 Michael Dunlop’s early dominance of the Isle of Man TT Races  continued on Monday morning when he made it two wins from two in the  first 4-lap Supersport race. Riding his own MD Racing Honda, technically  supported by PTR, the 24-year old almost beat his own lap record with a  second lap of 127.525mph and once he’d caught second placed rider Bruce  Anstey on the roads, he was able to circulate with the Kiwi for the  final two laps and take his fifth TT victory, matching the total of his  late father Robert.
 Michael Dunlop’s early dominance of the Isle of Man TT Races  continued on Monday morning when he made it two wins from two in the  first 4-lap Supersport race. Riding his own MD Racing Honda, technically  supported by PTR, the 24-year old almost beat his own lap record with a  second lap of 127.525mph and once he’d caught second placed rider Bruce  Anstey on the roads, he was able to circulate with the Kiwi for the  final two laps and take his fifth TT victory, matching the total of his  late father Robert.
“I struggled a bit with the bike in the first few miles as it was all  over the road but after that I just got my head down and gave it my all  on that first lap,” said Dunlop afterwards. “I knew it was Bruce in  second so once I’d caught him on the road on the second lap I knew what I  had to do. We caught James Hillier, Cam Donald and John McGuinness so  it was good craic out there but it also helped me stay focussed. The wee  girl was spot on and it’s great to have taken my second win of the week  and give PTR their first TT win too.”
It was brother William who made the early running, leading through  Glen Helen on the opening lap by 1.6s from Anstey 1.6s with Michael a  further 0.1s back. However, as the rest of the race unfolded, Michael  turned his deficit into a lead and by the Grandstand, an opening lap of  126.431mph extended his lead to 4.2s. Anstey had moved back into second  by two seconds with Cameron Donald in fourth, just ahead of Guy Martin  and a flying Dean Harrison.
On the second lap, Dunlop went even faster, his lap of 127.525mph  only a fraction outside his own lap record, and having now caught Anstey  on the road, he could afford to sit with his fellow Honda rider for the  second half of the race. William was still holding onto third although  the rest of the leaderboard was shuffling somewhat with Martin up to  fourth ahead of Donald, John McGuinness, Harrison, Gary Johnson on the  MV Agusta and James Hillier.
As they left the solitary pit stop, Dunlop, Anstey, Donald,  McGuinness and Hillier were together on the road giving the thousands of  fans around the course a tremendous sight and the dice allowed the last  two riders to not only overhaul Martin but also close in to Dunlop in  third.
However, the Milwaukee Yamaha rider responded and with Michael and  Anstey secure in first and second, he was able to take the final podium  spot by over seven seconds. The result meant it was the first time the  two siblings have shared a TT rostrum.
McGuinness took a strong fourth with Hillier having another excellent  ride into fifth as he overhauled Martin on the final lap. Donald  slipped back to seventh with Harrison, Dan Stewart and Dan Cooper  rounding out the top ten.
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
	
 
 
 
0 commentaires:
Enregistrer un commentaire