logo
'Do I need to be here?' - Dunlop battles pain to end winless run

'Do I need to be here?' - Dunlop battles pain to end winless run

BBC News09-05-2025
"I was sore and I was thinking, 'Do I need to be here? It's sore to be here', but I thought it was time to keep going."They say wins are like buses. You wait ages for one....Even Michael Dunlop's most ardent supporters - of which there are many - would not have expected him to win two of the opening three races at the 2025 North West 200.Despite his success at the Isle of Man TT, where he became the rider with the most victories in the road race's storied history in 2024, his home event had been a more barren affair. He had not stood on the top step at Northern Ireland's international road race since 2016. The fear his winless run on home soil would continue only grew after an accident towards the end of Superstock qualifying on Thursday afternoon.The 36-year-old had a high side on an out lap exiting the Magherabuoy chicane and, although he returned to the pits to take part in the final two sessions, it was evident to onlookers he wasn't 100% comfortable. It was even at the point where Steve Hicken, the team manager of Hawk Racing, said Dunlop might not be able to compete in all three races on Thursday evening. But it was wearing those same scuffed leathers that he stood on the top step of the podium on Thursday evening. Not once, but twice.
'I'm not 100%'
Even after three laps of the Supersport race, victory didn't look on the cards. Leaders Davey Todd and Richard Cooper had knocked metaphorical lumps out of each other, which had kept Dunlop in play in a five-bike battle for the lead. However, as Cooper looked ready to pull the pin on the fourth and final lap, Dunlop and his new Ducati moved past Todd at Station corner and set after the leader. He reeled Cooper in and blasted past him on the run to Magherabuoy - the same chicane where he crashed hours earlier. From there, Dunlop didn't look back. Even from the media centre at the top end of the paddock you could hear the cheers from the grandstands as Dunlop crossed the line, despite the roar of the other bikes still finishing their own races."It's nice to win in Northern Ireland again at international level," said Dunlop."It was about being in the right place at the right time. I've been mugged here before and I got my finger out. The slipstream is beautiful here and I decided it was time to get a push on."Dunlop admitted he was wondering in the early laps whether he could fight through the pain to finish the race. But, with the leaders still in sight, he persevered."I've damaged the shoulder a little bit so I'm struggling to brake full pin. "I'm not 100% but I'm not using it as an excuse. The bike was mint."
'I've proved I'm still fast'
After that race, Dunlop said he would keep his "head down and keep going".He did just that. While it was a last-lap dash for his first win, the following race was a much more controlled performance. He was aided by Alastair Seeley not being on the grid with a mechanical issue, and contender Peter Hickman skipping a chicane on the opening lap. Todd looked to have pulled away out front, but Dunlop reeled him in and an issue at University corner saw the 8TEN rider miss his braking on the penultimate lap.Although Dean Harrison piled on the pressure, he had no answer and Dunlop came home in first place with a couple of seconds in hand."I've proved tonight I'm still fast. It's great, I knew it was going to be hard and I knew that race was going to be hot and heavy," Dunlop added."The boys have worked hard to get everything ready, I appreciate it. I haven't won in a long time and it was a kick in the face, so to win again is another weight off my shoulders. "I've not come here fully fit for a long time, but we've overcome it and won two races tonight."Twenty-five years after his passing, this year's North West 200 has been one of celebration of the life and legacy of the legendary Joey Dunlop, who Michael surpassed to claim the Isle of Man TT record last year.But on Thursday night it was time for Michael, Joey's nephew, to bask in his success as the sun set on the north coast of Northern Ireland. With six more races to come on Saturday, he might not be finished yet.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hegelmann v St Patrick's Athletic
Hegelmann v St Patrick's Athletic

BBC News

time41 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Hegelmann v St Patrick's Athletic

Update: Date: 90'+6 Title: Post Content: Match ends, Hegelmann 0, St Patrick's Athletic 2. Update: Date: 90'+6 Title: Full Time Content: Second Half ends, Hegelmann 0, St Patrick's Athletic 2. Update: Date: 90' Title: Post Content: Fourth official has announced 4 minutes of added time. Update: Date: 89' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, St Patrick's Athletic. Al-Amin Kazeem replaces Kian Leavy. Update: Date: 86' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, Hegelmann. Yanis Azouazi replaces Léo Ribeiro. Update: Date: 83' Title: Booking Content: Esmilis Kausinis (Hegelmann) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Update: Date: 81' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, St Patrick's Athletic. Anto Breslin replaces Simon Power. Update: Date: 81' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, St Patrick's Athletic. Chris Forrester replaces Jason McClelland. Update: Date: 73' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, St Patrick's Athletic. Aidan Keena replaces Mason Melia. Update: Date: 72' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, Hegelmann. Abdoul Harouna replaces Domantas Antanavicius. Update: Date: 71' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, Hegelmann. Esmilis Kausinis replaces Donatas Kazlauskas. Update: Date: 68' Title: Booking Content: Klaudijus Upstas (Hegelmann) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Update: Date: 64' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, Hegelmann. Patrick Popescu replaces Artem Shchedryi. Update: Date: 64' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, Hegelmann. Rasheed Yusuf replaces Njoya Kader. Update: Date: 57' Title: Goal! Content: Goal! Hegelmann 0, St Patrick's Athletic 2. Kian Leavy (St Patrick's Athletic) left footed shot from the centre of the box to the high centre of the goal. Assisted by Mason Melia. Update: Date: 52' Title: Booking Content: Donatas Kazlauskas (Hegelmann) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Update: Date: 46' Title: Substitution Content: Substitution, St Patrick's Athletic. Zach Elbouzedi replaces Jake Mulraney. Update: Date: 46' Title: Second Half Content: Second Half begins Hegelmann 0, St Patrick's Athletic 1. Update: Date: 45'+5 Title: Half Time Content: First Half ends, Hegelmann 0, St Patrick's Athletic 1. Update: Date: 45'+1 Title: Booking Content: Lazar Kojic (Hegelmann) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul.

Scottie Scheffler disputes driving accuracy, stands by pre-tourney view on winning
Scottie Scheffler disputes driving accuracy, stands by pre-tourney view on winning

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Scottie Scheffler disputes driving accuracy, stands by pre-tourney view on winning

July 17 - Honesty always has been in Scottie Scheffler's bag, as the headlines before the start of The Open underscored, and he was wringing truth once more Thursday after firing a 3-under par at Royal Portrush. Scheffler's rainy round of 68 was among the morning-wave best in Northern Ireland thanks to a composed finish despite hitting only three fairways. "I actually thought I drove it pretty good. I don't know what you guys are seeing. When it's raining sideways, it's actually, believe it or not, not that easy to get the ball in the fairway. Thank you guys all for pointing that out," Scheffler said at the end of Thursday's 18. Scheffler credited his putting with keeping him on the first page of the leaderboard after failing to gain strokes on the greens in the Scottish Open last week. Scheffler was a touch testy when pressed for what made his short stick more magical on Thursday than it was last week. "Different greens, different surface. These greens, it's just different," Scheffler said. "I don't know how you want me to elaborate on that." Wayward tee shots were to blame for Scheffler's bogeys on Thursday on a pair of par 4s at No. 9 and No. 11. He closed with a collective five on the par-3 16th and the par-4 17th plus a clutch putt to par No. 18 and said the greens at Portrush were "definitely smoother" than the surface in Scotland. "Putting is one of those deals where, especially when there's a little bit of activity on the greens, you can hit a lot of good putts that don't go in," Scheffler said. "I'm trying to do my best to be perfect every week, but some weeks the putts just aren't going in, and did a good job battling last week to finish top 10." Scheffler stuck to his guns when asked Thursday to revisit much-discussed comments about how meaningful and gratifying victories can be relative to the amount of time, effort and sacrifice it takes to take home a trophy. "I think I try to be as honest as I can with y'all, with the stuff that I'm willing to kind of say. At times I feel like maybe I should be a little less honest. Maybe I shouldn't have said the stuff I said yesterday because now I'm going to get asked about it more," he said. "But really it's just a matter of perspective, and I've had some players come up to me and say that they feel and think the same things. If anybody has disagreed with me, they haven't said it to my face yet, so I don't know what the reaction would be. But overall just glad to be out playing golf and competing again." --Field Level Media

Lee Westwood's strong start to shedding nearly-man tag at 92nd attempt
Lee Westwood's strong start to shedding nearly-man tag at 92nd attempt

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Lee Westwood's strong start to shedding nearly-man tag at 92nd attempt

There is still a long way to go this week if Lee Westwood is to finally discard the unwanted record as the man with the most major appearances without winning one, but it seemed on Thursday that the 52-year-old Englishman is already content enough with merely being a part of the Open once again. 'It's nice to see my name on the big yellow scoreboards and it's nice to walk down the 18th here,' Westwood said on his 92nd appearance at a major. 'For a British player it's the greatest walk in golf, especially if you're in with a chance on Sunday.' Westwood clearly revelled in his return to this championship for the first time in three years. Having produced one of the best stories in qualifying by coming through 36 holes at Dundonald Links in Scotland two weeks ago, the former world No1 has carried that form across the Irish Sea by posting a two-under-par opening round of 69. Whether his wife Helen enjoyed it so much was debatable. She had been tasked with caddying after her successful stint on the bag last time at Portrush in 2019, when Westwood finished in a tie for fourth. While both like to spend time together on the course, heavy rain midway through Thursday's round made the job far more challenging. 'She loves the weather over here, the fact that she needs two pairs of hands and sometimes three,' Westwood said, jokingly. 'She caddied for me in the qualifying and I prefer to have her caddying for me whenever she can. We have a good record around here from finishing fourth here six years ago. It's an easy decision for me to make, probably harder for her. She would probably rather be at home riding her horse.' Ironically, Westwood's preparations for his Open campaign did not get off to the ideal start in qualifying because of a faux pas by his wife. Landing in Glasgow airport the night before, after a mad dash from an LIV event in Dallas, Helen was supposed to pick him up for the journey onwards to Dundonald. 'She said there was a bit of miscommunication,' Westwood said. 'I asked her where she was, and she was already sitting upstairs in Dundonald Golf Club having dinner.' A taxi was hailed instead and Westwood briefly scouted out the course upon his arrival before heading to bed. Despite having only one hour of sleep because of jetlag, he finished top of the leaderboard by playing 36 holes in seven under par. Curiously, Westwood, who was second at St Andrews in 2010, did not attempt to qualify for the Open in the past two years. A switch to the unranked LIV tour led to him dropping out of the running for direct entry — he has not played an event affiliated with the official golf world rankings since 2023 — and he did not feel his game was in good enough shape. Even this year he has posted only one top-20 finish on LIV. The prospect of returning to Portrush, however, has provided the spark Westwood has been seeking. He has always liked this course, first coming here in 1993 to play the Amateur Championship. 'I love the Open championship and I love Portrush,' Westwood said. 'I've been coming here a long time. Portrush is one of the golf courses where, if it wasn't the Open and if someone said, 'Do you want to go and play here this weekend?' then I would probably go. There are not many golf courses like that.' It was easy to see why Westwood enjoys these links, with four birdies in his first 12 holes on Thursday. Bogeys on the 14th and 16th threatened to derail his round as the rain hammered down but he used his experience to keep calm and post two pars for a 69. This style of course clearly offers Westwood his best chance of becoming a major champion and handing back his status as golf's nearly man to Jay Haas, who was the previous record holder with no trophies in 87 appearances. 'Links golf, more than any golf, gives you a chance when you are our age,' Westwood said. 'There's a bit more run on the ball. It's not a golf course laid out where there is a massive advantage to carry a trap at 310 yards, which I don't have any more. You've got to use the conditions and hold the ball up well in the sidewinds and crosswinds, and obviously be able to bring your ball flight down when you're going into the wind.' Another LIV veteran also impressed with his experience on day one. At the age of 55, Phil Mickelson posted his best round at an Open Championship since 2018 with a one-under-par round of 70. 'Winning the Open in 2013 [at Muirfield] was the greatest accomplishment in my career because I had to learn a style of golf that I didn't grow up playing,' Mickelson said. 'Now I've come to really love it, enjoy it, and I seem to play well in some of the adverse conditions too.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store