samedi 27 juillet 2013


Decision of the Grand Prix Commission
Friday, 26 July 2013


The Grand Prix Commission, composed of Messrs. Carmelo Ezpeleta (Dorna, Chairman), Ignacio Verneda (FIM Executive Director, Sport), Herve Poncharal (IRTA) and Takanao Tsubouchi (MSMA) in the presence of Javier Alonso (Dorna) and Mike Trimby (IRTA, Secretary of the meeting), in a meeting held on 13 July 2013 in Sachsenring (GER), made the following decisions:


Technical Regulations MotoGP Class - Effective 2014
Electronics (ECU) Regulations
A detailed specification and permitted options were confirmed.
The use of the official MotoGP ECU, including an internal datalogger, and the official MotoGP software package is compulsory.
Maximum fuel capacity is 24 litres.
Maximum number of engines per rider, per season, is 12.
Factory Status
Each Manufacturer, (including motorcycle manufacturers and chassis manufacturers), can choose to enter up to 4 riders for the season who will participate with “Factory” status.
The use of the official MotoGP ECU is compulsory. However manufacturers are permitted to develop and use their own software.
Maximum fuel capacity is 20 litres.
Maximum number of engines per rider, per season, is five. (Nine Engines for the first year of participation by a new manufacturer).
Engines are subject to the engine homologation regulations which mandate frozen engine design and internal parts. (New Manufacturers are not subject to frozen engine design and internal parts in their first season of participation).


jeudi 25 juillet 2013


With winters frost being broken by an early warm-up in England  the G.50 was taken out for a nice stroll at Anglesey.
With the expense of their daughter Elizabeth's college tuition looming along with recent changes in the classic racing world, selling the beloved G.50 was a hard, but necessary choice for Frank and Carol Melling.
I have, or more accurately had, what our Managing Editor Bart Madson called, with admirable wit, “A First World Problem.”

In fact, the problem was also an interesting metaphor on a wider range of issues which are now dominating motorcycle racing so please indulge me by allowing me to tell you the whole story.

The problem was our beloved G.50 – and my daughter’s education: the two are symbiotic in this case. For British kids whose parents are in employment, as distinct from receiving any of the vast range of benefits showered on those who prefer not to work in Britain, college is an expensive exercise. Done on a tight budget, it’s a $20,000 a year project and kids leave school with a degree – but carrying an elephant sized debt on their shoulders.

We decided to do what we could to help our daughter and she kept her side of the bargain by doing her first degree in two years and, fingers crossed, will complete her second degree next year.

However, two degrees barely get the young adult on the back of the job seekers’ starting grid so, as a family, we decided that Elizabeth would do her Master’s degree before taking a teaching qualification. This was another $25,000 and we simply didn’t have any more money.

However, we did have a G.50 which, even second-hand, was worth a lot of money. But sell the G.50? Goodness me, two years ago I would have rather cut off my right arm. However, things have changed in the classic racing world – and not for the better. Last year, Carol and I took the G.50 to a prestigious classic race and all the top six riders used three sets of tires – including ultra-soft “Qualifiers” with a working life of five laps. Now three sets of classic racing tires is $1500. Add $350 entry fee and $150 for diesel and that’s a $2000 weekend – and we’re simply not a $2000 per race family.

After playing with his G.50 at the Bikers Classics event in Belgium  our correspondent caught a glimpse of the general motorcycling public in his travels through central and sourthern Europe.
Selling the G.50 was made easier by the fact that it cost a fortune to maintain and repair. It had also become uncompetitive against other G50s on the grid.
Our G.50 was also uncompetitive. G50s now come in many flavors and a standard bike like ours was not on the pace.

Finally, racing a G.50 can be a terrifyingly expensive exercise. A new, race ready engine is over $20,000 and once again, we’re not a $20,000 family in this respect either!

The cost of a G.50 also made Carol and me very nervous about working on the bike – very nervous indeed. Make the slightest mistake and the bill is never in hundreds of dollars – only thousands.

The last part of the equation was that we had five fabulous, and utterly unmissable, years with our G.50. I only fell off the bike once and it never let us down. In those five glorious seasons I managed to get on to the podium twice in real road races and also took home a trophy from a British championship race. Could a clubman racer ever ask for more?

So, the G.50 went to a new home and we could continue to make some contribution to Elizabeth’s long term future.

The next step in the process should have been to hang up my leathers, sell the race trailer and become a spectator. After all, my first event was a horse and cart race just after the Pilgrim Fathers landed in Plymouth, Massachusetts and I had done virtually everything in the racing book – and usually multiple times too.

The problem is that racing is peculiarly addictive. When the lights go out the years roll back and, at least until the following morning, all the aches and pains which come from being an ancient, disappear and are replaced by a near mystical sense of clarity and joy for life that few other activities can equal. In short, the race track is a truly wonderful place to be.

Carol, my wife, business partner and best friend sensed the sadness and regret and, as always, put her finger right on the core of the problem. “Yes,” she opined, “you do need to retire – but only when you’re old. Put it off for a bit…”

The problem was what to race. There was no point in spending a lot of money on a classic race bike because this would simply abrogate the financial benefits of selling the G.50 in the first place, and the affordable race bikes were cheap for a very good reason! 





Then the lights came on inside both our heads – and simultaneously too. At the back of the garage, under dust covers, was our beloved Seeley Suzuki – the bike which had been with us most of our married life.

Bringing the Seeley Suzuki out of retirement after parting ways with the G.50.
Bringing the Seeley Suzuki out of retirement after parting ways with the G.50 marked the start of a new chapter in Melling's racing life.
The Seeley had virtually not turned a wheel during the five years we had the G.50 but it still had one heck of a racing pedigree with a lot of success to its credit. Better still, we had owned the bike from new and so in every way it was our bike.

Let me digress at this stage and introduce the Seeley Suzuki. It is a replica of the bike which launched Barry Sheene’s career as a big bike rider. Here’s the full story.

In essence, Colin Seeley, the genius of British frame building, took a Suzuki Cobra engine and built a chassis around it which was capable of Grand Prix success and in so doing got Barry the factory Suzuki ride which was to lead to his two world championships.

It’s a bike I have always loved and although dramatically different from the G.50 it is still a happy, easy going and very rider friendly machine.

So, it was with a sense of real joy that we ran the Seeley to the workbench and gave it a thorough re-commissioning. The bike is a simple bike to work on and modern technology has made it even easier. Before it went into hibernation, the 20 year old electronic ignition system had been starting to get sulky so I ordered a brand new, solid state unit from Germany and this brought the bike instantly up to date with a spark you could weld from.



The pistons and cylinder bores were fine so we’ve left these alone for this year and the cycle parts were almost ready to go. British racing regulations demand that there is no gap between the rear sprocket and chain and the old, plastic “shark’s tooth” was looking tired so I spent an afternoon cutting, drilling and filing a sheet of Duralumin to make a new item. Since I have the hand craft skills of a drunken, three-toed sloth what would have been a 15 minute job for a real metal worker stretched out to three hours for me. However, at the end I felt an immense sense of satisfaction. With the G.50, it was merely a case of phoning up and, $100 later, a new, perfectly made, carbon fibre shark’s tooth would have been on its way to me. What I discovered as I was playing with the Seeley was a sense of involvement with the bike which was missing with the G.50. 

The twin-cylinder Suzuki engine dates from 1967 and is stone-axe simple.
The twin-cylinder Suzuki engine dates from 1967 and is stone-axe simple.
However, there were some things which I couldn’t fix with my bumbling, amateur mechanic skills and the big problem was caused by the tires. The Seeley is a fine, very fine, chassis but it is a 43-year-old design and in four decades the change in tire technology has been immense.

Current classic racing tires are so good that they put unimaginable stresses on the chassis and actually lead to handling problems. The fix for me is always to visit Ron Williams, of Maxton Engineering, whose factory is fortunately three miles away from our house.

Ron is one of the great unsung heroes of motorcycle racing and can rightly be called a genius. He was Freddie Spencer’s boss – and you don’t get to be a Honda Grand Prix team manager by being fairly good at racing. Maxton make some of the highest spec suspension in the world and, being of a certain age, Ron is still a fan of classic racing.

As an aside, the reason you don’t hear much about Maxton in the US is because of product liability insurance. With small volume production, the cost of the insurance makes selling in America prohibitively expensive – a problem exacerbated by the permanent waiting list for Maxton products in Europe: they simply can’t keep up with demand!

Almost as an addendum to the modern shocks, Maxton make classic racing shocks which look, superficially at least, a bit like the old Girlings we used to have but are fully gas pressurized and have state of the art damping internals with a vast range of external adjustment. In every way, they are cutting edge technology.

The Maxton shocks have a classic look but are fully gas pressurized and have state-of-the-art damping internals with a vast range of adjustment.
The Maxton shocks have a classic look but are fully gas pressurized and have state-of-the-art damping internals with a vast range of adjustment.
One might think that improved shocks simply improve the feel at the rear of the bike – which they do – but they also have a huge effect on the front end too. Ron put what he thought was the best weight of rear springs on the shocks based on my weight – and yes, you actually do have to get weighed at Maxton so your Maxi burger and double large fries will reveal the whole truth and nothing but the truth – and skill level. A quick rider has a very different riding style to a Muppet clubman like me and we both need different shocks which is why Maxton build the suspension units individually to suit the customer.

With the motor running like a dream, we took the bike to the Anglesey Circuit for a shake-down run and immediately found front end chatter which would have made the Ducati team wince. Classic racers hate front end chatter as much as MotoGP deities – maybe more so because Carol would beat me stupid if I fell off!

Back at Maxton, the ever patient Ron listened carefully and then increased the weight of the rear spring by 0.2kg – under half a pound. Now if, like me, you are skeptical when you read of MotoGP riders transforming the handling of their bikes when they change the ride height by 1mm I would forgive you for thinking that a slightly stiffer rear spring would have any effect on a classic race bike’s handling. However, you would be wrong. The new spring transformed the front end and vastly reduced the amount of chatter. So now I had a bike with a lovely, easy to ride 53 horsepower engine, 2200 rpm wide powerband, sweet gearbox and handling which would make your Grandma feel safe.

And so to Bart’s apt description of my “First World Problem”. Yes, the G.50 did go in order to support Elizabeth’s education, but rather than being cast into the pit of perdition, which would be life without racing, I have to struggle along riding a beautiful GP bike which Barry Sheene would have been proud to ride. Truly, it’s a tough life. 


mardi 23 juillet 2013


Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Honda Racing has announced that former MotoGP world champion, Casey Stoner, will return to the track this year for the first time since his departure from the sport at the conclusion of the 2012 season. Stoner will conduct four tests in Motegi aboard the RC213V and he’ll also be testing the new production racer Honda plans to make available to select teams in MotoGP next year. Rumors have circulated recently that the Australian rider would make a wild card appearance sometime this season, but Honda PR dismisses that possibility. Stoner and HRC Executive Vice President Shuhei Nakamoto offered their comments in the announcement, both of which are included below.

Casey Stoner: 
"It's been almost 7 months now since Valencia and I'm still happy and comfortable with the decision I made to stop racing. Sometimes I miss riding my RCV, so I am happy that HRC asked me to do some tests in Motegi this year. This will allow me to enjoy what I miss: riding a MotoGP bike! I'm looking forward to getting on the bike and see how it has changed from last year and I'd like to thank Honda for this opportunity"

Shuhei Nakamoto: 
"We are very pleased to have Casey back on a Honda! He knows this machine very well and I'm sure he can help our engineers and technicians with the development of the RC213V. We will also ask him to test the new production racer and give us his initial feedback to assist us in producing the best machine possible" 


Monday, 22 July 2013

Dani Pedrosa has revealed that he nearly took the decision to miss Sunday’s US Grand Prix, having felt unwell following his heavy crash a week earlier.

On the Saturday of the previous weekend’s German Grand Prix, Pedrosa had suffered a heavy blow during a highside accident at the Sachsenring. He travelled to California on Thursday, then missing both the first and third practice sessions at Laguna Seca.
“First of all, I want to thank everyone who has supported me over these past few days,” says the Repsol Honda Team rider. “This was a race in which it was very important to take points.
“I was seriously considering sitting out this race because the conditions were very difficult, so I am very happy to have taken fifth.
“We were close to the podium, but on the final laps I found things very hard. I think that I held up well in the race, although I was in a lot of pain the entire weekend. At least I was able to grip the handlebars and control the bike.
“A lot of times, moving the bike makes it tough for you and it is difficult to ride a long race. In the end, the 11 points are very important for the championship.”
Pedrosa crossed the Mazda Raceway finish line in fifth position; although he lost further ground to winning teammate Marc Marquez, he critically finished in front of Yamaha Factory Racing’s Jorge Lorenzo to remain second in the standings.

Monday, 22 July 2013

Cal Crutchlow could not help but leave Laguna Seca dissatisfied on Sunday, having struggled for the majority of the weekend before ending the race in seventh place.

Retirements aside, seventh marked Crutchlow’s worst MotoGP™ finishing position since the German Grand Prix of 2012 in which he finished eighth. Championship wise, he now drops one position behind Valentino Rossi to fifth overall.
“That was a difficult end to a very difficult weekend and in all honesty I never got comfortable with the bike at any stage here,” admitted the Monster Yamaha Tech 3 rider, who had qualified with his second bike following a crash with the first.
“It is my worst result of the season so far and I can’t be happy because I gave up some valuable points in the championship. Maybe last year in the same situation I would have pushed and not finished, so that is one positive we can take from what was a tough weekend and it certainly isn’t how I wanted to go into the summer break.
“Right from the start of the race I was on the limit and couldn’t go any faster. I got beaten fair and square and the three on the podium definitely deserved it. I tried my best and didn’t give up, but sometimes you have to accept you can’t do any better.
“It has been a pretty hectic month so now I am looking forward to getting some rest and I will be back even more motivated in Indianapolis.”
The next race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway will take place on the weekend of 17-18 August. Crutchlow finished his 2011 race in 11th position before retiring in 2012.

dimanche 21 juillet 2013


marquez race laguna motogp
Sunday, 21 July 2013

Marc Marquez has won Sunday’s Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix at the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, becoming the youngest ever back-to-back race winner in MotoGP™. The Repsol Honda Team rider extended his championship lead while LCR Honda MotoGP’s Stefan Bradl celebrated a first premier class podium finish from pole position. Valentino Rossi held off Alvaro Bautista for the final rostrum spot.

On Saturday, Bradl had stormed to a maiden pole position while Marquez suffered a crash in qualifying. On Sunday, the Spaniard patiently followed the German before pulling off a clean manoeuvre at the end of the 19th lap. Five riders failed to make the distance at the notoriously difficult anti-clockwise circuit, the shortest on the calendar.
Marquez’s third victory of the year equals the sum of reigning World Champion Jorge Lorenzo. The Repsol Honda rider sank as low as fourth after a poor start, but stayed ahead of Bautista in the early stages and crucially pulled off a confident pass on Rossi at the world-famous Corkscrew corner. He soon homed in on Bradl, overtaking the German and winning by 2.2 seconds. In doing so, Marquez wins for the second time within the space of a week and steals former double champion Freddie Spencer’s record of being the youngest MotoGP™ rider to triumph in consecutive Grands Prix. Furthermore, he makes history by becoming the first rookie rider to win at Laguna Seca.
Bradl’s ride to second was one of calm and composure. A clean getaway allowed the LCR Honda MotoGP rider to head the field from his first ever pole in the top class. The 2011 Moto2™ World Champion was assisted by the fact that those behind him were battling early on, but by the 17thtour had the recovering Marquez only two tenths of a second behind. Once the overtake had occurred two laps later, Bradl comfortably managed a two-second gap back to Rossi to clinch his maiden premier class podium, improving on his previous best of fourth – achieved on three occasions.
Having not finished on the podium until he won Round 7 at Assen, Yamaha Factory Racing’s Rossi has now taken the chequered flag inside the top three for as many races in a row. The Italian, who had famously overtaken Casey Stoner at the Corkscrew five years ago, was this time passed in the same place by Marquez before holding off a significant attack from Bautista over the closing laps; the Spaniard briefly edged ahead before the final corner, but was kept behind. Another third place for Rossi sees him jump ahead of Cal Crutchlow for fourth in the standings.
Laguna Seca had always promised to be a weekend of damage limitation for both Lorenzo (Yamaha Factory Racing) and Pedrosa (Repsol Honda Team). Both men continued to suffer with left collarbone injuries as they finished fifth and sixth, with Pedrosa having moved ahead of his rival in an overtake at the Andretti Hairpin. The duo finished in front of Monster Yamaha Tech 3’s Crutchlow, who on Saturday had been left confused by a crash before taking part in Q2 with his second bike.
The top ten was completed by Ducati Team’s Nicky Hayden and Andrea Dovizioso – who during the race made side-to-side contact on the start/finish straight – and Avintia Blusens’ Hector Barbera, who became the first rider other than Aleix Espargaro to lead the CRT runners in 2013. Espargaro crashed at the last corner, while Power Electronics Aspar teammate Randy de Puniet retired with technical problems. Tech 3’s Bradley Smith also stopped with mechanical gremlins, while the first two retirements were PBM’s Michael Laverty and NGM Mobile Forward Racing’s Claudio Corti.
In 11th, Ignite Pramac Racing’s Alex de Angelis scored while covering for the injured Ben Spies, while Colin Edwards finished 12th for Forward Racing. The top 15 was completed by Danilo Petrucci (Came IodaRacing Project), Karel Abraham (Cardion AB Motoracing) and Yonny Hernandez (PBM).
With the first half of the season now completed, MotoGP™ heads into its summer break before returning with the Red Bull Indianapolis Grand Prix in mid-August. Marquez carries a 16-point advantage over teammate Pedrosa and has finished on the podium in eight of his first nine races since joining the premier class as reigning Moto2™ World Champion.


Sunday, 21 July 2013

FIM World Supersport rider Andrea Antonelli has succumbed to his injuries after suffering a crash at the Moscow Raceway on Sunday.

During Sunday's FIM World Supersport race, Italian rider Andrea Antonelli (Team Goeleven Kawasaki) suffered a serious accident on the straight between Turn 14 and Turn 15 wherein he sustained critical injuries.
The race was stopped with the red flag and the rider was immediately taken to an ambulance where the medical staff worked to resuscitate him.
Despite their efforts, Andrea sadly succumbed to his injuries at 2.10pm local time (GMT +4).
FIM, Dorna and YMS Promotion decided to cancel all activities scheduled for the rest of the day.
Everyone involved in motorcycle championships extend their deepest condolences to Andrea’s family, friends, team and Italian Federation over this tragic loss.
A minute of silence in Andrea's memory will be held on Sunday at the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca ahead of the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix.

samedi 20 juillet 2013


marquez fp3 motogp laguna
Saturday, 20 July 2013

Marc Marquez may have learned the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca only a day earlier, but on Saturday morning very much threw down the gauntlet for his MotoGP™ rivals. The Repsol Honda Team rider lowered the best lap time to 1’21.568, leading the way from Yamaha Factory Racing’s Valentino Rossi and LCR Honda MotoGP’s Stefan Bradl.

The first news of the day was that Marquez’s teammate Dani Pedrosa, still nursing a collarbone injury, elected not to take part for the second time in three sessions. That means the former championship leader, who missed last weekend’s German Grand Prix, will later be running in Q1 for the first time. He finished 11th on the combined timesheets, whereas Rossi’s teammate Jorge Lorenzo – also with a collarbone injury – improved his time and rose to seventh place.
The first to move inside the 1’22.000 barrier, Marquez confidently led the way but Rossi was one of only three riders to complete 23 laps and moved to within two tenths of the rookie during the closing moments. Bradl was the only other runner to post a 1’21 lap time, as GO&FUN Honda Gresini’s Alvaro Bautista and Monster Yamaha Tech 3’s Cal Crutchlow were demoted to fourth and fifth spots.
There were no significant incidents, but several riders ran off-track. This included Rossi, Alex de Angelis who is covering for the injured Ben Spies at Pramac Racing Team, Gresini’s Bryan Staring and Power Electronics Aspar’s Aleix Espargaro who once again set the pace for the CRT representatives. There was immense disappointment for Blake Young, as the American wildcard rider withdrew from the event after damaging his Attack Performance Racing APR frame on Friday; with his only bike left irreparable this weekend, he will be back in action at Indianapolis.
The two Americans left in action ended up eighth and 16th on the combined timesheets, in the form of Nicky Hayden (Ducati Team, running a golden 69 on the front of his bike as well as a modified helmet design) and Colin Edwards (NGM Mobile Forward Racing). The top ten, which includes Ducati Team’s Andrea Dovizioso and Tech 3’s Bradley Smith, will this afternoon head directly to the Q2 Qualifying phase and will be joined by the top pair of riders from Q1. The rest of the field will fill grid positions 13th and downwards, depending on their Q1 results.
Following Free Practice 4, which has no bearing on the running order for Qualifying, Q1 for the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix will start at 2:10pm local time (GMT -7).



bradl qualifying laguna motogp
Saturday, 20 July 2013

Germany’s Stefan Bradl has achieved a first ever MotoGP™ pole position for the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix. The LCR Honda MotoGP rider will start alongside Repsol Honda Team’s Marc Marquez and GO&FUN Honda Gresini’s Alvaro Bautista. Jorge Lorenzo and Dani Pedrosa have qualified sixth and seventh, respectively.

Courtesy of a 1’21.176 lap time, Bradl becomes the first ever German to clinch pole in the premier class of the World Championship. Not only is he the second rider to clinch a maiden pole this season, but he has also become the first ever rider to achieve the qualifying top spot at Laguna Seca aboard a satellite machine.
Marquez - whose challenge ended with a crash at Turn 6, four minutes before the chequered flag came out - was 17 thousandths of a second slower on his first weekend at the Californian circuit, having topped three or the four practice sessions, while Bautista starts on the front row for the first time since taking pole position at Silverstone last year. Row 2 is headed up by Yamaha Factory Racing’s Valentino Rossi, ahead of Monster Yamaha Tech 3’s Cal Crutchlow who appeared late in Q2 on his second bike, having crashed his first at Turn 3 during final practice.
Rossi’s teammate Lorenzo, still suffering from a broken and very painful left collarbone and who missed last weekend’s German Grand Prix, will set off from sixth place and the back of the second row. Repsol Honda’s Dani Pedrosa was also absent from the Sachsenring race as well as Free Practices 1 and 3 here; he - similarly suffering with his left collarbone - will head up Row 3, having moved into the shootout from Q1 for the first time, ahead of Ducati Team’s Andrea Dovizioso who jumped ahead of Tech 3’s Bradley Smith late in Q2.
Americans Nicky Hayden and Colin Edwards will start tenth and 15th for their respective Ducati Team and NGM Mobile Forward Racing outfits, but compatriot and wildcard entrant Blake Young has withdrawn from the event after damaging his sole Attack Performance Racing APR frame in a crash on Friday. There was also a crash for Randy de Puniet, as the Frenchman - who had reached Q2 for the third time this year - went down at Turn 3. He will start 12th, ahead of teammate Aleix Espargaro who led the CRTs for the ninth time in as many races this season.
In 14th spot will be Ignite Pramac Racing’s Alex de Angelis, making a one-off return to the top class from Moto2™ as a substitute for Ben Spies, who is set to make a comeback at Indianapolis following the summer break. Energy T.I. Pramac Racing’s Andrea Iannone, who would have been alongside de Angelis in the garage, has not travelled to the USA after dislocating his right shoulder last time out in Germany. Another faller in qualifying was Karel Abraham (Cardion AB Motoracing, 19th on grid), who went down and slid across the Turn 10 gravel trap in Q1.
Sunday’s Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix starts at 2pm local time (GMT -7). The chequered flag will mark the halfway point in the 2013 MotoGP™ season.





MotoGP™ World Championship leader Marc Marquez is preparing to race at Laguna Seca for the first time. He will no doubt be relishing the thought of pushing hard through the Corkscrew, but what advice do his more experienced colleagues have for him ahead of his journey into the Californian unknown?




Bradl second but yet to be satisfied
Friday, 19 July 2013

Stefan Bradl finished second in Friday’s opening day of practice for the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix. Despite his top two placing, the German still has several tasks to complete.

The LCR Honda MotoGP rider’s best effort of 1’22.269 left him two tenths of a second down on pace-setter Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team), although Bradl found himself making up lost ground from earlier on in the day at Laguna Seca.
“Already this morning, with tricky track conditions, we showed our pace but honestly the working plan was not perfect,” the German admitted. “We made some small mistakes but in the afternoon we went back to our standard rhythm.
“Actually I was the first guy out on hard tyre but it did not work properly so we lost some track time on that rubber. After that I checked both bikes once again as we compared two different swing arm lengths and I already chose the one for the race.
“Finally I went out on soft tyre and could do a very good lap time, but the session was suddenly red-flagged (for an accident involving wildcard rider Blake Young, Attack Performance Racing). Basically we took the right direction but we still need to improve the front-end in the breaking areas.”
In his home race at the Sachsenring last weekend, Bradl finished fourth which equalled his career-best result so far. With both Jorge Lorenzo (Yamaha Factory Racing) and Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda Team) carrying injuries this weekend, Bradl could be presented with his best chance yet of a career-first MotoGP™ podium.

vendredi 19 juillet 2013


crutchlow fp1 laguna motogp
Friday, 19 July 2013

Cal Crutchlow led Friday’s first practice session ahead of the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix. The Monster Yamaha Tech 3 rider headed Yamaha Factory Racing’s Valentino Rossi and Repsol Honda Team’s Marc Marquez. Both Jorge Lorenzo and Dani Pedrosa were declared fit, but the latter elected to rest on the sidelines.


Amid cool and misty conditions, the field paced themselves in a bid to avoid incidents. Despite being annoyed mid-session following a near miss with Power Electronics Aspar’s Randy de Puniet, Crutchlow posted the quickest time of 1’22.757 which edged out Rossi by less than one tenth of a second. Championship leader Marquez was two tenths off the pace on his first visit to the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, which hosts Round 9 of 18 this season.
Stefan Bradl and Alvaro Bautista completed the top five for LCR Honda MotoGP and GO&FUN Honda Gresini, respectively, whereas World Champion Lorenzo (Yamaha Factory Racing) cautiously rode his way to 11th position and was informed via his pit board that 2013 newcomer Marquez, learning the track, was following him on the circuit.
Pedrosa (Repsol Honda Team) decided not to ride in order to avoid excessive stress on his injured left collarbone, while wildcard rider Blake Young finished 21st for Attack Performance Racing and ahead of both regular CRT riders Bryan Staring (GO&FUN Honda Gresini) and Lukas Pesek (Came IodaRacing Project). MotoGP™ Free Practice 2 will start at 2:05pm local time (GMT -7).



Injured Lorenzo approaches Laguna Seca with calm
Lorenzo on his return to action at Laguna Seca
Thursday, 18 July 2013

Yamaha Factory Racing’s Jorge Lorenzo, who only last week re-injured his already broken left collarbone, spoke to motogp.com the evening before the first free practice in Laguna Seca about how he would approach the weekend if passed fit by circuit doctors.


The Spaniard, who had ridden in Assen three weeks ago less than two days after suffering a double broken left collarbone, once again re-damaged the plated injury after a heavy crash in the following round at the Sachsenring. He had initially tweeted that he would sit out the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix and wait for a full recovery before Indianapolis, but feeling slightly better and with the championship closely bunched, decided to travel to America to race.
He commented: "This is the second operation I got in my left collarbone in a month or even less, so it’s not easy to get out all the inflammation. But anyway, I think I am a little bit better than in Assen - there I had only one day of recovery, and now I’ve had almost one week. So I’m better than in Assen, but worse than in Germany."
On his decision to reverse his statement and come out to race he said: "To be honest, I thought it was over, Laguna Seca….I was tired after so many crashes in little time. And two more injuries! I was thinking to stay calm and stay at home and not go to Laguna. But then of course the crash of Dani, that gave me more chance in the championship – and also I felt much better two days later. This for me changed my mind."
Lorenzo is well aware of the physical nature of the track, yet has past experience of not being in great shape there: "It has a lot of changes in direction, and a lot of up and downhill, and it’s a very short track, so we’re going to make 30 laps or even more. When you are perfect physically it’s very hard to finish the race – imagine you are injured, like I’m going to be these days. But also I’ve got some experience here of riding injured.
"In 2008 I was still injured in my two ankles…I re-broke those two ankles in the first lap. But especially in 2009, I didn’t break the collarbone, but had an injury in the ligament of the collarbone. So I raced in a very bad condition and finished third. And in 2011 I crashed after practice when the traction control didn’t work and I had a bad highside and got injured badly in my hip. So I’ve got experience here in Laguna racing injured."
About whether he has set any concrete goals for the weekend he answered: "We don’t know what my condition will be on the bike. Tomorrow we will see. In Laguna in the morning it is normally very cold and slippery with a lot of fog and humidity. It is best to be very calm, see the other riders first before going on track, and be very progressive. This important thing is not to crash, finish this race and lose the minimum points possible."


jeudi 18 juillet 2013


Le Championnat du Monde eni FIM Superbike se rend à Moscou cette semaine pour la huitième manche de la saison 2013. La piste russe avait accueilli le paddock WSBK pour la première fois l'an dernier lors d'un rendez-vous unique.

Tom Sykes (Kawasaki Racing Team) arrive en Russie en étant devenu le premier pilote Kawasaki à mener le classement Superbike depuis Scott Russell en 1994. Russell était alors le Champion en titre et était passé en tête en s'offrant un doublé de victoires à Sugo, au Japon, avant de concéder le titre à Carl Fogarty.

Sykes vise désormais le record de la plus longue série de pole positions, fixé à sept et établi par Ben Spies. Intouchable en Tissot-Superpole depuis la seconde manche de la saison, le Britannique a largement dominé la dernière épreuve à Imola, où il a fini premier puis deuxième.

Délogé du sommet du classement général pour la première fois de l'année, Sylvain Guintoli (Aprilia Racing Team) sera ce week-end l'un des principaux candidats pour freiner la déferlante Tom Sykes. Le Français avait vécu un week-end difficile à Moscou l'an dernier, qu'il avait conclu avec un abandon et une onzième place.

Eugene Laverty (Aprilia Racing Team) et Marco Melandri (BMW Motorrad GoldBet) devront impérativement finir sur le podium pour conserver leurs chances de remporter le titre mondial cette année puisque les deux pilotes sont respectivement à 45 et 53 points du leader à l'approche de la huitième manche. Melandri avait vécu en Russie l'an dernier l'un des plus grands moments de sa carrière puisqu'il était passé en tête du Championnat pour la toute première fois, avant de la concéder lors de l'épreuve suivante.

Après avoir roulé à Suzuka pour préparer leur participation à la course d'endurance des 8 Heures qui aura lieu à la fin du mois, Jonathan Rea et Leon Haslam du team Pata Honda retrouveront leur équipe habituelle ce week-end et tenteront de profiter des progrès réalisés lord du Test Officiel post-course à Imola.

Bien qu'ils ne soient toujours pas montés sur le podium cette année, Leon Camier (FIXI Crescent Suzuki) et Carlos Checa (Team Ducati Alstare) espèrent changer la donne sur la seconde partie de la saison et pourquoi pas ce week-end en Russie.

Loris Baz (Kawasaki Racing Team) avait pris une onzième et une neuvième places en Russie l'an dernier mais visera cette fois-ci le Top 5 tandis que Jules Cluzel (FIXI Crescent Suzuki) avait décroché la pole position et la deuxième place en Supersport.