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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127940
ROAD RACE
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
ROAD RACE SERIES
Aprilia rider's hands full with Stefano
Perugini's works Honda in sixth.
Another three second down came
QUB Team Optimum Honda's Jeremy
McWilliams after a fine race for the
Ulsterman. All weekend he'd been fighting a flu, but by Sunday he'd led this
four-strong group for much of the race,
only fading at the end in the exhausting
heat.
Pole starter Jurgen Fuchs and his
Docshop Aprilia lost his big chance by
choosing too hard a rear tire. Cautious
at the start, he'd thought his fast practice lap time would allow him to make
up the time. Not so, as he slid every
time he opened the throttle hard, and he
soldiered home in eighth.
Aprilia-mounted Sebastian Porto was
also out of luck. He'd been one of the
first away, only to be knocked off the
track on the first lap, and he too had
been obliged to battle his way through
to finish ninth.
Jose-Luis Cardoso's Yamaha was
10th, with Takeshi Tsujimura's imilar
machine 11th, and Noriyasu Numata's
Suzuki only 13th, behind new privateer
Roberto Rolfo's Honda.
Harada took the title lead, with 38
points to Jacque's 27. Japan's wild cards
Katoh (25) and Nakano (20) come next,
with Ukawa and Capirossi tied for fifth
(20).
125cc GRAND PRIX
Front-row starter Roberto Locatelli
and his Polini Honda got the break and
led for the first two laps, but third qualifier Mirko Giansanti and pole-sitter
oboru Veda were right there with him.
Giansanti took over on lap three, with
Veda on his back wheel.
As Locatelli gradually dropped back,
a five-way banle moved away ahead.
Masao Azuma and Tomomi Manako
made it four Hondas, with Aprilia rider
Kazuto Sakata hanging on grimly
behind.
By the finish, the Hondas had
escaped, and they were set for a bitter
battle on the last lap. The first to drop
off was Manako, running wide and los...... ing touch out on the back section. Veda
and Azuma were battling hard, with
0.. Giansanti just hanging on.
~
The pushing and shoving through
the chicane changed the order, with
Veda ahead and Giansanti second. The
.....
...
8
final drama came on the last corner,
when Azuma tried too hard to regain
second and went flying. In spite of him
and his motorcycle both completing several ground-loops, he stood up and
climbed back on board to cross the line
in ninth.
11)i.s handed third back to Manako.
Twelve seconds behind, Docshop
Aprilia's Masaki Tokudome prevailed
after a long battle with Locatelli. A disappointed Sakata faded to sixth. Then
came Fred Petit, heading Angel Nieto
Jr.
Aprilia rider Gino Borsoi crashed out
in the first corners. Andrea Ballerini was
disqualified after failing to come into
the pit for a stop-and-go penalty after
jumping the start.
Manako takes the title lead with 36
points, with earlier leader Sakata second
with 35; then comes Veda (25), Azuma
(23) and Tokudome (21). The first nonJapanese rider is Giansanti, with 20
points.
t.·
Circuit Johor Bahru
Johor Bahru, Malaysia
Results: April 19, 1998
us QUALIFYING, 1. Noboru Ueda (1,34.S16); 2.
Roberto Locatelli (1:34.715); 3. Mirko Giansanti
(1:35.004); 4. Youichi Ui 0:35.015); 5. Kazuto Sakata
0:35,020); 6. Mas..lki Tokudome 0:35.103); 7. Tomomi
Manako (1:35.276); 8. Gianluigi Scalvini (1:35.367); 9.
Marco Melandri (1;35.407); 10. Masao Azuma (l:35.559);
11. Frederic Petit 0:35.895); 12. Lucio Cecchinello
(US.934); 13. Gino eo"",i 0,35.940); 14. Angel Nieto),.
The master's turn
O
nce again, practice became a battle between the old master and
the new up tart. This time it was won by four-time SOOcc World
Champion Mick Doohan from four-time 2SOcc World Champion
Max Biaggi, though.it was closely fought.
Biaggi had been fastest after the first day and was quickest again
two minutes before the end of the final session. Then he feU off for a
second time while Doohan hunkered down to reclaim his own by less
than two-tenths of a second.
Like all riders, Doohan was v,'orried about tire wear.
"It's mainly the front," he said. "It will be a battle of endurance
tomorrow."
Biaggi escaped unhurt from his tumbles, both of them front-end
washouts on the downhill section that closes the lap. The first had been
through excess speed, the second because he went off line to pass a
slower rider.
'1t w;U be difficult to overtake tomorrow," he said.
Third went to Carlos Checa, less than three-tenths down in another
race of very close times - the first nine within the same second. The
Honda rider was confident.
'1 like this track, and I have found a good rhythm," he S

