Fiat Yamaha
Team rider Jorge Lorenzo
took a stunning second win of
the season in Le Mans yesterday,
negotiating varying track
conditions and a change of bikes
to lead from the first lap to
the flag and take the
MotoGP World Championship lead. It was a
doom-laden day for his team-mate
Valentino Rossi however as the
MotoGP World Champion slid off early on
and then had a ride-through
penalty to compound his
misfortune.
With the track still wet from a
rainy morning all riders started
the race on rain tyres, with the
mechanics readying the dry bikes
in pit lane in anticipation of
an early change as the track
dried out. Lorenzo, starting
from second, slipped a place at
the start but had passed both
Casey Stoner and Dani Pedrosa by
the end of the first lap to take
the lead. By lap five a dry line
had begun to appear and a few
riders chose to make early pit
stops to change bikes.
The
22-year-old Spaniard however was
feeling comfortable and had an
excellent pace on his
Bridgestone wets and so he
stayed out, constantly
stretching his lead. In the end
he was the last of the
front-runners to pit, a gamble
which paid off brilliantly as he
was by then nearly 34 seconds
clear and was able to rejoin the
race in the lead on lap 13. Once
he had bit of heat in his slick
tyres the youngster put his head
down and kept his nerve for the
remaining 15 laps and he
eventually took the chequered
flag an impressive 17.710
seconds clear of second-placed
Marco Melandri.
It was a day of stark contrasts
on the opposite side of the
garage, with Rossi forced to
make an incredible four visits
to pit lane. The Italian was in
second behind his team-mate when
he elected for an early bike
change, coming in to swap onto
his second M1 on dry
Bridgestones after just five
laps. The change went smoothly
but the track was still damp in
places and he went down on the
next lap whilst trying to warm
his tyres up. He returned to the
pits next time around to swap
back onto his other bike, with
the rules stipulating that he
had to keep one wet tyre with
the second bike change, but a
problem with his pit-limiter
meant he was penalised for
speeding on exit and forced to
return once again two laps later
to perform a ride-through
penalty. His final visit to the
garage came on lap 11 when he
changed once again onto a
fully-dry machine, but by then
he was some two laps adrift and
he finished in 16th.
Lorenzo’s 25-point haul takes
him into the lead by one point
and he now has 66 points to
Rossi’s 65. Stoner has the same
points as Rossi but lies third
as the Italian has more second
places, and Pedrosa follow in
the standings. With just nine
points separating the top four
the next round in Mugello is
sure to be a thrilling
spectacle.
Jorge Lorenzo - Position: 1
Time: 47'52.678
“Never in all my dreams did I
imagine this situation today –
winning the race and leading the
championship. This season I have
been much more calm and careful
and so I was really upset after
the crash in Jerez because I
didn’t expect it! Today has made
up for that though. I had a very
good pace with both types of
tyre and the strategy of our
team worked perfectly. I felt
happy to stay out on the wet
tyres for such a long time and
in the end I think we changed at
exactly the right time for our
race; there was some luck on our
side but we were also strong,
calm and careful and this paid
off. It was the first time in my
life that I’ve had to change
bikes during the race and I was
very nervous, but it went
smoothly and I was able to
rejoin in the lead. I’m sorry
for Valentino because it was bad
luck to crash, but now we are
nearly on the same points and it
seems like the championship is
starting again! I want to thank
my team because they were very
clever today, I’m so happy to be
here and to have won a third
MotoGP race.”
Valentino Rossi - Position:
16th Time: +2 Laps
“I had difficulties from the
start today and I really could
not ride my bike to its best.
Already by the fourth lap I felt
that I was quite slow and that I
couldn’t ride as I wanted. I
decided to change bikes early
because usually this strategy –
being among the first to change
the bike – pays off. Of course I
knew that I had to warm the
tyres up a little bit but I
crashed anyway in that corner
because at that point the track
was still wet and I just didn’t
ride into it in a calm enough
manner. Luckily I was able to
make it back to the pits and I
changed again, but the rule says
that if you change the bike
again then you have to use one
wet tyre, and so this is what we
did. When I started that time,
the pit-limiter on my bike was
not on and so I was given a
ride-through for speeding, but
by that time it was too late for
our race anyway. We’ve had
problems throughout the entire
weekend with the set-up of the
bike and today I was just hoping
that I could stay with the
riders in front and get some
important points for the
championship. Now we go to
Mugello, my home GP, where I
will perhaps be even more
motivated than usual!”
Daniele Romagnoli - Team
Manager
“We’re so happy to win today
because everyone has done a
great job all weekend to give
Jorge a competitive machine on
which he was able to ride very
fast and this is a well deserved
victory. The team did a very
important job during the race to
find a great strategy and the
best moment to change the bike.
Thanks and well done to all; the
championship is looking very
exciting now!”
Davide Brivio
- Team Manager
“Everything happened to us today
so let’s hope that’s it for now!
I don’t think that the decision
to stop early was wrong, and it
paid off for Melandri among
others, but unfortunately
Valentino crashed and that,
coupled with the ride-through
penalty, was the end of our
challenge today. This type of
race is always a gamble;
sometimes it works and sometimes
it doesn’t and today it really
didn’t for us! Luckily we’re
still just one point off the top
of the championship and we will
restart our challenge again at
the next race.”
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