The Aragon MotoGP
weekend was particularly challenging for Ducati Corse
and its riders, who are working to speed up the
development of the woeful Desmosedici bike.
On one hand, the
choice to use a seventh engine for Valentino Rossi
enables the Ducati team to have two identical
motorcycles available to work on during the last races
of the season, but on the other hand, he was obliged to
start from pit lane yesterday, ten seconds after the
race start. That didn’t prevent the Italian from
climbing up the field and then stubbornly climbing to
ninth place, even if a worn rear tyre prompted him to
subsequently lose a position to Cal Crutchlow.
Nicky Hayden started
from the third row and finished in seventh place after a
battle with Hector Barbera that lasted until the final
corner.
Nicky Hayden
(Ducati Team) 7th
“I had a good start and was
decent at the very beginning. We knew tyre wear was
going to be an issue, and we had a drop in performance
after the first couple of laps. It lost grip, and I also
wasn’t able to load the bike well for turning. I was
okay in parts of the track, but compared to the fast
guys, I was losing time in the last corner. I hoped to
hang onto the second group for a while, but it just
wasn’t possible. I’d like to have fought with Bautista
on the last lap because he was on our pace, but Barbera
and I were going back and forth, which hurt both of us
and let him escape. It’s unfortunate, because coming
here we hoped that we could put up a better fight.
Still, this is the first race I’ve finished normally
with the GP11.1, since at Indy I reentered just to get
points. Hopefully that will help us to get some data and
be better off in the future.”
Valentino
Rossi (Ducati Team) 10th
“It was definitely a difficult
race, even if objectively speaking, we could have done a
little better than we did. We used the setup from
yesterday morning, with which I had done some good laps
with a very used tyre. Unfortunately, in the race the
rear tyre was sliding much more than it did in practice.
It was almost used up just when I was catching Nicky and
his group. That said, we’re still not where we should
be. We’re working on several fronts, with short-term
solutions that haven’t been conclusive, and others that
are longer-term and that I still hope can bring more
substantial improvements. We’ll see what they think at
the factory. For now, we’re still pretty far, and given
that time is our biggest enemy, we’ll continue also
working on development during the races.”
Vittoriano
Guareschi (Team Manager)
“This race was very difficult
for us, but it was also important because we began a
project that, while it caused a penalty for Valentino,
is also one of the first steps in the direction of the
Desmosedici’s development. We know that it’s not easy
for a rider to knowingly sacrifice any chance of having
a better performance, and this gives us enormous
motivation to try to speed up our work as much as
possible. Nicky and his team are also trying extremely
hard to gather as much information as possible on his
GP11.1 which, despite not having the updated front
chassis part like Valentino’s, is still a new bike with
a lot of margin for improvement with regards to its
setup.”