Young Man Steps up to Take Dad's Place Among Leaders
Young Man Steps up to Take Dad's Place Among Leaders
JANUARY 8,
2018: As one Honda rider called Rees steps aside,
another one steps forward.
Whakatane's Tony Rees is the 2017
national superbike champion, but the opportunities for him
to run out with the No.1 emblazoned across his blood-red
Honda motorcycle have been few and far
between.
An
accident at the second round of three in the pre-nationals
Suzuki Series saw Rees in December left with a broken hand,
an injury serious enough to not only prevent him defending
his No.1 ranking in that series, but, with the 2018 New
Zealand Superbike Championships kicking off in Christchurch
just a couple of weeks later, it also wrecked any chance he
had of defending his national title.
The nationals began at Mike Pero
Motorsport Park in Christchurch on Saturday and Sunday and,
even though sidelined and with his arm in a plaster cast,
Rees was still there, in body and spirit
too.
His eldest of
two road-racing sons, Mitchell Rees (Honda CBR1000SP1) has
been something of a revelation this summer and the fairytale
continued in Christchurch at the
weekend.
In just
his second season of road-racing and with barely 20 races in
total under his wheels – but with his multi-time champion
father to guide him – the virtual novice clinched third
overall in the Formula One class in the 2017 Suzuki Series
and he's now backed that up by finishing second-equal in the
premier superbike class at the weekend's first of four
rounds of the nationals.
Mitchell Rees finished with a national
ranking of No.6 on his debut season of superbike racing last
year and that was an incredible feat in itself, but now he's
one of the sport's "big boys", a true title
contender.
The
24-year-old finished with a 2-2-3 score-card in Christchurch
at the weekend and that places him second equal, level with
Glen Eden's former national 600cc champion Daniel Mettam in
the standings after round one.
After this initial flurry of activity,
Rees and Mettam are just one point behind Wellington's Sloan
Frost in the championship standings and there's no time to
catch a breath, with round two set for Levels Raceway, near
Timaru, this coming weekend.
"I was two seconds a lap quicker on
this Christchurch track than I was last year and I put that
down to two things ... the bike handles just so well and I'm
another year older with a little bit more experience now,"
said Mitchell Rees.
"I was trying to get over the flu at
the weekend too, although I don't want to make
excuses.
"I got a
little bit tired in the races and I think I need to improve
my fitness but, equally, I didn't want to do anything stupid
and end up crashing. A crash would have cost me any chance
of winning."
He
now heads to round two in a confident
mood.
Other class
leaders after the weekend's series opener are Christchurch's
James Hoogenboezem (Supersport 600); Tauranga's Regan Phibbs
(Supersport 300); Hamilton's Jordan Burley (650 Pro Twins);
Christchurch's Nick Cain (250cc Production); Christchurch's
Dennis Charlett (Superlites); Rodney's Blayes Heaven
(125GP); Whanganui's Tarbon Walker (GIXXER Cup); and
Auckland's Peter Goodwin and Kendall Dunlop
(Sidecars).
After
racing at Levels this coming weekend, the riders will cross
Cook Strait for the second half of the season in the North
Island.
North
Waikato hosts round three at Hampton Downs Motorsport Park,
near Meremere, on March 3-4, before it all wraps up at Bruce
McLaren Motorsport Park in Taupo on March
17-18.