Bird made the startling revelation in his own personal
press release, in which he criticised Kawasaki's decision to drop Sykes,
particularly in light of his remarkable ride to victory in a sodden
second race at the Nurburgring.
Bird signed Sykes on a personal
contract for the 2011 season after Kawasaki's decision to retain Chris
Vermeulen and honour a long-standing agreement with Joan Lascorz. As
such, PBM has run a three-rider team this season, though Vermeulen has
skipped several races through injury.
With Sykes scoring a second
pole position with the manufacturer at Misano, Bird was shocked to
learn that neither he nor Paul Bird Motorsport – which assumed running
its effort in 2009 – will be retained for next year just hours before going on to take a surprise win.
Nonetheless, he is proud to see them 'responding magnificently' to the news by going to claim a landmark win.
"Having
learned this morning [Sunday] that we wouldn't be running the Kawasaki
team next year was a massive blow and the team responded magnificently
with our strongest performance of the season. As well as us, Tom was
told his services would not be required next season so what better way
of proving a point than giving the factory its first victory in five
years, but you have to say they make some great decisions don't they?
“Getting
sacked proved to be a lucky omen for us and I'm delighted for Tom and
the team as they have been through the mill at times with this project.
It's a shame we can't see it through given all our hard work but as one
door closes, another one opens and we look forward to the challenges
ahead should we decide to carry on."
Paul Bird Motorsport replaced PSG-1 Corse as Kawasaki's official representative in
in 2009, by which time the ZX-10R was beginning to age. Even so, in the
hands of Sykes in 2010, the team put in some fine performances,
renewing hope the new ZX-10R would transform them into consistent front
runners.
Though the bike hasn't established itself fully yet,
Sykes and Lascorz have posted some encouraging results, culminating in
Sykes's impressive victory at the Nurburgring.
Lascorz is tipped
to stay on in 2012, with the likes of Marco Melandri and Randy de Puniet
linked with Sykes's apparently vacant seat. Provec Motocard.com, which
runs the Kawasaki team in World Supersport, has been tipped to take over
from Paul Bird Motorsport.
Kawasaki to drop PBM and Sykes for 2012

The decision was made just before Sykes completed the manufacturer's first WSBK win in five years.
Paul Bird revealed neither his team nor Tom Sykes will be kept by Kawasaki for the 2012 World Superbike Championship on the day Sykes scored the manufacturer's first win since 2006.




