Cycle News

Cycle News 2022 Issue 07 February 15

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 59 ISSUE 7 FEBRUARY 15, 2022 P117 ming from the same dumbing down. Many observers think MotoGP bikes are much too easy to ride, thanks to limited technical vari- ables and modern technology. Hence strong rookies, tickling the tails of seasoned campaign- ers. "Too easy" comments come not least from a number of former riders who cut their teeth (and frequently also broke their arms and legs) aboard feisty 500cc two-strokes—light, agile, peaky and ultra-sensitive. They really sorted the wheat from the chaff in an often-painful process not too different from agricultural winnowing. Well, such is progress. Per- haps we should be thankful that MotoGP bikes do not yet have lane-control software, and auto- matic braking to preserve a safe distance between them. Paradoxically, however, while modern MotoGP bikes cut down on the vicious high sides of the past, the closer racing they gen- erate imposes different dangers. As uncomfortably demonstrated in Moto3. But it's a feast for the fans. Cream, as we know, rises. Even when lap times are whis- ker-close, the same riders tend to take over the top three. By this measure, favorites for the forthcoming season are fairly obvious: Bagnaia, Quar- tararo, Marc Marquez and Joan Mir (with an outside chance for Martin and Miller). Should they worry that they placed only sixth, seventh, eighth and 12th (and third and 14th) respectively at Sepang? Not at all. They were all within less than three-tenths of one another, and the worst of them (2021 champion Mir) less than four-tenths off the top. They should worry about one another, of course, and the greatest cause for concern must be Marquez. Back on an all-new and far-from-sorted Honda after more than three months away, and still working back to full fit- ness after a second long lay-off from training, Marc was bang on the money. And only just getting started. Whoever takes the 2022 title is going to have to beat Marquez first. CN Many observers think MotoGP bikes are much too easy to ride, thanks to limited technical variables and modern technology. Hence strong rookies, tickling the tails of seasoned campaigners. By this measure, favorites for the forthcoming season are fairly obvious: Bagnaia, Quartararo, Marc Marquez and Joan Mir (with an outside chance for Martin and Miller). 3.4-mile track with a lap taking almost two minutes. Closeness has been a grow- ing tendency in MotoGP, the natural consequence of increas- ingly restrictive regulations that limit not only tires and electron- ics, but even cylinder numbers and bore size. No wonder the bikes perform all the same. In important respects, they're identical. The gaps have closed up a little more for 2022, with signifi- cant progress from Aprilia (Aleix Espargaro and Maverick Vinales a close second and fifth overall), and a welcome improvement also from Honda, after a bad couple of years. The bikes are closely matched. But why does the same apply to the riders? That's another issue, stem-

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