With a large portion of the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship
season taking place on European soil, the first venture out west is always a
good indication of how a championship may unfold. Riders find their feet, teams
have a good few months of development time behind them, and gaps in the
standings can be opened… or closed.
Since 2013, the medieval town of
Alcañiz has hosted the first race on the continent, MotorLand Aragon proving to
be a true land of opportunity for title contenders, pretenders, rookies,
veterans and starlets alike. But fortune favours those who seek it, and several
riders will arrive at the Motocard Aragon Round aching for a potential
season-defining moment.
The first opportunity lies in the hands of the
man who right now lays down the law of the land in World Superbike. Álvaro
Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) returns home on a six-race-strong winning
streak, having picked up two debut hat-tricks in Australia and Thailand. The
rookie’s explosive run of form has shown no sign of abating: consecutive wins
seven, eight and nine would push him on par with Neil Hodgson for the best start
to a WorldSBK season, and there’s no better place to achieve that than at home.
Top-10 finishes in MotoGP™ in Aragon for four different manufacturers would seem
to spell out a promising fate for Bautista’s first homecoming.
It feels
odd to be mentioning history-making opportunities and not be referring to one of
Jonathan Rea’s (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) latest exploits, but that has
been the nature so far of the 2019 season.
But as they say, opportunity
knocks at every man’s door, and the Northern Irishman has built much of his
success on remaining cold and calculating through the toughest of times.
MotorLand Aragon is not one of the four-time champion’s favourite tracks – in
fact it’s one of just two on the 2019 calendar where he hasn’t achieved a double
– but his focus will stay intact; Rea will be ready to pounce should the chance
arise, as will teammate Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK), who took
pole position last time out in Aragon (2015).
Finding opportunity in
adversity is what separates the greats from the rest, and few have suffered more
setbacks in recent months than Chaz Davies (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati). Come Race
1 it will have been nearly a year since the Welshman’s last race win, which
happened precisely at the Alcañiz circuit. Davies has built up a treasure trove
of performances in Aragon, with seven hard-fought race wins and an additional
three podiums. Can he conjure up some more MotorLand magic and add an eighth
this weekend? It may arrive a bit early for the Brit in his personal adaptation
to the V4 R, but expect him to make several steps forward on his own road to
redemption.
There was a certain sense of dèja-vu in Thailand as Alex
Lowes and Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) crossed the line in
Race 2 in third and fourth, respectively, for the third time in a row; the same
applies to independent standings runaways Marco Melandri and Sandro Cortese (GRT
Yamaha WorldSBK) in sixth and seventh. All four Yamaha riders have performed
impeccably since Round One – in particular the Englishman, who has brought his
superb pre-season form into the new season – but how much margin for growth is
there? The first European showdown of the year could be an ideal moment to make
that final step towards the top of the rostrum.
Another manufacturer
looking for the final piece to the puzzle is BMW, although Tom Sykes and Markus
Reiterberger (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) should find it in the form of an
engine upgrade scheduled for later in the season. In the meantime, both men can
look to the past to find inspiration: the former World Champion secured a
dominant double here in 2014, while his partner emerged victorious last season
from Spain on the road to the 2018 STK1000 title.
Perseverance will be
key for the BMW riders and much of the same can be said for the Moriwaki Althea
Honda Team. Still recovering from a blameless crash in Thailand, at the moment
Leon Camier will simply aiming to be on the grid in Spain. If the combative
32-year-old gets the go-ahead to race, expect him to keep on pushing the
Fireblade to its limits, as the HRC-backed outfit continues seeking answers and
finding its grove in 2019.
The European leg of the 2019 season kicks off
at MotorLand Aragon this Friday, April 5th, with the first free practice
sessions on Spanish soil! Qualifying on Saturday morning will be followed by
Race 1 at 14:00LT (GMT+2), with the Tissot Superpole Race and Race 2 to follow
on Sunday. |
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