Grayling stamps authority on 250cc Class

| Photographer Credit: Andy McGechan

Taranaki’s Campbell Grayling could have a big future in motorsport, certainly if his learning curve continues on such a sharp upward trajectory.

The 17-year-old, a year 13 pupil at New Plymouth’s Francis Douglas Memorial College, collected his first national motorcycling championship at the weekend and, remarkably, that has happened less than three years after he first took up the sport.

The Opunake teenager had taken his Kawasaki Ninja 250 to an almost unbeatable position even before the weekend’s fourth and final round of the New Zealand Superbike Championships final at Hampton Downs and, with another hat-trick of wins at the North Waikato circuit on Saturday and Sunday, he put the title well beyond doubt.

In the end, Grayling finished the 12-race series a whopping 53 points ahead of his nearest challenger, fellow Kawasaki rider Rob Gibson, from Tauranga, with Timaru’s James Squire, on yet another Ninja Kawasaki, completing the class podium, 13.5 points further back.

“I only started riding two-and-a-half years ago, but I had always wanted to do this,” said Grayling. “When I was younger I’d go to watch dad race and then said to him one day ‘is it my turn now?’ and that was the start of everything.

“This bike, the 2012-model Ninja, is actually my first bike and you could say I’m pretty comfortable with it now.”

Although obviously his greatest achievement so far, the national title win at the weekend was not the first time Grayling had tasted major success. Last year, he won the 250cc production class title in the Hamilton Motorcycle Club’s Winter Series.

“That gave me confidence to really go for it at the nationals this year,” he said.

“I knew it would be really close between me and Rob (Gibson) and James (Squire), but things really clicked for me at (round one at) Christchurch, with three wins there that weekend, and I was already on my way to the title.

“Things went backwards for me at (round two at) Invercargill when I crashed and didn’t finish the first race. I got second place in the next race, but then crashed again in the third and this time I had to go to hospital.

“As it worked out, my rivals crashed at some stage in the championship too … I know we were all pushing really hard … but it worked out for me in the end. We’re all good mates off the track and we respect one another on it.”

Grayling is off to university next year, but he still hopes he can continue racing, perhaps in the 450cc superlites class.

In all, Grayling won nine of his 12 250cc class races at the nationals this year, as well as claiming the NZ GP and NZ TT titles.

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