Cycle News

Cycle News 2021 Issue 39 September 28

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOLUME 58 ISSUE 39 SEPTEMBER 28, 2021 P131 back on Yamaha and plumb last, aged 42 and 35, respectively. Commentators have been talking of "the changing of the guard" all year. It's easy to see that experience counts for less and less in MotoGP's frantic new normal. It's not so easy to understand why. Something similar prevails in all forms of professional sport, from tennis onwards, because of a number of factors. Most important, better train- ing. This has come along with a major social sea-change, itself driven by both opportunity and reward, as the financial ben- efits of sporting success have doubled and redoubled in the past couple of decades. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, when I first reported on the World Championships, most of the riders I interviewed had started riding motorcycles on the street. Faster than their friends, they discovered they had a knack for it. And took it to the track. Hopelessly old-fashioned. Things started to change when Americans and the odd Australian turned up. Beneficia- ries of the minibike boom of the 1960s they'd cut their teeth on dirt tracks with other youngsters. It was a new phenomenon back then. It is now a basic require- ment. Modern grand prix racers start long before street-legal age, belting around on minibikes on go-karts or oval dirt tracks from the age of six or so, usually with their excited fathers urging them on. Talent is obvious early, and those who show it then move up through increasingly well- supported and well-organized feeder series, where they are expertly coached. Dorna has promoted these assiduously, worldwide. When the best of them arrive at GP level aged 16, they are already seasoned competitors, up against rivals they know well. The Marquez and Espargaro brothers, Maverick Vinales, Alex Rins and Joan Mir, for example, have known and raced against one another (according to age overlaps) for years and years. There's more. Continual technical develop- ments reward new techniques. Chassis technology grows more sophisticated in small but impor- tant increments, tires develop rather faster, while adjustable geometry such as holeshot squatting and corner-exit droop are the latest significant advanc- es, making major inroads. Older riders, inevitably set in their ways, have more trouble adapting. Something to do with old dogs and new tricks. The kids bring fresh attitudes and new techniques. They can experiment without even thinking about it. Or is it even simpler? That—vaulting power and speed notwithstanding—modern MotoGP bikes are just too easy to ride. Switch on the traction control, engage electronic aids, set the controls for the checkered flag. Then open the twistgrip and hold on tight. Wouldn't you hate for that to be true? CN Commentators have been talking of "the changing of the guard" all year. It's easy to see that experience counts for less and less in MotoGP's frantic new normal. When the best of them arrive at GP level aged 16, they are already seasoned competitors, up against rivals they know well.

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