MCNEWS.COM.AU - The ultimate in motorcycle news British Superbike 2006 - Round 13 - Brands Hatch
October 1st, 2006
MCNEWS.COM.AU - The ultimate in motorcycle news
Ryuichi Kiyonari was crowned the Bennetts British Superbike Champion as he took a victory and then a second place to Leon Haslam in an eventful incident packed final round at Brands Hatch.

But there was heart-break for the defending title holder Gregorio Lavilla who saw his hoped of retaining the crown for a second year ended when he crashed out on the opening lap of the re-started first race, and then was sidelined by a gearbox problem next time out.

The Spaniard could only watch disconsolately as the two pretenders for the crown slugged it out amid the heavy showers one of which had brought the first race on the afternoon to halt on the fourth lap.

Haslam had his Airwaves Ducati ahead at that point: “I was gutted that I had to call the race stop but the conditions were deteriorating, it was too wet.”

He made the running on the re-start, but was a little concerned by “an engine noise” but that cleared, and having traded places with the HM Plant Honda of Kiyonari was running second when the race was red-flagged again, this time because of Shane Byrne’s high-side off his Rizla Suzuki on the approach to Druids.

“I was feeling good and thought that I would ease ahead without too much trouble,” said Haslam as he realised that the eleventh victory of the season for Kiyonari meant that the Japanese rider needed only a top three finish to secure the crown.

The HM Plant Honda rider set the early pace but Haslam, knowing his only hope was to win the race was upping the pressure and charged through on the sixth lap at Graham Hill to take the lead and then pull well clear, taking the race by eight seconds.

But, again the action was halted early, with the red-flags out as Virgin Mobile Yamaha’s Tommy Hill smashed down on the Cooper Straight with five laps remaining.

Second best was champion for Kiyonari. “Very pleased, bike very good, thank you English fans,” he smiled, with Haslam gracious in defeat, as he conceded the crown 466-458 to the first Japanes rider to win the title, at the same time giving Honda their first major British title in two decades.

“We had bad luck, but Kiyo has ridden well and deserved it. A title is won over a full season, and not one round,” said Haslam. “I’m happy, having finished off the podium only four times, and twice they were crashes. Luck has gone against me – I was sitting pretty in the first race, but then it rained, and again on the re-start I felt good.”

Away from the two riders who dominated the front-running action, there was a first podium since the opening race of the season, back in March for Michael Rutter aboard the Stobart Honda in the opening race, as he finished ahead of Hill, Glen Richards, on the Hydrex Honda and the Vivaldi Suzuki duo of Scott Smart and Ben Wilson.

In the final race, there was third place for Red Bull Honda’s Jonathan Rea, ahead of Karl Harris, Michael Laverty and James Haydon.

Chris Martin underlined his British Superbike Cup title with a winning double, finishing ahead of first Marty Nutt and then David Johnson.

Suzuki Report

Rizla Suzuki’s Shane ‘Shakey’ Byrne crashed out of the first race at the final round of the Bennetts British Superbike Championship at Brands Hatch today while fighting bravely for a podium finish in treacherous damp conditions.

Byrne was holding third with only a handful of laps remaining when his rear tyre touched the painted white line at the bottom of Paddock Hill bend. The tyre slid and he crashed at over 120mph, causing the race to be stopped. Due to concussion he was forced to miss the second event.

Rizla Suzuki’s James Haydon finished ninth and sixth in the two weather-interrupted dramatic races, showing real determination in only his second race meeting back after missing four rounds due to injury. Ducati’s Leon Haslam won the second race but Honda’s Ryuichi Kiyonari won the first and was runner up in the next to take the 2007 British Superbike Championship title. Shakey finished sixth and Haydon 15th overall.

Rizla Suzuki MotoGP’s John Hopkins delighted the capacity Brands Hatch crowd with a string of demonstration laps aboard his ear-splitting GSV-R990. The MotoGP ace then spent the rest of the day with the Rizla Suzuki Superbike team, enjoying the race action.

Rizla Suzuki is back on track in two weeks time at the Race of the Year at Mallory Park in Leicestershire.

Shane Byrne:

“I am disappointed to have finished the season with a crash. I have been on fire all weekend and really thought I could have won or at least got on the podium, but the damp conditions caught me out and I suffered a pretty big crash that gave me concussion and ruled me out of the second race.

“It’s been a challenging season but on a positive note I enjoyed riding this weekend and now know what it’s going to take to win the title in 2007. I’ll be back more determined than ever.”

James Haydon:

“Ninth and sixth in the final round are ok but not really where I want to be; I am only happy when I am at the front going for victory. But given my lack of racing over the last months and the difficult wet and damp conditions, I will take the results with a smile.

“Thanks to Rizla Suzuki and the fans for all their support in 2006. Over the last couple of rounds my confidence has grown and I am already looking forward to next year. I wish today wasn’t the end of the season, but rather the start. I am hungry and can’t wait to get racing again.”

Robert Wicks - Team Manager:

“Rizla Suzuki is deflated after a weekend that promised so much but in the end delivered so little. Shakey was on race winning pace in practice and qualifying and then a wet white line punished him in the opening encounter, excluding him from the second race.

“James rode well to bring his Rizla Suzuki home in the top 10 in both races. He’s shown remarkable resilience coming back from serious injury and it’s a shame he didn’t race for the whole season as he would have finished much further up the Championship table if he had.

“Well done to Ryuichi Kiyonari for winning the 2007 British Superbike Championship. He is a worthy Champion and the team is genuinely pleased for him.

“Thanks to all of the sponsors and the army of loyal Rizla Suzuki fans that have supported the team all season through thick and thin. Rizla Suzuki goes to the Race of the Year in two weeks time and has already started planning for the 2007 season. We’ll be back to challenge Kiyo for his number one plate at the opening round next year.”

 

Superbike Race 1

  1. Ryuichi Kiyonari (Honda) 19:45.196

  2. Leon Haslam (Ducati) +0.181

  3. Michael Rutter (Honda) +16.501

  4. Tommy Hill (Yamaha) +32.561

  5. Glen Richards (Honda) +35.694

  6. Scott Smart (Suzuki) +1-lap

  7. Ben Wilson (Suzuki) +1-lap

  8. Simon Andrews (Yamaha) +1-lap

  9. James Haydon (Rizla Suzuki) +1 lap

  10. Chris Martin (Honda) +1-lap.

NB: Thomas 11th, McConnell 12th, Johnson 15th

Superbike Race 2

  1. Haslam 22:02.916
  2. Kiyonari +8.772
  3. Jonathan Rea (Honda) +14.698
  4. Karl Harris (Honda) +17.939
  5. Michael Laverty (Honda) +27.586
  6. James Haydon (Rizla Suzuki) +32.449
  7. Billy McConnell (Yamaha) +38.623
  8. Rutter +40.544
  9. Richards (Honda) +41.621
  10. Wilson +1:03.322.

NB: Thomas 13th, Johnson 15th

Superbike Points

  1. Kiyonari 466
  2. Haslam 458
  3. Lavilla 377
  4. Rea 248
  5. Harris 244
  6. Byrne 224
  7. Rutter 206
  8. Hill 187
  9. Laverty 179
  10. Richards 151

Superstock Race

  1. Sanders

  2. Zanotti

  3. Jackson

  4. Kennaugh

  5. Palmer

  6. Laverty

  7. Neill

  8. Jenkinson

  9. Mainwaring

  10. Mercer

Superstock Points

  1. Roberts 216

  2. Zanotti 141

  3. Quigley 138

  4. Jackson 126

  5. Laverty 118

  6. Hutchinson 100

  7. Jenkinson 94

  8. Neill 90

  9. McGuinness 83

  10. Palmer 83

Supersport Points

  1. Crutchlow 242

  2. Sykes 172

  3. Laverty 152

  4. Camier 112

  5. Hobbs 105

  6. Easton 84

  7. Riba 73

  8. Robinson 71

  9. Lowry 59

  10. Murphy 59

British Superbike 2006

Late Braking News

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