Phillip Island (Australia), 19 February 2012: The clock is ticking down
in Australia towards the start of the 25th edition of the FIM Superbike World
Championship. With 24 permanent riders on the grid and the participation of six
manufacturers (Aprilia, BMW, Ducati, Honda, Kawasaki and Suzuki) the 2012
championship is sure to live up to expectations once again this year and with at
least ten potential race winners, everything is set for another exciting season
of World Superbike racing.
As
is traditional the production-based racing championship kicks off at Phillip
Island (Australia), one of the fastest and most spectacular circuits on the
entire calendar. The first of 14 rounds will be preceded by two days of official
tests, organized by Infront Motor Sports, on Monday 20 and Tuesday 21 February.
This will be the last chance for teams, riders and bikes to go through their
final fine-tuning before action gets underway later on in the
week.
It
was one year ago at Phillip Island that Carlos Checa began an extraordinary
march towards the first world title in his career. With 15 wins in 26 races the
Spanish ace took Italian manufacturer Ducati back to the top slot after a gap of
two years. The Althea Racing man was also quickest in last week’s private
testing here, confirming his current outstanding form on the Island. “Our Ducati
1198R is six kilos heavier this year with the regulation weight penalty, so
we’ve had to modify the bike set-up,” explained Checa. “We also successfully
tested some new Ohlins front forks. I’m happy with my lap time of 1 minute 31.8
seconds but now we have to do the most important test, over race distance. Both
me and the team are focused on what we have to do, which is to hold on to the
world title."
Last week’s big surprise in testing was Kawasaki, who placed Tom
Sykes right behind the reigning champion on all three days. “Through all our
tests we have explored a lot of areas and gathered a lot of information, but
finally it looks like our base setting from winter testing is pretty good” said
Sykes. “It is difficult to see exactly where our competitors are at in terms of
set-up but ultimately we have had a successful test and have set ourselves up
nicely for the official tests. We’ve also been quick on a race tyre and that’s
the most important thing.”
Max Biaggi, back in black again this year for the new liveried
Aprilia Racing Team, will line up at the age of 40 for his 23rd season of racing
with the aim of taking back the number one plate he conquered in 2010. On a
difficult track for the Italian bike, Aprilia have made up a lot of ground here
in testing, even though “it will be almost impossible to beat Ducati on this
track” as Biaggi himself admitted. "I have a new team with me this year and the
feeling between us is getting better day after day. We’ve prepared well for the
year ahead and we’re ready for battle."
It
will also be a crucial season for BMW Motorrad, who enter their fourth year with
new signing Marco Melandri and the confirmed Leon Haslam trying to score the
German manufacturer’s first win in World Superbike. In last week’s testing the
British rider lapped just four-tenths off the pace of Checa on soft tyres while
Melandri was over one second behind. “We still have some issues with the front
of the bike, and I need to get more confidence,” declared the Italian. “We still
have two more days of testing before we go into the first race weekend, and I
hope we are going to have good weather then.”
The test proved to be a bit of a setback for Aprilia’s new signing
Eugene Laverty, who crashed at turn 1, fracturing a bone in his left hand. “It’s
a bit painful but with the help of my specialist hopefully I won’t miss the
race” said Laverty. “The same thing happened to me a few years ago and five days
later I was back on the bike”. The hopes of seeing Crescent Fixi Suzuki star
John Hopkins race however are minimal, as the American broke a bone in his right
hand and immediately flew to the USA to visit a specialist. Hopkins will
probably be replaced by reserve rider Joshua Brookes from Australia, who tested
the team’s GSX-R last week.
All eyes will also be on the talented rider from Northern Ireland
Jonathan Rea, who lines up for another year on a Honda CBR1000RR Fireblade,
flanked by Superbike rookie Hiroshi Aoyama from Japan, while the British
contingent is completed by Leon Camier (Crescent Fixi Suzuki) and 2011
Supersport champion Chaz Davies, who steps up to World Superbike on an Aprilia
together with his ParkinGO team.
World Supersport
Australia will also see the start of the 14th season of World
Supersport racing reserved for racing bikes from the mid-sized production-based
sector. Despite the current economic climate the entry-list is stronger than
ever with over 30 riders from 14 different countries, on machines from Honda,
Kawasaki, Triumph and Yamaha. In winter testing strong times were recorded by
Turkey’s double Supersport champion Kenan Sofuoglu, who has returned to the
category to try and win a third title, this time on a Kawasaki DeltaFin
Lorenzini.
But Supersport, with its elbow-to-elbow racing and late braking
moves, is so unpredictable and any number of riders can win. These are sure to
include another former champion Fabien Foret (Kawasaki Intermoto), Broc Parkes
from Australia (Ten Kate Honda), and Britain’s Sam Lowes, one of six riders
spread over three different PTR Honda managed teams, an unprecedented operation
in modern-day bike racing. Completing the international line-up in Supersport
are two South Africans, two Hungarians, three Russians, two Czechs and a total
of eight Italians, all aiming to become the heir to last year’s winner Chaz
Davies.
Keine Kommentare:
Kommentar veröffentlichen