Archive for the ‘Moto’ Category

Lorenzo Dominates at Silverstone; Crutchlow Wow’s ’em

June 17, 2012

See the photographs about this article on Motorcycle.com.

Predicting the outcome of the MotoGP British Grand Prix is about as easy as carrying a piano up a flight of stairs.  The three free practice sessions produced no discernible pattern.  The top three qualifiers included San Carlo Honda’s Alvaro Bautista on pole for the first time and Yamaha’s Ben Spies, who started the race in 11th place for the season.  But, in the end, it was an all-Alien podium once again.  As they say in France, “The more things change, the more they stay the same.”

The lead-up to today’s race was more interesting than usual.  There was Ducati’s Valentino Rossi topping the chart in a wet FP1. A dry FP2 concluded with Spies, Bautista, Ducati #2 Nicky Hayden and LCR Honda rookie Stefan Bradl occupying spots two through five and Rossi in 11th.  The only thing fans would remember about FP3 is hometown fave Cal Crutchlow going ragdoll falling off his Tech 3 Yamaha, ending up in the gravel facing Coventry with his dislocated left ankle pointing toward Oxford. While everyone else was out qualifying, Cal was in the hospital having things put back in their rightful places, and it appeared he would miss his second consecutive home race.  But as they say in Chicago, “Not so fast.”

Drama Here, Drama There, Drama Everywhere

To the delight of the fans, Crutchlow today appeared on the grid, albeit in the 20 hole, stiff upper lip firmly in place.  Early on, it was Spies, Repsol ace Casey Stoner, polesitter Bautista and Hayden emerging in the first group, with Lorenzo laying back and Stoner’s Alien teammate Dani Pedrosa uncharacteristically getting caught in traffic.  Crutchlow’s Tech 3 Yamaha teammate Andrea Dovizioso, featured and thoroughly jinxed in this space last week, was unable to break into the top five after starting a surprising eighth.  Dovi would later crash, pit for some minor repairs, and finish a lap down, out of the points.  His team has asked that we kindly ignore him for the rest of the season.

Between laps five and eight, Spies conceded the lead to Stoner, while Lorenzo went through on three riders into second place, and the hoped-for match race was on.  Meanwhile, an anesthetized Crutchlow had dispatched all of the CRT bikes and made his way up to 9th position.  On Lap 11, the practically invisible Pedrosa snuck past Bautista into third.  At that point, the fans were being entertained by two separate races.  Up front, the three Aliens were slugging it out for the lead, a world championship at stake.  Back in the middle of the pack, Crutchlow, who was too injured to walk, was lining up the laggard prototype bikes, gritting his teeth, and likely thinking how nice a second injection in his ankle would feel at that moment.  The way things turned out, he wouldn’t need it.  As they say in Newark, New Jersey, “Fuggedabouddit.”

The Fans Go Home Happy

The Stoner-Lorenzo duel came to a head on Lap 12, during which the two rivals traded places three or four times, Lorenzo emerging with the lead he would maintain to the finish.  Stoner, Pedrosa and Bautista jousted for the remaining two spots on the rostrum, with the Repsol Hondas prevailing.  Bautista could feel good about his first pole and closest sniff to a premier class podium, and is clearly making progress in his effort to rid himself of the ghost of Marco Simoncelli that seemingly haunts team owner Fausto Gresini.

The ride of the day, however, belonged to Cal Crutchlow, who appeared to smell blood once teammate Dovizioso went down on Lap 10.  On Lap 11 he put a lovely move on rookie Bradl to take over seventh position.  At that point he trailed the sixth place Nicky Hayden by over eight seconds, the equivalent of eight minutes in MotoGP time.  Here are their splits from the end of Lap 12 on:

Lap 13:        6.8 seconds

Lap 14:        5.8 seconds

Lap 15:        4.6 seconds

Lap 16:        3.8 seconds

Lap 17:        2.8 seconds

Lap 18:        1.9 seconds

Lap 19:        0.5 seconds

Finally, on the last lap of the day, the throbbing Crutchlow went through on the Kentucky Kid and sent the hometown faithful into a fit of national pride unseen since the days Silverstone was an undermanned RAF fighter base holding off the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain.  The crowd expressed its heartfelt sympathy to Hayden with a classic English taunt.  As they say in Northamptonshire, “Hard cheese, you Yank bastard!”

Elsewhere on the Grid

Sure, Ben Spies managed to finish 5th today, not quite redemptive but a significant improvement over his previous 2012 results.  And sure, Stefan Bradl came in a respectable eighth, doing nothing to harm his Rookie of the Year prospects.  Karel Abraham’s absence today meant that only the last two (rather than the usual three) prototype bikes to finish would be Ducatis, as Rossi crossed the line in front of Hector Barbera and the CRT lot.  Nothing unusual there.

Here’s the amazing statistic to emerge from today’s race, in my humble opinion:  Rossi ended the day trailing teammate and understudy Hayden by a full 21 seconds.  On essentially the same machines, the fading one-time world champion administered a thorough and decisive beatdown to The Doctor.  Our Department of Idle Speculation suggests this is a sign that Rossi, despite his pronouncements to the contrary, is preparing to throw in the towel on the ill-fated Ducati project in favor of what will probably be his own team next year, featuring a rented Yamaha M-1 or Honda RC214V and sponsored by Coca Cola.  It’s hard to explain today’s Marlboro Ducati team result as anything but a lack of effort from Rossi, who will likely attribute it instead to a poor tire choice.  As they say in Indianapolis, “That’s just a big ol’ bunch of #@%$&, Vali!”

The Big Picture

No major changes in the 2012 standings today.  Jorge Lorenzo extended his lead over defending champion Stoner to a full race win.  Crutchlow’s gutty performance enabled him to leap past teammate Dovizioso into fourth place for the year, while Bautista now sits tied with Rossi for sixth.  Ben Spies started and finished the day in 11th place despite his best outing of the year, a measure of the depths he has plumbed during the first third of the season.  Without a couple of wins between now and Valencia it appears Ben’s factory team days are numbered.

The riders and teams will take next weekend off before launching into their three-races-in-three-weeks maelstrom at Assen, the Sachsenring and Mugello.  Closing out the first half of the season in a mini-marathon will test the endurance and focus of everyone involved, including the journalists covering the sport.  I expressed my concern about turning out six coherent articles in 19 days to my Canadian editor, to which he responded, “As we say in Toronto, if you want to run with the big dogs, you’d best be able to handle the tall grass, hey?”

Rossi’s “Yamaha Moment ” at Jerez

April 28, 2011

The controversy over the crash on Lap 8 of the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez at Round Two is not, in my mind, a controversy.  I have not viewed any of the press conference video.  I watched the race twice and have given the crash some thought.

For Valentino Rossi, the crash was a small, unexpected dream briefly coming true, in which he sought to bury Stoner and Lorenzo on the mythical Italian Desmosedici.  For a few laps in Jerez, The Doctor felt what it might feel like to dominate the premier class on the GP11.  Until Lap 8. 

Lap 8 was, for Rossi, what will be known as a “Yamaha Moment.”  Probably not the last.

Rossi has spent pretty much every waking moment since Valencia in 2010 working on his shoulder and his bike, with virtually nothing to show for his efforts, until the early laps of the race itself, in which he is suddenly, well,  flying.  He may be forgiven for being transported, momentarily, to his salad days at Jerez, when he wore blue, white and red.  He could actually win the 2011 race as a long shot and silence his critics.  Present company included.

On Lap 1, he dawdled to eighth.  By Lap 7, he was third, and was taking aim at Casey Stoner, Jorge Lorenzo, and the lead.  Watching him enter the fateful turn, I see the amazed and amazing Rossi lean into a gap between Stoner and Lorenzo.  It is at this moment that his lizard brain takes over.  No more math.

The lizard has spent the last seven years on the Yamaha YZR-M1. 

The lizard grabbed the gas and aimed for daylight.  In his Yamaha days, Rossi would emerge from the curve in first place running in clean air.  In the Yamaha days, the lizard would be down the road.  History.  Scalded.  Rabbit. 

On the Desmosedici, Rossi discovered that he’s no longer in Kansas, and mimicked so many of Stoner’s lost front ends in 2010.  That he managed to eradicate Stoner in the process is ironic, unfortunate and unintentional.  That he fell at all must have come as a humbling surprise to Rossi.  The unsympathetic lizard has lost interest and slithers away. 

Would Valentino Rossi have attempted that move five years ago?  Would Valentino Rossi have attempted ANY move five years ago he wasn’t virtually certain he could finish?  So, I believe, Rossi’s crash was a complete surprise, which means he really shouldn’t be criticized for taking Stoner out.  He’s freaking Valentino Rossi.  He knows how to time a passing move in a corner. 

After the crash he fell to 15th place but finished fifth, meaning he was turning quick laps after the crash. 

And guys were crashing out in front of him.  

Perhaps Rossi gained something at Jerez.  He has now had the GP11 perform up to expectations once; he knows the podium is at least possible.  He has a month to play with the current bike, waiting for the New and Improved “Vale” bike to arrive from Bologna.  

And the shoulder to improve, too.  Always the shoulder with this guy now, for a year already.  Jeesh.  Shoulder looked okay at Jerez, both before and after the crash.

Rossi has surgery on his shoulder

November 14, 2010
Valentino Rossi, Ducati pilot

Ducati pilot Valentino Rossi underwent arthroscopic surgery on his recalcitrant left shoulder on November 14.  The joint, which had been injured in an April training accident, bothered him for most of the 2010 campaign.  He blamed his relative ineffectiveness after coming back from the compound fracture of his leg, suffered in practice at Mugello, on the shoulder injury, while barely complaining at all about his leg.  Rehab is expected to take 90 days, which puts his return to competitive testing in mid-February.

It remains to be seen whether the engineers at Ducati can perform surgery on the bike’s front fork in time for Rossi’s return to racing.  His results from two days of testing at Valencia this month were disappointing, to everyone except perhaps Casey Stoner, who must be thinking to himself, “Alright, DOCTOR, let’s see YOU ride this bitch!”

Stoner must be elated with his decision to defect from Ducati to the Repsol Honda team, as he wasted no time in Valencia becoming the fastest rider on the grid.  Compared to wrestling the Desmosedici, controlling the throttle on the Honda must be a day at the beach.  Spies and Lorenzo have been forewarned.

November 2010 Valencia Testing – Wow!

November 10, 2010

Barely two days after the close of the 2010 season, the first round of testing at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo was noteworthy in several ways.

First and foremost were the visuals.  There was newly crowned champion Jorge Lorenzo leading the pack on his factory Yamaha, but sporting the #1 rather than his usual #99.  It’s good to be the king.  There was former Fiat Yamaha icon Valentino Rossi aboard a black Ducati GP11 clad in black leathers trimmed in fluorescent yellow, complete with a jaunty VR46.  There was Casey Stoner in kangaroo red, white and blue looking like he wanted nothing to do with his Repsol Honda teammates.  There was Ben Spies, looking extremely nifty on a black, blue and white factory M1.  And there was Toni Elias on the LCR Honda looking like, well, Randy de Puniet.

Valentino Rossi struggled on his GP11 at the Valencia test.

The real story, however, was in the time sheets, where Casey Stoner stood at the top of the chart, having made a seamless adjustment to his RC212V.  Not unexpectedly, he was followed in close order by Lorenzo and Spies. and thence by sophomore sensation Marco Simoncelli and Pedrosa.  The most dramatic result of two days at Ricardo Tormo, however, was the shockingly dismal performance of Rossi, who ended up in 15th place, dawdling with the likes of Loris Capirossi and, gulp, Karel Abraham, who’s not even a rookie yet.

As my friend David Emmett observes at motomatters.com, it’s going to be a long winter in Bologna.

Sachsenring–MotoGP Traffic Report Saturday 7/18/09.

July 18, 2009

It was after Mugello, which Stoner won in late May to lead the standings that some of us began to suspect it might be his year again.  At round five, he looked very tough.  But then he was a wreck after Catalunya, having given up the lead, and he faded noticeably at Assen and again at Laguna.  Going into this mid-season weekend, he was thought by many, including moi-même, to have his work cut out for him at Sachsenring.  So, on a wet track he has the top practice lap on Friday.  Perhaps he’s feeling better?  A little too soon to say.

Notice how on Fridays (Thursdays in the Netherlands) guys like Toni Elias, de Puniet and de Angelis, de bums, always seem to have something going on.  Some weeks, it carries over to Saturday, and they end up in the second row on the grid, fully enjoying the sweeties with the umbrellas.  But it almost never carries over to Sunday.  De Puniet’s fourth in Jerez was a gift, de Angelis has finished as high as sixth—at Qatar—with Elias scoring a sixth at Laguna.  There’s a whole lot of difference between running one fast lap and running thirty fast laps.

And the sick part of this sport?  The hellers are doing laps in eighty-three seconds and the “bums” are taking all of eighty-five seconds.  Like they’re going slow.

Last year in Germany, Lorenzo and Pedrosa went out early.  Stoner beat Rossi (the last race Rossi would lose until October 5th at Philip Island), with Vermeulen on the podium and the aforementioned de Angelis in 4th place.  In the background, on the jukebox, you’d swear you could hear bits and pieces of Patsy Cline’s haunting, “Crazy…”               Yes, that’s right, Alex de Angelis finished in 4th place.

Will it be Germany where Stoner reasserts his claim to the top spot?  I think not.  But all that needs to happen is for, say, Stoner to win, Pedrosa to finish 2nd, Lorenzo 3rd, and Rossi, uh, 7th, whence the championship standings would look like this– 🙂 —

Stoner                160

Rossi                   160

Lorenzo              158

Pedrosa               112

At roughly the same time pigs fly. 

Bummer for our boy Casey, who hasn’t been sandbagging.  He’s probably not winning this race, nor is Signor Rossi going to loaf his way to seventh.  I expect Rossi and Pedrosa to slug it out, with Lorenzo injured, lurking and dangerous, Stoner fading, Dovizioso threatening, Hayden being heard from, and even a Marco Melandri around if it rains. 

And I hear your boys Dani and Dovi got themselves brand new engines for the Sachsenring Rennen.

My question–who’s gonna LOSE it this year at Sachsenring? 

Probably not Signor Rossi.

 *  *  *

The forecast: rain for qualifications; cloudy and cool on race day.

Visit motorcycle.com during the Indianapolis GP

July 18, 2009
The official MotoGP logoImage via Wikipedia

The end of August isn’t that far away.  It’s time to start thinking MotoGP.

I post on motorcycle.com twice on each race weekend, on Friday and Monday. 

When the madness descends upon Indianapolis for what will be the biggest crowd of the MotoGP season, I’ll be posting all weekend, in addition to covering the race for the website.

Have a great time in Indianapolis this year, and please wear your helmet.

IMS MotoGP Lap of Champions

August 5, 2008
The

This from the Motor Speedway:

MotoGP: Riders can take Lap of Champions at IMS to benefit charity.

Written by Indianapolis Motor Speedway       Thursday, 31 July 2008

Motorcycle enthusiasts can ride into history Saturday, Sept. 13 by taking a parade lap on the road course at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the Lap of Champions, a charity event during the inaugural Red Bull Indianapolis GP:

Lap of Champions participants will ride around the IMs circuit during the historic first MotoGP race at IMs. Riders can participate in the Lap of Champions at a variety of levels, with proceeds for this Ride for Kids® event benefiting the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation:

$100:  One pass for the Lap of Champions, perfect for riders who already have their race tickets.

$300:  Participants will receive one pass for the Lap of Champions, one three day ticket to the Red Bull Indianapolis GP from Sept. 12-14 with reserved Paddock Penthouse seating and VIP parking, a commemorative T-shirt and hat, and one ticket for a drawing that includes fantastic prizes.

$425: Participants will receive one pass for the Lap of Champions, two three-day tickets to the Red Bull Indianapolis GP from Sept. 12-14 with reserved Paddock Penthouse seating and VIP parking, two commemorative T-shirts and hats, and one ticket for a drawing that also includes fantastic prizes.

Great motorcycle-oriented prizes will be awarded in the drawing, including an AGV GP Tech helmet, AGV Sport leathers, boots and gloves, a set of Dunlop tires and much more.

Additional drawing tickets are $200 each for participants at the $300 and $425 levels. Drawing ticket holders must be present to win. (When was the last time you saw that?)

The top fundraiser for this event will receive his or her choice of an Aerostich Roadcrafter or Darien riding suit.

This event is limited to 250 riders, so prompt registration is encouraged.

Register today online at www.rideforkids.org . For more information about the event or the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation, call (800) 253-6530 or (828)  665-6891.

The Lap of Champions is scheduled for 5:20 p.m. (ET) Saturday, Sept. 13, rain or shine.


Rossi Puts Stoner in the Dirt at Laguna

July 21, 2008

Valentino Rossi gave a clinic on Sunday, out-riding Casey Stoner for his first ever win at Laguna Seca.  Stoner, despite having the faster qualifying times, could never catch Rossi after a first lap pass and ended up a distant second.  Points is points, but Rossi was clearly the more skilled rider in Monterey.

Rossi spanks Stoner at Laguna Seca

Rossi spanks Stoner at Laguna Seca

Photo courtesy of motogp.com

CBS did a pretty good job of broadcasting the race, although the announcers kept cutting to commercial with breathless comments like, “My heart is beating!” and “This is exciting!”.  They caught Lorenzo’s high side crash pretty well, but had to spend too much time tracking the field while Stoner and Rossi ran away with the race.  Also, you would think that with a race this brief, around 45 minutes, CBS could afford fewer commercial breaks during the race, and hope to make up for the revenue shortfall by building viewership for future races.  I was also surprised by the utter lack of crowd shots; it was hard to tell if there was ANYONE actually there for the race.

With Lorenzo and Pedrosa healing from injuries (although with the summer break both are likely to be back at full speed in August), the 2008 season has become Stoner and Rossi.  The folks at the Motor Speedway have now started cranking up their PR machine in hopes of attracting 150,000 fans for race weekend in September.  Two of their flacks were also interviewed yesterday, expressing some surprise that a lot of attendees will be riding their bikes to Indianapolis, and wondering about things like parking.  Hello!!!

Other than a nice article by Phil Wilson in the Indianapolis Star, there wasn’t a lot of coverage out there early on.  MotoGP still suffers from a lack of awareness among American motorsports fans, a problem which the annual Indianapolis GP should help address.

Final Laguna Seca standings:

1 Valentino Rossi Yamaha Factory 44:04.311

2 Casey Stoner Ducati MotoGP 44:17.312

3 Chris Vermeulen Suzuki MotoGP 44:30.920

4 Andrea Dovizioso Honda Scot 44:39.212

5 Nicky Hayden Honda HRC 44:39.974

6 Randy De Puniet Honda LCR 44:41.979

7 Antonio Elias Ducati d Antin 44:45.940

8 Ben Spies Suzuki MotoGP 44:46.238

9 James Toseland Yamaha Tech3 44:47.330

10 Shinya Nakano Honda Gresini 44:48.702

11 Jamie Hacking Kawasaki Racing 44:50.569

12 Sylvain Guintoli Ducati d Antin 44:59.584

13 Alex De Angelis Honda Gresini 44:59.832

14 Colin Edwards Yamaha Tech3 45:06.691

15 Loris Capirossi Suzuki MotoGP 45:12.518

16 Marco Melandri Ducati MotoGP 45:15.273

17 Anthony West Kawasaki Racing 45:34.872

Latest MotoGP World Championship standings:

1 Valentino ROSSI ITA Fiat Yamaha Team 212

2 Casey STONER AUS Ducati Team 187

3 Dani PEDROSA SPA Repsol Honda Team 171

4 Jorge LORENZO SPA Fiat Yamaha Team 114

5 Andrea DOVIZIOSO ITA JiR Team Scot MotoGP 103

6 Colin EDWARDS USA Tech 3 Yamaha 100

7 Chris VERMEULEN AUS Rizla Suzuki MotoGP 89

8 Nicky HAYDEN USA Repsol Honda Team 84

9 James TOSELAND GBR Tech 3 Yamaha 72

10 Shinya NAKANO JPN San Carlo Honda Gresini 70

11 Loris CAPIROSSI ITA Rizla Suzuki MotoGP 61

12 Toni ELIAS SPA Alice Team 46

13 Alex DE ANGELIS RSM San Carlo Honda Gresini 41

14 Randy DE PUNIET FRA LCR Honda MotoGP 40

15 Sylvain GUINTOLI FRA Alice Team 38

16 John HOPKINS USA Kawasaki Racing Team 32

17 Marco MELANDRI ITA Ducati Team 32

18 Anthony WEST AUS Kawasaki Racing Team 22

19 Ben SPIES USA Rizla Suzuki MotoGP 10

20 Jamie HACKING USA Kawasaki Racing Team 5

21 Tadayuki OKADA JPN Repsol Honda Team 2

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Miracle Ride – Another GREAT Indianapolis Motorcycle Event

May 13, 2008

Riley Hospital for Children

On May 31st, the Miracle Ride Foundation brings its annual fund raising weekend for Riley Hospital for Children, and it is awesome. The activities start at 9 am on Saturday and run through Sunday afternoon. Indianapolis will host thousands of bikers in the 15th year of gathering pledges to support Riley, where no child is turned away based upon ability to pay.

Vanity plates for Indiana bikes

Enjoy prizes for best bikes in a host of categories, plus a silent auction, games of chance, alcoholic beverages and more. It’s possible to go home on Sunday with a tattoo and have no idea how it got there. The website has everything you need to know. Weather should be beautiful, so please come join us for a good cause and a good time. Pre-registration ends on May 21st.

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Mediterrano Cafe – Superb Food, Great Value

May 12, 2008

Mediterranean food at its best; great value.

Here’s a tip you’ll thank me for. The best–by far, in my opinion–Greek Mediterranean food in Indianapolis. Mediterrano Cafe. It comes to you in a modest storefront in a modest strip mall in a modest area of Castleton, at the northeast corner of the circle, where Allisonville Rd meets I-465.

In short, one of the best lunch buffets in the city for $10 including your beverage

Dinner buffet is bigger and better, if you’re looking for bigger and better. For me, lunch is superb. Your breath will be a wreck for two days unless you take measures. Tipping neither necessary nor expected. At the good tables you can see your bike from your seat. Plenty of vegetarian choices, but the meats rule.

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