Gregorio Lavilla Explained

Gregorio Lavilla
Nationality:Spanish
Birth Date:1973 9, df=y
Birth Place:Vandellòs i l'Hospitalet de l'Infant, Tarragona, Spain
Website:gregoriolavilla.com
Sbk Active Years:, -, -
Sbk Race Starts:180
Sbk Race Wins:0
Sbk Podiums:12
Sbk Poles:0
Sbk Fastest Laps:3
Sbk Total Points:1098,5
Motogp Active Years:,,
Motogp Manufacturers:Suzuki
Motogp Race Starts:18
Motogp Race Wins:0
Motogp Podiums:0
Motogp Poles:0
Motogp Fastest Laps:0
Motogp Total Points:7
Motogp Last Season:2004
Motogp Last Position:NC (0 pts)
Bsb Active Years:2005-2007
Bsb Manufacturers:Ducati
Bsb Championships:1
Bsb Race Starts:76
Bsb Race Wins:22
Bsb Podiums:51
Bsb Poles:18
Bsb Fastest Laps:25
Bsb Total Points:600
Bsb Last Season:2007
Bsb Last Position:4th (368 pts)

Gregorio Lavilla (born 29 September 1973) is a Spanish former professional motorcycle road racer. He has raced in MotoGP (full-time in 250s, and part-time in 500s and MotoGP itself), the Superbike World Championship, and the British Superbike Championship, taking the British crown in 2005.[1] [2] For he raced in WSB for the Ventaxia Honda team, finishing the championship in 12th place. He raced in four rounds of the 2009 WSB series with the Guandalini Racing Ducati team.[2]

Early years

Born in Vandellòs i l'Hospitalet de l'Infant, Tarragona, Spain, Lavilla was the Spanish Superbike champion in 1994, and raced in the 250cc Grand Prix World Championship the next year.[1] He was runner-up in Germany's Superbike championship in 1997, on board a Ducati. In 1998 he first raced in the Superbike World Championship full-time, on a private Ducati, taking two outright podiums.[2] He also made a one-off appearance at the German Grand Prix in the 500 cc class riding for the Honda Movistar Team of former rider Sito Pons.[1] He then spent 3 years with Kawasaki's factory superbike team, finishing 8th overall despite experiencing many crashes in 1999 (including five in a row) and finishing 10th overall in 2000 despite missing four rounds through injury, before a stronger 2001, in which he was the second-highest non-wildcard in Race 1 at Sugo.

For 2002 and 2003 he raced a factory Suzuki, doing what he could on a 750cc 4-cylinder bike which lagged behind the 1000cc Ducatis (and Colin Edwards' Honda in 2002), finishing 5th overall in the relatively weak 2003 championship with 19 top-six finishes including seven podiums, although still not taking a race win.[2] Suzuki did not enter a WSBK team in 2004, and Gregorio remained with them as a factory test rider, substituting for Yukio Kagayama in the BSB series once, and doing 4 MotoGP races for the team. He was released at the end of the season, leaving the way clear for his fairytale 2005.

British Superbike Championship

His victory in the 2005 British Superbike Championship was a major surprise, especially because he had never raced in the championship full-time before, and only got his ride a few days before the season started, initially to replace the injured James Haydon in the Airwaves Ducati team. He started so strongly that the team chose to retain him. He soon established himself ahead of teammate Leon Haslam, and the main rival to the Honda bikes, before a run of 6 wins and 5 second places in the final 11 races saw him take the crown.[3]

He started 2006 in even stronger form, with 6 wins in the first 8 races. His championship lead reached 66 points, but dropped after he crashed out of race 12 at Snetterton. Croft was not a successful meeting for him - a technical problem in race 1 and a fall in race 2 saw his championship lead down to 11 points over Haslam and 20 over Ryuichi Kiyonari's Honda. Further struggles meant that he lost the championship lead, and the final meeting was a disaster - he failed to score in either race, and slipped to 3rd in the championship behind Kiyonari and Haslam. His totals of 8 wins and 10 further podiums were still impressive for a third-place overall finish.

He started 2007 spectacularly, winning the first four races, and also winning race 7. However his form then faded and he finished 4th overall.

World Championship part 2

For he moved to the Superbike World Championship riding a Honda CBR1000RR for Ventaxia VK Honda as part of the Paul Bird team.[2] The team failed to run near the front, but Lavilla scored points in all but two races, peaking with fourth place in a chaotic first race at Donington Park but more often finishing between 11th and 15th. For he joined the Pro Ride Honda (formerly Alto Evolution) team, before sponsorship losses forced them to part company with Lavilla and only run a partial schedule[<ref>http://www.superbike.co.uk/news/Gregorio_Lavilla_out_of_Pro_Ride_WSB_team_news_279722.html{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Gregorio Lavilla out of Pro Ride WSBK team</ref>].In May 2009 Lavilla returned to WSBK with the Guandalini Racing team, initially in a one-race deal to replace the injured Brendan Roberts.[4] It was subsequently reported that Lavilla would race with Guandalini for the rest of the season,[5] but after four rounds (Kyalami, Miller, Misano and Donington), he was replaced at the team by Italian Matteo Baiocco.

Career statistics

Superbike World Championship

Races by year

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearMake1234567891011121314Pts
R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2R1R2
1994YamahaGBRGBRGERGERITAITASPA
17
SPA
17
AUTAUTINAINAJPNJPNNEDNEDSMRSMREUREURAUSAUSNC0
1996YamahaSMRSMRGBRGBRGERGERITAITACZECZEUSAUSAEUREURINAINAJPNJPNNEDNEDSPA
11
SPA
12
AUSAUS32nd9
1997AUSAUSSMRSMRGBR
13
GBR
13
GER
DNS
GER
13
ITAITAUSAUSAEUREURAUT
Ret
AUT
Ret
NEDNEDSPA
7
SPA
Ret
JPNJPNINAINA26th18
1998AUS
11
AUS
11
GBR
Ret
GBR
Ret
ITA
10
ITA
Ret
SPA
3
SPA
Ret
GER
Ret
GER
6
SMR
Ret
SMR
7
RSA
3
RSA
Ret
USA
13
USA
Ret
EUR
Ret
EUR
Ret
AUT
11
AUT
7
NED
Ret
NED
Ret
JPN
17
JPN
15
12th83.5
1999KawasakiRSA
8
RSA
6
AUS
Ret
AUS
Ret
GBR
Ret
GBR
Ret
SPA
6
SPA
4
ITA
8
ITA
7
GER
4
GER
Ret
SMR
7
SMR
5
USA
12
USA
8
EUR
Ret
EUR
10
AUT
5
AUT
Ret
NED
9
NED
7
GER
6
GER
8
JPN
14
JPN
16
8th156
2000KawasakiRSA
6
RSA
5
AUS
7
AUS
4
JPN
10
JPN
10
GBR
11
GBR
Ret
ITA
6
ITA
Ret
GERGERSMRSMRSPASPAUSAUSAGBR
12
GBR
8
NED
Ret
NED
Ret
GER
2
GER
4
GBR
9
GBR
5
10th133
2001KawasakiSPA
5
SPA
3
RSA
7
RSA
7
AUS
Ret
AUS
C
JPN
6
JPN
19
ITA
4
ITA
Ret
GBR
10
GBR
13
GER
6
GER
16
SMR
4
SMR
3
USA
12
USA
Ret
EUR
Ret
EUR
14
GER
11
GER
7
NED
12
NED
9
ITA
7
ITA
6
10th166
2002SuzukiSPA
8
SPA
Ret
AUS
7
AUS
8
RSA
Ret
RSA
11
JPN
12
JPN
12
ITA
7
ITA
5
GBR
Ret
GBR
14
GER
8
GER
Ret
SMR
10
SMR
6
USA
DNS
USA
DNS
GBR
15
GBR
12
GER
8
GER
9
NED
7
NED
Ret
ITA
8
ITA
7
10th130
2003SuzukiSPA
7
SPA
6
AUS
3
AUS
7
JPN
5
JPN
2
ITA
3
ITA
2
GER
Ret
GER
Ret
GBR
Ret
GBR
2
SMR
4
SMR
5
USA
Ret
USA
5
GBR
7
GBR
6
NED
Ret
NED
3
ITA
4
ITA
3
FRA
4
FRA
4
5th256
2008HondaQAT
13
QAT
14
AUS
11
AUS
8
SPA
7
SPA
11
NED
9
NED
7
ITA
11
ITA
10
USA
13
USA
15
GER
Ret
GER
14
SMR
8
SMR
14
CZE
15
CZE
14
GBR
14
GBR
13
EUR
4
EUR
7
ITA
14
ITA
Ret
FRA
10
FRA
12
POR
6
POR
8
12th135
2009DucatiAUSAUSQATQATSPASPANEDNEDITAITARSA
11
RSA
12
USA
14
USA
Ret
SMR
22
SMR
15
GBR
Ret
GBR
18
CZECZEGERGERITAITAFRAFRAPORPOR28th12

Grand Prix motorcycle racing

Races by year

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearClassBike12345678910111213141516Pts
1995250ccHondaAUS
15
MAL
22
JPN
Ret
SPA
23
GER
18
ITA
22
NED
15
FRA
18
GBR
22
CZE
18
BRA
Ret
ARG
19
EUR
24
32nd2
1998500ccHondaJPNMALSPAITAFRAMADNEDGBRGER
11
CZEIMOCATAUSARG27th5
2004MotoGPSuzukiRSACAT
Ret
NEDGBRCZE
Ret
AUS
16
VAL
17
NC0

Post racing career

In 2012, he joined the Avintia Blusens MotoGP CRT team as crew chief, from the second round of testing onwards. In 2013 he became a member of the new Dorna WorldSBK Orangisation (DWO), to become the WorldSBK Sporting director later.

Personal

His sporting heroes are Mick Doohan, Wayne Rainey and Lance Armstrong. He is unmarried and lives in L'Hospitalet de l'Infant.

References

  1. Web site: Gregorio Lavilla MotoGP statistics . motogp.com . 25 June 2012 . 7 July 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170707113144/http://www.motogp.com/en/riders/Gregorio+Lavilla . dead .
  2. Web site: Gregorio Lavilla WSBK statistics . worldsbk.com . 25 June 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120618082008/http://www.worldsbk.com/en/teams-e-riders/rider?pilota=57 . 18 June 2012 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: 2005 British Superbike statistical summary . www.f1network.net . 25 June 2012 .
  4. News: Lavilla returns to replace Roberts . crash.net . 2009-05-12 . 2009-05-12.
  5. http://www.motogpmatters.com/news/2009/05/26/gregorio_lavilla_to_replace_brendan_robe.html Gregorio Lavilla To Replace Brendan Roberts For Rest Of Season