Yearly Archives: 2011

After one long month and MotoGP is back in action at Estoril, Portugal. While ardent racing aficionados were left brooding over this irritably long hiatus, a few riders cashed in on this reprieve to go under the knife, nurse injuries and focus on the rehab.  With MotoGP field on the cusp of diminishing to bare minimum numbers, it can only be said almost all the riders savoured the inaction.

Friday brought MotoGP back to its fiery best in the form of FP1. This was Good Friday again for whom MotoGP was religion. Some riders right after the scalpel experience were trying to gauge their fitness levels; some were right on to fine-tuning their steeds to the track’s needs; some were engaged in a battle to get their base-setup right; and the remaining were doing an assortment of all these.

Despite being cock-a-hoop at resumption of action, there was nothing surprising about the weekend. The usual suspects set the pace as expected and  having known about lap time’s unimportance on Friday, our eyes still introspected the timing chart to the exact thousand’s accuracy.

MotoGP weekends are usually not dull and this one was no different; a tinge of controversy did surface in the form of Lorenzo’s caustic remarks about Super Sic’s dangerous racing lines, which the latter eventually laughed off. The usually media shy Stoner was also in the news for lambasting Rossi for deliberately getting a tow to register a faster lap time. This accusation being true or not, riders latching onto faster riders’ draft is not a new thing. Whether Rossi was badgering Stoner by remaining irritably close or Stoner was still nursing animosity indirectly because of Jerez mishap remains a puzzle.

The Race:

The lights went off to mark the beginning of the 1st of the 28 lap race and pole-sitter Lorenzo got the hole-shot and maintained the lead through the 1st corner. It was bizarre to see someone other than Pedrosa to lead into the 1st turn. There was hardly any change in the order of top 5 till the climax was reached.

Rossi uncharacteristically got off to a flying start and stuck himself  behind his on-and-off -track foe Stoner in 4th. Right from the 1st lap it was glaringly evident that Lorenzo and Pedrosa would set the tone of the race and they did, in an imposing fashion. The Spaniards broke away slowly yet consistently and formed a separate group of two only. They exchanged blows in the form of fastest laps and the pair remained incredibly close throughout.

Estoril’s home straight might not be the longest but it was indeed long enough for riders to slipstream past someone. With a heavier Lorenzo on the visibly slower M1, a feather-weight Pedrosa shooting past on his Honda was inevitable. But what happened was the polar opposite of what was expected – Pedrosa was neither getting his signature drive out of corners nor was he able to come within striking distance of Lorenzo. What ensued for the remainder of 24 laps was a rehash of all other laps. No wonder Pedrosa remained relatively at the bottom of the top speed heap during the race by recording a mere 315 clicks while his team mate Stoner achieved a very healthy 324kmph.

Some of us had personally written off Pedrosa’s victory chances. Such was the reputation of his. He regularly fades away towards the end while Lorenzo grown in strength. Pedrosa will be in his element when alone but does not fare to well in wheel-to-wheel racing. The odds were certainly stacked heavily against him.

While this pair looked more intent on increasing the gap to Stoner, the compatriots Rossi and Dovizioso were engaged in the fight for fourth and didn’t want to disturb the top three. Rossi brilliantly fended off Dovizioso despite taming a stubborn Ducati and nursing a recovering shoulder. Rossi looked to have befriended the Ducati better but loads of work  is round the corner to take the fight to the Yamahas and the Hondas on a regular basis.

Two riders in pursuit of the Alien tag, who earned a DNF in Jerez, unfortunately held the record intact at Estoril, too. Simoncelli, impatient to get to warm the tyres up, tasted the gravel in the very first lap. We’d been repetitively underscoring his brilliance if only he could master the art of race-craft better. Spies is the other who was out to make amends for his Jerez mistake. But his rotten luck continued at Estoril and ensured that he had to wait one more year to banish his memories and finish the race in Portugal. This time, it was no mistake of his. A brake adjustment tool was inadvertently left in the bike which later distracted Spies big time. Spies, for a brief moment, did attack the tool instead of riders, and as a result, took a few off-track excursions as well. But finally, the combat too proved to be too intense and the tool brought  him down with more than 10 laps remaining.

Monster Yamaha was the happiest satellite team this weekend with both their riders finishing ahead of factory Ducati rider Hayden. Edwards made the most of Spies’ absence by being the top American and satellite rider. Despite maintaining a low-profile Crutchlow remains the second top Yamaha in overall standings. It’s worth mentioning that Crutchlow has beaten Rossi over one-lap race (Qualifying) in all the three rounds. The only Brit on the grid seems to be learning the ropes as expected.

On the 25th lap, Pedrosa put an end to the cat-and-mouse game. He relied on slipstreaming and out braking to slip past Lorenzo for the first time and from then on, Pedrosa never looked back. He was on song and with no one in front of him, slipped into his time-trial mode. He hammered out a series of fast laps and finally took the chequered flag by over 3 seconds. This gap does not justify Pedrosa’s pace as he took just 3 laps to do so and set the fastest lap on the 27th lap.

Pedrosa has got to be the happiest but most importantly an extremely relieved man for several notable reasons. With this win, he has chucked Lorenzo off the top step of the Estoril podium after 3 years. He was also able to narrow the points’ gap down to 4 on Lorenzo. He had beaten recent Honda recruit Stoner fair and square and substantially consolidated his position at Honda. Finally, the operation to remove the collarbone plate proved extremely productive as the numbness was not to be seen at all. On the contrary, he grew in strength and energy while Lorenzo’s energy sagged, which would usually have been the other way around.

While the Spanish pair traded positions with less than 5 laps to go, the Italian pair did the same at the line on the very last lap. Estoril’s final turn seems to be Rossi’s Karma corner. Dovizioso, aware of Rossi’s adamancy in letting people past, didn’t’ want to eschew the opportunity and stole fourth by getting out of Rossi’s draft beating him by just a whisker. That move was reminiscent of Elias’ last gasp pass on Rossi in 2006 that apparently fetched him contract with Honda for 2007.

With the Estoril race providing a pleasant spectacle the prospect of a great race even at Le Mans looms large. Cannot wait for the weekend of 14th and 15th May.  Till then have fun.

After two good practice sessions in Estoril, Valentino Rossi found himself qualifying in a lowly ninth place.  Today was again a better day for Rossi who was able to climb up to fourth position on the first lap of the race itself.  He stayed there for most part of the race but just when it seemed he had staved of Andrea Dovizioso’s challenge he lost the fourth place to him.  Colin Edwards on the Tech 3 Yamaha finished in sixth place ahead of Gresini Honda’s Hiroshi Aoyama in seventh and team mate and rookie Cal Crutchlow in an impressive eighth.  Ninth place went to Nicky Hayden on the works Ducati ahead of Randy De Puniet on a Pramac Ducati in tenth.

Dani Pedrosa’s shoulder surgery seems to have gone well.  He was able to win the Portuguese Grand Prix at Estoril after beating compatriot Jorge Lorenzo into second place.  Casey Stoner took the third step on the podium after having an eventful start to his race which saw him dicing with Marco Simoncelli who crashed in front of him and slowed his charge down, allowing Pedrosa and Lorenzo to get away at the front.  Lorenzo though starting from  pole could not win the race due to the superior horsepower of the Honda which was faster than the Yamaha on straights.  Casey Stoner while being unhappy at what happened with Simoncelli must be very relieved to not be taken out of the race yet again for the second consecutive time.

Stefan Bradl, son of former 250cc GP rider, Helmut Bradl, held his nerve and his bike to finish the Moto2 race ahead of everyone else.  Bradl was starting from pole but conceded lead early in the race to Thomas Luthi of Switzerland who did not last there for long and crashed out of the race.  Points leader Andrea Iannone starting from P14 rode impressively to catch Bradl five laps from the end of the race and overtook him.  While riding hard to break Bradl, Iannone crashed, but remounted to take a lowly 13th position.  Towards the end of the race, Julian Simon was catching Bradl who held his nerve and his first position.  Yuki Takahashi rode to a fine third position.  The podium ceremony was subdued as there was no spraying of champagne as an expression of solidarity with Takahashi and the tsunami ravaged Japanese people.

For many years now, the size of the MotoGP grid has been a problem.  The problem has become acute in the last couple of years with Kawasaki withdrawing and Suzuki cutting down to one bike only.  However, in the first rounds of applications FIM has received sixteen new applications mostly from teams in Moto2.  The FIM has chosen fourteen of those featuring 21 riders to give further details based on which the teams are expected to provide full details of their plans for 2012 by May, 14th and after further scrutiny FIM will chose the final list by June.  Existing teams have a guaranteed place on the grid.  What remains to be seen is how many of the proposed new entrants will bring any new manufacturers and how many will come in with new engines based on production bikes in the Claiming Rule Team category which some say will get the name Moto1.

The organizers of the Bahrain F1 GP have only said that they will be back soon without specifying anything specific.  Tomorrow is the last day for a final answer.  Bahrain has only said that they are setting their house in order and post that they will be back.  Unless Bernie Ecclestone pulls some very powerful strings to reinstate the GP this year, it is unlikely that there will be one this year.

After what seemed to be promising practice sessions even in the dry, the Ducatis were once again mid field when it came to qualifying.  Valentino Rossi could only manage ninth behind rookie Cal Crutchlow and Nicky Hayden fared even worse qualifying in a lowly thirteenth behind rookie Karel Abraham’s Cardion AB Ducati who finished in twelfth.  The Pramac Ducatis were in even worse with Loris Capirossi and Randy De Puniet qualifying fourteenth and sixteenth respectively while Alvaro Bautista returning from injury qualified fifteenth.  Positions eleven and twelve went to Hector Barbera on the Aspar Ducati and Hiroshi Aoyama on the satellite spec Gresini Honda.  Tony Elias horrors continue as he yet again finds himself last on the grid, a position that is becoming customary of him.

Jorge Lorenzo clinched his first pole position this year, edging out Marco Simoncelli on the Gresini Honda.  Simoncelli’s efforts to retaliate ended in his low siding but it was still good enough to keep the Repsol Hondas of Dani Pedrosa and Casey Stoner behind him.  Simoncelli rides a factory spec Honda, since he is contracted directly to Honda.  Ben Spies was able to clinch fifth and with Andrea Dovizioso, Colin Edwards and Cal Crutchlow qualifying in sixth, seventh and eighth.  It was a good day for the Tech 3 Yamahas both finishing ahead of works bikes of Ducati.  Cal Crutchlow must feel happy for himself.

The Ducatis went well in the final free practice this morning at Estoril in Portugal in damp conditions.  Loris Capirossi on the Pramac Ducati went fastest followed by Jorge Lorenzo in second while the factory Ducatis of Nicky Hayden and Valentino Rossi went third and fourth fastest respectively. Stoner could only manage fifth and was followed by Dovizioso and Pedrosa while Simoncelli fared worse in ninth place.  It looks like Ducati is the bike to ride in the wet, irrespective of Rossi saying that he wants a dry race.

Casey Stoner’s meteoric rise in 2007 on the Ducati rankled Rossi enough to dislike him big time.  Not used to losing, Rossi started riding tactically once the Yamaha improved and in 2008 at Laguna Seca put questionable moves (at least from Stoner’s point of view) that led to Stoner crashing out.  The relationship between the two has never been good and the bad blood only increased thanks to fans who booed Stoner when he won and applauded when he crashed.  While Rossi has been the darling of all with his fun antics and accessibility, Stoner has an air of aloofness and sometimes arrogance and that his been the main reason why fans give the differential treatment.  Yesterday after free practice both riders accused each other of various things.  It all started with Stoner saying that Rossi was waiting to get a tow from him and also saying that Rossi is practically riding the same bike that he won thrice on towards the end of last year.  Rossi was quick to deny that he was looking for a tow and reminded that Casey Stoner crashed three times on the bike towards the end of they year.  Stoner is still simmering with anger about Jerez even though the actions of the track marshalls have been given a clean chit by the FIM.    J-Lo, no not her, this guy called Jorge Lorenzo who tries to emulate Rossi but fails every time did not want to be left out of controversy so he targetted Simoncelli.  He said that the way Simoncelli rides is a danger for everyone on the track.  Obviously J-Lo is miffed with Simoncelli’s pace.  Simoncelli did not seem to care too much for J-Lo’s opinions.  Poor J-Lo does not have a following to listen to his rant except for his Spanish fans (those ten or twenty who go to all grands prix).