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07 May 2009 | Track suits recently-formed BMW team

Corser on equal footing for round five this weekend at Monza

World Superbike, Rd5, Monza, live coverage on Fox Sports 1 from 7.30pm Sunday

Australia’s Troy Corser may have found the circuit breaker to ignite his 2009 world superbike campaign at Italy’s Monza circuit this weekend.

The historic 5.793km track near Milan is one of the few places on this year’s calendar where Corser’s BMW team has already tested, giving the Australian some meaningful engine and suspension data to utilise from the get-go when practice begins for round five on Friday.

“The great thing is that we will not be trying to play catch-up as much as we have to do normally,” said Corser. “Monza has some fast straights and is a track where slipstreaming can play an important part. It’s possible to be in fourth place exiting the Ascari chicane on the last lap and still win if you can take advantage of the draft.”

However, before Corser can even contemplate some epic slipstreaming battles against championship leader Noriyuki Haga and American star Ben Spies, he knows that he has to find a remedy for his qualifying woes.

Corser’s best qualifying position so far in 2009 has been 14th, which has been perplexing for someone with the most pole positions in world superbike history.

“Superpole has not worked out well for us so far and, considering that, I think we’ve done well to get the top 10s we have,” said Corser, who won at Monza in 2005. “I hope that we can qualify better at Monza and get even better results.”

Corser will be joined by the full roster of Australians at Monza, with Broc Parkes (Kawasaki) returning from a shoulder injury to line up alongside Karl Muggeridge (Suzuki) and Brendan Roberts (Ducati).

"I had a displacement operation to remove the gap between the collarbone and the shoulder and I'm recovering well,” said Parkes. “I'm still pretty sore all over, but I was lucky to not break anything and to have this time in between races to recover.”

Parkes crashed at high-speed in a private UK test session and, as well as the shoulder injury, he broke his nose and received bad bruising and swelling to his knee, elbow and ankle.

Haga is the runaway championship leader after four rounds, and already holds a 60pt lead over American Ben Spies (Yamaha).

Haga is also the form rider around Monza, winning three of the last four races on a Yamaha. But he’s now in the Ducati factory team, which is a scary proposition for his opponents.

That’s because since 1999, Ducati factory riders Carl Fogarty, Neil Hodgson, Régis Laconi and Troy Bayliss have all come away with maximum points at Monza.

If Haga wins race one on Sunday, history suggests that he’s a fair chance to complete the double, as 11 of the 17 rounds at the circuit have resulted in clean sweeps.

However, Spies, who was fastest in a recent test session at Monza, wil be desperate to scramble back some points on Haga after crashing out in race two at Assen, while Italians Michel Fabrizio (Ducati) and Max Biaggi (Aprilia) will be out to put on a show for their local supporters.

Leon Haslam (Honda), Max Neukirchner (Suzuki), Laconi (Ducati) and Jonathan Rea (Honda) will also be pushing hard in round five.

Monza is steeped in motorsport legend and, with its long straights punctuated by such iconic corners as the Parabolica and the Ascari chicane, is renowned for spectacular slipstreaming battles at speeds of more than 300kmh.

Haga’s current lap record comes at an average speed of 196km/h -- 23kmh more than Phillip Island.

In world supersport, Australia is still looking for its first win of the year, but it will surely come soon as Andrew Pitt, Anthony West, Mark Aitchison and Garry McCoy continue to push hard.

Cal Crutchlow (Yamaha) leads after podiums in three of the first four rounds, for one win, with fellow rookie Eugene Laverty (Honda) second, just ahead of Turkey’s Kenan Sofuoglu (Honda).

Laverty is the only multiple winner so far in 2009.

Superbike standings (after round 4 of 14):

1

Noriyuki Haga, Japan, Ducati

180

2

Ben Spies, America, Yamaha

120

3

Leon Haslam, Honda, Great Britain

94

4

Michel Fabrizio, Italy, Ducati

80

5

Max Neukirchner, Germany, Suzuki

75

6

Tom Sykes, Great Britain, Yamaha

70

7

Max Biaggi, Italy, Aprilia

65

8

Regis Laconi, France, Ducati

64

9

Jonathan Rea, Great Britain, Honda

53

10

Jakub Smrz, Czech Republic, Ducati

44

15

Troy Corser, Australia, BMW

35

19

Broc Parkes, Australia, Kawasaki

8

21

Karl Muggeridge, Australia, Suzuki

4

22

Brendan Roberts, Australia, Ducati

3

Current supersport standings (after round 4 of 13)

1

Cal Crutchlow, Great Britain, Yamaha

74pts

2

Eugene Laverty, Ireland, Honda

68

3

Kenan Sofuoglu, Turkey, Honda

65

4

Anthony West, Australia, Honda

52

5

Andrew Pitt, Australia, Honda

43

6

Mark Aitchison, Australia, Honda

34

7

Fabien Foret, France, Yamaha

28

8

Joan Lascorz, Spain, Kawasaki

27

9=

Matthieu Lagrive, France, Yamaha

25

9=

Barry Veneman, Netherlands, Suzuki

25

15

Garry McCoy, Australia, Triumph

12



Sunday, 5 February 2012