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Aragon WSBK: Bautista dominates again despite Rea charge

Ducati rider Alvaro Bautista made it seven World Superbike wins in seven starts as he converted pole into victory in the opening race at Aragon.

Alvaro Bautista, Aruba.it Racing-Ducati Team

Alvaro Bautista, Aruba.it Racing-Ducati Team

Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Bautista needed a little over a lap to shake off his pursuers, and paced himself towards victory as a frantic pack race unfolded behind him in the fight to be best of the rest.

Keeping the lead off the line, Bautista had to fend off the BMW of Tom Sykes through the first three sectors.

But the BMW, which lacks straightline speed, was then swallowed up by Alex Lowes and his Yamaha, which allowed Bautista to lead by six tenths over the line.

This turned into two seconds after the second lap, and his lead grew gradually from there, aided by a heated battle between Jonathan Rea and Chaz Davies – who combined for every win in each of the previous eight Aragon Superbike races.

Rea, who started 10th, was up to sixth after the start despite what looked like a handlebar clash with Markus Reiterberger, which led to a big crash for the BMW rider.

But Rea was soon re-passed by Davies before getting back ahead of the Welshman with an audacious move at Turn 3, for what was now fourth place.

On the fourth lap, Rea picked off Sykes on the back straight and was handed second place when Lowes ran wide entering Turn 16.

This allowed Davies to follow Rea, and the Ducati man lunged at his rival at that same corner on the next lap, running wide but getting a better exit onto the main straight.

Over the next few tours, as Bautista continued to check out up ahead, Rea and Davies went at it for second place, trading numerous overtakes, before Rea finally made a move stick at around the halfway point into the 18-lap race.

At that point, however, Lowes came into his own, storming past Davies and moving ahead of Rea on lap 12, only for the reigning champion to respond into Turn 16.

But Lowes eased past Rea on the back straight on the following tour, and Davies – who had only just fought off a spirited attack from Lowes' teammate Michael van der Mark – then overtook the Northern Irishman at the Turn 5 left-hander.

He then reeled in Lowes, outdragging the Yamaha on the back straight to assume second place once more.

Rea, however, still had something up his sleeve, first demoting Lowes off the podium and then catching Davies to pass him at Turn 4 on the penultimate lap.

As Bautista took the chequered flag ahead – winning by 15.170s, his biggest winning margin yet in the series – Rea held on to his seventh consecutive runner-up finish.

After a Turn 1 lunge on Rea didn't come off, Davies had to battle the resurgent privateer Ducati of Eugene Laverty on the final lap.

The GoEleven rider ended up too close to Davies as he clipped the back of the works Ducati through Turn 14, running wide and falling off-track.

This ensured Davies' third place and his first podium with the Panigale V4 R, with Lowes and Sykes making up the top five.

Van der Mark led front-row starter Sandro Cortese in sixth, while Puccetti's Toprak Razgatlioglu beat the fellow Kawasakis of factory rider Leon Haslam and Pedercini man Jordi Torres to eighth.

Marco Melandri, who hadn't finished lower than sixth in the first six races, was only 12th, outfoxed by the top Honda of Leon Camier.

Leandro Mercado and Alessandro Delbianco joined Reiterberger in the list of retirements, crashing early at Turn 12.

Race results

Cla # Rider Bike Time Gap
1 19 Spain Alvaro Bautista Ducati 33'14.114  
2 1 United Kingdom Jonathan Rea Kawasaki 33'29.284 15.170
3 7 United Kingdom Chaz Davies Ducati 33'29.764 15.650
4 22 United Kingdom Alex Lowes Yamaha 33'32.318 18.204
5 66 United Kingdom Tom Sykes BMW 33'34.279 20.165
6 60 Netherlands Michael van der Mark Yamaha 33'36.533 22.419
7 11 Germany Sandro Cortese Yamaha 33'37.447 23.333
8 54 Turkey Toprak Razgatlioglu Kawasaki 33'42.043 27.929
9 91 United Kingdom Leon Haslam Kawasaki 33'42.357 28.243
10 81 Spain Jordi Torres Kawasaki 33'42.525 28.411
11 2 United Kingdom Leon Camier Honda 33'53.240 39.126
12 33 Italy Marco Melandri Yamaha 33'53.354 39.240
13 21 Italy Michael Ruben Rinaldi Ducati 34'01.896 47.782
14 23 Japan Ryuichi Kiyonari Honda 34'13.993 59.879
15 50 Ireland Eugene Laverty Ducati 34'51.235 1'37.121
  36 Argentina Leandro Mercado Kawasaki    
  52 Italy Alessandro Delbianco Honda    
  28 Germany Markus Reiterberger BMW    

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