In our review of the Misano MotoGP test, we come at last to Honda. Undoubtedly the team with the most work to do, and the most going on. And the most attention, too, but that was more down to personnel than hardware. Marc Marquez was back on a MotoGP bike for the first time since the fourth operation on his right arm, with the aim of solving the multiple issues he has suffered since his crash at Jerez in 2020 once and for all.
Naturally, journalists and fans wanted to know if Marquez would be able to ride again, and if he could ride, whether he would still be winged, as he was after previous operations, or have full use of his right arm and get back to his old self So far, it looks like the answer is that he can ride, and will be back to his pre-Jerez crash form.
The lap times looking promising. Marquez did 39 laps on Tuesday morning, with a best time of 1’32.395, eight tenths of a second slower than the fastest rider, Aleix Espargaro. He did runs of three and four flying laps, before pulling in again. For Marquez, the question was how he would feel on Wednesday morning. It was clear from the way he was touching his right shoulder that riding had been a painful experience.
“The arm, I mean I did only two weeks in the gym and two days on a bike and straight away came to MotoGP. So the timings are quite tight and there still is a long way to go, but it’s true that I feel good ,” Marquez said on Tuesday. “I went out for the first run, I didn’t enjoy the first run because the bikes are too fast! But then from that point I started to enjoy it a bit more.”
But riding, and following the plan – which had been to ride 40 laps in the morning – had been a major step. “The most important is that these 40 laps today, my body, my arm, accepted in a good in a good way. It’s true that I was doing a very short runs, because for long runs still we need to work quite a lot, “Marquez said.
The pain Marquez felt was muscle pain, rather than bone pain, and that was the biggest step. “I was touching the shoulder, the arm, because the muscles were working in a different way for one year and a half. So all the muscles are working now in the proper way, but are not ready to hold all this torque, all this power of the bike,” he explained. “The bone is 100% fixed. So the bone I feel is perfect, it’s more the muscles. On the fracture area, I don’t feel any pain. But it’s more all the elbow and especially on the shoulder and on the back. “
Rinse and repeat
Wednesday was an even more productive day. Marquez did 34 laps in the morning, and then another 27 in the afternoon. His best time, 1’31.642 set on Wednesday morning, was half a second off Fabio Quartararo’s best time of that session, and under six tenths slower than Quartararo’s best time of the test, set in the afternoon. Given that this was Marquez’ first time on a MotoGP bike in three months, and he was measuring himself against riders in the middle of a season and coming off a weekend of racing, it doesn’t look like Marquez has lost any speed.
His problem now is that he lacks strength in his right arm. “Happy, very happy because it was really important for me to understand the second day and definitely the second day the feeling was better, especially in the in the morning,” Marquez said. “In the afternoon was true that I was struggling a bit more with the arm position because the muscles were empty. And then I start to do some strange positions and then some pain started to appear, but then we stopped. And yeah it was in the plan, what the doctors and the physio told me was exactly what happened.”
The problem Marquez has is exactly what the doctors had explained to him. After the third surgery, the humerus had regrown twisted, rotated at an angle of 34°. The muscles in his arm had stretched and grown to accommodate that twist. Now that his humerus had been straightened again, those muscles were overstretched, and lacked the strength in the right places.
Hasta la vista?
Will Marquez be racing in Aragon? “The plan is just to try to understand these next two or three days. How the reaction of the arm is. Because sometimes after a big effort you have two options: The pain is there and stays there. Or it drops and then… the muscle grows a lot,” Marquez explained. “That’s what we need to understand and go day by. I think around Sunday, Monday I can decide or I will understand if have some sense to try in Aragon or be patient.”
To read the remaining 2032 words of this article, you need to sign up to become a MotoMatters.com site supporter by taking out a subscription. You can find out more about subscribing to MotoMatters.com here. If you are already a subscriber, log in to read the full text.
This is part of a regular series of unique insights into the world of motorcycle racing, exclusive for MotoMatters.com site supporters. The series includes interviews, background information, in-depth analysis, and opinion, and is available to everyone supporting the site by taking out a subscription.
If you would like to read more of our exclusive content you can join the growing band of site supporters, by taking out a subscription here. If you prefer, you can also support us on our Patreon page and get access to the same exclusive material there.
No comments:
Post a Comment