Lorenzo Lanzi is an SBK race winner of yore but his more immediate task this year is to hold off the attentions of the only rider outside the top four to have won a race in 2007,
Ruben Xaus of Sterilgarda Ducati. Lanzi is sixth and with Xaus only three points behind, he will have to make good friends with Brno again early in the race weekend to keep his nose in front of the potent privateer rider.
Roby Rolfo has had some difficult periods since his move to the official Honda team but the flashes of excellence he undoubtedly has may well find Brno a great conductor this weekend. It is a circuit ex-GP rider Rolfo knows very well, as he fights to hold onto his top ten status. For the privateer wünderkid Max Neukirchner riding for Suzuki Germany, Rolfo is an immediate target, and only nine points ahead.
A good recent test for
Regis Laconi in the PSG-1 Kawasaki Corse and
Fonsi Nieto needs to be translated into strong results in each Brno race, to allow the talented Kawasaki twins to scale the heights of the top ten before the season concludes. Laconi is currently 11th, 13 points behind Kagayama’s Suzuki, with Nieto 14th, 26 points from his team-mate. Splitting the Kawasakis in the championship table right now are two very different riders, on very different machines. In 12th place,
Michel Fabrizio was a double Brno podium force in 2006, aboard last year’s DFX Corse Honda, with Jakub Smrz only six points behind him currently, riding to his relatively venerable Caracchi Ducati SC 999.
Josh Brookes is out of the SBK limelight now and very firmly in the forefront of the Supersport stars, with his old Alto Evolution team-mate
Karl Muggeridge staying put to see out the season in the Superbike class. Shinichi Nakatomi riding for the Yamaha YZF Team, Luca Morelli of DFX Honda Corse, Alessandro Polita on the Celani Suzuki and Dean Ellison are also privateer riders to watch, while a bit of local flavour comes from wild card rider, Milos Cihak on the Prorace Suzuki GSX-R1000.