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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127741
Slight/Okada was setting the pace,
closely shadowed by the second RC45 of
Itoh/Tsujimoto. Third place was for
Kawasaki riders Yanagawa/Fujiwara,
while the official Yamaha riders - Fujiwara/Yoshikawa in fourth and
Nagai/Edwards directly behind - had
not left each other out of sight for one
single minute.
After Kagayama's crash, Fred Merkel
and Peter Goddard defended the Suzuki
colors brilliantly, holding sixth position.
Mattioli and Mertens were 18th at that
time, and the unfortunates, Gobert and
Hale, were clawing their way back
(Above) From start to finish, It
waa all Honda with the team of
Aaron Slight and Tadayukl
Dkade (11) battling with
Shlnlchlltoh and satoshl
TsuJlmoto (4). The SlightlDkade
duo would prevail.
(Left) The other race - In the
pits. Dkade (left) and Slight
hand off.
Gobert
T
through the Held from 29th and 51st
position, respectively.
The second half of the race was
marked mainly by very strong comebacks by the two factory Kawasakis.
Two hours before the end, Yanagawa
and Fujiwara had set their sights on the
third rostrum position, at the expense of
Yamaha riders Fujiwara and Yoshikawa.
Nagai and Edwards had also lost some
·ground, which promoted the Merkel!
Goddard pairing into the top five.
Anthony Gobert, on the other Lucky
Strike Kawasaki, was getting back into
the top 15 after having overtaken Mattioli and Mertens, who were running in
17th place.
During the last two hours, everyone
seemed fairly satisfied with their positions, and most of the teams started to
back down a little in order to take their
bikes to the finish. Only Anthony Gob'ert seemed to be a little bit too eager,
crashing in the last hour, but losing no
places in the end.
At the finish, Slight and Okada took
the victory in front of their teammates
Itoh and Tsujimoto. '1 had never expected to finish on the rostrum," Slight said
, after his third consecutive victory in the
Japanese classic. "When I was lying in
the grass on Saturday morning, I
thought the weekend was over for me. I
was wondering if I was going to be able
to race. I couldn't even walk on Saturday,. and had to sleep with ice on my
-ankle and two swollen hands. I could've
kicked myself - we had done so much
testing here and now I was going to
throw it all away, Fortunately, Okada
has done a great job; we owe this result
mainly to him. I just tried to be consistent. The injuries cost me about one and
a half seconds from my own best practice times, and about one second compared to Okada's best times, I only started to believe that I would make it till the
end and that we might win the race after
Tsujimoto had made some mistakes and
I had been able to stretch the lead a little
bit to some 40 seconds."
In the final stages, Merkel and Goddard dropped back to sixth position
after the two Yamahas made a successful final charge.
Colin Edwards took his Yamaha to
fifth after a very steady race.
"In my first two turns I still struggled a bit," Edward said. '1n'the first
hour the rear was too hard, which prevented me from doing the lap times I
knew I was able to do, In the second
hour a softer rear was used, but then I
lost a wheel weight on the front, which
made the bike feel a little bit unstable.
The third hour we all got it right, and
in the fourth hour I settled down, as
there was no chance to catch Fujiwara."
Gobert and Kitigawa finished 13th
despite the minor crash by Gobert in the
last hour. "A shame we lost all our
chances in the gravel pit," the young
Australian said. "We had had a fron'tend chatter problem Cluring the whole
weekend, and I crashed trying to make
up positions. At the start, I wanted to
win really bad, especially after the pole
position I had set on Saturday. I knew
that it was going to be very difficult to
beat the Hondas, which are on familiar
ground here. Racing here was quite an
experience, but you have to be very
careful. There are several slow riders,
which makes things quite dangerous."
The fact that he was the youngest rider
to have taken pole in Suzuka, and the
only rider to have done so in his first
attempt, was of some consolation to the
Kawasaki rider.
Mattioli and' Mertens finished just
outside the points after an eventful
weekend, During practice they had
ruined their best powerplant and had to
run on the rebuilt engine during the first
race laps. They stayed around 17th posi-
ole
he ways of the Japanese are sometimes
unfathomable; even though several team
managers and riders had admitted not to
be very hot for a repeat of the "special stage"
formula introduced Iast.year to establish the
starting grid, the organizers bad once again
decided to send each rider of the top 30 teams
out, one by one, for a single fast lap

