Bridewell bags a fourth and Kennedy takes the championship lead
As the sun sets after a frantic Saturday of Bennets British Superbike Championship racing, Tommy Bridewell extends his championship lead with a hard fought fourth and Jack Kennedy celebrates a return to the top of the supersport standings with a close second.
Thruxton is notoriously a circuit at which a mixed set of results occur due to the tactical nature of the racing that takes place thanks to the need to manage tyre life. And a day brimming with racing action today was no different.
Superbike riders Tommy Bridewell and Andrew Irwin both had solid qualifying sessions early in the day and were separated by exactly a tenth come the session’s end. The closeness of the field however meant that although just 0.3 and 0.4 seconds back from the quickest time of the session, come lights out they would line up in eighth and ninth on the grid respectively.
In the twenty-lap afternoon race, both riders made strong starts to their races, Tommy especially making immediate progress to place as high as third in the opening lap melee. Andrew though was quick to begin preserving his tyre and dropped down the field to twelfth, albeit just seconds behind the leader. At half race distance Tommy was positioned in seventh with Andrew maintaining twelfth as the top fifteen riders ran almost nose to nose.
On lap fourteen the race then began to hot up as the high-speed game of chess unfolded and riders revealed their true race pace. Tommy instantly began putting passes on his competitors and fired himself into the lead with just a lap to go, whilst Andrew tagged onto the back of a leading gaggle of seven riders. At this point, both were in contention for podium finishes.
Then heading into the final chicane on the final lap of the race, the leading seven riders fanned out across the circuit in a manner more akin to a Moto3 race as they battled for the win. As the riders fanned out, Andrew Irwin, positioned on the outside, was caught out by the riders' movement to the outside and mistakenly clipped Danny Kent's rear, causing Andrew to crash out of the race, fortunately unhurt. Tommy meanwhile lost out as the leaders battled through the final chicane to finish fourth. This solid fourth-place finish extended his championship lead to twenty-six points.
In Supersport, Jack Kennedy was joined by his Honda stablemate for the weekend as Dean Harrison and the team opted to switch to the Supersport series for this weekend to test some development parts mid-year. In the five-lap dash, caused by a red flag in the previous running of the race Jack Kennedy bagged podium number nine of the year after just clipping the rev limiter as he made his move for the win on the final lap. Dean Harrison meanwhile in a seamless switch to the middleweight series raced to a solid eighth place finish after qualifying in a strong fifth.