Laconi and McCoy Run Out Phillip Island
Winners
29 March 2004
Regis Laconi (Ducati Fila 999F04) shook off the ghosts
that haunted him in the first round at Valencia and secured a fine
win in the first 22-lap Superbike race, streaking to a clear 7.145
margin of victory over his closest challengers. With Superpole winner
Laconi in a class of his own after an early race dust up with his team-mate
James Toseland and Steve Martin (DFX Ducati), a superb four-way battle
for second place supremacy was played out on the final circuits of
the first race.
The home crowd and Honda fans could hardly contain their
delight when Chris Vermeulen (Ten Kate Honda CBR1000RR) pounced to
secure his first podium finish in Superbike, and in second place to
boot. Behind him, the hard charging James Toseland, who was leaving
huge plumes of tyre smoke in his wake as he attacked the throttle,
despite with an imperfect bike set-up, ended his first race in third
place.
The second 22-lap event was held in different conditions,
still dry and warm, but each of the factory Ducati runners was to find
ill fortune awaiting in the gravel, traps, as first early leader Laconi
and then Toseland fell. The battle for second between Steve Martin
(Ducati DFX) and Garry McCoy (Xerox NCR Ducati) was thus eventually
a battle for the win, and was decided in McCoy’s favour when
Martin’s
bike blew up.
Despite the second place finish enjoyed once more by
Vermeulen, the second race itself proved to be a completely different
animal to the opener, as Pierfrancesco Chili (PSG-1) Ducati ripped
to third place, having jumped from his first race 999 machine to his
more familiar 998.
Outside the podium places the Phillip Island race
proved to be a fascinating contest, with many and various participants
writing their names on the scoreboard. The first race sort-out for
second place saw Martin fourth and Garry McCoy fifth.
It was a satisfying
event for the all-new Kawasaki Bertocchi machine of Mauro Sanchini,
who held off the determined challenge of Marco Borciani and Valencia
race winner Noriyuki Haga to take sixth. Borciani’s
own luck, thanks to the crashes up the front in race two, just got
better and he finished race two in fourth place, an excellent result
for a rider maturing into a real force to be reckoned with. Chili,
riding his 999 with a single sided swingarm in race one was a lowly
ninth, while Chris Walker once more was the fastest Petronas rider
in tenth.
Four non-finishers included the flying Leon Haslam, the
early lap leader in the opener. The minor places in race two were as
closely contested as any others, with Troy Corser beating the out-of-sorts
Haga to take fifth. Sanchini, Walker and Ivan Clementi (Kawasaki Bertocchi
ZX-10) battled for seventh, the Italian taking the upper hand. Tenth
place went to Haslam, a poor reward for his front row starts.
In the
World Championship itself, Toseland is still the leader, although his
race two DNF allowed Pierfrancesco Chili to creep up to within five
points of his leading total of 61. One point behind, race winner McCoy
shares his 55 points with Chris Vermeulen, but leads in the table because
of his single race win.
Supersport - Wildcard Wildchild Rocks
The Old Guard at Home
After another dramatic and unpredictable measure of Supersport
racing a raw rookie, 20-year-old Aussie wild card rider Josh Brookes
(Castrol Honda) stole the limelight from the WSS establishment, winning
his first ever World Supersport race. An Aussie championship regular,
Brookes, diced for the lead throughout, finishing off WSS regular Kevin
Curtain (Yamaha Motor Germany) on the last sector of the last lap.
It was a close run thing, with the gap at the end only 0.025 as Curtain
attempted to slipstream on Phillip Island’s long front straight.
Jurgen
van den Goorbergh, the Valencia race winner, extended his championship
advantage by mounting a steady charge to third, as the challenge of
the Ten Kate Honda riders, Broc Parkes and Karl Muggeridge faded. Parkes
was an eventual fourth, but engine problems for Muggeridge put him
down in 12th, losing a seemingly certain podium finish. Sebastien Charpentier
(Klaffi Honda) roared to a fifth place finish, with van den Goorbergh’s
team-mate Fabien Foret in sixth. Lorenzo Lanzi, the only Ducati finisher,
rode through problems with the front to finish ninth. The top Suzuki
was that of Stephane Chambon (Alstare Suzuki) with Katsuaki Fujiwara,
in 11th.
Van den Goorbergh now leads the table on 41 points, with
Foret second on 30 and Curtain third, on 27.
See series calendar for SBK
World Superbike Championship 2004
Related Story 13.02.2004 - Laconi
Sets Fastest Final Testing Pace