on the
Isle of Man Fogarty's Isle of Man achievements started in the mid-1980s. He won the 1985 Lightweight Newcomers event at the
Manx Grand Prix and went on to win three TT races. First was the 1989 production 750 race, followed by the Formula 1 and Senior events in 1990. He made a total of 26
Isle of Man TT starts, breaking the lap record in 1992. His lap at 18 minutes, 18.8 seconds (123.61 mph) on a Yamaha 750 cc was not broken until seven years later by
Jim Moodie from a standing start riding a
Honda RC45 in 1999, taking the record to 124.45 mph. Early in his career, Fogarty won the
Formula One World Championship for bikes, which was gradually fading after the 1988 commencement of the World Superbike Championship. Fogarty won it three times, from 1988 to 1990. In 1990, it dropped below the six races required for the FIM to class it as a championship, rather than merely a cup; again, he won it. Fogarty made several starts in
Moto GP, filling in for
Pierfrancesco Chili on an ROC bike for a while in 1990, with a best finish of sixth at the
Swedish Grand Prix. He also contested the 500cc
British Grand Prix several times. In
1992, he ran sixth before crashing on oil. In
1993 he qualified on the second row, and ran second early on after
Alex Barros,
Mick Doohan and
Kevin Schwantz crashed on the first lap. He was set for third when he ran out of fuel, coasting over the line in fourth behind three
Yamahas. He was entered again in
1994, but withdrew pre-race – citing a hand injury, but later admitting that he felt the ride was uncompetitive. In 1992, Fogarty teamed with
Terry Rymer and Michael Simul to win the
24 Hours of Le Mans. Other wins included
Bol d'Or. They went on to win the
FIM Endurance World Championship for
Kawasaki. Thus, along with his four World Superbike Championships, he holds an aggregate of five world championship titles. Riding for Ducati, Fogarty finished second at the 1995
Daytona 200 in the United States.
Scott Russell crashed during the first lap of the race but was able to remount and pass Fogarty for the win. Fogarty said that the pace car regrouping following the yellow flag allowed Russell to close the gap significantly. Fogarty won the
Ulster Grand Prix F1 race in 1988, and then a year later he won the 'King of the Roads' senior race, setting a new lap record in the process, a speed of 121.629 mph. In 1993, Fogarty won both superbike races at the
North West 200 on board a Moto Cinelli Ducati 888. In race one he beat the Dunlop brothers (Robert in second, Joey third), and in race two, he was again ahead of Robert (second) and Phillip McCallen in third. He also set a new lap record of 122.491 mph. Fogarty rode a Harris Yamaha 500 GP bike in 1992 to victory in the Macau Grand Prix. ==Career stats==