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Hacking - WSBK

Joined Oct 2006
3K Posts | 34+
Tar Heel State
Just got this off of Cyclenews....anyone else know about this?

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Jamie Hacking earned two more rides with the Kawasaki World Superbike team after giving them their best results during an up and down weekend at last weekend's World Superbike race at Miller Motorsports Park.

The Monster Energy Attack Kawasaki rider will continue to replace Makoto Tamada, the underperforming Japanese rider who was injured at Monza. Originally it was thought the most severe of his injuries was a broken wrist, but Tamada has two broken fingers each of which is being held together by wires.

In his debut with the team, Hacking put the ZX10R in the final Superpole session for the first time this year, with regular rider Broc Parkes doing the same. In the first race, Hacking was a strong fourth before a red flag stopped the race. Rear grip problems prevented him from running the same pace in the second part of the race and he finished seventh. Still, that was the best the team had seen all season by three spots.

The second race was more difficult, with Hacking running off track twice, including after a collision with Team Pedercini's Luca Scassa (Kaw). But he never gave up and soldiered on to finish 19th.

Now he has two weeks to prepare for the following round of the championship at Misano Adriatico in Italy, followed by the British round at Donington Park in the British East Midlands. Hacking was born in the UK and has strong ties to the country. The following week he'll jet back to the U.S. for the Daytona SportBike race in support of the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca.

Asked at Miller if he was interested in continuing with the team, Hacking said, "Hell yeah, I want to do it," adding, "If they said run the whole series, I'd say, ‘Where do I sign?'"

Hacking got a boost from his close friend, Yamaha's Ben Spies. Spies took every opportunity to tout Hacking's abilities at Miller Motorsports Park. Following his double win, Spies said, that "everybody's seen this weekend that he's got pace. The bike is...it's not the best bike out there. Everybody knows it. I think it can be better than where it is now and he showed them that and he deserves to be over here. And that's what I've said. I've brought his name up many a times and he's a hard rider and a lot of people, they kind of raise their eyebrows, oh the age, here and there, but the thing is he didn't start racing until he was in his late 20's. So he's still not, he's not an old racer. He just started later. The guy still rides hard.

"Everybody, all these guys know this track except for a couple guys and he hasn't ridden a superbike for half a season, never on Pirelli tires and a different crew, so I wouldn't say he had an advantage at all coming here on this weekend. I think he did pretty good."
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (L8Braker @ Jun 5 2009, 07:54 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Jamie Hacking earned two more rides with the Kawasaki World Superbike team after giving them their best results

Hey Lex, that pretty embarrassing, eh. Hahaha, good for you Hacking.
 
Any guesses on where he might finish this next round? Too bad kwak don't give a .... about their racing
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (SackWack @ Jun 5 2009, 06:25 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Any guesses on where he might finish this next round? Too bad kwak don't give a .... about their racing
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hhhmmm... I don't really think Hacking had a great weekend. He managed to trade paint with his teammate and go off course a few times. Is that a good result?
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (levigarrett @ Jun 5 2009, 11:16 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>hhhmmm... I don't really think Hacking had a great weekend. He managed to trade paint with his teammate and go off course a few times. Is that a good result?

<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (L8Braker @ Jun 5 2009, 07:54 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Jamie Hacking earned two more rides with the Kawasaki World Superbike team after giving them their best results
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (levigarrett @ Jun 6 2009, 07:16 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>hhhmmm... I don't really think Hacking had a great weekend. He managed to trade paint with his teammate and go off course a few times. Is that a good result?


I suppose it depends on what one terms as results and one terms as impressions.

In result terms he got a top 10 and a lowly place after a few offtrack excursions. Whilst race 2 was ordinary race one is impressive even with local track knowledge as the bike has not performed in oters hands for a while, so yes impressive.

If you are talking impressions well he may have been seen as a bit of a 'loose cannon' given the incidents in which he was involved and some may well judge his ability aginst thos impressions and say that he is not or should not be worthy of the opportunity. But I counter by saying that we (the public) often make allowances for the 'hometown redmist' of riders and to me Hacking may have fallen victim to that rather than shown any degree of recklessness in his riding.

The test of his suitability for future rides may be how he acclimatises to the next few rounds and what results follow from those rides.






Garry
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (Jumkie @ Jun 5 2009, 06:58 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>Hey Lex, that pretty embarrassing, eh. Hahaha, good for you Hacking.

Yes. It was quite embarrassing for someone of Hacking's quality to hit his teammate in race 1, then wreck another Kawaski rider in race 2.

However, I had the wrong frame of mind when assessing whether or not Hacking had a future with Kawasaki in WSBK. Kawasaki are a chronically embarrassed outfit that underachieves and backmarks at every event. I was approaching Kawasaki management decisions from a Honda or a Ducati perspective.

Hacking showed little race craft and he maximized collateral damage on his way to securing Kawasaki's highest finish of the season, but he is a good fit for them b/c he is determined and fast.
 
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (mylexicon @ Jun 6 2009, 04:19 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><div class='quotemain'>However, I had the wrong frame of mind when assessing whether or not Hacking had a future with Kawasaki in WSBK. Kawasaki are a chronically embarrassed outfit that underachieves and backmarks at every event. I was approaching Kawasaki management decisions from a Honda or a Ducati perspective.
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Good recovery.
 

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