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Cycle News 2022 Issue 47 November 22

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 47 NOVEMBER 22, 2022 P115 bordering on genius might help build better motorbikes but has little direct relevance to the bal- ance sheet. And it spoke also of divisions in that senior manage- ment—the decision it seems was hotly disputed before it became a fait accompli. It's not the first time Suzuki has summarily pulled out, even apart from mass withdrawal of Japanese factories at the end of the 1960s. Suzuki did it again in the 1980s, after the square-four RG500 had achieved serial success with Barry Sheene and many others. To the dismay, for one, of Randy Mamola, at that stage twice second and once third in the championship. A shocked Suzuki GB, which had been running the factory team, soldiered on using hand- me-down parts and their own experimental chassis. Remem- ber the famous "cardboard box," a pioneering exercise using honeycomb-sandwich a la cur- rent Formula 1 practice? Then a factory U-turn de- livered a new V4 in 1987—the bike that eventually took Kevin Schwantz and Kenny Roberts Jr. to the championship. The second surprise with- drawal was in 2011. Dorna was furious, but Suzuki managed to square the breach of contract by promising it would be only temporary. And they did return in 2015, The all-new in-line four GSX-RR, despite a relatively tiny racing department and meagre budget compared with Honda and Yamaha, became a race- and, in 2020, championship- winning machine. One that the riders loved. Phil- lip Island and Valencia winner Alex Rins spoke of how he was in tears both before and after the final race; one-off Thai GP substitute rider Danilo Petrucci talked about how he wanted to take the bike home. So, why did Suzuki kill it off, leaving staff and fans dismayed, and perhaps customers, too? After all, what wins on Sunday sells on Monday. And you have to be in it to win it. Suzuki's last champion Joan Mir asked what the company management might have been thinking, as they watched the last victory at Valencia, was bemused. "I don't know if they will regret it. Maybe they want to invest in other things. But the image we are giving here in MotoGP, with a beautiful bike, a beautiful team … no publicity campaign can give what we are giving here." One answer may be found in a surprise end-of-season action demonstrating a strange man- agement disconnection. After the Malaysian GP, with only one race left, the race team commissioned a test of new parts. Rins for one was dumb- founded. Why spend money testing things that will never be used? A former Suzuki insider ex- plained. "The engineers had a budget, so they spent it. Senior management probably wouldn't even notice." No details have emerged of the financial cost of leaving but having just signed a new Dorna contract until the end of 2026, the bail-out fee is likely to be considerable. Suzuki obviously consider it worthwhile. But if Suzuki can turn their back on MotoGP so easily, what about other long-standing competitors? Honda has en- dured an embarrassing spell of poor results, and it pulled out themselves in 1967. A year later Yamaha followed suit. Kawasaki already set a precedent in 2009, walking away without a back- ward glance. With European factories look- ing set to take over, who'll be next to leave MotoGP? CN All the more shocking that this was the swansong. The last cards in their hand. At least Suzuki was quitting while it was ahead.

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