Posted on Wednesday, February 27, 2013 - 10:37 pm:
Jaime
That quote was on crashnet.com... the Bbc And other UK sites. The orginal seems to come from crashnet. Nothing wrong with Rossi saying kudo's to lorenzo. Thats Rossi fashion.
I know for alotof you Rossi is King, but like every King their time comes one day. Rossi needs to move on. there is no change he could even finish the season in 3rd place. there is too much talent on the track. Lorenzo is the new KING and no one is going to take his title.
Looks like they all are bunched tight. Rossi being in forth. Actually not bad considering the first two days of testing he was riding the 2012 bike. I think its gonna be a huge battle this year between more bikes.
TIMES
1. Dani Pedrosa Honda 2m00.562s 57 laps 2. Marc Marquez Honda 2m00.643s + 0.081s 54 laps 3. Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha 2m00.992s + 0.430s 56 laps 4. Valentino Rossi Yamaha 2m01.062s + 0.500s 61 laps 5. Alvaro Bautista Gresini Honda 2m01.078s + 0.516s 43 laps 6. Cal Crutchlow Tech Yamaha 2m01.094s + 0.532s 59 laps 7. Stefan Bradl LCR Honda 2m01.309s + 0.747s 63 laps 8. Andrea Dovizioso Ducati 2m01.650s + 1.088s 44 laps 9. Nicky Hayden Ducati 2m02.070s + 1.508s 53 laps 10. Bradley Smith Tech Yamaha 2m02.314s + 1.752s 64 laps 11. Andrea Iannone Pramac Ducati 2m02.566s + 2.004s 52 laps 12. Michele Pirro Ducati 2m02.773s + 2.211s 38 laps 13. Randy De Puniet Aspar Aprilia 2m02.863s + 2.301s 45 laps 14. Ben Spies Pramac Ducati 2m03.055s + 2.493s 33 laps 15. Katsuyuki Nakasuga Yamaha 2m03.154s + 2.592s 32 laps 16. Hector Barbera Avintia FTR-Kawasaki 2m03.155s + 2.593s 42 laps 17. Wataru Yoshikawa Yamaha 2m03.257s + 2.695s 26 laps 18. Aleix Espargaro Aspar Aprilia 2m03.423s + 2.861s 45 laps 19. Karel Abraham Cardion Aprilia 2m04.066s + 3.504s 57 laps 20. Colin Edwards Forward FTR-Kawasaki 2m04.102s + 3.540s 42 laps 21. Hiroshi Aoyama Avintia FTR-Kawasaki 2m04.512s + 3.950s 51 laps 22. Michael Laverty PBM-Aprilia 2m04.546s + 3.984s 24 laps 23. Lukas Pesek Ioda Suter-BMW 2m04.674s + 4.112s 33 laps 24. Danilo Petrucci Ioda Suter-BMW 2m04.686s + 4.124s 36 laps 25. Claudio Corti Forward FTR-Kawasaki 2m04.718s + 4.156s 51 laps 26. Yonny Hernandez PBM Aprilia 2m04.722s + 4.160s 47 laps 27. Takumi Takahashi Honda 2m04.749s + 4.187s 65 laps 28. Bryan Staring Gresini FTR-Honda 2m05.313s + 4.751s 40 laps
I think the biggest problem with "the show" is that the riders are all on scalpels, not swords... if you don't maintain a perfect, precise line every time, you are going to lose tenths of a second on every lap.
In other words, expect more of the same, I'm afraid. I really do think the answer to more exciting racing is LESS electronic rider aids but that isn't going to happen. The factories have too much invested in developing them with an eye towards the future.
Soon, our bikes will be smarter than we are (if they aren't already) and we'll just be passengers along for the ride.
All we have to wait for is Skynet to gain self-awareness, and we're all toast.
I think the biggest problem with "the show" is that the riders are all on scalpels, not swords... if you don't maintain a perfect, precise line every time, you are going to lose tenths of a second on every lap.
Which is why the latest generation of 'star' riders are all ex-250 guys rather than the dirt track school of tail sliders.
Even Rossi has said that he needs to change his riding style to match Marquez and Lorenzo on the latest generation GP bikes.
The manufacturers will always cite safety as the main reason for electronic aids, so they are very unlikely to retreat from that position now. Most of the riders also admit that some level of electronic input will aid safety, although the crash record seen so far since the 800 days would tend to disprove that. There ar enow far more crashes over a weekend than there used to be, simply because everyone is so close to the edge all the time.
Riding styles are now so extreme that there is no margn for error or room to recover if it all goes wrong. Look at Marquez/Redding and their elbow dragging style for the future of MotoGP
To improve the show we need more riders capable of riding at this level rather than teams employing riders that can afford finance the team but don't have the ability to run at the front
To improve the show we need more riders capable of riding at this level rather than teams employing riders that can afford finance the team but don't have the ability to run at the front.
I foresee a lot of wrecked, broken bodies of riders trying to push themselves beyond their ability to get to that point, too.
Stoner may have been the last of the "tail sliders" to be successful in MotoGP.
Speaking of Stoner... I know Superbike Planet is not high on everyone's list here on websites to visit but I happen to LOVE the little dig they got in at the end of this article:
They'll be back one day, once the tyres or rules suit that style of riding once more The rules change: i.e. the end of the spec tire. Spec tires keep the cost down till everyone is building the same piece of equipment then everyone is chasing a smaller and smaller advantage. Note how Ducati was at the front when they were one of the few using Bridgestone tires. After Honda changed to Bridgestones Ducati is no longer at the front. I guess Bridgestone knows who they really need to build tires for.
Kawasaki and Suzuki were both using Bridgestones at the same time as Ducati, yet they were rarely competitive. Might want to come up with a different conspiracy theory.
I guess Bridgestone knows who they really need to build tires for.
The actual reason was a lot more complicated than just tyres, although the Ducati did use its Bridgestones better than the Suzuki did (because the Ducati power charactaristics suited the tyres better).
The original Ducati 800 simply had more power than the Yamaha/Honda opposition in the first year of the 800 rules. The Japanese factories were far too conservative when they were building the bikes because they were worried about the new fuel limits and backed the power off too far. Ducati just went for power first and economy only as an afterthought.
By the second season the Japs had caught up and Ducati lost their dominance. It is pretty coincidental that they other teams got Bridgestone tyres as well later (at a time when Michelin had lost their dominance of the class), although again that is more complicated than simply getting the same tyres as Ducati.
The situation is seldom as clear cut as a simple tyre advantage unfortunately
Anything that gets rid of that awful red white and blue paint job they ran last year is good news. A curious move for a team that is concerned about being taken seriously though!
10 years since Barry Sheene died. Still deeply missed in Oz motorcycling circles. Still the subject of motorcycle magazine articles, memorial rides and dedicated historic racing championships.