Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127398
II th after an engine change between
sessions when a titanium valve
stretched. Then carne Stroud, benefitting from chasing Slight in session one
but struggl ing with a bike that refused
to stop wobbling through the long flat o u t kink, then Lopez-Mella riding
more aggressively than for some tim e
at a track which resembles ]arama, and
Knight and Doohan.
Race one
Th e ambi ent temperature was
hovering aro u nd 93 degrees a nd th e
tra ck temperature 115 degrees as the
field mad e a rather mess y start from
th e grid.
Pirovano , unsu rprisingly, grabbed
-th e holeshot by just out-braking Roche
into the first tum. Phillis was third
ahead of Polen before Mertens cam e
flying up past them both.
The Belgian was giving it everything early, leading laps two, three and
four before Phillis stuffed him to take
over from laps five through nine. Then
it was Pirovano's tum again, sliding
underneath the Kawasaki in the kink
at the fastest part of the course in a
neat maneuver. Roche outbraked
Phillis into the left-hand Lucky Strike
Loop which follows and by the end
of the next lap Mertens and Falappa
had pushed the Au stralian back to
fifth .
"The bik e was so slow it wouldn't
pull the skin off a rice pudding,"
Phillis complained later . "The
temperature was real high , the rear tire
was sliding and I was wearing my
unvented leather suit, I could hardly
stand the heat with five laps to go ."
The order behind the top five a t the
end of lap II was Polen, Tardozzi,
Slight, Fogarty all with . the leaders,
then a gap to Rym er and another gap
back to Merkel, who had lucked out
and found a front tire that worked and
was leading th e scrapping teammates
Knight and Stroud.
From this point on, it was all
backwards for Mertens as he lost the
use of the clutch . He eventually
dropped back to ninth. The problem
was an unusual one, the piston in the
Brembo master cyli nder actually having a hole in it.
Roche and Pirovano were now
going right at it, swapping the lead
three times on lap 12 before the Duca ti
rider emerged in front. They even
appeared to hit a t one stage, an
incident which Roche confirmed but
Pirovano denied.
Polen was never a factor, not coming
forward and threatening at all: "The
gearing wasn 't right." he explained
later. " First was too low and second
was too tall so I'm going to change
to my spare bike for race two. I'll also
change compounds because that one
was a little soft, "
For the next few laps the gap
between Roche and Pirovano was
never more than a tenth or two but
on lap 17 it blew out to over a second
after the Yamaha had a big slide. From
there, Roche went on to score an
untroubled win by. 3.5 seconds. But
who would finish second was another
question.
Falappa had dropped out of third
as his left arm and shoulder faded and
he was unable to operate his clutch
lever, but his eventual sixth was still
a meritorious result, Phillis, his times
varying erratically, went back into
third briefly, but coming through hard
was Tardozzi, disposing of and unsettling Polen as he ran him wide under
brakes at Lucky Strike Loop, then
catching Falappa and finally Phillis.
He pressured Pirovano but was
unable to beat him: "My back protector
was too tight and I got cramps, I
couldn't feel my legs for the last 10
laps." Tardozzi gas ped as he slumped
swea t-soaked on a sofa in his garage.
" Also th e front tire was gone with 10
laps to go. " It was liule consola tion
'as he recovered to know tha t he had
no bett er front Pirelli to change to.
Polen wasn 't go ing to win but he
co u ldn' t be kept out of the glory
altogether, setti ng a new lap record at
1:28.69 and pass ing a dispirited Ph ill is
on the last lap. Slight, in sevent h , was
ano ther unhappy Kawasaki p ilot after
being constantly stymied by the fleet
of &"ln~ing Italian V-twins. Fogarty,
agam first H onda, was in the same
posi tio n and unhappy with virtua lly
every aspect of hi s bike -lack of po wer
and a surfei t of vibra tion from th e
spa re motor , tires, gear selection plus
a kn ee scrape r fell off and he damaged
his leathers.
Behind Mertens, Rymer rounded out
the top 10, with Stroud just pipping
Merkel to the line after they traded II th
place twice on the last lap. DeVries and
Mella battled each other through most
of the race, passing an unlucky Knight
in the last cou pIe of laps after his rear
tire did a ' Doo han' and shed a long
strip of tread on the left-hand side. He
was lucky to finish considering the
hol e in the tire went through to th e
canvas.
The tire th at failed had been 'used
as a qualifier by the main Michelin
men because it was too soft for race
conditi ons. But Knigh t had as ked for
a specia l tire and that was all that was
available. The result was probabl y not
surp rising: " For me it was a good
en ginee ring test," joked Michelin's
Laurent ]oly.
Race two
The clouds had moved in but th e
.temperature remained stuck at 93
degrees and track temperature had
gone up to an incredible 122 as th e
field roared away in much tidi er
fashion with Roche holeshotting.
Mertens immediately took over with
Pirovano, Slight, Phillis, Tardozzi,
Falappa, Rymer, Merkel, Polen and
Fogarty making up the lead group as
they ended the first lap.
Stroud had already come in to have
- th e COl changed and was back out
again before the leaders came round
for lap two. T hi s was to have significance lat er in th e race.
Pirovano, with sparks trailing from
his exhaust pipe from the second lap
th anks to a broken bracket, and Slight
were the movers. Both were desperate
to try and break clear of the Ducatis
and their superior drive. By lap five
they were first and second and had eked
out 0.5 sec. over Mertens, with Roche,
Falappa and Phillis in tow.
The Australian's involvement cam e
to an end at th is point when a fork
seal bl ew : "It's just one of those
things," he lamented later. " It' s a 20
cent part and it 's no one's fault. Anders
(Andersson, Ohlins rep) is nearly in
tears . It could have just been a stone
thrown up from the track. The pity
was I was j u st sitting there and
cruising, letting them sort th emselves
OUL "
They would now do that without
him. And Falappa too. He moved past
Roche for fourth on lap nine but
within another four laps was out wh en
the exhaust pipe header broke off on
the rear cylinder.
At th e halfway stage th e o rd er
remained static at the top, with Pol en
hanging off the back. He 'd changed
the gearing on the back-up bike and
was now regretting the decision.
Tardozzi was next and dropping away
as his tired engine lost horsepower
while the grimly determined Fogarty
was hanging on in yet another excel lent ride.
Stephane Mertens qualified third fastest, and finished second in race two.
Italian Davide Tardozzi posted 3·6 finishes aboard his Ducati.
But on tha t lap they cam e within
sight of Stroud and th e next lap they
were on him. While the Kawa sak i rider
kept pressing on, lapping quite hard,
the rest had to find their own wa y
round him. Pirovano managed i t
successfully, but Slight was balked
badl y and lost his 0.8 sec. lead over
Mertens, who swiftly rel ieved him of
secon d place. Then Roche got him as
well , as he battled to get by h is
' tea m mat e' . That was th e en d of
Slight'S challenge for the lead .
Now Roche was on the move. On,
lap 13 he 'd set the fastest lap of the
race at 1:28.7 and he passed Mertens
on lap 18. In a breath-taking move
around the ou tside in the sweepe r he
took Pirovano for th e lead on lap 20.
From th ere he just drew away,
leading by more than three seconds on
lap 25 and then slowing down on the
last lap to win by 2.74 seconds: " All
this year; everytime problems," Roche
said afterwards. "This is the first race
this year without problems."
Again the battle for second heated
up with Mertens taking the pos iti on
o n lap 23. Polen came at him on lap
25, the two of them traded second twice
in two com ers with Mertens tou ghing
it ou t. On the last lap Polen found
a fal se neutral a t the Lucky Strike Loop
and had to strai gh ten the Ducati up,
allowi ng Pirovano and Slight to dive
back th rough .
Tardozzi ch ugged homesixth ah ead
of Fogarty with Crafar putting in a
fin e rid e for eighth ahead of Merkel,
wh o on ly re-passed Lopez-Mell a on the
last lap. Rym er retired on lap 17.
unable to select gears and Fred moved
back into seventh in the championship
but lost more ground to Fogarty in the
battle to be first Honda.
Polen, his incredible run of seven
stra igh t wins brough t to an end iro nica lly th e day before hi s 31st
birihday - now has scored 281 championship po ints. While he is virtually
guaranteed the titl e, second place is
where the big battle lies. Phillis has
189. Ro che , 174 and Pirovano 166.
Even Merten s' 138 is an outside chance.
Fogar ty is still in sixth place while
Merkel mov ed back past Rymer into
seventh and T ardozzi in to a clea r nin th
ahead of Falappa.
a
Results
QUAUFYING: 1. Doug Pol en (I mi nute, 28.08
xrond>J89.0 1 mp h ); 2. Ra ymon d Roch e ( 1:28.56);
3. Srepha ne Mert ens (1:28.64 ); i . Rob Phillis
( 1:28.87); 5. Aaron Sligh, ( 1:29.05); 6. Da vide
Tardom (1:29. 17); 7. ianc:Ulo Falappa ( 1:29.33);
8. Terry Rymer (1:29.56); 9. Fred Merkel ( t :29A I~
10. Fabrizio P irovan o (1:29.19); II . Carl Fogarty
(1:29.57); 12. A. Srroud (1:29.58); U . Juan Lopez
Md la ( 1:30.35); 1-1. j. Knigb, (1:50.53); IS. S. Doohan
( 1:30.72); 16. S. Cra lar (1:50.91); 17. j ellry De Vries
( 1:3 1.22); 18. T . j ordan (1:31.12); 19. jean Yves
Mounier (1:31.58); 20. M. Kua n (1:32.58); 21. S.
o.eung (1:38.89); 22. P. Smo lik ( 1:1 0. 7 1 ~
RACE 1: 1. Raymo nd Roch e (Due); 2. Fabrizio
Pirovano (Yarn); 3. Davide Tardozri ( D~e); 4. Dou g
Pol en (Due ); 5. Rob Ph ill is (Ka w); 6. Gia ncar lo
Fala ppa (Due); 7. Aaron Sligh t ( Ka w~ 8. Car l
Fogarty (H on); 9. Stephane Mm ens (Due); 10. Terry
Rym