The Ducati
Marlboro Team goes into the 2006 season finale aiming to end
MotoGP's 990cc era on a high by adding to its haul of race
wins and podium finishes. Loris Capirossi will race at
Valencia alongside former team-mate Troy Bayliss because
Sete Gibernau is unfit to ride following further treatment
to the collarbone he broke at June's Catalan GP and damaged
again at the recent Portuguese GP. Bayliss contested the
2003 and 2004 MotoGP championships with the Ducati Marlboro
Team and won his second World Superbike title with Ducati
earlier this month. The 2006 season
has been the Ducati Marlboro Team's most successful since it
first entered the MotoGP World Championship in 2003.
Capirossi has doubled his previous number of victories for
the team by taking three wins (at Jerez, Brno and Motegi)
plus four further podiums, two pole positions (at Jerez and
Motegi) and four fastest laps. In contesting the final 990cc
MotoGP event Bayliss will 'bookend' the public life of
Ducati's 990cc Desmosedici because he also gave the V4 its
first public outing at the 2002 Valencia GP, riding a few
demo laps alongside Ducati test rider Vittoriano Guareschi.
Both Bayliss and Capirossi have scored podium finishes on
the Desmosedici at Valencia, Capirossi taking third in 2003,
Bayliss third the following year.
LORIS CAPIROSSI, Ducati
Marlboro Team rider, 4th overall, 209 points:
"Estoril was a bad weekend for us but the prevoious four
races were amazing, the bike and the tyres working really
well, so we hope that we will be in similar shape at
Valencia so we can once again fight for the podium. Valencia
is such a strange racetrack, like a go-kart track which
makes it very tough on a MotoGP bike. The Valencia weekend
is never easy because the circuit is very unusual, with many
slow-speed corners that lead into each other and very few
right-handers. It's maybe not the ideal racetrack for MotoGP
bikes, though it seems a lot of fun on a 125 or a 250.
Looking at the year overall, we've had some great moments
and some bad moments. I think the big first-turn crash at
Barcelona lost us the chance of winning the title, but I
don't think about it any more, I think only of the present
and of the future. I understand that this is the correct
attitude because I have been racing in GPs for 17 years and
during those years I have made many mistakes, but you must
always move on, don't dwell on the past".
TROY BAYLISS, Ducati
Marlboro Team rider: "The only way I can put it is
that I appreciate the opportunity that has been given to me
to race at Valencia with the Ducati Marlboro Team. I feel
sorry of course for Sete, who won't be able to race in his
home GP, but it sort of makes sense that I have been called
to replace him.I was there at the start of the whole Ducati
MotoGP project four years ago, the decision just fell into
place and I am sure there are lots of people in the Company
and lots of fans who want to see me at Valencia.
|
|
Troy Bayliss contested the
2003 and 2004 MotoGP championships with the Ducati Marlboro
Team and won his second World Superbike title with Ducati
(above) earlier this month. |
|
|
|
Loris Capirossi will race at Valencia alongside
former team-mate Troy Bayliss (above) because
Sete Gibernau is unfit to ride following further treatment
to the collarbone he broke at June's Catalan GP and damaged
again at the recent Portuguese GP. |
|
"My season
has finished and I have this great opportunity now so it's
nice for all concerned and it'll also be great to join up
again with some of my old team and mechanics. I feel really
good it's Valencia, because it's a track I know like the
back of my hand and I've always had good results there. I'll
be thrown in at the deep end and won't have much time for
practice but I know the bike pretty well. The only thing I
won't have tried are the Bridgestone, but we'll take it step
by step and see how it goes from there".
LIVIO SUPPO, Ducati MotoGP
project manager: "We are really sorry that once again
Sete isn't fit to race, it's a real shame. For Loris, we
hope he can finish the season by claiming third place
overall, which will be our best result in the riders'
championship. We hope he can have another great race, like
the races he has had this year at Jerez, Motegi, Brno,
Mugello, Sepang and so on. We count on the team and on
Bridgestone to give him all the support he needs to get the
result he deserves. Finally, a big welcome back to Troy. He
was the first guy to ride the Desmosedici in public here in
Valencia in 2002 and now he will ride the bike in its last
race. Once we realised that Sete wasn't fit we invited Troy
to race to celebrate his second Superbike title with us. We
just want him to enjoy the weekend because although there
will be a lot of expectation upon him, it won't be easy. He
is riding a bike and tyres that he's not familiar with and
he will be racing against guys who have been on their bikes
all year."
Valencia is
one of five anti-clockwise MotoGP circuits and the
second-slowest GP circuit with a lap record of just
154.9kmh, a fraction slower than Laguna Seca and
marginally faster than Estoril. Most of the track's
corners are slow, in-and-out turns, grouped closely
together, this unusual layout affording spectators a
mostly unobstructed view of the entire circuit - a real
rarity in the world of motorsport.
It's an immensely
physical circuit with riders afforded little rest
between bouts of heavy acceleration, braking and
cornering. This weekend Valencia hosts its eighth Grand
Prix after featuring on the World Championship calendar
for the first time in 1999. The venue is officially
christened the Ricardo Tormo circuit, in honour of the
late Spanish rider, a former 50cc World Champion.
|
|
|