Laconi Doubles at Monza
15 May 2004
First Among Equals: Regis Laconi (Ducati Fila 999F04)
added to his 2004 race wins score in perfect fashion at Monza, taking
two front running wins on his Ducati Fila machine. He was untouchable
and in each race he won by a margin that underlined why he is the only
rider to have secured more than one win so far this year. His total
now stands at four and he leads the World Championship by three points
from Toseland, with a total of 120. In a day of much regulatory discussion,
Chris Vermeulen (Ten Kate Honda) was excluded from second place after
his engine cut-out switch, devised to kill the engine in the event
of a fall, did not function when tested.
Race 1: With Pierfrancesco
Chili (PSG-1 Ducati 998) experiencing an engine failure from his first
choice machine, pulling out on the warm-up lap and swapping to his
999 machine in pitlane, the way was open for Chris
Vermeulen to take an early advantage. He could not make his early speed
stick for the entire race, as he dropped back to finish fourth. Regis
Laconi ran away to a clear win, by 9.8 seconds over the hard charging
James Toseland, his own team-mate. The Fila Ducati 1-2 was followed
on by a third place for Aussie privateer Garry McCoy, on the first
Xerox Scuderia Caracchi 999RS. Aussie Chris Vermeulen was fourth, in
a race that was to deliver his only points scoring finish of the day.
Race
2: After Vermeulen was excluded from race two, having had a clear race
in the vacuum of the disappearing Laconi (some 12 seconds ahead), James
Toseland was promoted to second and Garry McCoy bagged himself a pair
of third places – making each podium finish a carbon copy of
the other. In fourth, Leon Haslam belatedly had his best ever SBK result,
earning 13 additional points.
Chili Calamity: The beaten but unbowed figure
of Pierfrancesco Chili left Monza with no race finishes to his name,
the championship leader before Monza having two mechanical failures
in race one and a crash in race two. A Monza crowd up 14,000 from last
year - to a total of 86,000 - was behind Chili’s attack from
the start, on a day when Superbike racing offered a feel good factor
off the scale at the revamped Monza.
Petronas Perseverance: Despite
a lack of power in comparison to the big twins and fours in SBK, the
recently re-engineered Petronas machines of Chris Walker and Troy Corser
battled around what will maybe be their worst circuit if the year.
Each scored strong top ten finishes; Corser was ninth and fifth, with
Walker eighth and seventh. Walker was especially combative, running
all over the back tyre of Marco Borciani’s DFX Ducati
in race one, with Borciani seventh and eighth.
Supersport Race: Karl
Muggeridge (Ten Kate Honda CBR600RR) once more bulldozed the Supersport
competition, winning from Fabien Foret (Yamaha Italia) – another
rider who was later excluded for a technical infringement – again
a non-functioning engine cut-out switch. Muggeridge’s team-mate
Broc Parkes was thus promoted to second and championship leader Jurgen
van den Goorbergh to third. Sebastien Charpentier (Klaffi Honda) took
fourth despite a time penalty for a jump-start. In the championship
van den Goorbergh leads with 73, Muggeridge is second with 62. Retiree
Kevin Curtain (Yamaha) is third, some way back with 47.
See series calendar for SBK
World Superbike Championship 2004
Related Story 29.03.2004 - Laconi
and McCoy Run Out Phillip Island Winners