Superbike racing is a category of motorcycle racing that employs modified production motorcycles
Many countries such as the Australia, Canada, Japan, United Kingdom, and the United States operate national superbike championships, and a World Superbike championship has run since 1988.
The Superbike category is highly popular with manufacturers. Because the race bikes are built from production road bikes, the marketing value of a Superbike victory is significant. A common motorsport expression is "Win on Sunday, sell on Monday"
Pre 2004, regulations were in brief summary:
Pre 2004, winning in the series swung between the Honda CB750 (4cyclinders), and the Ducati 916 and its derivatives (2cyclinders). After three years of Ducati winning with Carl Fogarty, Honda introduced the 2cyclinder VTR-1000 SP1/RC51 and won in 1999 with Colin Edwards. Ducati then won the crown back with Troy Bayliss on the Ducati 998, while Edwards regained the crown in 2002
Resultantly, in 2002 the FIM started discussions on a new series of regulations which would allow wider manufacturer support. The first change was the consistency of capacity at 1000cc for all entrant machines, irrespective of the number of cyclinders. This was a 'standard' production engine size well sold around the world, allowing manufacturers to absorb racing costs into production machine development, as well as the marketing of these dvelopments. However, as this would result in an unfair power advantage for 4cyclinder machines, air-restrictors were introduced - one restrictor plate per intake port, with sizes of 50mm for twins and 32.5mm for fours *
The second regulation change was the use of a "control" tyre, to be solely supplied to all competitors. The bid process was won by Pirelli, who supply between five and seven different compounds per race. Although top and cornering speeds have fallen, the racing has become closer and safer.
The third change was an increase in mimimum weight for all machines, with 165 kg (363.8 lb) pre-race, and 163.5 kg (360.5 lb) post race.
The Superbike versions of the Honda CBR 1000RR, Suzuki GSX-R1000 K5, and Yamaha YZF-R1 are all capable of generating more than 200 horsepower (150 kW). The Ducati 999 F05 can generate 194 horsepower (145 kW).
During the early 1990s World Superbike racing was generally regarded by the public in general as a poor cousin to the more glamorous MotoGP championship. On the other hand, its followers frequently enjoyed it more than GP-bike racing because in Superbike the racing for the lead was frequently very close, and also because spectators had easy access to both the paddocks and to the racers themselves. Since the late 1990's, World Superbike racing's profile has improved considerably, withstanding considerable changes to the format, and challenging the long-time domination of the event by Ducati, riden by the most accomplished World Superbike racer Carl Fogarty, who won four championships in the 1990s.
At first, with the introduction of the control tyre in 2004 the lap times slowed, but the quality of racing has improved and the viewership has increased. For a brief period in the early 2000's, the majority of Japanese official factory teams had pulled out of the World Superbike Championship. But as of 2005, official or quasi-official factory teams from all of the major Japanese manufacturers (Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Yamaha) re-entered the World Superbike Championship, once again lining up against the long-standing factory teams from Ducati, as well as the Petronas team.
Well-known riders of this period include 2004 champion James Toseland, Regis Laconi, Andrew Pitt, Karl Muggerige, 1996 and 2005 champion Troy Corser and his team-mate Yukio Kagayama, fan favourites Noriyuki Haga and (41-year old) Pierfrancesco Chili, ex-GP riders Alex Barros, Norick Abe, Garry McCoy, promising youngsters such as Chris Vermeulen (who moved to MotoGP in 2006), returning World Superbike champion Troy Bayliss, and many more with devoted fans both world-wide and in their respective countries.
National series in the rest of Europe are not well supported, where most riders graduate to MotoGP via national 125 and 250cc series. Both Japan (All Japan Road Race Championship) and Australia have well supported national superbikes series, although they only run for short 10race seasons
| Year | Champion | Country | Maufacturer | Bike | Runner Up | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Fred Merkel | Honda | ||||
| 1989 | Fred Merkel | Honda | ||||
| 1990 | Raymond Roche | Ducati | ||||
| 1991 | Doug Polen | Ducati | ||||
| 1992 | Doug Polen | Ducati | ||||
| 1993 | Scott Russell | Kawasaki | ||||
| 1994 | Carl Fogarty | Ducati | Ducati 916 | |||
| 1995 | Carl Fogarty | Ducati | Ducati 916 | |||
| 1996 | Troy Corser | Ducati | Ducati 916 | |||
| 1997 | John Kocinski | Honda | RC45 | |||
| 1998 | Carl Fogarty | Ducati | Ducati 916 | |||
| 1999 | Carl Fogarty | Ducati | Ducati 916 | |||
| 2000 | Colin Edwards | Honda | VTR-1000 SP1/RC51 | Troy Bayliss | Bayliss replaced Fogarty, after his accident at Misano | |
| 2001 | Troy Bayliss | Ducati | Ducati 998 | Colin Edwards | ||
| 2002 | Colin Edwards | Honda | VTR-1000 SP1/RC51 | Troy Bayliss | ||
| 2003 | Neil Hodgson | Ducati | Ducati 999 | Ruben Xaus | ||
| 2004 | James Toseland | Ducati | Ducati 999 | Regis Laconi | Ducati were backing Laconi to win, Tosleland performed consistently to win | |
| 2005 | Troy Corser | Suzuki | GSX-R 1100 | |||
Superbike | Superbike | Superbike | Superbike | スーパーバイク世界選手権 | Superbike
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Superbike racing".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world