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Chaz Davies

Chaz Davies
Davies at Daytona 200 in 2008
NationalityWelsh
Born (1987-02-10) 10 February 1987 (age 37)
Knighton, Powys, Wales
Current teamAruba Cloud MotoE[1]
Motorcycle racing career statistics
MotoGP World Championship
Active years2007
ManufacturersDucati
Championships0
2007 championship positionNC (0 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
3 0 0 0 0 0
250cc World Championship
Active years20032006
ManufacturersAprilia, Honda
Championships0
2006 championship position32nd (3 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
55 0 0 0 0 119
125cc World Championship
Active years2002
ManufacturersAprilia
Championships0
2002 championship position29th (5 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
15 0 0 0 0 5
MotoE World Championship
Active years2024
ManufacturersDucati
2024 championship position17th (35 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
16 0 0 0 0 35
Superbike World Championship
Active years20122021
ManufacturersAprilia, BMW, Ducati
Championships0
2017 championship position2nd (403 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
263 32 99 7 37 2071.5
Supersport World Championship
Active years20092011
ManufacturersTriumph, Yamaha
Championships1 (2011)
2011 championship position1st (206 pts)
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
28 6 12 1 1 381

Chaz Richard Page Davies[2] (born 10 February 1987 in Knighton, Powys, Wales), is a British motorcycle racer, primarily known for his career in the Superbike World Championship, where he finished three times as runner-up. In 2024, Davies was confirmed as a rider in the MotoE World Championship, an electrically powered race series.[3]

He was the 2011 World Supersport champion and also the 2011 BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year.

Career

Early career

Davies started racing in the British Mini Moto championship in 1995, moving up to Junior Road racing in 1999. In the same season he was given special dispensation at the age of 12 to take part in the Aprilia Challenge 125cc Championship. Davies finished 6th overall, and was the only rider to finish every race in a points scoring position. He set a new lap record at Donington Park National circuit, and was awarded 'Superteen of the Year'. He stayed with the series for a second year, and was runner up in the championship.

In 2001 Davies moved to the British 125 Championship, placing seventh after completing 8 of 13 rounds. Davies was the youngest winner of a British Championship race in July at Thruxton at the age of 14 years 5 months. Davies also contested all rounds of the Spanish National 125 Championship with the Telefonica Movistar team under the management of Alberto Puig. He was nominated for BBC "Young Sports Personality of the Year."

In 2002 management company Dorna Sports placed Chaz with Team Matteoni Racing to compete in the 125cc Grand Prix World Championship riding a kit Aprilia. Davies became the youngest rider to compete in a full season of GP Motorcycle racing.

From 2003, Davies rode for Aprilia Germany on the back of the consistent performance in his 125cc 'Rookie' season. In 2003 he became the youngest rider to score World Championship points in the 250cc class finishing 15th place in the Gauloises Africa's Grand Prix. For the 2004 season, still the youngest rider by two years, Davies finished 13th in the 250cc World Championship Classification out of the 36 regular starters scoring three top 10 results in the final three races of the season. Davies finished 2004 with a series of outstanding results on what was a customer kit level of bike, far inferior to those of the factory teams. He finished 9th in Malaysia, 6th in Australia and then backed it up with 5th at the final race in Valencia.

Davies again signed for Aprilia Germany for 2005 in hope that Aprilia would provide him with factory material after his strong end to 2004. With two Top 10 results in Italy and Turkey, Davies again proved himself a consistent front runner within the non-factory machines but again failed to secure any type of factory backing. He finished the championship in 16th.

For the 2006 season, he was promised a semi-works Aprilia bike by the Campetella team, but this did not materialise after the team ran into serious sponsorship difficulties and Davies was forced to ride a series of privateer options. After Campetella replaced Davies for the Mugello round with a sponsored rider Franco Battaini due to financial difficulties, Davies secured a semi-works Honda ride for another team the 2006 British GP at Donington Park. He then rode a 600 cc Yamaha in the AMA Championship at Mid-Ohio; then finished out the season with a 250 cc ride at the closing Grand Prix of the year at Cheste, near Valencia.

AMA

In 2007, Davies raced in the AMA Supersport Championship and Formula X-Treme Championship, racing a Yamaha for the Celtic Racing team.[4] In 2008 he rode a Kawasaki for Attack Kawasaki.[5] In early December 2007 Davies set the fastest times in two classes while testing at Daytona for the upcoming opening race of the 2008 AMA season. He was named winner of the 2008 Daytona 200 after original race winner, Josh Hayes, was disqualified for an illegal crankshaft.[6] Davies becomes the first racer from the United Kingdom to win the prestigious race.

For 2009 Davies signed with KWS Aprilia to run in the all-new AMA Daytona Sportbike series, finishing the season with moderate success.

MotoGP World Championship

In 2007 he made his MotoGP debut, at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca for Pramac d'Antin Ducati, riding a Desmosedici GP7 in replacement for the injured Alex Hofmann, who crashed in first practice.[7] Already there for the supporting AMA round, Davies took over on an unfamiliar bike and track.[8] Despite setting solid laptimes, he was overlooked for the following event at Brno, with Iván Silva replacing Hofmann.[9]

On 28 September 2007 it was announced that Chaz Davies would replace Alex Hoffmann at the D'Antin squad for the final three rounds of the 2007 season.[10] After failing to score in Phillip Island and Sepang, Davies was forced to pull out of the final race of the season in Valencia due to hand and wrist injuries sustained during the qualifying and practice sessions. Davies was offered a full-time testing role with Ducati for 2008, but he turned it down in favour of a return to AMA.[11]

Supersport World Championship

Davies made a switch to World Supersport late in the 2009 season for Triumph, remaining with them for 2010.[12] He was consistently their fastest rider, scoring podium finishes at Valencia, Kyalami and Brno. After his Brno success, team manager Guiliano Rovelli commented "He is a tough bloke who always gives 110% and is now the best rider in Supersport". He came agonisingly close to a first class win at Imola – suffering a fuel pump failure while running third, just as leaders Kenan Sofuoglu and Eugene Laverty collided.[13]

2011 saw Davies team switch to Yamaha machinery. After a disappointing start to his championship campaign with a puncture at the first race, Davies scored 8 podiums with 6 wins on his way to securing the 2011 World Supersport Title.

Superbike World Championship

Chaz Davies at the 2014 Goodwood Festival of Speed

In 2012 Davies moved to the World Superbike championship to join ParkinGO MTC Racing Aprilia. After a highly impressive debut season he finished 9th overall with 4 podium finishes, including 1 win.[14]

For the 2013 season Davies moved to the factory BMW Motorrad Goldbet team.

From 2015, Davies rode for the Aruba.it Ducati team. Davies announced his retirement from regular competition in September 2021.[15]

Post Superbike Career

From 2022, Davies was a rider-coach working with Ducati and Feel Racing, mentoring Alvaro Bautista and Michael Ruben Rinaldi in World Superbikes and Nicolo Bulega in Ducati's inaugural World Supersport season, riding the Panigale V-twin.[16]

Davies intended to compete in the 2022 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race but was ill.[17] He entered the 2023 event on an ERC Endurance Ducati with David Checa and Philipp Öttl, finishing fifth.[18]

In 2024, Davies was confirmed as a rider in the MotoE World Championship, an electrically powered race series using Ducati series-specified machines.[3]

Career statistics

All-time statistics

Series Years Races Poles Podiums Wins 2nd place 3rd place Fastest Laps Titles
125cc 2002 15 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
250cc 2003–2006 55 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AMA Formula Xtreme 2006–2008 22 0 4 1 0 3 0 0
AMA Supersport Championship 2006–2008 22 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
MotoGP 2007 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
AMA Pro Daytona SportBike 2009 20 0 2 0 2 0 0 0
World Supersport Championship 2009–2011 28 1 12 6 1 5 1 1
World Superbike Championship 2012–2020 237 7 98 32 37 29 36 0
MotoE World Championship 2024 16 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total 418 8 116 39 40 37 37 1

Grand Prix motorcycle racing

Races by year

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

Year Class Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Pos Pts
2002 125cc Aprilia JPN
Ret
RSA
21
SPA
24
FRA
18
ITA
18
CAT
Ret
NED
24
GBR
16
GER
20
CZE
DNS
POR
11
BRA
29
PAC
24
MAL
25
AUS
22
VAL
28
29th 5
2003 250cc Aprilia JPN
18
RSA
15
SPA
18
FRA
Ret
ITA
13
CAT
Ret
NED
24
GBR
13
GER
12
CZE
14
POR
20
BRA
9
PAC
11
MAL
12
AUS
15
VAL
13
14th 33
2004 250cc Aprilia RSA
Ret
SPA
Ret
FRA
12
ITA
17
CAT
13
NED
15
BRA
13
GER
12
GBR
Ret
CZE
8
POR
16
JPN
Ret
QAT
16
MAL
9
AUS
6
VAL
5
13th 51
2005 250cc Aprilia SPA
11
POR
Ret
CHN
Ret
FRA
12
ITA
10
CAT
Ret
NED
14
GBR
Ret
GER
Ret
CZE
Ret
JPN
Ret
MAL
12
QAT
16
AUS
11
TUR
10
VAL
16
16th 32
2006 250cc Aprilia SPA
13
QAT
17
TUR
Ret
CHN
17
FRA
Ret
ITA CAT NED 32nd 3
Honda GBR
Ret
GER CZE MAL AUS JPN POR VAL
21
2007 MotoGP Ducati QAT SPA TUR CHN FRA ITA CAT GBR NED GER USA
16
CZE SMR POR JPN AUS
Ret
MAL
17
VAL
DNS
NC 0
2024 MotoE Ducati POR1
9
POR2
15
FRA1
13
FRA2
12
CAT1
Ret
CAT2
14
ITA1
14
ITA2
16
NED1
9
NED2
Ret
GER1
14
GER2
16
AUT1
13
AUT2
14
RSM1
15
RSM2
15
17th 35

AMA Formula Xtreme

Races by year

(key)

Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pos Pts
2006 Yamaha DAY
BAR
FON
INF
RAM
MIL
LAG
M-O
VIR
RAT
M-O
8
45th 23
2007 Yamaha DAY
4
BAR
Ret
FON
4
INF
28
RAM
15
MIL
3
LAG
6
M-O
3
VIR
6
RAT
6
LAG
6
6th 206
2008 Kawasaki DAY
1
BAR
3
FON
5
INF
27
MIL
Ret
RAM
6
M-O
4
VIR
6
RAT
5
LAG
5
5th 224

AMA Supersport Championship

Races by year

(key)

Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pos Pts
2006 Yamaha DAY
BAR
FON
INF
RAM
MIL
LAG
M-O
VIR
RAT
M-O
5
40th 26
2007 Yamaha DAY
8
BAR
Ret
FON
8
INF
4
RAM
7
MIL
9
LAG
Ret
M-O
VIR
6
RAT
Ret
LAG
Ret
13th 145
2008 Kawasaki DAY
4
BAR
10
FON
8
INF
10
MIL
9
RAM
6
LAG
15
M-O
9
VIR
11
RAT
16
LAG
4
6th 239

AMA Pro Daytona SportBike

Races by year

(key)

Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pos Pts
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
2009 Aprilia DAY
7
FON
8
FON
7
RAT
5
RAT
6
BAR
28
BAR
4
INF
4
INF
31
RAM
39
RAM
8
LAG
2
M-O
5
M-O
7
HRT
4
HRT
36
VIR
36
VIR
30
N-J
2
N-J
29
9th 219

Supersport World Championship

Races by year

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

Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Pos Pts
2009 Triumph AUS QAT SPA NED ITA RSA USA SMR GBR CZE GER ITA
4
FRA
Ret
POR
7
20th 22
2010 Triumph AUS
12
POR
4
SPA
3
NED
4
ITA
7
RSA
3
USA
4
SMR
4
CZE
3
GBR
4
GER
5
ITA
Ret
FRA
3
4th 153
2011 Yamaha AUS
18
EUR
2
NED
1
ITA
1
SMR
6
SPA
1
CZE
3
GBR
1
GER
1
ITA
Ret
FRA
6
POR
1
1st 206

Superbike World Championship

Races by year

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

Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Pos Pts
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
2012 Aprilia AUS
DNS
AUS
DNS
ITA
Ret
ITA
14
NED
Ret
NED
Ret
ITA
C
ITA
12
EUR
12
EUR
7
USA
7
USA
4
SMR
6
SMR
Ret
SPA
4
SPA
3
CZE
11
CZE
6
GBR
14
GBR
7
RUS
Ret
RUS
3
GER
3
GER
1
POR
DNS
POR
Ret
FRA
Ret
FRA
8
9th 164.5
2013 BMW AUS
4
AUS
17
SPA
1
SPA
1
NED
7
NED
5
ITA
5
ITA
Ret
GBR
8
GBR
6
POR
6
POR
5
ITA
6
ITA
5
RUS
2
RUS
C
GBR
10
GBR
Ret
GER
3
GER
1
TUR
8
TUR
6
USA
2
USA
Ret
FRA
Ret
FRA
5
SPA
7
SPA
5
5th 290
2014 Ducati AUS
8
AUS
7
SPA
4
SPA
Ret
NED
7
NED
8
ITA
2
ITA
2
GBR
5
GBR
5
MAL
4
MAL
8
ITA
4
ITA
Ret
POR
18
POR
3
USA
Ret
USA
DNS
SPA
3
SPA
4
FRA
Ret
FRA
9
QAT
7
QAT
5
6th 215
2015 Ducati AUS
3
AUS
3
THA
11
THA
15
SPA
2
SPA
1
NED
2
NED
2
ITA
DNS
ITA
Ret
GBR
3
GBR
3
POR
3
POR
4
ITA
3
ITA
4
USA
1
USA
1
MAL
2
MAL
1
SPA
2
SPA
1
FRA
6
FRA
2
QAT
4
QAT
2
2nd 416
2016 Ducati AUS
2
AUS
10
THA
4
THA
3
SPA
1
SPA
1
NED
2
NED
5
ITA
1
ITA
1
MAL
3
MAL
4
GBR
Ret
GBR
3
ITA
4
ITA
Ret
USA
Ret
USA
3
GER
1
GER
6
FRA
1
FRA
1
SPA
1
SPA
1
QAT
1
QAT
1
3rd 445
2017 Ducati AUS
2
AUS
2
THA
2
THA
6
ARA
Ret
ARA
1
NED
Ret
NED
3
ITA
1
ITA
1
GBR
8
GBR
3
ITA
Ret
ITA
DNS
USA
1
USA
3
GER
1
GER
1
POR
2
POR
Ret
FRA
10
FRA
1
SPA
2
SPA
3
QAT
2
QAT
2
2nd 403
2018 Ducati AUS
3
AUS
Ret
THA
3
THA
1
ARA
2
ARA
1
NED
3
NED
5
ITA
2
ITA
2
GBR
8
GBR
5
CZE
8
CZE
3
USA
2
USA
2
ITA
2
ITA
4
POR
4
POR
4
FRA
5
FRA
2
ARG
Ret
ARG
4
QAT
7
QAT
C
2nd 356
Year Bike 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Pos Pts
R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2 R1 SR R2
2019 Ducati AUS
10
AUS
10
AUS
7
THA
15
THA
8
THA
Ret
SPA
3
SPA
4
SPA
3
NED
7
NED
C
NED
5
ITA
Ret
ITA
2
ITA
C
SPA
7
SPA
10
SPA
Ret
ITA
5
ITA
17
ITA
7
GBR
10
GBR
7
GBR
9
USA
2
USA
2
USA
1
POR
2
POR
10
POR
16
FRA
Ret
FRA
4
FRA
4
ARG
DNS
ARG
4
ARG
2
QAT
2
QAT
5
QAT
2
6th 294
2020 Ducati AUS
8
AUS
13
AUS
5
SPA
4
SPA
5
SPA
2
POR
11
POR
Ret
POR
4
SPA
2
SPA
5
SPA
2
SPA
3
SPA
5
SPA
Ret
SPA
3
SPA
4
SPA
1
FRA
4
FRA
5
FRA
3
POR
2
POR
4
POR
1
3rd 273
2021 Ducati SPA
5
SPA
4
SPA
19
POR
6
POR
9
POR
2
ITA
NC
ITA
Ret
ITA
Ret
GBR
11
GBR
8
GBR
7
NED
9
NED
9
NED
4
CZE
Ret
CZE
14
CZE
12
SPA
Ret
SPA
7
SPA
Ret
FRA
7
FRA
8
FRA
5
SPA
10
SPA
Ret
SPA
DNS
SPA
SPA
SPA
POR
POR
POR
ARG
12
ARG
13
ARG
9
INA
8
INA
C
INA
12
12th 143

* Season still in progress.

References

  1. ^ The Aruba Cloud MotoE Team is born arubacloud.com, 6 February 2024. Retrieved 2 April 2024
  2. ^ "Chaz Richard Page DAVIES". Companies House. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
  3. ^ a b Chaz Davies confirms return to racing with Aruba.it Racing MotoE deal for 2024 bikesportnews.com, 7 February 2024. Retrieved 25 February 2024
  4. ^ Chaz moves to AMA Archived 6 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Crash.net, 24 November 2006
  5. ^ Davies switches teams in the US BBC Sport – 11 December 2007
  6. ^ "Hayes Disqualified For Illegal Crankshaft Preparation". SuperbikePlanet.com. Archived from the original on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 8 March 2008.
  7. ^ FIVE WEEK RECOVERY TIME FOR ALEX HOFMANN AFTER PRACTICE CRASH Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine retrieved from trymysport.co.uk
  8. ^ "MOTOGP: Davies gets d'Antin call-up!, motorsport news, results, features, teams, drivers, updates". Archived from the original on 22 August 2007. Retrieved 21 July 2007.
  9. ^ Soup:: Davies Won't Race At Brno:: 08-09-2007 Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Official: Chaz to d'Antin
  11. ^ Chaz returns to the AMA
  12. ^ "Chaz Davies secures full-time Triumph seat". crash.net. Crash Media Group. 7 January 2010. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  13. ^ "Fuel pump denies Davies, Triumph first win". crash.net. Crash Media Group. 29 September 2010. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  14. ^ "Chaz Davies World Superbike statistics". worldsbk.com. 22 April 2013. Archived from the original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  15. ^ Chaz Davies: 99 and not yet out for retiring World Superbike racer BBC Sport, 30 September 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2021
  16. ^ WorldSBK: Chaz Davies takes up Riders’ coach role with Ducati crash.net, 21 January 2022. Retrieved 25 January 2022
  17. ^ Ex-WorldSBK star Chaz Davies pulls out of Le Mans 24 Hour through illness visordown.com, 13 April 2022. Retrieved 24 April 2023
  18. ^ Why 'love, hate' EWC experience leaves Davies "hooked" and wanting more fimewc.com, 20 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023
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