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  • WorldSBK: Rivals fall short as Bulega aces Aragon

    WorldSBK: Rivals fall short as Bulega aces Aragon

    Despite spending most of the Tissot Superpole Race in fourth and teammate Iker Lecuona keeping him honest in the final race, Nicolo Bulega asserted his dominance over the 2026 season once again at the Aragon Round.


    Race 1

    Bulega kept Lecuona at bay at the start and would continue to do so for the rest of Race One.  Just behind, Sam Lowes lost out to his brother Alex but by the start of the next tour was back in front.

    37-year-old Tommy Bridewell ran in fifth and did a great job to repel Lorenzo Baldassari until the end.  Behind came Yari Montella and Axel Bassani.

    These top eight positions would remain the same throughout the race.  BMW stand-in Hannes Soomer retired early as did Alvaro Bautista with brake problems.

    Four Yamaha bikes were racing each other until Andrea Locatelli crashed out at turn 14 early on.  The bike slid past the apex of the following corner but thankfully was avoided by those behind.

    Garret Gerloff, Tarran Mackenzie and the other BMW substitute Michael van der Mark disposed of the remaining Yamahas who continued to fall down the order.  Meanwhile, Bulega took a controlled victory from pole for 20 consecutive race wins and looked in little doubt to extend that run on Sunday.

    Race 1 Results

    Image Credit: WorldSBK

     

    Tissot Superpole Race

    Alberto Surra was this time able to start from where he qualified on the front row after a penalty in Race One.  Surra would make it into second on the first lap as Bulega (electing for a harder rear tyre than most) ran wide on the exit of the first corner and Lecuona took the lead.

    Surra pressured Lecuona for the lead and he snatched it briefly on lap two while further back Locatelli and Mackenzie took each other out on lap two as Bulega fell behind Sam Lowes to fourth.  Sam made it into the lead on lap three with an aggressive move that was so harsh on Lecuona he let him straight back through.

    The action was thrilling with Bulega still trapped in fourth and for the first time all year there was a lead pack of several bikes.  Sam moved cleanly in front at the start of lap five but Bulega had started to recover by this stage.

    Although Bulega made it into the lead on lap six he lost it twice as Lecuona, Sam Lowes and even Lorenzo Baldassri got involved for the win before crashing out on the penultimate tour.  By lap eight Bulega looked to have asserted himself but Lecuona sneaked by again at turn 15 then the positions changed back once more and were not settled until the final lap in the former’s favour.

    Tissot Superpole Race Results

    Image Credit: WorldSBK

     

    Race 2

    After easily the best WorldSBK race of 2026 earlier in the day when Bulega looked vulnerable on a harder tyre (that ultimately still paid off), hopes were high for Race Two.  Lecuona edged ahead briefly at the last corner on the opening lap but Bulega nonetheless controlled the pace to land a 22nd consecutive victory.

    Baldassari and Vierge crashed at turn one and Soomer slid out early on just as he had in Race One.  Sam Lowes ran safely in third as his brother Alex repelled Surra and his teammate Bassani for fourth.

    Bridewell was the meat in a Barni Spark Ducati sandwich while Gerloff and van der Mark ran behind them in the same pack.  Meanwhile, Mackenzie circulated 12th ahead of trio of despondent Yamaha’s and Chantra secured a point in 15th due to attrition while his teammate Jake Dixon’s comeback was cut short as he was ruled out of competing on Sunday.

    Surra slid back to seventh and Bridewell to ninth as Montella retired after a crash at turn nine but his teammate Bautista at least made progress.  The biggest mover though was Gerloff who followed Bautista climbing through the lower top ten positions and after a great battle prevailed for sixth.

    Race 2 Results

    Image Credit: WorldSBK

    Championship Standings

    Image Credit: WorldSBK

    Feature Image Credit: WorldSBK

     

     

  • WorldSBK: 0.030s separate top 2 in titanic Aragon Race 1 battle

    WorldSBK: 0.030s separate top 2 in titanic Aragon Race 1 battle

    Having never won at this circuit before, Toprak Razgatlioglu extended his winning run to 13 races in the Superbike World Championship after an incredible duel with resurgent polesitter Nicolo Bulega in Race 1 at the Tissot Aragon Round.

    With Bulega starting on pole position with a new lap record and Ducati historically holding the upper hand in Aragon, hopes were high that Razgatlioglu would finally be denied as he steamrolls his way to a third WorldSBK title.  What ensued under the Spanish sunshine was a thrilling battle that lasted the entire length of the race as 2025’s main protagonists chopped and changed positions throughout and were never more than 1 second apart for the entire 18 laps.

    The general pattern was that Bulega would get a much better exit from the long final corner of turn 16 to get close to Razgatlioglu by turn 1, then the latter would be stronger through the middle of the lap.  While the top-2 in the championship did battle, Sam Lowes was in close attendance right behind the pair.

    This pattern first occurred at the end of the 1st and start of the 2nd lap after Razgatlioglu had stolen the lead on lap 1.  Then it happened again at the end of the 2nd lap and the start of the 3rd.  Two laps later and again, Bulega slingshotted into the lead at turn 1 before he ran wide at the tight chicane at turns 14/15 to allow Razgatlioglu back through – then Bulega was ahead again by the next time they reached turn 1.

    By the halfway stage of the race Razgatlioglu had edged ever so slightly clear of Bulega while it looked as if Danilo Petrucci, Alvaro Bautista and Alex Lowes were starting to close up to the top 3.  Ultimately, home hero Bautista crashed out with 6 laps to go from 5th place while Petrucci and Alex Lowes stabilised their respective positions of 4th for the former and an inherited 5th for the latter.

    Behind them, the two Andrea’s were battling over 6th with Iannone passing Locatelli in the 2nd half of the race.  Behind them came Axel Bassani from 23rd on the grid after being penalised earlier, with the Bimota rider making up 15 places and settling into 8th in the closing laps while Jonathan Rea faded after to 13th after his own promising start.

    With 5 laps to go, Bulega began to pick up his pace and stretch a small gap to Sam Lowes.  However, Sam was saving himself for the last couple of laps and closed back in to the top 2 to finish less than 1 second off the winner.

    The MarcVDS rider was so close but just not quite by enough to get involved in the scrap for the lead as Bulega very nearly made it past Razgatlioglu into turn 1 on the final lap.  Once again, a superb ride through the long last corner let the Ducati rider close right up to the BMW as they blasted towards the chequered flag and were separated by just 0.030s in Razgatlioglu’s favour.

    The win meant a lot to Razgatlioglu and was devastating for Bulega after such a defiant ride.  Not only was it the Turk’s first win at Aragon but it matched his record of 13 consecutive wins from last season and was of course another hammer blow in the championship for his Italian rival – but tomorrow’s pair of races should hopefully be another close fought affair with the BMW and Ducati neck-and-neck.

    Race 1 Results

    Image Credit: WorldSBK

    Feature Image Credit: WorldSBK

  • Aragon = All-out Action!

    Aragon = All-out Action!

    Qualifying:

    Big news of the weekend is that Marc Marquez (Honda) is finally back, after his surgery which was a complete success this time around. He had some work to do to try and get through to Q2 but, yellow flags hampered him and he narrowly missed out going through to Q2, meaning he would start 13th on Sunday.

    It was also a warm welcome back to British racer Cal Crutchlow, who will be racing for the rest of the season in Andrea Dovisiozo’s place at Yamaha.

    Good news for Ducati though as it was a lock-out on the front-row for them. Francesco Bagnaia took pole with an all-time lap record – 1:46.69, from current teammate Jack Miller and next year’s teammate Enea Bastianini.

    Pole! Courtesy of: Moto GP website

    Race:

    Sunshine was beaming and the anticipation was bubbling along nicely.

    It was all action from lights out – Bagnaia remained in the lead from Miller and Bastianini. While Marquez had made an impressive start and was up into 6th place by turn 2, when suddenly championship leader Fabio Quartararo rode into the rear wheel of Marquez, propelling him from his Yamaha and flying him across the track, lucky not to get caught up in other riders behind him, he recovered on the side of the track. (A medical update later revealed that he had numerous burns to his chest – we wish him a speedy recovery). With this one sudden moment, the championship was flung wide-open!

    Fabio’s crash. Courtesy of: Moto GP footage

    A few moments later Marquez was checking his Honda as there was some of Fabio’s Yamaha lodged in the rear of it when Takaaki Nakagami (Honda) nudged him, sending Nakagami also into the line of on-coming bikes and then into the gravel. Quick reactions from the riders behind meant no further collisions were caused. (Medical updates later confirmed Nakagami is doing well but has visited the medical centre, we wish him a speedy recovery also).

    Nakagami incident. Courtesy of: Moto GP BT Sport footage

    The action wasn’t over yet though as Marquez’s bike started to smoke from the rear, the Yamaha parts that had gotten lodged in the bike must have damaged his rear wheel. He was forced to retire from his first race back in 2022.

    Back at the front, Bastianini went backwards to 4th place, but he had also taken fastest lap.

    Bagnaia led Miller, Brad Binder (KTM) and Bastianini onto lap 3 of 23. Bastianini wasn’t hanging around though and soon re-took 3rd from Binder. He knew he couldn’t let the factory Ducati’s get away.

    Bagnaia leads the way. Courtesy of: Moto GP wesbite

    The race pace settled down after the excitement of the opening laps as Bagnaia created a lead of 0.457 seconds ahead of his teammate with 18 laps to go.

    Bastianini had plans to thwart Bagnaia’s lead though and soon had passed Miller to take 2nd. The gap between himself and his future teammate was 0.700 seconds, knowing he had to hunt him down – he got to work.

    Miller’s race meanwhile, was going from bad to worse as Binder also passed him as did Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia) moments after, putting him back to 5th place.

    With 16 laps to go Bagnaia was still in control, leading Bastianini, Binder and Espargaro.

    The gap between the two front Italians had decreased further to 0.412 seconds. Would Bastianini dare challenge Bagnaia for the lead? Ducati had announced prior to the race that their riders are “free to race” so what would he decide?

    By lap 9 the gap between the pair had closed dramatically and Bastianini did indeed pass the Duke to take the lead. It was a short-loved lead though as he soon went wide, meaning Bagnaia could re-take the lead with ease. He then made a small mistake on the next corner, nearly letting Binder also take a place from him, fortunately he remained in second, but all his hard work had come undone. The gap between him and the leader was back to 0.786 seconds. He wasn’t going to be perturbed though.

    Bastianini was on a mission, not letting the number 63 get away he started to claw the gap back. Meanwhile, behind him Binder was being hunted down by Espargaro.

    By lap 16 of 23, gapping was appearing between the leading four riders: Bagania’s lead was 0.745 seconds ahead of Bastianini, who’s gap between him and Binder was 1.579 seconds, who’s gap between Binder and Espargaro was 0.405 seconds.

    In 14th place – British Yamaha test-rider Cal Crutchlow was remaining in the points, currently higher than any place Dovi had managed to collect this year.

    Cal Crutchlow. Courtesy of: Moto GP website

    Back at the front the action was becoming tense. With only 6 laps until the chequered flag the gap between Bagnaia and “The Beast” had dropped and Bastianini was very close to the rear of Pecco.

    With 4 laps till the end: Crutchlow passed Vinales to take 13th, Espargaro closed the gap between himself and Binder (to 0.193 seconds) and Bastianini started getting tempted to pass his future teammate.

    Would he actually do it? Could he actually do it? There weren’t many laps left to make a decision.

    The gap between the two Ducati’s was 0.193 seconds as Bastianini seemed to be testing a corner to pass Bagnaia on. Deciding against it, audiences had to hold their breath.

    Espargaro though, decided enough is enough sitting behind Binder and passed him to take the last podium position.

    The next lap Bastianini did another tempting move but again decided against it. Was he going to try a pass on Bagnaia?

    Last lap:

    Baganaia led Bastianini onto turn 1 –

    turn 2 –

    turn 3 –

    turn 4 –

    turn 5 and turn 6 but, turn 7 saw a surprise move from Bastianini which saw him re-take the lead at Aragon. Bagnaia had little response to it. The last corner/ the short start-finish straight was his last chance, but it was not to be.

    Bastianini claimed his 4th victory for 2022, with Bagnaia extremely close behind.

    Top ten finishers:

    1st

    E. Bastianini

    2nd

    F. Bagnaia

    3rd

    A. Espargaro

    4th

    B. Binder

    5th

    J. Miller

    6th

    J. Martin

    7th

    L. Marini

    8th

    J. Zarco

    9th

    A. Rins

    10th

    M. Bezzecchi

    Surprising turn of events for round 15 sees the championship blow wide-open:

    Top four championship standings:

    1st

    F. Quartararo

    211 points

    2nd

    F. Bagnaia

    201 points

    3rd

    A. Espargaro

    194 points

    4th

    E. Bastianini

    163 points

    Now only 10 points between Fabio and Pecco and 17 points between Aleix and first place.

    With a 1, 2 in the bag for this round, Ducati had more to celebrate as they became the 2022 Constructors World Champions! 

    Courtesy of: Ducati Course Twitter page

    What could possibly happen next time in Motegi, Japan? Be sure to join in with the action on Sunday 25th September.

     

    (Featured image. Courtesy of: Enea Bastianini Twitter page)

     

     

    Thank you for your service. May you rest in peace. Courtesy of: Google Images.