Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Start time, how to watch & more

Pramac Ducati’s pJorge Martin starts the race from pole position for the third time this season after beating Honda’s Marc Marquez to the top spot with a new lap record in qualifying.

Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati) will be the top championship contender on the grid in third position, but with chief title rivals Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia) and Fabio Quartararo (Yamaha) starting right behind him in fourth and fifth respectively.

Ducati last won a race at Phillip Island in 2011, with all subsequent editions of the Australian GP won by Honda and Yamaha riders.

What time does the MotoGP Australian Grand Prix start today?

The Australian Grand Prix will begin at 2pm local time (+11 GMT) at the Phillip Island Grand Prix circuit near Melbourne.

The race will run to 27 laps.

  • dates: Sunday, October 16, 2022
  • Start time: 03:00 GMT / 04:00 BST / 05:00 CEST / 05:00 SAST / 06:55 EAT / 23:00 ET (Saturday) / 20:00 PT (Saturday) / 14:00 AEDT / 12:00 JST / 08:30 IST

Can’t find your country or region in the list? Check the MotoGP schedule page for the broadcast times in your local timezone.

2022 MotoGP Australian Grand Prix session timings

session

GMT

BST

CEST

ET

pt

AEDT

JST

IS

FP1

10:55 p.m

11:55 p.m

00:55

18:55

15:55

09:55

07:55

04:25

FP2

03:10

04:10

05:10

23:10

20:10

14:10

12:10 p.m

08:40

FP3

10:55 p.m 11:55 p.m 00:55

18:55

15:55

09:55

07:55

04:25

FP4

02:30 03:30 04:30

10:30 p.m

19:30

1:30 p.m

11:30 a.m

08:00

qualifying

03:10

04:10

05:10

23:10

20:10

14:10

12:10 p.m

08:40

warm up

10:40 p.m

23:40

00:40

18:40

15:40

09:40

07:40

04:10

Race

03:00

04:00

05:00

23:00

20:00

14:00

12:00 p.m

08:30

How can I watch the Phillip Island MotoGP race?

Europe:

  • Spain: DAZN
  • UK: BT Sport
  • France: Canal+
  • Germany and Austria: ServusTV/DAZN
  • Italy: Sky Sport
  • Hungary: Spieler TV
  • Netherlands: Ziggo Sport (new for 2022)
  • Portugal: Sports TV

Asia:

  • Japan: G+/Hulu
  • Thailand: SPOTV (new for 2022)
  • India: Eurosport
  • Indonesia: Trans7
  • Malaysia and Singapore: SPOTV (new for 2022)
  • China: Guangdong Television
  • South Korea: SPOTV (new for 2022)

Americas

  • US: NBC
  • Canada: REV TV
  • Brazil: Fox Sports
  • Argentina: ESPN+

oceania

  • Australia: Fox Sports
  • New Zealand: Spark Sports

Africa

  • Sub-Saharan Africa – SuperSport / Canal+

Phillip Island MotoGP – Starting grid:

Fabio Quartararo heartbreak captured by new footage after MotoGP title loss – “what p***** me off the most…” | MotoGP

Francesco Bagnaia edged Quartararo in the season-finale Valencia MotoGP to claim his first title, and end Quartararo’s reign.

New pictures show Quartararo in tears and being consoled by those around him…

Crew chief Diego Gubellini: Well done. Amazing job.

Team boss Lin Jarvis: Thanks for everything, man.

Quartararo: When Pecco comes in, I’ll go and see him, then come back.

Yamaha teams: OK. Go and congratulate him. But come straight back.

Gubellini to a weeping Quartararo: You had a great race. Unfortunately the seasons are like this sometimes. Sometimes they go a bit s***. You made a few mistakes, I made a few mistakes, we have to make up for it next year.

Quartar’s friend: Bro, don’t cry, my bro. Runner up, come on. You did what you could do. Be proud. I know it’s hard, but come on.

Ducati engineers praise Quartararo: Really well done.

Yamaha garage chants: Fabio! Fabio! Fabio!

Quartararo to Gubellini: I was on the limit. I wasn’t far, but… what pisses me off the most is that under braking I was catching him but…

Jarvis to Quartararo: Yeah, we loose. Big ask. It was a strong season. Next year, look forwards, not backwards. We tried to the max but that’s all we can possibly ask for. We knew at the beginning of the year – remember the beginning of the year? – I thought the year would be much more difficult than it was. But mainly it was less because you are at your maximum.

Quartararo: Yeah, it was good. Thank you Lin.

Bagnaia: The race was a bit of a pain.

Engineers: It’s fair to say that you did not enjoy the race at all. I thought the wing that flew off was Fabio’s!

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Bagnaia: I couldn’t ride anymore.

Engineers: I know. It was obvious from the timing. Then Brad Binder came through like a madman and overtook everyone!

Miller hands Gigi Dall’Igna a cigar: So that we can smoke right after!

Dall’Igna: Ich liebe dich.

Miller to Bagnaia: I’m so happy for you, mate.

Yaakov And Sneed Join MP13 Racing For 2023 MotoAmerica Season – MotoAmerica

Yaakov raced a Yamaha YZF-R3 in last month’s Yamaha R3 bLU cRU European Cup SuperFinale, and she will be aboard an MP13 Racing Yamaha YZF-R7 in the 2023 REV’IT! Twins Cup Championship. Photo courtesy of Yamaha.

MP13 Racing will field a two-rider team in the 2023 MotoAmerica Championship. Team principal Melissa Paris has announced that 15-year-old Kayla Yaakov will compete aboard an MP13 Racing Yamaha YZF-R7 in REV’IT! Twins Cup, while 14-year-old Aiden Sneed will be aboard an MP13 Racing Yamaha YZF-R3 in SportbikeTrackGear.com Junior Cup.

Yaakov had a breakthrough year in 2022. The Pennsylvanian notched four wins in SportbikeTrackGear.com Junior Cup and finished third in the Championship. This past month, she was selected to compete in the Yamaha R3 bLU cRU European SuperFinale in Portimao, Portugal, and her fourth-place finish in race one and runner-up result in race two put her on the overall podium in third place for the prestigious event

“It is truly an honor to join a team like MP13 Racing to embark on this new journey in the REV’IT! Twins Cup,” Yaakov said. “Having the opportunity to work with such incredible individuals as Melissa Paris, Josh Hayes, and all the MP13 Racing team is an honor and a privilege. This is another big step in the right direction for my career, and I am so grateful for this opportunity. My goal is to make the most of this new experience, and I’m looking forward to starting this new chapter! I would like to thank everyone involved in making this happen!”

Sneed, shown here in North America Talent Cup competition at Ridge Motorsports Park this past June, will make his MotoAmerica debut with MP13 Racing this coming season. Photo by Brian J. Nelson.

Yaakov’s new teammate Sneed competed in the North America Talent Cup in 2022 where he finished on the podium twice and ended up fifth in the championship. The Texan will make his MotoAmerica debut in 2023 for MP13 Racing. 

“I’m super-excited to join team MP13 Racing this upcoming season,” commented Sneed “I’m very fortunate to be given this opportunity. Thank you to everyone who continues to support me in chasing my dreams. I’m very excited for this new challenge!”

Paris (center) with her protégés Sneed (left) and Yaakov (right). Photo courtesy of MP13 Racing.

About MP13 Racing’s expansion to a two-rider team and the challenges ahead, Paris said, “I am so excited for what 2023 has in store for MP13 Racing. Being able to grow the team with two verified rippers is a dream come true. Our team has had success before in both the Junior Cup and Twins Cup classes and, with Evan Steel of ESP coming back to assist, I feel confident we can give these young racers some good weapons. Motivation is at an all-time high right now, and I can’t wait to see what [Kayla and Aiden] can do when we send them out on their Yamahas.”

Look for more news to come soon from MP13 Racing about the 2023 season.

For the full 2023 MotoAmerica schedule and to purchase tickets for MotoAmerica events, click HERE

For information on how to watch the MotoAmerica series, click HERE


2023 Ducati Streetfighter V4 Family Updated With Subtle Changes

Ducati presented the new Streetfighter V4 family With the V4 and V4 S models, together with the more exclusive and performing V4 SP2, Ducati continues in the application and evolution of the winning “Fight Formula” to remain at the top of the segment with an unrivalled level of equipment.

Unveiled to the public in 2020, the Streetfighter V4 was an instant success and set new performance benchmarks in the super sports naked segment. Universally appreciated for its aggressive and minimalist aesthetic, characterized by a front inspired by the Joker of the comics, the Streetfighter V4 immediately entered the hearts of enthusiasts.

The natural evolution of the family is a bike that pushes the concepts of the “Fight Formula” even further, the key elements of which are the Panigale V4 stripped of the fairings, high and wide handlebar, 178 kg weight, 208 hp Desmosedici Stradale engine , biplane wings and latest generation electronic package. An improvement that follows that of the Panigale V4 family.

Ducati Streetfighter V4 2023 transmits sportiness, thanks to the standard single-seater configuration with saddle and passenger footrests supplied.
The design of the Streetfighter V4 is direct and minimal, with its full-LED front light and its V-shaped DRL that recalls the Panigale V4’s front view. The low, forward-canted front, as to extend the strong lines of the tank, gives the bike a predator look.
The fuel tank has the same shapes as on the Panigale V4 2022, which are designed to better support the rider during braking and cornering. It has a greater capacity (17 liters) and is embraced by new side covers.

The new “Front Frame” and the Desmosedici Stradale are left uncovered as much as possible, with a minimal bodywork that, through streamlined lines and sculptural volumes, create a clean, essential ensemble. In the V4 S version, the Streetfighter 2023 is available in a new, gritty “Grey Nero” livery, played on the contrast between the gray and the various black tones – dark and lucid – of the bodywork, that bring out the technical components like brakes and suspension and give the motorcycle an ever more aggressive, but still refined look.

MY23_Ducati_Streetfighter_V4S

The new Streetfighter V4 implements the Power Modes logic already developed in the Ducati Panigale V4 and V4 S with calibrations dedicated to the Desmosedici Stradale engine in the Streetfighter configuration. There are four engine delivery strategies: Full, High, Medium, Low. Full and Low are newly devised, while High and Medium have been revised in strategy. Full Power Mode allows the engine to express its full potential with torque curves without electronic filters, except for first gear. For the High and Medium Power Modes, a new Ride by Wire map management system has been developed with dedicated calibration for each of the six gears, which ensures the rider always obtains the optimum thrust every time the throttle is opened. The Low Power Mode, on the other hand, has been designed for riding on low-grip surfaces, limiting the maximum power of the bike to 165 hp and offering a particularly manageable throttle response. The calibrations dedicated to the Streetfighter V4 guarantee maximum correlation between the torque value required by the rider and that actually delivered.

The Streetfighter V4 in the 2023 version sees the introduction of the brand-new Wet Riding Mode to make riding even safer on low-grip surfaces. The standard equipment is enriched by a lithium-ion battery for the S version (1.7 kg lighter than the previous one and already equipped on the V4 SP version).

The dashboard of the new Streetfighter V4 also follows the evolution traced by the Panigale V4. The graphics are revised in all views, to make the information simpler and more descriptive and support in the calibration of the various parameters.
As on the Panigale V4, the gear change is indicated via an external green LED signal. The dashboard offers the “Track Evo” display mode, which replicates the layout used on the MotoGP Desmosedici and guarantees an immediate view of the most important information and the intervention of the electronic controls.

The Streetfighter V4 2023 also evolves thanks to the new Engine Brake Control (EBC) EVO 2 software which guarantees better stability, precision and directionality in the braking and corner entry phases and the possibility for the rider to define more precisely the electronic setup for each use . This software features a different gear-by-gear calibration on each of the three selectable levels. The new strategy was developed to optimize the intensity of the engine brake as a function of the load on the rear end. In the first braking phase, when there is little load on the rear tyre, the EBC EVO 2 provides less engine brake, then increasing it as you approach the center of the corner, where the intervention of the engine brake makes the greatest contribution in slowing down the bike and closing the line. Thanks to this modification, which guarantees a more balanced intervention of the control on the engine brake in all riding conditions, the locking of the rear wheel in the most demanding braking sections is also reduced.

MY23_Ducati_Streetfighter_V4SP2

The Streetfighter V4 ’23 also implements a new strategy for the Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) which improves the fluidity of shifting at every degree of opening of the throttle, both when the latter is partialized and when it is completely open, dealing with the two situations in a different way.
In partialized throttle shifting, the strategy acts both through an injection cut and a reduction of advance, making shifting in road use smoother thanks to the absence of engine shutdowns and restarts. In fully open throttle shifting, typical of track use, the DQS strategy is refined with an evolution of the torque restitution phase that guarantees more stability to the bike and a more homogeneous and therefore more profitable thrust in the lap time.

Finally, an update of the cooling fan control strategy, which offers better management of operating temperatures and greater thermal comfort for the rider already at typical road use speeds, is added to these electronic changes.

On the new Streetfighter V4, the chassis also follows the evolution of the Panigale V4 family to offer enthusiasts improvements in stability, front-end feeling and riding safety. The chassis includes Front Frame and single-sided swingarm, both in aluminium, with upside-down fork and mechanically adjustable shock absorber on the V4 standard version.
The Streetfighter V4 S features semi-active Öhlins suspension (NIX30 upside-down 43 mm fork and TTX36 shock absorber) with SmartEC 2.0 interface, gaining in versatility, effectiveness and rapidity in set-up. In addition, on the V4 S version, the Marchesini rims are forged in aluminum alloy with important benefits in terms of nimbleness when changing direction and responsiveness in acceleration and braking thanks to the reduction of unsprung masses.

As on the Panigale V4, the swingarm pivot of the Streetfighter V4 2023 is positioned 4mm higher, increasing the anti-squat action that helps the rider thanks to greater stability, precision and the ability to maintain the trajectory when exiting corners and, in general , in all acceleration situations.
The weight distribution also moves towards the front, loading it more and thus increasing accuracy and speed in corner entry. Finally, the ergonomics benefit from the new layout of the fuel tank, the shape of which offers greater support to the rider during braking and cornering. The wet weight of the Streetfighter V4 S 2023 stands at 197.5 kg.

MY23_Ducati_Streetfighter_V4SP2

The 1,103 cc Desmosedici Stradale, capable of delivering 208 hp at 13,000 rpm and 123 Nm in Euro-5 configuration, has been revised in calibration to match the larger diameter of the silencer outlet, introduced in order to reduce the exhaust back pressure. In addition, on the right side there is the clutch cover of the Panigale V4, which allows you to easily mount the dry clutch and the clutch cover protection.

Street Fighter V4 SP2

To push the performance of the Streetfighter V4 2023 even further, Ducati also presents the top-of-the-range Streetfighter V4 SP2 model in a numbered version. A bike ready to hit the track, thanks to exclusive technical equipment that combines the “Fight Formula” with the “SP” specifications, making it even more effective in sports riding and in particular on the track.

Streetfighter V4 SP2 is offered in the “Winter Test” livery, designed by the Centro Stile Ducati taking inspiration from the Ducati Corse bikes used during the pre-season tests of the MotoGP and SBK Championships. The matt black of the bodywork, combined with the matt carbon finish of the rims and wings, contrasts with the bright red accents and the brilliance of the exposed brushed aluminum tank, which we also find on the side covers of the radiators. The progressive number of the bike is lasered on the handlebar.

Streetfighter V4 SP2 is equipped with 5 split-spoke carbon rims*, 1.4 kg lighter than the forged aluminum ones mounted on the Streetfighter V4 S and able to reduce the moment of inertia by 26% at the front and 46% at the rear, making the bike significantly more nimble and lighter when changing direction. The Brembo Stylema R® front brake calipers* guarantee high braking power, as well as exceptionally consistent performance even in the case of prolonged use on the track*.

On the Streetfighter V4 SP2 the Desmosedici Stradale is equipped with the STM-EVO SBK dry clutch*, which guarantees a better slipper function, even in the most aggressive of climbs, and more fluidity in all “off-throttle” phases, essential to be effective on the track when riding at the limit.
A contribution to performance between the curbs also comes from the Öhlins suspension with springs and hydraulics identical to those of the Panigale V4 which guarantee the rider the right confidence for riding at the limit

The equipment is completed by adjustable aluminum foot-pegs machined from solid that increase the lean angle and allow the rider to find the optimal position in the saddle, carbon front mudguard and by usable accessories on “track days,” such as an open carbon clutch cover**, a cap for removing the license plate holder and screws for removing the mirrors**.

MY23_Ducati_Streetfighter_V4S

The Streetfighter V4 and V4 S models will be available in Ducati dealerships starting from January 2023, while the V4 SP2 version will arrive starting from March 2023. The color range consists of Ducati Red and the new “Grey Nero” livery, which will be available only for the “S” version.

There is a wide range of accessories, which allow you to customize the Streetfighter V4 making it even sportier, starting with the Ducati Performance by Akrapovič full-racing exhaust**. Equipped with high silencers at the side of the tail, it allows a reduction of the total weight of 5 kilos and raises the maximum power to 220 hp. Noise is within the limit of 105 dB (102 dB with the dB killer installed).

The accessories catalog also features street-legal slip-on systems, mudguards, aero kit and carbon fiber frame and crankcase protections, billet aluminum controls, but also tire warmers and stands for those who want to use their Streetfighter V4 on the circuit.

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™ set for 2022 title charge

Fabio Quartararo: “The winter break was quite long, but if I’m honest I feel like I kept busy the whole time. There were many events for me to attend, and of course training continued as normal – so all in all it was quite busy, but in a good way. I’m excited to begin the new season and start riding and improving. We got the title last year, and that’s great. Nobody can ever take that away from me, but as of the first day of riding, none of that matters anymore. Last year’s title win is behind us now, we must focus on this year’s championship. Last year we barely did any pre-season testing due to the pandemic. This year I already have a year of experience with the Factory Team, so we know how to work well together. We know our strengths and where we can improve, so that will help during the tests in Sepang and Mandalika.”

Why internal struggle is inevitable for Rossi’s MotoGP clan

Valentino Rossi and confidant Uccio Salucci have pulled off something special. Going into MotoGP’s 2023 season, Rossi will have been retired for over a year, but 18% of the grid will carry his torch. Among them will be the series’ reigning champion.

If Franco Morbidelli’s run to runner-up in the 2020 MotoGP season hadn’t formally cemented the VR46 Academy as an obvious success story – and, let’s be honest here, it absolutely did – then Pecco Bagnaia becoming champion in 2022 certainly has. There’s still some way to go until this crop matches Rossi’s seven MotoGP crowns, but, assuming the Academy keeps ticking along, it’s distinctly not an impossible scenario.

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Yet sustained success creates a particular pressure point. Some other motorsport talent development structures are famously ruthless, to the point where that ruthlessness appears a desired feature for zeroing in on the absolute best of the best. The VR46 program, meanwhile, wants to be a family every bit as much as a talent scouting scheme – and, to hear its participants, it has succeeded in that. But most families don’t routinely compete against one another.

VR46’s class of 2023

Franco Morbidelli, 27 (will be 28 on December 4)
Andrea Migno, 26
Pecco Bagnaia, 25
Luca Marini, 25
Marco Bezzecchi, 24
Celestino Vietti, 21

“We spend a lot of time together,” Valentino Rossi’s brother Luca Marini said of the dynamic among the VR46 Academy riders. “It’s not just training together.

“We are a group of friends, and we talk about everything – TV shows, Netflix, other sports, watching F1 together, playing video games together. We are first of all a group of friends. And then a training group. And then competitors on track.

“I think that we’re managing this situation really well in these years, because it’s not easy, especially when you arrive in MotoGP, because everything is different in MotoGP. But we are doing great and I hope we can keep going like this.

“But also I hope it will be a little bit worse! Because when the relationship is more difficult, it’s a sign you are fighting for victory. It’s good also to have this.”

VR46’s current MotoGP contingent are four very capable riders. But, though Rossi and Salucci no doubt want their proteges to succeed consistently, they can perhaps count themselves lucky that some underperformed in 2022 relative to others.

Bagnaia’s fellow VR46 riders weren’t a major factor during his title chase. Rookie Marco Bezzecchi took it easy on him on a couple of occasions, while Bagnaia’s improvement curve virtually coincided with Marini’s, the pair moving up the order in tandem as the Desmosedici GP22 was refined, and therefore not in battle too often.

The big one is Morbidelli, who Yamaha would have wanted to play a much bigger role in helping Fabio Quartararo defend his title against Bagnaia – but who by and large was just not quick enough to impact Bagnaia’s races. He did at one point anger Ducati by getting in Bagnaia’s way during a crucial practice session at Sepang – but he’d also done the same to Quartararo a few minutes prior, and the knock-on effect proved minimal as Bagnaia got himself out of Q1 and won the race, in which Morbidelli dutifully let team-mate Quartararo through.

Morbidelli’s pre-race answer on who he preferred to triumph in the Valencia finale was telling, even if clever and perfectly uncontroversial. “I sit back and watch,” he said. “Everybody keeps asking me ‘who you cheer for?’. I mean, I’m a rider. I’m super selfish.”

But a continuation of that theme of ‘split loyalties’ is inevitable if Morbidelli rediscovers his form. Equally, it’s inevitable for the others if they keep improving, because already you can’t really fit all the VR46 contingent within a single manufacturer and keep them all satisfied with their rides.

1013407

Of course, beyond that, there’s the simple matter of battling one another for the big prizes and the potential wheel-to-wheel angst that comes with that.

Marini – who already fought fellow VR46 rider Bezzecchi for the 2020 Moto2 crown that ‘outsider’ Enea Bastianini ultimately beat both to – admits that the VR46 factor makes it a “much more weird” dynamic than even the complications of fighting your team-mate.

“It’s a very difficult situation. But fortunately everybody’s really smart and clever to understand this situation, and we want to keep it clean and normal when we are at home, in the best way.

“And I think that when you are not fighting for victory, it’s easier.

“But if in next years it will be that more riders can compete for victory against Pecco – me, Bezz, also Franco, because I think all four of us can win in MotoGP – it will be more difficult.

“Because this is life, this is human behavior and it’s something impossible [to avoid], and something so important for your life. It’s not just your career. it [MotoGP success] is life-changing.

“[We need] just to be smart and try to keep the relationship in the best way among clever people.”

Marini will have already felt the situation in which his VR46 friends overperforming put him under pressure in terms of reputation and future career prospects.

Upgraded to a GP22 for this year, he was really struggling with the new Ducati, whereas Bezzecchi was enjoying life on an older bike. More pertinently, in Moto2, Celestino Vietti established a remarkable 34-point lead after just five races, making a case for a premier-class promotion.

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In the end, Marini never really looked like being replaced even before he got much, much better – reeling off 10 top-10 finishes in the final 14 races – whereas Vietti’s campaign was sent hurtling off a cliff. But, to hear Marini say it, that’s not something he will have ever wanted for the 21-year-old.

“At the end I’m really happy when the other guys from the Academy – but, in general, Italian riders – can achieve good results,” he insisted.

“Because I think it’s nice for our nation, for our sport. And it gives me a bigger motivation when I see them achieve good results, like Pecco did this year – he made an amazing season, demonstrating that he was the strongest.

“So it’s nice to be close to him and see him working every day, to arrive at his target.”

VR46 has not been without its internal strife. Romano Fenati (pictured below) was famously cut loose in 2016 for behavioral reasons – “we had to give up [on him]”, Rossi bluntly said at the time – and there has been other turnover.

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It goes on still. As per German publication Speedweek’s interview with Salucci, Niccolo Antonelli, Alberto Surra and Stefano Manzi are all off after this year – even if Salucci intends to give them “60%” support as “friends of the Academy”.

Salucci also revealed in said interview that VR46 was pausing the youth intake, because the existing group is very closely-knit, made up of riders “who all arrived within a year or two”, and that it would be difficult to integrate newcomers, especially of a different age – like what seems to have happened with 18-year-old Surra.

But the intake is just paused, not permanently ended – and the six current riders still make for a substantial amount. Andrea Migno’s eight years of intermittent Moto3 success probably rule out a premier-class future, but the others are either already there or right on the cusp.

And, given series promoter Dorna is always keen on tapping into markets with a diverse – at least in terms of passports – grid and that there are other Italians present beyond the VR46 contingent, it seems inevitable that Rossi’s proteges will find themselves battling one another for a single seat that may represent keeping their lifelong dreams alive.

That, as Marini rightly points out, will be a serious test.

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

F1 starts ‘Drive it Out’ initiative against increasing verbal and online abuse

The F1 community has come together with a new initiative named ‘Drive it Out’ which aims to flush out the various times of abuses.

Amid increase of online and even in-person abuses from fans side in the sport, F1 has come up with ‘Drive it Out’ as they have released a full video including drivers, Stefano Domenicali and Mohammed Ben Sulayem with a message.

The message talks about limiting the increasing abuses whether verbally or online amid polarizing and divide among fans for their respective drivers and teams. F1 has stressed everyone to report tweets which results in hate especially online.

Here’s a message from F1:

“The Formula 1 community, including all twenty drivers, Stefano Domenicali and Mohammed Ben Sulayem, have come together to deliver a strong message to ‘Drive Out’ any form of abuse, online and at events, and call for greater respect. The video message released today recognizes that while passion and competition is a very important part of our sport it can go too far, resulting in fans, journalists, presenters, and drivers receiving abuse both verbally and online.

“We are all sending a clear message that this isn’t acceptable and must end and those that continue to spread abuse and offensive comments are not welcome in our sport. We ask for your support in spreading this important message and all working together to drive out abuse in any form.”

We are united in our desire to drive abuse of all kinds out of the sport we love, and we’re calling on the entire F1 family to join us#DriveItOut. together pic.twitter.com/j0x6vsoars

— Formula 1 (@F1) July 30, 2022

We encourage our fans to report any incidents of abusive or discriminatory language you see on social media#DriveItOut pic.twitter.com/uYkdxl30Am

— Formula 1 (@F1) July 30, 2022

More to come

Vips takes feature race pole in Baku post red flag stoppage

Hitech GP’s Juri Vips took feature F2 race pole in Baku from Carlin’s Liam Lawson and Prema’s Dennis Hauger.

The F2 qualifying in Baku saw DAMS’ Ayumu Iwasa lead the way at the mid part of the session with a 1m54.483s lap but the likes of Hitech GP’s Marcus Armstrong and MP Motorsport’s Felipe Drugovich not far off being 0.004s and 0.071s apart.

Carlin’s Liam Lawson and Prema’s Jehan Daruvala were not far off in the top 5, as Campos Racing’s Ralph Boschung had a difficult return to the F2 grid after an off moment and no time for him in the first part of the qualifying session.

The second run saw some drivers tripping over each other but as things got going, the session was red-flagged after the provisional pole-sitter Iwasa took more speed at the left-hander and smashed it into the wall to end his qualifying session.

With less than six minutes remaining, it was a tricky situation for all on a track like Baku where tripping is very easy. There was an unsafe release situation with Prema’s Dennis Hauger which the stewards are to investigate after the session.

The second run totally changed the order with improvements from every driver on the grid as Hitech GP’s Juri Vips took pole with a 1m53.762s lap as a late push from Carlin’s Lawson put him in second ahead of Prema’s Hauger, who is under investigation.

The other Hitech GP of Armstrong was fourth from F2 points leader Drugovich as Trident’s Richard Verschoor did a solid job along with Carlin’s Logan Sargeant to slot in sixth and seventh where the American had a late brush with the wall.

Prema’s Daruvala dropped to eighth with ART’s Frederik Vesti in ninth and Van Amersfoort Racing’s Jake Hughes 10th, which puts him on reverse grid pole for sprint F2 race. Iwasa ended up 13th despite not running his final run.

#F2 #AzerbaijanGP Provisional qualifying results. The top 10 gets reversed as the starting grid for the sprint race tomorrow. #MsportXtra @BakuCityCircuit @F2Inside pic.twitter.com/VmvT93pit9

— #MsportXtra (@MsportXtra) June 10, 2022

More to come

Yamaha MotoGP roster oddness leaves Quartararo question mark

Fabio Quartararo’s loss of a 91-point lead over Pecco Bagnaia is clearly regarded with the level of scorn as you may expect from a sporting collapse of that magnitude. You will not see it compared to Barcelona’s successive Champions League second-leg embarrassments against PSG (4-0 in first leg, 1-6 in second) and Liverpool (3-0 in first leg, 0-4 in second), to the Golden State Warriors fumbling a 3-1 NBA finals lead over LeBron James and his Cleveland Cavaliers, or to the Atlanta Falcons’ Super Bowl nightmare that has made ’28-3′ a running joke.

You will not see it compared to those because the prevailing impression is that Quartararo should not have been that far ahead to begin with, that his Yamaha M1 was no good enough for a 91-point lead over Francesco Bagnaia’s Ducati Desmosedici, and that Bagnaia subsequently overhauling that lead was just the status quo being restored.

Yamaha itself seems more than happy to be seen as more culpable than its star rider. Maybe because it cannot afford to alienate Quartararo in any way, maybe because it’s how the team really sees things – but it’s an image that has been projected both inwardly and outwardly. For the former, see the Dorna footage of managing director Lin Jarvis telling a shirtless (of course) Quartararo after the Valencia decider: “We knew at the beginning of the year, remember – I thought the year would be much more difficult than it was . But mainly it was less difficult because you are maximum-maximum-maximum.”

For the latter, see Yamaha publishing a letter of thanks to Quartararo, which also featured words from Jarvis – of how “the odds were stacked” against Quartararo, of how he “always extracted the maximum potential from our machine”, of how he “ maintained his characteristic sunny disposition”.

We can never really know the exact makeup of performances – how much is the bike, how much is the rider’s talent, how much is the rider’s effort, and how much are all the tiny little circumstantial details that can sometimes make enormous differences.

What we can glean obviously points to the fact that Quartararo remains great, and has had a really good season. When the rider who beat you to a title admits he thinks you are still “more complete”, that says something.

But what Quartararo transcendent in 2022? Did he drag the M1 to places that other MotoGP stars won’t have taken it to? You could argue that we are missing data to be able to really say.

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At least, that seems to be the point of view of then-Ducati, now-KTM employee Jack Miller.

“Every time I comment on what Fabio’s doing, it sounds like I’m talking too much!” Miller lamented when asked by the media about Quartararo’s season in Valencia, though he ultimately played along.

“He’s been unfortunate- I do hear a lot of, I don’t want to say ‘excuses’, but problems with the bike, and not a lot of positivity about the bike, and I mean, if you’re already focused on the fact that the bike is s**t and is no good, that’s not going to help your mindset going into the weekend. That’s my feeling.”

And when it was put to him that the pessimism was justified also by the lacking performances of Quartararo’s M1 peers, he said: “For sure, but I mean… it’s true, but I don’t think the bike is crazy bad. cal [Crutchlow] hopped on it and is doing a fantastic job, after being on the couch for however long he was on, nearly a year, nearly 12 months. Okay, with a test here and there, but… and Darryn [Binder] is doing a decent job as a rookie, I think he’s done a fantastic job and for him not to have a job next year is kind of s**t, but that’s the way it goes, it’s cutthroat these days.

“[Franco] Morbidelli’s having not the best of seasons, as we all know, but since the knee injury [in mid-2021] he hasn’t really looked like himself. That’s, you know, pointing out the elephant in the room.

“So it’s hard to say. And next year there’ll be even fewer Yamahas to look at.”

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Miller is arguably biased, of course – he was speaking as a Ducati employee and as a friend of Bagnaia who doesn’t want to see the 2022 title at all devalued – but the point he makes is valid nonetheless. Quartararo has not had a clear benchmark at Yamaha this year.

The chasm between his points tally and those of his fellow M1 riders is reminiscent of Marc Marquez in 2019 at Honda. And like Marquez that year, Quartararo had alongside him in the works team a rider who both faced fitness question marks and wasn’t gelling with the bike at all.

Franco Morbidelli has long maintained that the knee is no longer a limitation, instead focusing on the fact the 2022 M1 was not accepting of the same riding style that made him shine on the 2019 version. Darryn Binder was a rookie straight out of Moto3. Andrea Dovizioso came back after nearly a year out, to a bike that he felt he’d quickly hit a brick wall with and a series that had already moved away from him with the introduction of the new Michelin rear in 2020. And Cal Crutchlow, as Miller points out, was a test rider with limited race practice.

Quartararo ran circles around all of them. In terms of the intra-Yamaha battle, he could only beat who was in front of him, and it was a beatdown for the ages.

But were any of those riders anywhere as strong as even a losing-faith Maverick Vinales from the early stages of 2021? Probably not.

Quartararo versus other Yamahas in 2022

Average gap, fastest weekend time (all sessions included as other Yamahas were rarely in Q2)

Crutchlow +0.590s to Quartararo
Morbidelli +0.675s to Quartararo
Dovizioso +0.759s to Quartararo
Binder +1.468s to Quartararo

Average finishing gap in representative races

Crutchlow +11.125s to Quartararo
Morbidelli +19.151s to Quartararo
Dovizioso +26,800s to Quartararo
Binder +32,000s to Quartararo

The numbers make the point Miller made. They are a little skewed by Quartararo’s sole qualifying defeat to a fellow Yamaha this year – Sepang, where Morbidelli was in his best form and where Quartararo broke a finger – but in any case, it appears reasonable to ascertain that Crutchlow was indeed Quartararo’s most performant rival. The Sepang weekend aside, his fastest weekend lap gaps to Quartararo all slotted in between 0.629s and 0.739s.

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Having six tenths in hand over your test rider is solid but not incredible, right? You’d expect, for instance, that the gap between Bagnaia and Ducati tester Michele Pirro on your average weekend would be more than that. But, as good as Pirro is at his job, you’d also surely say Crutchlow is the better MotoGP rider, even after a spell on the sidelines.

So, in terms of Quartararo’s ‘greatness’, there is no conclusive answer in the team-mate comparisons. But what the numbers do contain is a pretty strong suggestion that he wasn’t the architect of his demise.

Take Morbidelli’s season again, and his feeling that he’d been gradually improving – along with the fact that he’s been getting further and further away from that mid-2021 knee operation. But if Morbidelli really was getting better, Quartararo kept pace. Sepang might paint a different impression, but take the full mass of gaps and you’ll see little in the way of a trend. The Spearman rank coefficient – ​​a statistical tool to measure correlation, which maxes out at 1 – between the number of a race and Morbidelli’s deficit to Quartararo in said race is 0.376, which suggests only a moderate-to-low correlation (ie Morbidelli perhaps was getting closer in races as the season went on, but not conclusively).

And as for the single lap, the number is 0.063, indicating there is no correlation at all between the weekend number and Morbidelli’s deficit.

So what’s Quartararo’s season a truly great one? It’s not easy to say. But it certainly looked great early on – and, with no clear performance decline from the Frenchman, it should’ve at least been good enough to keep the crown in Iwata for another year.

2022 Yamaha Aerox 155 Monster Energy MotoGP Edition launched

2022 Aerox 155 Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Edition

2022 Aerox 155 Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Edition

Yamaha Motor India has extended 2022 Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Edition line-up with the launch of the new Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Edition of the Aerox 155. The new launch has been announced under the company’s ‘The Call of the Blue’ brand campaign. The new limited edition scooter has been priced at Rs 1,41,300 (ex-showroom, Delhi) and will be sold via the company’s premium Blue Square outlets in India. The company has previously launched the new YZF-R15 with the same livery which has helped Yamaha to attract more buyers in the segment.

The newly announced scooter takes inspiration from the company’s Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP M1 motorcycle. It gets an all-black color treatment along with Yamaha MotoGP branding that can be found on the visor, front apron, front mudguard, side panels, rear panels and the ‘X’ Center Motif. Save for these aesthetic updates, the rest of the scooter remains unchanged.

At the heart sits a new generation 155cc liquid-cooled, 4-stroke, SOHC, 4-valve Blue Core engine which is seen equipped with the company’s Variable Valve Actuation (VVA). It comes with a CVT transmission. This is rated to produce a maximum power output of 15 bhp at 8,000rpm with 13.9 Nm of peak torque at 6,500rpm.

Some of the key features on Yamaha’s sporty scooter include the use of single channel ABS, liquid-cooling, 14-inch wheels with wider 140mm rear tire, LED Headlight / LED Taillight, Bluetooth Enabled Y-Connect App 24.5 Liter Under seat storage, and to an external fuel lid.

“Yamaha’s product range testifies to Yamaha’s commitment to offering two-wheelers that live up to the global spirit of Yamaha Racing. In order to deepen its connection amongst passionate MotoGP fans and customers, Yamaha will continue to offer MotoGP-inspired Editions in the future as well,” the company noted in a recent press announcement.

Monday, November 28, 2022

MotoGP: Cal Crutchlow backs Morbidelli: Yamaha too aggressive, smooth ‘philosophy’ has to return | MotoGP

That’s the view of Yamaha test rider Cal Crutchlow, who took part in six end-of-season races for the satellite RNF squad alongside development duties with next year’s machine.

2020 title runner-up Morbidelli has only taken one podium in the last two years, suffering a step down in results since returning from knee surgery to take over from Maverick Vinales at the factory team in late 2021.

Morbidelli’s smooth style on an A-spec bike had enabled him to outscore Fabio Quartararo as Petronas team-mates in 2020 – a season that saw all four Yamaha riders on the podium and three of them win races – but by 2022 only Quartararo could unlock the M1’s shrinking performance (grip) window.

Realizing his naturally smooth approach wasn’t working, Morbidelli tried to morph into a Quartararo-type attacking style during this season. Some progress was made, but there was little reward.

While Quartararo battled to defend his world title, ultimately losing out to Ducati’s Francesco Bagnaia at the final round, Morbidelli was the next best Yamaha rider in just 19th. Quartararo took three wins and eight podiums, with Morbidelli a best of seventh in the Mandalika rain and tenth in the dry, at the Valencia finale.

The good news for Morbidelli is that, alongside the top speed increase Quartararo craves, Crutchlow is pushing for Yamaha to rediscover its smooth philosophy for 2023.

“Honestly speaking, I think Yamaha needs to go back to make it so that you don’t have to be an aggressive rider. That’s the reality,” Crutchlow said.

“The problem is – and why Frankie’s had to turn into an aggressive rider – is because the bike’s [become] like that. And that’s not Yamaha’s philosophy.

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“We need to make the bike smoother and calmer. We need to work on that for next year and it’ll make the bike better overall.

Crutchlow: I fully expect Frankie to be good next year

“The Yamaha was always the slowest bike [in a straight line], but still the fastest around the track most of the time. Now it’s trying to be faster and faster [on the straight] and it’s more difficult [to ride],” Crutchlow added.

“So the philosophy has to go back, I think, in one way.

“And Frankie is a smooth rider at heart. So this is why I fully expect Frankie to be good next year. He’s had a difficult year, but it doesn’t mean that he won’t come back.”

Although Crutchlow didn’t ride at the official Valencia test, where Yamaha were left baffled by a lack of performance from the previously promising 2023 engine, he had tried the same updates a week earlier in a private outing at Jerez.

“The new bike is very good [for] top speed,” Crutchlow had said. “But we need to work on the rest of the stuff for next year, then come back for Sepang [February] in a better way and I’m looking forward to that.”

2023 is the last year of Morbidelli’s current Yamaha contract.

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Bottas talks of sharing his experience to improve Alfa Romeo’s sim use

Valtteri Bottas talks about how the Alfa Romeo simulator is when compared to Mercedes, as he adds on good life at his new F1 team.

For Alfa Romeo, the 2022 season has been a marked improvement on their 2021 campaign. An all new driver line up with the experienced Bottas and the rookie Zhou Guanyu has instilled new confidence along with a better car overall.

It’s only five Grands Prix in but Bottas has picked up points in four races and has had a fair turn of pace since the season started while Guanyu had a points scoring debut in Bahrain. Not just that but substantial investment last year by the team in a driver and loop simulator has now begun to pay dividends.

The simulator came into being some eight months ago and the team benefited towards the end of last season and have reaped the results this season as per above. But what has also helped is the arrival of Bottas. A race winner 10 times at Mercedes over his years there and has gained solid experience of leading a team.

By his own admission, his move to Alfa Romeo was seen as a project and his experience has helped Alfa Romeo massively but not just in terms of on track racing and testing, limited that it is now but having used such a product at Mercedes, his experience in this area is also assisting Alfa Romeo.

It’s a valuable apparatus for any team but with Mercedes being so far ahead of the game and Alfa having some “catching up” to do, having Bottas on board is a bonus. “Nowadays, of course, the simulators are hugely important with a lack of testing and as the technology improves, you can get more and more out of it,” he said.

“And the first time I tried the Sauber simulator, I could feel that there was quite a difference to the one at Mercedes because Mercedes started a long, long time ago and our team, we only started a few years ago. So of course there’s catching up to do but from the first time I tried it versus what it is now it’s already hugely improved and it has been already this year, especially the last couple of events, a really useful tool to kind of support the race week-end”.

“So that’s always a driver at the factory during the race weekend doing also similar setup tests and doing the correlation and it’s been rapid progress on that and that keeps going and it is already really good tool. There are still improvements to be made and obviously I’ve given my part to it based on my experience and I’m sure it has helped as well and like, for example, in Miami it was really useful to get to know the track and actually try a few different set-ups or wing levels so you get a bit of an idea and before going there,” summed up Bottas.

He has made an impressive start to his career with his new team, so much so probably surpassing his and the team’s expectations. No matter what he did at Mercedes, he was always a number two driver. It’s a different ball game now, number one driver and helping the team in the right direction up the grid, it’s great to see.

“I’m enjoying it a lot,” said Bottas. “We started the season with the first race, you know, with points and what I’ve been really enjoying is the progress we’ve been able to make together as a team. So we’re definitely not falling back. And that is a motivation for us to go ahead rather than backwards. And yeah, I’m really, really enjoying the ride.”

It’s a good season so far for Bottas, written off ever so slightly in some quarters during his latter period at Brackley, while Alfa Romeo aren’t Mercedes, they are still on the up and Bottas is only six points behind his former teammate Hamilton.

Here’s Valtteri Bottas on safety car not helping him

Here’s what Lewis Hamilton and George Russell said

Misano MotoGP: Jack Miller: Binder can make Moto3 to MotoGP work | MotoGP

Jack Miller, the only rider to have previously jumped straight from Moto3 to MotoGP, has backed Darryn Binder to make a success of the move in 2022.

Binder has been officially confirmed as riding for the new WithU RNF Yamaha squadwhich replaces the Sepang Racing Team he currently rides for in Moto3.

Miller made his MotoGP move in 2015, skipping Moto2 completely to debut on an Open-class Honda.

After just 17 points (and 19th) in his rookie season, Miller progressed to 82 points (11th) by his third and final year with Honda, including a shock wet win at Assen 2018.

After switching to Ducati, Miller took his first dry podiums in 2019 and 2020, with two wins so far in factory colors this season.

Miller was only 20 when he made his MotoGP debut, but Binder – younger brother of KTM MotoGP winner Brad – will be a more mature 24 next January, with seven seasons of grand prix racing under his belt (compared to three for Miller).

On the other hand, Miller took a standout six wins and ten podiums during his final Moto3 campaign, only narrowly losing out on the title to Alex Marquez. Binder meanwuile has just two rostrums this year, in the Qatar openers, and sits sixth in the standings. His only grand prix win came at Catalunya 2020.

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“I think all power to him. As I’ve stood by my whole MotoGP career, if you get the opportunity – this train doesn’t come twice, if you know what I mean, for a lot of people,” Miller said.

“If you’ve got the opportunity, you best get on and give it a crack because a lot of people don’t get to do this, they don’t get to ride the fastest motorcycles in the world against the best riders in the world.

“So if you’ve got the opportunity, why not take it and if anyone can do it, I think it’s Daz. He’s got that wild style, he can ride a bike when it’s moving around and what not. So I don’t think it’ll be an issue.

“He’s got plenty more experience on bigger bikes than I had when I moved to MotoGP, he’s ridden Superbikes and 600s and stuff like that.

“But yeah, nothing can prepare you for one of these things [MotoGP], it’s that far from everything else that you never know until you are here. So you best just try and get here.”

An alternative view came from Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro, who was somewhat perplexed at the decision and felt some kind of MotoGP super license – achieved through experience in other classes – could be the way forward.

“It’s a very strange situation. I agree about a super license or something like this,” Espargaro said. “I prefer to not really comment too much… I mean I don’t really understand, anything of this movement [decision].

“It’s not that I don’t like, but I cannot find a reason why… It’s the most bizarre movement I’ve ever seen in my life!”

Spain result ‘like a win’ amid ‘defeatist’ radio suggestions

Lewis Hamilton says that his P5 finish in the Spanish Grand Prix was “like a win”, and believes he was not being “defeatist” when he suggested retiring the car.

Hamilton fell to the well-beyond the rear of the field at the end of the first lap of the Barcelona race after heavy contact with the Haas of Kevin Magnussen at Turn 4 punctured the front-left tire of the Mercedes and left him with no option but to slowly return to the pit lane.

Upon re-entering the race, the TV broadcast played a radio message from the seven-time champion suggesting to his race engineer Pete ‘Bono’ Bonnington that he should retire the car to “save the engine”. Particularly prevalent in the new cost cap era of Formula 1, manufacturing more spare components than intended takes a bigger hit out of the teams’ finances and also runs the risk of incurring grid penalties, both of which will seriously handicap championship campaigns.

Hamilton was therefore thinking that he could not possibly make up enough positions to make the added 66 laps of power unit wear in the sweltering Spanish temperatures worthwhile. But his race engineer reassured Hamilton that the team’s prediction was for a potential P8 finish (four championship points) being the best case scenario.

He would go on to finish in P5, while his teammate George Russell crossed the line in P3, with Hamilton only missing out on a certain P4 had it not been for a severe cooling issue arising in the last few laps. He was very happy with the result, comparing it to the Saudi Arabia race earlier in the season where he struggled to make up places from a lowly starting position.

“I’m so happy,” Hamilton said to media. “Obviously I was hoping for a smoother race without the issue at the beginning of the race, and I was 30 seconds behind at one stage, behind last. Having seen where I was, and if you think back to Jeddah where I started 15th and I struggled to get into the top 10, I was thinking it’s impossible to get back into points position.

“But the team said no, you’re on for eighth. I couldn’t understand it at the beginning, and I thought they were definitely being super optimistic. But I said OK, I’ll give it everything and see where I come out and it turns out it was higher than eighth. So it was just a little bit unfortunate at the end with the engine, but I’m just glad we finished.”

Hamilton also explained that he was not being defeatist on the radio, amidst a season that has not got off to the best of starts for him or the Mercedes team in which has filled doubts about his commitment to Formula 1.

“It’s not being defeatist, it was just I was literally 30 seconds behind,” Hamilton exclaimed. “If I’m going to use a whole engine to drive around in the last or out of the top 15, and at one point we might have to take a penalty or something like that.

“I don’t know if reliability is an issue, we won’t know until, well we’ve already seen today at the end there was something. I was like, we might as well just save the engine so we live to fight another day. But I’m glad we didn’t, and it just shows you never stop, you never give up, and that’s what I did.”

He also added on how he takes “100%” satisfaction from the race which he feels was “like a win” for him after a difficult start to the 2022 season in which he has been outpaced by Russell on more than one occasion.

“A race like that is like a win,” said Hamilton. “And it actually feels better most often than a win, when you’ve come from so far back, been through so much. Ultimately there was quite a bit of adversity in that race, starting so far back. And there was a girl that I spoke to yesterday, who was my little inspiration, Isla, a five-year-old that’s terminally ill and she said can you win the race for me tomorrow.

“I said I don’t know if I can win the race, but I’ll give it everything. So hopefully for me, that was a bit like a win, and I dedicate it to her,” Hamilton summed up. Mercedes’ CEO and team principal Toto Wolff added his thoughts on the dynamic between Hamilton and the team during the race, and how the climb through the field reminded him of last year.

“The dynamic between the driver and team is something that is so important, and it’s clear,” said Wolff to media. “You’re having an accident at the early stage of the race, and you’re saying to yourself, ‘not again’, and you’re not featuring because I think he was 38 seconds or so behind the last cars after his stop . That’s basically game over.

“But then, him going and then showing this very good pace was important. It was not only [for] his morale, but also our morale. And who would have thought he would have climbed all the way to fourth before the problem came up. And that looked like a world championship winning race car that he was driving, that would have not been possible in the previous races.

“That reminded me of last year and the years before when a car is really on the top of its game, and the driver.” The radio message from Hamilton didn’t surprise Wolff during the race, instead implying that he didn’t really want to retire the car and was merely venting his frustration.

“On the contrary, I think it was just, you know, a sentence of ‘I can’t believe that’ it was not what he meant,” he replied when asked if the message came as a surprise. “You’re not describing exactly a driver that comes back 38 seconds behind the last guy, storms to the front, posting the fastest lap times, consecutive lap times throughout the race, and ends up in P5. That shows his quality mindset and determination.”

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Verstappen, Leclerc relay Saudi Arabian GP tussle amid SC/VSC periods

Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc relayed their F1 Saudi Arabian GP battle and how they tried to outsmart each other.

At the start of the F1 Saudi Arabian GP, ​​it looked like Red Bull’s Sergio Perez had it under his control with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc a bit behind along with Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz. But his pit stop and subsequent safety car period changed the order.

It dropped Perez to fourth allowing Leclerc to the lead the Saudi Arabian GP from Verstappen. It thus ensued a fight until the end for the duo. It was almost a repeat of Bahrain, but this time the Dutchman managed to play it out smartly to secure the win.

The double DRS zones in the last part of the track initially helped Leclerc as he could get Verstappen back on the main straight. It even led to a bizarre locking-up moment by both in the final corner which set the Dutchman back by a couple of laps.

But he had time to regain life in his tire and work out smartly to eventually pass Leclerc at the main straight and keep the lead. With the 2022 F1 cars allowing for a better following and the DRS becoming more powerful, it sure provided the spectacle.

“It was like qualifying laps, it was tough,” Verstappen started. “I didn’t really feel that happy on the medium. All the time when you would get close to the car ahead the tires would die. So there wasn’t much racing going on there. So it was a little bit frustrating to just sit there and wait for the right lap to pit so you could go onto the other tires, because as soon as we went on to the hard tire I had a much better feeling.

“So then I of course tried to stay close with Charles after the safety car restarted and, yeah, I was just trying to keep the gap more or less the same. And that was basically just trying to match the lap times, trying to get a bit closer, then he was pulling away a bit. I got a bit closer again. And yeah, then of course, we had the VSC at the end.

“And then it’s always a bit of a question mark, what’s going to happen after with the tires, of course, because they cooled down a lot, but it seemed like we had quite a good first few laps on that restart. I had a good feeling with the car and the tires were still only holding on quite well through the high speed.

“I then had a few good opportunities, but Charles really played it smart in the last corner. So it wasn’t easy for me to actually get by. And of course I had to line myself up again to have another go at it. And eventually I had the go and I got ahead but then once I was ahead it was really like four laps flat out trying to stay ahead because Charles was consistently in my DRS. So yeah, it was quite tough out there,” summed up Verstappen.

The Dutchman noted it to be like fighting in karts but without touching. “In go-karting you can rub a bit with the sidepods and stuff. That’s unfortunately not possible anymore in Formula cars. But we have done that in the past. I think we are okay,” Verstappen stated.

On the other side, Leclerc agreed that it was tricky to hold off Verstappen considering how good the Red Bull was on straights. All his work in the corners was undone on the straights, especially as the Dutchman was able to stay with him all through the lap.

“I definitely enjoyed the fight,” Leclerc stated. “It’s obviously disappointing to lose the win so late in the race but it was a fun fight. It was very difficult because we had two cars that were in a very different place. I was very strong in the first sector, in all the corners, and basically much less strong in the straights. So it was very, very tricky.

“I tried to have the DRS in the last corner. It worked twice but it didn’t the last time and then obviously there was this yellow flag. I don’t know if we are speaking about the same yellow flag but I think the one where I could have had a chance to at least be alongside was the one into Turn 1 where I had no DRS there, so this was a little bit of a shame but it’s part of the game! We’ll try again next race,” summed up Leclerc.

Not only there was the DRS in the game, the safety car periods and even the Virtual Safety Car period played a key role in the tussle between the two. The VSC period, in fact, saw Verstappen be slightly closer to Leclerc by the time they re-started.

“For the VSC I mean, I don’t know,” Leclerc stated. “This is probably more a question for Max. And I’m pretty sure that if there is a way, he won’t say it now, in front of everyone. But yeah, I felt at one point that Max was closer, but actually, I think at the actual restart, I don’t think it was the case. But we’ll look into it anyway. And yeah, I knew that the strength of Max and the Red Bull in general, this weekend was the straight line speed.

“So I basically knew that if I was leaving Max with a DRS behind for the main straight, I will basically be overtaken very easily. So, I just wanted that, DRS, so on the first lap, I braked very early and I got the DRS and manage to overtake back on the run to Turn One. And then the second one, obviously Max knew that I was going to do that, so we both braked quite early, but I still managed to stay in front at the end. And the third time, it didn’t work out for me,” summed up Leclerc.

At the same time, Verstappen added: “To be honest, I was a little bit surprised myself that it did look a little bit closer, but I don’t know how close Charles was, of course to zero, you know, with the delta. That’s always a bit of a question mark. But also, sometimes it depends a bit where the restart is: if it’s in a corner for somebody in front or not. I think I was still on a bit more of the straight side and had a bit of a better run into Turn 4 as well.

“So, it’s a bit tricky. And yeah, I think, like Charles said, you always try to of course have a good run with the DRS into the final zone, where then you have a lot of fast corners where you cannot pass so, of course Charles played is very smart there, but also, it seemed like their defense/attack mode is very powerful. So, for me also, even more top speed. It was very hard to nail the overtake, but eventually it worked,” summed up Verstappen.

Regarding the cat and mouse fight, Verstappen noted that they have to adapt accordingly. In Bahrain, he went for it and lost out, but in Saudi Arabia he changed his strategy which helped him. Also, saving a bit of tires worked out in his favor too.

“Every battle is different but yeah, well, it’s just smart racing and good racing, you know, so just have to deal with it, adjust to it,” said Verstappen. “And yeah, it was a lot of fun. It wasn’t easy but a lot of fun. Regarding the tire saving, I was just trying to stay with Charles without hurting the tires too much because that was a bit my problem in the first stint, to see what would happen in the last 10 laps or 15 laps.

“And yeah, then of course, that VSC happens so the tires also cooled down quite a bit. But then yeah, when I started to push fully, seemed like we had good pace. So that’s why I think I could actually push up to Charles a little bit. So yeah, a lot happier on the hard tire in general with degradation,” summed up Verstappen.

Here’s the fight between the two: https://www.formula1.com/en/latest/video.2022-saudi-arabian-grand-prix-leclerc-and-verstappen-battle-for-lead-in-closing-laps .1728479532608805236.html

Here’s the two appreciating each other: https://twitter.com/F1/status/1508191127224000520?s=20&t=hcTq8qoJho3Bpvtqj_MKLg

Here’s Pierre Gasly on health issues

Correa stays back in F3 for another season with ART GP

Juan Manuel Correa will stay back in FIA Formula 3 (F3) Championship for another season in 2022 with ART Grand Prix.

Having returned to F3 in 2021 after his injury lay off, Correa is staying back in the championship for another season with ART GP in the hope of breaking into the top half of the grid. He scored points last year to end up 21st in the drivers’ standings.

Off-season, Correa tested with Charouz in Abu Dhabi in F2 but the chances for him to make a return to the championship was less and another year in F3 seemed a more likely thing to happen. He joins Gregoire Saucy in the line-up with the third driver to be revealed later.

“I am very glad to stay one more year with ART Grand Prix and build on our first season together,” said Correa. “2021 was not an easy season for me, with lots of work being done both on the sporting side but with the rehabilitation and medical progress in my legs.

“I feel that this season is an opportunity for me to start on a much higher level and get back to where I can be. I want to give a big thank you to ART and my partners for their continuous support, I believe it will be a good year.”

At the same time, Sebastien Philippe, added: “Juan Manuel provided positive feedback by fitting in perfectly with the team and making progress after missing a year due to that pivotal event in his career. His strength of character has enabled him to rediscover his joy behind the wheel and to fight regularly in the top 10.

“In 2022, with the help of ART Grand Prix, he will be keen to take an additional step in his goals, to be even closer to the front and to participate in the team’s ambition to win both championships.”

2022 F3 line up so far:

ART GP: Gregoire Saucy, Juan Manuel Correa

Prema: Oliver Bearman, Arthur Leclerc, Jak Crawford

Trident: Jonny Edgar

Hitech GP: Isack Hadjar

Austrian MotoGP: Rins rues costly Crash, felt he had pace to lead | MotoGP

Alex Rins couldn’t hide his disappointment at being able to make the most of his evident speed during the Austrian MotoGP by crashing out just moments after moving into the lead of the race.

The Spaniard, who is still recovering from a shoulder injury that he said had him ‘screaming in his helmet’ for the first few minutes of Friday practice, Rins nonetheless gritted his teeth on race day to emerge in contention for the win.

Benefitting from the restart with its shorter distance, Rins stalked his way into contention before pulling a move on Andrea Dovizioso for the lead into turn five with ten laps remaining. However, that would be where his challenge came to an abrupt end, Rins folding the front of the Suzuki and sliding off into the gravel trap to retire.

Frustrated to see an excellent chance of winning his and Suzuki’s first MotoGP race since Silverstone 12 months ago slip through his grasp, he is nonetheless confident he can make amends at this weekend’s Styrian MotoGP around the same circuit.

“I started the first race well but I then I couldn’t keep the rhythm because I felt some locking, then I was behind the big crash and it was so scary – I want to send best wishes to the riders involved.

“In the restart I felt really good with the bike and the rear tyre, and when I was behind Dovizioso I knew I had the pace to lead, so I overtook him where I felt most confident in corner 6.

“But then I lost the front and crashed, which was a real shame. But everything is so close in this championship and I’m ready to put today behind me and focus on next weekend.”

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MotoGP: Augusto Fernandez: Amazing power, brakes – but I’m not good with the ride-height device! | MotoGP

The reigning Moto2 champion is the only newcomer entering the premier class, which is being compressed from 24 to 22 grid places by the loss of Suzuki.

Shortly after winning the intermediate title in a showdown with Ai Ogura, Fernandez returned to the Valencia circuit for his MotoGP debut with Tech3 GASGAS at the post-race test.

After 83 laps, Fernandez was 1.698s behind leader Luca Marini (Ducati), 0.390s from former Tech3 rider Augusto Fernandez (RNF Aprilia) and 0.8s from the next closest KTM of Jack Miller.

“All my life I’ve been dreaming about this first test with the MotoGP,” said Fernandez, who won the Moto2 title in his sixth season but first with KTM Ajo.

“You imagine the power and it’s there! It’s amazing. I’m super happy.”

But the carbon brakes proved just as impressive.

“I was surprised because my [braking] point on every corner is not much different from Moto2,” he said. “You arrive much, much faster but brake more-or-less in the same place. So imagine all the force.”

‘I’m not good on the ride-height device!’

The 25-year-old admitted to being a little ‘shocked’ at all the extra controls he needs to master when given a walkaround of the RC16 the day before the test.

The extra buttons and levers include activation of the ride-height device, which lowers the rear of the bike out of slow corners to help reduce wheelies during hard acceleration.

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“Yesterday in the meeting I was a little bit shocked about how many things I had to do and how many new things I had to try. I’m not good on the [ride-height] devices!” hey smiled “Honestly I was not activating it on all the laps. Because sometimes I forget. Sometimes it feels strange.

“They say it’s better, but I don’t know how to use it! Because it’s surprising you a lot. Then the bike becomes heavy a little bit and, I don’t know, strange! But I’ll focus on all the rest and then I will focus on the device. But yeah, so many new things and just a learning day today.”

What are the main lessons to take into the winter?

“Many things about riding style because it asks totally different things from how to turn corners, the corner speed, the way to accelerate, the way to pick up the bike and you can play a lot with the body [position],” Fernandez explained.

“I’m quite big for the Moto2. I was always trying to play with the body [position]but as soon as I could I was getting in the [tucked] position for the aerodynamics. That’s still important [in MotoGP]but it’s more about how much you can play with the body to turn the bike, to control the sliding, there’s a lot of things.

“At the beginning, I did longer stints because I wanted to understand the bike and be back in the pit box with some clear ideas of anything and then with electronics a lot of things about electronics,” the Spaniard continued.

“Because in Moto2 you focus on springs, shocks [for set-up]. Today we just changed one spring because our base wasn’t for me, but then we focused on electronics and we also tried the traction control – taking out traction control, more power, less power.

“Just feeling things to know how everything works and what I prefer also with the bike. [We tried] a lot of things!”

Only a handful of riders did more than Fernandez’s 83 laps, which equated to over three grand prix race distances.

“I wasn’t thinking about laps, we were just doing runs and runs and runs and when we arrived to 83, the team said ‘woah, 83 laps is not bad!’ I feel good, but for sure [at the next test in] Sepang it’s going to be more physically demanding.”

Fernandez insisted he also hadn’t set a lap time target.

“I didn’t put any expectations on lap times. Because honestly, I didn’t know how I was going to feel. But 1.6s from first I think is good for the first day. And I’m happy.”

‘I need to start from zero’

Joining Fernandez in the all-new 2023 Tech3 line-up is Pol Espargaro. Like Fernandez, Espargaro made his MotoGP debut with Tech3 (then using Yamaha machinery) back in 2014 and is returning to KTM machinery after two seasons at Repsol Honda.

“The good thing is we have Pol on the other side of the box and, even if I was slower than him, I’ve been comparing to him all day and I had a little chat with him at lunch,” said Fernandez.

“There are some things I’m already good at, which surprised me, but a lot of things I need to work on. As I said, what MotoGP needs from the riding style is very different from Moto2.

“So I need to start from zero, like getting a new riding style.”

Fernandez now has until the Sepang Shakedown test, in early February, to let his world title success and new MotoGP future sink in.

“After the race, I didn’t stop. So it’s good now to have some rest to realize what has happened; becoming world champion and a MotoGP rider. I still can’t believe it! So I’m looking forward to having some rest and realizing everything.”

Cal Crutchlow: ‘Mentally I wanted to go home, first year in MotoGP was win or lose’ | MotoGP

The two Yamaha riders have shown good pace in recent rounds, with Crutchlow often challenging for the points in particular.

While it could be argued that Binder has been unfortunate to miss out on a seat in 2023 after being given just one year to make the jump from Moto3, the South African will move down to Moto2 with the Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP team.

Crutchlow, who also came into MotoGP in unusual circumstances back in 2011 after moving across from WorldSBK, knows the challenges that come with needing to perform right away.

In fact, Crutchlow was at times finding himself in need of a break which he said made him want ‘to go home’.

“I’ve always said in my career that I was lucky,” added Curtchlow. “I was in the right place at the right time and I made the best decisions. I worked hard for it and then it worked.”

“The motto for the first year in the MotoGP class was win or lose. Mentally, sometimes I just wanted to go home. But I pulled myself together and the next year was good.”

When speaking about his current team-mate Binder, Crutchlow feels his pace has been better than the positions usually occupied by the former Moto3 rider.

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Crutchlow believes Binder’s pace would have been good enough to fight for podiums just three years ago, however, that also highlights just how big a jump teams have made with their current machines in 2022.

“It’s so difficult in MotoGP because everyone is extremely fast,” added the Brit. “Fabio Di Giannantonio, for example, is a much better rider than what he shows.”

“Darryn is strong too. With the lap times Darryn is setting he could have been on the podium three years ago. That’s the reality and he comes from Moto3.”