Cycle News

Cycle News 2017 Issue 21 May 31

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/830616

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 139 of 141

VOL. 54 ISSUE 21 MAY 31, 2017 P139 racing bikes, the different makes have different behav- ior—some, to simplify, excelling at corner entry, others finding advantage on the exit. Because of the different setting and gear- ing possibilities, there is even variation between bikes with the same badge on the tank. This makes it possible to overtake using tactics rather than brute force. Brains rather than brawn. And that is what Valentino would like the young French- man to understand. There is, in all this, a consid- erable element of pot versus kettle. When Rossi arrived in the 500cc class in 2000, his forceful riding ruffled many a feather. There are a number of famous incidents over the years—like the bump-pass on Gibernau at Jerez in 2005, and duffing up Stoner at Laguna Seca in 2008, for instance. And even last year, he was accused of dangerous riding by Lorenzo at Misano. "Other riders over- take more clean," the Spaniard said. Lorenzo is fond of such ac- cusations, but the pot-kettle syndrome rears up once more. At least he admits it, pointing out repeatedly that he was disqualified for one race back in his 250cc days for taking out another rider (de Ange- lis, as it happens, or as he is nicknamed "d'Angerous"). He (Jorge) learned his lesson, he now says, and back in 2013 called for the same penalty to be applied to Marquez, after the hard-and-fast new boy gave him a major last-corner lunge at that same Jerez hairpin. Marquez has come in for even more criticism than Rossi, and interestingly enough hasn't said too much about Zarco. Not yet, anyway—and probably won't, being a fan of the "rub- bing is racing" mantra. His silence is despite be- ing one of the riders who got minced at Jerez. Where the double Moto2 champion was on a major charge for a fourth race in a row. Just to recap: in Qatar, his first MotoGP race, he forced into the lead on lap one from the second row, and was going away when he crashed out on lap seven. In Argentina he qualified 14th and was up to sixth after only five laps. He got as high as fourth in the race, and finished fifth. In Texas he qualified and finished fifth, but in between he had a real wrestling match with Rossi, including punting him off the track at one point, with Rossi lucky not to crash. Then in Jerez, he qualified sixth and got away well, and at once set about those in front of him. He left Rossi trailing and had disposed of both Iannone and Crutchlow—two notable hard battlers—by the second lap. No respecter of reputations, he then set about Marquez and got ahead of him for second, if only for a lap. He ended up fourth, and easily first Yamaha. And all this on a year-old satellite Yamaha. In his first season. Zarco is an interesting char- acter: analytical and intelligent. And very loquacious, seldom answering a simple question with anything less than several carefully considered para- graphs. He won two Moto2 titles in an equally considered way. Only once did he get mental, when he knocked Sam Lowes off at Silverstone. More usually, he specialized in stay- ing calm and saving his tires then pushing away at the end. In this way, he spoke respect- fully about Rossi, after follow- ing him for much of the race in Texas. In studious fashion, after his first lunge had been unsuc- cessful, he was able to learn how Rossi preserved his tires, and was able to be as fast at the end of the race as at the begin- ning. This is his "serious" mode. But it seems all this consid- eration goes out of the window as soon as the green light goes. Earning him the enviable ac- colade of "dangerous maniac." And he's hardly even started yet. CN

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2017 Issue 21 May 31