"It has been truly incredible. We have all the usual suspects entered in the Formula One [superbike] class and we welcome the return this year also of likeable Liechtenstein rider Horst Saiger," Willacy said.
Saiger was absent for family reasons last year but he did win the Suzuki Series' F1 class in 2014 and this year he would bring his own Yamaha bikes with him.
However, Saiger, along with all the other premier F1 class riders, may have their work cut out this time around with Suzuki Series debutant Peter Hickman arriving from the United Kingdom.
Internationally-renowned Hickman won at the Isle of Man earlier this year, setting a new lap record on the fabled Mountain Course, and also celebrated wins in 2018 at the North West 200 in Northern Ireland and at the Ulster Grand Prix.
Hickman will race at all three rounds of the Suzuki Series and will be racing his BMW motorcycle under the Carl Cox Motorsports banner.
Other international stars set to make the trip Downunder include British and world sidecar championship contender John Holden, who will again have Tauranga's Robbie Shorter as his "wingman". Holden and Shorter won the sidecars class in the 2016 edition of the Suzuki Series.
British duo Gary Bryan and Phil Hyde also add international sparkle to the sidecars class in what will be their first Kiwi appearance, while Manx racing regular Nigel Rea, also from the UK, will make his Kiwi debut as well and offer undeniable class to the 600cc class.
New Zealand Superbike Champion Sloan Frost, from Wellington, should also be greatly respected and he is certainly a contender.
Frost won the Suzuki Series in 2015, ahead of Whakatāne's Tony Rees, with Saiger, the early leader in the series that year, slipping down to eventually settle for third overall.
The year before that, in December 2014, it was a classic down-to-the-wire battle in the Suzuki Series between Saiger and Taupō hero Scott Moir. In the end, Saiger won the series by just three points from the hard-charging Kiwi.
Suzuki rider Moir broke through to finally claim the Suzuki Series F1 crown last year, but this year it's anybody's guess as to who will dominate the series or, perhaps even more importantly, who will win the Boxing Day finale and its signature Robert Holden feature race.
The Suzuki Series F1 winner in 2016, Whakatane's Tony Rees, will have his two equally-talented sons, Mitch and Damon, riding "shotgun" with him this season and these three Honda men will almost certainly also rate among the series frontrunners.
In addition to the F1, F2 and sidecars classes, the Suzuki Series programme also caters for F3 sport bikes, super moto bikes, GIXXER Cup bikes, pre-89 post classics, pre-89 sidecars and Bears (non-Japanese bikes).
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