Image 10 of 15 from Incredible debut for 250 KTM

West had several stints in the lead. Image: O. Bergamaschi

West had several stints in the lead.  Image: O. Bergamaschi
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Image 1 of 15 from Incredible debut for 250 KTM The day before practice begins - Anthony and the new bike.  Image: O. Bergamaschi The new KTM 250 GP bike.  Image: O. Bergamaschi The new KTM 250 GP bike.  Image: O. Bergamaschi
On the podium after the event - a happy Before the event, the nerves are clear - a new bike, that has already seized a motor, on a wet track.  Image: O. Bergamaschi Practice at Donnington was dry, and Ant put the bike through its paces.  Image: O. Bergamaschi Awaiting the call to the start line.  Image: O. Bergamaschi
On the grid. Image: O. Bergamaschi West had several stints in the lead.  Image: O. Bergamaschi West, fellow-Aussie Casey Stoner and Randy de Puniet. Image: O. Bergamaschi West, De Puniet and Stoner. Stoner is now a clear second in the title chase. Image: O. Bergamaschi
Legendary two-stroke engineer Harald Bartol designed the new 110 bhp, 101 kilogram machine Bartol's KTM 125 is just two years old yet is leading the 125 class Image 15 of 15 from Incredible debut for 250 KTM
Article Summary
July 26, 2005 Austrian motorcycle manufacturer KTM had one of the most remarkable debuts of any racing machine in history when it gave its new KTM Grand Prix 250 its first outing in the hands of Australian rider Anthony West at the British MotoGP round. The 250 class is highly competitive with any one of a dozen riders capable of winning on any day, and a machinery war between Honda and Aprilia that keeps improving the two-stroke breed, minute-by-minute, making it nigh-on-impossible for a new bike to break into the top echelon of 250 racing. So despite KTM’s illustrious off-road racing pedigree, and a fine showing from its recently created 125 roadracer, it was not expected to be competitive for some time yet, given that it had only been ridden ONCE prior to arriving at the Grand Prix. Then West had the new 110 bhp motor seize up in practice at over 200km/h. Then, on race day it rained, LOTS!! But West had won an Australian dirt track title when he was 15 years old, and is comfortable with a bike sliding at very high speeds. What happened?

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