The enchanting
city of Istanbul opens its gates to the MotoGP World
Championship for the third time next weekend as the new
800cc era enters a third chapter shrouded in mystery. Unlike
the opening two rounds at Losail and Jerez, the Fiat Yamaha
Team and their rivals will be racing at a circuit where they
have no pre-season testing experience with this year's
machines. Not only will they have to set the bikes up from
scratch but new regulations limiting the number of tyres
each rider can use over the course of the weekend also come
thundering into the equation.
Valentino Rossi and Colin Edwards will each have just
seventeen rear tyres and fourteen fronts at their disposal
throughout the four hour-long official practice sessions,
25-minute warm-up and 22-lap race. A variety of different
compounds will be available, based on Michelin's assessment
of the characteristics of the spectacular 5.378 kilometre
track and data gathered during tests following the Grand
Prix at Jerez, but the rubber manufacturers will not be
allowed to alter each rider's allocation after 5pm on
Thursday evening.
The battle against the clock will start on Friday morning,
when the riders and their engineers will work methodically
through the available tyre options and adjust their bike
set-up to the best available choice. Their job will not be
made any easier by the demanding nature of the circuit,
which features fourteen turns - eight lefts and six rights -
several of which are based on famous bends at other
circuits, such as the ‘Senna Esses' at Sao Paolo, the ‘Spoon
Curve' at Suzuka and the ‘Eau Rouge' at Spa. Like Phillip
Island and Laguna Seca, it also has the unusual
characteristic of running anti-clockwise.
The challenge is further enhanced by dramatic changes in
elevation, with the track built on four different ground
levels, and the fastest corner in MotoGP - a 270km/h bend
that the riders may even take with the throttle wide open in
sixth gear on the new 800cc machines. That hair-raising turn
eleven is followed by three ultra-slow chicanes, calling for
a balanced set-up that provides front-end confidence as well
as the rear-end stability required to cope with the
high-speed changes of direction.
A run of six different winners from the last six MotoGP
races makes this weekend's proceedings even harder to
predict but both Rossi and Edwards are confident of
maintaining their strong early season form. After two rounds
Rossi defends a World Championship lead of nine points over
Casey Stoner and Dani Pedrosa, with Edwards another ten
points further back in fourth place. The Italian's victory
at Jerez was his 46th of the four-stroke MotoGP era and made
him the first man to win on three different capacity
machines in the premier-class; 500cc, 990cc and 800cc.
Valentino Rossi - "Putting the record straight"
Istanbul Park is one of only three circuits on the current
calendar where Valentino Rossi has yet to take victory in
the premier-class of MotoGP, the others being Laguna Seca in
the USA and Misano in Italy, which will this year host a
Grand Prix for the first time since 1993. It is a figure the
28-year-old is looking to reduce as he aims for his first
back-to-back victories since Mugello and Catalunya last
year.
"The next two races, Turkey and China, are ones that I don't
like so much and I have never won at Istanbul, but it's a
great circuit with some very fast corners," says Rossi. "If
the bike works well then it will be great fun I think. Last
year I made an error early in the race and it cost me the
chance for a podium, but I won't be making the same mistake
this year.
We are leading
the championship but it's a long season and we have to aim
to get on the podium at every race. The difficult thing over
the next two races is going to be horsepower, because both
Istanbul and Shanghai have very long straights.
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The battle against the clock will start on Friday
morning, when the riders and their engineers will
work methodically through the available tyre options
and adjust their bike set-up to the best available
choice. |
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Valentino Rossi and Colin Edwards will each have
just seventeen rear tyres and fourteen fronts at
their disposal throughout the four hour-long
official practice sessions, 25-minute warm-up and
22-lap race. |
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"We tried some new things at the Jerez test
to improve this and I know that Yamaha have been working
very hard in Japan so hopefully we will have a little bit of
improvement in this area when we get to Turkey. The other
question is for the tyres, because it's the first time this
season that we're going to be racing at a track that we
haven't tested at. With the new restrictions it's going to
be very important to make the right choices and also we
don't know what the weather will do."
Colin
Edwards - "We're counting on Michelin"
Colin Edwards heads to Turkey brimming with confidence after
his return to the podium in Spain three weeks ago. Third
place at Jerez was the Texan's first rostrum finish since
the Grand Prix of China almost one year ago and, after
relaxing at home during the extended Easter break, Edwards
is determined to make sure the team don't have to wait that
long for his next visit to those hallowed steps.
"It's been good to have some time at home, relaxing and in
the knowledge that we did well in Jerez," reflects Edwards.
"Now it's time to get back to work and prove that wasn't a
fluke by getting amongst the champagne again in Turkey. It's
definitely not one of my favourite tracks and it was a
really hard race for us last year, but we had a lot of
problems then and things are very different this year. We
know we're going to lack a bit on the straights but we also
know that our bike is working pretty well and hopefully we
can make up time in other parts. Obviously everyone's going to be talking about the tyre
factor in Istanbul but we're all in the same boat. Nobody
has tested there so everyone's going to have to take some
risks with their tyre choices. Basically we've just got to
trust Michelin - we thought we were in trouble in Jerez but
they were confident they had ‘the' tyre and they were right.
They know what they're doing so hopefully everything will be
ok!"
Davide
Brivio - "Let's stay on the attack"
With the Fiat Yamaha Team leading both the individual and
team World Championship standings after two rounds, Team
Manager Davide Brivio is backing his team to keep on the
front foot in Turkey. With the long straights of Shanghai
sure to provide a stern challenge for the nimble YZR-M1,
Brivio has highlighted the need to get another solid pair of
results in the bag before the long trip East."
"We head to Turkey looking to attack because China might be
difficult for us and we may have to defend more," conceded
Brivio. "Of course the big challenge for everybody this
weekend is about finding a set-up quickly and making the
right choice with the tyres. Istanbul has not been a good
track for Yamaha and the cold conditions won't help either,
but we have a team of very shrewd engineers and a fantastic
relationship with Michelin so we are in a good position to
make the difference. Even though we haven't tested at Istanbul we have gathered
data at a lot of varied tracks during the winter and the
bike has worked fairly well everywhere, which is crucially
important when it comes to making a consistent challenge for
a World Championship. It is still early in the season but
the new M1 seems to have a solid base, so we'll see on the
Friday what we need to work on. Both our riders are very
motivated after their excellent results in Jerez so we are
looking forward to another strong challenge from them this
weekend."
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