Welcome to Road Track Dirt (RTD). RTD was created by a group of guys from Melbourne and Sydney who all love bikes, but different parts of motocycle culture. Contributors: Steve W, Joe Z, Shavarsh B, Matt P. Twitter: @roadtrackdirt Email: roadtrackdirt@gmail.com
Showing posts with label ducati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ducati. Show all posts
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Track - Austin MotoGP
March pre-season testing set the scene for the inaugural Austin MotoGP. That the Repsol Hondas and Stefan Bradl lead the way over the factory Yamahas was not a surprise. What was a surprise was that it was rookie Marc Marquez who topped the timesheets, not his 7th MotoGP season veteran Dani Pedrosa. While Marquez played down his pace, in deference to the then team leader Pedrosa it was an ominous sign of what was to come.
The Circuit of the Americas is a strange track. Fast sweeping corners and serious elevation changes make for a great TV spectacle, however most riders complain that despite its aesthetic beauty it does not flow properly, making it difficult to find the right lines and tiring to ride. Unlike truly flowing tracks like Phillip Island, corner exits do not naturally lead to the next corner entry, making the right line difficult to find. But it's the number of first gear corners (something like 40% of the lap is spent in first) that gives the natural advantage to the Hondas. It was always up against Yamaha to overcome the hp and seamless shift transmission deficit.
Fast forward to qualifying and Marquez once again stole the limelight. Pole for the 20 year old ahead of Pedrosa, Lorenzo and Crutchlow made him the youngest pole sitter in 500GP/MotoGP history. Marquez did his best to tone down the hype but the prospect of eclipsing Freddie Spencer's record (youngest premier class winner) was the sole topic of conversation amongst the press and paddock. With the natural advantages held by the Honda's, Sunday was looming as a two way shootout between the Spanish Repsol twins.
While Qatar had a metronomic leader disappearing ahead of an intense battle for second, Austin had an epic battle for the lead followed by relatively lonely rides for those behind. A split tyre strategy where Marquez backed himself on the harder tyre posed more questions than answers early in the race. Pedrosa did what was necessary, leading into turn 1 and was relentlessly stalked by Marquez, as in Qatar biding his time, waiting for his time to strike. Try as he might, Lorenzo's inch perfect laps could not close the gap, although the differential was less than many expected. Behind, Crutchlow put in his most impressive ride in MotoGP, challenging Lorenzo until a mistake put him off the track and into the pack with Bradl, Rossi and Bautista. Impressively, however, as quickly as he was in the dogfight, he had cleared off again into a lonely ride for fourth.
Speaking of Rossi, after his Qatar heroics I was expecting him to charge the through pack and be competitive with Lorenzo (or at least Crutchlow). But the Doctor had no remedy for a lack of confidence at a track with which he struggled to get to grips (and brakes) with. Rossi revealed he lost a chunk of his brake disc after the race, but it is unlikey he would have challenged even without the problem
.
So back to the main show. After losing the lead into the first turn, Marquez held station behind his team mate, waiting for his opportunity to make the move back. At no stage was Pedrosa able to pull a gap, despite being on the medium rear tyre, versus Marquez on the harder option. As in Qatar, it was only a matter of time befor Marquez shoved it up the inside on lap 13, and try as he might, Pedrosa struggled to keep tabs. Riding at 11/10ths, he made a mistake with a couple of laps to go, fulfilling Marquez's destiny to break both of Freddie's record in one weekend.
On the in lap, the congratulations from the entire field showcased the arrival of the next era of MotoGP. Rossi, in particular, made a special effort to congratulate him. Greatness recognises greatness.
Friday, 19 April 2013
Track - MotoGP Qatar
The pre season posed more questions than answers. Would this be Pedrosa's year? Will Rossi be able to recapture his previous powers? Will Lorenzo make a mistake? Will Marquez be able to step into the shoes of Stoner? Will Ducati find hope?
A new F1 style qualifying format lead to a 'Q2' field that was much as expected, however the new format caught up a number of the big names. Lorenzo on pole was not a surprise, but Crutchlow in second definitely was. You get the sense that the indignation of not having full factory support is worth at least 3 or 4 tenths for Cal. Dovi in fourth was a ray of sunshine for Ducati, made all the more impressive by beating Marquez in 6th and Rossi in 7th.
So 2 of the big 4 were outside the top 5. When the race started, it was really a tale of 2 fields. One was the sole realm of Lorenzo, who disappeared from pole and was never seen again. His metronomic times are now the stuff of legend, but it was so effective that we barely saw Lorenzo on the coverage.
The second field was a cracker. Watching Lorenzo disappear, Pedrosa focused on keeping his rookie team mate and Crutchlow behind. Rossi started well, tailing Pedrosa but overcooked his corner entry on lap 3, bending his brake lever protector and running off track. The next 10 laps seemed to be a fight for second between the Repsols and Crutchlow. Marquez surprised many with his controlled aggression, keeping his trademark bruising style in check.
The apparent strengths and weaknesses of the Hondas vs. Yamahas persist into 2013. The sweet mid corner handling of the Yamaha that Rossi has craved for the past 2 years interplayed with the much stronger drive from the Honda seamless shift transmission and higher engine power. No where was this more apparent that in the mid race battle between Crutchlow and the Repsol twins. Working his backside off to close up on the back of the Hondas, Crutchlow was powerless to fight their straight line speed.
Having had to battle with Bradl and Dovi after his early off, Rossi started to come into the frame with 10 laps to go. Chipping away a gap of about 5 seconds to Crutchlow, Rossi displayed an ability to rattle off fast laps that we have not seen since the failed Ducati experiment started. The collective motorcycling world held its breath as the Rossi of old (rather than the impostor wearing his leathers that we ahve seen for the past 2 years) reappeared. Consistently reducing the gap to the Repsol/Cruthlow trio by 0.5secs per lap, Rossi caught the battle for the podium with 5 laps to go. As Marquez finally moved on Pedrosa, Rossi used the carrot of watching Marquez disappearing to pass Crutchlow on the straight and then home in on Pedrosa. Rossi achieved what Crutchlow couldn't, finding a gap up the inside of Pedrosa setting a scene for a showdown between the old school and the very new school.
Of all the riders in the current paddock, Rossi has been the most complimentary of Marquez. He sees a lot of himself in the rookie, who has truly stunned the GP paddock with the ease he has adapted his small frame to the complexities and brutality of the 1000cc machines. Watching them dice for the last 3 laps was the most excitement we've seen since Lorenzo first entered the class. All credit to Marquez, despite being passed with 3 laps to go, he refused to be intimidated and regained second place briefly. The old man would have been impressed, but stamped his authority 2 corners later and was not to be caught. Realising that a podium on debut ahead of his team mate was at astake, Marquez kept his head to take 3rd.
What a race!
Thursday, 28 February 2013
Track - Sepang Test II wrap up
It's always a trap to read too much into test times. Set up changes, race simulations, tyre testing and weather conditions play a huge part in determining the final order. The second MotoGP Sepang test was subject to all of these, but we can see a few trends emerging:
-The fight at the front will be once again Repsol Honda vs. Factory Yamaha
-Marquez is a freak and has gotten to grips with the machine very quickly, his comments that the other big three are in a different race are just for expectation management
-Pedrosa is not going to have it all his way, he could be easily upstaged as Marquez rapidly goes up the learning curve
-Rossi will fight for podiums and occasionally wins, but Lorenzo clearly has his measure at this stage as shown by his race simulation
-Cal Crutchlow is a podium contender, however the amount of support he gets from the factory could impede his raw speed
-Ducati are still in the doldrums
-The gaps between prototypes and CRTs remain staggering if you remove the Ducati's who are battling with the fastest of the CRTs
Overall Results from all Three Days of MotoGP’s Second Test at Sepang, Malaysia:
-The fight at the front will be once again Repsol Honda vs. Factory Yamaha
-Marquez is a freak and has gotten to grips with the machine very quickly, his comments that the other big three are in a different race are just for expectation management
-Pedrosa is not going to have it all his way, he could be easily upstaged as Marquez rapidly goes up the learning curve
-Rossi will fight for podiums and occasionally wins, but Lorenzo clearly has his measure at this stage as shown by his race simulation
-Cal Crutchlow is a podium contender, however the amount of support he gets from the factory could impede his raw speed
-Ducati are still in the doldrums
-The gaps between prototypes and CRTs remain staggering if you remove the Ducati's who are battling with the fastest of the CRTs
Pedrosa looks to be very comfortable without Stoner to chase |
Marquez is up to speed with the machine already, imagine what it'll look like after another 2 tests! |
Lorenzo's race pace puts him squarely in the mix |
Crutchlow will be glad he missed out on the Ducati ride |
Rossi shows decent pace, but not enough to reel in Lorenzo |
Pos. | Num. | Rider | Team | Time | Diff. | Prev. | Day |
1 | 99 | Jorge Lorenzo | Yamaha | 2:00.282 | - | - | Day 2 |
2 | 26 | Dani Pedrosa | Honda | 2:00.562 | 0.280 | 0.280 | Day 3 |
3 | 93 | Marc Marquez | Honda | 2:00.643 | 0.361 | 0.081 | Day 3 |
4 | 35 | Cal Crutchlow | Yamaha | 2:00.907 | 0.625 | 0.264 | Day 2 |
5 | 46 | Valentino Rossi | Yamaha | 2:01.062 | 0.780 | 0.155 | Day 3 |
6 | 19 | Alvaro Bautista | Honda | 2:01.078 | 0.796 | 0.016 | Day 3 |
7 | 6 | Stefan Bradl | Honda | 2:01.309 | 1.027 | 0.231 | Day 3 |
8 | 4 | Andrea Dovizioso | Ducati | 2:01.650 | 1.368 | 0.341 | Day 3 |
9 | 69 | Nicky Hayden | Ducati | 2:01.778 | 1.496 | 0.128 | Day 2 |
10 | 38 | Bradley Smith | Yamaha | 2:02.023 | 1.741 | 0.245 | Day 2 |
11 | 29 | Andrea Iannone | Ducati | 2:02.566 | 2.284 | 0.543 | Day 3 |
12 | 51 | Michele Pirro | Ducati Test | 2:02.773 | 2.491 | 0.207 | Day 3 |
13 | 14 | Randy de Puniet | Aprilia ART | 2:02.863 | 2.581 | 0.090 | Day 3 |
14 | 41 | Aleix Espargaro | Aprilia ART | 2:02.905 | 2.623 | 0.042 | Day 2 |
15 | T2 | Katsayuki Nakasuga | Yamaha Test | 2:02.946 | 2.664 | 0.041 | Day 2 |
16 | 11 | Ben Spies | Ducati | 2:03.055 | 2.773 | 0.109 | Day 3 |
17 | 8 | Hector Barbera | FTR Kawasaki | 2:03.155 | 2.873 | 0.100 | Day 3 |
18 | T1 | Wataru Yoshikawa | Yamaha Test | 2:03.257 | 2.975 | 0.102 | Day 3 |
19 | 7 | Hiroshi Aoyama | FTR Kawasaki | 2:03.990 | 3.708 | 0.733 | Day 2 |
20 | 17 | Karel Abraham | Aprilia ART | 2:04.066 | 3.784 | 0.076 | Day 3 |
21 | 5 | Colin Edwards | FTR Kawasaki | 2:04.102 | 3.820 | 0.036 | Day 3 |
22 | 9 | Danilo Petrucci | Suter BMW | 2:04.279 | 3.997 | 0.177 | Day 2 |
23 | 37 | Takumi Takahashi | Honda Test | 2:04.512 | 4.230 | 0.233 | Day 2 |
24 | 70 | Michael Laverty | PBM Aprilia | 2:04.546 | 4.264 | 0.034 | Day 3 |
25 | 68 | Yonny Hernandez | Aprilia ART | 2:04.671 | 4.389 | 0.125 | Day 2 |
26 | 52 | Lukas Pesek | Suter BMW | 2:04.674 | 4.392 | 0.003 | Day 3 |
27 | 71 | Claudio Corti | FTR Kawasaki | 2:04.709 | 4.427 | 0.035 | Day 2 |
28 | 67 | Bryan Staring | FTR Honda | 2:05.313 | 5.031 | 0.604 | Day 3 |
Friday, 31 August 2012
Track - WSBK Moscow Race 2
In contrast to Race 1, Race 2 was held in dry conditions which saw all runners start on slicks. The ducati's decided to run the softer compound, which ended up being a mistake and compounded a miserable weekend for the Italian marque.
Tom Sykes seemed to check out the front very early, with a chase group of Melandri, Haslam, Biaggi, Rea and Laverty following. That was until Biaggi, using the his Aprilia missile to good effect to get pass Rea on the back straight but the manouvre compromised his corner entry and he punted into the back of a helpless Haslam.
With Biaggi and Haslam off to the medical centre to get checked out, Melandri set about closing down Sykes, closing up on him quickly and taking the lead.
The battle for second went down to the wire, with the fading Sykes trying to hold of Rea and the charging Laverty. The drama continued to the end, with Laverty high siding on the last lap on turn 14, taking out Rea. Checa had to take evasive action, promoting Davies to the podium wth Checa finishing behind in fourth.
Melandri's win promotes him to the head of the champions with 308.5 points to Biaggi 290 and Sykes 267.5
Track - WSBK Moscow Race 1
Tom Sykes repaid Kawasaki's new contractr extension with his second win of the season at the new Moscow Circuit. Challenging weather conditions after a morning shower lead to consternation around tyre choice, but the front runners all chose to start on slicks, which turned out to be the right move. Pole man Checa crashed out on lap 3 in an incident with Jonny Rea. Crashes continued as Rea followed Checa for an early trip back to the pits and Giugliano making it 0/2 for Althea Ducati. The race for the podium behind Sykes ended up being between Davies, Haslam and Melandri, culminating with contact between Davies and Haslam, punting Haslam off his bike and Davies off the track. This left Melandri in second and Biaggi in a very unexpected third.
Thursday, 23 August 2012
Track - It's official, Ducati and Yamaha swap Italians
So the silly season for factory bikes is over. Ducati announced that Andrea Dovisioso would take Valentino Rossi's seat next year, having signed a contract until 2014. The likely candidate for this ride has changed from Rossi staying, to Dovi's team mate Crutchlow, and finally to Dovi. The irony of the situation is that Dovi had moved to Yamaha Tech 3 with the hopes to move up to Spies' seat in the Factory team. With Spies quitting Yamaha, it seemed that the plan was falling into place, however Rossi's desire to get on a competitive bike asap blocked this path for Dovi. Crutchlow 'The Honey Badger' has been speaking publically about the verbal offer he had from Ducati for a long time and will be dismayed by the way he has been strung along and ultimately dumped in favour of his team mate.
So Dovi is now back in a factory team, but the underperforming one. The Ducati has been a career killer for all but Stoner so it is a brave move, however Dovi will be hoping that new Audi money and technology will fast track the development of the bike.
So confirmed riders for 2013 prototype bikes are now:
Factory Yamaha Racing: Jorge Lorenzo and Valentino Rossi
Repsol Honda: Dani Pedrosa and Marc Marquez
Ducati Team: Nicky Hayden and Andrea Dovisioso
LCR Honda: Stefan Bradl
Tech 3 Yamaha: Bradley Smith
Cardion Ducati: Karel Abraham
The key riders looking for a ride are now Cal Crutchlow (who you would think would stay with Tech 3), Ben Spies (Could return with Suzuki to MotoGP or go to WSBK with BMW), Hector Barbera (who is currently injured) and Alvaro Bautista (talk is that his ride at Gresini is at risk).
Tuesday, 21 August 2012
Track - Indy MotoGP
Firstly,
Monday, 20 August 2012
Saturday, 18 August 2012
Road - Ducati 1199 Panigale Recall
Ducati America has just announced it is recalling 375 1199 Panigale superbikes, for some reason almost 2 weeks after the Aussie authorities. MY 2012 and MY 2013 Motorcycles are affected in Australia.
The issues...
Friday, 10 August 2012
Track - Rossi confirms Yamaha return. Bye Bye Ducati...
As expected, Rossi has confirmed that he will be going back to Yamaha next season to partner Jorge Lorenzo. While some held out hope that Audi coming on board would keep Rossi with Ducati, it seems that he has chosen to go back to a bike he knows can win races immediately rather than potentially develop into a winner. It is expected that Rossi's crew will also move back to Yamaha with him.
So where does this leave us in the game of musical chairs?
Confirmed:
-Repsol Honda - Dani Pedrosa, Marc Marquez
-Factory Yamaha - Jorge Lorenzo, Valentino Rossi
-Tech 3 Yamaha - Bradley Smith
-Ducati Corse - Nicky Hayden
-LCR Honda - Stefan Bradl
Yet to be confirmed
-Cal Crutchlow
-Andrea Dovisioso
-Alvaro Bautista
-Ben Spies
If you had asked me a couple of weeks ago I would have said that under the Rossi to Yamaha scenario, Cal Crutchlow was the firm favourite to go to Ducati. Crutchlow has been very public about a verbal offer made by the Italian factory but also the lack of paperwork that has come with it. There is increasing chatter that his Tech 3 team mate Dovisioso has jumped ahead of him in Ducati's preferences. Indeed, on twitter Cal, has responded to questions about what is going on with the comment that 'passports are getting guys jobs'. This may suggest that Dovi has leapfrogged him at Ducati and his best option bay be to stay at Tech 3. To be honest, the satellite Yamaha package is faster than the current factory Ducati package, so it's not necessarily a bad thing. However, Cal's belief that he needs a factory bike to win a championship is well founded, it's just that a factory Ducati is unlikely to be that bike.
Ben Spies is the other wildcard, with rumours of a move to BMW or Suzuki. Spies recently got a new tattoo, do you think it's a suzuki or BMW tattoo?
Silly season continues...
Tuesday, 7 August 2012
Track - Gazetta dello Sport says date set for Rossi Yamaha switch
Well, the 'sighting' of Rossi at the Yamaha factory may have been a hoax but Gazetta dello Sport is reporting that Rossi has decided to go back to Yamaha and will announce as soon as next week's Indy round. It is silly season so take everything reported with a grain of salt, but there seems to be a crescendo of Rossi/Yamaha speculation building.
Monday, 6 August 2012
Road - Amazing Vilner Ducati Monster Evo 1100
Bulgarian tuner/customer Vilner has created this amazing Ducati Monster. Apart from a small power increase to 80kw, this special build has a smaller headlight, skimpy side panels, a shortened sub frame and customised paint/rims. VIlner plans to produce 100 kits to allow Ducati Monster Evo 1100 owners to recreate this bike. Sadly, the model in the photos does not come as standard or an option.
Sunday, 5 August 2012
Track - retraction, Rossi NOT seen at Yamaha HQ
It seeems the rumous yesterday that Rossi was seen by Niall Mackenzie at Yamaha were false. Mackenzie's twitter account had been hacked.
Saturday, 4 August 2012
Track - Rossi spotted at Yamaha HQ
Just to add more fuel to the 'Rossi to Yamaha' fire, former racer Niall Mackenzie (who was at the factory to negotiate a deal for his son to race next season) tweeted that he saw a 'well known Italian' wearing 'a big smile on his face'. Mackenzie then tweeted 'Done deal! A well known Italian will definitely be on a blue bike next year, woo hoo!'
So let's look at the scenarios:
1. Rossi stays at Ducati. Dovi and Cal fight it out to move up to the Factory Yamaha squad.
2. Rossi goes to Yamaha. Cal goes to Factory Ducati, Dovi stays with Tech 3
We'll know soon...
So let's look at the scenarios:
1. Rossi stays at Ducati. Dovi and Cal fight it out to move up to the Factory Yamaha squad.
2. Rossi goes to Yamaha. Cal goes to Factory Ducati, Dovi stays with Tech 3
We'll know soon...
Monday, 30 July 2012
Track - Autosport Porsche GT2 RS v. Ducati 1199 Panigale
This is for you Shav...
Track - 12m reasons to stay friends
Del Torchio was at Laguna to present Ducati's final offer of 12m Euros per year for Rossi to stay at Ducati.
With Spies officially leaving the factory Yamaha squad, and Rossi committed to making a decision over the summer break, we should have an answer on Yamaha or Ducati soon.
No one will be watching more closely than Cal Crutchlow, who has publically stated he has an offer to go to Ducati. Now that Nicky Hayden is re-signed, should Rossi elect to stay, Crutchlow will stay with Yamaha (although whether it is a black or blue bike is still a hot topic).
Track - Rossi the backseat rider...
After a strange highside coming into the corkscrew, Rossi hitched a ride back to the pits with team mate Nicky. I guess it's the least he could do after securing a contract extension to stay at Ducati next year!
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