Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 23 June 9

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

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VOL. 52 ISSUE 23 JUNE 9, 2015 P37 vies on the Aruba.it Ducati by an eventually comfortable four sec- onds. Angered by his bad luck and feeling he could have stayed with Rea, Sykes was ready to give it more in race two. It looked like he and Rea would be dancing partners in their seemingly endless rivalry—a fight made all the more intense by Sykes' double win at Don- ington—but again Sykes had a bizarre gremlin: a damaged rear wheel rim allowing air out of his rear tire. In the dry race two this dropped him from podium to eighth. And even with Aprilia Rac- ing Red Devils' Leon Haslam on the podium in third (after his race one disappointment in the wet), Sykes still moved ahead of Haslam to second in the cham- pionship. A disaster of sorts for Sykes, who eventually laughed off not just half a bad day at the office, but a full double dose of bad luck. "I am putting a brave face on it because it has not been a great day for us," said Sykes. "It was such a shame that we had a small technical issue in race one and then a flat rear tire in race two. In race one the revs dropped for a while and then it cleared again." His teammate may well have won both races on merit in any case, but Sykes was left won- dering "what if" and given his pre-race pace, he had every right to. For Rea, an eventually clear win in race two came after he exercised patience and pushed in the right alchemic ratios that saw him take his fourth double of the year, to add to four sec- ond places to make him only 20 points less than perfect still. Davies teammate Davide Giugliano had a strong start to both races and finished out race two with a second place inher- ited from Sykes misfortunes. The Superpole winner—and the top non-British rider in the champi- onship—was fourth in race one, After falling in the wet in race one and restarting for 12th place, Haslam struck bronze in race two, with a gritty ride against the physical track and the pain of a freshly re-cracked rib, which were only partially healed pre- Portimao. Davies was fourth in race two, while Pata Honda's Sylvain Guintoli and teammate Michael van der Mark were rejuvenated in Portimao. Guintoli was fifth in the flag-to-flag first race, then just behind Van der Mark in race two for sixth place, in a race held entirely in the dry. At the top of the World Super- bike shop, Rea's astounding run of form puts him at 330 points, and Sykes his closest chaser at 206. That is a difference of 124 points, which means almost five races worth of full points scores. Even Rea started speaking about the championship itself after his latest magical day of racing, but ominously for his peers. He sees the best form of defense as attack, so expect more wins or seconds from him at the next round in Misano on June 21. "The points gap is a lot after this round, but I will try to not change the way I am riding," said Rea. Gordon Ritchie Rea extended his points lead to 124—five races worth of full-points scores with six rounds remaining in the championship. PHOTOGRAPHY BY GOLD & GOOSE

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