324,6 – The fastest ever top speed recorded at
Phillip Island is 324.6 kph, set by Max Biaggi onboard his Aprilia in the 2012
race.
178 – Last year Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing
Team) recorded the fastest ever pole in Phillip Island history, at 178.647 kph
(1’29.573).
170 - The last race run at an average speed
lower than 170 kph here was Race 2 in 2008, when Bayliss recorded 169,636 kph,
while the last pole slower than 170 kph dates back 1998 (Troy Corser, 168.683
kph).
53 – Phillip Island is the track with most
WorldSBK races run: 53. The first appearance of the Australian track in the
calendar was back in 1990.
30 – Last year the fastest
four riders in Superpole 2 (Rea, Sykes, Melandri, Davies) were the only ones
lapping below the minute and 30 seconds in the history of Phillip
Island.
23 - Australian riders have won their home race
here 23 times out of 53, the last one coming in 2008 with a double for Troy
Bayliss. Since then, riders from seven different countries have won
here.
17 – In the history of the Championship, in 17
seasons out of 30, the winner of the opening race has gone on to win the title
at the end of the year. Jonathan Rea has done this over the last three
seasons.
13 - The last rider to win at Phillip Island
starting outside the top-10 was Noriyuki Haga; he lined up in 13th in the first
race in 2009, and by the end of the opening lap he was already in second, and
hit the front after just four laps.
10 - For the tenth
year in a row Phillip Island will be the opening weekend of the season. The
Australian track is the one where the most season openers in the history of the
Championship have taken place, followed by Donington, Valencia and Losail, at
four each.
6-6 - British riders have won the last six
races here (5 Rea and Leon Haslam in 2015, Race 2), equalling the record string
for a single country in Phillip Island. This was set by Australian riders from
2004 Race 2 to 2007 Race 1 (Garry McCoy, 3 Troy Corser, 2 Troy Bayliss 1). The
Australian string was broken by a British rider, James
Toseland.
5 - In all the 30 seasons of WorldSBK, the
eventual champion has always finished the opening race in the top five, with Tom
Sykes (Kawasaki Racing Team) being the only champion to start his winning
campaign with a fifth, back in 2013.
0.004 – The closest
finish in WorldSBK history was recorded at Phillip Island in Race 1, 2010. Leon
Haslam won with a 0.004 seconds margin over Michel
Fabrizio.
0 – The last seven races held here were all
decided by less than one second at the flag. The last time the winner had at
least a one second margain at the finish was back in 2014, when Eugene Laverty
won with 2.959 seconds over Marco Melandri.
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