World Superbike heads cross-channel
and Donington-bound
Rome (Italy), 8 May 2012 – The 2012 eni FIM Superbike World Championship continues its first
European leg of races this coming weekend at the Donington Park circuit in the
UK, where it all began back in 1988, the year of the very first round of the
production-based series. 25 years and 301 rounds further on, the East Midlands
track 180 kms north of London is getting ready to offer even more excitement at
what will be the fifth of 14 rounds this season and races number 598 and 599 in
its history.
The
complicated Monza weekend left the points standings virtually unchanged, Max
Biaggi (Aprilia Racing) still in control but with a two-point lead over Carlos
Checa (Althea Racing Ducati). With his triumph at the fastest circuit on the
calendar Tom Sykes (Kawasaki Racing Team) is now just six points away from the
top slot and ready to make the most of home advantage. Donington is ideal ground
for another great race by Sykes, who first emerged on the world scene in 2008
when he finished second on a Suzuki as a wild-card rider behind the three-times
champion Troy Bayliss.
Biaggi has never won at Donington but he does have a 50% podium
record, four times out of eight. His compatriot Marco Melandri, currently fourth
in the table 25 points behind the leader, has gone better in the UK, taking his
first win in Superbike last year and sharing the day with Carlos
Checa.
In
2011 the Spaniard picked up the most points (45 out of 50 with a win and a
second place) on a Ducati, a bike that in all of its different versions has won
at Donington 17 times in 38 races. Another rider to keep an eye on will be
Jonathan Rea, fifth in the points table but 27.5 points behind Biaggi: the
spectacular northern Irishman has never been on the podium at Donington while
Honda have not won a race here since 2008 when Ryuichi Kiyonari scored the
double in a wet race.
The
numerous UK fans expected to pack into Donington will also be cheering on their
local hero Leon Haslam, the BMW Motorrad man who hails from just down the road
near Derby. Frenchman Sylvain Guintoli (Effenbert-Liberty Racing Ducati), who
scored his first win in the wet at Assen but then had to take a rain check from
pole at Monza due to a problem in the warm-up lap, is also sure to be back on
the ball this weekend.
It
will also be a home round for the Crescent FIXI Suzuki team, which will line up
with Leon Camier, podium finisher in 2011 with Aprilia and American John Hopkins
who will probably not be in perfect form after picking up a broken bone in his
foot at Monza. With the possibility of utilizing reference data accumulated in
recent editions of the BSB championship, the Suzuki GSX-R might be in with a
chance of gate-crashing the WSB regulars’ party.
Good
news comes on the weather front, with a sunny weekend on the cards: after the
rain that has ruined the last two rounds at Assen and Monza, the British crowd
will be hoping for some true Superbike action at their home event.
Points (after 4
of 14 rounds): 1. Biaggi 97.5; 2. Checa
95.5; 3. Sykes 91.5; 4. Melandri 72.5; 5. Rea 70; 6. Haslam 68; 7. Guintoli 66;
8. Laverty 64; 9. Smrz 42.5; 10.
Giugliano 41; etc. Manufacturers: 1. Ducati 140.5; 2. Aprilia 108; 3.
Kawasaki 97.5; 4. BMW 96; 5. Honda 74; 6. Suzuki 20.5.
World Supersport
The
Supersport World Championship for the medium cylinder sector bikes continues its
unpredictable run with four different winners in four rounds and a spectacular
start to the season. The group is headed by former double champ, Turkey’s Kenan
Sofuoglu (Kawasaki DeltaFin Lorenzini) who after claiming the opening round win
has proved to be the most consistent rider in terms of results and placements.
The chasing group is led by Sam Lowes (Bogdanka PTR Honda), who is yet to win a
race but who provided such a great spectacle to finish runner-up at Monza, a
result that allowed him to cut the gap to the Turk to just ten points. Unlike
Superbike, Supersport is run over a single race format and each win assigns 25
points.
The
biggest step forward in this sense has been made by series newcomer Jules Cluzel
(PTR Honda) who was brilliant in the wet to conquer his first win in the
category and move to within 13 points of Sofuoglu. Just one point ahead of
Cluzel is his fellow Frenchman Fabien Foret (Kawasaki Intermoto Step) who is
still up in the leading positions despite only notching up four points in the
last two outings.
Alex
Baldolini (Power Team by Suriano Triumph) is the leading Italian in the points,
in fifth place and the only man capable of keeping up with the front-runners, if
one excludes Lorenzo Lanzi who dominated in the wet at Assen in a one-off
outing. Baldolini knows Donington well, having raced there in Moto2, while right
behind him is Australian Broc Parkes (Ten Kate Racing Products Honda) whose
season has gone from bad to worse recently after he crashed out of the lead at
Monza.
The
Donington weekend event schedule will not include the two Superstock categories
or the KTM European Junior Cup which now take a break until the next round at
Misano on June 8-10.
Points (after 4
of 13 rounds): 1. Sofuoglu 61; 2. Lowes 51; 3. Foret 49; 4. Cluzel 48; 5.
Baldolini 34; 6. Parkes 29; 7. Leonov 26; 8. Lanzi 25; etc.
Manufacturers: 1. Honda 86; 2. Kawasaki 86; 3. Yamaha 40; 4. Triumph 40;
5. Suzuki 6.
For further
information:
Julian Thomas
Press Office Associate Manager
Cell. +39 340 0993623
Email: julian.thomas@infrontsports.com
Press Office Associate Manager
Cell. +39 340 0993623
Email: julian.thomas@infrontsports.com
Nino
Barra
Press Office & PR ItaliaCell. +39 339 4688138
Email: nino.barra@infrontsports.com
Press Office & PR ItaliaCell. +39 339 4688138
Email: nino.barra@infrontsports.com
Valentina
Conti
Sponsorship & Int’l PR Associate Manager
Cell. +39 388 3032059
Email: valentina.conti@infrontsports.com
Sponsorship & Int’l PR Associate Manager
Cell. +39 388 3032059
Email: valentina.conti@infrontsports.com
In 2011 the FIM Superbike
World Championship achieved the following:
- A worldwide TV audience of 462 million
- Live broadcasts on 95 television networks covering 173 countries
- 3,106 broadcast hours
- Approximately 1,000,000 race spectators
- 3,779,237 contacts on the official website www.worldsbk.com
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