Supersports 600

AZLAN SHAKES OFF HIS SUZUKA BLUES TO LEAD A 1-2 FOR MANUAL TECH KYT KAWASAKI

On another day of clear blue skies at Suzuka, the sun shone most brightly on the Manual Tech KYT Kawasakis, with defending champion, Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman shaking off years of bad results to lead a closely fought 1-2 in Supersport 600 Race 1. Asia Production 250 featured a bruising battle for second behind Astra Honda’s dominant Rheza Danica Ahrens, while Muhammad Helmi Azman gave a glimpse of what it takes to win an underbone race in which the first nine finished within 1.2 seconds of each other. AS EVER THE UNDERBONE 150s were first on track this morning for a 10 minute warm-up in preparation for Superpole. In the morning Superpole session, it was SCK Rapido Hi Rev’s Fakhrusy Syakirin Rostam who won the most advantage, moving from 13th in qualifying practice to claim pole position with a lap of 2:41.390. The fastest rider in qualifying, the resurgent Gupita Kresna, was next best on the Yamaha Yamalube SND Factory machine, half a second behind the tall Malaysian. Md Amirul Ariff Musa, Md Affendi Rosli, Helmi Azman and Wahyu Aji Trilaksana populated the remaining places on the first two rows of the grid. There was confusion at the start of the race when the red lights failed to go out due to a technical problem. Eventually the ‘Start Delayed’ board was shown, causing nervous moments, particularly for 13-year-old Suzuka debutant, Travis Hall, whose bike stalled on the grid and had to be pushed into pit lane. His team managed to get it going as race direction announced that the quick start procedure would be used to get things underway over a race distance reduced from six to five laps. The re-start went without a hitch and Fakhrusy got his SCK Rapido Hi Rev Honda hooked up and away better than the others, before being out-dragged on the downhill run to Turn 1 by Affendi and Gupita. Md Helmi Azman snapped at the heels of his team mate and the rest of the field tried to get in on the action. Yamaha Indonesia’s Wahyu Aji Trilaksana moved up towards the leaders as the race wore on and nobody was able to make a break. Wahyu crossed the line at the start of the last lap first from Helmi, Gupita, Fakhrusy, Akid and RCB Yamaha YY Pang’s Izzat Zaidi and Md Adib Rosley. Helmi and Fakrusy broke away on the Spoon curve before the straight over pass section, while Adib ran wide and out of podium contention. Helmi slipstreamed his way to the front and held his line through Turn 15 and the tricky final chicane to take the win from Akid, Gupita, Wahyu and Fakhrusy. Izzat claimed sixth from Haziq, Peerapong Luiboonpeng and Adib, who recovered to finish ninth, just 1.2 seconds behind the winner. Less than one second further back the remaining two SCK Rapido HOndas of Fakhrusy and Hall came through in 10th and 11th. Helmi’s win, his second of the season, puts him at the top of the standings with 81 points, an advantage of 4 four over Izzat. Akid is in third place with 61. Full results here. IN ASIA PRODUCTION 250 Rheza Danica Ahrens continued his perfect weekend by taking pole position with a time six tenths quicker than Manual Tech KYT’s Andy Md Fadly, who was next best and a full 1.7 seconds faster than Gerry Salim’s pole winning time 12 months previously. He followed it up by clearing off as soon as the red lights went out to win the Race 1 by 5.2 seconds. What went on behind the imperious Indonesian, however, was far from predictable, with Fadly, Muklada Sarapuech and Mario Suryo Aji looking the most determined to grab the best of what was left for them. It was also a case of damage limitation for Yamaha which was unable to get close to the dominant Hondas and Fadly’s fast Manual Tech KYT Kawasaki. In qualifying ONEXOX TKKR’s Reynaldo Chrisantho  Ratukore snatched the fastest Yamaha mantle from the shoulders of Yamaha Thailand’s Anuparb Sarmoon. The race for second place had as much drama as we have ever seen in the competitive cauldron of AP250s. As Rheza scampered away, Fadly chased in vain before AP Honda’s Muklada asserted herself and showed him some lines and hard braking techniques that the 18-year-old Malaysian was struggling to find answers to. Watching just behind them was Astra Hondas supporting cast, Awhin Sanjaya and Mario, who also pulled Kritchaporn Kaewsonthi up towards the front of the P2 punch-up. A confident looking Muklada broke away from the group on lap 3 until a mistake under hard braking a lap later made her run wide and allowed Mario, Fadly and Awhin back onto her tail, with the hard riding Anuparb keeping his Yamaha just within reach. On the last lap it looked as though Mario and Muklada would sort out the remaining two podium positions, until they were caught by Fadly at the end of the overpass. The Kawasaki rider made a mess of the entry to Turn 15, pushing Muklada wide and then went into the final chicane too hot, held the front brake lever too hard and too long and hit the deck. As the others took avoiding action, Anuparb took his chance and squirted through the melee to grab a hard earned second position ahead of Mario, Awhin, a recovering Muklada, the Yamahas of Rey Ratukore and Ahmad Afif Amran, Kritchaporn, Yamaha Thailand’s Peerapong Boonlert and Anggi Setiawan, who completed the top ten. Five seconds further back Akito Narita was 11th, beating the next finisher and fellow wildcard, Takehiro Yamamoto to the line by 7.7 seconds. Further down the field Masato Fernando finished 17th and was the better of the two popular Filipino debutants, with McKinley Kyle Paz finishing 27th. The similarly well followed Indian hopefuls, Anish Damadora Shetty and Sethu Rajiv finished together in 24th and 25th for Idemitsu Honda Racing India. Rheza now has 98 points, stretching his championship lead to 16 points from Anuparb

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AZLAN, RHEZA AND GUPITA LEAD DAY 1 AT SUZUKA

The grey skies and rain that dampened set-up day on Thursday gave way to perfect, sunny conditions for Free Practice at Suzuka Circuit for Round 3 of the Asia Road Racing Championship. Despite two red flagged sessions, most of the expected leaders in all three classes were able to get close to race pace by the end of the afternoon. UNDERBONE 150cc started proceedings when pit lane opened at 08:30, with Yamaha Indonesia’s Wahyu Aji Trilaksana, banking a session topping time of 2:41.45 on his third flying lap before spending the rest of the session experimenting with machine set-up. Team All for One’s Peerapong Luiboonpeng also showed good early pace before being pushed down to fourth as UMA Racing’s Haziq Md Farues and Yamaha Yamalube SND’s Gupita Kresna found their rhythm. By session 2 most riders had calibrated themselves for the unique challenges of the Mie Prefecture circuit. UMA duo Haziq and defending champion Md Akid Aziz helped each other around, showing good pace throughout and breaking into the 2:39s, a likely pace for the leading group when racing gets underway. In 3rd place and one-sixth behind Akid, SCK Rapido Hi Rev Honda’s Md Helmi Azman led SND’s Syahrul Amin and Gupita from Peerapong who all circulated within 0.3 seconds of each other. Wahyu had a quiet session, clocking a best lap 0.8s slower than his best in FP1, while championship leader, Izzat Zaidi, was a notable laggard in both sessions, managing a best time of 2:43.944 in FP1. Australia’s Travis Hall, in only his second Underbone outing and his first visit to Suzuka, steadily improved his pace, getting into the 2:43s and placing himself 12th out of 20 on combined Free Practice times. In Qualifying it was Izzat’s RCB Yamaha YY Pang team mate, Md Adib Rosley who set the early pace, though unable to improve on a best lap of 2:40.7 and was pushed back first by Helmi, then Syahrul, Affendi and Peerapong, before Gupita put in a killer lap of 2:39.262 leapfrogging 15 riders to go nine tenths clear of Helmi at the top of the screens. The SCK rider improved a few tenths but was unable to get close enough to challenge the Indonesian former double champion. Syahrul qualified 3rd, 0.8s adrift of Helmi, with Team One for All pairing, Affendi Rosli and Peerapong within 0.2s to complete the top five. RCB’s Adib and Izzat were sixth and seventh from an impressive Travis Hall, who finished the session 8th ahead of Akid and Wahyu, who had still not improved on his early morning time. UMA’s purple pairing of Akid and Haziq had again been playing tag, though without the results they achieved in FP2. Haziq fnished 12th, behind Yuzy Honda Vietnam’s Md Amirul Ariff Musa, Fakhrusy Syakrin Rostam, Md Aiman Azman and wildcard, Miu Nakahara, completing the top 15 who will contest the first 15 grid positions in Superpole on Saturday morning. IN ASIA PRODUCTION 250, Astra Honda’s Rheza Danica Ahrens, was in a class of his own during all three free practice sessions. The championship leader sent his rivals into shock by going one tenth faster than Gerry Salim’s 2017 pole winning time with 2:28.667 just 12 minutes into the first session. AP Honda’s Muklada Sarapuech, who contested the All Japan 250 round at Suzuka last weekend, also set a strong early pace, as did wildcard, Akito Narita on the Team Hiro Honda and Md Andy Fadly on the Manual Tech KYT Kawasaki. The first session was re-flagged when Rafid Topan Sucipto crashed heavily, injuring the rider and leaving the track surface in need of a clean-up. At the restart Rheza struck again, slicing another 0.9s from his previous best.  The quickest Yamaha was sixth, under the guidance of Anuparb Sarmoon, who managed to break into the 1:29s just before the chequered flag came out. Free Practice 2 yielded no improvements among the top riders from the first outing, but it did see newcomers to Suzuka starting to unravel its mysteries. Muklada help to pull her rookie teammate, Kritchaporn Kaewsonthi into the 1:29s, while CKJ’s Ahmad Afif Amran and Astra Honda’s Mario Suryo Aji both moved into the low 1:30s. Rheza jumped straight to the top of the timing screens again in FP3, 1.7s clear of Kritchaporn, Muklada and Andy Fadly. Anuparb got between the two Thai Hondas after 10 minutes, before they responded by pushing him back into 4th. After a mid-session break, Rheza improved to 2:28.241 gapping Muklada by over half a second, who quickly found herself behind Fadly as the Indonesian managed a round of 2:28.459. Their pressure spurred Rheza back into the 2:27s, as the Astra Honda man decided to strike another psychological blow ahead of tomorrow morning’s qualifying session. Reynaldo Chrisantho Ratukore had a good last outing with a best time of 2:29.874, to end up 5th on combined times, two tenths clear of Anuparb and the fastest Yamaha of the day for ONEXOX Racing Team. Narita ended the day 7th in front of Astra Honda’s Awhin Sanjaya and Mario Suryo. Returning former champion, Takehiro Yamamoto, finished 11th, after a day of working on the set-up of his new Trickstar Kawasaki. Further down the order, the Filipino pairing of McKinley Kyle Paz and Masato Fernando were 22nd and 23rd, as they worked on both the bike and getting to know the circuit. Sethu Rajiv was the better of the two Indian riders in 27th in front of Karen Ogura, Cao Viet Nam, Kanatat Jaiman and Idemitsu Honda team mate Anish Damadora Shetty. Rafid Topan will sit out the rest of Round 3, after being declared unfit to continue after his morning crash. SUPERSPORT 600cc saw Md Zaqwan Zaidi set a brisk early pace, despite arriving at Suzuka in the early hours of the morning after a long trip from Sugo. Manual Tech KYT Kawasaki’s Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman and Ahmad Yudhistira along with Yamaha Racing Asean’s Yuki Ito, gave chase early on, before Yamaha Thailand’s Ratthapong Wilairot got into his

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IMPRESSED, WEBIKE IKAZUCHI CONFIRMS JOE FRANCIS FOR THE REST OF THE SEASON

Team Webike IKAZUCHI Racing has confirmed that BSB rider Joe Francis will be a part of team’s line-up for the rest of the 2018 FIM Asia Road Racing Championship season.   The 21-year-old British rider was roped in as the team’s replacement rider in Round 2 of the ARRC at The Bend Motorsport Park in Australia. Francis took the place of Ant West who had a conflicting schedule in the World SSP.   The following table tracked Joe Francis’s performance in Australia:   SESSION BEST LAPTIME POSITION DIFF. TO LEADER Free Practice 1 1’59.583s P2 +0.241s Free Practice 2 1’58.655s P11 +1.323s Free Practice 3 1’57.831s P3 +0.955s Qualifying 1’56.690s P2 +0.099s Race 1 RACE CANCELLED Race 2 15’55.126s P9 +12.521s

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THE USUAL SUSPECTS BACK TOGETHER AGAIN

The unexpected results from the Australian round of the 2018 ARRC has kept the status quo in the SuperSports 600cc title chase. The race to cinch the 2018 SuperSports 600cc crown will resume in earnest as the Asian contingent head to the Suzuka Circuit for Round 3 this June 1 to 3.   Despite missing out on his home race due to a schedule-clash with the WSSP, Ant West is still nominally in charge with the 45 points he picked up in at the season-opener in Thailand. In his absence, the cancellation of Race 1 following a series of red flag incidents, had worked in his favor as no points were awarded for the first race.   In Suzuka, the WeBike Ikazuchi Racing rider will be going toe-to-toe against the reinvigorated Yuki Ito. Following a disappointing season in 2017, the factory Yamaha rider is back with a vengeance. The best performer at The Bend Motorsport Park, his win had propelled him up the rankings to 2ndoverall with 42 points, three points behind West.   Both championship leaders are equipped with the 2017 Yamaha R6 this season. While Ito has notched up a couple of Suzuka wins during his ARRC career, West has had the more recent success with a double in 2017.   SuperSports 600cc Records At The Suzuka Circuit   Year Pole-Sitter Race 1 Winner Race 2 Winner 2013 Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman (Honda) Shinichi Nakatomi (Yamaha) Shinichi Nakatomi (Yamaha) 2014 Yuki Ito (Yamaha) Katsuaki Fujiwara (Kawasaki) Yuki Ito (Yamaha) 2015 Yuki Takahashi (Honda) Yuki Ito (Yamaha) Yuki Takahashi (Honda) 2016 Yuki Takahashi (Honda) Decha Kraisart (Yamaha) Yuki Takahashi (Honda) 2017 Ikuhiro Enokido (Honda) Anthony West (Yamaha) Anthony West (Yamaha)   The time to beat will be 2’12.094s set by wildcard rider Ikuhiro Enokido during the 2017 qualifying practice.   Defending champion Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman struggled to find the right balance in the Australian round. Fighting to tame the finicky Ninja ZX-R6, it took almost herculean effort for the Malaysian rider to finish within the top-10. Azlan has dropped to third on the rankings but is still within shot of the championship lead with 38 points.   Behind Azlan, P4 to P9 on the standings are peopled by a slew of exciting names popping up on the Asian talent radar.   Ratthapong Wilairot is rocking his first season with the Yamaha Thailand Racing Team. He picked up his first podium of the season in Australia and is now 4thon the standings. Previously, Ratthapong’s best performance in the SuperSports 600cc class had been in 2015 when he ended his campaign in sixth overall.   Keminth Kubo continues to show improvements and is presently ranked 5thwith 27 points. While still a little erratic, team Yamaha Racing Asean’s decision to hone Kubo’s skills in the All Japan J-GP2 has helped stabilize the Thai rider’s aggressive streak.   Andi Farid Izdihar, returning after a 3-year stint in the Asian Talent Cup, is the best performing Indonesian rider in 6thoverall.   Thitipong Warokorn is still on the top-10. Warokorn won Round 1 as a wildcard, but his ranking will continue to drop until he makes another wildcard appearance in Round 6.   Team Hong Leong Yamaha Malaysia’s latest recruit, Mohd Ramdan Rosli, along with team Musashi Boon Siew Honda’s rookie Azroy Hakeem Anuar, has been highly impressive in the first two rounds. The two Malaysian youngsters are ranked 8thand 9threspectively.   The venerable Decha Kraisart, anchor for the Yamaha Thailand Racing Team, has had a bad start to the 2018 season. Decha has only finished one race out of three so far, and has dropped to 10thon the standings with 20 points.   As the ARRC heads back to familiar surroundings at the 5.8km Suzuka Circuit, other riders who had previously been tipped as title contenders will need to double down on their efforts to stay in touch with the chase. Tomoyoshi Koyama, Ahmad Yudhistira, Keisuke Kurihara, Taiga Hada, and Mohd Zaqhwan Zaidi are ranked 11thto 15threspectively.

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LUCKY ITO TAKES FIRST WIN OF THE SEASON

Tensions ran high as the premiere class riders lined up on the grid for Race 2 of the SuperSports 600cc class. Following the cancellation of Race 1, everyone had been determined to finish the race in grand fashion at the FIM Asia Road Racing Championship’s Australian debut at The Bend Motorsport Park.   The 600cc grid was cut down further when Decha Kraisart and Broc Pearson had to pull out due to injuries sustained earlier in the weekend.   Ito, who was one of the riders who had crashed out in Race 1, was lucky to have been able to get back onto the grid for Race 2. As the race was flagged off, the Yamaha Racing Team Asean poleman jumped into the lead ahead of Ratthapong Wilairot and Taiga Hada. The Japanese ace was racing well until a crash by Irfan Ardiansyah brought out the red flag on Lap 4.   The SuperSports 600cc race was re-started and reduced to 8 laps. At the re-start, Malaysian rookie Kasma Daniel Kasmayuddin took the early lead, again with Ratthapong and Yuki Ito in tow. Kasma ran wide on Lap 3, creating an opening for Ito to ride into the lead.   The Yamaha Racing Team Asean rider proceeded to control the race pace from the front of the group and ended the race in first with 15’42.605s. This would be Ito’s first win since Round 5 in India, in 2017.   Ratthapong Wilairot also reveled in his first SuperSports 600cc podium when he finished second with 15’44.207s. Malaysian rookie Mohd Ramdan Mohd Rosli created quite a stir when he came home in third place, clocking 15’49.587s.   Keisuke Kurihara and Keminth Kubo placed fourth and fifth respectively followed by Andi Farid Izdihar in fifth, Azroy Hakeem Anuar, Kasma Daniel, Joe Francis and defending champion Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman.   The shakeup from Race 1 has had a huge impact on the title chase. With points awarded only for Race 2, Ito was unable to take the lead from the absent Anthony West. West is still at the top of the ladder with 45 points. Ito is now ranked second with 42 points. Azlan Shah has dropped to third overall with 38 points.

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SUPERSPORTS 600cc RACE 1 DEEMED CANCELLED

The SuperSports 600cc Race 1 at The Bend Motorsport Park, Round 2 of the FIM Asia Road Racing Championship, has been deemed cancelled after two separate incidents brought out the red flags twice in the duration of the race.   The original 15-lap race was first red flagged on Lap 3 when race leader Yuki Ito highsided. Ito, fortunately, walked away uninjured by the crash. The 600cc grid re-convened for a shortened 9-lap race but was again interrupted when championship leader Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman took a tumble at the same corner on Lap 3.   Under ARRC regulations, Race 1 is deemed cancelled and no championship points will be awarded.

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ITO IN CHARGE

Yuki Ito and the Yamaha Racing Team Asean has succeeded in their efforts to unlock the true potential of the 2017 Yamaha R6. Ito has been a strong contender throughout the SuperSports 600cc free practice sessions at Round 2 of the ARRC at The Bend Motorsport Park in South Australia. He further sealed his dominance when he took his Yamaha to pole position with a fast lap of 1’56.591s.   In the absence of podium regulars Anthony West and Zaqhwan Zaidi, defending champion Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman saw Round 2 as an opportunity to bend the title chase in his favour. Instead, the Malaysian rider has been facing problems with his Kawasaki and uncharacteristically, qualified only P11 in the Australian round.   West’s super-sub, BSB rider Joseph Francis, proved to be the right choice for team Webike Ikazuchi Racing. The British rider qualified second on the grid with 1’56.690s. Idemitsu Honda Racing  India by T.Pro Ten10’s Taiga Hada slipped into the last position on the front grid. Hada clocked third fastest with 1’56.710s.   Rookie Kasma Daniel Kasmayuddin served up the biggest surprise in the SuperSports 600cc qualifying. After a creditable full-season debut in Thailand, Kasma netted a blazing 1’56.736s to qualify for P4. The young Malaysian rider will lead the second row ahead of seasoned campaigners Tomoyoshi Koyama and Decha Kraisart on P5 and P6 respectively.   Ratthapong Wilairot, Irfan Ardiansyah, Ahmad Yudhistira, and Mohd Ramdan Rosli rounded up the top 10.

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ITO FLIES HIGH

Tyre abrasion was the primary concern among the SuperSports 600cc riders as the first day of free practices concluded for Round 2 at The Bend Motorsport Park. The new track asphalt had proven to be particularly unforgiving.   Nevertheless, competition is still fierce across the grid with a determined Yuki Ito leading the way. The Yamaha Racing Team Asean rider posted 1’57.332s at the top of the timesheets. Also lapping within the same second, are Yamaha Thailand Racing Team duo Decha Kraisart and Keminth Kubo with 1’57.552s and 1’57.964s respectively.   Wildcard Broc Pearson could be a potential podium threat. The Australian rider who is very familiar with the level of competition in the Asia Road Racing Championship, pulled off the fourth fastest time, 1’58.034s. Tomoyoshi Koyama from team MUSASHi Boon Siew Honda logged fifth fastest with 1’58.288s.   The lack of team data at the new circuit is becoming quickly apparent. The first day of practice had brought mixed results among the top 10. Astra Honda Racing Team’s Irfan Ardiansyah was sixth fastest with 1’58.338s. Manual Tech KYT Kawasaki Racing’s Ahmad Yudhistira posted seventh while his defending champion team mate, Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman, clocked a conservative tenth fastest with 1’58.641s.   Malaysian rookie Azroy Hakeem Anuar also produced creditable results, eighth fastest with 1’58.561s. Wildcard Tom Toparis was ninth fastest after the first day of practice.

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BSB RIDER JOE FRANCIS TO REPLACE ANT WEST

British Supersport rider Joe Francis is team Webike IKAZUCHI Racing’s pick to replace the absent Anthony West on the SuperSports 600cc grid.   The 21-year-old Brit has been progressing up the British Superbike Championship ranks in recent years, and finished 7thoverall in the Dickies British Supersport in 2016.   Other riders that were under consideration to fill in for West included the likes of Gino Rea, Augustus Fernandez. photo : joefrancisracing.com

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ZAQHWAN STICKS TO HIS TRAINING GOALS

Mohd Zaqhwan Zaidi will be sticking to his training goals as a scheduling clash between the Asia Road Racing Championship and the All Japan Road Race forces the MUSASHi Boon Siew Honda rider into a catch-22 situation.   However, the team’s directives for Zaqhwan had been clear right from the start of 2018. Zaqhwan’s main focus for 2018 will be the JSB1000 class of the All Japan Road Race. This is considered as training to hone his race craft with the objective of winning the first ASB1000 title when the class is introduced into the ARRC roster in 2019.   Therefore, Zaqhwan will be taking a leave of absence from the Australian grid in Round 2. To uphold team honours in the upcoming race, team MUSASHi Boon Siew Honda will be banking on their latest recruit, Tomoyoshi Koyama who will be flying to Australia fresh from his recent ST600 win in the All Japan’s opening race.   Zaqhwan’s full season debut in the JSB1000 got off to a rocky start at the season opener in Motegi. Qualifying under cold, rainy and slippery conditions was a tough challenge and he was disappointed when he only managed to qualify 28thon the grid. Zaqhwan managed to make up for lost ground during the race as he finished 19thin Race 1 and picked up a couple of points in Race 2 by coming home 14th.

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