Suzuki Tri-Series - Wanganui race report
Friday 28 December: Underground Brown Suzuki GSXR1000 rider Dennis Charlett won the 2012 Suzuki Tri-Series at his first attempt on a Superbike, at Wanganui on Boxing Day.
Based in Christchurch, Charlett rode consistently throughout the three round series but needed to protect a slim seven point lead from Sloan Frost (Wellington, Valvoline BMW S1000RR) heading into the final round at the famous Cemetery Circuit.
The
experienced campaigner did exactly what he needed to do by finishing
each of the two Formula One races directly behind the flying Frost, who
himself needed Charlett to finish lower down the order to have a shot at
the coveted F1 crown. With Frost third and second in each race, fourth
and fifth placings were enough for Charlett to win the 2012 Suzuki
Tri-Series on a hot sunny day, with intermittent rain.
Charlett
sums up his victory, "It was awesome - my Underground Brown Suzuki ran
well all day. My plan for this event was if I can beat Sloan [Frost]
easily enough I would have beaten him, but it not I only needed to be
just behind him, and that is what I did. I had an enjoyable day’s
racing!
"I
had a few set-up problems because I haven’t been here on a Superbike
before and Robert Taylor from Ohlins worked through that, so by the last
race I knew all I had to do was finish behind Sloan Frost to take the
championship.
"I’m really lucky to be riding a Superbike this year, Suzuki NZ have been fantastic with help to me.”
Fastest
qualifier and double F1 race winner for the day was Red Devil Racing
Kawasaki ZX-10R rider Nick Cole, who proved impossible to beat around
the Cemetery Circuit. Since stepping up to a Superbike two years ago the
Hamilton rider had been threatening to take a big win in the premier
class at Wanganui, although he had to come through a strong field from a
slow start in race one before pulling away. Cole grabbed the holeshot
in race two and was never headed until the chequered flag eight 50
second laps later.
Heavy
rain late in the day prevented the final BEARS race, and the Robert
Holden Memorial feature - a coveted race win which must have been within
Cole’s grasp.
Cole
said after his wins, "I came here knowing I could win, I just had to
put the pieces of the puzzle together really. I went out as the fastest
qualifier, I won the first race with the fastest lap, and I won the
second race, so it can’t get much better than that!

Nick Cole leads race two at Wanganui on his Kawasaki. Photo - Terry Stevenson
"In
the second race I got the holeshot, that was my first in years! I got
the lead and just had to hold it. Sloan was coming at me the last few
laps but I didn’t need to push.
We've been working big hours to get me out on the track, so to win for them is
great. My Pirelli tyres proved again they are as good as anything else
out there, so we came home with some wins for them.”
Valvoline
BMW S1000RR racer Sloan Frost (Wellington) clocked the fastest time of
the day, however he had troubles with the traction control system on his
Valvoline BMW during the opening race so he turned the electronics off
for race two. By day’s end Charlett was only three points ahead of the
persistent BMW rider.
After
finishing third in race one behind Hayden Fitzgerald (New Plymouth,
Suzuki NZ GSXR1000), who put in his best ever ride at Wanganui, Frost
explains how the title chase played out in race two.
"I
got a shocking start so I had my work cut out, I was back in sixth. It
took me until the second to last lap or so to get in behind Nick [Cole]
so I was trying to catch him, because that was the title basically.
Dennis followed me as I went past people so he knew he just had to
follow me, and consistency paid off for him at the end of the day. I
wasn’t getting very good drive off the corners so I was doing all I
could to block him out.
"I’m
disappointed to be second but congratulations to Dennis. He just rode
smart and has won so many championships he knows how to do it, and that
is something for me to learn. Given the accident I had at the start
[Hampton Downs] I couldn’t be happier.”
Fitzgerald
was third in the F1 title chase on a Suzuki GSXR1000, just three points
ahead of a consistent Ray Clee (Kumeu, RCM Suzuki Superbike), with
CBR1000RR riders Ryan Hampton (Christchurch, Hampton Honda) and Tony
Rees (Castrol Honda) fifth and sixth in the championship. Hampton and
Rees held second and third in the second stanza until fading to finish
fourth and fifth as the title battle raged around them. Rees also lead
race one for several laps during his first race in ten years at the
Cemetery Circuit!
Formula Two:
Aucklander Jaden Hassan won his first major title by a mere nine points from Wanganui’s Jayden Carrick.
Hassan
was unbeatable in the previous two Suzuki Tri-Series rounds in the F2
class and enjoyed a healthy 30 point lead over Carrick at Wanganui, who
inherited second because Jeremy Holmes did not compete at the Cemetery
Circuit. But Hassan, 18, had never ridden the tricky street circuit and
had his work cut out to retain his lead, a situation made worse due to a
wet practice session.
Carrick,
of Wanganui, has been riding at another level this summer and thrilled
his 10,000 home race fans with a brilliant race one victory on his
Suzuki GSXR600. Adam Chambers (Hawkes Bay, Honda CBR600RR) and another
local, Ashley Payne, on a Triumph 675, completed the podium.
Christchurch
rider Seth Devereux held second position early in the race, however the
more experienced riders pushed the Kawasaki ZX-6R exponent to fourth by
race end.
Hassan tried his best but could only muster 13th
position, which meant the Home Buyers Reports Yamaha NZ R6 rider was
under immense pressure to finish in the top ten in the next heat, if
Carrick repeated his win.
Rain
however became the deciding factor as Payne won a wet race two to take
his first big win, with John Oliver (Bulls, Honda CBR600RR) second and
Daniel Ormsby (Oxford, Yamaha R6) third.
German
Thomas Kreutz enjoyed his F2 racing in NZ, and at Wanganui with a
fourth in race one. Hassan tried his best in the difficult and slippery
conditions which included slippery railway tracks, steel manhole covers
and wet white lines. He crossed the line 15th, while Carrick encountered the same issues and finished 11th, allowing Hassan to a title well earned.
Hassan
has now been invited to race in the 2013 German Superbike Championship
with support from Thomas Kreutz and his Yamaha motorcycle shop, near
Frankfurt.
Hassan
said, "It would have been good to wrap it up with a couple of wins,
like we did over the last few weeks, but realistically in my first time
here and with the weather, it was never going to happen. I was
uncomfortable on the bike and thrown in the deep end with the weather
but we managed to bring it home, I didn’t fall off the bike and I got
the championship.”
Supermoto:
Wanganui’s Richard Dibben held off a strong
title challenge from Duncan Hart, of Tauranga, who won both heats on his
Yamaha YZF450. After a race long duel with several riders Dibben was
second on a Honda CRF450 in the first race, ahead of Toby Summers
(Auckland, Yamaha YZF450), and his third place in race two behind Hart
and Scott Moir (Taupo, Honda CRF450) helped to sew up his first Suzuki
Tri-Series title.
Formula Three:
Glen
Williams wrapped up the Formula Three and Pre ’89 Post Classic titles
on his Suzuki SV650 and Bimota YB8 motorcycles, respectively.
Scott
Moir won both F3 races on his RS450 at Wanganui, however he was not in
the hunt for the series title due to a pair of non finishes at Manfeild
during round two. Williams crossed the Cemetery Circuit finish line
second on each occasion, with Neil Chappell taking third in the first
leg, and Jason Nairn third in the second leg on his SV650.
Pre '89:
Eddie
Kattenberg came very close to snatching the Pre ’89 championship at
Wanganui. The Yamaha FZR1000 rider lead the class going into the final
round but finished both races in sixth position, which allowed Williams
to overtake Kattenberg when he won the second race as the rain began
pouring down.
Hamiltonian
Jay Lawrence took a fine first in the opening leg and was second,
behind Williams, in race two. Steve Bridge of Ngaruawahia was second and
third in each heat on his Ducati TT2 900.
Lawrence
rode extraordinarily well on a GSX1100 but did not compete in the other
two Suzuki Tri-Series rounds so did not feature in the final points.
Suzuki RG500 racer and international California Superbike School
instructor Damian Mackie ended the series in third place.
BEARS:
Rhys
Holmes went home happy after capturing the BEARS title on a BMW
S1000RR, after the second race was cancelled due to heavy rain. Riding
similar machines and reflecting the close nature of the racing, Sloan
Frost completed the series just three points adrift, with Travis Moan
only two points further back. Local Wanganui rider Ashley Payne was
third in the race on a Triumph 675.
Results: 2012 Suzuki Tri-Series, Wanganui, Wednesday 26 Dec:
Formula
1, race 1: Nick Cole (Hamilton, Red Devil Racing Kawasaki ZX-10R), 1;
Hayden Fitzgerald (New Plymouth, Suzuki NZ GSXR1000), 2; Sloan Frost
(Wellington, Valvoline BMW S1000RR), 3; Dennis Charlett (Christchurch,
Underground Brown Suzuki GSXR1000), 4; Tony Rees (Whakatane, Honda
CBR1000), 5; Ray Clee (Kumeu, RCM Suzuki Superbike), 6.
Formula 1, race 2: Cole, 1; Frost, 2; Charlett, 3; Ryan Hampton
(Christchurch, Hampton Honda CBR1000RR), 4; Rees, 5; Fitzgerald, 6.
Formula
1 final series points: Dennis Charlett, 120; Sloan Frost 117; Hayden
Fitzgerald, 106; Ray Clee, 103; Ryan Hampton, 85; Tony Rees, 84.
Formula
2, race 1: Jayden Carrick (Wanganui, Suzuki GSXR600), 1; Adam Chambers
(Hawkes Bay, Honda CBR600RR), 2; Ashley Payne (Wanganui, Triumph 675),
3; Thomas Kreutz (Germany, Yamaha NZ R6), 4; John Oliver (Bulls, Honda
CBR600RR), 5; Seth Devereux (Christchurch, Kawasaki ZX-6R), 6.
Formula
2, race 2: Payne, 1; Oliver, 2; Daniel Ormsby (Oxford, Yamaha R6), 3;
Devereux, 4; Rhys Holmes (Katikati, Yamaha R6), 5; David Hall (Te
Awamutu, Suzuki GSXR600), 6.
Formula
2 final series points: Jaden Hassan, 116; Jayden Carrick, 107; Thomas
Kreutz, 85; Seth Devereux, 83; Toby Summers, 78, Adam Chambers, 77.
Formula
3, race 1: Scott Moir (Taupo, RS450), 1; Glen Williams (Palmerston
North, Suzuki SV650), 2; Neil Chappell (Feilding, ZX650R), 3; Gavin
Veltmeyer (New Windsor, Suzuki SV650), 4; Jason Nairn (New Plymouth,
Suzuki SV650), 5; Gareth Easter (Lower Hutt, GSXR450), 6.
Formula 3, race 2: Moir, 1; Williams, 2; Nairn, 3; Veltmeyer, 4; Easter, 5; Craig Sergeant (Waipukurau, KTM Duke 690), 6.
Formula
3 final series points: Glen Williams, 141; Gavin Veltmeyer, 106; Scott
Moir, 100; Gareth Easter, 83; Chris Osborne, 74; Terry Fitzgerald, 73.
Supermoto
race 1: Duncan Hart (Tauranga, Yamaha YZF450), 1; Richard Dibben
(Wanganui, Honda CRF450), 2; Toby Summers (Auckland, Yamaha YZF450), 3;
Casey Bullock (Taupo, KTM 450SMR), 4; Steven Croad (Auckland, CRF450),
5; Ben Dowman (Wanganui, CRF450), 6.
Supermoto race 2: Hart, 1, Scott Moir (Taupo, Honda CRF450), 2; Dibben
3; Glen Haden (Wanganui, Honda CRF450), 4; Summers, 5; Bullock, 6.
Supermoto final series points: Richard Dibben, 134; Duncan Hart, 132; Toby Summers, 112; Scott Moir, 107; Glen Haden, 95.
Post
Classic Pre ’89 race 1: Jay Lawrence (Hamilton, GSX1100), 1; Steve
Bridge (Ngaruawahia, Ducati TT2 900), 2; Glen Williams (Palmerston
North, Bimota YB8 1000), 3; Bernard Ryan, (Moto Guzzi Le Mans), 4; John
Reid (Huntly TZ250), 5; Eddie Kattenberg (Hawkes Bay, Yamaha FZR1000),
6.
Post
Classic Pre ’89 race 2: Williams, 1; Lawrence, 2; Bridge, 3; Ryan, 4;
Sean Donnelly (Paraparaumu, GPZ1170), 5; Kattenberg, 6.
Post Classic Pre ’89 final series points: Glen Williams, 122; Eddie
Kattenberg, 121; Damian Mackie, 102; Paul Wootton, 97; Terry Moran, 57;
Mark Hay, 49; Sean Donnelly, 46; Andrew Skelton, 46.
BEARS
race 1: Sloan Frost (Wellington, Valvoline BMW S1000RR), 1; Rhys Holmes
(Katikati, BMW S1000RR), 2; Ashley Payne (Wanganui, Triumph 675), 3;
Mark Perry (Palmerston North, Aprilia RSV1000), 4; Dave Oliver
(Brisbane, Aprilia VDB550), 5; Brett Gray (Palmerston North, Triumph
Daytona 675), 6.
BEARS
final series points: Rhys Holmes, 106; Sloan Frost, 103; Travis Moan
(Auckland, BMW S1000RR), 101; Richard Taylor (Wellington, BMW S1000RR),
89; Nick Prestige (Hawera, Ducati 1098R), 72; Jamie Galway (Masterton,
Triumph Daytona 675), 65.
F1
Sidecars race 1: Adam Unsworth/Stu Dawe (Auckland, Windle F1), 1;
Michael Wolland/Maxine Skilton (Masterton, Derbyshire 1000), 2; Chris
Lawrance/Richard Lawrance (Auckland, Anderson R1), 3; John
Blaymires/Charles Bilby (Te Puke, Shelbourne GSXR600), 4; Andy
Scrivener/Steve Bryan (Taupo, Sowersby Hayabusa), 5; Darren Pate/Karl
Verdellen (Katikati, Kawasaki), 6.
F1
Sidecars race 2: Unsworth/Dawe, 1; Wolland/Skilton, 2;
Blaymires/Bilby, 3; Tracey Bryan/Jo Mickleson (Tauranga, Yamaha
DMR600), 4; Des James/Warren Miller (Auckland, Applecross, GSXR), 5;
Corey Winter/Tim Shepherd (Wanganui, DMR Suzuki 600), 6.
F1
Sidecars points: Unsworth/Dawe 51; Wolland/Skilton, 44;
Blaymires/Bilby, 38; Bryan/Mickleson, 32; James/Miller, 29;
Pate/Verdellen, 29.
Sidecar
Classics race 1: John Blaymires/Charles Bilby (Te Puke/Wanganui,
MotoGuzzi 850T), 1; Robert Hood/Mark Thompson (Wanganui, Norton Commando
920), 2; Mark Smith/Sid Sutherland (Carterton), 3; Peter Andrews/Shayne
Perry (Wanganui, Triumph Bonneville 750), 4; Neville Mickleson/Jo
Mickleson (Hamilton, Matchless G12 800), 5; Gordon McKewon/Warwick
Demmocks (Tauranga, BMW R90s), 6.
Sidecar
Classics race 2: Blaymires/Bilby, 1; Mickleson/Mickleson, 2;
Smith/Sutherland, 3; Bruce Williamson/Julie Loveridge (Whanganui,
Triumph T110) 4; McKewon/Demmocks, 5; Basil Craig/Dave Dibben
(Hastings, Triumph 73), 6.
Classic
Sidecars points: Blaymires/Bilby, 51; Smith/Sutherland, 40;
Mickleson/Mickleson, 38; Williamson/Loveridge, 32; McKeown/Demmocks, 31;
Craig/Dibben, 28.
Classic Solos race 1: Bernard Ryan (Moto Guzzi Le Mans), 1;
Hayden Fitzgerald (New Plymouth, 1958 Matchless G50), 2; Peter Tanner
(Palmerston North, Norton Manx 630), 3; Dave Cole (New Plymouth,
Matchless McIntyre 500), 4; Warren Marsh (Napier, Norton Manx 500) 5;
David Hall (Te Awamutu, Norton 500 1962), 6.
Classics Solos race 2: Tanner, 1; Cole, 2; Ryan, 3; Marsh, 4; Fitzgerald, 5; Hall, 6.
Classics Solos points: Ryan, 46; Tanner, 45; Cole, 40; Fitzgerald, 38, Marsh, 34; Hall, 30.
Copy Terry Stevenson. Sorry but internet at Cooks Beach is too slow for the photos.