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/1542342
Ji'F
I
DUCATI
.
BIG
NUMB€RS
rcR
TH€ BEAST
Possibly the
biggest
change from last
),,ear
to this, is the obviously continuing com-
petitiveness
of Ducati machinery You.s
truly
put
Ducati machines in firct and third
in last
year's predictions,
but if I had the
opportunity to change after even round
one, I would have done so.
As it turned out,
James
Toseland had to
perform
a rally almost as strong as the
one that
gave
him the 2004 title,
just
to
linish almost third in the championship -
l7
points
behind Noriyuki Haga, but
almost 200 behind Corcer.
Regis
Laconi, who scored a triple
crown of race wins, frequently
had
to
ride
beyond the capabilities of bikes and rub-
ber
just
to keep Corser and co. on his
red-tinged radar screen at other
races in
2005
-
and
crashed in the aftempt.
Yet,
iust
as the four-cylinder
Japanese
machines were massing for the kill around
Ducati's booming twins, a
new
star
showed that
Ducatis
could still
cut it.
Lorenzo Lanzi scored two race wins
-
could have been more, but for bad luck
and silly mistakes. But
nqt
bad
for
a
rook-
ie, wouldn't
you
say...?
Disheartened by the uncertainties of
Toseland and Laconi in 2005, Ducati
threw both their
previous
babies out with
the bathwater, and
gave
Lanzi a full-time
step-uP.
They then also went back the future
with the signing of Tro/ Bayliss, who
proved
that whatever four
podiums
and
man/ disappointments in three seasons of
MotoGP does for
you,
it doesn't seem to
prevent you
coming back at anything less
than
full
pace
on a Ducati 999. Not if
you're
Bayliss at least.
An even more dazling Ducati hctoid is
that this
year
there will be a full eight
per-
manent Ducati starters on the
grid.
Now
we always knew that the factory Dukes
would be there or thereabouts in the
hands of the very best, but why would any-
one want to
run
an expensive,
flniclq/, indi-
vidualistic
and high-maintenance
Ducatis in
the age of the
l000cc
Japanese
four?
Well, it seems that not only is national-
ism
playing
its
part
for teams such as
Pedercini,
Caracchi and Sterilgarda
Berik,
but also, once
you
know how to
get
the
best out of a Duke,
you
are almost
guar-
anteed a competitive
package
against all
but the
'factory''
fours. Now who wor.rld
have
thought that, when the
fours
came
in? Not even Ducati, until halfway through
last year,
at
least,
Speaking of
"who
would
have thought
it?''
-
who would have thought that we
would see
not
one or two, but
multiple
lvlotocP
refugees
joining
or
reioining
the
class again? Five riders
(Alex
Barros,
Bayliss, Robeft
Rolfo, Franco Battaini
and
Ruben Xaus) who were
in
possession
of
some level of MotoGP full-time contract
last year are now in World Superbike rac-
ing. One or two might even win it out-
right, and few seasoned observers would
write even the likes of
privateer-mounted
Rolfo or Xaus off the list of
possible podi-
um finishers. Especially after Lanzi's crim-
son-rocket-ship rides last
year.
ln terms of numbers, Ducati rules the
roost, their eight-rider charge headed
up by official Ducati Xerox duo, Bayliss
and Lanzi.
The SC Caracchi Ducati team, despite
seeming to have a Supersport wing only
at
one
stage,
has
played
the hometown
card again, sweeping Rolfo off his
l4otocP Ducati feet to
give
them a strong
single-rider effort
in
the big
class.
The surprise last-gasp loss of l'4ax
Neukirchner from the Klaffi Honda squad
will
be a demerit to Honda
for many,
but
it's a serious future
gain
for Ducati - even
if he is only on a third Pedercini Ducati,
alongside Lucio
Pedercini
and
perennial
Italian
privateer
lvan Clementi.
Having tasted the forbidden Oriental
fruit
provided
by temptresses from
Yamaha last
year,
then
going
back to the
one true ltalian
faith
of
Ducati midseason,
Marco Borciani has created
yet
another
new team for himself and his Sterilgarda
money
- the Sterilgarda
Berik
Ducati
squad. The Berik money may well have
come from MotoGP refugee and
World
Superbike semi-legend Xaus, but all
pro-
ceeds were welcomed.
Spectacular
when winning,
losing or
drawing his
leathers
across the tarma€
with worrying regularity, whatever the
machinery or tires, Xaus is a talent worth
having and nurturing. He starts the season
with a broken leg, but anyone who has
seen him dominate in multiple Superbike
races, and even score a
podium
in
MotoGP knows that there
is
a deep lawa
flow of talent inside his short-tempered
volcano.
The original case of anything
being
possible.
HONDA
.
WIND BEN€ATH THEIR WINGS
The Winston Ten Kate squad needs no
introduction by now, and the country
boys with the fastest tofs, having been
multiple Supercpon champions and lirmly
in the Superbike vanguard since their
introduction in 2004-
ln Karl Muggeridge they have a rider
who
sometimes carries misfortune
around like an aura, despite his obvious
speed in
year
one of his Superbike career.
He's got
talent and hunger and those.
in
any season
you
care to mention, are tvvo
omnipresent
pillars
in the temple ofeven-
tual racing
glory
Ten Kate has always been a
good
iudge
of
riding
talent, and when they say that
Toseland is a
good
signing for Ten Kate,
you
can overcome any notions about
Toseland's
2004 championship win being
a one-off in a weak
year.
Still developing
as a
rider, he is in
the happiest
patch
of
territory he has cultivated since he left his
beloved GSE Racing team. He started out
on Hondas, and he's on them again- Not
iust
Hondas,
but the best ones on
track,
according to any form
guide you
care to
mention.
Honda's ace-up-the-sleeve is a name
everyone
has heard of. Barros is a seven
time
MotoGP race winner
(the
most
recent of which came last
year)
and he
has
proven
to be no average Superbike
racer either,:rs many a Suzuki 8-Hour
campaign attests - albeit on a
V-twin.
He
has no real experience upon the frame
fours, but few think this will be a handicap
to someone with this degree of talent and
experience,
Two things may hold him back, howev-
er. One is a relatively new SBK Klafll
team, which
gave
outgoing
pairinS
Pier-
Francesco Chili and Neukirchner occa-
sional reliability, and more frequent, setup
worries last
year.
The other is that aside
CYCLE NEWS
o
MARCH
1
,2006
45
.4
,t.
,,,t
!i',,
alr./,/
Zror.lor,d'.
*--
molE is Auslrolion
Ko Muggeridge,
ll
I
v
L
;
{
I
:,
s
tr
lorenzo lanzi is
Ducali'. hopc fo. tfio
future.
The
youag
hqlion
could bc o
thrcot for the title
this
yeor.
---,'
>!r'-
(:l'
T
1
r.
-a
I
a
il
I
The Foggy Petrlnqs thrue-cylindorr
will be ridden by Steve Mortin
(le-ft)
ond

