A new chapter in the
amazing career of Valentino Rossi kicked off under the
floodlights in Qatar last night, but a combination of
the Italian still recuperating from his recent shoulder
operation and his new Ducati outfit lagging someway
behind its Japanese rivals saw an uncharacteristically
unrewarding start to the season.
However riding with all
his usual grit and determination, Rossi finished the
Grand Prix of Qatar in seventh place. The Italian rider
dueled with Ben Spies for sixth place as long as the
strength in his still-healing shoulder allowed, and he
managed to maintain a good pace to the end. After
starting from the fifth row, Ducati team mate Nicky
Hayden rode a comeback race, steadily increasing his
pace and finishing ninth after a series of nice passes.
Valentino Rossi (Ducati Team) 7th
“For sure we’re not here to get seventh-place finishes,
but there are also positive things from this race,
starting with the times, because we were lapping pretty
quickly. I had a great start, and that was a nice
feeling because the horsepower that this bike has really
helps it to launch. Then I made a small error in the
first turn, which is a shame because I got stuck behind
Barbera for a few laps. Otherwise I would have been
closer to Simoncelli and Dovizioso, since anyway there
was a period when I lapped with them. I wouldn’t have
beaten them though, because at the end of the race, I’m
no longer able to ride like I have to. I’m not referring
to the Ducati because even last year, after I hurt my
shoulder, I had the same problems in the latter parts of
the races, and since the two bikes are so different, it
means that it’s really a matter of me not being
physically right. It’s not just that. We also have to
improve the bike because the others have clearly made a
step forward since last year. Still, I learned a lot in
this test and in this race, and we’ve already given very
specific instructions about what must be done in the
long term, in order to improve for the second half of
the season for example. In the near term, on the other
hand, we’ll work on the setup, we’ll keep gathering
experience, and I’ll continue exercising and doing
everything I can to recuperate physically.”
Nicky Hayden (Ducati Team) 9th
“I got a bad start in the race, and then when De Puniet
crashed, I just about ran over him and had to come to a
complete stop. I’m happy I didn’t run into him, but that
was a bad break, because I was dead last with a gap to
the next person. I started picking my way through, and
once I got into ninth, I got into a decent rhythm and
started doing my pace. I was trying to catch Edwards
because I thought it would’ve been nice to have a
last-lap race with him, but I didn’t quite get to him.
It’s been a tough weekend for me on and off the track,
but everybody around here is working to the maximum.
They’re the first ones in and the last ones out. I can’t
be happy with the ride, but I came from dead last, and
my fastest lap was my last one. We’ve got a lot of work
to do, but it’s just one race, and no one can say we
weren’t trying.”