Cycle News

Cycle News 2013 Issue 46 November 19 2013

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/213117

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P22 WIND MORE WORLD SUPERBIKE RULE CHANGES A raft of changes to the World Superbike rules for 2014 were brought in recently by Dorna, and communicated via the FIM. While most of the previous ones were technical in nature these are a fundamental change to many sporting aspects of the series. The effective eradication of Superpole qualifying means that there will be a MotoGP style twostage qualifying, with the fastest riders already into it while the mid-pack and tail enders fight it out in qualifying one – and only the best going to the final qualifying session. The new race-day schedule is another big change and will see the first Superbike race taking place at 10:30 a.m. (not noon as in the past), followed by the World Supersport race at 11:40/11:45 or so (not 1:30 as now), the second Superbike race at 1 p.m. – 1:10 (not the always-was-too-late 3:30). With F1 starting at 2 p.m. in Europe this would make sure the second World Superbike race will finish before the TV cov- World Superbike races will start earlier in 2014 and Superpole has also been scrapped in favor of emulating the MotoGP qualifying method. erage would have to change to F1. The Superstock 1000 will be the final race on the day instead of the first and will go off at 2:30 or so. The overarching idea is to get a World Superbike race day finished before the other bigger sports - that would take any available airtime from it - get underway in Europe. Red flagged races will also get restarted sooner, but there are no details on how yet. There will also be a license points penalty system, similar to MotoGP, for riders who break rules on the track. A final meeting of the SBK Commission on December 10 in Madrid will finalize all the details of the 2014 rules and regulations and the finer points of the new Dorna World Superbike way. This meeting will also hear the final inputs on what the exact 'all-Evo' World Superbike rules package set to begin in 2015. Gordon Ritchie DOWNUNDER MOTORSPORTS NEARLY READY T he much-desired Australian dream team that is trying to find a spot in the World Superbike paddock next year is currently being organized by the vastly experienced former Honda and BMW crew chief Tom Larsen. Almost all the elements are in place to compete with two riders in the Evo class in 2014, according to British-based Larsen, who was Troy Corser's crew chief for a time in the official BMW team. One crucial element missing continued on page 24 PHOTOGRAPHY BY GOLD & GOOSE IN THE

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