FIAT YAMAHA TEAM

19.05.2007 FIAT YAMAHA TEAM READY FOR THE CHALLENGE IN FRANCE THIS WEEKEND

The Fiat Yamaha Team has returned from a whirlwind trip to the Orient to continue their MotoGP World Championship challenge this weekend on more familiar territory in Europe. Valentino Rossi and Colin Edwards enjoyed contrasting fortunes at the last race in China, with the Italian taking second spot after a spirited ride and the American struggling to tenth with tyre problems, but they both travel to the Le Mans circuit in good spirits for a fifth round that promises to provide an improvement in results and a solid points platform for the rest of the season.

The Grand Prix of France is a home race for the team's tyre suppliers Michelin, who have taken victory in every premier-class race to have been held at Le Mans since 1991. On two occasions their success has been at the hands of Rossi, including his 2005 success with Yamaha, when team-mate Edwards also tasted the French podium champagne after clinching third place - his first rostrum for the factory. In total Rossi has had five MotoGP podiums at Le Mans, contributing to a career total of 94 - a tally bettered only by Mick Doohan. However, that record could be equalled if Rossi can register number 95 next weekend.

The legendary Bugatti circuit, which has intermittently played home to the MotoGP World Championship since 1969, has been a fixture on the calendar for the last seven seasons. From a technical point of view it is considered one of the most unremarkable; an archetypal stop-go track with the main complication being the first corner - one of the fastest on the calendar - followed by a tight chicane, which requires hard braking at high lean angle. There are several short straights, interspersed by hairpins and chicanes, calling not just for balance and control under hard and repeated braking but a neat and swift transfer from full braking to full acceleration on the exit of the corners. With nine right-handers and only four lefts, the track is also particularly hard on one side of the tyres.

Valentino Rossi

After burying the nightmare of tyre troubles at Shanghai one year ago with a stirring second place in China last Sunday, Valentino Rossi is looking to settle another score from a turbulent 2006 at Le Mans next weekend. Engine trouble at the French circuit robbed the Italian of what looked like a certain victory last May and he is keen to continue a much-improved start to 2007 with another significant points haul.

"I definitely have a score to settle at Le Mans after what happened last year, when I should have won the race!" says Rossi. "Anyway, everything is different now and I'm very determined and looking forward to this next race. Our Yamaha has always gone well there and until the problem of last year it was really flying. I'm very happy to go back to Europe and this next run of races is over some of my favourite tracks, where I know I'm always strong. It's a very busy time with seven races in just over two months but it's also a key part of the championship and I'm ready to race at 100%."

"China was encouraging for us because our bike worked perfectly in qualifying and then also in the race, when we expected more problems. I think our bike is very, very good and although we lack a little bit of top speed this won't be such a problem at the next few circuits as it was in China. I think we're in good shape."
 

The Grand Prix of France is a home race for the team's tyre suppliers Michelin, who have taken victory in every premier-class race to have been held at Le Mans since 1991.

The Fiat Yamaha Team has returned from a whirlwind trip to the Orient to continue their MotoGP World Championship challenge this weekend on more familiar territory in Europe.


Colin Edwards

After a brief stop at home in the USA, Colin Edwards travels to France hoping for an end to the bad luck that has dogged him for the past two rounds and taken the shine off an otherwise positive start to the 800cc era. The Texan Tornado has adapted to the demands of the new machines as well as any other rider in the field and, after being knocked off track on the first lap in Istanbul and then suffering from tyre problems at Shanghai, he is targeting Le Mans as a starting point for a run of podium finishes leading up to the summer.

"China was really gutting for me - after the way my bike worked on Saturday for qualifying I really had my hopes up and it was devastating not to be able to fulfil my potential", says Edwards. "I honestly believe our bike is the best one out there and now I just want to get to Le Mans and prove it! We know we go well there so I'm really hoping I can get back on the podium. We didn't have the right tyre in China but Le Mans is ‘home ground' for Michelin and we've done a lot of testing there over the last couple of years, which will hopefully help."

"This is always the busiest and most intense part of the season with no time to rest and building up to what is the biggest race of the year for me in Laguna Seca. My target is to arrive there with several podiums under my belt and in a strong position in the championship!"

Davide Brivio

The Grand Prix of France is the first of a run of six races in just eight weeks on European soil before the series heads to the United States for its final date before the summer break. It represents an intense period for the teams and Fiat Yamaha Team Director Davide Brivio believes his riders are now primed to launch the kind of consistent assault on the top positions that will be crucial to mounting a serious challenge for honours at the end of the season.

"This is the start of a very important block of races that will have a huge bearing on how the championship develops before the summer break," says Brivio. "It's a tough schedule for the whole team because we only have three weekends without a race in two months so it's a key part of the season and it puts everybody to the test. We said before China that we were going there to defend and then go on the attack in Europe. That is still our plan but this is an unpredictable season with a lot of strong rivals on the track so there is always a ‘but'!"

"Le Mans is a circuit that has been good to us in the past and it will be extremely interesting to compare the level of our bike with our competitors there just because it is so different to anywhere we have been so far. It doesn't have the long, fast straights of Qatar, Turkey or China but, even so, we know our competitors will be strong. This is a strange season because the new 800 machines and the strong competition between the tyre manufacturers make it impossible to forecast what will happen in each race. Our target for Le Mans and the races that follow it are just to stay as close as we can to the top, finish regularly on the podium and take our chances to win races when they come along."
 

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06.05.2007

Fiat Yamaha Team rider Valentino Rossi finished in a close second place after he fought a race-long battle with Ducati's Casey Stoner during the MotoGP Grand Prix of China today

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