Chris Vermeulen

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Chris Vermeulen

Chris Vermeulen
Nationality Flag of Australia Australian
Date of birth June 19, 1982 (1982-06-19) (age 25)
Place of birth Brisbane, Australia
Website chrisvermeulen.com
MotoGP Record
Current team Rizla Suzuki MotoGP
Bike number 7
World Championships 0
Race starts 37
Race Wins 1
Podium finishes 5
Pole positions 3
Fastest laps 1
Championship Points 287
2008 Championship position 11th (31 pts) - In Progress

Chris Vermeulen (born June 19, 1982 in Brisbane, Australia) is a Grand Prix motorcycle racer. From the 2006 season he switched permanently from Superbike World Championship to the elite MotoGP series, and the Rizla Suzuki MotoGP Team. He is regarded as a wet-weather expert [1]He is affectionately nicknamed 'Vermin' on account of his last name.

Contents

[edit] Superbike

In 1999 he raced in the Australian Superbike Championship, despite only having participated in a handful of professional races beforehand. He took his Yamaha to 8th in the championship, with a best result of 4th, and the privateer championship for non-factory riders. His mentor Barry Sheene then arranged rides for him in Britain in their Supersport and Superstock classes, and success in these gave him his World Supersport break with Castrol Honda.

Initial success in a few late-2000 races did not translate into a successful 2001, as he only managed a single top 5 finish. However, it was for 2002 that he first linked up with Dutch team owner Gerrit Ten Kate, taking his first poles and podiums en route to 7th in the championship. He became the team's lead rider for 2003, and was comfortably series champion with four victories, becoming the youngest ever winner.

[edit] World Superbike

When Ten Kate arranged a deal to run a Honda Fireblade in World Superbikes for 2004, Chris was the natural choice to ride it. The team did their own development on the bike (in its first test they still used a road-bike clutch), but he won four races and briefly lead the championship before finishing 4th, as the only non-Ducati in the top 8.

For 2005 the championship had many Yamaha and Suzuki bikes, as well as 4 more Hondas include a second Ten Kate entry for Karl Muggeridge, but Chris has continued to record victories, and took his first pole at Assen in Holland, the country in which his grandfather was born. Victory in the first race at Imola took him to within 55 points of veteran compatriot Troy Corser's lead, but the cancellation of the second race due to heavy rain meant that only 50 points were still available from the remaining round's 2 races. He still comfortably finished as series runner-up.

[edit] Move to MotoGP

He rode factory bikes for Honda in the Suzuka 8 hour race and, because of sponsorship and manufacturer relationships (Japan Tobacco and Honda, as the Ten Kate Honda team was sponsored by Japan Tobacco), also rode a Camel Pons Honda GP bike at the tail end of the 2005 season.

His progress towards a factory Honda ride seemed assured but Honda were only offering him another year in World Superbike, and Japan Tobacco had switched to Yamaha in MotoGP, so he made the bold decision to quit HRC and go with team Suzuki who has signed for in 2006 alongside fellow youngster John Hopkins.

[edit] 2006 Season

He scored his first MotoGP pole in Turkey after a stunning ride in the wet, coincidentally one round after fellow Australian rookie Casey Stoner scored his maiden pole. After the Sachsenring race he is 14th in the championship on 46 points, 4 places and 18 points behind Hopkins. At the following round at Laguna Seca (a track he knows from his WSBK days) he took pole position, one of only 2 non-Americans in the first 2 rows of the grid. He had a technical problem while running 3rd. In his home race at Philip Island he was the fastest man once the field had changed to wet tyres, and charged through the field to finish 2nd.

[edit] 2007 season

Vermeulen made a modestly competitive start to his 2007 campaign, with two 7th's, a 9th and an 11th place in the first 4 GP's of the season. Nevertheless, consistenly racking up the points saw him placed inside the top 10 riders for the season. His season came alive on the 20th May, 2007 at the Bugatti Circuit Le Mans, where, in a wet race, Vermuelen rode from 12th on the grid to take his maiden victory in MotoGP [2]. He followed the victory up with an impressive 3rd place at the Nickel & Dime British GP, again from 12th on the grid in the wet behind winner and fellow countryman Casey Stoner [3], and pole position in the wet at Assen [4]. He shone in the dry by starting third and finishing second at the US GP (Laguna Seca), again behind Stoner. At this meeting he was confirmed as a Suzuki rider for 2008 [5]

[edit] Career statistics

[edit] By season

Seas Class Moto Race Win Pod Pole FLap Pts Plcd WCh
2005 MotoGP Honda RC211V 2 0 0 0 0 10 21st -
2006 MotoGP Suzuki GSV-R 17 0 1 2 0 98 11th -
2007 MotoGP Suzuki GSV-R 18 1 4 1 1 179 6th -
Total 37 1 5 3 1 287 0

[edit] By class

Class Seas 1st GP 1st Pod 1st Win Race Win Podiums Pole FLap Pts WChmp
MotoGP 2005-2007 2005 Australia 2006 Australia 2007 France 37 1 5 3 1 287 0
Total 2005-2007 37 1 5 3 1 287 0

[edit] Races by year

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Yr Class Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Final Pos Pts
2005 MotoGP Honda SPA POR CHN FRA ITA CAT NED USA GBR GER CZE JPN MAL QAT AUS
11
TUR
11
VAL   21st 10
2006 MotoGP Suzuki SPA
12
QAT
Ret
TUR
7
CHN
Ret
FRA
10
ITA
14
CAT
6
NED
10
GBR
16
GER
7
USA
5
CZE
12
MAL
11
AUS
2
JPN
11
POR
9
VAL
Ret
  11th 98
2007 MotoGP Suzuki QAT
7
SPA
9
TUR
11
CHN
7
FRA
1
ITA
8
CAT
7
GBR
3
NED
16
GER
11
USA
2
CZE
5
SMR
2
POR
13
JPN
11
AUS
8
MAL
7
VAL
6
6th 179
2008 MotoGP Suzuki QAT
17
SPA
10
POR
8
CHN
Ret
FRA
5
ITA
10
CAT
7
GBR
-
NED
-
GER
-
USA
-
CZE
-
SMR
-
IND
-
JPN
-
AUS
-
MAL
-
VAL
-
- -

[edit] Trivia

  • He has a penchant for collecting old American Hot Rod cars and has a few in his collection.
  • All his racing numbers have the digit "7" as a tribute to his mentor Barry Sheene.

[edit] External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Fabien Foret
World Supersport Champion
2003
Succeeded by
Karl Muggeridge