Forget Lightbox, Netflix, Spark Sport or Sky TV for your summer viewing – get royally entertained with live motorcycle racing at the always-popular Suzuki International Series, starting in December.
It is certainly going to be another scorching summer of motorcycling this year with the annual Suzuki International Series road-race competition again absolutely swamped with entries and organiser Allan ‘Flea’ Willacy sure he will again have trouble fitting them all in.
Willacy is overjoyed with the huge interest being shown from overseas too, and he believes the 2019 edition of the series, set to kick off at Taupo’s Bruce McLaren Motorsport Park on December 7-8, will be massive.
The popular three-round series – with Manfeild following as host venue a week after the Taupo round and the action wrapping up on the public streets of Whanganui’s famous Cemetery Circuit on Boxing Day – is New Zealand’s richest motorcycle competition and it has again attracted a huge overseas contingent, with top riders arriving from the United Kingdom, France and Australia, including Isle of Man and British Superbike Championship winners among them.
Willacy said members of the public could save money by purchasing “early bird tickets” through Ticketek on-line and then they’ll also go in the draw to win a Suzuki Gixxer 150 bike.
British rider Richard Cooper, Ireland’s Lee Johnston and Frenchman Morgan Govignon are the main draw-card entrants this year, with many race fans sure to already know of their incredible international exploits.
Cooper is the British Superbike Championships (BSB) Superstock Champion for 2019 and his performance as a newcomer at this year’s North West 200 was a definite highlight of that iconic event.
Johnston is the 2019 Isle of Man TT winner, icing on a cake to his 2019 season that also saw him win the Scarborough Gold Cup and finish runner-up in the Ulster GP. He raced in New Zealand at the Suzuki Series in 2017 and he returns this year riding a BMW1000 under the M1 Motorsport NZ banner.
Govignon will be riding in the Bears Class. He will also be riding a special one-off Voxan in memory of good friend of his, Fabrice Miguet, who unfortunately died at the Ulster GP.
Another French rider, Xavier Denis, will also debut in New Zealand this summer.
Australian-based rider Steve Marshall first raced in New Zealand during the NZ Marlborough Series in 1977 and moved to Australia in 1979. Teamed up with Australian Murray Stronach, the duo competed in multiple Western Australian and State Championships sidecars events, gaining many titles. Marshall retired in 1995 but came back again in 2016 with Stronach. They both came out to New Zealand in 2017 for the Suzuki Series and have returned, bringing two of Steve’s sons who will also compete.
Australian brothers Morgan and Dion Marshall will race in New Zealand for the Marshall Brothers Racing Team.
They wanted to take the opportunity to race against their father on overseas circuits, which is what brings them to this year’s Suzuki International Series.
Several notable trans-Tasman partnerships will also be on track this season.
Australian Sam Watson will join up with Kiwi Jo
Suzuki’s former national and Suzuki Series champion in the F1 class, Wellington’s Sloan Frost, will be determined to win again, while last year’s Suzuki Series outright winner and fellow Suzuki rider Scott Moir, from Taupo, and Suzuki’s 2019 national superbike champion Daniel Mettam, from Glen Eden, won’t be taking a back seat either.
Wainuiomata’s Shane Richardson returns from overseas, where he is currently leading the British Superbike Championships in the superstock class. He will race a 1000cc Kawasaki in the F1 class in the Suzuki International Series.
Wellington’s Glen Skachill returns to racing after a number of years away and he will also add spark to the F1 class on his BMW bike, while reigning national 600 Supersport champion Avalon Biddle has delighted organisers with news that she will race the Suzuki International Series and make her debut on the public streets of Whanganui on Boxing Day. Rangiora-based Kiwi international Biddle will race her ZX6R Kawasaki in the F2 (600cc) class.
“I feel this is a reflection of the confidence riders have in the increased safety measures that we have put in place over the past few years. These top riders perhaps feel they can now commit to pushing it even harder on the street circuit,” said Willacy.
The Suzuki International Series also offers races for Formula Three, Classics (pre-89), sports bikes, super motard bikes and sidecars, so there’s no shortage of on-track action.
The always-popular GIXXER Cup class, reserved for riders on identical 150cc Suzuki GSX150F model bikes, returns to the programme again this year with the rider age-limit restriction lifted, meaning individuals such as Frost, Moir and Mettam are expected also to line up and give talented youngsters such as Jesse Stroud (Hamilton) and Caleb Gilmore (Whanganui) something to really think about.
Find Cemetery Circuit HERE, and click HERE for tickets.
Words and Photo by Andy McGechan