Ten Kate Racing
This article needs to be updated.(March 2018) |
2019 name | Ten Kate Yamaha WorldSBK |
---|---|
Base | Nieuwleusen, Netherlands |
Team principal/s | Ronald ten Kate Kervin Bos |
Race riders | Supersport World Championship Jorge Navarro Stefano Manzi |
Motorcycle | Yamaha YZF-R6, Yamaha YZF-R9, Yamaha YZF-R1 |
Tyres | Pirelli |
Riders' Championships | 11 2021 2022 Dominique Aegerter 2014 Michael van der Mark 2010 Kenan Sofuoğlu 2008 Andrew Pitt 2007 James Toseland 2007 Kenan Sofuoğlu 2006 Sébastien Charpentier 2005 Sébastien Charpentier 2004 Karl Muggeridge 2003 Chris Vermeulen 2002 Fabien Foret |
Ten Kate Racing is a motorcycle racing team competing in World Supersport with 2023 rider Jorge Navarro and Stefano Manzi. They previously competed in the Superbike World Championship with 2019 rider Loris Baz, and previously with Gulf Althea Racing BMW Motorrad.
The re-built team participated in a part-season from June.[1][2]
Ten Kate had the official backing of Honda for 18 years until late 2018, being their presence in both World Superbikes and World Supersport series, with reports of Honda's sudden withdrawal causing team bankruptcy.[3]
Ten Kate raced a team as the Red Bull Honda World Superbike Team, a squad sponsored by Red Bull, using Honda superbike motorcycles in the Superbike World Championship.[4]
History
[edit]Foundation
[edit]Gerrit ten Kate was a full-time motocross rider, who like many undertook his own mechanics. After semi-retirement from his own career, he guided his nephew Ronald ten Kate through regional motocross series to fourth place in the Dutch national championship. Having founded a workshop undertaking mechanics for other riders during his career, it was noticed that Ronald's bike was fast, which resulted in Gerrit expanding his workshop to the point where he was selling and maintaining 50/60 bikes per annum.[5]
In 1993, Gerrit gave up his own motocross activities to concentrate on developing his motorcycle dealership Ten Kate Motorcycles in Nieuwleusen, near Zwolle in the north of the Netherlands. Soon after foundation, local road racing rider Harry van Beek came to the showroom looking for help, so Gerrit fixed it. Van Beek got a wildcard entry in the European Superstock round at Hockenheim, where he found he had the fastest bike.[5] As a result, from 1994 Ten Kate entered road racing maintenance.
Road Racing
[edit]This section needs to be updated.(March 2018) |
From 1995, the team entered its own team in regional Dutch road racing. Managed by Ronald ten Kate,[6] each season Ten Kate Racing has increased in scope and size, and now takes a team of 28 - including technicians, administrative staff and four riders - to contest the World Superbike and Supersport champ:[5]
With four engine builders, we are always looking to increase the performance of the motors. But there is a lot more to it than that. I would much rather have five horsepower less in a good chassis than five horsepower more that cannot be used. For that reason we have brought data-logging and suspension specialists into the team over the past few years to help us develop the whole package.
The team first entered the Supersport World Championship full-time in 2001, using Honda CBR600F4i motorcycles. In 2002 Ten Kate rider Fabien Foret won the championship, Honda's first in Supersport.
The team went on to win all of the last six Supersport World Championships using the Honda CBR600RR. In 2003 Chris Vermeulen won the title, followed by Karl Muggeridge in 2004, Sébastien Charpentier in 2005, who retained his title in 2006, the first rider ever to do so, and Kenan Sofuoğlu who won the championship in 2007. Also in 2008 Ten Kate wins with Andrew Pitt.
In 2004 the team also moved up to the Superbike World Championship using the Honda CBR1000RR and Chris Vermeulen as its single rider. Despite being a privateer entry with no support from Honda who had withdrawn its support from the Superbike World Championship, Chris Vermeulen finished fourth in the championship with four wins and was in contention for the title until the final round of the season.
The team expanded into a two motorcycles operation in 2005 with Karl Muggeridge joining Chris Vermeulen. Vermeulen managed 6 wins and finished the championship runner-up while Muggeridge had a poorer season and finished 11th.
Chris Vermeulen moved to MotoGP in 2006 and was replaced by 2004 Superbike World Champion James Toseland. Toseland finished the season runner-up with 3 race wins, while teammate Karl Muggeridge once again had a poorer season finishing 12th.
In 2007 James Toseland was joined in the team by Roberto Rolfo. Toseland got 8 race wins and won the championship in the final race of the season by a margin of 2 points. Rolfo finished 8th overall.
For 2008 the team continues to use Honda motorcycles, CBR1000RR in Superbikes,[7] and CBR600RR for Supersport.[8]
With James Toseland moving to MotoGP, former MotoGP rider Carlos Checa and 2 times British Superbike Champion Ryuichi Kiyonari join the team,[7] while 2007 Supersport World Champion Kenan Sofuoğlu will ride a third motorcycle under the banner of Hannspree Ten Kate Honda Jr.[9]
Kenan Sofuoğlu and 2001 Supersport World Champion Andrew Pitt ride for the team in the 2009 Supersport World Championship.[8]
Honda has announced its plans for the 2013 World Superbike and World Supersport championships, which include a new four-rider line-up, a comprehensive technical development and testing programme and a new title sponsor.[10]
In the World Superbike championship, current rider Jonathan Rea has signed with the team once more and will team-up with fellow Briton Leon Haslam on the Honda CBR1000RR Fireblade. In the World Supersport championship, Italian Lorenzo Zanetti will ride Honda's CBR600RR alongside Michael van der Mark from the Netherlands.
Italian snack manufacturer Pata is the new title sponsor of the reinvigorated squad which will be known as the Pata Honda World Superbike and Pata Honda World Supersport teams. Both groups will once again be run by the Netherlands-based Ten Kate organisation.
For Jonathan Rea, 2013 will mark a fifth year on Honda's CBR1000RR Fireblade and his sixth season of racing with Ten Kate. The 25-year-old has enjoyed a spectacular and busy 2012, combining his World Superbike duties – including wins at Assen and Donington Park – with getting married and winning the Suzuka 8-hour race.
More recently, Northern Irishman Rea has replaced the injured Casey Stoner in the Repsol Honda MotoGP team, riding back-to-back Grands Prix with the final three rounds of World Superbike.
Haslam, 29, returns to Honda's CBR machinery after a three-year absence to continue a strong family link to the Japanese manufacturer. It was begun by his father, Ron, who won Formula 1 world championships and raced with Honda in 500cc Grands Prix.
With his own 250cc and 500cc GP experience, the younger Haslam, from Derbyshire in the UK, has been racing in the World Superbike championship since 2009 and was runner-up in the 2010 series. He has amassed a total of 28 podium finishes, including three race wins.
Lorenzo Zanetti is from Brescia in Italy and has been in the World Superbike paddock for three years, but began his career with Honda, winning the RS125 GP Cup in Italy in 2004. The 25-year-old finished third in the 2011 Superstock 1000 championship and has spent the 2012 season competing in the World Superbike series with a best result of eighth last time out at the Nurburgring in Germany.
Michael van der Mark. the 19-year-old from Gouda in the Netherlands began his career racing in the Dutch 125cc Junior Cup and has spent the last five years on Honda machinery.
World Supersport
[edit]Results
[edit]Year | Team | Bike | No | Rider | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | Pos | Pts | Constructors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pos | Pts | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | Ten Kate Racing Yamaha | Yamaha YZF-R6 | 9 | Simon Jespersen | SPA |
SPA |
POR |
POR |
ITA |
ITA |
NED |
NED |
CZE |
CZE |
SPA 9 |
SPA 8 |
FRA |
FRA |
SPA 11 |
SPA 14 |
SPA |
SPA |
POR |
POR |
ARG |
ARG |
INA |
INA |
22nd | 22 | 1st | 456 |
24 | Leonardo Taccini | SPA |
SPA |
POR |
POR |
ITA |
ITA |
NED |
NED |
CZE |
CZE |
SPA |
SPA |
FRA |
FRA |
SPA |
SPA |
SPA |
SPA |
POR |
POR |
ARG 17 |
ARG 11 |
INA |
INA |
31st | 9 | |||||
55 | Galang Hendra Pratama | SPA 15 |
SPA 10 |
POR 20 |
POR 19 |
ITA 13 |
ITA 14 |
NED 14 |
NED Ret |
CZE 14 |
CZE DNS |
SPA 11 |
SPA Ret |
FRA Ret |
FRA 20 |
SPA 13 |
SPA 22 |
SPA C |
SPA Ret |
POR 22 |
POR 21 |
ARG |
ARG |
INA Ret |
INA 13 |
21st | 27 | |||||
77 | Dominique Aegerter | SPA 2 |
SPA 5 |
POR 4 |
POR 1 |
ITA 1 |
ITA 1 |
NED 1 |
NED 1 |
CZE 4 |
CZE 1 |
SPA 1 |
SPA 1 |
FRA 1 |
FRA 2 |
SPA |
SPA |
SPA C |
SPA 1 |
POR 3 |
POR 5 |
ARG 5 |
ARG 3 |
INA 2 |
INA 3 |
1st | 417 | |||||
2022 | Ten Kate Racing Yamaha | Yamaha YZF-R6 | 24 | Leonardo Taccini | SPA 18 |
SPA Ret |
NED 10 |
NED 13 |
POR 14 |
POR DNS |
ITA 14 |
ITA Ret |
GBR 13 |
GBR 15 |
CZE 16 |
CZE 13 |
FRA 14 |
FRA Ret |
SPA 11 |
SPA 9 |
POR Ret |
POR DNS |
ARG |
ARG |
INA 15 |
INA 18 |
AUS 17 |
AUS 19 |
21st | 35 | 1st | 535 |
57 | Bradley Smith | SPA | SPA | NED | NED | POR | POR | ITA | ITA | GBR | GBR | CZE | CZE | FRA | FRA | SPA | SPA | POR | POR | ARG 14 |
ARG Ret |
INA | INA | AUS | AUS | 33rd | 2 | |||||
77 | Dominique Aegerter | SPA 2 |
SPA 1 |
NED 1 |
NED 1 |
POR 1 |
POR 1 |
ITA 1 |
ITA 1 |
GBR 1 |
GBR 1 |
CZE Ret |
CZE EX |
FRA 3 |
FRA 1 |
SPA 1 |
SPA 1 |
POR 4 |
POR 1 |
ARG 1 |
ARG 1 |
INA 4 |
INA 1 |
AUS 5 |
AUS 1 |
1st | 498 | |||||
2023 | Ten Kate Racing Yamaha | Yamaha YZF-R6 | 9 | Jorge Navarro | AUS 9 |
AUS 6 |
INA 12 |
INA 8 |
NED 10 |
NED 7 |
SPA 7 |
SPA 9 |
EMI 8 |
EMI 18 |
GBR 12 |
GBR 11 |
ITA Ret |
ITA 6 |
CZE 9 |
CZE Ret |
FRA Ret |
FRA 9 |
SPA 7 |
SPA 6 |
POR 3 |
POR 7 |
JER 4 |
JER 11 |
7th | 163 | 1st | 571 |
62 | Stefano Manzi | AUS 6 |
AUS 2 |
INA 7 |
INA 2 |
NED 5 |
NED 2 |
SPA 6 |
SPA 3 |
EMI 2 |
EMI 1 |
GBR 2 |
GBR 5 |
ITA 1 |
ITA 1 |
CZE 2 |
CZE Ret |
FRA 2 |
FRA 3 |
SPA 11 |
SPA 2 |
POR 2 |
POR 1 |
ARG 2 |
ARG 2 |
2nd | 408 | |||||
2024 | Ten Kate Racing Yamaha | Yamaha YZF-R6 | 28 | Glenn van Straalen | AUS 18 |
AUS 20 |
SPA 14 |
SPA 10 |
NED 4 |
NED 1 |
EMI 10 |
EMI 14 |
GBR 12 |
GBR 7 |
CZE 9 |
CZE 7 |
POR 9 |
POR 6 |
FRA 3 |
FRA 6 |
ITA Ret |
ITA 15 |
SPA 9 |
SPA 10 |
EST 9 |
EST 7 |
SPA 11 |
SPA 12 |
8th | 165 | 1st | 580 |
62 | Stefano Manzi | AUS 2 |
AUS Ret |
SPA 2 |
SPA 1 |
NED 2 |
NED 21 |
EMI 3 |
EMI 4 |
GBR 2 |
GBR 4 |
CZE 3 |
CZE 2 |
POR 3 |
POR 2 |
FRA Ret |
FRA 2 |
ITA 2 |
ITA 1 |
SPA 2 |
SPA 2 |
EST 3 |
EST 1 |
SPA 1 |
SPA 1 |
2nd | 415 |
* Season still in progress.
References
[edit]- ^ Baz: Podiums for Ten Kate Yamaha are "realistic" Motorsport, 10 April 2019. Retrieved 11 April 2019
- ^ Baz back in the top ten on WorldSBK return! WSBK.com, 10 June 2019. Retrieved 28 July 2019
- ^ a b Ten Kate Superbike team declared bankrupt after Honda split Motorsport, 27 November 2018. Retrieved 11 April 2019
- ^ "TEAM PROFILE: RED BULL HONDA WORLD SUPERBIKE TEAM". Honda - European Media Newsroom. Honda. 23 February 2015. 41050.
- ^ a b c "Castrol Motor Oil and Lubricants/Ten Kate Honda team profile". www.castrol.com. Archived from the original on 2005-10-20.
- ^ "HANNspree Ten Kate Racing / Honda". Archived from the original on 2009-01-01. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
- ^ a b "Hanspree Ten Kate Honda Superbike team profile".
- ^ a b "Hanspree Ten Kate Honda Supersport team profile".
- ^ "Hanspree Ten Kate Honda Jr. Superbike team profile".
- ^ "Honda announces Rea And Haslam At Ten Kate With Pata For 2013".