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/1542397
World Championship Road Race Series
Mugello Circuir
,rlusello, lrt'ly
MOTOGP
c
otocP
racing is fantastic.
At least it was on Sunday
in ltaly, on a day that
Valentino
Rossi marked
his return
to
form and
the
end of
his
bad
luck with
an epic
win.
The
Camel
Yamaha rider had
qualified
on the
front
row of the
grid
for
the
first
time this season, and he seized the
lead
on the flrst of 23 laps of the spectacular
Mugello circuit in the Apennine foothills
outside Florence, But he was in for one of
the toughest races of his career. The
armies of Rossi fans around the hillsides,
packed
with a capacity crowd of almost
90,000, saw their hero at his absolute
best.
It was the same for the swathe of red
on the Ducati
grandstand.
Loris Capirossi
didn't win, but he was only beaten by half
a second, after a superlative recovery
from a bad start, And with Repsol
Honda's Nicky Hayden a similar distance
behind, nor could the occasional Hayden
fan
who
might have intruded on the ltalian
party
be less than impressed and satisfled.
The ltalian GP
provided
close, clean
and thrilling racing at its best, in all three
classes
-
and a
little twist in
the tail.
ln
spite oI all the brilliant
racing,
the lap
record set by the
jobless
former hero
Max
Biaggi
last
year
remained intact.
Rossi's flrst baftle
was
with
pole quali-
fier
Sete Gibernau,
who
got
straaght
back
in front for three more laps
an
his
Marlboro Ducati, and
then
stayed
close
until an unusual
prgblem
occurred on the
l6th lapi
The
toe-slider on
his
Spidi boot
became detached, cutting
his
toe and
dropping him out of contention long
enough
for
him to
lose
touch,
Challenges
from Fortuna Honda's
I4arco
Melandri
and LCR
Honda's
Casey
Stoner
were impressive,
though shoft-
lived.
Stoner
had
a terrifying
crash
while
holding a strong
third
on
lap nine,
his
Honda
somersaulting
high in
the air but
luckily
landing well
away
from
the bat-
tered but not seriously hurt
young
Australian,
''l'm
feeling a bit average," he said after
checks to a sore neck
revealed
no serious
problems.
But Hayden and Capirossi
-
seventh
and eighth. respectively, after the first lap
- were cominS, and when they arrived,
Rossi made his first mistake and dropped
to fifth, behind those tlvo and Gibemau
and Melandri. The last-named then made
a mistake of his own, running into the
gravel
and
reioining
the
race
out of touch
with the
lead
pack,
By the
flnish,
the battle was between
the three survivors,
with
Capirossi mak-
ing the most ofthe running. Rossi
grabbed
the lead at the start of the final lap and
managed to
get
far enough away to resist
the final charge.
"This
was definitely the toughest race
of the
last years,
especially aSainst Loris
[Capirossi],"
Rossi said.
"l
don't remem-
ber one race where the balance was so
equal
-
bikes, riders and tires. The cham-
pionship
is
very
equal between Honda,
Yamaha and Ducati. lf I had to make a bet
who would win before the last lap, I don't
know what I would have said, I think I
made a
great
iob
-
and sure I didn't
breathe for the last lap."
He had been expecting Capirossi.
"When
ldidn't see his name on the
board, I thought he might have made a
mistake," Rossi said.
"Then
his name
came."
A
pockcd
hou.e wokhe. lhe llqlion
MotoGP
ond
rhey

