Paul_Bird_Motorsport

Paul Bird Motorsport

Paul Bird Motorsport

British motorcycle racing team


Paul Bird Motorsport are a British motorcycle road racing, car racing and rallying organisation. From 2024, following owner Paul Bird's death in 2023, the motorcycle road racing operation was renamed Paul Bird Racing with Glenn Irwin as sole rider in British Superbike class.[2] Paul Bird had competed as a rally driver and a solo-rider in motocross. His son Frank is a car racer.[3]

Quick Facts 2024 name, Base ...

Motorcycle racing

The team competes in the British Superbike Championship, using Ducati machinery from 2016, based on the 1199 Panigale R,[4] followed by Ducati Panigale V4, a change of manufacturer from Kawasaki. They managed the Kawasaki World Superbike team until 2011,[5] and competed in MotoGP from the 2012 season.[6]

Championship winning team principal, the late Paul Bird acknowledging the spectators' plaudits at Brands Hatch Showdown podium, end of BSB season 2014

PBM competed in the 2014 British Superbike Championship as a two-rider team with Shane Byrne and Stuart Easton on board Kawasakis.[7] Also in 2014 Ian Hutchinson joined Paul Bird Motorsport for a few rounds of Pirelli National Superstock 1000 competition on the Rapid Solicitors Kawasaki team, after which he again competed in the Macau road GP on Shane Byrne's superbike, but without his previous year's success, overshooting a corner and retiring after a low-speed fall.[8] The race was won by PBM rider Stuart Easton.

For 2015 Hutchinson competed in selected BSB rounds and Paul Bird's first foray into racing on closed public roads in UK, involving the North West 200 and the Ulster Grand Prix in Northern Ireland and also in the Isle of Man TT races, where he won three TT races and a TT Championship.[9][10][11][12]

On 16 October 2015 Paul Bird Motorsport announced a sponsorship arrangement with Be Wiser Insurance and that the 2016 BSB team would be four-time BSB champion Shane Byrne and Glenn Irwin, riding Ducati Panigale Rs.[13] This sponsorship continued until the end of 2019 season. For 2020 and 2021, the team arranged a new title sponsor by Kent-based Video Telematics business VisionTrack,[14] followed by MCE insurance for 2022,[15] changing to BeerMonster from 2023.[16]

Personal life

In December 2015, Paul Bird received a ban from organised sport competitions until July 2017 administered by UKAD, the UK Anti-Doping agency, after failing a standard test for banned substances. He tested positive for cocaine after driving in a car rally event in July 2015.[17] This was followed by an eight-year ban imposed in 2019 by UKAD, for refusing a drugs-test following a Welsh rally event in April 2018. The ban will run from 11 July 2018 until 2026.[18]

Bird's son Frank drove in Ford MSA Formula for Fortec Motorsport in 2016, after the 2015 season in Ginetta Junior Championship.[19]

For 2022, Frank Bird competed in Asian Le Mans Series,[20] having participated in some rally car driving during the winter,[21] and intends to enter the Sol Rally Barbados in June 2022, twice won by Paul Bird.[22]

Paul died on 1 September 2023 after a short illness aged 56.

MotoGP

MotoGP team

PBM competed in the 2012 MotoGP season with an ART-Aprilia bike entered to CRT regulations ridden by James Ellison,[6] and with riders Michael Laverty and Broc Parkes in the 2014 MotoGP season before disbanding to concentrate on British Superbikes.[23][24]

Results

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

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References

  1. "Rallying". Paul Bird Motorsport. pbmuk Limited. Archived from the original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  2. "Kawasaki to drop PBM, Sykes for 2012". Crash.net. Crash Media Group. 5 September 2011. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  3. Birt, Matthew (23 March 2012). "James Ellison's 2012 MotoGP livery revealed". Motor Cycle News. Bauer Media Group. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  4. Stuart Easton wins Macau GP MC News Retrieved 23 April 2015
  5. Hutchinson ready to fight for the TT crown in 2015 Bikesport News, 20 October 2014, Retrieved 23 April 2015
  6. 2015 Supersport TT Race 1 results Retrieved 29 September 2015
  7. 2015 Supersport TT Race 2 results Retrieved 29 September 2015
  8. 2015 Superstock TT race results Retrieved 29 September 2015
  9. British Superbike: Paul Bird Motorsport Signs VisionTrack As Title Sponsor roadracingworld.com, 21 December 2019. Retrieved 28 April 2020
  10. Frank Bird makes switch to Ford-powered MSA Formula PBM News, 19 Feb 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2016
  11. Clean sweep as Frank Bird and Jack Morton win the 2022 rally BrandsHatchStages, 16 January 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2022
  12. Frank Bird Heads For Sol Rally Barbados 2022 Carter Sport, 28 January 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2022
  13. Birt, Matthew (11 August 2014). "Paul Bird planning BSB super team after quitting MotoGP". Motor Cycle News. Bauer Media Group. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  14. Birt, Matthew (11 December 2014). "Paul Bird MotoGP machinery up for sale". Motor Cycle News. Bauer Media Group. Retrieved 17 December 2014.

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