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RO\D RACE
World Championship Road Race series
Round 7: Dutch Grand Prix
almost four seconds ahead in order to
land a podium position.
"In the excitement I somehow
thought I only had to finish ahead of
Barros to get third, but in fact I needed
to be 3.7 seconds in front. I left my
attack to the last lap, crossed the line
ahead of him, then found he'd beat me
after all."
Their battle preceded the One for
fifth, which was waged among a bunch
of Yamaha riders and Rymer. Rymer
had taken sixth in the first leg ahead of
Roberts and Okada, Abe, Juan Borja,
and Bayle. But in the second leg he
found he was having a hard time adjusting to the brakes and made a few mistakes.
Marlboro Yamaha Rainey's Loris
Capirossi had finished the first leg in
fourth and was running in fifth in the
second leg after a Uttle too much drama
between races. The team had broken a
rear disc in the first part of the race and
had to change wheels on the grid. He
started the race on a tire which wasn't
ros feU victim to Criville and was about
a second behind the lead Hondas when
the lightly falling rain began to intensify, bringing out the red flag.
The order at the end of the eighth lap
was Doohan, CriviUe, Barros, Capirossi,
Russell, Rymer, Kenny Roberts Jr., and
Okada. Doohan's lead at that point was
0.282 seconds, which meant that he
could finish that far behind CriVille and
still win the race.
The finishing order determined the
starting grid, with Doohan starting from
the pole after a 3D-minute delay and not
getting away all that cleanly when his
dutch acted up.
Criville was in front with Barros'
next, then Doohan and Rus~ On the
second lap Doohan was up to second
and from then on he was on Criville's
tail and losing more ground than he
would have liked. With five laps to go
he was better than a second behind on
combined time, but was able to take
back half a second on the next lap when
Criville ran wide exiting the chicane,
then got into a big slide a few corners
later. The Spaniard was under attack
and showed it, riding nervously as
Doohan made his presence felt. Doohan,
meanwhile, was calm and fluid, waiting
for the right minute to pounce.
"Criville started to build up a big
lead and I really started to think that I
would not be able to catch him,"
Doohan said. "The other guys in front
were not making any impression on him
so I decided that I just had to get ahead
of them again if I was to stand any
chance of winning. I got my head down
but kept distracting myself as I kept
looking skywards and seeing the black
clouds rolling in again. Then I started to
catch him. I got a second back and then
he overshot the 'chicane and I knew that
if I stayed with him I could win."
Doohan was actually in the lead on
real time while running second with
three laps to go and kept it to the final
lap when he made his move to the front.
At the end of the back straight he went
up the inside of CriviJ1e with the
(Above) Doohan and
Crlville stayed close
throughout and the
outcome wasn't
decided until the final
chicane when Crlvllle
ran wide trying to
pass the two-time
W9rld Champion.
(Right) Ral'
Waldmann was
ecstatic with his wtn
in the 250cc Grand
Prix•.
Spaniard returning
to the fron t in the
next right. Only he
went in too fast,
drifting wide and
allowing Doohan to
scoot up the inside.
It came down to the
chicane and Criville
made a desperate
late move on the brakes, only to overshoot the comer and allow Doohan an
easier win.
It was the third race in a row and
fourth time this year that Criville has
finished behind his teammate. As to
when he might reverse the order, Criville said: '1 don't know. I'm still fighting
for the victory every time. It's not like
racing against just anotht;r guy, he's a
two-time World Champion on his way
to a third."
Barros had lost the leaders a few laps
into the second leg and was third on the
track and on overall time after finishing
third in the first race. The Brazilian had
come up with a solution to front-end
problems during a test last week at
Mugello and was putting it to good use,
staying in front of Russell, who'd bt;en
with him from the 15th lap on. Then his
face shield began to fog up, and he was
losing precious seconds as Russell
mounted an attack. Russell, meanwhile,
was unaware that he not only had to finish ahead of Barros, he had to finish
properly warmed up and was looking to
hold onto his spot when he ran out of
gas.
'1 can't beUeve it," he said. "I'm not
having any lucky at the moment."
Capirossi'~ exit gave the position to.
Roberts, who'd passed the struggling
Rymer several laps earlier. His race was
something of a fight itself, his rear tire
not working and causing him to "wobble around." What helped him was the
knowledge that he was well ahead of his
teammate Abe on aggregate time, so
when the Japanese rider came by with
two laps left, he let him go.
"Near the end Abe came past me on
the brakes when I was trying to catch
Scott (Russell), but I knew there was no
point taking chances trying to go past
him again because 1 was six seconds
ahead on aggregate time," Roberts said.
Abe ended up nearly five seconds
back to take sixth, little more than a half
a second better than Rymer, who is still
learning the nuances of a works 500.
"I'm still getting used to slowing the
bike down. It's so Ught and the brakes
are so powerful that it's hard to judge. I
made a couple of slips and ran off the
track one time. That lost me three or
four positions and meant I had to find
my way through traffic," Rymer said of
the 16th-lap incident
Next to cross the line was JeanMichel Bayle, the Marlboro Roberts
Yamaha rider knowing that after finishing 11th in the first part of the race he
would have a hard time greatly improving in the second one.
Juan Borja managed to stick with the
factory riders and finish ninth, the best
ever for the Elf and enough to beat the
Honda V-twins of Shinichi Itoh (10th)
and Tadayuki Okada (13th), as well as
the V-fours of llth- and 12th-placed
Checa and Puig. Itoh had Tear-tire woes
that caused his front end to skid out of
the corners and Okada lost his front
brakes at the start of the race. AfteT that
he had to pump them in order to stop. a
Circuit van Drenthe
Assen, Holland
Results: June 29, 1996 (Round 7 01 15)
12Scc QUALIFYING: 1. Masaki Tokudome
(2:14.557); 2. Haruchika Aoki (2:15.096); 3. Emilio
Alzamora (2:15.481); 4. Tomomi Manako (2:15.669); 5.
Noboru Ueda (2)5.711); 6. Peter Oettl (2:15.763~ 7. Dirk
Raudies (2:15.970); 8. Valentino Rossi (2:15.987); 9.
Kazuto Sakata (2:16.028); 10. Lucio CecchineJlo .
(2,16.030); n. Jorge Martinez (2:16.207); 12. Frederic
Petit (2,16.634); 13. Aldn Saito (2,16.365); 14. Darren
Barton (2,16.408); 15. Manfred Geissler (2'16.600); t6.
Josep Sarda (2:16.771); 17. Gabriele [)ebbia (2,16.771); 18.
Jaroslav Hutes (2:16.799~ 19. Stefano Perugtru (2:16.860~
2ll. Loek BodeHer (2:17.220~ 21. Ivan Goi (2:17.242); 22.
Herti Torrontegui (2:17.587); 23. Garry McCoy
(2,17.597); 24. Paolo T....ri (2,17.620); 25. Youichi Ui
(2:18.213); 26. YoshiaJci Katoh (2:18.215); TJ. Angel Jeto
(2,19.842); 28. R. Filart (2,20.927); 29. Benny Janssen
(2,21.499); 30. Gerard Rike (2,22.S13); 31. Andrea
Ballerini (2:22.748); 32. Gilbert de Rover (2:23.427).
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