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Razgatlioglu leaves Donington with WorldSBK Championship lead

2021 WorldSBK Round Four
Donington Park Sunday

Superpole Race


Donington WorldSBK

Jonathan Rea won the Tissot Superpole Race on Sunday morning which was preceded by a downpour that wet the track and made tyre choice a gamble but the Northern Irishman slid out of the dry Race Two on Sunday afternoon after what had been a tense battle between the six-time World Champ and the Turkish challenger.

Jonathan Rea won the Tissot Superpole Race on Sunday morning ahead of BMW’s Tom Sykes and Michael van der Mark

Race Two

Race Two gets underway

Jonathan Rea found himself under pressure from Razgatlioglu in the early stages of the 23-lap Race Two after the Turkish star once again made up positions from the start as he found himself in second place on the exit of Turn 1.

Race Two gets underway

Razgatlioglu made his move on Rea on Lap 4 at the right-hander of Coppice, Turn 8, on Rea to move into the lead of the race as he looked for his second win of the weekend.  Rea nearly ran up the rear of the Turkish star under braking into the Foggy Esses but Rea’s pressure paid off on Lap 10. Razgatlioglu made a mistake at the same corner he had earlier passed Rea for the lead, running wide on his Yamaha YZF R1, allowing Rea back through into the lead of the race, but just a single lap later Rea found himself in the gravel at Coppice, tumbling out of the points. Rea re-joined the race in 20th place on Lap 11 and that is where he finished the race.

Rea re-joined the race and finished but scored no points

American Garrett Gerloff claimed his best result of the 2021 campaign with second place after working his way past Tom Sykes to move into second place, securing Yamaha’s tenth 1-2 finish in WorldSBK history while Sykes claimed his second consecutive podium finish.

Garrett Gerloff

Sykes found himself under a lot of pressure in the latter stages of the race from Scott Redding as the British rider bounced back from a difficult weekend so far in his first home round in the Championship, missing out on a podium by less than a second.

Scott Redding had a tough weekend on home soil

Dutchman Michael van der Mark was unable to convert a front row start into a podium finish but came home in fifth place after a strong weekend for the BMW outfit and their brand-new M 1000 RR machine, finishing more than a second clear of Alex Lowes who rounded out the top six.

Michael van der Mark

Chaz Davies finished in seventh place a despite carrying a knock on his shoulder following a crash at Misano last time out, finishing two seconds clear of Michael Ruben Rinaldi in eighth place. Team HRC duo Leon Haslam and Alvaro Bautista rounded out the top ten with ninth and tenth respectively; Haslam had started from fourth while Bautista battled his way up the order from 16th place.

Leon Haslam was in the thick of the action

Italian rookie Andrea Locatelli claimed another points finish with 11th place with Lucas Mahias falling down the order despite a strong starting position but still secured a points finish ahead of Axel Bassani, Tito Rabat and Eugene Laverty who completed the points paying positions.

Luke Mossey missed out on his second points finish of the weekend by just a few seconds behind Laverty, with Spanish rider Isaac Viñales (Orelac Racing VerdNatura), Christophe Ponsson (Alstare Yamaha) and Loris Cresson all finished ahead of Rea after his crash. Jonas Folger was the first rider to retire in the early stages of the race when he brought his BMW M 1000 RR into the pitlane.

Toprak Razgatlioglu now leads Jonathan Rea by two-points in the Superbike World Championship.

Thanks to his victories in Saturday’s Race One and Sunday’s Race Two, Toprak Razgatlioglu now leads Jonathan Rea by two-points in the Superbike World Championship.

Toprak Razgatlioglu now leads Jonathan Rea by two-points in the Superbike World Championship.

The WorldSBK paddock now have a few weeks off before they will get back down to action late this month at Assen, July 23-25, where the WorldSSP and WorldSSP 300 categories will be back on the card with the big boys.


Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

“This morning the Superpole Race was not so good, I tried my best but it was a sixth position finish with the intermediate tyres. I hoped that we would see dry conditions for Race 2 because this is the important race and I need to be at the front. The race was not easy because every lap I was pushing for the win. I followed Jonathan and the race track grip was not like yesterday, because three times I almost lose the front tyre! And I say, “okay, now I follow Jonny and we see near the end” but he made a big mistake and crashed, so after that I try for a consistent lap time and bring the bike back to the team. I think my favourite track is Donington Park, because in 2018 and 2019 I was on the podium two times in second position. This year, two victories, so I am really happy and I want again to thank Yamaha and my team. In Assen, I like the track but it will be the first time I ride the R1 there – but I think no problem, I am looking forward to it!”

Race Two Podium
Jonathan Rea

“A bitter sweet day really. The Superpole race in mixed conditions was really stressful on the grid, because we saw some guys used a wet tyre but the clear choice was the intermediate – or even the slick, to be honest if I had to do the race again. I built a nice lead and was able to maintain that 2.5 second gap to the end. In Race Two we changed the bike quite a lot from yesterday because I was struggling quite a lot with grip, and the bike was not turning as well. We fixed that in morning warm-up for Race Two. When Toprak came through and I ran wide into the chicane I gained the time I had lost to him quite quickly. I just kept my powder dry then he made a mistake at Coppice and I passed him. I just put my head down because I had the rhythm, the bike set-up and the feeling. But, going into Coppice I got caught out wide on the bumps a little bit, the front unloaded and when I tipped it in I lost the front. I am frustrated with myself but I am feeling a lot more positive than I did yesterday because I felt I did not have the tools to fight then. Today I felt it was my race but I made a silly mistake. We just have to maximise every opportunity now.”

Jonathan Rea
Tom Sykes

“Credit to the whole BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team. We have come here, tried to just assess the situation after the Navarra test and really, I am happy. I was training at the beginning of the week and when I came to my house and got off my pushbike, I knew: this is the weekend. Considering what we learned at Navarra I would be going to drag the thing around Donington Park if I have to. On Friday, I was pushing the boundaries and went to the deck twice. Normally I ride to the limit and stop just like I did today in the race. The guys did an incredible job, giving me a perfect bike in terms of what we had available in our tool box so I think we got the best from our package this weekend. Still, we need to improve but this is a whole confidence boost for the team and me. It gives everyone what they deserve. And what’s really nice is that we had two BMWs, myself and Michael, on the front row in wet conditions and then with the intermediates in tricky conditions, we were on the podium again – both BMWs, second and third. Then in that last race, it was tricky in the beginning but ultimately a dry race on a different rear tyre. I am not really sure if I am happy with the tyre I chose but we dug deep and the tyre gave us a podium so for this I am happy. Hopefully now we can continue with the information we have and try to keep improving.”

Tom Sykes
Michael van der Mark

“We had a really good Sunday. It was nice this morning in the Superpole race. The track was a little bit tricky so early everyone went on intermediates and it was the right choice. I really enjoyed it. It was good to finish on the podium together with Tom. Then in race two I had quite a good feeling but I just struggled too much in changing directions; I lost a lot of time there compared to the other guys. But in the end, we finished fifth so we have a lot of valuable points and it was nice to have Tom on the podium again.”

Michael van der Mark
Alex Lowes

“That was a tough day when I expected to be really strong. In the mixed conditions I was strong, to be honest, and I felt really good on the bike for the Superpole race. We had some experience from Aragon on the Intermediate tyres. I thought on the grid I was going to have a chance. The crash was completely my mistake but into the Old Hairpin on the outside of the track there were a lot of wet patches. I was so conscious of not overshooting and hitting the wet patch that I turned it too tight and caught the white line on the inside. I just touched it and it was enough to crash. It is a shame because with my pace I should have had a good race. After Saturday’s podium it would have been good. In the final race I do not really know what happened. After starting tenth I managed to gain some places in the first corner but I was just slower than expected. I have been fast in every dry session but in the race I was struggling and spinning. I do not really know why. If I look at today it has been disappointing but if I look at the weekend, my first time here on the Kawasaki, I gained some points on third in the championship. That is the positive side.”

Alex Lowes
Scott Redding

“Needless to say, I expected a lot more from this weekend. We encountered so many difficulties from the beginning and, as if that wasn’t enough, the Superpole Race was a real disaster. I take responsibility for having raced with rain tires, already in the warm-up lap I realized I had made the wrong choice but there was no time to fix it. In Race 2, however, for the first time this weekend, I felt a positive feeling with my Ducati. The world title? Yes, the gap is wide but in Superbike there are many points available and certainly, I will not give up after 4 rounds!”

Scott Redding
Michael Rinaldi

“It’s been a very strange weekend with unpredictable weather conditions that didn’t allow us to work properly. In Race-1 and in the Superpole Race the tarmac was humid and I have been maybe too “careful” losing, as a consequence, many positions. Race-2 was the most normal race of the weekend in dry conditions. I cannot be happy with the final position but we have understood many things that I’m sure will help us in the future. I’m a little bit disappointed with the results of this weekend but I’m sure that in Assen we can be very competitive again”.

Alvaro Bautista

“Overall, it has been a tough weekend. On Friday we tried something different with the set-up just to verify a few things and collect some information, but it didn’t work as we’d expected so we went back to a more base set-up. Then yesterday, mixed weather conditions limited the time we had available to define the best set-up. In the end our best day in terms of feeling with the bike was today, but our gamble with rain tyres in the sprint race didn’t pay off. In Race 2 we actually improved our pace over the course of the 23 laps and were able to achieve a top ten finish, but honestly this isn’t what we are aiming for. We need to improve from here on in, because we really want to be doing better of course.”

Leon Haslam

“It felt good to get fourth today. I felt we were in the mix for the podium in both yesterday’s race 1 and the Superpole race, which was definitely a positive. We then had some issues in today’s second race, but overall we can say that we’ve taken some steps over the weekend and are clear as to where we need to work. My pace was quite strong in the sprint race, which we ran on intermediate tyres, and my set-up wasn’t bad in the last race either, it was just a pity that we had an issue that ultimately saw me go backwards rather than forwards. All in all, a better weekend for us, and we hope to build on this next time out at Assen.”

Andrea Locatelli

“In the Superpole Race, I lost the front group at the start and the conditions were little bit crazy like yesterday. I was in the middle group and I lost too much time but in the end we were able to take P9 to start on the third row of the grid for Race 2. But, in Race 2, there was just one point on the circuit where I lost too much time with the rear grip, especially in the last sector – I don’t understand why. But from the first to the last lap, I found it so difficult to ride and to stay with the group in front. In the end, it was not so easy. But we can be happy with this weekend after the crash in Race 1. I want to thank my crew because they worked a lot yesterday to give me a new bike. Now, we go to Assen and for sure we will try to start faster and push a little bit more for the next race. I know the track from Moto3 and Moto2 which is one nice point, so we will stay focused just on the setup and to try and go as fast as possible!”

Eugene Laverty

“It was a pretty difficult weekend here at Donington Park. I had high hopes for here because I know the character of the BMW M 1000 RR is well suited to the majority of the flowing Donington track but we never had a good feeling this weekend. That has been the case with the bike since my big crash at Misano so now we have to investigate if there is some damage from the bike from the crash that hasn’t still been recognized because it’s impossible to be so slow this weekend when we see what the official BMWs were doing. We should be there together with them. So let’s investigate and come back stronger.”

Jonas Folger

“It was a difficult weekend and I am sorry for the entire team that we find ourselves in this situation. Right now, we are searching for solutions that we have not yet been able to find. I hope that things will improve soon and we can make progress.”


Team Managers

Paul Denning – Team Principal, Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK

“I’m a little bit surprised to be honest because, with the weather forecast as it was and Jonathan’s history of winning in wet conditions, the expectation was maybe more to manage the losses this weekend than it was to take the championship lead for the first time! Toprak was simply stunning today. Even the Superpole Race on a really difficult circuit, keeping it on two wheels and improving his pace throughout to secure a great starting position for the important Race 2 – and then of course, the battle at the front was only between him and Jonathan from the first corner onwards. It looked like it was going to be a fair bit of cat and mouse, but Toprak managed to pressure Jonathan into a mistake and from then on, he used his head superbly, managed the gap and brought it home for a famous double victory and lead in the WorldSBK Championship. A great moment for the team, Yamaha and Toprak, but we’ll keep our feet on the ground. We’re only four rounds into a 13 round series and we look forward to re-joining the fight in Assen. Andrea’s day was positive in terms of the Superpole Race and improvement into the top nine, showing good strong pace to get there. But Race 2 was a disappointment for him, he suffered a lot of rear wheel spin which hadn’t been the case earlier in the day and the team will be checking from a setup point of view to see if anything more could have been done to improve this point as Andrea picks up more valuable WorldSBK experience.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu now leads Jonathan Rea by two-points in the Superbike World Championship.
Marc Bongers, BMW Motorrad Motorsport Director

“We are very happy. It’s very good to get this under the belt, it takes away a bit of the pressure when we focus on the next rounds. As I said yesterday, there is still some work to do. I was hoping for some rain today but it didn’t come in the afternoon. So it was very, very good to confirm our performance in a full dry race on slicks as we were definitely not as competitive in such conditions in the last race and also at the beginning of this weekend. Overall, to come away with three podiums is of course very, very pleasing. This is something we can build on. Crucial for this weekend was definitely our Superpole qualifying because if you look at the pace of the others you know that you could easily be sixth, seventh or eighth if you are not in that front row. Now it’s time to settle down, look at the data, gather our thoughts and make the next step.”

Team BMW happy with their efforts
Shaun Muir, Team Principal BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team

“It was a fantastic day. It’s our home track, the home round for Tom and us, so it was a sensational day for all. I think we stepped up. We’ve come back from a really disappointing Misano round, we have reacted. In the sprint race, there were changeable conditions and almost everyone went for intermediate tyres which was the right decision. Then in race two, with dry conditions, all started on slicks and it shows the step we have made with the BMW M 1000 RR. We were literally a few seconds off the win. We always were in contention for the podium and Tom did a fantastic race and Michael was not far behind him. He withstood the pressure from Alex Lowes on the Kawasaki and brought the bike home in a strong fifth. Now we all are looking forward to Michael’s home round at Assen.”

Team BMW happy with their efforts

2021 WorldSBK Donington Race Two

Pos Rider                      Bike                                        Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +2.243
3 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +4.522
4 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +5.151
5 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +13.315
6 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +14.444
7 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +16.684
8 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +18.757
9 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +20.783
10 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +22.938
11 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +23.194
12 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +25.442
13 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +32.898
14 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +38.370
15 E. Laverty BMW M 1000 RR +39.776
16 L.  Mossey Kawasaki ZX-10RR +43.182
17 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +56.811
18 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +57.073
19 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m13.148
20 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m14.103
Not Classified
RET 94 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 17 Laps
Donington WorldSBK 2021

2021 WorldSBK Donington Superpole Race

Pos Rider Bike Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR /
2 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR 2.531
3 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR 3.409
4 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R 3.955
5 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 4.067
6 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 5.011
7 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR 6.461
8 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R 11.599
9 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 20.284
10 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R 24.865
11 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R 25.318
12 E. Laverty BMW M 1000 RR 25.584
13 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR 40.885
14 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1m09.188
15 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R 1m16.976
16 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 1m24.717
17 L.  Mossey Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1m33.316
18 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R 1m37.702
Not Classified
RET 84 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR 3 Laps
RET 23 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 5 Laps
RET 53 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 9 Laps
Donington WorldSBK 2021

WorldSBK Championship Points

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

2021 WorldSBK Calendar

Date Track SBK SS600 SS300
21-23 May Aragón (Spain) X X
28-30 May Estoril (Portugal) X X  
11-13 Jun Misano (Italy) X X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X    
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X X
06-08 Aug Autodrom Most (Czech) X X X
20-22 Aug Navarra (Spain) X X  
3-5 Sep Magny-Cours (France) X X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X  
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X  

Source: MCNews.com.au

A bitter sweet day really. The Superpole race in mixed conditions was really stressful on the grid, because we saw some guys use…

A bitter sweet day really. The Superpole race in mixed conditions was really stressful on the grid, because we saw some guys used a wet tyre but the clear choice was the intermediate – or even the slick, to be honest if I had to do the race again. I built a nice lead and was able to maintain that 2.5 second gap to the end. In Race Two we changed the bike quite a lot from yesterday because I was struggling quite a lot with grip, and the bike was not turning as well. We fixed that in morning warm-up for Race Two. When Toprak came through and I ran wide into the chicane I gained the time I had lost to him quite quickly. I just kept my powder dry then he made a mistake at Coppice and I passed him. I just put my head down because I had the rhythm, the bike set-up and the feeling. But, going into Coppice I got caught out wide on the bumps a little bit, the front unloaded and when I tipped it in I lost the front. I am frustrated with myself but I am feeling a lot more positive than I did yesterday because I felt I did not have the tools to fight then. Today I felt it was my race but I made a silly mistake. We just have to maximise every opportunity now


Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

2-1-20. Messed up today, felt great, got in front and got the hammer out! Bit too much though. Thanks for all the support tracks…

2-1-20. Messed up today, felt great, got in front and got the hammer out! Bit too much though. Thanks for all the support trackside this weekend, means the world!
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📸 @geebeeimages
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65


Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

A very loose Razgatlioglu wins Donington opener

2021 WorldSBK Round Four
Donington Park Race One


A stunning first lap from Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK) helped the Turk secure his second victory of the 2021 Motul FIM Superbike World Championship. After starting from 13th place Toprak found himself in the lead of the race on just the second lap of the opening race at the Prosecco DOC UK Round at Donington Park.

2021 WorldSBK Round Four – Donington Park – Race One

Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) led the field away from pole position but it was Razgatlioglu who caught the eye at the start, moving from 13th to fifth by Turn 1 and up to second by the end of Lap 1. It did not take long for Razgatlioglu to take the lead of the race as he passed the six-time Champion on the second lap.

2021 WorldSBK Round Four – Donington Park – Race One

A rare error from Rea on Lap 3 allowed Razgatlioglu to build up a gap of three-seconds ahead of Rea. Razgatlioglu’s victory saw him close the gap to just 15-points in the Championship. Victory for the Turkish star means WorldSBK’s streak of wins coming in pairs continues, a run that started at the start of the 2021 campaign. Rea had looked to close in on Razgatlioglu throughout the race after recovering from his trip through the grass on Lap 3 at Turn 2, but another big moment at Turn 1 meant he lost even more time to the race leader.

2021 WorldSBK Round Four – Donington Park – Race One

Behind the two leaders who had broken away, an epic battle for third was brewing between Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team), team-mate Tom Sykes, Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) and Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team). Van der Mark was running in third place and looked to make a move on Rea for second after his trip through the grass, but found the reigning Champion pulling way while Sykes started closing in at the front of the chasing group.

Sykes, Lowes, Gerloff, Van der Mark, Haslam

As Sykes closed in on his team-mate, Lowes was on the rear of Sykes’ M 1000 RR as both he and van der Mark searched for BMW’s first podium with the new bike. Lowes made his move at Melbourne Hairpin on Sykes to move up the order, while the two BMWs were battling, with van der Mark falling down the order behind Lowes and Gerloff.

Van der Mark, Sykes, Haslam

Sykes and van der Mark both gained a position when Gerloff came off his Yamaha YZF R1 at the final corner on his own, with the American able to remount his bike and fight back to finish in seventh. It meant Lowes claimed third place after the titanic battle ahead of the BMW duo of Sykes and van der Mark; with two BMWs finishing inside the top five.

WorldSBK at Donington Park – Race 1
1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK)
2. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +2.419s
3. Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +12.261s

Toprak Razgatlioglu – P1

“This one was nice, to first from 13th on the grid on the second lap! Only one time have I done better, from 17th to first in France… today with Yamaha was far more important though. Earlier today for me was not a good start, I was not fast in wet conditions, so I say to myself “ok, if it is raining – I just ride and try to have a good position for the championship”. But I see a small dry line, and I guess all riders put on slick tyres on the grid, but I know I have just one chance. I needed to get a good position for the team’s home race! First corner I got to fifth position, end of lap one I arrive in second and after I say “this is my race!” and I am pushing all laps. Sometimes, I make some small mistakes and feel very close to a crash! But anyway, we made it happen and I am happy! In 2018 and 2019, I was second position here and this is nice but I say I need to win, I never had a win at this track in WorldSBK and also this is very important for the championship. Now the gap is only 15 points from Jonathan but the season is very long and in all races I need to take good points. My team did a great job today and yes, I will try again tomorrow! The weather will be important and maybe tomorrow it will be raining, but I will try to make the best race possible again.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu
Jonathan Rea – P2

“I was actually struggling quite a bit to be there at the front. The bike set-up compared to yesterday was not great and I don’t know if there was a lack of grip because the rain washed some tyre rubber out from the track surface. But I struggled to stop the bike and at full lean angle. It wasn’t turning the same. We had a bit of a compromise for set-up but nothing too drastic. Fifteen minutes before the race we were still wondering ‘would it be fully dry, should we use intermediates, or a normal race set-up?’ I got a good start but I was worried about somebody coming underneath me into Turn One because there was only one tiny, tiny dry line. I led the first lap then Toprak came past. After that I got unsighted at the top of the Holly Wood section and really lost the rear, quite aggressively. From that point I was nervous to go off the line and I was having quite a few moments as well because Toprak was riding away but I did not want to give up. I wanted to keep pushing.”

Alex Lowes – P3

“The conditions have been tough all day today. The morning was really wet and I felt quite good then it dried up a little bit for Superpole. It did not feel as good in the less wet conditions but in the race I got a terrible start. I think I was like eighth in the first corner. I have been good at starts this year but on a track like that with such a thin dry line I just had to stay calm. I was quite a bit faster than the guys in front but I just couldn’t get past them. Johnny and Toprak were gone so it was a case from then on to try and win the battle behind them. The rear was spinning quite a lot and I did not feel like I had too much grip, but obviously after the rain that can happen. I am happy with the podium, the first one since Aragon, and I kept a good consistent run, which was nice.”

Alex Lowes
Tom Sykes – P4

“I am definitely happy that the BMW M 1000 RR was working well in the full wet conditions. In that in-between condition at the beginning of the race, we just struggled to get into it. We could not get the same grip as everyone else but the bike stayed very, very consistent so we were just missing a couple of tenths. We did not have a full dry set-up. Who would have thought that the sun comes out? So we maybe missed out in that respect but fourth position is not too bad. I’m okay with that and obviously we will try to improve tomorrow.”

Michael van der Mark – P5

“Today was not bad. In Superpole, on the wet track, I felt really good and we managed to put both BMWs on the front row. That’s always a good thing. For the race, the track started to slowly dry. My start was quite okay and then I was just trying to find my line. I was making a couple of mistakes going down to Craner Curves, going onto the wet with the slicks so I lost a lot of time there a couple of times. That was a bit of a shame but anyway, there is a lot to improve on the bike for sure for tomorrow but I think we can be satisfied with P5 today.”

Michael van der Mark
Leon Haslam – P6

“This morning was really the first time we’ve ridden in the rain, so I was surprised how easy the lap times came. Having said that, I didn’t make it easy for my team as I then crashed in Superpole, so they did a great job to get the bike ready for the race. The wet gave us the confidence to battle hard, while we know we still have some limitations in the dry. But despite these, we came close to the podium. It was nice to get a strong result and be part of the front group. We still have some areas where we need to improve but we are clear as to what those are. Here, we’re struggling in the stop-start section, the final sector, so if we can find an extra something there, I’m confident we can run two strong races tomorrow.”

Garrett Gerloff – P7

“I want to give my team some good results because they deserve it, and I really wanted to be on the podium today, so it was disappointing to make my way through the field all the way to the top-three just to throw it away. I am happy with how the bike is, the Yamaha R1 works really well around here as Toprak (Razgatlioglu) demonstrated, but I am frustrated with how the day ended. The mixed conditions made things tricky during the race, especially in the first sector, which took a long time to dry out. It became a bit easier when the track finally dried, so I am happy to have stayed on two wheels at least until then. I know that we are fast, tomorrow I want to minimize my mistakes and get to the front. I managed to get acquainted quite quickly with this track; doing my homework before the weekend definitely helped, and learning new circuits is something that I have done a lot of in the last few weeks too, so I guess I was just in the right mindset for it.”’

Garrett Gerloff
Alvaro Bautista – P8

“Race conditions were very tricky today, especially in the early stages, as the track dried out. Like everyone else we opted for slick tyres because you could tell the weather was improving. Because I started so far back, I had to be very careful with overtaking early on, because in some sectors there was only a narrow dry line. However, little by little I found good feeling and, in the end, it turned out to be not a bad race, at least in terms of the positions I made up and the data collected. We started the weekend with a different set-up in terms of weight distribution to try and understand a few things but today we ultimately went back to a setting closer to the one we’ve usually used this year. Let’s see what the weather will be like tomorrow. In the very wet conditions we had this morning, I felt OK, so we’ll see what we get.”

Alvaro Bautista
Michael Rinaldi – P12

“The race was below our expectations. After the weekend in Misano, we were expecting a better result. I wasn’t able to ride as I wanted to. For sure we have to work to understand why in certain conditions we are not able to find a good feeling. Something is not working and this is quite clear. We will have to understand why and find a solution.”

Eugene Laverty – P13

“In the race, the conditions dried up and unfortunately, while I went with dry tyres we weren’t able to change to the dry setting. So in the end I was riding with a wet suspension setting and it was impossible to do good lap times. That was the maximum I could do today, so hopefully tomorrow it is either clearly wet or clearly dry because when it is like that, there isn’t time to change and it’s a bit difficult for a smaller team like us. But, we start again tomorrow.”

Scott Redding – DNF

“We’re having a really hard time finding the right grip. This is a problem we’ve been carrying around for a while and we definitely need to solve it quickly. I’m usually pretty strong in wet conditions but today I felt like I was skating and couldn’t even defend myself from the overtaking. The crash? I went into the corner feeling the back wheel slipping and the high side was pretty hard.”

Jonas Folger – DNF

“There’s not much to say today. I just didn’t feel right today. Now we have to find out what caused that. We can only hope that it goes better tomorrow.”

Andrea Locatelli – DNF

“I am so sorry for the guys and also for myself because I wanted to make a good result today and I thought it would be possible. The conditions were not so easy when we started the race, and the feeling on the bike was not easy. In the end, after seven laps I crashed because I ran a little wide and arrived at high speed on a section that was not completely dry. Tomorrow we have another chance and I am sorry for the team that they now have to work to build a new bike! It is not normally how we end the day. In qualifying it was difficult in the wet, but also it is still only my first time here in Donington and for sure it is not easy at this track – but we are happy because 11th position is not so bad and maybe tomorrow in the Superpole Race we can try to fight and see what is possible.”


2021 WorldSBK Donington Race One

Pos Rider Bike                                         Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 /
2 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.419
3 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +12.261
4 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +14.625
5 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +16.447
6 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +17.028
7 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 +33.345
8 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +37.385
9 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +43.566
10 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +43.836
11 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +48.102
12 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +56.538
13 E. Laverty BMW M 1000 RR +59.392
14 L.  Mossey Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m01.922
15 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +1m22.275
16 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1 Lap
Not Classified
RET J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 2 Laps
RET T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 10 Laps
RET A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 17 Laps
RET S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R 22 Laps
RET C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 22 Laps

2021 WorldSBK Donington Superpole

Pos  Rider Bike                                 Time/Gap
1 J.  Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1’40.101
2 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR 0.525
3 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR 0.662
4 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR 1.250
5 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 1.292
6 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R 1.966
7 L.  Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R 2.105
8 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R 2.486
9 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R 2.529
10 L.  Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR 2.557
11 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 2.582
12 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R 2.700
13 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 2.739
14 L.  Mossey Kawasaki ZX-10RR 3.111
15 E. Laverty BMW M 1000 RR 3.244
16 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R 3.524
17 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR 4.529
18 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R 4.602
19 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 6.467
20 J.  Folger BMW M 1000 RR 6.559
21 L.  Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR 6.674

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  JONATHAN REA  169
 2  TOPRAK RAZGATLIOGLU  154
 3  SCOTT REDDING  104
 4  ALEX LOWES  104
 5  MICHAEL RUBEN RINALDI  86
 6  GARRETT GERLOFF  68
 7  TOM SYKES  64
 8  MICHAEL VAN DER MARK  63
 9  CHAZ DAVIES  53
 10  ALVARO BAUTISTA  51
 11  ANDREA LOCATELLI  45
 12  AXEL BASSANI  44
 13  LUCAS MAHIAS  29
 14  LEON HASLAM  28
 15  KOHTA NOZANE  17
 16  TITO RABAT  16
 17  EUGENE LAVERTY  13
 18  JONAS FOLGER  8
 19  ISAAC VINALES  8
 20  LUKE MOSSEY  2
 21  CHRISTOPHE PONSSON  1

Donington Park Schedule (AEST)

Sunday
Sunday 1800 WorldSBK Warm Up
Sunday 2000 WorldSBK Superpole Race
Sunday 2300 WorldSBK Race Two

2021 WorldSBK Calendar

Date Track SBK SS600 SS300
21-23 May Aragón (Spain) X X
28-30 May Estoril (Portugal) X X  
11-13 Jun Misano (Italy) X X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X    
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X X
06-08 Aug Autodrom Most (Czech) X X X
20-22 Aug Navarra (Spain) X X  
3-5 Sep Magny-Cours (France) X X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X  
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X  

Source: MCNews.com.au

I was actually struggling quite a bit to be there at the front. The bike set-up compared to yesterday was not great and I don’t …

I was actually struggling quite a bit to be there at the front. The bike set-up compared to yesterday was not great and I don’t know if there was a lack of grip because the rain washed some tyre rubber out from the track surface. But I struggled to stop the bike and at full lean angle. It wasn’t turning the same. We had a bit of a compromise for set-up but nothing too drastic. Fifteen minutes before the race we were still wondering ‘would it be fully dry, should we use intermediates, or a normal race set-up?’ I got a good start but I was worried about somebody coming underneath me into Turn One because there was only one tiny, tiny dry line. I led the first lap then Toprak came past. After that I got unsighted at the top of the Holly Wood section and really lost the rear, quite aggressively. From that point I was nervous to go off the line and I was having quite a few moments as well because Toprak was riding away but I did not want to give up. I wanted to keep pushing
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@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65


Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook

Razgatlioglu sticking with Yamaha in WorldSBK

Toprak the Turk signs on with Yamaha through 2023

Yamaha Motor Europe has announced a new two-year contract extension for FIM Superbike World Championship title contender and multiple race-winner Toprak Razgatlıoğlu.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Yamaha has become like my family and I’m really happy to be signing for another two years. I think we’ve improved the bike a lot since I joined for the 2020 season, so it was an easy decision for me to make. We are fighting for the championship this year, we’re very close to the top and I have the best people around me in the Pata Yamaha with Brixx team pit box to help me achieve my goals. I like the WorldSBK paddock, and I’m happy racing here. Maybe MotoGP is something I will think about in the future, but for now I am focused completely on getting the job done here in WorldSBK. Thank you to everyone who has worked to make this happen and now I look forward to the future together with Yamaha.”

After a strong first season aboard the Yamaha R1 in 2020, where Razgatlıoğlu won on his first outing at Phillip Island and scored two further victories on his way to fourth in the series standings, the Turkish rider has made another significant step forward so far this year and sits second in the championship, having already scored seven podiums including a sensational win at Misano.

2021 WorldSBK at Misano – Superbike Race Two
1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK)
2. Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +1.286s
3. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) +2.987s
Andrea Dosoli – Road Racing Manager, Yamaha Motor Europe

We started this journey together with Toprak in 2020, a strange year for everyone, but one where we developed a good relationship. That served as the basis for the current season which has been very positive so far, the best since Yamaha came back to WorldSBK. The Yamaha R1 keeps improving race-by-race, and this allows Toprak to express his great talent. The decision to extend the collaboration between Toprak and Yamaha Motor Europe for the next two seasons arrived earlier than expected, as we are really convinced that there is more to come, and together we’ll be able to challenge for the WorldSBK title. I strongly appreciate the trust Toprak has put in Yamaha, for which I thank him, and I can guarantee that we’ll do our best to meet our high expectations.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Those performances have attracted the attention of teams in both WorldSBK and MotoGP, but ahead of the Donington Park WorldSBK round Yamaha Motor Europe and the 24-year-old agreed a new two-year contract extension, which will see Razgatlıoğlu spearhead Yamaha’s assault on the FIM Superbike World Championship until the end of 2023.

Paolo Pavesio – Director, Marketing and Motorsport, Yamaha Motor Europe

Since joining Yamaha in 2020, Toprak has consistently demonstrated his pace and race winning potential and we’re extremely pleased to be continuing this journey together for another two seasons. He has proven that he’s capable of fighting for wins every weekend and in just his second year aboard the Yamaha R1 he’s already announced himself as a WorldSBK title contender. Equally important for us is that he is both an inspiration and a role model for our bLU cRU youngsters, with whom he spends a lot of time during WorldSBK race weekends. I would like to thank Toprak for his confidence in Yamaha, as well as his manager Kenan Sofuoğlu and everyone from our side who worked to make this possible. I think we have an exciting and successful time ahead together and we will work to make sure we give Toprak the best platform for success.

WorldSBK Test PI Monday Razgatlioglu GB
Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Source: MCNews.com.au

Garrett Gerloff tops day one at Donington WorldSBK

2021 WorldSBK Round Four
Donington Park Friday


Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) hit the headlines by stunning on his debut at Donington Park for the Prosecco DOC UK Round. The American fastest on a blissfully sunny Friday afternoon, enough to put him on top overall with a 1m27.524, ahead of Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) and Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK).

It was an Independent on top on Friday in the UK as Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) improved significantly throughout the opening day of action to go top on an SCX tyre in the closing stages. An irrepressible Gerloff topped every single sector around the Donington Park circuit, as he made his debut at the British venue. Impressively going about his business at a brand new circuit and less than a week after a solid substitute performance at the Dutch GP in MotoGP, Gerloff hopes to continue his form into Saturday and Sunday. On the other side of the garage, it was a nightmare for Kohta Nozane, who was ruled unfit following his Navarra testing crash which left him with a fractured middle finger on his right hand.

Garrett Gerloff – P1

It’s funny to say, but I get a lot of US vibes here. Everyone speaks English, and this track reminds me of Road Atlanta, Virginia International Raceway, and Pittsburgh back at home. Today was good and I look forward to the rest of the weekend. I already feel like I have a really good bike, and the Yamaha R1 has historically always been fast around here, just like on most circuits. It’s nice to know that Les (Pearson, Chief Engineer) always has everything already planned and under control. Whenever I need any information, he already has everything ready. With me focused on learning the track, it is nice to know that he has all the adjustments set to go depending on my comments. I feel really good on the bike, so I just want to get through qualifying and go racing now. I was surprised at how little grip the track had in the heat of the afternoon and my first run during FP2 was all over the place, but it seems like it might rain both tomorrow and Sunday anyway. We have a good bike either way, we will see how it goes.

The Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK duo of Jonathan Rea and Alex Lowes enjoyed a positive session, as both riders hit the ground running right from the start of the session. Both riders were running 1-2 in the session in the opening 20 minutes as they continued their work at their home round. Rea was super consistent throughout the opening day and ended the day in second place, whilst Lowes was also in fine form in the afternoon to finish fourth, leaving him on the combined.

Jonathan Rea – P2

The bike was working pretty well today and straight away I felt a good rhythm. The level of grip of the track is pretty low compared to 2019 but I don’t think there has been a lot of activity here. So it just took a little bit of time to understand and we tried not make too many changes because we expected the track to have more tyre rubber laid down as the day went on. We made a set-up change that would increase agility, especially in the first two sectors and I felt as big improvement – but it compromised the last two sectors where I was really strong in FP1. So we need to find a middle ground for tomorrow. But I felt quite good and my rhythm was really strong. I could ride in the 1’28 lows so I feel that has put us in good shape for tomorrow. I am satisfied with the days’ work.”

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes – P4

We did not have a normal session this morning. I did not feel quite right so I did not really push, so I just did some laps to learn the Kawasaki on this track. In the afternoon we used our base setting, more or less, from the last few tests, and we tried a couple of things on the electronics and I felt quite good from the start. I was able to do a lot of good, fast consistent laps. It was a positive afternoon and I did not feel like I was pushing too hard. The pace was strong so it was probably one of my more positive Friday sessions.

Alex Lowes

The factory Yamaha charge was led by Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with BRIXX WorldSBK), as he celebrated a new Yamaha Motor Europe contract that was announced prior to the first track action of the day. Despite a massive moment in the opening moments of the session, he was able to continue on his way and cement his position in the leading positions in third, putting in a long run in his second stint.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P3

Today we started to try to find a good setup with the bike, because the track was very dirty, but now the track condition is much better. Also we are working for good grip with the rear tyre because I was finding this a problem today. We tried a small race simulation in the afternoon, 12 laps, it was not bad but not really fast and we need to improve the rear grip. Now we are working for tomorrow, I speak with my team because we need to improve a little bit for the race, we will see what is possible – tomorrow we try again. For the future, I’m really happy to stay with this team! Every year Yamaha and my team is working for a good bike. I think next year we can be stronger, because we keep moving forward. But for now, this weekend and this season is important; I like this track and we want to improve for the race.”

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu

Tom Sykes, eager to return to his winning ways around the 4023 metre circuit was quick out the box and made an instant impact to the timing sheets in FP1. Despite a small crash at T11 in the early stages he ended the opening session in P3 (1’28.202).  FP2 was not without drama for the BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team. Sykes in the opening laps had a crash at T6 /7, barrel rolling his BMW M 1000 RR into the gravel. The crew did a fantastic job in getting Tom back out for the final 12 minutes as he finished the session in eleventh, P6 on combined times.

Tom Sykes – P6

Long and short, I said to myself before arriving here this weekend I will drag the bike around if I have too. In FP1 we took a step back in time with some of our set up and felt comfortable doing the lap times, which was positive. Then for FP2 we had a good plan but unfortunately, I had a crash on my first flying lap. I probably got a bit carried away but I got caught out with a rear slide, so I lost the front which was not ideal. I have to say the guys did an incredible job in getting her fixed. The bike got back to the box with 28 minutes to go and I was leaving the box with 12 minutes left on the clock so great work from those boys. It is what it is, I was not able to try the things I was wanting to do mid FP2 as a result but looks like the rest of the weekend is going to be fairly moist, so it doesn’t matter too much. But it was one of those days, if we had a dry race tomorrow, I feel like we are prepared regardless.”

Tom Sykes

On a track that Ducati say is not particularly favorable to the Panigale V4R, Scott Redding and Michael Ruben Rinaldi made tangible progress during the first day of free practices. The two Aruba.it Racing – Ducati riders close respectively in fifth and seventh position waiting for tomorrow’s opening race that, according to the weather forecast, could be affected by rain.

Scott Redding – P5

All in all it wasn’t a bad day but I wasn’t able to be incisive on the single lap. This is a particular track with many different corners that do not play in our favour. The feeling, however, is positive. In the afternoon things improved but we still have to find the best set up that will allow me to ride at my best. The weather forecast? I don’t really care because we’ll all start in the same conditions“.

Scott Redding
Michael Rinaldi – P7

Today was a pretty positive day even though we are a little bit far from the top. This morning we struggled a lot in the last sector, that’s why between FP1 and FP2 we focused a on fixing the set up. In the afternoon things went better but, as it often happens, we missed something, especially in T2. We just have to put together all the pieces of this puzzle and I am confident that we will make it“.

Michael Rinaldi

Michael van der Mark who took the double race win here in 2018 equally had a solid opening session this morning, lapping consistently in the low 1m29’s throughout FP1 to finish in P10 (1’29.104).

Michael van der Mark – P10

I really enjoyed riding today and its great to be back a Donington Park, I have some great memories here. This morning we felt good with the bike and made some small changes which improved our lap time. Unfortunately, we went the wrong direction at the end of FP1 which was frustrating but in FP2 we made a big change on the bike which helped stability in braking. I was having fun and enjoying my time out there, but we are losing too much time in the final sector with the stop and go section. We know this is a weak point of the BMW M 1000 RR but we for sure we can improve in this area, but overall, I don’t think we had such a bad Friday.

Michael van der Mark

Working hard to find the best possible set-up for their Fireblades around the technical Leicestershire track, HRC factory riders Alvaro Bautistia and Leon Haslam completed a challenging but constructive first session, in which Haslam finished P7 and Bautista P14.  During the afternoon’s second timed practice, the Team HRC riders continued their preparations ahead of the weekend’s three races and local rider Haslam rounded out the day in a solid eighth position overall. Bautista also shaved off several tenths to set a 1m29.568, which put him fifteenth at the day’s end.

Leon Haslam – P8

Obviously I know this track very well, which is a benefit. We’ve not been here on the Honda, but my experience with different bikes here means I know where and how the bike should be turning and so I think we’ve highlighted a few areas where we need to improve. There’s no one specific thing we need to work on, it’s more a case of putting it all together to find a solid overall package. It’s been a tough day but also a very useful one, and now we have more idea as how to move forward”.

Leon Haslam
Alvaro Bautista – P15

Today was an objectively difficult day and our position reflects this, because normally we are quite closer to the front group in terms of performance. We need to keep working on the set-up because right from the first few laps this morning I have been struggling to ‘feel’ the tyres. With this problem I can’t push hard and exploit the potential of the bike. The changes we have tried haven’t solved the issue yet, but at least we have done some exploratory work and now we will analyse the data and try to find a solution tomorrow”.

Alvaro Bautista

2021 WorldSBK Donington Friday Combined Practice times

Pos Rider Bike                                  Time/Gap
1 G. Gerloff Yamaha YZF R1 1m27.524
2 J. Rea Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.317
3 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha YZF R1 +0.524
4 A. Lowes Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.607
5 S. Redding Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.626
6 T. Sykes BMW M 1000 RR +0.678
7 M. Rinaldi Ducati Panigale V4 R +0.800
8 L. Haslam Honda CBR1000 RR-R +0.871
9 L. Mahias Kawasaki ZX-10RR +0.938
10 M. Van Der Mark BMW M 1000 RR +1.025
11 A. Locatelli Yamaha YZF R1 +1.070
12 C. Davies Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.540
13 A. Bassani Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.835
14 T. Rabat Ducati Panigale V4 R +1.890
15 A. Bautista Honda CBR1000 RR-R +2.044
16 I.  Vinales Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.256
17 L. Mossey Kawasaki ZX-10RR +2.451
18 J. Folger BMW M 1000 RR +2.553
19 E. Laverty BMW M 1000 RR +2.564
20 C. Ponsson Yamaha YZF R1 +2.729
21 L. Cresson Kawasaki ZX-10RR +3.879
22 K. Nozane Yamaha YZF R1 +7.685

WorldSBK Championship Points

Pos Rider Points
 1  Jonathan Rea  149
 2  Toprak Razgatlioglu  129
 3  Scott Redding  104
 4  Alex Lowes  88
 5  Michael Ruben Rinaldi  82
 6  Garrett Gerloff  59
 7  Michael Van Der Mark  52
 8  Tom Sykes  51
 9  Chaz Davies  48
 10  Andrea Locatelli  45
 11  Alvaro Bautista  43
 12  Axel Bassani  38
 13  Lucas Mahias  22
 14  Leon Haslam  18
 15  Kohta Nozane  17
 16  Tito Rabat  16
 17  Eugene Laverty  10
 18  Jonas Folger  8
 19  Isaac Vinales  7
 20  Christophe Ponsson  1

Donington Park Schedule (AEST)

Saturday
Saturday 1800 WorldSBK FP3
Saturday 2010 WorldSBK Superpole
Saturday 2300 WorldSBK Race One
Sunday
Sunday 1800 WorldSBK Warm Up
Sunday 2000 WorldSBK Superpole Rac
Sunday 2300 WorldSBK Race Two

2021 WorldSBK Calendar

Date Track SBK SS600 SS300
21-23 May Aragón (Spain) X X
28-30 May Estoril (Portugal) X X  
11-13 Jun Misano (Italy) X X
2-4 Jul Donington Park (UK) X    
23-25 Jul Assen (Netherlands) X X
06-08 Aug Autodrom Most (Czech) X X X
20-22 Aug Navarra (Spain) X X  
3-5 Sep Magny-Cours (France) X X
17-19 Sep Catalunya (Spain) X X
24-26 Sep Jerez (Spain) X
1-3 Oct Portimao (Portugal) X X
15-17 Oct San Juan Villicum (Argentina) X X  
12-14 Nov Mandalika*** (Indonesia) X X  

Source: MCNews.com.au

The bike was working pretty well today and straight away I felt a good rhythm. The level of grip of the track is pretty low comp…

The bike was working pretty well today and straight away I felt a good rhythm. The level of grip of the track is pretty low compared to 2019 but I don’t think there has been a lot of activity here. So it just took a little bit of time to understand and we tried not make too many changes because we expected the track to have more tyre rubber laid down as the day went on. We made a set-up change that would increase agility, especially in the first two sectors and I felt as big improvement – but it compromised the last two sectors where I was really strong in FP1. So we need to find a middle ground for tomorrow. But I felt quite good and my rhythm was really strong. I could ride in the 1’28 lows so I feel that has put us in good shape for tomorrow. I am satisfied with the days’ work
.
📸 @geebeeimages
.
@krt_worldsbk @alpinestars @araieu @monsterenergy @showaperformance @oakleymotorsports @insidebikes #team65


Source: Jonathan Rea On Facebook