He posted a video on his youtube channel. He said he had a puncture hole in his left arm from his get off and wasn't able to bend his arm with busting the stitching open. He plans to ride tomorrow if he isn't bleeding through his leathers.
Anyone up to watch superpole ? I can't find anywhere it's getting broadcast. Is it on any of the Eurosport channels. Guess I'll watch the timing data on the wsbk homepage.
http://superbike.perugiatiming.com/ six minutes remaining in Superpole 2.. a red DEL means that lap doesn't count, usually because of a cut course. Fairly common at Monza.. -jim
Biaggi takes pole position. His last lap was unreal. 1'41.745 I don't think anyone else got under 1'42, although Haslam and Biaggi had a 1'42.1xx lap in the second session. edit: make that the first session.
Davis in first with 15 minutes to go... He has about .5 seconds on second... AND OVER A SECOND ON THIRD... This should be an interesting race for pole Go Chaz!!!
Damn, just clicked on that to see live timing for the Superstock 600 race. They should just rename it the R6 Cup. 16 of 20 bikes in the field are Yamaha R6's.
Monza curcuit? After over a decade of watching international racing, I am making a concerted effort to familiarize myself with various tracks, and how they merit for 2-wheeled racing. Given that, what is the groups opinion of Monza? It seems like a simple layout, very hard on the right side of tires, and interestingly has three chicanes breaking up what would otherwise be largely one long set of sweeping rights. The setting looks really nice, lots of forest, an interesting integration with an oval (the oval above the roadcourse between 6 and 7), and a fanbase likely to include some hot Milanese models...well, it seems promising. What sayeth y'all?
I think the Parabolica is possibly my favorite corner to watch in all motorcycle championships, but that track is really a design of from different time.
Monza provides some of the best racing ever. Its one of my favorites. How it looks on paper, and how it translates to racing are 2 completely different things... ask Tilke haha Monza, Assen, Spa, Magny Cours... most any of the post-WWII/pre-Tilke tracks are awesome. BSB has some of the best shit ever as well.
Well, I learned something today. When they homologated it for Formula One in 1989, I thought it was a new circuit. But it had only been extensively improved.
Its interesting to see how relatively poorly the paper schematic translates into understanding the way a course actually gets ridden, and what that means for racing action. Whenever the races go to tracks I have ridden/raced on (Miller, Laguna) its so much more compelling. You know exactly where the riders are from the various camera shots, and what is coming up next. Makes following the races a lot more engaging. Thus, I need to study more. Too bad I am too old to do the computer gaming thing Given Papa's statement about the Parabolica, I am at least looking forward to tomorrow.
And Monza was originally built in 1922... Going to be chatting with James Whitham who's at Monza covering from Eurosport 2 in an hour or so. He *loves* Monza... -jim
I thought about it some more after I posted that, and I realized I forgot a corner at Phillip Island that also produces amazing slides. But the thing about the Parabolica is the speed they carry by the time the reach the halfway point with the rear wheel spinning. It's just a thing of beauty. Watching Haga highside a R1 there is one of the most spectacular things anyone will see done on two wheels.