Pierfrancesco Chili

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Pierfrancesco Chili
Nationality Flag of Italy Italian

Grand Prix motorcycle racing career
Active years 1986 - 1995
Teams Suzuki, Honda, Aprilia, Yamaha, Cagiva
Grands Prix 102
Championships 0
Wins 5
Podium finishes    11
Career points 691
Pole positions 5
Fastest laps 4
First Grand Prix 1986 500cc Spanish Grand Prix
First win 1989 500cc Nations Grand Prix
Last win 1992 250cc British Grand Prix
Last Grand Prix 1995 500cc Italian Grand Prix


Pierfrancesco 'Frankie' Chili, (born June 20, 1964 in Bologna, Italy, near the Imola race track) is a motorcycle racer who has raced in the Superbike World Championship and the 250cc and 500cc classes in Grand Prix. In WSBK he had a record number of starts, as well as 10 poles and 17 wins. He retired at the end of the 2006 season.

Contents

[edit] 500cc

Frankie spent several years on a Gallina HB Honda, with some works backing. He won a race at Misano when most of the top riders didn't race due to the track being too slippery due to rain, but was generally upper-midfield at best. His best championship finish was 6th in 1989.

[edit] 250cc

He stepped down to 250s, finishing 3rd overall in 1992.

[edit] Superbike World Championship

He switched to the Superbike World Championship in 1995 on a private Ducati, taking a win at Monza and 3 further podiums, as well as the fastest lap in four races, en route to eighth overall. Curiously, in each of 1995-1997 he won race two at Monza after crashing in race one. In 1996 he took two wins as well as his first two poles, coming sixth in the championship. He was seventh-placed in 1997, taking three wins and three poles but only three more podiums.

Results in 1998 on a factory Ducati were an improvement - Frankie won five races to come fourth place overall, his best ever finish. However, at Assen he battled too hard with Carl Fogarty (also on a factory-backed bike, although a separate team), falling on the final lap, and was sacked at the end of the year. In 1999 he raced for Suzuki, coming sixth with two more wins. His first win came in race two at the A1-Ring, after crashing while leading the first race.

In 2000 he repeated the ten podiums and fourth place overall of 1998, although with only a single win as Colin Edwards dominated. Over the next two years he made the podium just three times, coming seventh and eighth in the series. Although he was only seventh again, 2003 represented something of a resurgence for a rider nearing forty years of age; with five third places and one win. The year 2004 was even better for the PSG-1 Ducati team, fifth overall with another nine podiums. In 2005 he moved to the Klaffi Honda team with rookie Max Neukirchner, coming tenth overall. 2006 was ruined by a broken pelvis, which caused him to miss several races.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pierfrancesco Chili says no to Silverstone MOTOGP News:

[edit] External links


Personal tools