World
championship off to a wet start.
KTM Press release.
KTM factory rider Bernd Hiemer and all the riders in the
Supermoto S1 class had more to contend with on Saturday
night than the new experience of competing in a night time
race.
Hiemer managed a fifth place in the first race but for
the later night race only came across the finish line at
fourteenth
for an overall seventh in the season's second event.
Set in the Oval Lingotto in the city of Turin, one of the
Winter Olympics venues, the race was a real spectacle,
if for the wrong reasons. Instead of the pleasure of racing
in the balmy early summer night air the clouds broke and
transformed the arena into a mud bath that made riding practically
impossible, according to the German KTM Factory rider.
Hiemer already experienced problems in training, particularly
because of the wet and muddy conditions and considering his
unsatisfactory start place was quite satisfied with his fifth
place finish in the early evening race.
"
The course was full of dirt and the motocross section was
a real mud bath," Hiemer said. "If you went 20cm
off the ideal line then it was impossible to race."
The rain had eased off for the second race later on Saturday
night but conditions were no less easy, particularly riding
on rain tyres, Hiemer said. He got away well and was up with
the leaders in the second curve when he got bumped off by
another rider, scrambled to recover and found himself at
the back of the pack. He did manage to fight his way back
through the pack and by the fifth round was back to fourteenth
place. Hiemer tried to hold on but was involved in two more
altercations also resulting in crashes.
"
I am quite sore from bruises from the crashes, but fortunately
it was nothing really serious," the tough KTM Supermoto
rider said after the event that turned out to be a real lottery
race. After two rounds of the championship Hiemer is lying
sixth in the standings with 48 points. The next round in
the world championship series is next weekend in France.
Results
1. Thomas Chareyre, France, Husqvarna
2. Thierry van den Bosch, France, Aprilia
3. Adrien Chareyre, France, Husqvarna
4. Aurelien Rolland, France, Yamaha
5. Jerome Guraudo, France, Aprilia
7. Bernd Hiemer, Germany, KTM
Check out all
the top racers who have been doing a bit of Supermoto.
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