The Ballymoney man extended his Supersport winning streak at the Isle of Man TT to nine in a row, securing his 34th victory at the event on Tuesday afternoon
Northern Ireland motorsport hero Michael Dunlop has described Tuesday’s record-extending Monster Energy Supersport race win at the Isle of Man TT Races as ‘comfortable’
The Ballymoney man extended his Supersport winning streak at the Isle of Man TT to nine in a row, securing his 34th victory at the event on Tuesday afternoon.
He holds the all-time record for victories and podium finishes at the Isle of Man TT, with 34 wins and 52 podiums, surpassing the previous record of 26 victories held by his uncle Joey Dunlop.
Michael Dunlop overhauled early race leader Dean Harrison (Honda Racing) at the end of the first lap to eventually win by 24.47s. Peter Hickman (Swan Triumph by PHR Performance) completed the podium in third.
“It was good,” Dunlop said afterwards. “The bike’s been good all week, we’ve been really comfortable, so the main thing was to try and put it on (the podium) today.
“The conditions were a bit strange today, but the bike never missed a beat, the boys worked really hard, and it was nice to be back in here winning again.”
Delayed four hours from an 11am start to allow the roads to dry after the inclement weather on Monday and overnight, the race was also cut from four laps to three but conditions all around the course were good come the start time of 3pm.
Mike Browne led the field away on the Boyce Precision Engineering by Russell Racing Yamaha but by Glen Helen, nine miles into the lap, Harrison led Dunlop by 1.6s with Browne in third 4.2s further back.
As they came into the pits at the end of the lap for their mandatory stop, a first lap speed of 126.602mph gave Dunlop the lead from Harrison (126.587mph) by just 0.127s.
Jumping Ballaugh Bridge for the second time, Dunlop’s lead had almost doubled to four seconds and by Ramsey, he’d extended his lead further to 7.2s as he started the Mountain climb once more.
Dunlop continued to increase his lead through every sector and starting the third and final lap, the gap to Harrison stood at 12.5s as he looked to have broken the Honda rider’s challenge.
The Antrim man never looked back and with the fastest lap of the race, 127.672mph, he took the victory by 24.47s from Harrison (126.258mph) with Hickman (127.215mph) claiming third as the same three riders filled the podium position as Sunday’s Superbike race – albeit in a different order.
Sign up to our free sports newsletter to get the latest headlines to your inbox



You must be logged in to post a comment Login