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Ryan Larkin making great strides in Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Cup

Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Championship - Round Two - Thailand International Circuit

Motorcycle News by Motorcycle News
May 22, 2024
in ASBK, Japan / Asian Road Racing

Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Championship
Round Two Report


The Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Championship hit Thailand International Circuit earlier this month and 15-year-old Chayakorn Saeong proved untouchable. The Thai rider came away with both wins despite three red flags and only half-points for the final race.

Chayakorn Saeong

If anything, temperatures were even hotter than a month earlier in Buriram, with air temperatures hitting 43 degrees, which blasted the track surface into the sixties. Such blistering conditions at a circuit that was new to all, but handed Thai riders an early advantage.

Even as the gap narrowed during practice and qualifying, round one double winner Kakeru Okunuki was the only visitor able to match the pace of the fastest Thais.

The 16-year-old from Fukushima put himself on the outside of the front row just a few tenths off the pole-setting time of 1:29.412 logged by Chayakorn, and Tanakit Pratumtong, who was second quickest. Theppitak Kraiyafai led row two from Supakarn Phasuraphonkul and Anak Waichalard.

Ryan Larkin

Aussie Ryan Larkin was still recovering from bruising and fatigue after a crash in Queensland just a week earlier.  The 17-year-old Victorian was only able to complete half the practice and qualifying time available, but still had the pace to qualify eighth.


Race One

When racing got underway, Chayakorn converted pole position into holeshot. He led from turn one and set an immediate fast pace that only Kakeru, Theppitak, and Supakarn were initially able to match, though they soon began to lose ground.

By lap seven, Theppitak was on the move, closing in on the second-placed Japanese rider. With three laps left, and just when it looked as though he was going to overhaul Kakeru, two slower riders crashed at the final turn and brought out the red flag.

Chayakorn Saeong won Race One, Kakeru Okunuki second, Theppitak Kraiyafai third

With 75 per cent of the race distance having been completed, the result was declared, confirming Chayakorn as the winner by 3.3 seconds from Kakeru and Theppitak. Supakarn, a further four seconds back, was a lonely fourth

Anak Waichalard and Ryan Larkin finished a distant fifth and sixth, respectively.

Young Kiwi Haydn Fordyce finished 13th.

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Race One Results

PosRiderNat.Time/Gap
1Chayakorn SaeongThailand13:29.360
2Kakeru OkunukiJapan+3.281
3Theppitak Kraiyafai Thailand+3.503
4  Supakarn Phasuraphonkul Thailand+7.442
5  Anak Waichalard Thailand+25.935
6  Ryan Larkin Australia+26.081
7  Pasavee Detraksa Thailand+27.114
8  Chonlasit Rakbumrung Thailand+34.189
9  Moses Gerard Reyes Philippines+ 35.139
10  Huanni Ke China+42.549
11  Natthakorn Kammayee Thailand+52.537
12  Chalath Natthapongpipat Thailand+1:12.507
13  Haydn Fordyce New Zealand+1:13.696
14  Phornwasing Chanmaneerat Thailand+1 Lp.
DNF
15  Kerkrit Chansuta Thailand1 Lp.
16  Mytchell Joshua NGO Philippines1 Lp.
17  Tanakit Pratumtong Thailand6 Lp.
18  Zain kaizzer Doblada Philippines 9 Lp.

Race Two

Chayakorn executed another perfect launch in brutal conditions while being chased by Tanakit and Kakeru. Also starting well were Supakorn and Larkin from the second and third rows, respectively.

Race Two

Kakeru passed Tanakit on the second lap and set off after Chayakorn, recording two successive fastest laps as he did so. However, just as attention focused on the battle at the front, an incident brought out the red flags.

At the restart, scheduled for eight laps, Tanakit managed to edge out Chayakorn into turn one, but ran wide to hand the lead straight back to the race winner. Kakeru, meanwhile, lifted the front from the outside of the front row and got shuffled back to fifth.

Chayakorn Saeong

Seeing Chayakorn escaping once again, Kakeru pulled off a spectacular double overtake on Theppitak and Supakorn at turn four on the third lap and immediately made off after Tanakit in second. On lap four, the Japanese rider got alongside his rival at turn three, but low-sided and caught Tanakit’s machine as he fell, sending the Thai over the high-side.

That brought out the red flag for the second time, and Race Control called it a result, with half championship points to be awarded. Chayakorn was duly declared the winner, while Theppitak and Supakarn were elevated to second and third.

Ryan Larkin

Meanwhile, Ryan Larkin picked up useful points in fourth, moving closer to the podium.

Behind the Australian, New Zealand’s Haydn Fordyce had a much better race and was fifth from Moses Gerard Reyes, who won a close fight for sixth from Pasavee Detratksa, Zain Kaizzer Doblada and Chonlasit Rakbumrung.

Race Two Results

PosRiderTime/Gap
1 Chayakorn Saeong26:27.815
2 Theppitak Kraiyafai2.971
3 Supakarn Phasuraphonkul3.155
4 Ryan Larkin4.420
5 Haydn Fordyce8.006
6 Moses Gerard Reyes9.090
7 Pasavee Detraksa9.390
8 Zain kaizzer Doblada9.675
9 Chonlasit Rakbumrung9.727
10 Natthakorn Kammayee13.065
11 Kerkrit Chansuta13.785
12 Chalath Natthapongpipat23.511
13 Phornwasing Chanmaneerat44.084
14 Huanni Ke3 Lp.
DNF
15 Kakeru Okunuki+1.679
16 Tanakit Pratumtong+2.422
17 Anak Waichalard+3 Lp.

Championship hotting up

After two rounds, Kakeru leads the standings with 57-points, 10 clear of Chayakorn, who is just half-a point ahead of Aussie Ryan Larkin, whose tally stands at 46.5. Theppitak is fourth on 44.5, so an intriguing battle is emerging at the top.

New Zealand’s Haydn Fordyce sits seventh on 29.5 points.

Ryan Larkin

“The second round of the Yamaha Blu Cru Asia Pacific R3 Cup was one of the hardest weekends of riding so far; a track that gave no rest in 40 deg Thailand heat became a battle of energy and fatigue to qualify eighth and finish the opening race in sixth and the second bout in fourth. My positive thoughts for all my team-mates who were injured and Kakeru, who suffered multiple pelvis breaks in the second race: you will heal as fast as you ride. Being one of the cleanest riders I enjoy competing with, I look forward to our laughs once again. Rest up, my friend. We will see you very soon.”

With track temperatures above 40-degrees every day, the ice baths had plenty of work to do

The Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Championship returns to Chang International Circuit on the weekend of 4-6 July for Round 3.

Further rounds will be held in  August (Sugo) and September (Chang) before the series wraps in Australia, in conjunction with the final round of the Australian Superbike Championship in early November.

The series is open to riders from as young as 12 and provides a stepping stone towards world championship racing. The winner of the six-round Asia-Pacific title will receive full support to race in next year’s Yamaha R3 bLU cRU World Cup, which runs in conjunction with the World Superbike Championship. Following on from that, the World Cup winner gets Yamaha support to race in the FIM World Supersport 300 Championship.

Yamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia Pacific Standings

PosRiderNat.Total
1K.OkunukiJP57
2C.SaeongTH47
3R.LarkinAU46.5
4T.KraiyafaiTH44.5
5T.PratumtongTH30
6S.KhongduangdeeTH30
7H.FordyceNZ29.5
8S.PhasuraphonkulTH25.5
9M.ReyesPH23
10N.KammayeeTH22
11P.DetraksaTH19.5
12C.RakbumrungTH18.5
13H.KeCN16
14A.WaichalardTH13
15Z.DobladaPH10
16K.ChansutaTH8.5
17M.NGOPH7
18C.NatthapongpipatTH6
19P.ChanmaneeratTH3.5

 

Tags: ASBKRyan LarkinYamaha R3 bLU cRU Asia-Pacific Championship
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