© Bruce Allen. Exclusive to Motorcycle.com
All Eyes on Marquez, Deep in the Heart
Now that we’ve had 10 days to assess the Argentinian misadventure, a consensus seems to have formed around the BS being widely peddled by a petulant Valentino Rossi that Repsol Honda head case Marc Marquez should be put in front of an Italian firing squad and summarily executed. Marquez, it is true, may need to reconsider his approach to racing. This weekend could offer the opportunity he needs for a solitary retreat off by himself for a while, to ruminate on the sport and his place in it, and take the checkered flag when he’s done.
For Marquez, a typical weekend getaway in Austin would feature him on top of every timesheet, qualifying on pole, getting away at the start, and indulging his introverted side, interacting with no one all day. Especially Valentino Rossi. It’s happened before, as he is undefeated in the United States since forever, and the Circuit of the Americas appears to have been designed with his mind in mind. After his tantrum in Argentina he must feel like he’s racing a bunch of porcupines, that any on-track contact at all, accidental, incidental or otherwise, will come back to stick him. This, I believe, is Rossi’s objective, to have the world watching #93 like a hawk, adding to the pressure, booing him at every turn, as it were.
Worse news for the Repsol Honda team coming out of Argentina was that Dani Pedrosa would need surgery for a fractured right wrist bone, courtesy of Aleix Espargaro, and is doubtful for Austin, thus putting to rest any notion (see my season preview) that this could Finally Be His Year. And people tell me I was insufficiently laudatory toward Cal Crutchlow as regards his race win and title lead. Those people don’t understand the voodoo doll-like effect I have on riders, such as Cal, whom I rarely praise. I pick them to win, it’s the kiss of death. I pick them to finish 13th, they podium. It’s a gift. I’ll shut up about Cal for now. Anything less than a podium in Texas, for him, though, would be telling.
There it is. I’ve figured out I want to watch Crutchlow and Marquez mix it up in Texas. It would be fun to see them get away and have it out. Cal is saying he has the bike, the chops and the stones to win a title; a Texas cage match would provide a grand opportunity to prove it.
Recent History at COTA
While Marquez was busy winning again in 2015 (his non-championship season), Dovi finished second and Rossi third in a generally uneventful procession. A clean start led to a leading group of Dovizioso, Marquez, Rossi and Bradley Smith on the Tech 3 Yamaha. Marquez went through on Dovizioso on Lap 5 and maintained the margin, coasting to the win by 2.3 seconds over Dovizioso and 3.1 seconds over Rossi.
In the 2016 tilt, with Marquez getting away, Pedrosa arrived at a left-hander way hot, taking Dovizioso down from behind; the Italian never knew, as it were, what hit him. Besides #93, the men standing on the podium were Yamaha’s Jorge Lorenzo, and a “cautious” Andrea Iannone on his Ducati GP16, paying penance for his takedown of teammate and podium threat Dovizioso the previous round. Viñales edged out Suzuki teammate Aleix Espargaro for 4th place that day.
The run-up to the 2017 Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas set the stage for a much-anticipated cage match between Yamaha phenom Viñales, undefeated at that point of the season, and Marquez. Showing no sense of the moment, Viñales crashed out of fourth place on Lap 2, letting the air out of the balloon and ceding, at least for the moment, the lead in the world championship to teammate Valentino Rossi, with Marquez suddenly back in the game in third place.
Zarco: The Second Coming of Marco Simoncelli?
Those of you who remember Marco Simoncelli, who worked for Fausto Gresini back when he had a Honda team, will remember his “arrival” in MotoGP. He showed up in the 250cc class in 2006, tall, charismatic, outspoken, shock of curly hair, a world of talent. He won the 250 title in 2008, faded slightly to third in 2009, and arrived in MotoGP in 2010 with a satellite RC213V, placing eighth as a rookie with 11 top-ten finishes. Was very aggressive on track and wore out his tires every time out.
Simoncelli was a hazard to himself and those around him early in 2011, as he was faster than he realized, taking out several riders unapologetically. Notably defending double world champion Jorge Lorenzo, who took umbrage at the Italian. Recorded three DNFs in the first six races. Finally got things straightened out, stayed on the bike, and recorded podium finishes at Brno and Phillip Island before losing his life in an unlikely lowside crash at Sepang.
Zarco, no spring chicken, arrives on the MotoGP scene with two Moto2 trophies on a surprisingly competitive vintage Yamaha M1 circa 2016. He is fast from the start with three podiums and several other highly competitive outings in his Rookie of the Year year. He almost never crashes out, yet plays rough out there, and would have a target on his back were it not for #93. Simoncelli had a bright future in MotoGP; Zarco’s future is equally bright. He will need to learn to save his tires.
Speaking of Jorge Lorenzo…
That was a weak transition.
But the best piece of gossip emerging since Argentina has Jorge Lorenzo, currently residing in a dumpster fire at Ducati Corse, weighing a move to Suzuki, ostensibly to replace an improving Andrea Iannone, and riding alongside Alex Rins, a rising star in the MotoGP firmament. These are uncharted waters, a world champion onboard a Suzuki, and it would make for interesting racing. The Suzuki, unlike the Ducati, seems fairly easy to ride, making up time in the tighter areas of the track, losing time in the straights. I like the idea of Lorenzo getting away from the torture of Ducati and back on a more rider-friendly bike. It would be fun to have him back in the Alien ranks. Fun having him relevant again. I wonder if he could beat Rins.
Your Race Weekend Forecast
My primary forecast for the weekend: Marc Marquez will not stall at the start of the race.
Otherwise, the weather looks good, with the possible exception of Saturday, and race day is supposed to be sunny and 75°.
I can’t see any reason not to suspect Marquez will win in Texas. I believe Crutchlow and Zarco or Dovizioso will join him on the podium. I don’t expect much from the factory Yamaha team of Rossi and Vinales, which means they will probably do well. And no further incidents between Marquez and Rossi. Please. They generate too much conversation.
The race goes off at 3 pm Eastern time, with the underclasses starting at noon. We’ll have results and analysis here for you early Sunday evening at no extra charge.
Tags: Aprilia, Cal Crutchlow, COTA, Dani Pedrosa, Ducati, Grand Prix of the Americas, Honda, KTM, Marc Marquez, maverick vinales, motogp, suzuki, valentino rossi, Yamaha
April 16, 2018 at 1:01 pm |
Still surprised there is no further punishment of Marquez. Finishing ahead of the rider you took out isn’t punishment. I’m going Dovi, Zarco, Marquez, Crutchlow, Rossi for the top 5.
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April 18, 2018 at 8:24 pm |
Have you seen Revvin’ Kevin’s opinion?
http://www.superbikeplanet.com/93-world-champion-schwantz-you-cant-knock-someone-down-just-because-youre-faster/
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April 19, 2018 at 4:21 am |
I feel bad for guys like Kevin, who hang around MotoGP living off a reputation they made decades ago. I don’t disagree with much he says about Marquez. The Red Mist is A Thing.
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April 16, 2018 at 7:54 pm |
As wrong as Marquez was in Argentina, I cringed when I read Rossi’s response. Hope that is all over. Zarco needs to stop being so aggressive as well, though his last incident was particularly due to the wet.
Note: You mentioned Pedrosa’s injury was due to Espargo. Typo?
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April 17, 2018 at 5:07 am |
Bad news, friend. You’ve had Pol and Aleix’s last name wrong for, like, years. Espargaro. 😉
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April 18, 2018 at 6:21 am |
Hell, I’ve been saying it wrong!
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April 17, 2018 at 12:11 pm |
What about the twitter war between A.Espargaro and Pramac Ducati? I think even Simeon got involved somehow. It’s all tragically funny if you ask me.
As for this week’s race, I agree with Bruce. No reason why Marc shouldn’t clear off at the front, but I hope Cal can hang with him and show that he’s no fluke.
As for Silly Season, I wonder if Suzuki have made any overtures to Zarco. Two years ago they chose Rins, but if they could get Zarco back, they would have probably the two hottest riders to have come out of Moto 2.
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April 18, 2018 at 6:23 am |
Would be cool if Crutchlow made a run at the championship.
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