Craig Fitzpatrick had a difficult time at round 3 of the British Superbike Evo Championship at Oulton Park. A stone through the radiator at the start of race one lead to a DNF and forced a swift engine change before race 2. In his first wet British Superbike race, and with the spare engine, Fitzpatrick could only finish ninth.
Following the crash in the second race at Thruxton, two weeks ago, Fitzpatrick was still struggling with a hand injury. Bruising and swelling around his first metatarsal on his left hand meant he didn’t have the full range of movement.
A fall in Saturday morning’s free practice session did little to help matters. Fitzpatrick hit a false neutral whilst down-shifting for Island bend. With no engine breaking, he ran wide onto the grass and tipped off. Although unhurt in the crash, the bike suffered extensive damage.
Having repaired the damaged to the bike, Fitzpatrick qualified fourth fastest in a time of 1 minute 38.981 seconds.
At the start of the first race, a stone put a hole through the radiator of the Close Print Finance Honda, causing coolant to spray out. As the spray flew up onto his screen and visor, Fitzpatrick assumed it was rain and eased off slightly. It soon became apparent that it was leaking from the bike, and Fitzpatrick had no choice but to pull into pit lane and retire.
After examining the bike, the team diagnosed the cause and decided to switch to the number 2 engine as a precaution. This left the team just two hours to swap engines and prepare the bike for the second outing.
Rain prior to the start of race 2 meant the riders were given ten minutes of wet practice as this would be the first wet session of the weekend. This gave the Close Print Finance team a good chance to test the rebuilt bike before the race. During practice the bike showed no problems but having spent all the time between races rebuilding the bike, Fitzpatrick had to practice on the only wet rear tyre.
By the time the riders lined up on the grid for the second race, the track was starting to dry. Fitzpatrick decided that it was still too wet to use the intermediate tyre, so he would have to race on the wets he had just run in practice.
When Alex Lowes’ KTM had a problem on line, it looked as though the start procedure would be stopped, but the lights went out and Fitzpatrick was caught cold. Dead last into turn one, Fitzpatrick faced an uphill battle. By lap five Fitzpatrick had fought his way up to fifth place in the Evo race. The conditions were starting to take their toll on the part-worn wet tyres. The track was still wet around the start/finish, but was dry on the back part of the circuit.
With his tyres quickly disintegrating, Fitzpatrick was struggling for grip. As the bike was moving around under braking and when accelerating out of the corners, Fitzpatrick was unable to keep his pace up. Having already suffered one DNF, Fitzpatrick made the sensible choice to hold on and take home solid points for his ninth place finish.
Fitzpatrick commented: “We don’t seem to be having much luck at the moment. The crash on Saturday was my own fault, but even then we didn’t exactly get off lightly with the damage as the bike went end over end. The holed radiator in the first race was another blow we could have done without.”
“I was so happy with how the Close Print Finance team dealt with the problems, I really couldn’t ask for any more from them. There was quite a bit of work to do following the crash in practice and then there was a big rush to swap the engines between races.”
“In hindsight, I should have chosen the intermediate tyre for race 2, but on the grid wets seemed the better option. I think virtually everyone went with the wet option. By mid-race, the tyres were absolutely destroyed and they were just spinning everywhere. We have come away with some points and now we just have to move on and look forward to the next round at Cadwell Park.”
Sam Farrington