Cycle News

Cycle News 2021 Issue 44 November 2

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/1424948

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INTERVIEW I KEVIN SCHWANTZ P86 "It's such a hard thing at Suzuki with the manufacturer being so much smaller, with the race shop being that much smaller, the development team being that much smaller. There are no satellite teams to help you with input, to give you data. It's a really, really hard job. It's so easy to get frustrated. But what you've got to remem- ber is the guys at the shop are the guys that gave you the bike that you won on last year. They're eventually going to get it right again. If you continue to race at the front and get close, they'll eventually put something underneath you that will put you where you want to be." Does the former number-34 consider Mir, the current number-36, to be riding on the same level as the men ahead of him in the champion- championship]. I think Fabio's done a great job. I love the pressure Pecco's applying right now. But I think it could be just too little, too late." Talk turns to the manufacturer Schwantz used to call home. Suzuki came into the 2021 season as defending champions for the first time in 20 years. And despite a host of spirited performanc- es, Mir's title defense came to an end in Texas with a muted eighth place. A lack of development has led to the GSX-RR to drop from the grid's best bike to one that has struggled to keep up with the Ducatis and Quartararo's Yamaha. Yet maintaining that edge as a manu- facturer is never easy, with Suzuki one of the lesser resourced factories on the grid. As Schwantz—one of only six men to have won a premier class crown with Suzuki—explained, the factory's size must always be taken into account. "[Joan] needs to realize he's been there three years now. He's had a decent bike [in 2019] and a great bike [in 2020]. Now he's seeing what it's like the rest of the time when it's not one of those few [best bikes that Suzuki produces] every six, seven or eight years. Schwantz's ability to come back from injury was legendary. This broken wrist on Friday at Assen in 1994 saw him ride to fifth place on Sunday. "I mean, oh my gosh! He's just a kid where you walk in the garage, and he pukes confidence. He was like, 'Oh hey! Nice to meet you, my dad used to call me Kevin! My name was Pedro, but I raced the number 34.'"

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