Manawatu Standard

Rees top in Cemetery Circuit

- ANDY MCGECHAN

There was no stopping Bay of Plenty’s Tony Rees on Whanganui’s famous Cemetery Circuit on Monday.

Rees had started the Suzuki Series’ final round third in the standings, eight points behind the 2016 series leader and defending champion Sloan Frost and five behind visiting Liechtenst­ein rider Horst Saiger, but Whakatane’s Rees was taking no prisoners at the traditiona­l postchrist­mas street fight on Boxing Day.

Rees qualified his Honda CBR1000RR fastest, and gained a valuable bonus point for the effort, then proceeded to bank maximum points by winning both Formula One/superbike races later that afternoon, easily enough for him to surge past both Frost and Saiger in the standings and, for the first time, snatch the series win outright.

To add icing to the cake, Rees then also won the stand-alone Robert Holden Memorial feature race, shattering the track lap record in the process, making it three consecutiv­e victories in this race and a career total of seven Robert Holden race wins.

‘‘I got pole position and three race wins on my way to winning the series. You could say it was a good day at the office,’’ said the 49-year-old Rees afterwards.

‘‘Horst (Saiger) was right behind me in the Robert Holden race and I nearly threw it all away. But I got the job done in the end.’’

Rees won the F1 crown by nine points from Saiger, with Frost forced to settle for third overall, while Taupo’s Scott Moir and Glen Eden’s Daniel Mettam rounded out the top five.

There were further celebratio­ns too in the Tony Rees camp with his youngest son, 21-year-old Damon, doing enough at Whanganui to wrap up the Suzuki Series Formula Two/600 Supersport class title as well.

‘‘This is a first major title win for me,’’ said an elated Damon Rees. ‘‘This is a massive confidence-booster for me ahead of the nationals.’’

Other class winners for the series were Pukerua Bay’s Glen Skachill (F3/sport bikes); Tauranga’s Duncan Hart (super motard); Tauranga’s Colin Macgregor (Bears, non-japanese bikes, seniors); Bulls’ Ashton Hughes (Bears, non-japanese bikes, juniors); Pukerua Bay’s Glen Skachill (Post Classic, Pre-89, senior); Auckland’s Scott Findlay (Post Classic, Pre-89, junior); UK’S John Holden and Tauranga’s Robbie Shorter (sidecars).

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