View Poll Results: Who do you think will win the SBK opening round?

Voters
67. You may not vote on this poll
  • Troy Bayliss

    25 37.31%
  • Lorenzo Lanzi

    1 1.49%
  • Troy Corser

    6 8.96%
  • Noriyuki Haga

    15 22.39%
  • James Toseland

    5 7.46%
  • Karl Muggeridge

    1 1.49%
  • Max Biaggi

    8 11.94%
  • Yukio Kagayama

    1 1.49%
  • Ruben Xaus

    4 5.97%
  • Regis Laconi

    1 1.49%
Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 16 to 26 of 26

Thread: Who will win the SBK opening round?

  1. #16
    Join Date
    19th November 2002 - 08:55
    Bike
    Bikes
    Location
    (hic) Wine (hic) Country
    Posts
    3,037
    It's a reminder that we ALL have differing opinions.

    The KB Poll - it's Bayliss, Haga, Corser and Katayama is the only rider who has not been picked by at least one Kiwi.

    In the CycleWorld Poll: It is still Bayliss, but then (a long way back) it's Biaggi then Corser. Haga is not a favourite in USA? (Maybe they haven't got over Pearl Harbour?)

  2. #17
    Join Date
    17th January 2005 - 12:14
    Bike
    2011 yz450f
    Location
    Featherston
    Posts
    4,025
    well I am sure Bayliss will do extremly well.....
    But its racing anything can happen.


    I also have a good support to Rubeun Xaus that guys the man
    Blindspott are back as Blacklist check them out
    www.blacklistmusicnz.co.nz

  3. #18
    Join Date
    12th September 2003 - 12:00
    Bike
    Katana 750, VOR 450 Enduro
    Location
    Wallaceville, Upper Hutt
    Posts
    5,521
    Blog Entries
    26
    BAYLISS BAYLISS BAYLISS!!!!!


    And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.

    - James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.

  4. #19
    Join Date
    12th January 2004 - 12:00
    Bike
    '87 CR500, '10 RM144
    Location
    'Kura, Auckland, Kiwiland
    Posts
    3,728
    I think Biaggi's got a lot to prove, and despite all the bs about him, he's fuggin fast..........
    Drew for Prime Minister!

    www.oldskoolperformance.com

    www.prospeedmc.com for parts ex U.S.A ( He's a Kiwi! )

  5. #20
    Join Date
    16th September 2004 - 16:48
    Bike
    PopTart Katoona
    Location
    CT, USA
    Posts
    6,542
    Blog Entries
    1
    Haga, cos he gots all da bitches.
    that and he's fricken nuts
    Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.

  6. #21
    Join Date
    12th January 2004 - 12:00
    Bike
    '87 CR500, '10 RM144
    Location
    'Kura, Auckland, Kiwiland
    Posts
    3,728
    Quote Originally Posted by avgas View Post
    Haga, cos he gots all da bitches.
    that and he's fricken nuts
    Haga's my fave too, I just don't think he's up to it straight from the gate.....but give him a round or two
    Drew for Prime Minister!

    www.oldskoolperformance.com

    www.prospeedmc.com for parts ex U.S.A ( He's a Kiwi! )

  7. #22
    Join Date
    12th November 2005 - 11:52
    Bike
    saving
    Location
    Auckland
    Posts
    33
    'nitro nori 'the samuri of slide hehehe cant wait till first race

  8. #23
    Join Date
    17th April 2006 - 05:39
    Bike
    Various things
    Location
    Wellington
    Posts
    14,429
    Race one.... Bayliss
    Kagayama
    Toseland

    Race two... Kagayama (Bayliss will crash out of the lead dicing with him)
    Haga
    Toseland

  9. #24
    Join Date
    19th November 2002 - 08:55
    Bike
    Bikes
    Location
    (hic) Wine (hic) Country
    Posts
    3,037

  10. #25
    Join Date
    19th November 2002 - 08:55
    Bike
    Bikes
    Location
    (hic) Wine (hic) Country
    Posts
    3,037
    http://www.mcnews.com.au/ SBK Preview

    The 20th year of World Superbike action launches this Thursday (racing on Saturday Feb 24) at the Losail circuit in the Middle East’s Qatar, with world champion Australian Troy Bayliss beginning his quest to become just the fourth rider to win successive titles.

    The 37-year-old is currently at the peak of his motorcycle racing powers. Not only is Bayliss the current monarch in World Superbikes, but he also dismantled the field in last year’s final round of the MotoGP title in Spain.

    While ecstatic that he was able to overpower marquee riders like Valentino Rossi and world champion Nicky Hayden, Bayliss has committed to seeing out his road racing career in World Superbike with the slick Ducati operation.

    Bayliss’ current contract will see him through to the end of the 2008 season, where he hopes to join Carl Fogarty on four world titles – as well as eclipsing the Englishman’s tally of 59 World Superbike wins. Bayliss currently sits on 34 victories, one ahead of compatriot Troy Corser.

    Bayliss has been a colossus in pre-season testing, eclipsing the current lap record at all the circuits he has visited: Valencia, Qatar, Phillip Island and, just last week, Vallelunga in Italy.

    However, Monaco-based Bayliss is fully aware that a prolific pre-season means very little in the big picture, and the real action begins with the opening practice session at Losail this Thursday.

    “Testing there (at Losail) in December looked great on paper but if I come onto the straight first and there's anybody within half-a-second, they're going to pass me,” said Bayliss. “I have to make a break and that's very hard to do. You can try as hard as you can to get away, but you chew your tyres up, it's going to be a difficult situation.

    “Although we've basically got the same package as we had last year with a few minor changes, the team has worked really hard on the settings over the winter and we're still confident we can do a good job with what we've got. Pirelli has also worked well and come up with some new tyres, which have gone fantastically well in testing. There’s no doubt we are in a good situation.”

    Bayliss will join a select coterie if he wins successive World Superbike titles in 2007: Americans Fred Merkel (1988-1989) and Doug Polen (1991-1992); and Fogarty (1998-1999).

    Aside from Bayliss, seven other World Superbike winners will be on the grid at Losail, as well as four-time world 250 GP champion Max Biaggi, who replaced Corser at Suzuki at the end of last year.

    Corser, in turn, was only a short-term World Superbike exile before finding incumbency at Yamaha Motor Italia alongside Japan’s Noriyuki Haga – replacing compatriot Andrew Pitt in the process.

    Corser, 35, has won two of the four World Superbike outings at Losail, and he’s certain to again be one of the big guns after a methodical pre-season aboard the latest incarnation of the YZF-R1.

    The Wollongong rider returned to Losail last week to round off his preparations, and managed to iron the last bugs out of the Yamaha’s system.

    "We did enough laps to let us try everything we needed to try and we got all the parts we asked for after the last test,” said Corser. “It was a definite improvement. We just tried different things and weren’t worried about lap times.

    “I’d say the bike feels even better than it did in our last test at Losail. The track surface can change here day to day but the track wasn’t too bad; we just needed a few more bikes going round to put more rubber down."

    There will be three other Aussies in this year’s championship: Gold Coast’s Karl Muggeridge, Melbourne’s Steve Martin and Bringelly’s Josh Brookes.

    Martin’s seventh year in World Superbikes will see him re-unite with the Italian-based DFX Racing, where he spent his first four seasons in the championship. The 38-year-old will be Honda-mounted alongside mercurial Italian Michel Fabrizio, and is ready to circulate at the front on a consistent basis despite an abbreviated pre-season.

    “I would stay home if I didn’t think I could achieve a top five finish as a minimum,” said Martin, whose pre-season has been limited to European outings only. “It’s always difficult to ride a bike at only one circuit especially in the middle of a European winter to learn its intricacies,” said Martin. “Until I get a few races under my belt we won’t see where we are at. This year could be my best chance so I want to make the most of it.”

    Brookes, 22, will remain at Team Bertocchi in 2007, but he too is switching to Honda, from Kawasaki machinery. Muggeridge, the 2004 world Supersport champion, will join Brookes at Bertocchi in what is shaping up as a potent antipodean combination.

    But this year’s title certainly won’t be the sole province of Australian riders, with experienced competition coming from not only the Samurai of Slide, Haga, but also the mega-talented Biaggi, who has been a force in pre-season testing from the get-go; proven race winner Yukio Kagayama (Suzuki); 2004 World Superbike champion Toseland (Honda); ex MotoGP rider Roberto Rolfo (Honda); 11-time race winner Ruben Xaus (Ducati); Bayliss’ Lanzi; Fabrizio; and the pairing of Regis Laconi and Fonsi Nieto now collaborating in a streamlined Kawasaki operation.

    Kagayama and Toseland are the only other riders to have won races at Losail. The 5.380km circuit’s short history certainly appears to bring out the best in the Suzuki, which augers well for Biaggi to make a strong impression in his World Superbike debut.

    This year’s World Superbike grid will feature 22 regular riders, bolstered at several events by wild card entries.

    In the manufacturer stakes, there is a classic name making a full time return to SBK racing for the first time - MV Agusta with Austria's Christian Zaiser on board. The legendary Italian machine, to be campaigned in a low-key privateer effort, will join Yamaha, Ducati, Honda, Suzuki and Kawasaki on the grid. All of them will draw from the same pool of Pirelli control tyres.

    In World Supersport, all the signs point towards a year-long battle of epic proportions between Yamaha-backed Aussie pair Kevin Curtain and Broc Parkes, and Honda teamsters Sebastien Charpentier and Kenan Sofuoglu.

    Charpentier retained his championship in 2006 over Curtain, while Sofuoglu was lightning fast in the second half of the year. Parkes was also a race winner before injury curtailed his challenge.

    The Superbike World Championship will be held over 13 rounds in 2007, including a return to the Donington for the first time since 2001. A new circuit is also on the calendar -- Vallelunga, just outside Rome.

    The local round will be held at Phillip Island next weekend from March 2-4, with a special 20th anniversary celebration planned with some of Australia’s former World Superbike stalwarts.


    FINAL 2006 WORLD SUPERBIKE STANDINGS
    1 Troy Bayliss, Australia, Ducati 431
    2 James Toseland, Great Britain, Honda 336
    3 Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Yamaha 326
    4 Troy Corser, Australia, Suzuki 254
    5 Andrew Pitt, Australia, Yamaha 250
    6 Alex Barros, Brazil, Honda 246
    7 Yukio Kagayama, Japan, Suzuki 211
    8 Lorenzo Lanzi, Italy, Ducati 169
    9 Chris Walker, Great Britain, Kawasaki 158
    10 Fonsi Nieto, Spain, Kawasaki 139
    12 Karl Muggeridge, Australia, Honda 123
    21 Steve Martin, Australia, Petronas 19
    28 Josh Brookes, Australia, Yamaha 3

    2007 WORLD SUPERBIKE CALENDAR

    February 24 Qatar Doha/Losail

    March 4 Australia Phillip Island

    April 1 Europe Donington Park

    April 15 Spain Valencia

    April 29 Netherlands Assen

    May 13 Italy Monza

    May 27 Great Britain Silverstone

    June 17 San Marino Misano

    July 22 Czech Republic Brno

    August 5 Great Britain Brands Hatch

    September 9 Germany Eurospeedway Lausitz

    September 30 Italy Vallelunga

    October 7 France Magny-Cours

  11. #26
    Join Date
    31st January 2006 - 18:39
    Bike
    06 Yammie R1, 07 Husky WR250
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    389
    Haga is looking fast early on:

    http://www.mcnews.com.au/MotorcycleR...d1/sbk_qp1.htm

    Hopefully he'll be able to keep it up!

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •