Slow progress is better than no progress

Yep, that’s the Shadowfax seat and tank, mudguard and fairing. Now painted in gleaming black by the excellent Paul Campbell of Redback Racepaint in Canberra. Once that is fitted to the chassis, later this week, the completed rolling chassis will be off to Alan Beavan’s place to have the green stripes applied. Then it’s engine in and commissioning all the rest of the running gear. As of tomorrow, the 1st March, there will be 22 days till practice day at the Sheene. I’d like to have it ready by then if possible. Best case scenario as a runner, worst case as a display.

I’ve been really pleased with the response to my photo album of put shots from PI, and very gratified too. Funny that pictures taken with a little compact camera could come out that well.

In MotoGp, testing has been taking place at Sepang for the last 3 days with Casey Stoner consistently topping the charts and Valentino Rossi still languishing more than a second behind the Australian’s best time. Sooner or later the new father is going to get some credit for what he does on the bike.

Island tragic

Well, the first round of the WSBK at Phillip Island last weekend delivered the very best and the very worst of what a race meeting can deliver. Champagne racing in the premier categories and the tragic death of a 17 year old competitor in one of the domestic races.

I was at PI as a member of the press, yes, I know, amazing eh? My press accreditation as a representative of MotoPod came through without a hitch and, on arrival at the track, I was handed my Press Kit with car parking sticker and my green pass which basically allowed me to go anywhere at all except onto pit lane while the three big races were being gridded, a small inconvenience. It also gave me a desk in the Press Room, access to as much bottled water as I wanted and free sandwiches for lunch each day. Most importantly it guaranteed me an air-conditioned haven from the 37 degree heat that was the main feature right over the whole of race week.

Jim had sent me to PI to try and secure some interviews with riders and personalities that would be interesting for the MotoPodcast programme. He used his previous contacts to ensure that I secured an interview with World Champion, Carlos Checa, but, apart from that, I was left to my own devices to use my guile, previous knowledge and undoubted charm to arrange any others!!

And, arrange them I did. All in all, something like 16 interviews, mostly of between 15 and 20 minutes in length, just by asking politely and being prepared to fit in with the teams’ schedules. Carlos, as noted already, Tom Sykes, Johnny Rae, Sheridan Morias, Broc Parkes, Eugene Laverty, Carlo Firoani, the Honda team Manager, Roland ten Kate, Georgio Barberi, the Pirelli Team Manager to name just a few. Everyone of them obliging and more than happy to spend time talking about their passion. I missed some through scheduling problems; Fabien Foret failed to front at the appointed time and a technical issue with the voice recorder lost me a solid gold interview with Ron Haslam and another with Kenan Sofoglu. No use crying over spilt milk and I hope that what I got more than makes up for what I lost.

I got to spend time with many great people along the way; ex-pat French road racer, Vic Soussan who I haven’t seen since the Sandown Park round of the Swann Series in 1979; Malcolm Pitman, one half of the famous Pitman brothers from South Australia, and creators of the famous, Coca Cola 800-winning chain drive XS1100 Yamaha, Australia’s premier motorcycle journalist, Don Cox, battling with the increasingly debilitating effects of MS, well-known journalists, Darryl Flack and Mike Esdaile and, of course, the racers themselves.

Of the fatal accident, I know very little. I was actually in the hospitality van interviewing South African rider, Sheridan Morias, when it happened and didn’t even know it had happened till I got back to the press room. Suffice it to say that it hit the close-knit racing community heavily, and not just the domestic riders, but the O/S ones as well, Carlos Checa pausing in his acceptance speech after Race 2 to pay tribute to Oscar McIntyre and express his condolences to the family and friends on behalf of the WSBK fraternity. Suffice to say that the normally bouyant and light-hearted mood in the paddock on Saturday had become very subdued on the Sunday. My condolences to all concerned. I’ve seen plenty of incidents like this at the track, but they never get any easier to accept.

The racing? Well, it was brilliant. Checa was pulling away when an unforced error brought his race to and end at T12 in Race 1, leaving Max Biaggi to cruise to an easy win. In Race 2, Carlos showed what might (and should) have been, winning easily. Unfortunately, Carlos’s courageous ride in that race was almost completely overshadowed by Max Biaggi’s astonishing “burn from the stern” to take 2nd. No doubt about it, the old blokes are hard to beat.

In the WSS, my hopes were resting on the pole man, Aussie, Broc Parkes, but he had a shocker of a start and languished in 6th for much to the race, overshadowed completely by a red-hot battle for the lead between WSS returnee, Kenan Sofoglu, Fabien Foret (a veteran of the class) and classy new-comer, Sam Lowes. Broc finally got on the podium on the last lap run to the flag, showing what a clever rider he really is finishing a distant 3rd behind Superglue and Foret. 1-2 to the Kwakas, the green army was ecstatic.

My press duties kept me away from the track during most of the domestic races but I was able to see a young man called Alex Phillis finish 5th overall in the Superstock races. Watch that name, the apples hasn’t fallen far from the tree.

I’ll get some more impressions and stuff down in the next few days, but, if you want to look at my album of pit shots, follow this link.

PIT SHOTS FROM PI

Oh, and just to show that it really IS worth being a member of the press.

 

Torrid Thursday

I started going to the bike races exactly 26 years ago. It was the Australian TT at Laverton in Melbourne. A full contingent of overseas riders were on hand to compete in the prestigious meeting on a track laid out on the barren, hot wasteland of the Laverton RAAF base. It’s now history that Australia’s Kenny Blake beat the legendary Giacomo Agostini to win the 500cc race, inflicting Agostini’s second defeat on Australian soil after he was beaten by the late Bryan Hindle at Oran Park in 1970.

And it was the enthusiasm and excitement of that first meeting that surfaces every time I go into the gate of any race track I attend. This morning I couldn’t wait to get to the track even though it was only Thursday. I had to keep telling myself, “Phil, it’s only Thursday, pace yourself.”

It was hot today and I couldn’t get track temperature details from the Pirelli technicians as the “important” riders won’t be out on the track until tomorrow!! But it was a steaming day and the pressure was on from this morning.

As it is an International meet, getting to see and talk to the riders is a great deal more difficult than at a domestic event, but Jim at motopodcast.com is working hard with the top riders’ media people to secure me some opportunities to talk to and interview them. Most of them didn’t even put in appearance today, but it will be hot and heavy tomorrow.

Here’s an example of how the other half lives.

The spares room of the Crescent Suzuki Team. A sight to bring a tear to the eyes of any Gixxer owner. :)

Catch you tomorrow.

Whew!

Whew, indeed. 1108kms today, straight down the coast from Wollongong to the Island via the centre of Melbourne to deliver some packages to my son who lives there. All up, including having tea with him at a nice restaurant around the corner from his apartment, 16 hours. Car went well, amazing fuel consumption as it always does on a trip and no dramas at all (apart from my GPS trying to make me take the Tollway out of Melbourne, but I soon showed it who’s boss)

Constantly amazed at the number of motorists who don’t understand what “Keep left unless overtaking” means. Ignorant or illiterate or a combination of both, I think.

Got to the house in Cowes where I’m staying and, after letting myself in, I realised that there was no electricity. Quick hunt around outside with the torch and I found the fuse box and turned on all the circuit breakers. Then I went to refill my water bottle….mmm, no water, either. So, if you had happened down the little street where the house is at around 2145 tonight you’d have seen one very tired little traveller searching through the front garden (which is overgrown with agapanthus plants) trying to find the water metre. Took a while, but me and my little torch got the job done.

I’m hot and stinky (was 33 degrees in Melbourne today and the aircon isn’t working in the Calibra at the moment) and I’d love to have a shower, but, since I only just turned the electricity on, I guess the shower will have to wait until tomorrow.

BIG day tomorrow. Pick up my Press Accreditation and start hustling around for interviews. Terrified, to be honest. Not sure how easy/difficult it will be to get access to the “stars”. Oh well, my good mate Troy Corser is going to be there so that’s one almost sure interview anyway.

Better hit the sack. By this time tomorrow night I should know whether I’m going to qualify as a REAL reporter or just a pretend one.

Nite.

WSBK by numbers

Ahead of this weekend’s World Superbike opening round at Phillip Island, here’s the numbers, courtesy of the series promoters, Infront.

1 – the most successful number: 80 races have been won by the bike carrying the number 1 plate
2 – the manufacturers present in every race run so far: Ducati and Kawasaki
11 – the bike manufacturers with at least one race started in the Superbike World Championship
11 – the race number most used, present in 514 races
14 World Champions
18 years old: the youngest winner, Yuichi Takeda in Japan, 1996
25th championship, starting in Phillip Island this year
25 hosting countries so far. Russia will be the 26th
40 – the only rider able to win at 40 years old so far has is Max Biaggi (Brno 2011)
41 – the races run in Phillip Island, the most visited track
41 – the highest number of race finishers (Zeltweg 1989, race 1)
44 – the tracks visited by the Superbike World Championship
59 – Carl Fogarty’s wins, the most successful rider
67 different winners, from Davide Tardozzi (Donington 1988) to Tom Sykes (Nurburgring 2011)
118 – the wins by Australia and United States, the two most successful countries
204 – the highest speed ever reached for pole position (Max Biaggi, Monza 2011, 204.405 km/h)
306 wins by Ducati, 51% of the total
377 races run by Troy Corser, accounting for more than 60% of the total
590 races run so far
940 riders with at least one race start, 1150 in total, from 42 different countries
1,356,498 kilometers raced so far by all the riders in all the races run

Fascinating to see how much Australia features in that list. As well as the ones actually mentioned, it should also be noted that the #11 was Troy Corser’s preferred number.

Also this morning, courtesy of twowheelsblog, the following upcoming information about this week’s CRT testing in Spain.

“With the Moto2 and Moto3 teams having finished a three day at the Jerez circuit yesterday, on Monday and Tuesday it will the turn of several CRT teams who will continue the development work on their production based Aprilia’s.

Back on track will be Aleix Espargaro and Randy de Puniet with the ART’s under their new racing banner Power Electronics Aspar Team, Mattia Pasini with his Speed Master team, and the test should finally see the debut of James Ellison with PBM’s CRT team and Danilo Petrucci with Ioda Racing (who is developing their own chassis that will house Aprilia’s RSV4 engine).

Also present at Jerez will be Ducati with test rider Franco Battaini who will be continuing development work on the GP12 ahead of the Sepang 2 test (February 28th to March 1st).

Nicky Hayden, who sat out most of the first Sepang test due to his shoulder problems was also to be present at Jerez, but since he had to undergo shoulder surgery, the Italian media is currently reporting that he could be replaced at the test by Pramac’s Hector Barbera who could test the factory version of GP12 (Barbera rides the GP12 Valencia version with some modifications).”