing) in 12th. Czech rider Petr Svoboda (WRP Wepol Racing) claimed his best result of the 2021 season with 13th; a result that will give him confidence as the Championship heads to the Czech Republic next time out.
Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) was in 14th place after the 14-lap race in the Netherlands with Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) securing the last point on offer with 15th place. The 2018 WorldSSP300 Champion was one of three riders demoted a place after the race ended for exceeding track limits on the final lap. Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) finished just outside the points in 16th place with Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing) in 17th; the Spanish also demoted one place for a track limits infringement on the final lap of the race. Johan Gimbert (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing), Kevin Sabatucci (Viñales Racing Team), who claimed a top five finish in Race 1, and Inigo Iglesias (SMW Racing) rounded out the top 20.
Two front runners lost their chance of victory on Lap 11 when Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) and Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) coming together, with Turkish star Sofuoglu and Orradre, the youngest ever race winner in WorldSSP300, able to re-join the race, with Orradre finishing in 25th and Sofuoglu in 32nd.
Young Aussie Harry Khouri claimed a 31st place finish.
Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK) was a retirement on Lap 2 of the 14-lap race after he had a crash at Turn 1 at the start of the second lap. Christian Stange’s (2R Racing) comeback to WorldSSP300 ended with a Turn 3 crash on Lap 4. Vicente Perez Selfa (Machado CAME SBK) also retired from the race on Lap 4 after a crash at the final chicane. Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez crashed out of the race at around half-distance
“I’m very happy today after my crash yesterday. It was nice to repay the team with the win. This is a home race, they’re Dutch and German, so I can’t think them enough. It’s nice to be in front of some fans again.”
“I’m very happy because yesterday I crashed on the last lap. I can be happy to finish a race like this. It was a very difficult race. Thanks to all my team, all my family and all the people I have with me this year because we worked a lot.”
“It was a crazy race, actually. Very, very crazy. We struggled a little bit on the back straight but managed to put the bike on the podium again. I’m very happy, third in the Championship, I think. We will be hoping for Most, a new track for us. A big thanks to the team, they did an amazing job. I’m so happy and just want to thank them for their excellent work. Let’s hope for a win in the next race, we’ll work for it.”
Pos | Rider | Bike…………………………… | Time/Gap |
1 | 69 T. BOOTH-AMOS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | / |
2 | 64 H. DE CANCELLIS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.513 |
3 | 46 S. DI SORA | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.545 |
4 | 1 J. BUIS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.547 |
5 | 99 A. HUERTAS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.550 |
6 | 61 Y. OKAYA | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.557 |
7 | 26 M. GENNAI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +0.572 |
8 | 72 V. STEEMAN | KTM RC 390 R | +0.862 |
9 | 17 K. MEUFFELS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.863 |
10 | 83 M. KAWAKAMI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.015 |
11 | 20 D. LOUREIRO | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.185 |
12 | 80 G. MASTROLUCA | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.270 |
13 | 53 P. SVOBODA | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.430 |
14 | 87 T. KAWAKAMI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.667 |
15 | 11 A. CARRASCO | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.695 |
16 | 2 A. CARRION | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +2.031 |
17 | 19 V. RODRIGUEZ NUNEZ | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +2.090 |
18 | 7 J. GIMBERT | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +3.221 |
19 | 85 K. SABATUCCI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +3.323 |
20 | 58 I. IGLESIAS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +3.421 |
21 | 48 T. BRIANTI | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +3.610 |
22 | 59 A. ZANCA | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +7.976 |
23 | 52 O. KONIG | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +8.034 |
24 | 23 S. MARKARIAN | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +21.946 |
25 | 10 U. ORRADRE | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +22.002 |
26 | 5T. SMITS | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +22.109 |
27 | 93 M. GAGGI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +22.628 |
28 | 4 S. DOORNENBAL | KTM RC 390 R | +22.944 |
29 | 81 T. MOLENAAR | KTM RC 390 R | +23.837 |
30 | 97 F. PALAZZI | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +23.887 |
31 | 43 H. KHOURI | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +27.626 |
32 | 54 B. SOFUOGLU | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +46.455 |
33 | 18 I. OFFER | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +50.405 |
34 | 22 J. ROMERO | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +50.455 |
35 | 14 J. MCMANUS | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +53.554 |
36 | 70 M. DUARTE | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1m02.972 |
37 | 55 A. FRAPPOLA | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1m06.286 |
Not Classified | |||
RET | 73 J. PEREZ GONZALEZ | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 8 Laps |
RET | 15 A. COPPOLA | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 8 Laps |
RET | 44 C. STANGE | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 11 Laps |
RET | 21 V. PEREZ SELFA | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 11 Laps |
RET | 77 R. BIJMAN | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 13 Laps |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Dominique Aegerter | 169 |
2 | Steven Odendaal | 125 |
3 | Philipp Oettl | 108 |
4 | Luca Bernardi | 97 |
5 | Jules Cluzel | 91 |
6 | Manuel Gonzalez | 84 |
7 | Randy Krummenacher | 62 |
8 | Hannes Soomer | 47 |
9 | Raffaele De Rosa | 46 |
10 | Can Alexander Oncu | 43 |
11 | Marc Alcoba | 40 |
12 | Federico Caricasulo | 39 |
13 | Christoffer Bergman | 34 |
14 | Niki Tuuli | 28 |
15 | Vertti Takala | 19 |
16 | Kevin Manfredi | 19 |
17 | Galang Hendra Pratama | 14 |
18 | Peter Sebestyen | 9 |
19 | Sheridan Morais | 8 |
20 | Maria Herrera | 7 |
21 | Filippo Fuligni | 6 |
22 | Michel Fabrizio | 6 |
23 | Roberto Mercandelli | 5 |
24 | Massimo Roccoli | 4 |
25 | Matteo Patacca | 3 |
26 | Stephane Frossard | 3 |
27 | Luca Ottaviani | 1 |
28 | Leonardo Taccini | 1 |
29 | Davide Pizzoli | 1 |
30 | Pawel Szkopek | 1 |
Source: MCNews.com.au
It was nice to make it three-from-three here at Assen. We achieved it after we changed the rear tyre choice from yesterday. With the overnight rain the track’s grip level was a little bit lower and the temperature was maybe three or four degrees lower. We figured that would be the crossover point to run the SC0. It was nice to win with the soft tyre choice yesterday and the standard race tyre option today. It is a massive testament to the guys in the pitbox and what they have done. We made quite a big chassis change in the set-up this weekend and it was easier to ride. You could see in my passes, I could put the bike where I wanted and it was very nimble, yet stable in the fast sections as well. I went over to see the flooding on the track first thing this morning, considering how much rain there was last night – and there was a lake on the inside of turn five! So massive respect to the track and everybody at Assen because they had lots of machines there, two fire trucks, three tankers and I think we were only delayed 45 minutes this morning. They did an incredible job
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📸 @geebeeimages
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
Jonathan Rea became the first rider in WorldSBK history to win 13 times at a single circuit, having converted pole position into a win after he held off the challenge from his nearest rivals. The race was Red Flagged with just a few of the scheduled 21 laps following a crash for Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Action) at Turns 6 and 7; after the German rider was on course for a career best WorldSBK result. Folger was conscious and taken to the medical centre for a check-up following the crash. The German rider will be transported to Assen Hospital for further assessments and has been declared unfit for the remainder of the round.
Polesitter Rea lost out from the start to Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK), with the Championship leader able to jump Rea on the run down to Turn 1. The Turkish star then ran wide through Turn 4, allowing Rea back through with the six-time Champion tried to break away but to no avail.
Rea’s start and Razgatlioglu running wide allowed Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) to challenge the leaders but his race soon came to an end after he crashed at Turn 8 on Lap 3, forcing the Italian to retire from the race. It was the same corner that Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) had a crash at a lap earlier which put the Spanish rider out of the race.
It allowed Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati), who has shown glimpses of strong pace throughout the weekend so far, was able to close in on Razgatlioglu and Rea, before Rea made his move on Razgatlioglu on Lap 5. Three laps later, Redding made the move on Razgatlioglu at the same corner, the fast right-hander of Turn 6, demoting Razgatlioglu to third.
There was nothing to separate the lead trio as the race entered the second half of the 21-lap encounter although a mistake from Redding allowed Razgatlioglu through for second place, but it also allowed Rea to jump ahead by a couple of seconds ahead of the battling duo, with Razgatlioglu and Redding continue to fight until the end; Redding finishing the race in second place ahead of Razgatlioglu after passing the Turkish star on Lap 16 to secure second place.
“I think we won that with perseverance; I just kept going. I could see on my pit board that the gap was fluctuating to Toprak and Scott. I knew that if I let those guys get in it would be very hard to get away. When I had a clear track I had to maximise it, make no mistakes and put in a little gap. But I had to keep doing that, never settling, because they were in their own battle and pushing hard. If I relaxed they were going to catch me. I had a good rhythm and the bike was on rails. I just ran into some vibration on the rear tyre at the end so instead of keeping pushing the tyre in the critical areas, like the fast right handers, I conserved the tyre a little bit more. Even then the gap was still increasing. It’s a really nice feeling as a rider to have that. I am looking forward to tomorrow now. In Superpole, I had a feeling that my first fast lap might have been deleted because I did see a yellow flag. When I got back to the pit box I saw my time was still there, but, to save any confusion, I put in another Q tyre and went out straight away. I tried to avoid any traffic in the latter stages of the session and I had clear track but you are also nervous sitting in the box, watching everybody else go fast!”
“It’s nice to be back on the podium and get this result in Assen with so many fans in the stands. In the first half of the race the feeling was very positive and I was aware that I could fight for victory. Then I started to have some issues with the front tyre and I had to fight hard with Toprak. All things considered, I’m very satisfied with this result”.
“My plan was to follow Jonathan, but in the race I was feeling some problems because the front tyre was destroyed – and after I see that Scott is also not really fast, so I say, okay I wait until the last lap and try to pass him for second position. But then we saw the red flag… so I am not really happy today because I don’t want to settle for third position, but we are taking good points in a difficult race. Tomorrow we will try again for the best position and I will try a different front tyre for the next race. Thank you to everyone in my team today for the incredible work in Superpole, without this the podium would not have been possible and now we can fight again tomorrow.”
Home hero Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) claimed a stunning fourth after battling his way up from ninth on the grid, taking advantage of the crashes to Rinaldi and Bautista as well as Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), with Lowes crashing at Turn 5 on Lap 3.
“It was a tough Saturday, to be honest. This morning, I did not do any laps as we had a mechanical problem and so we went straight into Superpole. We thought we can do two laps with the qualifying tyre but I could just do one so it was quite tough. P9 on the grid wasn’t great, and also my start was not the best. I had some wheelieing and lost some positions there, then I got a bit of wrangling with another rider going into turn one and the first lap wasn’t really clean, but then straight away I had a good pace and I managed to pass some riders one by one. At the end I had a similar pace as the guys in front of me who were fighting for the podium but I just could not get any closer. We need to find a little bit extra grip to have the pace so I can battle with them.”
Andrea Locatelli (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) equalled his best WorldSBK result to date with fifth. Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team finished in sixth place after starting from 21st; the American did not set a lap time in the Tissot Superpole Session.
“I’m really, really happy – we had a really good race today because the gap to the front was close and the feeling with the bike from Friday is excellent. We worked well and I was able to make no mistakes, so maybe we can try to push a little bit more! Tonight, for sure, we will work a bit more to understand what we can do for tomorrow. I think this is my best race because the gap is really close, I was able to ride really fast although we lost a little bit of time at the start of the race with another rider. I tried to pass him to go with the front group but in the end we lost the time. It’s a really good place for me in Assen, I love the track and this is one of the key points! This was also the first “normal” qualifying that we start on the third row without penalties, which I am also really happy about. We look forward to tomorrow, and also the guys did a fantastic job today and we will continue to improve a little bit more.”
Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) started one position ahead of Gerloff, after a technical issue in Superpole, but finished one place behind the American in seventh.
“It has been a little bit of a character building day. We have been unlucky in Superpole and that set the scene for the opening race today. We had a slight technical issue; fair play to the marshals who brought the bike back. The boys did an unbelievable job to get me back out there and we managed to get a lap in which was good enough for second position on the grid but unfortunately it wasn’t to be. Then at the start of the race, we made an acceptable first lap and away we went. Unfortunately we had some limitations, I feel we had an issue which made it difficult for me to consistently make the apex. We will check that and again, we understand the bike a little bit more. For tomorrow we will make some changes. Overall, it was again a strong showing from BMW from a not so good start position. Michael rode a very strong race and it is just proof that we have been working hard.”
Leon Haslam (Team HRC) claimed eighth place with Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven) and Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) claiming ninth and tenth respectively.
“It was a bit of a frustrating race to be honest. During the practices I felt that I had good pace, making .34s on a used tyre, but come the race I was around 0.8 of a second slower. The feeling was not good with the front and I felt like I almost crashed on several occasions. So, in managing that, I couldn’t do more than eighth. But I’m disappointed as my expectations were much higher. We crossed the line anyway and will of course do our best to do more tomorrow”.
Isaac Viñales (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) claimed his best WorldSBK result to date with Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team) returning to the points after him and MIE Racing opted to miss some rounds to focus on improving the bike.
Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) claimed his first WorldSBK points with 13th place, taking advantage of wildcard Andrea Mantovani (Vince64)’s double Long Lap Penalty being converted into a ride through penalty after he did not take his Long Lap Penalties.
Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team) was a late-race retirement after he brought his Ducati machine back to the pitlane. Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) crashed out of the final chicane while Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) also crashed out, at Turn 15; both Nozane and Mahias crashed on Lap 13.
Pos | No. Rider | Bike……………………………….. | Sector/Gap |
1 | J. Rea | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | / |
2 | S. Redding | Ducati Panigale V4 R | 3.312 |
3 | T. Razgatlioglu | Yamaha YZF R1 | 1 Sector |
4 | M. Van Der Mark | BMW M 1000 RR | 1 Sector |
5 | A. Locatelli | Yamaha YZF R1 | 1 Sector |
6 | G. Gerloff | Yamaha YZF R1 | 1 Sector |
7 | T. Sykes | BMW M 1000 RR | 1 Sector |
8 | L. Haslam | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | 1 Sector |
9 | C. Davies | Ducati Panigale V4 R | 1 Sector |
10 | A. Bassani | Ducati Panigale V4 R | 1 Sector |
11 | I. Vinales | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | 2 Sectors |
12 | L. Mercado | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | 2 Sectors |
13 | L. Cresson | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | 1 Lap |
14 | A. Mantovani | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | 1 Lap |
Not Classified | |||
RET | J. Folger | BMW M 1000 RR | / |
RET | T. Rabat | Ducati Panigale V4 R | / |
RET | K. Nozane | Yamaha YZF R1 | / |
RET | L. Mahias | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | / |
RET | M. Rinaldi | Ducati Panigale V4 R | / |
RET | A. Lowes | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | / |
“Today in the Superpole I didn’t feel good with the qualifying tyre and lapped slower than with the race tyre yesterday. In the race I started quite well and was with the group in front. I wanted to try and stay there, especially in the first laps where we usually suffer more, but perhaps I had a little too much faith and lost the front, unable to save the crash. It’s a shame because every time I find the confidence to push a little more, I take a risk. We have to improve the feeling to understand where the limit is. I am very sorry for the team because they are working very hard, and I’m sorry for HRC because they are making a real effort with this project. But when I feel I can go faster, I want to at least try, if not I would feel frustrated. It is what it is, it’s a pity but fortunately we have two opportunities to improve tomorrow, so we remain positive and look forward to scoring a better result tomorrow”.
“I am very sorry for the crash. Despite a rather difficult Friday, we were able to take some steps forward and this morning the sensations were quite positive. After a good start, I had the feeling that I could easily stay with the leading group. Unfortunately, I made a mistake because I approached turn 8 in the wrong way, without taking into account the fact that the tank was still full. A lesson I’ve learnt for the future”.
“I felt good on the bike and we had made a positive step in FP3 this morning. Superpole was quite close but I got a bit boxed in with Rinaldi and Redding at the start of the race. I got passed by Jonas Folger but I re-passed him. Then I just lost the front in T5, the really slow corner. I was trying to release the brake to make the turn and maybe – with the fuel load on the bike or something – I was on the limit of the front. It was a shame because it was such a small crash but the handlebar was damaged and I could not get back on the bike. A little mistake and the race was over. But I felt quite good on the bike which is the main thing and we have two more races tomorrow.”
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Jonathan Rea | 206 |
2 | Toprak Razgatlioglu | 199 |
3 | Scott Redding | 137 |
4 | Alex Lowes | 114 |
5 | Garrett Gerloff | 103 |
6 | Tom Sykes | 98 |
7 | Michael Ruben Rinaldi | 94 |
8 | Michael Van Der Mark | 94 |
9 | Chaz Davies | 71 |
10 | Andrea Locatelli | 62 |
11 | Alvaro Bautista | 57 |
12 | Axel Bassani | 53 |
13 | Leon Haslam | 49 |
14 | Lucas Mahias | 36 |
15 | Tito Rabat | 18 |
16 | Kohta Nozane | 17 |
17 | Eugene Laverty | 14 |
18 | Isaac Vinales | 13 |
19 | Jonas Folger | 8 |
20 | Leandro Mercado | 4 |
21 | Loris Cresson | 3 |
22 | Andrea Mantovani | 2 |
23 | Luke Mossey | 2 |
24 | Christophe Ponsson | 1 |
The special Ten Kate Racing Yamaha livery enjoyed a successful first race outing at the TT Circuit Assen as Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) claimed his fourth consecutive FIM Supersport World Championship victory after a thrilling three-way battle at the front of the field in Race 1 for the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round.
Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) got the holeshot into Turn 1 to take the lead but soon found himself down in third place on the opening lap as both Aegerter and Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing). As seen before in 2021, the lead group contained plenty of riders all looking to break Aegerter’s winning streak.
After five laps, the lead trio of Aegerter, Oettl and Odendaal were the leading trio and all set fastest laps of the race to start pulling away from the chasing pack, with Aegerter continuing to lead the race despite Odendaal, in third, being the fastest rider of the three. Oettl had been in the lead of the race before falling back behind Aegerter and Odendaal, with the pair running the SCX tyre while Oettl used the SC0.
As the race entered the second half of the race, the lead trio kept extending their lead over Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) in fourth, who was at the front of the chasing pack, although the gaps at the front tended to be a couple of tenths, although on Lap 10 Odendaal had a look at passing Aegerter before the final chicane, with Aegerter able to hold on.
Oettl was dropped by Aegerter and Odendaal as the race went on with Aegerter, riding a special livery for the Ten Kate Racing team, able to withstand the challenge from Odendaal as the Swiss rider extended his Championship lead over the South African, with Aegerter consistently on lap record pace including setting a new record of 1’37.688s. After 18 laps, Aegerter finished three seconds clear of Odendaal with Oettl claiming third.
Jules Cluzel (GMT94 Yamaha) and Randy Krummenacher (EAB Racing Team) engaged in a battle for fourth place in the closing stages of the race, with Cluzel able to pass the 2019 WorldSSP Champion on the last lap; Krummenacher’s fifth the best result of his 2021 campaign.
Gonzalez ended the race in sixth place after losing out to both Cluzel and Krummenacher in the closing stages. Gonzalez has now secured 22 consecutive points finishes in WorldSSP, equalling the third-longest all-time streak and just three away from the longest streak of 25 races, held by Roberto Rolfo.
Can Öncü (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed seventh place after a strong race for the Turkish star, with Federico Caricasulo (GMT94 Yamaha) and Sheridan Morais (Wojcik Racing Team) completing the top ten; Morais returning to the Championship in place of Christoffer Bergman.
Peter Sebestyen’s (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) return to the Championship culminated with 11th place and a points finish, holding off the challenge from Sammarinese rider Luca Bernardi (CM Racing) who came home in 12th place; today’s race the first time Bernardi has not finished second when Aegerter has claimed victory.
Michel Fabrizio (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) claimed 13th place as the Italian continues his comeback with Indonesian rider Galang Hendra Pratama (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) in 14th and Kevin Manfredi (Altogo Racing Team) completing the points with 15th place and the highest-placed WorldSSP Challenge competitor.
Leonardo Taccini (Orelac Racing VerdNatura) narrowly missed out on WorldSSP Challenge honours, finishing 16th and just over a tenth behind Manfredi. Federico Fuligni (VFT Racing) was 17th with Stephane Frossard (Moto Team Jura Vitesse), Eemeli Lahti (HRP Suzuki), Luigi Montella (Chiodo Moto Racing) and Eduardo Montero Huerta (DK Motorsport) completing the classified runners.
Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) was declared unfit with a left distal tibia fracture following a crash in the Tissot Superpole session, while Shogo Kawasaki (G.A.P. MOTOZOO Racing by Puccetti) crashed in Free Practice 2 and was declared unfit after he was diagnosed with concussion. Pawel Szkopek (Yamaha MS Racing) was the first retirement of the race after the Polish rider crashed his Yamaha machine at Turn 4.
Daniel Webb’s (WRP Wepol Racing) return from injury came to a premature end when he came off his bike at Turn 9 on Lap 8, while Niki Tuuli (MV Agusta Corse Clienti) had a high side crash as he looked to pass Krummenacher at the final chicane; forcing the Finnish rider to retire.
Vertti Takala (Kallio Racing) retired from the race on Lap 14 at Turn 11, an incident for which Bernardi was given a Long Lap Penalty, while Mattia Casadei (VFT Racing) was out a lap later. WorldSSP Challenge competitor Maria Herrera (Biblion Iberica Yamaha Motoxracing) brought her Yamaha machine into the pitlane on Lap 16 of 18 to retire from the race.
Pos | Rider | Bike……………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | D. Aegerter | Yamaha YZF R6 | / |
2 | S. Odendaal | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.846 |
3 | P. Oettl | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +8.871 |
4 | J. Cluzel | Yamaha YZF R6 | +11.159 |
5 | R. Krummenacher | Yamaha YZF R6 | +11.276 |
6 | M. Gonzalez | Yamaha YZF R6 | +11.501 |
7 | C. Oncu | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +15.418 |
8 | F. Caricasulo | Yamaha YZF R6 | +15.430 |
9 | M. Alcoba | Yamaha YZF R6 | +19.727 |
10 | S. Morais | Yamaha YZF R6 | +28.623 |
11 | P. Sebestyen | Yamaha YZF R6 | +29.372 |
12 | L. Bernardi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +29.732 |
13 | M. Fabrizio | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +35.555 |
14 | G. Hendra Pratama | Yamaha YZF R6 | +38.657 |
15 | K. Manfredi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +38.702 |
16 | L. Taccini | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +38.866 |
17 | F. Fuligni | Yamaha YZF R6 | +49.709 |
18 | S. Frossard | Yamaha YZF R6 | +49.934 |
19 | E. Lahti | Suzuki GSX-R600 | +50.026 |
20 | L. Montella | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1m12.083 |
21 | E. Montero Huerta | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1m27.441 |
Not Classified | |||
RET | R. De Rosa | Kawasaki ZX-6R | 1 Lap |
RET | M. Herrera | Yamaha YZF R6 | 2 Laps |
RET | M. Casadei | Yamaha YZF R6 | 5 Laps |
RET | V. Takala | Yamaha YZF R6 | 6 Laps |
RET | N. Tuuli | MV | 8 Laps |
RET | D. Webb | Yamaha YZF R6 | 12 Laps |
RET | P. Szkopek | Yamaha YZF R6 | 15 Laps |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Dominique Aegerter | 144 |
2 | Steven Odendaal | 122 |
3 | Philipp Oettl | 88 |
4 | Luca Bernardi | 86 |
5 | Jules Cluzel | 78 |
6 | Manuel Gonzalez | 74 |
7 | Hannes Soomer | 47 |
8 | Raffaele De Rosa | 46 |
9 | Randy Krummenacher | 46 |
10 | Federico Caricasulo | 39 |
11 | Christoffer Bergman | 34 |
12 | Can Alexander Oncu | 34 |
13 | Marc Alcoba | 33 |
14 | Niki Tuuli | 20 |
15 | Galang Hendra Pratama | 14 |
16 | Kevin Manfredi | 14 |
17 | Vertti Takala | 13 |
18 | Maria Herrera | 7 |
19 | Sheridan Morais | 6 |
20 | Filippo Fuligni | 6 |
21 | Peter Sebestyen | 5 |
22 | Roberto Mercandelli | 5 |
23 | Michel Fabrizio | 5 |
24 | Massimo Roccoli | 4 |
25 | Matteo Patacca | 3 |
26 | Stephane Frossard | 3 |
27 | Luca Ottaviani | 1 |
28 | Leonardo Taccini | 1 |
29 | Davide Pizzoli | 1 |
30 | Pawel Szkopek | 1 |
Racing action got underway at the TT Circuit Assen in the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship and it was a typically unpredictable affair, with Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) leading an MTM Kawasaki podium lockout at the Prosecco DOC Dutch Round, extending his Championship lead after his nearest rival crash out.
At the start of the race, polesitter Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) was able to keep the lead of the race from his rivals but soon found himself falling down the order, although he was able to keep in the lead group throughout the first half of the race. The lead group throughout the 14-lap race was consistently around 10 riders although in the latter stages the top three tried to break away.
The race was full of drama throughout with the lead battle between Adrian Huertas (MTM Kawasaki) and teammate Jeffrey Buis on the last lap of the race with Huertas making his move late on the final lap of the race. Buis claimed his first podium of the 2021 campaign as he looks to kickstart his title defence on home soil but was demoted to third after the flag for a track limits infringement on the final lap, with teammate Koen Meuffels claiming second place ahead of Buis.
Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) secured fourth place, after a drag race with Meuffels that was originally a battle for third.
Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) claimed fourth place after both Bahattin Sofuoglo (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) and Kevin Sabatucci (Viñales Racing Team) were penalised for last-lap track infringements, with Sabatucci completing a stunning race to fight back and claim sixth place after starting from 22nd, with South African rider Dorren Louriero (Fusoort – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claiming seventh place, ahead of polesitter Steeman. Ton Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) was in ninth place, after a late-race crash with Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki), but the Brazilian was able to stay on his bike; Okaya forced to retire from the race.
Despite a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start, and a crash with Ruben Bijman, Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) (Machado CAME SBK) claimed a top ten finish, with Bijman retiring from the race later on. Alejandro Carrion (Kawasaki GP Project) claimed 11th place ahead of Harry Khouri (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki), Oliver König (Movisio by MIE), Alfonso Coppola (Team Trasimeno) and Johan Gimbert (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) who completed the points; König awarded a one-place penalty for a last-lap track limits infringement at Turn 18, whole Gimbert was forced to drop two positions after being deemed to have overtaken under yellow flags at Turn 16.
Alessandro Zanca (Kawasaki GP Project) came home in 16th place with Twan Smits (Viñales Racing Team), replacing Dean Berta Viñales, in 17th on his WorldSSP300 debut. Wildcard Sven Doornebal (Molendaar Racing Team) was in 18th place after the 14-lap race with Marco Gaggi (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) and Thom Molenaar (Molenaar Racing Team) rounding out the top 20.
James McManus (Team# 109 Kawasaki) claimed 21st place with Antonio Frappola (Chiodo Moto Racing) in 22nd place; just over a tenth behind McManus. Indy Offer (SMW Racing) claimed his best ever WorldSSP300 result to date with 23rd, ahead of Joel Romero (SMW Racing), Miguel Santiago Duarte (Yamaha MS Racing) and Victor Rodriguez Nuñez (Accolade Smrz Racing); Nuñez having a crash on the second lap of the race at Turn 1 and coming home last of the classified runners.
For the second race in a row, Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) crashed out of the race at the final corner when fighting for a strong result, with the British rider forced to retire from the race despite fighting for the podium. The first half of the opening lap had been without incident but as the riders got to Turn 10, there was an incident between Thomas Brianti (Prodina Team WorldSSP300), the returning Christian Stange (2R Racing) and Mirko Gennai (Team BRcorse); Gennai retiring from the race but Brianti and Stange able to bring their bikes back to the pits with Brianti re-joining the race.
Czech rider Petr Svoboda (WRP Wepol Racing) went down at Turn 10 and retired from the race. Unai Orradre (Yamaha MS Racing) and Ruben Bijman (Machado CAME SBK) had a coming together at the final chicane on the second lap although both were able to continue. Orradre’s race was compromised with a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start as well as the collision. Bijman retired from the race after
On the fourth lap, Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) had a massive highside at Turn 4 which forced the Spanish rider to retire from the race. At the same time, Gabriele Mastroluca (ProGP Racing) and Sylvain Markarian (Leader Team Flembbo) also retired from the race, while Bruno Ieraci (Machado CAME SBK) was another retirement from the race alongside Vicente Perez Selfa (Machado CAME SBK). As the race started Lap 10, Inigo Iglesias (SWM Racing) and Meikon Kawakami (AD78 Team Brasil by MS Racing) came together at the final chicane; Iglesias retiring from the race and Kawakami able to continue.
Pos | Rider | Bike……………………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | A. Huertas | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | / |
2 | K. Meuffels | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.959 |
3 | J. Buis | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.960 |
4 | S. Di Sora | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.363 |
5 | B. Sofuoglu | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.364 |
6 | K. Sabatucci | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.367 |
7 | D. Loureiro | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.480 |
8 | V. Steeman | KTM RC 390 R | +1.558 |
9 | T. Kawakami | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +2.276 |
10 | U. Orradre | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +3.683 |
11 | A. Carrion | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +15.224 |
12 | H. Khouri | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +24.268 |
13 | O. Konig | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +24.269 |
14 | A. Coppola | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +24.309 |
15 | J. Gimbert | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +24.642 |
16 | A. Zanca | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +29.244 |
17 | St. Smits | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +29.322 |
18 | S. Doornenbal | KTM RC 390 R | +29.468 |
19 | M. Gaggi | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +29.520 |
20 | T. Molenaar | KTM RC 390 R | +35.438 |
21 | J. Mcmanus | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +36.380 |
22 | A. Frappola | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +36.523 |
23 | I. Offer | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1m02.149 |
24 | J. Romero | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1m03.130 |
25 | M. Duarte | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1m08.515 |
26 | V. Rodriguez Nunez | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1m15.995 |
Not Classified | |||
RET | T. Booth-Amos | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 1 Lap |
RET | H. De Cancellis | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 1 Lap |
RET | Y. Okaya | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 3 Laps |
RET | M. Kawakami | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 4 Laps |
RET | I. Iglesias | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 6 Laps |
RET | R. Bijman | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 7 Laps |
RET | F. Palazzi | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 8 Laps |
RET | B. Ieraci | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 10 Laps |
RET | G. Mastroluca | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 10 Laps |
RET | A. Carrasco | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 11 Laps |
RET | J. Perez Gonzalez | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 11 Laps |
RET | S. Markarian | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 11 Laps |
RET | V. Perez Selfa | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 11 Laps |
RET | T. Brianti | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | 12 Laps |
RET | P. Svoboda | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 13 Laps |
RET | M. Gennai | Yamaha YZF-R3 | 13 Laps |
RET | C. Stange | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | / |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Adrian Huertas | 97 |
2 | Tom Booth-Amos | 65 |
3 | Samuel Di Sora | 48 |
4 | Ana Carrasco | 42 |
5 | Yuta Okaya | 42 |
6 | Unai Orradre | 39 |
7 | Jeffrey Buis | 39 |
8 | Meikon Kawakami | 37 |
9 | Koen Meuffels | 37 |
10 | Ton Kawakami | 30 |
11 | Hugo De Cancellis | 29 |
12 | Dorren Loureiro | 26 |
13 | Bahattin Sofuoglu | 21 |
14 | Bruno Ieraci | 21 |
15 | Victor Steeman | 17 |
16 | Gabriele Mastroluca | 13 |
17 | Oliver Konig | 11 |
18 | Harry Khouri | 11 |
19 | Kevin Sabatucci | 10 |
20 | Mirko Gennai | 10 |
21 | Filippo Maria Palazzi | 10 |
22 | Vicente Perez Selfa | 9 |
23 | Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez | 8 |
24 | Marc Garcia | 7 |
25 | Victor Rodriguez Nunez | 6 |
26 | Alejandro Carrion | 5 |
27 | Alfonso Coppola | 2 |
28 | Thomas Brianti | 2 |
29 | Alex Millan Gomez | 2 |
30 | Inigo Iglesias | 2 |
31 | Johan Gimbert | 1 |
32 | Ruben Bijman | 1 |
Source: MCNews.com.au
I think we won that with perseverance; I just kept going. I could see on my pit board that the gap was fluctuating to Toprak and Scott. I knew that if I let those guys get in it would be very hard to get away. When I had a clear track I had to maximise it, make no mistakes and put in a little gap. But I had to keep doing that, never settling, because they were in their own battle and pushing hard. If I relaxed they were going to catch me. I had a good rhythm and the bike was on rails. I just ran into some vibration on the rear tyre at the end so instead of keeping pushing the tyre in the critical areas, like the fast right handers, I conserved the tyre a little bit more. Even then the gap was still increasing. It’s a really nice feeling as a rider to have that. I am looking forward to tomorrow now. In Superpole, I had a feeling that my first fast lap might have been deleted because I did see a yellow flag. When I got back to the pit box I saw my time was still there, but, to save any confusion, I put in another Q tyre and went out straight away. I tried to avoid any traffic in the latter stages of the session and I had clear track but you are also nervous sitting in the box, watching everybody else go fast
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📸 @geebeeimages
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
Lot’s of memories around this place. WorldSBK Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK
Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook
It was a close run Friday in the WorldSBK class at the TT Circuit Assen for round five of the Championship at Assen
Some 13 riders were covered by less than a second, with Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) leading the way on combined times ahead of Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), whilst Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was third, having led the way in FP1. It was a strong day for parity across the manufacturers, with all five brands inside the top five places come the chequered flag.
It was a solid first day for Jonathan Rea, as the Ulsterman enjoyed a strong afternoon session after finishing second in the morning. Despite a major moment with around 20 minutes to go in FP2 coming into the final chicane, he finished in first in the afternoon, thus placing him top overall.
“They have re-asphalted the track at Assen since we were last here and it is incredible. They have done a great job. Massive congratulations to them because it was like when Misano was resurfaced; it is like a different track. You can attack more and the rhythm is faster. I feel good with the bike and this morning I was up to speed quite fast, although also we had to understand different tyres and so on. We put what we thought would be the race package together for the second session and my crew chief Pere said that if it felt good, just stay out and do a longer run. We did a long distance stint and I felt quite comfortable all through the session. It was good for the first day but we need to improve in some areas. We will sit down now and come up with a plan for Saturday.”
Teammate Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) didn’t have the sharpest of mornings in the Netherlands as he was only 12th but was back inside the top ten in ninth overall and did a 13-lap run, gathering data for the weekend ahead.
“It is nice to be back at Assen. It is my first time here with the Kawasaki and the times are quite close. We tried a couple of things in the afternoon and I felt pretty good on the bike. I was quite consistent. I felt a lot better than the final position and when we looked at the timesheets afterwards there were a lot of guys who did a couple of good laps, but then their overall pace was a bit slower. I would say it was fairly positive in that respect and I have got a lot more information about this track with this bike. Sometimes having a lot of experience of riding different bikes at one track goes against you because you are searching for something that feels different. I would say it has been a good day; plenty of laps and a nice, calm approach. I am looking forward to Saturday morning and FP3 to find some improvements in a couple of areas.”
Top Yamaha honours went to Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), as he celebrated his Yamaha contract extension with P2 on day one, trading positions with Rea for top spot.
“Riding here on a MotoGP bike is totally different from riding here on a Superbike. The hardest thing for me this morning was to change my muscle memory and my breaking markers from the ones I had developed on the MotoGP to the ones I need on the R1, but it was kind of difficult to do and I struggled in FP1. After resetting my mindset though, everything felt much better in the afternoon. I feel good, we have decent consistency, but I keep making mistakes that cost me more than half a second per lap, such as running off the track here and there. That is something I have to clean up tomorrow, but when I don’t run off I feel very consistent, also thanks to the great work the GRT Yamaha team has been doing with the setup. We have an idea of what direction we will take when it comes to the tyre compound, but I am not saying anything about it yet, I will just say we will choose a black and round one! The nature of this track allows the whole field to stay close together, no bike is the clear favourite, so it will be a big battle tomorrow.”
Championship leader Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) had a busy day where he was inside the top six but didn’t feature inside the top three too much, as he adapts to Assen aboard the Yamaha. In the end, Razgatlioglu ended the session in fifth and was sixth overall.
“Every rider was very close today, and also all riders are trying to understand the rear tyre because the SCX tyre and soft tyre did not work so well in this conditions. We did not try a long run like normal, just focus to find a good tyre and good setting for the race. Tomorrow we will also try again a change to the setup in FP3 because I am not quite feeling ready. For me it is different from the last time in 2019 because it is the first time riding the Yamaha here, but it was not bad! Every rider was very fast and also we had a quite ok start, but I need a little more. I am focused on each race, to try to fight for the podium – but also tomorrow qualifying will be important for a good start position.”
Teammate Andrea Locatelli had a more than dignified first WorldSBK appearance at Assen and was a firm fixture inside the top ten for the majority of the session. The Italian finished the day in 13th overall, although his position perhaps is not indicative of the potential he has.
Bouncing back and shining bright, Scott Redding (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) was fastest in FP1 and was in contention throughout the afternoon as he worked on race pace. Although he didn’t feature inside the top six in the afternoon and was relying on his morning time, he was third overall.
“I’m satisfied with how things went today. Since the morning, the feeling with the bike has been much better than the weekend in Donington. We worked a lot with the used tires to gather information ahead of the race. There are undoubtedly the conditions to get some good results. The important thing will be to stay with the leading group from the first lap, also because my race pace seems to be incisive“.
Teammate Michael Ruben Rinaldi had a strong showing in the morning but like Redding, didn’t feature quite as heavily in the afternoon but was nonetheless in contention in eighth. Both factory Ducatis appeared to have a tougher afternoon session in comparison to the morning.
“This morning’s session was quite difficult while in the afternoon we were much more consistent. We worked exclusively on the race pace and I’m sure that if we had tried to do a lap time we would have been with the leading group. We are all very close to each other so the important thing will be to work well to understand how to make the most out of used tire, especially in the final part of the race“.
It was a turnaround in comparison to the morning session for Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC), after having languished outside the top ten in FP1, bounced back to enjoy his best Friday of the season with fourth overall and just 0.350s off the top. Bautista was visibly more confident aboard the Honda and will hope that a solid opening day can be good foundations to build on ahead of the two upcoming race days.
“This morning I didn’t have the best feeling with the bike, so I think we’ve worked well over the two sessions in terms of set-up and in FP2 I found it easier to keep a good line through the corners which is especially important at this track. We also improved on the electronic side of things, making a better connection with the gas. So we’ve finally been able to close the gap to the frontrunners, and quite consistently. We still have room to improve in terms of both general feeling and the bike’s set-up but for sure it’s much better to be close to the top, rather than further back in the standings! We have some ideas with which to try and improve further so we’ll see how it goes tomorrow. The new asphalt is pretty good, definitely less bumpy compared to last time we came here but actually, considering the weather we had in 2019, the track conditions were going to be much better in any case!”
Leon Haslam (Team HRC) couldn’t match the heights of Donington Park just yet and was 12th after day one, with plenty more yet to come.
“Not a bad day today. Straight away, we felt quite quick during the morning’s session, which was nice. We’re losing quite a lot of time in the first sector compared to the fastest guys, but it’s only in that section really, and I’d say we’re not far off overall. We did some work with the tyres, but although I didn’t make the same step that a lot of the guys were able to make with the new solution, I’m not unhappy and the important thing is that we know where we need to improve. We’ll see what tomorrow brings, also in terms of track temperatures, and carry on from there”.
Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) was flying the BMW flag in fifth place overall and was fastest at varying points of the session. Come the close of the session, it was apparent that the BMW M 1000 RR had made strides, with Sykes fastest in sector two and four – high speed areas of the Assen track.
“It’s been a good day one here in Assen. To start off the guys at the Assen circuit have done a good job with the resurfacing on the track, its smooth and such a pleasure to ride. The BMW M 1000RR is working well from the previous data at Donington. Myself and my crew chief have put a plan in place and have had a smooth Friday. We have been able explore the base set up this morning in FP1 and going into FP2 we were able to expand into different tyre options that Pirelli have brought here, so now I feel we are quite prepared on this. One thing we didn’t do was fine tune that base set up on the bike which is something we will focus on tomorrow. So overall, today was a good strong performance from the whole of the BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team and I am looking forward to tomorrow. Hopefully the weather stays dry and consistent.”
Teammate and home-hero Michael van der Mark was 11th overall and on the fringes of the top ten, albeit less than six tenths off top slot occupied by Rea.
“It was quite a positive Friday if you look at our lap times and pace. We made a big step from this morning’s FP1 to FP2 as this morning I was not happy with the bike. Unfortunately, the position is not where we want to be, but with the progress we made from this morning is a good step. There are a couple of tenths missing to the front guys which is really close, but if we make that time up we will be in and around where we are wanting to be. I am happy with how our Friday has gone and looking forward now to Saturday’s Superpole and Race 1.”
Besides Gerloff in second, there were two other Independent riders inside the top ten, with Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) overcoming a crash in the opening moments to finish seventh overall. Next Independent was Chaz Davies (Team GoEleven), who had a solid morning session in third before slipping down the order to tenth on combined times, nearly six tenths slower than his morning time.
Jonas Folger (Bonovo MGM Racing) was 14th on his first WorldSBK experience at Assen, marginally ahead of Axel Bassani (Motocorsa Racing) and Tito Rabat (Barni Racing Team). Isaac Viñales (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura), Leandro Mercado (MIE Racing Honda Team), Kohta Nozane (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team), wildcard Andrea Mantovani (Vince64) and Loris Cresson (OUTDO TPR Team Pedercini Racing) rounded out the standings.
Pos | Rider | Bike………………………………………. | Time/Gap |
1 | J. Rea | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | 1m34.391 |
2 | G. Gerloff | Yamaha YZF R1 | +0.121 |
3 | S. Redding | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +0.200 |
4 | A. Bautista | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +0.350 |
5 | T. Sykes | BMW M 1000 RR | +0.362 |
6 | T. Razgatlioglu | Yamaha YZF R1 | +0.364 |
7 | L. Mahias | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +0.380 |
8 | M. Rinaldi | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +0.567 |
9 | A. Lowes | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +0.568 |
10 | C. Davies | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +0.580 |
11 | M. Van Der Mark | BMW M 1000 RR | +0.583 |
12 | L. Haslam | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +0.585 |
13 | A. Locatelli | Yamaha YZF R1 | +0.690 |
14 | J. Folger | BMW M 1000 RR | +0.952 |
15 | A. Bassani | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +1.137 |
16 | T. Rabat | Ducati Panigale V4 R | +1.208 |
17 | I. Vinales | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +1.554 |
18 | L. Mercado | Honda CBR1000 RR-R | +2.006 |
19 | K. Nozane | Yamaha YZF R1 | +2.014 |
20 | A. Mantovani | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +2.755 |
21 | L. Cresson | Kawasaki ZX-10RR | +4.195 |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Toprak Razgatlioglu | 183 |
2 | Jonathan Rea | 181 |
3 | Scott Redding | 117 |
4 | Alex Lowes | 114 |
5 | Michael Ruben Rinaldi | 94 |
6 | Garrett Gerloff | 93 |
7 | Tom Sykes | 89 |
8 | Michael Van Der Mark | 81 |
9 | Chaz Davies | 64 |
10 | Alvaro Bautista | 57 |
11 | Andrea Locatelli | 51 |
12 | Axel Bassani | 47 |
13 | Leon Haslam | 41 |
14 | Lucas Mahias | 36 |
15 | Tito Rabat | 18 |
16 | Kohta Nozane | 17 |
17 | Eugene Laverty | 14 |
18 | Jonas Folger | 8 |
19 | Isaac Vinales | 8 |
20 | Luke Mossey | 2 |
21 | Christophe Ponsson | 1 |
Swiss rider Dominique Aegerter (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) topped the combined classification in WorldSSP as he took to the track adorned in iconic yellow colours on both his leathers and Yamaha YZF-R6 as his Ten Kate Race outfit celebrated their home race.
The morning Free Practice 1 session was a battle between Aegerter and Steven Odendaal (Evan Bros. WorldSSP Yamaha Team) as the South African rider looked to get back to winning ways and close the gap to Aegerter in the Championship. Both riders went under the lap record throughout the day, with Aegerter posting a 1’37.274s to top the times at the end of Friday by just 0.041s; the duo separated by just over a tenth but half-a-second clear of their nearest rivals.
Spanish rider Manuel Gonzalez (Yamaha ParkinGo Team) put in a strong last lap at the end of the disrupted Free Practice 2 session to slot into third place as he goes in search for his first WorldSSP podium at the venue he made his Moto2 debut at a few weeks ago. Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) claimed fourth place on his Kawasaki ZX-6R, the only rider to not improve in the afternoon Free Practice 2 session.
Pos | No. Rider | Bike……………………… | Time/Gap |
1 | D. Aegerter | Yamaha YZF R6 | 1m37.274 |
2 | S. Odendaal | Yamaha YZF R6 | +0.041 |
3 | M. Gonzalez | Yamaha YZF R6 | +0.550 |
4 | P. Oettl | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +0.711 |
5 | R. Krummenacher | Yamaha YZF R6 | +0.883 |
6 | J. Cluzel | Yamaha YZF R6 | +0.910 |
7 | C. Oncu | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +0.991 |
8 | H. Soomer | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.050 |
9 | N. Tuuli | MV Agusta F3 675 | +1.067 |
10 | K. Manfredi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.255 |
11 | F. Caricasulo | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.284 |
12 | R. De Rosa | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +1.420 |
13 | M. Casadei | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.573 |
14 | L. Bernardi | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.577 |
15 | M. Fabrizio | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +1.693 |
16 | S. Morais | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.804 |
17 | P. Sebestyen | Yamaha YZF R6 | +1.861 |
18 | D. Webb | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.029 |
19 | V. Takala | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.056 |
20 | L. Taccini | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +2.155 |
21 | G. Hendra Pratama | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.257 |
22 | M. Alcoba | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.291 |
23 | E. Lahti | Suzuki GSX-R600 | +2.506 |
24 | F. Fuligni | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.719 |
25 | P. Szkopek | Yamaha YZF R6 | +2.986 |
26 | M. Herrera | Yamaha YZF R6 | +3.040 |
27 | S. Frossard | Yamaha YZF R6 | +3.273 |
28 | S. Kawasaki | Kawasaki ZX-6R | +3.862 |
29 | L. Montella | Yamaha YZF R6 | +4.508 |
30 | E. Montero Huerta | Yamaha YZF R6 | +4.938 |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Dominique Aegerter | 119 |
2 | Steven Odendaal | 102 |
3 | Luca Bernardi | 82 |
4 | Philipp Oettl | 72 |
5 | Jules Cluzel | 65 |
6 | Manuel Gonzalez | 64 |
7 | Hannes Soomer | 47 |
8 | Raffaele De Rosa | 46 |
9 | Randy Krummenacher | 35 |
10 | Christoffer Bergman | 34 |
11 | Federico Caricasulo | 31 |
12 | Marc Alcoba | 26 |
13 | Can Alexander Oncu | 25 |
14 | Niki Tuuli | 20 |
15 | Vertti Takala | 13 |
16 | Kevin Manfredi | 13 |
17 | Galang Hendra Pratama | 12 |
18 | Maria Herrera | 7 |
19 | Filippo Fuligni | 6 |
20 | Roberto Mercandelli | 5 |
21 | Massimo Roccoli | 4 |
22 | Matteo Patacca | 3 |
23 | Stephane Frossard | 3 |
24 | Michel Fabrizio | 2 |
25 | Luca Ottaviani | 1 |
26 | Leonardo Taccini | 1 |
27 | Davide Pizzoli | 1 |
28 | Pawel Szkopek | 1 |
Home hero Victor Steeman (Freudenberg KTM WorldSSP Team) topped the timesheets in the FIM Supersport 300 World Championship ahead of his home round, running three tenths clear of his nearest rival.
Steeman posted a lap time of 1’48.710s in the 30-minute Free Practice 2 session, with the Dutch rider one of only two riders to lap in the 1’48s bracket. He was joined by Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Yamaha Motoxracing) in that bracket, with the pair separated by almost three tenths after the day’s running. Dutchman Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki) completed the top three.
WorldSSP300 has a reputation for being a close and competitive class and the start of the Dutch Round has proved no exception ahead of racing, with Ana Carrasco (Kawasaki Provec WorldSSP300) in fourth; the 2018 WorldSSP300 Champion less than a tenth away from a place in the top three. British rider Tom Booth-Amos (Fusport – RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) claimed fifth place, ahead of Samuel Di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) in sixth; the French rider had topped Free Practice 1 in the morning in the Netherlands.
Young Aussie Harry Khouri was back on track after hand surgery and managed P34 in what is a busy 43-rider field.
Pos | No. Rider | Bike…………………………… | Time/Gap |
1 | V. Steeman | KTM RC 390 R | 1m48.710 |
2 | B. Sofuoglu | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +0.284 |
3 | K. Meuffels | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.405 |
4 | A. Carrasco | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.442 |
5 | T. Booth-Amos | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.513 |
6 | S. Di Sora | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.569 |
7 | B. Ieraci | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +0.604 |
8 | U. Orradre | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +0.676 |
9 | A. Huertas | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.709 |
10 | V. Rodriguez Nunez | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.711 |
11 | J. Buis | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.732 |
12 | Y. Okaya | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.761 |
13 | O. Konig | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.850 |
14 | H. De Cancellis | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +0.855 |
15 | M. Gennai | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +0.915 |
16 | M. Kawakami | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.048 |
17 | J. Gimbert | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.109 |
18 | K. Sabatucci | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.139 |
19 | R. Bijman | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.181 |
20 | I. Iglesias | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.204 |
21 | T. Kawakami | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.218 |
22 | T. Brianti | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.218 |
23 | D. Loureiro | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.327 |
24 | C. Stange | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.378 |
25 | A. Zanca | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.401 |
26 | G. Mastroluca | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.530 |
27 | P. Svoboda | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.590 |
28 | M. Gaggi | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.615 |
29 | S. Markarian | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.807 |
30 | T. Molenaar | KTM RC 390 R | +1.876 |
31 | V. Perez Selfa | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +1.890 |
32 | A. Carrion | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +1.932 |
33 | J. Perez Gonzalez | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +2.163 |
34 | H. Khouri | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +2.188 |
35 | S. Doornenbal | KTM RC 390 R | +2.286 |
36 | T. Smits | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +2.335 |
37 | F. Palazzi | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +2.484 |
38 | A. Coppola | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +2.686 |
39 | A. Frappola | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +3.179 |
40 | I. Offer | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +4.067 |
41 | J. Mcmanus | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +4.124 |
42 | M. Duarte | Yamaha YZF-R3 | +4.459 |
43 | J. Romero | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | +5.358 |
Pos | Rider | Points |
1 | Adrian Huertas | 72 |
2 | Tom Booth-Amos | 65 |
3 | Ana Carrasco | 42 |
4 | Yuta Okaya | 42 |
5 | Meikon Kawakami | 37 |
6 | Samuel Di Sora | 35 |
7 | Unai Orradre | 33 |
8 | Hugo De Cancellis | 29 |
9 | Jeffrey Buis | 23 |
10 | Ton Kawakami | 23 |
11 | Bruno Ieraci | 21 |
12 | Dorren Loureiro | 17 |
13 | Koen Meuffels | 17 |
14 | Gabriele Mastroluca | 13 |
15 | Bahattin Sofuoglu | 10 |
16 | Mirko Gennai | 10 |
17 | Filippo Maria Palazzi | 10 |
18 | Vicente Perez Selfa | 9 |
19 | Victor Steeman | 9 |
20 | Oliver Konig | 8 |
21 | Jose Luis Perez Gonzalez | 8 |
22 | Harry Khouri | 7 |
23 | Marc Garcia | 7 |
24 | Victor Rodriguez Nunez | 6 |
25 | Thomas Brianti | 2 |
26 | Alex Millan Gomez | 2 |
27 | Inigo Iglesias | 2 |
28 | Ruben Bijman | 1 |
Source: MCNews.com.au