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1989 Belgian motorcycle Grand Prix


FieldValue
Grand PrixBelgian
flagBelgium
Official_NameBelgium Motorcycle Grand Prix
LocationCircuit de Spa-Francorchamps
Course_mi4.352
Course_km7.004
Race_No10
Season_No15
Date2 July
Year1989
ImageCircuit Spa.png
Pole_Rider_500Kevin Schwantz
Pole_Rider_500_CountryUSA
Pole_Time_5002:24.650
Fast_Rider_500Kevin Schwantz
Fast_Rider_500_CountryUSA
Fast_Time_5002:26.110
First_Rider_500Eddie Lawson
First_Rider_500_CountryUSA
Second_Rider_500Kevin Schwantz
Second_Rider_500_CountryUSA
Third_Rider_500Wayne Rainey
Third_Rider_500_CountryUSA
Pole_Rider_250Didier de Radiguès
Pole_Rider_250_CountryBelgium
Pole_Time_2502:31.790
Fast_Rider_250Sito Pons
Fast_Rider_250_CountrySpain
Fast_Time_2502:33.530
First_Rider_250Jacques Cornu
First_Rider_250_CountrySwitzerland
Second_Rider_250Sito Pons
Second_Rider_250_CountrySpain
Third_Rider_250Carlos Cardús
Third_Rider_250_CountrySpain
Pole_Rider_125Ezio Gianola
Pole_Rider_125_CountryItaly
Pole_Time_1252:43.470
Fast_Rider_125Hans Spaan
Fast_Rider_125_CountryNetherlands
Fast_Time_1252:55.740
First_Rider_125Hans Spaan
First_Rider_125_CountryNetherlands
Second_Rider_125Ezio Gianola
Second_Rider_125_CountryItaly
Third_Rider_125Hisashi Unemoto
Third_Rider_125_CountryJapan

|}}

The 1989 Belgian motorcycle Grand Prix was the tenth round of the 1989 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. It took place on the weekend of 30 June-2 July 1989 at Spa-Francorchamps.

500 cc race report

Kevin Schwantz makes it six poles in a row, and John Kocinski makes his 500 debut.

The first turns go to Eddie Lawson, Wayne Rainey and Schwantz. Christian Sarron watches from fourth as the three ahead scrape fairings. The quartet get well clear, but wet patches begin to appear on the track.

Rainey and Schwantz raise their hands to stop the race, but ahead of them Lawson and Sarron continue at race pace. Lawson soon becomes aware of the water and raises his hand too, but Sarron, perhaps under the mistaken impression that he’s dropping the other three, seems too enthusiastic to stop and loses the front-end on a fast left. The riders pit with 5 laps raced.

It looks like the restart on aggregate time will be dry, and again Lawson, Rainey and Schwantz get away at the front, though the sky darkens. Again, the leaders raise their hands after the 9th lap, but before everyone can pit, Mick Doohan and Kocinski collide, sliding without serious injury.

The podium of the second leg is Lawson, Schwantz and Rainey, but the race organizers decide to run a third leg in the wet.

The third race sees Schwantz get away from Rainey, while Lawson gets into a tussle with Kocinski for third. On the last lap, with a comfortable lead, Schwantz crashes out on the brakes, and Rainey wheelies in for the lead, followed by Kocinski and Lawson. However, the results of the third race are later nullified, giving Lawson the win and closing the gap to Rainey. The points are later halved when a rule is discovered that only one restart is allowed.

The FIM had decided by 1989 that there could be no more than two starts and that after the second race, started on slicks, was stopped due to rain, the race would be deemed complete. In an interesting footnote, the 1989 Belgium Grand Prix in Spa Francorchamps, scheduled for 18 laps and 73.3 miles, was entered in the books as a “complete” eight-lap, 34.5-mile sprint race victory for Eddie Lawson. But if you look at the old magazines you’ll see Kevin Schwantz celebrating the victory atop a wet podium and John Kocinski standing third in his 500 debut. In fact, the race director, fearing a riot if he sent the fans home after only seeing two aborted starts and eight recorded laps, decided to appease the crowd by sending the riders out again even though it was clearly against the rules. Word was that the “promoter” ordered the race director to do this. The “promoter” was Bernie Ecclestone. Eventually half points were awarded and the FIM realized that something had to be done. Thus the “wet race” and “dry race” rules were instituted. Under these rules if a race starts in the dry with riders on slicks and rain begins to the extent that the race director believes that there is insufficient traction for slick tires, he orders red flags. If three or more laps have been run, the original race distance, minus the number of laps run and minus one additional lap, is established for the second leg. However, regardless of the conditions at the start of the second part, the race is declared “wet,’ meaning that it would not be stopped simply because it begins to rain. Riders go out for part two with the understanding that, if they opted for the wrong tires, they either have to wobble around like Steve Manship at Silverstone or come in for a change. The final results are then to be based on aggregate times. This worked from the late eighties until 2003 when Dorna, protecting their TV coverage against long delays, overrode strong MSMA (Motorcycle Sport Manufacturers Association) objections and managed to introduce the first of three variants of “flag to flag” racing -- races which would not be stopped and restarted due to rain.

500 cc classification

Pos.RiderTeamManufacturerLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526DNSDNQSources:
USA Eddie LawsonRothmans Kanemoto HondaHonda819:46.260510
USA Kevin SchwantzSuzuki Pepsi ColaSuzuki8+0.92018.5
USA Wayne RaineyTeam Lucky Strike RobertsYamaha8+1.52027.5
FRA Christian SarronSonauto Gauloises Blondes Yamaha Mobil 1Yamaha8+11.43046.5
USA John KocinskiTeam Lucky Strike RobertsYamaha8+15.22085.5
ITA Pierfrancesco ChiliHB Honda Gallina TeamHonda8+18.87075
AUS Kevin MageeTeam Lucky Strike RobertsYamaha8+20.72064.5
AUS Mick DoohanRothmans Honda TeamHonda8+27.23034
USA Freddie SpencerMarlboro Yamaha Team AgostiniYamaha8+27.85093.5
GBR Niall MackenzieMarlboro Yamaha Team AgostiniYamaha8+32.840113
GBR Rob McElneaCabin Racing TeamHonda8+32.970132.5
CHE Marco GentileFior MarlboroFior8+1:25.460162
NLD Cees DoorakkersHRK MotorsHonda8+1:34.460211.5
IRL Eddie LaycockHonda8+1:37.060201
GBR Simon BuckmasterRacing Team KatayamaHonda8+1:37.590170.5
AUT Josef DopplerHonda7+1 Lap22
CHE Bruno KneubuhlerRomer Racing SuisseHonda7+1 Lap18
ITA Marco PapaTeam GrecoPaton7+1 Lap19
CHE Nicholas SchmassmanFMSHonda7+1 Lap23
FRG Hans KlingebielSuzuki7+1 Lap26
ESP Fernando GonzalesClub Motocross PozueloHonda7+1 Lap25
GBR Mark PhillipsSuzuki7+1 Lap24
USA Randy MamolaCagiva CorseCagiva7+1 Lap14
ITA Alessandro ValesiTeam IberiaYamaha+6 Laps15
AUS Wayne GardnerRothmans Honda TeamHonda+6 Laps10
CSK Pavel DekanekHonda+6 Laps27
GBR Ron HaslamSuzuki Pepsi ColaSuzukiDid not start12
BEL Patrick ChavanneHondaDid not qualify

References

| Previous_year's_race = 1988 Belgian Grand Prix | Next_year's_race = 1990 Belgian Grand Prix

References

  1. "Alle Grand-Prix uitslagen en bijzonderheden, van 1973 (het jaar dat Jack begon met racen) tot heden.".
  2. Mitchell, Malcolm. "1989 500cc Class (FIM Grand Prix World Championship) Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project".
  3. "Spa-Francorchamps | the Motor Racing Programme Covers Project".
  4. Noyes, Dennis: [http://www.speedtv.com/articles/moto/motogp/32715/ ''Time to Fix 'Flag-to-Flag' Pit Stops Before Luck Runs Out''] SpeedTV.com 20 September 2006.
  5. (13 June 2017). "1989 Belgian MotoGP - Motor Sport Magazine Database".
  6. "BELGIUM GRAND PRIX · 500cc Race Classification 1989".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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