Suzuki Road Racing Series showdown on Boxing Day
Tuesday 22 December:  Whanganui hosts the final round of the 2015 Suzuki Series on Saturday and it may be one of the greatest showdowns in Cemetery Circuit history.  Words & photos by Terry Stevenson.
 
The gloves are off on Boxing 
Day. It is Kawasaki vs Suzuki, Liechtenstein vs New Zealand, Horst 
Saiger's Red Devil's Racing team vs Sloan Frost's Fujitsu TSS Red Baron 
Suzuki NZ team, and international pride vs kiwi passion.
Both riders are equal on 91 points in the premier Suzuki F1
 Superbike class. Saiger of Liechtenstein, and Wellington's Sloan Frost 
lead the Suzuki Series and a small error of judgment or a simple slip on
 a white line could decide who becomes champion. 
However,
 if both riders take a win and a second place in the two points races 
(or remain equal on points by day's end), then Saiger will take his 
second Suzuki Series championship back to Europe on account he would 
have more victories than Frost. 
Which
 makes it even more important that Frost finishes ahead of Saiger in 
both legs if he wants to win the title, and the Wellingtonian is going 
all-out for series victory on Boxing Day.
"Usually
 I don't do a lot of preparation for Whanganui because I don't really 
try that hard, thinking about the nationals. But this year we are going 
to do the best we can so we're going to Whanganui with the intention of 
winning!" Frost says. "Robert Taylor has put in a Nitron rear shock 
which is working better than the Ohlins, so we're putting more of an 
effort in than we have in the past and hopefully come away with a win.
"On
 those tight streets it's down to how you qualify. You don't get much 
time on the track so I need to go fast straight up, and that's what is 
difficult about it."
Horst Saiger & Sloan Frost are equal on points in F1 Superbike.
The
 more experienced Saiger has raced at the Isle of Man, Macau, the 
Northwest 200, and the Ulster GP road circuits, and has other ideas 
where the title will go, "It is perfect for the championship as we are 
equal with the points. It is also perfect for Whanganui, so there's no 
silly game or anything, just full gas!" The defending champion says, who
 only recorded one top-five finish in the two championship heats last 
year.  
"It
 is not too bad, I did the fastest lap of the whole meeting but I 
couldn't manage to pass the other guys as I was a little bit over the 
limit of the tyres. I preferred to sit on the bike (not crash), so I 
just didn't win there." 
With
 all their skill and bravery there are a number of other riders capable 
of beating the pair of them, Jayden Carrick is a local Whanganui rider 
and he'll have the bit between his teeth after missing both previous 
rounds due to a practice crash at Hampton Downs. At Whanganui last year 
Carrick recorded a second and fourth on his Physiotherapy Hand Clinic GSXR1000, so he is good for the task at hand. 
Whakatane
 Honda rider Tony Rees took a valiant opening race win then finished 
second to Taupo's Scott Moir on his Penny Homes GSXR1000 in the second 
leg. Either of these riders are capable of winning outright on judgment 
day. Moir finished runner-up in the 2014 Suzuki Series, and Rees was 
third. 
Moir says, "I want to take the overall win this year - that is the plan!" 
Last year's F2 600 champion Toby Summers will be racing his Barnes
 Jenkins Insurance Kawasaki ZX-10R for the first time in the Suzuki 
Series, and is fast enough to be a deciding factor for the eventual 
title holder if his day goes to plan
Honda Rider Insurance CBR1000RR mounted Rees won the Robert
 Holden Memorial Feature race last year, his fifth since 1990, and he is
 currently riding better than ever. This is the race everyone wants to 
win to have their name engraved on one of the most treasured trophies in
 motorcycling. With names such as Rod Coleman (1952, '53, '54 & 
'56), Bob Coleman (1956), Ginger Molloy (1968 & '71), Pat Hennen 
(1974, '75 & '76), John Woodley (1978), who is back racing this year
 in the BEARS class, Dave Hiscock (1981 & '83), Bob Toomey (1982 
& '87), and Jason McEwen (1988, '94, '96 & '98) to name a few. 
And of course the late Robert Holden himself, who won the feature event 
five times. 
Rees
 says, "So long as the bike is good when we pull it out of the van we 
might be in the hunt. I've been there - done that, I've won it five 
times now (Robert Holden Memorial) and I'll always have a go, but I'm 
only doing this because I like riding motorbikes."  
		
		
		
		
		
Tony Rees leads Scott Moir in F1 Superbike Race 2. 
Huge interest will be on the Nationwide Accessories F2
 600 class, presently lead by Motorad Kawasaki ZX-6R-mounted Shane 
Richardson, of Wellington, who also rode very well last year at 
Whanganui. 
"I
 lead a big portion of the first race and ended up second to Adam 
Chambers, and then in the second race I made a mistake trying to pass 
around the outside and I ended up in the air fence!" Richardson recalls.
 
"I'm 
going to do what I have to do! It's good going there with a buffer (nine
 points) and not having to push to claw it back, I'll just go out there 
and maintain it, and not crash. I'm looking forward to it as I love the 
street circuits with all the bumps."
Aucklander
 Daniel Mettam (RCM Suzuki NZ GSXR600) is only nine points behind 
Richardson in the title chase but will need to be at the top of his game
 coming off a shoulder injury following his Manfeild crash. 
Swiss
 rider Roman Stamm (Red Devils Racing ZX-6R) also hopes to make a return
 after his own high-speed Manfeild practice crash, and with his 
incredible experience should not be discounted to win during his debut 
visit to the Cemetery Circuit.
Other
 riders to watch include Whakatane’s Damon Rees (Honda Rider Insurance 
CBR600RR) who is only 2.5 points behind Mettam, a fast improving Adam 
Chambers (Wolfpack Racing Honda CBR600RR), Steve Bridge of Ngaruawahia 
(F1E Motorcycle Works Kawasaki ZX-6R), or Connor London who lies fifth 
in series on his WIL Sport GSXR600. 
Multi-world sidecar champion and Isle of Man TT winner Tim Reeves remains unbeaten in the Quality Inn
 F1 Sidecar class on the Carl Cox Motorsport E-Aide LCR and has 
shattered the lap records at Hampton Downs and Manfeild. Although he 
will have a new passenger in Robbie Shorter, chances are the famous 
Cemetery Circuit will be no different for the Briton. 
The
 Cemetery Circuits bumps, white lines nor manhole covers seem to worry 
Reeves because he’s done it all before. "I'm not going to go and look at
 it beforehand, we'll just get down there and run out - I'm sure it will
 be fine."  
There
 are however several New Zealand riders capable of preventing a clean 
sweep at Whanganui by the 2014 World Sidecar champion. Second in the 
title chase with four second placings is the Shuzi LCR-mounted 
Waikato/Bay of Plenty pairing of Aaron Lovell and Tracey Bryan.
"All
 we can do is to try and get the holeshot and not ride defensively, 
because you don't race properly that way, just try to keep in front. If 
we can get the holeshot we will brake as late as we can and go as hard 
as we can." Lovell says, who will need to get a top qualifying position 
if he wants the holeshot. "It's the inside line that we need, so pole 
would be good there." 
		
		
		
Adam Unsworth leads Aaron Lovell & Spike Taylor at Manfeild.
The
 former Whanganui-based but now Auckland-domiciled duo of Adam Unsworth 
and Stu Dawe have become crowd favourites, and have lead many races at 
the Cemetery Circuit.
Unsworth
 says, "I've been pushing my Eni Windle sidecar around Whanganui for 
eight years now so it's a totally different set-up for Whanganui, 
suspension, steering geometry, everything changes because it's just so 
bumpy. 
"We've
 had lots of seconds and thirds there, we won last year, and my opinion 
is you've got to be at least on the first two rows to have a chance of 
winning. If you are third or further back it's very difficult to make up
 ground. 
"I
 don't think anything is a challenge to Tim, he's just a class act! The 
lap record is going to go for sure, unless it rains, which will change 
things dramatically.
Other
 contenders include Masterton’s Spike Taylor and Astrid Hartnell, who 
are third in the Suzuki Series, and the Perth pairing of Des Harvey and 
Dirk Jeal may also come into their own due to having a more specialist 
'short' sidecar for Whanganui. 
The ACC "Ride Forever"
 F3 category has provided some of the closest racing this series, 
however when it comes to taking the chequered flag, no one has crossed 
the finish line yet before Leigh Tidman on his Yamaha RS450, of 
Taumarunui. 
Richard Dibben, of Whanganui, has won all his Edmonds Painting
 Supermoto races and leads his class by 18 points from Tauranga's Duncan
 Hart and Reporoa rider Casey Bullock, so the battle for second will be 
the positions to watch. 
Feilding's John Oliver holds a 14 point lead on his BMW S1000RR to local rider Dwayne Bishop (Aprilia RSV4) in the Q-west Boat Builders BEARS
 category. Keep a look out for a red MV Agusta F4 1000 with the letter W
 on it, as 1978 feature race winner John Woodley recreates history just 
by competing again. 
Te Awanga racer Eddie Kattenberg (Yamaha FZ1000) leads Aucklander Paul Russell (Suzuki GSXR1100) in the Lyndsay Tait & Associates Post Classics Pre ‘89 class by 14 points, while in the Junior section Hamilton's Shane Lawrey (Yamaha FZR600) has a ten point lead to Wellington racer Terry Moran on his Kawasaki ZZR600.
Words & photos by Terry Stevenson