Tag: maverick vinales

  • Vinales Steals MotoGP Season Opener From Zarco, Dovizioso

    Vinales Steals MotoGP Season Opener From Zarco, Dovizioso

    In his first race as a member of Movistar Yamaha MotoGP, Maverick Vinales captured the season-opening win in Qatar on Sunday in dramatic fashion.

    The mounting pressure of an almost too comfortable lead in his first premier class race proved too much for rookie Johann Zarco, who lost his bike to a heartbreaking lowside after leading the first half of the race .

    Weekend favorite and preseason test dominator Vinales capitalized on the Frenchman’s disappointment and turned the race into a two-bike duel between his Yamaha 2017 M1 and Andrea Dovizioso’s Ducati Desmosedici GP17.

    While the final laps were ripe with overtakes for the lead and a drag races on the frontstretch, Vinales finished a half second over Dovizioso and nearly two seconds over third place, teammate Valentino Rossi.

    Repsol Honda teammate’s Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa finished fourth and fifth, respectively, over six seconds back from Vinales.

    The Qatar GP also saw the best finish in the sport for Aprilia with Aleix Espargaro’s sixth place showing, the top from an independent team.

    Octo Pramac’s Scott Redding put in an impressive seventh place effort, stunted from the start by Zarco, whose sweeping move to the inside of the frontstretch killed the British rider’s holeshot aboard his Ducati GP16.

    Australian Jack Miller finished 14 seconds back in eighth, matching his third best career finish, only better in last year’s maiden victory at Assen and seventh place showing at Sachsenring.

    Top rookie honors went to Alex Rins, who gathered Suzuki Ecstar’s only seven points after teammate Andrea Iannone wrecked early on.

    Zarco’s fellow first-year teammate Jonas Folger gathered six championship points for Monster Yamaha Tech 3 with a tenth place finish.

    New to Ducati Team, Jorge Lorenzo finished 11th after running off track early on.

    Just outside of points positions was the new KTM team of Pol Espargaro and Bradley Smith in 16th and 17th, respectively.

  • Suzuki Podium Is Much-Needed Leverage in Factory Fight for Vinales

    Suzuki Podium Is Much-Needed Leverage in Factory Fight for Vinales

    Blue track suits dominated the podium at Le Mans on Sunday, but a lighter shade than usual was present in the form of Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Maverick Vinales. His first premier class podium, a possible instance of foreshadowing showed the 21-year-old next to the dark blue suits of the Movistar Yamaha team where he may end up next season.

    Suzuki’s first podium since 2008 and a career benchmark for the second year rider, he downplayed the implications of his high finish as it relates to his upcoming decision to remain at Suzuki or take an offer from Yamaha.

    “The decision is gonna be really difficult but every day is more clear and finally as soon as possible I will make it,” said Vinales. “For sure, I will make the decision soon. I don’t need to think [the decision] is whether I made a podium or not.”

    If Vinales has already settled on Yamaha and is just waiting to make it official, then the podium won’t have much effect, but if he is still considering Suzuki then it would be difficult to imagine the factory’s best finish in nearly a decade won’t provide some pull in attaining the Spaniard.

    Team Suzuki Ecstar knows this well, and in an interview with Motorsport.com, Suzuki boss Davide Brivio made it clear that improvements set for early in the season could help keep Vinales on board.

    “That task began last summer when we explained our development programme for the bike,” Brivio said. “We knew that in the first three or four races 2016, Maverick would decide his future, so we had to take a step forward, and we have done that.”

    Brivio said Vinales will choose teams sometime between Le Mans and Mugello because Yamaha does not want to wait too long.

    An Improving Team in 2016

    With just five races to make an impact this season, Suzuki has done just that.

    Vinales and teammate Aleix Espargaro have finished inside the top six the last three races in a row. Currently fifth in the World Standings, Vinales only finished worse than sixth place at Argentina, where he crashed. Espargaro’s worst finish this year is 11th, and he sits seventh in the standings.

    Vinales has already gathered over half of his total points from last year less than a third of the way through this season (49 points through five of 18 races), which is more a comment on this season’s huge success than any failure last season. In his 97-point rookie year in the premier class, he gathered points in every race except Brno and Motegi, both of which ended in crashes.

    Last year at Le Mans, Espargaro failed to finish and Vinales came in the ninth spot. Improvements this year are undoubtedly due in big part to rider performance, but it goes without saying that Suzuki is providing better bikes. Vinales and Espargaro combined have finished every race this year but one. Among those nine races completed, they average a finishing position of 6.2.

    Is It Enough To Keep Vinales Around?

    Vinales voiced concern over his inability to maintain pace with the leaders during qualifying at Le Mans, claiming that rear tire sliding caused him to fall nearly a second off Jorge Lorenzo’s pole time.

    “For me it’s always the same problem. I always say, also last year, that we need to improve the rear,” Vinales said. “The problem is, when I need to use the rear to turn, the bike doesn’t turn and it starts to slide. It’s one year that I say the same and I still have the same problem.”

    The Suzuki optimist could see Vinales’ concern as a sign that he is invested in the team and wants better performance going forward. More likely, his interest in Suzuki’s performance pertains to the remainder of the season ahead. With an offer from the top team in the world dangling in front of him and the bad taste of recent dissatisfaction with Suzuki performance in his mouth, several signs point to a move. It doesn’t help Suzuki’s chances that Vinales’ third spot on the podium was bested only by the two riders from the team that is trying to sign him.

    Brivio thinks an underdog Suzuki narrative could provide leverage against Yamaha in the fight for Vinales.

    “Maverick can become a legend if he wins with Suzuki, because at Yamaha everybody expects him to do it,” Brivio said. “In any case, that is up to him, and maybe he doesn’t care at all. Maybe he only wants to win and that’s it.”

    Vinales must decide which team offers the best residence to fulfill expectations regarding his being the next big thing. Yamaha has the track record. But Suzuki is making reasonable arguments, which is keeping things interesting.

    “If he stays at Suzuki and we win, the story will be very inspiring because we started from scratch together,” Brivio said. “He arrived at Suzuki new to MotoGP, and we were also new as a team. From a sporting point of view it would be very inspiring.”

    Vinales has a lot to think about: The future of his career. The future of the sport. The potentially history making intersection of those separate-but-bound unwritten narratives.

    The French GP could only have made his decision more difficult. With a contract offer from the reigning champions, he just made recent history with an underdog team that is very much on the rise. Just how high that team can rise is the question he must answer.

  • Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez dominated Sunday’s Grand Prix of the Americas, building a big gap between himself and the field early and winning the race by six seconds.

    The 23-year-old Spaniard has won all four MotoGP races at Circuit of the Americas since it’s inaugural season (and his rookie season) in 2013.

    COTA is the only North American track on the schedule after Indianapolis Motor Speedway was removed following last season. At Indy, Marquez claimed wins in three of his four premier class visits.

    Leading up to Sunday’s race, Marquez topped the charts in all four free practice sessions and qualifying. All of his wins at COTA come from pole position starts.

    In the three races this season, Marquez has claimed victories in the last two and placed third in the season opener at Qatar, launching him to a 21 point lead in the championship over Movistar Yamaha’s Jorge Lorenzo. His comfortable lead is due in part to being the only factory Honda, Yamaha or Ducati rider not to have crashed out of any of the three races thus far this season.

    His easy win may have been partly influenced by an early Valentino Rossi low side, followed by a hard wreck between Repsol Honda teammate Dani Pedrosa and Ducati’s Andrea Dovizioso.

    Lorenzo appeared to be the only rider with anything for Marquez, but even his clean race couldn’t put him in contention for the win. The Movistar Yamaha rider may have elected to accept the second position and avoid pushing his bike too hard after crashing out of last weekend’s grand prix in Argentina.

    Ducati’s Andrea Iannone finished third, eleven seconds behind Marquez, with a comfortable seven-second gap to fourth place finisher Maverick Vinales. Iannone also improved heavily on crashes in the first two races, particularly last week’s final turn slide that took himself and Ducati teammate Dovizioso out of the race. Worth noting is that Dovizioso’s crash this week was due to competitor error as well.

    Fifth went to Suzuki Ecstar’s Aleix Espargaro, who engaged in close action with teammate Vinales from Lap 6 to the checkered flag.

    The series heads to Jerez, Spain in a few weeks, yet it goes without saying that Marquez would like an extended Western Hemisphere swing in the schedule.

  • Marquez Continues Dominant Ways at COTA

    Marquez Continues Dominant Ways at COTA

    Marc Marquez, winner of all three MotoGP races at Circuit of the Americas since it’s inaugural season in 2013, opened the track’s 2016 weekend with a sweep of Friday’s free practices.

    The two-time champion bested reigning champ Jorge Lorenzo by a quarter second in Free Practice #1, then shaved almost a second off his time in Free Practice #2.

    The competition was unable to keep up, with second overall Andrea Iannone trailing Repsol Honda’s Marquez by .7 seconds, despite improving his own FP1 time by three quarters of a second. The Ducati Corse rider undoubtedly aims to improve performance and ease tensions after losing control of his bike and taking out teammate Andrea Dovizioso in the final turn of last weekend’s grand Prix in Argentina. He was penalized for the incident.

    Despite taking the top spot in both of Friday’s free practice segments, Marquez’s time of 2’04.034 is still nearly two seconds off the track record he set last year.

    FP2 saw second-year GP rider Maverick Vinales pilot his Suzuki to the third spot overall, with a time of 2’04.895.

    Octo Pramac’s Scott Redding overcame gastrointestinal illness and was the top satellite rider overall, placing 6th and 4th in the free practices, respectively. Redding also experienced serious flight delays from Argentina, arriving two days late after multiple flights and “a few bus rides of seven or eight hours.”

    Possibly the biggest surprise of the day was Avintia Racing’s Hector Barbera placing fourth in FP1, and his teammate Loris Baz capturing the seventh spot overall.