The German Grand Prix
at the Sachsenring today provided a thrilling
afternoon's racing, with Jorge Lorenzo finishing
second and his resurgent Fiat Yamaha team-mate
Valentino Rossi rounding off a remarkable return
from injury to finish fourth by a mere whisker. A
red flag after nine laps meant the race was
restarted, with Dani Pedrosa eventually taking the
win after a 21-lap ‘second' race.
Starting from pole for the fourth race in a row, Lorenzo
lost ground to Pedrosa at the start but retook the lead
on the first lap and led the way by a couple of tenths
for the first nine laps. Rossi meanwhile, back racing
just six weeks after breaking his leg, had dropped two
places on his grid position to seventh. On the second
lap he passed Hector Barbera and then loomed up behind
Marco Simoncelli, passing his fellow Italian to take
fifth on lap four. The World Champion had more than a
second's gap to Andrea Dovizioso but he quickly started
to close down on him and was in range on the ninth lap,
passing him on the tenth. By then however an incident
involving three riders had caused the race to be
red-flagged and, with positions then taken from the end
of the ninth lap, that left the top five in almost their
original grid order of Lorenzo, Pedrosa, Stoner,
Dovizioso and Rossi.
Thirteen riders restarted the race and it was the same
story all over again, with Pedrosa passing Lorenzo into
turn one but the championship-leader getting back
through before the end of the first lap. The next few
laps saw the two Spanish riders in some superb
wheel-to-wheel action as Lorenzo tried and failed to
shake Pedrosa off, the pair maintaining a nail-biting
distance of about a tenth for several laps. After three
wins in a row however Lorenzo finally succumbed today
and on lap nine he was unable to hold his compatriot off
any longer, sensibly deciding to bring his M1 home in
second place for 20 points. The 23-year-old has now
finished in first or second place at every one of the
eight rounds this season.
The
restart saw Rossi again lose some ground but he passed
Hayden second time around to retake fifth and set off in
pursuit of the leaders. On the sixth lap he got by
Dovizioso but with a near two-second gap to Stoner it
looked unlikely that the Italian would make much headway
on the Australian. Rossi is always one to amaze however
and he was soon lapping at the same pace as the leaders
to bring himself within striking distance of Stoner with
a third of the race remaining. The final six laps saw
some superb action between the two rivals, with Rossi
looking as if he had never been away and several
brilliant overtaking manoeuvres from both riders. On the
penultimate lap Rossi took the lead in what looked like
a decisive move but on the final corner Stoner somehow
found a way back through and the nine-time Champion was
forced to settle for fourth, albeit probably the most
impressive fourth position of his career.
Lorenzo's MotoGP World Championship lead now stands at
47 points from Pedrosa, whilst Rossi moves up one place
to sixth. The paddock now heads directly to Laguna Seca
in California for the US Grand Prix in one weeks time.
Jorge Lorenzo
"It's always difficult when a race is split like this
and I think I didn't ride quite as well in the second
race as I felt I had been doing in the first. Dani was
very, very strong and I was on the limit trying to stay
ahead. When he passed me I tried briefly to stay with
him but he was much faster than me today and I was going
to have to take a lot of risks to stay with him; the
safest thing for me to do was finish second and take 20
points for the championship. I am happy because I never
really liked this track and now I've been second here
two years in a row. Now we go to Laguna and I am very
excited about racing there again."
Valentino Rossi
"I didn't expect this! I thought it was maybe
possible to make fourth or fifth place but I thought it
would be very difficult. In the end I was fourth but I
had a great battle with Casey and I was so close to the
podium, so this is a fantastic result after missing four
races. I need some more kilometres to really recover the
feeling and feel completely okay with the bike again,
but I think I did a great job and this was a very good
comeback, better than we could wish for. I felt a bit of
pain in my shoulder but more in the leg when changing
direction, but at the end the battle with Casey was such
fun that I didn't think about it. Unfortunately though
he just got the better of me on the last corner! Thanks
to all my team for helping me come back and be
competitive like this, we will try to do even better in
Laguna."
Wilco Zeelenberg - Team Manager, Lorenzo
"I said
before this weekend that we can't win them all and today
Jorge rode another very sensible race to finish second
and bring home 20 valuable points for the championship.
It's a pity about the restart because the final third of
the race is generally Jorge's strongest and with the
shortened race he didn't have that bonus, but he rode a
great race nonetheless and tried his best to stay with
Pedrosa, who was a bit faster than us today. This hasn't
been one of his best tracks in the past and he had some
problems the first day so this is a good result for us
all."
Davide Brivio - Team Manager, Rossi
"In the end this race was something completely
unexpected; one week ago we didn't know if we'd be able
to ride here at all and then day by day our targets
changed. We would have been happy whatever with a top
five today but finally we were really competitive and so
close to the podium. It's unbelievable and even more so
because we were lapping at the same pace as the leaders.
We've never been so excited by a battle for third
position! It was very positive; Valentino worked so hard
to be here and he made it in style, so now we will
continue our plan in Laguna next weekend."