Tagged: Qatar Grand Prix

What does Rossi being fast on a Yamaha mean for MotoGP?

A week ago today Valentino Rossi qualified poorly, but got up to 4th, fell back to 7th, and then charged through the field to finish 2nd. It was an impressive ride, and one we would have never seen had he stayed on the Ducati Desmosedici. So, now that MotoGP has had its way and it’s most sellable star is again up on the podium in a dry race, what does it mean for the series?

Well, firstly, it means that Valentino is not slow. Not that very many people felt he would be slow when he got his hands on the bike he fell in love with. But it goes to show how difficult the Ducati was to ride. I don’t want to harp on too much about the Duke, but a telling interview of Rossi by MCN outlined some telling details. Rossi was shocked by the Ducati, having expected a bike that was capable of winning races. He has Casey Stoner to thank for that particular bomb shell. The Italian goes on to say that only Stoner could use the bike, and Rossi simply couldn’t, and is mystified to this day how Casey could win riding the Ducati. But perhaps the most interesting part was Rossi’s comment about Ducati’s attitudes to its riders and its bikes. When Rossi came in after testing the bike to tell Ducati staff what was wrong with their baby, the mechanics and staff didn’t trust his feedback. Why hire a rider of Rossi’s ability and then question what he’s saying? Then, to further compound the issue, Rossi stated that the crew also took the feedback more as assault on the bike. Stoner often outlined how difficult it was to get the Desmosedici altered and improved, and Rossi’s words exactly match what Stoner had said for years. With the Japanese marques, Rossi goes on, the staff are almost thankful for negative feedback. They see at as constructive, know what needs doing, and it gives them the direction to go away and know their work is going to help. At Ducati it seems, first it is the rider that is wrong, and then he must ‘learn to use the bike’…and only then will the bike be looked at.

Anyway, Rossi being back to somewhere near the front could also change racing this year. Since the introduction of the 800cc bikes, the riders have not only become faster, they have become more consistent, and incredibly smooth. The bikes respond best to this style, with high corner speeds a must, resulting in races that have been somewhat processional. The fastest rider wins, unless he makes a mistake, in which case the next fastest rider wins. Mistakes among the top riders have been few and far between, and with very little between the fastest riders, catching up and passing is difficult. With so much at stake for a single mistake, dives down the inside were rarer and rarer. Now though, Rossi has returned, and he has possibly less pressure than ever. Historically he has always raced to win, and raced to pass the rider in front no matter what, more often than not at least. With no pressure on him and a bike that is capable of winning races, it looks like he’ll revert back to his gun slinging style. Even if Jorge Lorenzo is faster than Rossi, which on the basis on the Qatar Grand Prix he is, Rossi is still capable of ruining the Mallorcan’s moment, get in the way of his lines, and slow him down. You don’t need to be the fastest to win a race after all, just fast enough.

Rossi isn’t the be all and end of MotoGP, of course. There are other riders that are capable of fighting at the front. But Rossi’s effect on them could change the racing style. Take Cal Crutchlow, for example. He was quick round the Losail circuit, but couldn’t get past Dani Pedrosa or Marc Marquez. Rossi turned up, and dispatched all three. Yes, Cal had a fuelling issue which affected his acceleration, and Rossi of course has a factory bike, but Cal’s words are telling. What will he do next time he thinks a Honda is slowing him down? ‘Take a leaf out of Valentino’s book, and start charging them. If that’s the only way to do it, then we’ve got to do it.’ While I have no such quote from Marquez, he too is a rider that is hugely skilled, but also aggressive and dives through gaps. In seeing him dicing with Rossi in Qatar it was clear that Marquez would rather turn a slower lap and be ahead than use the perfect lines and save half a second.

Now, no one knows if the mentality of the entire field will change, but there is precedent. In F1, the drivers got so used to it being hard to overtake they almost stopped bothering even trying. Lewis Hamilton came along and was quickly seen as being an incredible overtaker, and then, once the overtaking aids came like DRS and KERS, overtaking started becoming the norm again. And before you shout ‘These are fake tools!’, well, overtaking now takes place in areas of the track were these aids aren’t so useful, like round the outside a corner, through esses, and so on. But the point is, the drivers got a kick up the arse, and now they make moves more often, and everyone loves it. With Rossi coming back, Marquez coming in and Crutchlow irritated he couldn’t do what Rossi did, three big names could begin to get in the way of Lorenzo and Pedrosa (when he’s back on form) and we could have a train of five riders at the front desperately vying for position.

Which brings us on to my final topic, the growth of MotoGP. Sure it’s early days and I’m jumping the gun, but MotoGP.com reported that viewing figures were ‘vast’ for the Qatar Grand Prix. The UK saw a 75% increase in viewers, Spain 46%, Italian 17.6%, and while this isn’t all down to Rossi, the race was a stonker, and more people saw it than last year. They’ll come back. And if it’s better next time, more will come back. And they’ll be plenty of American’s watching the next one too, maybe even new converts to MotoGP thanks to its new home in Texas at the Circuit of the Americas. The more riders that are riding the way the viewers want, the better, and if it also turns out to be the only way to win a race at the moment, then that’s great. One rider isn’t enough, we need a number of riders, all racing hard and entertaining us. When MotoGP gets back its audience base, the teams can get more backers and sponsors, they’ll be more bikes, a greater number of equal machinery, more manufacturers, and then the racing will be better than ever.

So, what does Rossi being fast on a Yamaha mean? It means the fastest guys in MotoGP will have more riders in their face slowing them down, and the fastest guys ain’t guna always win. Well, maybe at least.

Qatar Grand Prix Race, result and times: Lorenzo gallops on, Rossi claws back to second, Marquez takes a podium

The first race of the season has been run, and while Jorge Lorenzo claimed what was eventually an easy win, many will focus on the triumphant return of Valentino Rossi. Anyway, before we get on to that, here’s how the race went.

When the lights went out Lorenzo got away smoothly, just beating Dani Pedrosa to the first corner. Cal Crutchlow dropped from 2nd to fifth, letting not only Pedrosa but also Andrea Dovizioso and Rossi by. The first lap and a half were hectic, with Rossi nudging up past Dovizioso, but out braking himself, nearly crashing into Pedrosa. Well, actually he did hit Pedrosa; the Italian later said his brake lever protector had hit the rear tyre of the Honda, and without it, he would have been flung over the handle bars. The incident made Rossi run wide, and he joined just behind Stefan Bradl in 7th.

With Rossi out of the way, Crutchlow bolted to catch up Pedrosa, and Marc Marquez was able to jump ahead into 4th. Dovizioso was unable to match his fast qualifying pace and quickly back behind Bradl and Rossi.

And he we can look at the strength of the Honda. While it’s clear it hasn’t been the best bike here, with Lorenzo and Crutchlow taking Pole and second on the grid, the top end speed and drive out of corners of the Honda is a massive problem in race trim. Crutchlow couldn’t pace Pedrosa and was quickly overtaken by Marquez. The Brit was as every bit as fast as Dani, and at least fast enough to battle with Marquez, but come the straight he was too far behind at the exit, thanks to the acceleration of the Honda, and couldn’t stay in the slipstream down the straights. The same is true for Rossi’s battle with Bradl. The Italian was all over the LCR man for lap after lap, but couldn’t get close enough when it mattered.

Of course, the difference is Rossi did get past Bradl on lap 8, and begun chasing down the trio of riders in 2nd, 3rd and 4th. Pedrosa, not comfortable all weekend on his bike at Losail, was slowing up Marquez and Cal, but still, Rossi’s pace and consistency was impressive. He banged out a string of 1:55s and low 1:56s, and was the fastest man on the track for much of the race. That’s not all that’s impressive. Where the top riders set their fastest lap on lap 2 or 3, Rossi’s was on lap 16. He was going for it and was obviously comfortable enough with his Yamaha to pull out a lap like that, just 0.3 from Marquez’s fastest lap that was set on lap 3.

With 8 laps left Rossi was near, and with every camera angle closer and closer to the Tech 3 Yamaha of Crutchlow. He dived through in turn 1, with the Brit making a valiant effort to keep his place, but Cal ran wide, travelling too fast to make the turn. He kept his 5th place, and should be pleased he was running with factory Honda’s for much of the race.

Marques had finally managed to out brake his teammate after a good drive from the final turn, and Rossi threw his bike up the inside of Pedrosa on lap 19. The biggest battle of the night commenced. Steve Parrish, the BBC commentator suggested Marquez’s rear tyre was beginning to give way, but it just seems the Spaniard can still ride with a loose rear end, for he was fast, and up for a battle. Rossi got through, but only just, with Marquez trying to cling on. The Honda then pulled up alongside the Yamaha, but Rossi appeared to have turn 1 covered, only for Marquez to pull off an audacious move round the outside. With a lap to go Rossi squeezed through after Marquez’s rear end lost grip for a split second, and Marquez was unable to beat the Italian to the line.

Still, Marquez can’t feel too disappointed, he scored a podium for his first MotoGP race, the elite class, fought with Rossi and beat Pedrosa, both elite riders. Lorenzo’s winning gap was 6 seconds, and we’ll have to wait until next time to find out whether Rossi would have challenged him. Still, the next track is the Circuit of the Americas, a track that, during testing, no one could touch Marquez, the latest elite rider to join the premier class. Next race day is Sunday 21st April.

Also, check out my Qatar Grand Prix race prediction – right top five riders…wrong order! Still, managed to call Lorenzo and Rossi…

Qatar race result and times:

Pos. Num. Rider Team Time/Gap
1 99 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 42’39.802
2 46 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 5.99
3 93 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 6.201
4 26 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 9.473
5 35 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 18.764
6 19 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 22.148
7 4 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 24.355
8 69 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 24.92
9 29 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 37.124
10 11 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 44.908
11 41 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 49.809
12 14 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 56.495
13 8 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens +1’09.599
14 68 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport +1’10.742
15 7 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens +1’13.600
16 71 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing +1’29.444
17 70 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport +1’34.341
18 52 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project +1’34.683
Not Classified
5 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 7 Laps
9 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 10 Laps
6 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 14 Laps
38 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 18 Laps
67 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 21 Laps
17 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 0 Lap

Qatar Grand Prix Warm Up, times and results: Crutchlow claims top spot in slower session

With times down all round, it was Cal Crutchlow who topped the session to stake his claim on the Qatar podium, and maybe even the top step. A quick glance at his personal timesheet also shows he was consistently fast, and his fast laps looked faster than Jorge Lorenzo’s. Still, Lorenzo came in second, 0.137 behind the Brit, with Dani Pedrosa third, just a thousandth of a second behind.

Valentino Rossi bounced back from a bad qualifying session that consisted of him making poor use his first rear tyre then being stuck in traffic to finish fourth in Warm Up. At two tenths off the pace, he’s just 0.048 ahead of Stefan Bradl. Marc Marquez slipped into sixth place with a 1:56.578, 0.9 seconds slower than his effort in QP2. The happiest man other than Crutchlow is probably Andrea Dovizioso. Still only 0.4 away from the session’s fastest time, just as he was in qualifying, he’s seventh, but has shown the Ducati can grab fast times across the weekend.

This is the final time the riders get to tweak their setups, and with the Yamaha’s looking like the strongest package here, it’s a brave man who bets on any other marque taking the chequered flag.

Warm Up results:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. Gap Prev. gap
1 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’56.273
2 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.410 0.137 0.137
3 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’56.411 0.138 0.001
4 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.480 0.207 0.069
5 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’56.528 0.255 0.048
6 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’56.578 0.305 0.05
7 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’56.682 0.409 0.104
8 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’57.059 0.786 0.377
9 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’57.239 0.966 0.18
10 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’57.267 0.994 0.028
11 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’57.483 1.21 0.216
12 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’57.561 1.288 0.078
13 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’58.094 1.821 0.533
14 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’58.161 1.888 0.067
15 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’58.175 1.902 0.014
16 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 1’58.375 2.102 0.20
17 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’58.848 2.575 0.473
18 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’58.912 2.639 0.064
19 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 1’59.243 2.970 0.331
20 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’59.763 3.490 0.520
21 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 1’59.772 3.499 0.009
22 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’59.788 3.515 0.016
23 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 2’00.080 3.807 0.292
24 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 2’00.200 3.927 0.120

Qatar Grand Prix Qualifying Practice 2, times and results: Lorenzo shows his class, with Crutchlow 2nd & Pedrosa 3rd

The second qualifying session was fast, hectic and even gave us some surprises. Still, there was no real surprise with the pole sitter; Jorge Lorenzo, MotoGP World Champion. His last two laps in the session were both under 1:55, showing he can string together phenomenally fast times. His race pace is as strong as we’ve come to expect from the Mallorcan, and he was rightly pleased with his result.

Right behind Lorenzo was Cal Crutchlow. He posted a fast lap early on, a 1:54.916, and although he didn’t better it after he came in for a new rear tyre, he still clocked a high 1:54.9. His pace looks almost as good as Lorenzo’s, and from second on the grid he looks good for a decent result.

Dani Pedrosa finally found some speed on the Losail track and nipped in late on to take third on the grid. He’s over 0.400 seconds away from Lorenzo, and a couple of tenths behind Crutchlow, but he’s still not completely happy with his setup. With only Warm Up practice left, he will only hope he can find a solution that will let him achieve faster lap times with less effort.

Ducati. Whether or not it will be a trend that will continue into the next few races of the season, no one knows, but Andrea Dovizioso is fast on the Desmosedici. Very fast. Clocking a 1:55.160 he’s 0.446 behind Lorenzo, but ranks 4th fastest, 0.009 behind Pedrosa. The Italian is still unsure how his tyres will last the race distance, but if the pace is there, that’s a start. The other Ducati’s were certainly not able to match Dovi though. Andrea Iannone, fresh from QP1, managed only a 1:56.523 to get 10th on the grid, and Nicky Hayden was over a tenth slower still. This means Hayden’s over 1.9 seconds slower than his teammate. You don’t make that up with a new spring rate…

How about Marc Marquez? The entire grid pulled out the stops and the times significantly dropped from FP4, but Marquez wasn’t able to get the same gains. While Lorenzo lapped 1.4 seconds faster and Pedrosa 1.3 seconds in QP2 than FP4, Marquez only managed to find an extra third of a second. This was the a similar scenario for Valentino Rossi. From FP4 to QP2 he dropped 0.4 seconds, and gets a lowly 7th on the grid. With Dovizioso on the bike he rejected sitting three places ahead, he must be feeling irritated. There was however something not quite right with Rossi’s riding, so if there’s more news, we’ll find out later.

Talking of lowering your time brings us to Bradley Smith. The young Brit slashed 1.1 seconds off his FP4 time and grabbed a well deserved 9th on the grid. Being in the top ten for your first ever MotoGP qualifying on a satellite bike is good work, and if he can finish in the same place on Sunday, he can consider the weekend a great success.

QP2 times:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. Gap Prev. gap
1 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’54.714
2 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’54.916 0.202 0.202
3 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’55.151 0.437 0.235
4 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’55.160 0.446 0.009
5 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’55.477 0.763 0.317
6 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’55.645 0.931 0.168
7 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’55.711 0.997 0.066
8 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’55.870 1.156 0.159
9 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’56.315 1.601 0.445
10 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’56.523 1.809 0.208
11 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’56.667 1.950 0.144
12 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.064 2.350 0.397

Qatar Grand Prix Qualifying Practice 1, times and results: Espargaro leads, with Iannone second

The first in the new type of qualifying has ended with Aleix Espargaro pulling out a pretty special lap to make it through to QP2. Ben Spies made a valiant effort, but was clearly sore from his crash in FP4, and lacking confidence in the front end of his Ducati. On the other side of the Pramac garage though Andrea Iannone was beaming and lapped 0.052 behind Espargaro to get a chance to prove his mettle in QP2.

It’s not only Spies who’ll be disappointed either; Randy De Puniet only managed to get within 0.400 of his teammate Espargaro’s time. So fast was Espargaro that only two more riders got within a second of his. These were rookie Lukas Pesek, who looked impressive on the Ioda-Suter CRT, and Yonny Hernandez, a fan favourite who always gives 100%.

Next up is QP2 to decide the front four grid rows.

QP1 results:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. Gap Prev. gap
1 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.151
2 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’57.203 0.052 0.052
3 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’57.440 0.289 0.237
4 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.551 0.400 0.111
5 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 1’57.926 0.775 0.375
6 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 1’58.058 0.907 0.132
7 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 1’58.263 1.112 0.205
8 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’58.271 1.120 0.008
9 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’58.361 1.210 0.090
10 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 1’58.486 1.335 0.125
11 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’58.755 1.604 0.269
12 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’58.806 1.655 0.051
13 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’58.912 1.761 0.106
14 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 1’59.572 2.421 0.660

Qatar Grand Prix Free Practice 4 results and times: Crutchlow leads Marquez with Lorenzo & Rossi close behind.

The first ever Free Practice 4 session has been completed and it’s Brit Cal Crutchlow that takes the fastest time. The first man to get into the 1:55s, he looked good, consistent and smooth. Marc Marquez too looked good and consistent, but not entirely smooth. For much of the session he was kicking the back out and sliding it into corners…basically, Marquez looks like he’s going to crash at every corner. It looks pretty sweet, it has to be said, but he trails Crutchlow by a third of a second.

Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo are just over a tenth back from Marquez, with Rossi only 0.021 seconds behind Lorenzo. Stefan Bradl clocked a 1:56.312 to take fifth fastest, with top Ducati once again going to Andrea Dovizioso. He’s 0.7 behind Crutchlow’s time, but is still faster than Dani Pedrosa, if only by 0.020.

After Pedrosa sits Nicky Hayden, but he’s 1.230 behind the leader,with Ben Spies a little less than 0.2 behind. Spies was starting to look better on the bike, but had a typical Ducati front end washout and landed heavily on his shoulder. Remember how Rossi crashed at Laguna last year? It’s literally the same crash riders have had on Ducati’s for years, and will zap his confidence for QP1.

FP4 results:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. Gap Prev. gap
1 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’55.655
2 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’55.997 0.342 0.342
3 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.140 0.485 0.143
4 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.161 0.506 0.021
5 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’56.312 0.657 0.151
6 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’56.378 0.0723 0.066
7 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’56.398 0.743 0.02
8 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’56.885 1.23 0.487
9 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’57.060 1.405 0.175
10 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’57.063 1.408 0.003
11 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’57.118 1.463 0.055
12 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’57.453 1.798 0.335
13 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.454 1.799 0.001
14 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’58.388 2.733 0.934
15 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’58.466 2.811 0.078
16 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 1’58.466 2.811 0
17 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’58.746 3.091 0.28
18 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’58.788 3.133 0.042
19 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 1’58.816 3.161 0.028
20 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 1’59.118 3.463 0.302
21 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’59.187 3.532 0.069
22 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 1’59.337 3.682 0.15
23 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’59.867 4.212 0.53
24 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 1’59.890 4.235 0.023

Qatar Grand Prix Free Practice 3 is over, but what’s going on with qualifying?

So, now Free Practice 3 has been sorted, we can think about the new Free Practice 4 session, and also the updated qualification process. This is all new for 2013, so here’s a brief summary of how it works. For a complete run down, including the benefits of the new system, head over to my New MotoGP Qualifying rules page.

Here’s a quick summary of how qualifying works:

Free Practice 1 (FP1)
Free Practice 2 (FP2) Riders ranked in order of their fastest lap achieved in any of the 3 sessions
Free Practice 3 (FP3)
Free Practice 4 (FP4) A final session to work on setup to prepare for one of the qualifying practices
Qualifying Practice 1 (QP1) Qualification for places 13-last place. Fastest two riders from the session enter QP2
Qualifying Practice 2 (QP2) Qualification for places 1-12. Only times recorded in QP2 will count

Qatar Grand Prix Free Practice 3, results and times: Newbie Marquez top again

It seems the hype surrounding Marc Marquez has real substance as he tops the timesheets for FP3, edging out Jorge Lorenzo by 0.001. Hey, every bit counts, and that’s why it’s measured to a thousandth of a second.

Ex-World Supersport champion Cal Crutchlow posted the third fastest time, getting the better of Valentino Rossi in a close session. Just over 0.400 splits places three down to eighth as the times dropped from FP2. After Rossi sits Andrea Dovizioso, a third of a second off of the leading times and is definitely showing his intentions to turn the fortunes of Ducati around. And get this; Dovizioso is only 0.001 seconds behind Rossi, on the very bike Rossi left last year…only one of the Italian riders will be smiling about that statistic. Still, without making excuses for Rossi, he did report a severe headache was leaving him at less than 100%.

Dani Pedrosa finally lapped the Losail circuit at a decent page, but had to settle for 6th fastest. He’s still not really looking like himself on the bike at Qatar, and with a gap of 0.418 to Marquez at the top of timings, he’s made significant improvements, but just not enough.

The top finished with Alvaro Bautista, Nicky Hayden, Bradley Smith and Stefan Bradl all within a second of the quickest time, meaning they all make it into QP2, the second qualifying practice. The rest of the riders will enter QP1, the first qualifying practice, to settle places 13 to 24. The fastest two riders from QP1 will join the fastest riders in QP2 for the top 12 places.

FP3 times:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. gap Prev. gap
1 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’56.084
2 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.085 0.001 0.001
3 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’56.326 0.242 0.241
4 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.416 0.332 0.090
5 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’56.417 0.333 0.001
6 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’56.502 0.418 0.085
7 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’56.572 0.488 0.07
8 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’56.670 0.586 0.098
9 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’56.901 0.817 0.231
10 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’56.984 0.900 0.083
11 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’57.169 1.085 0.185
12 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’57.308 1.224 0.139
13 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.420 1.336 0.112
14 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’57.956 1.872 0.536
15 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 1’58.211 2.127 0.255
16 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’58.396 2.312 0.185
17 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 1’58.863 2.779 0.467
18 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’59.180 3.096 0.317
19 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 1’59.212 3.128 0.032
20 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 1’59.755 3.671 0.543
21 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’59.758 3.674 0.003
22 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 1’59.837 3.753 0.079
23 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 2’00.080 3.996 0.243
24 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 2’00.439 4.355 0.359

Qatar Grand Prix Free Practice 2, results and times: Marquez top, Yamahas strong, Pedrosa struggles

Well, after struggling slightly in the first session with grip and the racing line, Marc Marquez finished the end of FP2 a quarter of a second ahead of second placed man Jorge Lorenzo. Valentino Rossi was just 0.060 behind his teammate, but then there’s a bit of gap to fourth. Cal Crutchlow, continuing his good form, sits just over a third of a second from Rossi, but seven tenths behind the leading Honda, with Stefan Bradl 5th, three quarters of a second off the pace. Andrea Dovizioso sits 6th, but a hefty 1.3 seconds off the pace of Marquez.

Looking further down the timings we have to reach seventh to find Dani Pedrosa. Clearly still struggling with grip on the way out of and in to corners, he’s 1.4 seconds behind his new teammate, and almost definitely beginning to get worried.

It’s worth noting that while Marquez improved his time from yesterday by 0.800 of a second, practically every other rider was around a tenth or more off their FP1 times, including Lorenzo, Rossi and Pedrosa. Espargaro clocked a time a whole second slower, giving support to claims that his impressive time from yesterday was at least in part down to a tow he received from Crutchlow. Either way, Espargaro is still top CRT and 2.1 seconds from the ultimate pace.

Another thing clear from the results is that Ben Spies is beginning to get to grips with his shoulder and the Desmosedici. Less than a tenth slower than Nicky Hayden is testament to that, but his pace will still not be impressing him as he sits in 9th, over 1.6 seconds from the leading Honda’s time.

The track is still not at its best and clearly, looking at the relatively slow times, the bikes and riders and not comfortable with it. Once the track cleans up this evening with the lower classes running again, we should get a real idea of who is fast and has their bike hooked up best.

FP2 times:

Pos. Rider Team Time Lead. gap  Pre. Gap
1 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’56.477
2 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.745 0.268 0.268
3 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.805 0.328 0.060
4 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’57.169 0.692 0.364
5 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’57.257 0.780 0.088
6 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’57.833 1.356 0.576
7 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’57.877 1.400 0.044
8 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’58.040 1.563 0.163
9 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’58.137 1.660 0.097
10 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’58.298 1.821 0.161
11 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’58.340 1.863 0.042
12 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’58.575 2.098 0.235
13 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’58.631 2.154 0.056
14 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 1’58.871 2.394 0.240
15 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’58.904 2.427 0.033
16 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’59.185 2.708 0.281
17 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’59.809 3.332 0.624
18 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 2’00.557 4.080 0.748
19 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 2’00.652 4.175 0.095
20 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 2’00.919 4.442 0.267
21 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 2’00.940 4.463 0.021
22 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 2’01.321 4.844 0.381
23 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 2’01.622 5.145 0.301
24 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 2’01.816 5.339 0.194

Qatar Grand Prix Free Practice 1, times and results: Lorenzo leads from Crutchlow and Rossi

The first free practice of the 2013 has been run and it’s Jorge Lorenzo who takes first blood. With a dusty track many riders ran on going from the 1km straight into Turn 1, including Bradley Smith, Marc Marquez, Dani Pedrosa, Andrea Iannone and Stefan Bradl. Yonny Hernandez was unlucky enough to be the first rider to crash, but he was up and walking and continued uninjured.

At the 19 minute mark Valentino Rossi led from Lorenzo by 0.3 seconds, and it looked like the Italian would take the fastest time. A quick look at Lorenzo’s times though tells you he was the most consistant, sticking two times in the 1.56 bracket before nailing a 1.56.685 to take the fastest time. Interestingly Cal Crutchlow got the second fastest time, just 0.058 seconds behind Lorenzo, while Rossi was a mere 0.071 from the leading time. If the times stay as close as this, we’ll have a right scrap on our hands come Sunday.

Further down, Marc Marquez grabbed fourth, but was over half a second down from the leaders. Ducati might have just found its saviour in the form of Andrea Dovizioso. He came in fifth, 0.853 seconds behind Lorenzo. Dani Pedrosa was not having a good session. He ran off track twice and finished over a second down on the best time, and less than two tenths ahead of Aleix Esparagaro, the leading CRT. Espargaron was possibly the star performer, taking 9th in the first practice, just over 1.1 seconds away from the leading Yamahas. Comnpared to his FP1 last year, he was almost three seconds faster too.

FP 1 times:

Pos Rider Team Time Lead. gap Prev. gap
1 Jorge LORENZO Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.685
2 Cal CRUTCHLOW Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’56.743 0.058 0.058
3 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha Factory Racing 1’56.756 0.071 0.013
4 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’57.276 0.591 0.52
5 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’57.538 0.853 0.262
6 Alvaro BAUTISTA GO&FUN Honda Gresini 1’57.601 0.916 0.063
7 Stefan BRADL LCR Honda MotoGP 1’57.670 0.985 0.069
8 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 1’57.749 1.064 0.079
9 Aleix ESPARGARO Power Electronics Aspar 1’57.843 1.158 0.094
10 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Team 1’57.926 1.241 0.083
11 Bradley SMITH Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’58.369 1.684 0.443
12 Andrea IANNONE Energy T.I. Pramac Racing 1’58.559 1.874 0.19
13 Ben SPIES Ignite Pramac Racing 1’58.575 1.89 0.016
14 Hector BARBERA Avintia Blusens 1’59.608 2.923 1.033
15 Randy DE PUNIET Power Electronics Aspar 1’59.633 2.948 0.025
16 Karel ABRAHAM Cardion AB Motoracing 1’59.758 3.073 0.125
17 Colin EDWARDS NGM Mobile Forward Racing 2’00.341 3.656 0.583
18 Yonny HERNANDEZ Paul Bird Motorsport 2’00.426 3.741 0.085
19 Hiroshi AOYAMA Avintia Blusens 2’00.563 3.878 0.137
20 Claudio CORTI NGM Mobile Forward Racing 2’01.227 4.542 0.664
21 Danilo PETRUCCI Came IodaRacing Project 2’01.438 4.753 0.211
22 Bryan STARING GO&FUN Honda Gresini 2’01.942 5.257 0.504
23 Lukas PESEK Came IodaRacing Project 2’02.079 5.394 0.137
24 Michael LAVERTY Paul Bird Motorsport 2’02.135 5.450 0.056