AZROY LED THE CHARGE

AZROY LED THE CHARGE

Round 4 of the 2025 AEON CREDIT MAM MALAYSIA SUPERBIKE CHAMPIONSHIP kicked off at the PETRONAS Sepang International Circuit today, with Azroy Hakeem Anuar of HONDA RACING MYS dominating the MSBK1000 A category to emerge as the fastest rider in the combined Free Practice sessions.

In Free Practice 1, Azroy set the benchmark with a rapid 2’06.105s, immediately showing his intent for the weekend. Adam Norrodin of AMI SUZUKI MOTORSPORT followed closely with 2’08.285s, while Muhd Helmi Azman of HONDA RACING MYS secured third at 2’08.679s. Chen Hongyan of China and Osama Mareai of OSAMA RACING TEAM completed the top five.

Free Practice 2 saw Azroy continue his dominance with a 2’06.284s lap, further cementing his status as the man to beat. Kasma Daniel Kasmayudin of HONG LEONG YAMAHA MYS improved to second with 2’07.393s, while Helmi again posted competitive times in third. Adam and Hafizh Syahrin Abdullah rounded out the top five.

With the combined classification, Azroy remained fastest overall, followed by Kasma in second and Helmi in third, setting up an exciting battle for qualifying and Race 1.

Azroy commented, “Alhamdulillah, today I managed to set a fairly good lap time. Perhaps it’s because I just finished Moto2 recently, so my mindset, physical condition, and overall focus are in a better state than before, which I was able to translate onto the track here. As for the championship, if it’s meant to be, it will happen. What’s most important for tomorrow and Sunday’s races is that I aim to be at the front.”

SIC AND TWMR WOULD LIKE TO EXPRESS OUR HEARTFELT THANK YOU TO AEON CREDIT (M) BERHAD FOR THE SUPPORT RENDERED THIS WEEKEND DURING AEON CREDIT MAM MALAYSIA SUPERBIKE CHAMPIONSHIP.

TOP 5 FASTEST – FREE PRACTICE (COMBINED)
1. AZROY HAKEEM ANUAR – HONDA RACING MYS (2’06.105s)
2. KASMA DANIEL KASMAYUDIN – HONG LEONG YAMAHA MYS (2’07.393s)
3. MUHD HELMI AZMAN – HONDA RACING MYS (2’07.505s)
4. ADAM NORRODIN – AMI SUZUKI MOTORSPORT (2’08.172s)
5. HAFIZH SYAHRIN ABDULLAH – MALAYSIA (2’10.499s)