Whanganui Chronicle

RACE DAYS NOT TO BE MISSED TODAY

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It is certainly another scorching summer of motorcycli­ng this year with the annual Suzuki Internatio­nal Series road-race competitio­n again absolutely swamped with entries. Organiser Allan ‘Flea’ Willacy is overjoyed with the huge interest being shown by riders for the 2020 edition of the series and the action wraps up on the public streets of Whanganui’s famous Cemetery Circuit on

Boxing Day.

This popular three-round series is

New Zealand’s most esteemed motorcycle competitio­n and it has again attracted a huge number of top-calibre riders.

Suzuki’s former national and Suzuki Internatio­nal Series champion in the F1 class, Wellington’s Sloan Frost, Taupo’s Scott Moir, the Suzuki Internatio­nal Series outright winner in 2017 and again in 2018, and Suzuki’s 2019 national superbike champion Daniel Mettam, from Glen Eden.

They will be joined in the Suzuki superbike ranks this year by the

2020 New Zealand Supersport 600 champion from Whanganui, Richie Dibben, and while it’ll be Dibben’s debut on a 1000cc bike, it pays not to ignore the likely threat he’ll pose. Fellow Whanganui rider Jayden Carrick also steps out this year on a Suzuki GSX-R1000 and former 600cc frontrunne­r David Hall, from Te Awamutu, also joins the superbike brigade for the first time, also racing one of the potent GSX-R1000 bikes. Christchur­ch’s Alastair Hoogenboez­em, winner of the superbike class during the COVID-19 pandemic-shortened New Zealand Superbike Championsh­ip series in March, made the trip north to tackle the Suzuki Series again this year and Auckland former national superbike champion Jaden Hassan rejoins the fray after a five-year hiatus. Whakatane’s Damon Rees will make a welcome return to New Zealand after a successful 2020 season spent racing the British Superbike Championsh­ips in the superstock class.

Damon’s elder brother, Mitch Rees, and their father, Tony Rees – the multi-time national superbike champion who was Suzuki Internatio­nal Series champion in 2016 – are also entered for 2020 and that will stir up the action even further.

The Suzuki Internatio­nal Series also offers races for Formula Two (600 Supersport), Formula Three, Supersport 300, Post Classics (pre-89), BEARS (non-japanese bikes), sports bikes, super motard bikes and sidecars, so there’s no shortage of on-track action.

As always, the third and final round of the series, on the public streets of Whanganui’s world-renowned Cemetery Circuit on Boxing Day (December 26), will bring fans the excitement and closeness that only street racing can deliver.

The 1.6-kilometre course comprises eight corners, a railway crossing, an over-bridge and blind s-bends, flanked either side by headstones.

This is a venue unrivalled almost anywhere in the world, a place where more than 10,000 spectators cram every nook and cranny as bikes race past almost within touching distance. Riders can’t believe it and spectators love it.

You have to be there on Boxing Day to see who takes out the series overall and, of course, to witness who claims the most sought-after, one-off Robert Holden Memorial Feature race trophy.

By Andy Mcgechan, www.bikesportn­z.com

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