Cycle News

Cycle News 2023 Issue 06 February 14

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/1492570

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VOLUME ISSUE FEBRUARY , P45 Here we assess the fortunes of the five manufacturers across three rain-affect days, in the order of those that can be happi- est first. DUCATI A test from the heavens for Bologna bosses. Learning from its mistakes of 2022, Ducati engineers opted against radical changes to a bike that ended its 15-year wait for the MotoGP title. Factory riders Bagnaia and Enea Bastianini, as well as Pramac's Jorge Martin and Jo - hann Zarco, were relieved to find the GP23 is a small evolution on last year's model. Development work was split across the four men, with the new engine deemed a suc- cess from the off. Martin, who topped day two, said he's already "ready to race." Plus, he could make fast lap times when riding "smoothly. I don't have to be aggressive to be fast." The only area of mild concern? According to Bagnaia, "the handling; the '23 bike is more aggressive and more nervous. This is something that we can focus on in Porti- mao." Otherwise, Ducati is miles ahead from this time a year ago. "From the first exit with the new bike, I felt great," said the reign- ing champion, who feels the '23 bike is already at the level of its predecessor, with more still to come. Even riders from Mooney VR46 and Gresini Ducati, riding year-old GP22s, look capable of getting in on the act. APRILIA Having made major steps forward with radical changes to its RS-GP in each of the three previous years, Aprilia's fine 2022 meant only small evolu- tions were needed this winter. Aleix Espargaro was almost bummed out by this on day one. "I thought we'd have more to test," he shrugged. But in reality, this showed the RS-GP needs only small tweaks. All aspects of performance were touched in a minor way. "The '23 bike is definitely better than the '22," said Espargaro, sixth-fastest overall. "The cool - ing is much better. We have some more revs, the bike is a bit faster on the straight and its more narrow, which makes it easier to change direction. With the new aero the bike turns bet- ter. In general we made a very small step forward in all areas." Teammate Maverick Vinales was third fastest. And with another updated package and the full '23 engine still to come at next month's Portimao test, there's no reason to think the No - ale factory's brilliant 2022 was a flash in the pan. YAMAHA Up until the final hour of the final day, things were looking rosy for Marc Marquez was mad. There's much work to do at Repsol Honda. Minor tweaks for Maverick Vinales and Aleix Espargaro mean the RS-GP for 2023 is well on track.

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