Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Fired up Rossi hoping to build on Motegi form

Fired up Rossi hoping to build on Motegi form

Valentino Rossi eyes another podium finish at Sepang on the weekend he could lose his MotoGP crown to team-mate and rival Jorge Lorenzo.

Having proven that team orders are not in effect at FIAT Yamaha between himself and MotoGP title-elect team-mate Jorge Lorenzo, Valentino Rossi is plotting a similarly feisty performance in the Malaysian Grand Prix.

The Italian scored his sixth podium of the season after coming out on top of an exciting duel with Lorenzo during the latter stages of the race, Rossi overcoming pain from his shoulder to get the edge on the Spaniard.

One of his most convincing performances since returning from injury in July, Rossi was pleased to be fighting back at the front in Japan, though he is reserving judgement on how his shoulder will contend with the Sepang circuit until action gets underway.

"Japan was very exciting for us and it felt good to be fighting at the front through all the sessions and the race; it's been a long time since we were that strong. I don't know until I start riding how Sepang will feel on my shoulder but it is one of my two or three favourite tracks in the world and I am always excited to go there.

“We were strong there in winter testing, obviously a lot has changed since then but we made some good improvements to our bike in Japan so I hope we can be in the same kind of form this weekend."

Despite his podium, Rossi dropped behind Andrea Dovizioso in the fight for fourth in the standings at Motegi. 


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Jorge Lorenzo - Some of Rossi's moves 'a bit much'

Jorge Lorenzo - Some of Rossi's moves 'a bit much'

"Maybe in the future Rossi's rivals will get a little bit mad and act like him."

Jorge Lorenzo wasn't happy with some of the strong moves made by his team-mate Valentino Rossi, during their thrilling battle for third in the closing stages of Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix.

Whilst many in the Yamaha pits might have preferred Rossi to give Lorenzo a little extra space, given he is firmly on course for the 2010 championship, the pair instead battled as if they were title rivals.

Although they had swapped places earlier in the race, the real action between them kicked off on the penultimate lap - when Lorenzo passed Rossi on entry to the first underpass, only for Rossi to slice back ahead of him on the exit, making possible contact.

Lorenzo then successfully lunged for the inside at a following left hander, but Rossi immediately barged back up the inside on the next right - the pair bumping fairings in the process.

Rossi guarded the entry to the underpass corner more carefully on the last lap, but Lorenzo still found a way around him soon after.

Once again, Rossi instantly responded, parking his M1 on the apex of a slow left corner in what proved to be the decisive pass.

"This was a big battle between Valentino and I, two warriors with the killer instinct," said Lorenzo.

"I have to say that at some points I do not think he was completely fair, we were both on the limit but some of his moves were maybe a bit too much and he touched me and pushed me wide when I don't think it was right.

"We are team-mates, I am fighting for the Riders' Championship but we are both fighting for the Teams' and Manufacturers' Championship as well and we have to remember this."

In an interview with MotoGP.com, Lorenzo gave stronger comments.

"The show is great for the business of motorcycle racing," Lorenzo said. "But when you are a rider and on a MotoGP bike reaching 300km/h on the straight and 180-200km/h on the corners, and you are feel the other rider touch you. It is not a good feeling. You know you are putting your life at risk.

"The three or four moves I made on Valentino I thought were correct and fair. His movements were legal but on the limit, from my point of you. I think it is the way he likes to fight - before with Gibernau and Stoner, and now with me.

"Maybe in the future his rivals will get a little bit mad and act like him."

Yamaha Racing management are said to have agreed that Rossi took too much of a risk against another Yamaha rider, especially one leading the championship.

That was also the view of Lorenzo's team manager Wilco Zeelenberg.

"It was a great battle between the two strongest riders in the world but they are team-mates and Valentino took too many risks and touched Jorge a couple of times, which should not have happened when Jorge is fighting for the championship," he said.

Although disappointed, Lorenzo can at least claim credit for not being sucked into a mistake during the heated conflict with Rossi - as others have in the past.

Fourth for Lorenzo marked his second race in a row off the podium, after finishing in the top three in the first twelve rounds. Unlike Rossi, Lorenzo raced with the older spec M1 engine and the softer front tyre.

"I am disappointed to miss the podium of course because I wanted one at Yamaha's home, but this is racing," said Lorenzo.

"We chose to ride with the old engine to be safe and then I wasn't getting the best feeling from the front tyre, so things weren't perfect for me, but anyway we took some good points."

With Lorenzo's only remaining title rival Dani Pedrosa missing the race through injury, Lorenzo needs just seven points next Sunday at Sepang to secure the title.

"We are very close to getting our dream and I really hope we can do it next weekend in Sepang," said the Spaniard.


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Yamaha - Valentino Rossi was 'too aggressive'

Yamaha - Valentino Rossi was 'too aggressive'

"We made our position clear. You don't do this; especially considering the situation in the championship."

Yamaha management have told Valentino Rossi that he was too aggressive in his defence of third position against team-mate and title leader Jorge Lorenzo in the closing stages of Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix at Motegi.

Lorenzo was faster than Rossi at the end of the race and the pair swapped places six times over the last two laps - and made contact several times - before Rossi held on to the final rostrum position.

“I think that Valentino's actions in the race were not correct towards Lorenzo," GPone.com reports Yamaha Motor Racing Managing Director of Lin Jarvis as saying.

“After the race, Jorge came to us and asked our opinion of Rossi's behaviour during the race. There were four of us. Besides me, there was Furusawa and another two people from Yamaha.

"We, together, were in agreement with the fact that a battle like that between team-mates makes no sense. We expect our riders to race with a higher margin of safety and they were too close today.

"After that, Furusawa went to talk to Valentino, and he asked him to adopt a different approach when racing other Yamaha riders.

"We made our position clear. The race was too tight and too difficult. You don't do this; especially considering the situation in the championship.

“There is no implication of wrongdoing [by Rossi], otherwise Race Direction would have intervened. But a rider can be very aggressive, or too aggressive. Valentino was too aggressive.

“From a sporting perspective races might be more boring and less spectacular [without these kinds of battles]. But we don't want riders ending up in the gravel. We expect the riders to respect one another."

Lorenzo, who is staying at Yamaha for the next two season, can win the title at Sepang on Sunday.

Seven time champion Rossi, out of the 2010 title fight after breaking his leg earlier in the year, is moving to Ducati next season. 


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Valentino Rossi - A great battle, proper racing

Valentino Rossi - A great battle, proper racing

"We had a great battle, proper racing - I think everyone watching enjoyed it."

Valentino Rossi beat Yamaha team-mate Jorge Lorenzo for the first time since round one in Qatar, after a thrilling no-holds-barred contest for third place at Motegi on Sunday.

Rossi had been held up by title leader Lorenzo in the early stages of the race, but once ahead could not shake the young Spaniard, who then began attacking the departing seven time MotoGP champion in the closing stages.

Fuelled by pride and competitive instinct, the pair swapped places four times on the penultimate lap - including some fairing bashing as Rossi moved back ahead - and then twice more on the last lap, as Rossi won the position by half a second.

In terms of technical difference, Rossi was running the latest Yamaha engine, while Lorenzo had the softer option front tyre.

"What a great race! Of course I would have preferred to be battling for the win but anyway it was a great feeling, a real show and I want to congratulate Jorge because he was very strong and didn't give up!

"Unfortunately I lost time at the start when he passed me so Stoner and Dovizioso got away, and by the time I passed him again they were too far ahead. At the end I was tired and my tyre was sliding a lot, it was a bit softer than I would have liked, so I knew I was going to be in trouble but I wanted the podium so much.

"Jorge came back at me and we had a great battle, proper racing - I think everyone watching enjoyed it."

There had been suggestions that Rossi might help Lorenzo to the title, but Rossi's team manager Davide Brivio said he wasn't surprised by the ferocity of the battle

"When two strong riders have the chance to fight like this it is always going to create a lot of enjoyment and Jorge didn't give up, but it was better for Valentino this time!" he said. "We hope to see more of this for the fans and everyone watching." 


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Casey Stoner joins the greats with 22nd MotoGP win

Casey Stoner joins the greats with 22nd MotoGP win

"All I can say is that it is an honour to be alongside such great names"

Ducati's Casey Stoner took his second MotoGP victory of the season, in as many starts, at Japan on Sunday - and in doing so joined motorcycle legends Kenny Roberts, Geoff Duke and John Surtees on 22 premier-class wins.

Riding in front of his future Honda bosses, Stoner passed current factory RCV rider Andrea Dovizioso within a few corners of the start, then rode to a near four-second victory over the Italian.

"This win feels great. I could have never imagined when I began my first season in Grand Prix at 16 years of age that I would reach this level and all I can say is that it is an honour to be alongside such great names," said Stoner, now joint eighth in the all-time winners list.

"I have taken all my MotoGP wins with Ducati and it is down to their fantastic support, hard work and above all their belief in me that this has been possible.

"Once again we put in maximum effort all weekend here to find some stability in the hard braking and acceleration zones at this circuit, which has been a massive challenge for us.

"We tried something in warm-up this morning that didn't quite work so we took a bit of a lucky dip for the race and it paid off. Once I got out in front I knew we had a chance to win but it wasn't without fighting for it because Andrea rode a great race to push me all the way to the last lap.

"It's a big win for me, especially because it's my first at this circuit and that means a lot," added Stoner, who wrapped up the 2007 world title at Motegi.

The next best Ducati rider on Sunday was Stoner's team-mate Nicky Hayden in twelfth.

Team manager Vittoriano Guareschi was impressed by Stoner and his crew kept working to find a set-up.

"After two really tough days of practice we couldn't really have expected a race like this so my compliments to Casey and the team," he said. "He had a great race today and set an incredible pace from the start to the end, without making a single mistake despite some intense pressure from Dovi.

"Congratulations to everybody in the garage because we kept cool heads yesterday at a time when it would have been easy to panic and make the wrong decisions." 


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Andrea Dovizioso - I don’t know what Stoner ate

Andrea Dovizioso - I don’t know what Stoner ate

"I don't what Casey ate today because his pace was amazing!"

Following the Friday injury for his team-mate and title contender Dani Pedrosa, Andrea Dovizioso upheld some Honda pride with second place in Sunday's Japanese Grand Prix.

Starting from his first pole in MotoGP, the Italian lost the lead early on lap one to Ducati's Casey Stoner and - while staying close to the Australian for much of the race - was forced to concede defeat in the closing stages.

Nevertheless, second place meant Dovi's first podium since round five and he is back ahead of Valentino Rossi for fourth in the world championship standings, with four rounds to go.

"I don't what Casey ate today because his pace was amazing!" joked Dovi. "I pushed 100 percent all the race but I never had an opportunity to overtake him.

"It was hard to maintain the pace on the tyre in the last few laps and I nearly had a big highside three laps from the end - at that moment I knew I couldn't win the race.

"It was a little bit disappointing because I wanted the win and I thought it was possible today, but I'm really happy to be back on the podium again.

"Following Casey I learned a lot about the strategy for tuning the electronics settings for the final part of the race when the tyre performance is dropping off, so this is really positive for the future," he added.


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Jorge Lorenzo unhappy with Rossi battle tactics

Jorge Lorenzo unhappy with Rossi battle tactics

Following their nail-biting fight for third position in the Grand Prix of Japan the Championship leader was dissatisfied with the manner in which his Fiat Yamaha team-mate secured the final podium spot.

Fourth position at Motegi has done little to dent Jorge Lorenzo's hopes of securing the 2010 MotoGP World Championship but the Spaniard was left extremely unhappy with the manner in which he missed out on a podium finish to team-mate and current World Champion Valentino Rossi.

Their Japanese battle began at the first turn of the opening lap and as the two remained in close contact throughout the race the fight for third really heated up towards the end of the 24-lap contest, with daring moves and touching fairings the highlights in a tense battle that engrossed everyone watching on. Rossi managed to edge the result and whilst Lorenzo was understandably disappointed at finishing off the podium for only the second time this season, it was the nature in which he did so that left him with a bitter taste in his mouth.

"The show is great for the people to enjoy and the business of motorcycle racing, it's fantastic, but when you are a rider who is on a MotoGP bike which gets up to 300 km/h in the straight and 180-200 km/h in the corners and you are feeling the other rider touch you it's not a great feeling or a good emotion because you know you are putting your life at risk," said Lorenzo in the attached video interview. "The three or four moves I made on Valentino I felt were correct and fair. On the other hand his moves were legal but on the limit, from my point of view. We have seen the way he likes to fight, it happened before with Gibernau, then with Stoner, and now with me. Maybe in the future his rivals will get a little bit mad and we will act like he usually does!"

Lorenzo added: "We are team-mates, I am fighting for the Riders' Championship but we are both fighting for the Teams' and Manufacturers' Championship as well and we have to remember this. I am disappointed to miss the podium of course because I wanted one at Yamaha's home, but this is racing."

The decision to go with the medium front Bridgestone tyre as opposed to the hard option that his rivals opted for was a key factor in his race as well said Lorenzo. "It was obvious after the race that our choice was not the best but we can't change the situation. We made a mistake with the front tyre and I didn't have so much confidence in the front so for this reason it was difficult to overtake Valentino. We also chose the old engine because with the new one we would waste a lot of fuel and would not finish the race."

Lorenzo remains on the verge of sealing his first premier class title and leads the standings by 69 points ahead of injured rival Dani Pedrosa heading into Round 15 of 18 at Sepang next weekend.

"I am very happy at the moment because we are very close to achieving a dream that has been in the making for 20 years. It was nice to get the 250cc World titles but now we are talking about something much bigger. Maybe in Malaysia we can get it and we will then celebrate, and after in Spain," he concluded.

You can watch the fantastic battle between Lorenzo and Rossi once again by clicking here.


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