Jeremy Burgess was famous for finding that special something on Sunday morning that gave Valentino Rossi the edge in the race in the afternoon. It is a tradition carried on by Silvano Galbusera, who has replaced Burgess since the start of the 2014 season. Galbusera, too, always seems to find that extra little tweak during warm up that makes the difference between cruising in fourth or finishing on the podium, and even on the top step. The fact that it has continued since Burgess' departure suggests that the tweaks were very much a collaborative effort, with input coming from his data engineers and mechanics, as well as the rider himself, of course.
Two weeks ago in Barcelona, Rossi's team appeared to have found something extra special. For it did not just work on the Sunday in Catalonia, taking Rossi from the third row all the way up to 2nd, but it has even carried through to Assen, some 1600km further north. Rossi was quick from the moment he rolled out of pit lane for the first time at Assen, and has been at or near the top of the timesheets ever since. In this form, Rossi may well have expected to have been on the front row, but he went better than that. Putting in one of the best laps of his recent career with a couple of minutes to go, he simply hammered the opposition. As a sign of just how dominant he was at Assen, he led the second fastest man, Aleix Espargaro, by nearly a quarter of a second. The next quarter of a second difference covers second place to eleventh, from Aleix Espargaro to Danilo Petrucci. It is incredibly close at Assen, except at the front. One man reigns supreme.
Where did Valentino Rossi get his new-found speed from? From a change to the balance of the bike which the team tried on Saturday at Barcelona. That base set up still worked when they used it in the new chassis he tested at Aragon after the Barcelona round, and it worked here at Assen. The new chassis is really just a refinement of the previous one, offering improved grip when tire wear starts to kick in, and making the bike even easier to ride – HRC take note. Rossi was skeptical when he was first told about the new chassis, as the improvements were to areas where they bike was already strong. Why make it better there, instead of working on areas where it is weaker? Because improving your strong points is just as good a way of going fast as improving your weak points. Especially when it means improving grip and bike manageability.
Rossi's speed, however, underlines what a truly remarkable rider the Italian is. His hunger is keener than ever, his focus is sharper than ever, his talent is as yet undimmed. And how brightly that talent shines, and has shone. If anything, he is getting better with age, free of the distractions of a younger man, more keenly aware of what he really wants from life, enjoying the racing as much, if not more, than ever.
Rossi claims he was never a great qualifier, and looking at the last five years, with just three pole positions, you would have to agree. Look a little further back and that claim looks a little more tenuous: in 2009, Rossi had seven poles and started from the from row thirteen times. Between 2001 and 2007, he had at least four poles every season, and a lot more front row starts. He has really suffered since the introduction of the new qualifying system, but he showed no signs of concern at Assen. He said he needed to improve his qualifying if he had any hope of holding off the challenge of Jorge Lorenzo, who has come to within a single point of Rossi in the championship. Pole position at Assen is the right time and the right place to reverse the recent momentum.
Was it the tires which slowed up Jorge Lorenzo, leaving him down in eighth on the grid? A little perhaps, but not as much as you may think. Lorenzo had struggled with the tires on Thursday, Bridgestone having brought the same tires here as they did last year, with a slightly harder edge to prevent the tire problems they had here in 2012, when they were shedding chunks of rubber. By Friday, though, he had a handle on the situation, his pace in FP4 far more promising than before, especially on used tires. Lorenzo had expected Bridgestone to bring tires with the 2015 modifications, having gone a little softer on the edge to enhance feel. They did not, and Lorenzo took a day to get his head around them. Now he has, he will be far more competitive in the race. He is still struggling in two sectors, however, and that was where he was losing time during qualifying. Lorenzo needs a little bit of help during warm up, and a good start to allow him to pass a few people on the way to the first turn. If he can get that, he has a chance to try to reverse the momentum in the championship, and get the pendulum to swing back in his direction.
While the Yamaha riders have both moved forward, switching to a new chassis, Marc Márquez has gone backward, using the 2014 frame with the 2015 swingarm and new front forks. It has made the bike more consistent and predictable, and allowed Márquez to put in longer runs at a more consistent pace. Every lap no longer feels like qualifying, and the reigning champion is more confident of finishing the race. He had expected to be further behind the Yamahas, and he is not, and his pace is consistent and fast. Márquez may finally be able to race the leaders without ending up in the gravel. Or it could Misano 2014 all over again.
The Suzukis have impressed once again, Aleix Espargaro getting onto the front row, and Maverick Viñales ending up in ninth. Of course, both riders have the soft tire at their disposal, which helped to get closer to the front. Just how much it actually helps is debatable: at Assen, the soft and medium tires are both very close indeed, the Suzukis both seriously considering racing the soft if the temperatures do not rise too high. Espargaro put the difference at about a tenth of a second, a difference which would have put him third instead of second.
Cal Crutchlow's complaint about the soft tire was rather different. As they have two tires they can use, he told us, they effectively have a larger allocation for the weekend. "The issue I have with it now is that they're able to use more tires than us over the weekend," he told us. "They can use eleven tires over the weekend, we can only use seven. Because the hard here, there is no point to use it, somebody tried it once or twice. It means that they've got eleven tires to use. When we put our new tire in at the end of the practice, they put a new soft in. And then, in the next session, they can start with another new tire, where we can't. And also that carries over to the next day. So tomorrow morning, I have to start with a used tire, same as Marc, same as Dani, we're all in the same boat. But Ducati don't and Suzuki don't, they can just keep throwing tires in. So really, they've got a four tire advantage. " Whether they can translate that four tire advantage into a podium remains to be seen.
A curious incident at the start of Q2 had costly consequences for both Valentino Rossi and Aleix Espargaro. Rossi was first out of pit lane, but he timed his exit just a little early. He passed the line demarcating pit lane exit about a second and a half early, while the red lights were on and the red flags were being shown. The infraction was felt to have offered them an unfair advantage, and both riders were fined €2,000, and had their first flying lap time canceled. That mattered very little, as both Rossi and Espargaro set their fastest times towards the end of the session. But it is right for Race Direction to be vigilant.
Marc Márquez got lucky. Like Espargaro, he too was following Rossi out of pit lane. But he was just a few meters behind Espargaro when he crossed the line. That meant he was leaving pit lane exit exactly as the lights dimmed and the flags were being withdrawn. Like Andrea Iannone's non-jump start in Mugello, he owes his failure to be given a penalty more to luck than to judgment. His timing was perfect, but it was also completely accidental. Perhaps it is an omen that his luck is starting to change.
In Moto2, there are once again three riders a cut above the rest. Best of the lot is Johann Zarco, the Frenchman looking increasingly in control of the intermediate class. His pole was taken with a clear advantage, and reflects the strength of Zarco this year in Moto2. He is joined on the front row by Tito Rabat and Sam Lowes, the three men starting to form a clear group who will be fighting for the championship.
In Moto3, Enea Bastianini once again shone, taking his second pole in a row at Assen. Both he and Danny Kent were fast in practice, and significantly, set their lap times mostly alone. The Moto3 title looks to increasingly be coming down to a battle between the Italian and the Englishman, with a clear advantage to the British rider so far. Kent himself was not flustered: he had done a long run of 12 laps at a very strong pace on medium race tires, and was less concerned about starting fourth on the grid. It is possible to make a break and make it stick at Assen. It would be unwise to bet against that happening on Saturday.
The biggest question mark over Assen is what the weather will do. How hard it is to make predictions, the professional weather forecasters are finding out. The forecast changes every time that you look at it, the time that rainfall is expected getting earlier and earlier. It looks likely to rain at Assen on Saturday. The question is whether it will rain at 2am in the morning, or 2pm in the afternoon. If it rains in the afternoon, that would throw a real spanner in the works. If that happens, then all bets are off again.
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Comments
Thanks David!
My enjoyment of MotoGP, Moto2 and Moto3 would not be as complete as it is without your commentary and insights. Your writing enhances my understanding of the series, the factories, the riders and teams that participate. Really appreciate the hard work and understanding that you bring to the series!
Can Suzuki really race the soft tire?
It's easy enough to dismiss the soft tire as only being worth one place in qualifying, but if it's really capable of lasting race distance, that could equate to several seconds at the finish. Is there really any likelihood of either Suzuki bike going out on the soft option? That could certainly make things interesting (for at least a few laps anyway).
My apologies
on the comment in the Q thread. Bravo David
2000EUR "Costly"
Do me a favour. Rossi would notice 2000euro like the rest of us would notice dropping small change! :)
When top-end sportsmen (of any discipline) cop fines like this it makes me laugh, it is mainly a bit of revenue raising for the governing body, rather than any real deterrent for the transgressor. However the same fine for some guy riding for nothing in a middling Moto2 team might be a huge deal.
A 2000euro fine in the real world is more like a fortnight's salary (gross), for the top end of the MotoGP field that might be like a 350-400 thousand euro fine! Start handing those out, donate half to a fund for severely injured racers, a quarter to the host track for safety upgrades, and the other quarter to Carmelo Espeleta to buy something other than a cardigan! :D
Roll on Assen, looking forward to the race and hoping someone can run with Rossi. Assen is always a pivotal round.
In reply to 2000EUR "Costly" by breganzane
"They levied a €2,000 fine on Rossi..."
Which he recouped in VR46 T-shirt sales by then end of his pole lap!...
That's some pretty funny stuff.
In reply to 2000EUR "Costly" by breganzane
Fines go to charity
All fines levied on riders go to charity. The organizing bodies, Dorna, IRTA, the FIM, none of them see a penny of it.
In reply to Fines go to charity by David Emmett
Thanks
That's good to hear, but my point was that fixed fines are pointless in a game where the top guys might earn several million (or tens thereof) euro, while others barely make an income at all.
I think it's Finland where they relate the traffic fines to your income, I have vague memories of the boss of Nokia getting a half million euro speeding fine some years back.
Thanks for the detailed reporting!
Thanks for the detailed reporting!
advantages of the soft tyre
Hello, Cal and others complaining about the soft tyre advantages - quicker QP, more tyres available to use, etc...
Guess what? It's SUPPOSED to be an advantage to help the new or underperforming teams.
On Cal
What i once thought was honest and unfiltered insight on paddock matters now seems like incessant whining. He simply refuses to be content and not in a i-am-going-to-harness-my-frustration-and-show-them way. Whether it was his gas tank while at Tech3, lack of support from Yamaha, having to buy his own Brembos, his shock and disappointment at how bad Ducati really was, his digs at Dovi or now his tire tirade, i am unfortunately at the point where i just dismiss what he has to say and that is too bad.
If anyone has seen 'A Bronx Tale' he is the Motogp equivalent of The Mush. Whatever he moans about he ends up getting and then $hits the bed with it.
My rant over. I just hope we don't get the 'this race is going to be awesome' curse. It seems whenever the field is this tight we get a snoozer. (Did i just whine?).
Nothing about Dani...
Not a die-hard Rossi fan but, he is still a force to reckon with! If Lorenzo can't find his mojo back during the warm-up, we are likely to see Rossi just cruise by to a comfortable victory. He is just SO FAST here!
Would be good if HRC boys can manage and get into the mix, but I feel they will struggle again with their 'setup'.
Also, David, I am a bit disappointed with this write-up. Yesterday, you mentioned how 'ironic' it is that Pedrosa, despite being a talented rider, has been often underrated by all. And in this very article, you did not mention him even once (apart from Cal's quote, of course). I thought he was pretty quick for most parts of the practice sessions and, hence, deserved your attention. A few words on where he stands among Rossi, Marquez and Lorenzo in the race would have been appreciated. If anyone can beat these three, it's likely going to be Pedrosa. I was really looking forward to get some insights from you regarding Pedrosa's race-pace etc. Hope you take this in a positive way. :)
In reply to Nothing about Dani... by Stigwannabe
My home round
This is my home round. I have so much more to do than at a normal round. That means I am not getting to even start my round ups until very late, and they are shorter than normal (between 500 and 1000 words).
So I did indeed miss out on Pedrosa. I also missed out on Pol Espargaro, who is looking much better than normal, after a few dismal rounds. I missed out on Bradley Smith, who had a poor qualifying but is fast. I missed out on Danilo Petrucci, who is having a very strong weekend. I should have written much more about the Suzukis, and I didn't mention the Ducatis. No time, and it is a constant source of disappointment that there aren't enough hours in the day. I may start to redress that by taking a look at what happened to the people I don't mention during the weekend in a post later in the week.
In reply to My home round by David Emmett
Can't get enough...
Haha! Well, of course, we can't get enough of your write-ups, you see. Thanks for reverting. Looking forward to your post-race write up now. Let's hope we have a cracker of race today!
Interesting....
Today as jorge said its a challenge for him to get to the front. I hope if he does that people will get that he too can come from behind and fight at the front. Though its clear rossi will be faster, no matter how hard jorge tries, how he modifies his style when he will have to fight he will again act with his instincts like he did in qualifying and lose too much time in sector 2 and 4
In reply to Interesting.... by 99bunny
Of course
Jorge can fight to the front from 8th, he is and will always be faster than at least 5 of the guys in front of him... Podium, probably... Win, just depends if he gets a break at the first corner as I don't think it's as easy as somewhere like Barcelona to make up huge amounts of places. If anyone can, Jorge can though.
In reply to Of course by Tourn46
Nice
Its good to be optimistic for lorenzo but still the task is an uphill one for him, even marc will be there atleast in the first 10 laps as he showed in warm up.....lets see