Skip to main content

New date for Silverstone MotoGP

World champion Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi won his seventh MotoGP title this season

The 2010 British MotoGP at Silverstone has been put back two weeks and will now be staged on Sunday, 20 June.

Several other changes have been made to the provisional calendar, affecting the dates of the races in France, Italy, Czech Republic and San Marino.

Silverstone is replacing Donington Park as the venue for the British MotoGP.

The Northamptonshire track is also in line to host a Formula 1 race in 2010, with talks ongoing about plans to stage the British Grand Prix.

The MotoGP season is due to start in Qatar on 11 April and end in Valencia on 7 November.

606: DEBATE
R1pley

The date of the Czech GP has also been moved, meaning there are no longer two blocks of three successive race weekends during the season.

And there may still be more changes made to the calendar after the draw for the 2010 football World Cup in South Africa takes place in Cape Town on 4 December.


2010 provisional MotoGP calendar (as of 17 November):

11 April: Losail, Qatar *
25 April Motegi, Japan
2 May Jerez, Spain
23 May Le Mans, France
6 June Mugello, Italy
20 June Silverstone, Great Britain
26 June Assen, Netherlands **
4 July Catalunya, Spain
18 July Sachsenring, Germany
25 July Laguna Seca, US ***
15 August Brno, Czech Republic
29 August Indianapolis, US
5 September Misano, San Marino
19 September Balatonring, Hungary
10 October Sepang, Malaysia
17 October Phillip Island, Australia
31 October Estoril, Portugal
7 November Ricardo Tormo Circuit, Valencia

* Evening race

** Saturday race

*** Only MotoGP class

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Valentino Rossi finishes second in the Rally de Monza

Monday, 30 November 2009

The MotoGP World Champion proved very competitive, winning four of the nine time trials.

Valentino Rossi finished second in the Rally de Monza, which he competed in this weekend. Driving a Ford Focus WRC, the Italian rider was very fast throughout the race, taking four out of nine stage wins, but two errors on special stages 4 and 5 handed victory to Dindo Capello, driving a CitrΓΆen C4.

Valentino also took part in the Master’s Show, a competition involving all the participants of the rally in an elimination round special stage. Despite having the best overall time, Rossi reached the semi-finals where he lost to Capello, after beating Marco Simoncelli in the quarter final round.

After the race Rossi said β€œI finished the rally by winning the last super special β€œGrand Prix” test in the rain and I am satisfied to have taken the fastest time as well in the Master’s, where I was hoping to take revenge on Capello but I was not able to do so. In recent years the level of the Rally de Monza has risen a lot and in order to win it is not enough just to be fast, it is also necessary to make few mistakes. In any case, the last twenty days have been very entertaining for me, firstly with the motocross in Cavellara, then with a Ferrari GT in Vallelunga and now with the rally.”

The sports activities of Valentino Rossi outside the world of two wheels will continue next weekend with the β€œBettega Memorial”, a rally show which is celebrated each year as part of the Bologna Motorshow.

Heatseek

New team, same Rossi: Winning with Yamaha

Thursday, 26 November 2009

Valentino Rossi’s titles won with Yamaha are reviewed with video highlights of more entertaining celebrations, in the final instalment of the motogp.com series looking back at the Italian’s accomplishments.

A new age of winning with Yamaha begins for Rossi: Australia 2004

A new age of winning with Yamaha begins for Rossi: Australia 2004

 

The switch from Honda to Yamaha did not upset Rossi’s winning rhythm as he immediately claimed his fourth and fifth successive premier class titles with Yamaha.

Wasting no time in settling on the Yamaha prototype, Rossi won his first race of the 2004 MotoGP season on his new machine at Welkom and collected 11 podiums – including nine wins – on his way to glory. β€˜What a Spectacle’ was the triumphant slogan on his t-shirt as he secured the title at Phillip Island.

The following year in 2005 provided another crown and yet another memorable festivity. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs joined Rossi on the track at Sepang as he marked his seventh World title in a season that delivered 11 wins.

β€˜Sorry for the delay’ was the party line at Motegi in 2008 as Rossi reclaimed the title which had for the past two years been won by Nicky Hayden and Casey Stoner respectively. Nine wins and a total of 13 podiums are the statistics of an eighth World title winning season.

At 30 years old, the success shows no sign of fading as Rossi held off the spirited challenge of Fiat Yamaha team-mate Jorge Lorenzo throughout the 2009 campaign to take his ninth World title at Sepang, with β€˜The old hen makes good soup’ Rossi’s celebratory tag.

Fifth in a row for Rossi: Sepang 2005

Fifth in a row for Rossi: Sepang 2005

Rossi bounces back after two seasons without titles: Japan 2008

Rossi bounces back after two seasons without titles: Japan 2008

A ninth title for Rossi and another celebration: Sepang 2009

A ninth title for Rossi and another celebration: Sepang 2009


Heatseek

Honda's Dani Pedrosa leaves hospital after hand surgery

Dani Pedrosa
Pedrosa had an injury-plagued season

Dani Pedrosa has left hospital after having surgery to remove a screw from his left hand and will step up his training for 2010 in a fortnight.

The 24-year-old Spaniard had the screw inserted to aid his recovery from a fracture sustained during the season.

The Repsol Honda rider ended the 2009 campaign in third place behind champion Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo.

Pedrosa, who won the final race of the season in Valencia, suffered an injury-plagued season, also damaging his knee.

Heatseek

MotoGP increases engine size to 1000cc in 2012

Motorbikes
MotoGP engines will increase in power from 2012

MotoGP engines will increase in size from 800cc to 1000cc in 2012 after an agreement between the sport's governing body and rights holders on Friday.

The international motorcycling federation (FIM) met with rights holders Dorna in Switzerland to agree the switch and discuss rule changes.

"2012 will be the year of a new era of MotoGP," FIM president Vito Ippolito told the motogp.com website.

"Manufacturers want 1000cc engines, so that's the way now."

The top engine category in MotoGP increased from 500cc to 990cc in 2002 but was reduced to 800cc in 2007 in a bid to reduce costs and cornering speeds.

"The 800cc formula hasn't worked," Ippolito told Italy's Motosprint magazine earlier this month.

"With 800cc power is more or less the same (as with 990cc engines) but cornering speed has increased. And costs have increased too."

Heatseek

Ducati Desmosedici GP10 unveiled

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

The new prototype to be used by the Ducati Marlboro team for the 2010 MotoGP World Championship campaign was presented on Wednesday.

Ducati Marlboro unveils the new Demosedici GP10

Ducati Marlboro unveils the new Demosedici GP10

 

There was a packed schedule again on the third day of Wrooom 2010 at Madonna di Campiglio on Wednesday, with Claudio Domenicali coming under the spotlight in a morning press conference. The General Manager of Ducati Motor later joined Casey Stoner and Nicky Hayden on the spectacular Patascoss slope to unveil the new Ducati Desmosedici GP10, the Ducati Marlboro Team’s latest weapon in the chase for the MotoGP title, against the dramatic backdrop of the Dolomites - recently added by Unesco to their World Natural Heritage list.

β€œThe main changes to the bike are based on the rule changes, so the major part of the work was done precisely to make it perform better using only six engines for the entire championship,” explained Domenicali. β€œIt’s a very important difference, because we were used to using more-or-less one engine per race, so to switch from 18 engines to six is a very important adjustment. All of the main parts were redesigned - pistons, rods, crankshaft, the basics. It’s an engine with which our main objective was to minimise the loss of power to increase durability.”

Domenicali continued: β€œThe second big news isn’t related to the rules, but to our attempt to make the bike more rideable. This has to do with the firing order. We have a motor that, since the switch to 800cc, utilised a screamer set-up. This has permitted us to have maximum power, which was very important and was probably fundamental with the results that we’ve had in 2007, 2008 and 2009, but at a certain point, we began to wonder whether it could be worthwhile to re-test a way that we’d already followed in the past. The last 1000cc motors that we made in 2005 and 2006 used a big-bang firing order, and this gave us important rideability. We re-tested that way, first trying it on the dyno, then with Vittoriano Guareschi in his previous role as test rider and then with Nicky and Casey.”

β€œWe think we have a bike for 2010 with better traction, and that therefore makes it easier for us to find a good set-up. Another part of the work was dedicated to the chassis. In the pursuit of ease of use, we’ve worked to eliminate the bike’s squatting, which is why the entire rear portion of the bike was redesigned. This bike has a rear structure that carries the rider - which we call the seat support - and that also supports the swingarm. That part was redesigned to have six mounting points instead of four; this makes the bike more rigid in a way and it guarantees better rideability and improved rigidity. With respect to the bike we introduced last year, this bike is also aesthetically different because of the redesigned fairing but we already saw that at Estoril.”

Domenicali then discussed the recent changes to Ducati Marlboro Team management.

β€œ2009 was a year - even from a sporting perspective - that was difficult and complicated. Nicky found things harder than he or we expected but he gave us a great lesson because he never lost his good attitude, he always had a spirit of great optimism and positivity. We were able to put at his disposal a bike that permitted him to obtain results that were in line with his talent. He gave us a podium at Indianapolis and he kept improving the whole season.”

β€œCasey was very fast from the start, as he always is, and had great potential. Of course what happened at mid-season affected the season, but I believe that everyone - from Casey to us - has described what happened and clarified it so it seems useless for me to continue to give details. The important thing, in my opinion, is that today we have Casey with us, probably in the best health we’ve ever seen him. We have reason for optimism for both riders.”

β€œThere have also been some changes to the management, with Alessandro Cicognoni and Vitto Guareschi coming in, having shown themselves in the team to have competence and perhaps even bring things that were missing. I believe that this important change leaves the company in a solid situation, also because it’s in some way personalised by an incredible talent as Filippo Preziosi, who is the true engine of all our racing activities, and he remains safe, solid, and dedicated. I believe it’s a change in the continuity, if we can define it that way.”

Domenicali continued to add: β€œFaith is the key word that Ducati are using in looking ahead to 2010, in a variety of aspects. We have a team that certainly makes us think we can approach the Championship with great hope. Nicky and Casey are two riders who don’t need any type of introduction. We have faith in the company, because it has a solid, stable base in the Bonomi family, and it’s a company that has managed 2009 well: the motorcycle market had a big decline in 2009 - the market declined by over 30 percent, a very heavy, difficult amount. But our company managed very well and we dropped β€˜only’ 18 percent. In fact, in 2009, we had the largest share that the company has ever enjoyed historically. So also from the economic point of view, the company knew how to control very carefully its costs and manage 2009 well. For example, we didn’t cut or eliminate any development of future models, something that’s fundamental for the future health of the company.”

β€œWe have faith in the Championship, because I see that Carmelo Ezpeleta (CEO, Dorna Sports) - here with us - has come through a truly difficult moment, with great character. He’s always been present in person, and he’s somebody with whom you can have a relationship and a dialogue, so it’s very important for our company to be present in a Championship run in this manner and Carmelo is thanked personally for this.”

β€œWe have faith in our sponsors, because 2009, as I said, has been very difficult and yet we’ve managed to continue good relationships with them. We have a very important main sponsor in Marlboro - obviously our host at this event - which has confirmed our faith. We have other important partners like Telecom, Generali, Enel, Riello ups, that have been with us and grown with us over a long period of time. We also have faith in the media, who are well represented in this sport.”

Heatseek

Valentino Rossi fastest in first Moto GP test in Sepang

MotoGP champion Valentino Rossi
Rossi was the fastest driver on both days of the opening test

Reigning world champion Valentino Rossi picked up where he left off as he set the pace in the first pre-season test.

The seven-time MotoGP champion lapped a wet Sepang circuit in two minutes, 00.925 seconds to head the field for Yamaha after two days of testing.

Australian Casey Stoner was 0.395 secs behind the Italian for Ducati with Rossi's team-mate Jorge Lorenzo, who completed 60 laps, third fastest.

The opening round of the 2010 season begins in Qatar on 11 April.

Dani Pedrosa knocked more than a second off the time he set on Thursday to record the fourth fastest lap on Friday for Honda.

Ben Spies was fifth on a Yamaha while Pedrosa's team-mate Andrea Dovizioso produced the sixth fastest time in Malaysia.

Colin Edwards (Yamaha), Nicky Hayden (Ducati), Aleix Espargaro (Pramac) and Loris Capirossi (Suzuki) filled out the top 10.

During the test, members of the manufacturers' association (MSMA) met to discuss proposals to change the bikes' engine capacity from 800cc to 1000cc in 2012.

Rossi has already said that a return to more powerful engine could persuade him to extend his career in MotoGP.

The 30-year-old Italian tested a Ferrari Formula 1 car for a sixth time over the winter and has not ruled out a future move to four-wheel racing.

Heatseek

Lorenzo misses MotoGP test after injuring hand in crash

Jorge Lorenzo
In such a close-fought championship, pre-season could prove vital

Jorge Lorenzo will miss the second MotoGP testing session of the year at the end of the month after injuring his right hand in a training accident.

The 22-year-old Fiat Yamaha rider, who was world championship runner-up last year, fell off a motocross bike going at 30kmh on a course near Barcelona.

Lorenzo was taken to hospital and found to have a fracture at the base of the first metacarpal and a displaced thumb.

He is due home on Friday but will need hand protection for four to six weeks.

Lorenzo, who was runner-up to team-mate Valentino Rossi in the 2009 championship, is expected to make a full recovery in time for the final pre-season test at Qatar in March, with the 2010 season starting at the same venue in April.

606: DEBATE
JulianS

Despite being team-mates, Rossi and Lorenzo had a divided garage last season and have confirmed they will continue with that set-up in 2010.

Lorenzo spoke seriously about leaving Fiat Yamaha last season, saying he did not always feel appreciated, before eventually signing a new one-year deal.

Rossi had made it clear he does not feel there is room for both riders in the team.

Heatseek
Heatseek

Debut Hungarian MotoGP at Balatonring cancelled again

Valentino Rossi
MotoGP champion Valentino Rossi will have to wait to race in Hungary

The inaugural Hungarian MotoGP has been cancelled for a second time and replaced by a fourth race in Spain.

Governing body the FIM said the race at the new Balatonring circuit on 19 September would not go ahead because construction work delays.

It will be replaced by the Grand Prix of Aragon at Spain's Motorland Aragon circuit on the same date.

Spain already has races scheduled for Jerez, Barcelona and Valencia in May, July and November respectively.

Construction of the 4.6km Balatonring in Savoly began in November 2008 but has been hit by problems.

The inaugural Hungarian MotoGP was initially scheduled for September 2009 but was postponed because a harsh winter and financial concerns left the project badly behind schedule.


2010 MotoGP calendar:

11 April Qatar, Losail

25 April Japan, Motegi

2 May Spain, Jerez

23 May France, Le Mans

6 June Italy, Mugello

20 June Great Britain, Silverstone

26 June Netherlands, Assen

4 July Catalunya, Barcelona

18 July Germany, Sachsenring

25 July United States, Laguna Seca

22 August Czech Republic, Brno

29 August United States, Indianapolis

5 September San Marino, Misano

19 September Spain, Aragon*

10 October Malaysia, Sepang

17 October Australia, Phillip Island

31 October Portugal, Estoril

7 November Spain, Valencia

* replaces Balatonring, Hungary

Heatseek

Meet the new face of BBC MotoGP

By Julian Shea

Jennie Gow - Motorcycle News/Photographer Mykel Nicolaou.
Jennie will be the face of BBC MotoGP coverage from this year

After all the new bikes and liveries, plus line-up changes, the last question all fans have been asking themselves about the 2010 MotoGP season can finally be answered - who will be presenting the BBC's MotoGP coverage?

Suzi Perry, the face of MotoGP for more than a decade, decided in the close season to step down and concentrate on other work.

Now, her replacement can be revealed - Jennie Gow.

"It's a dream come true," she told BBC Sport.

"It's the most amazing opportunity for anyone who's into bikes, I can't wait to meet every rider and every person involved with it - there isn't a rider I'm not looking forward to meeting."

The 32-year-old has an extensive background in newspapers, radio and television, presenting motocross and speedway, and says she is thrilled at the prospect of getting involved with the world of elite-class motorbikes.

"I've always been interested in sport in general but my first foray into sports broadcasting was with bikes, so I'm biased towards them," she added.

There were some thrilling races and battles in the 2009 campaign before Valentino Rossi ran away with the world title and Jennie cannot wait for the new campaign to start.

"There were some amazing races last year and I think it will be even better in 2010 - there are some real grudges there, and with Ben Spies coming through, there's going to be loads going on."

This sport is all about the riders and the stories, not me. I'm there to relay it to the people who can't be there, it's about getting that sense of excitement across to those watching
Jennie Gow

The move into MotoGP is a big step for Jennie - but she says it is a challenge she cannot wait to take on. She will be working in the BBC team alongside experienced commentators Charlie Cox and Steve Parrish and reporter Matt Roberts.

"I call myself an honorary biker - I've got a lot to learn, and I'm very aware of that, but hopefully the biking community will welcome me," she stated.

"I come to it from the fans' point of view - Steve and Charlie are there as the pros, I'll bring you the fans' enthusiasm.

"The globetrotting will be a first for me - I've done bits of travelling for work before but nothing as major as this, so I'll certainly be buying some new luggage, something that will last more than one flight!"

After 13 years of covering motorbike racing for the BBC, Perry took the "agonising" decision to step away from the sport.

Suzi Perry and Valentino Rossi
Perry rubbed shoulders with the likes of Valentino Rossi for many years

"I am still bike racing's number one fan but the time commitments have prevented me from doing other stuff," she told Motorcycle News.

"It feels like a part of something has died. That might sound a little dramatic but that's how I feel."

Jennie knows it will be a hard act to follow.

"Suzi has been amazing with bringing on bike coverage," she said.

"She knows it inside out as she's lived it for so long. It's a massive challenge for me and I hope I can do it justice. If enthusiasm counts for anything then I've certainly got lots of it - I hope I can do a decent job for the fans."

And despite stepping into the limelight, it is not something she is particularly keen to hog.

"My style is energetic and quite chatty but this sport is all about the riders and the stories, not me. I'm there to relay it to the people who can't be there, it's about getting that sense of excitement across to those watching."

Heatseek

All set for Rossi v Stoner again

Casey Stoner and Valentino Rossi
Arch-rivals Stoner and Rossi appear set for another titanic battle

By Matt Roberts
BBC MotoGP reporter

With the first race of the new MotoGP season a week away, it is already hard to see past another battle between Valentino Rossi and Casey Stoner for the title.

Certainly, that is the way it looked in pre-season testing, the first five days of which Yamaha rider Rossi dominated until Stoner stole his thunder on the final day in Qatar.

Rules changes have restricted testing to just six days, and that means those who got their homework right are more than one step ahead.

With Rossi's team-mate Jorge Lorenzo sure to need some time to fully recover from a hand injury and Dani Pedrosa in desperate trouble on the new factory Honda, old rivals Rossi and Stoner look like they will take some catching.

Lorenzo missed the second test in Malaysia in February after breaking a bone in his hand in a motocross training accident, adding to a catalogue of surgical interventions to the MotoGP grid during the winter.

Valentino Rossi
Rossi dominated five of the six days of pre-season testing

The Spaniard was the first to go under the surgeon's knife at last season's end, with doctors removing a plate that had been fixed to his left collarbone since 2005 just two weeks after the final race at Valencia.

At the same time LCR Honda's Randy de Puniet had an operation to remove screws from his left ankle, which he had broken in the summer, while two days before Christmas Pedrosa had a screw removed from his hand.

Pramac Ducati's Aleix Espargaro had what is a routine operation for MotoGP riders to relieve compartmental syndrome (arm pump) in his left forearm, as did Ducati's Nicky Hayden, who then needed a clean-up procedure to remove scar tissue in February, between the two Sepang tests.

San Carlo Honda's Marco Simoncelli has avoided the surgeon's knife but he did require CAT scans in a Kuala Lumpur hospital following the worst of a series of confidence-sapping crashes in Malaysia - exactly the kind that knocked the stuffing out of James Toseland at the same time last year and effectively ruined his season.

Perhaps more of a danger to the MotoGP field than their own maladies, however, is a clean bill of health for Stoner, who has enjoyed a full pre-season without a visit to the doctors for the first time since winning the title in 2007.

Stoner spent last pre-season recovering from major wrist surgery and the winter before that struggling with an old shoulder problem that had previously affected preparations for his rookie campaign back in 2006.

Furthermore, the Australian is benefiting from the revitalised well-being of the Ducati Desmosedici GP10, which features a new 'big-bang' engine configuration and higher seat position amongst the most significant updates to the GP9.

The changes make the notoriously wild Italian stallion easier to handle, particularly in corner exit, and give it more pitch under braking and acceleration, giving the riders better feel for the tyres.

Perhaps more of a danger to the MotoGP field than their own maladies is a clean bill of health for Stoner

Hayden has benefited hugely from the modifications, ending third and fourth fastest respectively in the two tests at Sepang, Malaysia and Losail, Qatar, respectively, making him a contender for early podiums.

Changes to the Yamaha YZR-M1 factory machines of Rossi and Lorenzo have been of a more subtle nature, with testing focused mainly around finding the right electronic mapping for the new long-life engines. The overall performance of what was already the best bike on the grid has been evident in the preseason form of satellite pair Colin Edwards and standout rookie Ben Spies.

For my money Spies, whose ability to surprise is becoming less of a shock with every test, joins Hayden as an outside shot for a top-three finish in the opening race. With Lorenzo short of 100% fitness and preparation, the Americans are ideally placed to capitalize - especially with Honda in such dire trouble.

Andrea Dovizioso papered over the cracks with a quick late lap in Qatar to finish third but his pace throughout preseason has been inconsistent, whilst team-mate Dani Pedrosa has been consistently slow.

Casey Stoner
Stoner has looked quick on the new Ducati in testing

The HRC pair were told before the Brno race last August that they would be switching from Showa suspension to Γ–hlins for 2010 and whilst Dovizioso opted to do so immediately, Pedrosa stuck with the Spanish brand that he has used throughout his career until the end of the season.

So, while the Italian has finally begun to make progress with the opening race on the horizon the Spaniard is still going around in circles trying to find the right chassis stiffness for the new forks.

Pedrosa was a massive 1.5 seconds off the pace in Qatar, although he is not the only Honda rider with problems - the returning Marco Melandri and rookie pair Hiro Aoyama and Marco Simoncelli were three of just four riders slower than him at that final test.

Even a return to his traditional number 26 has failed to rescue Pedrosa, who has used two and three without much luck in recent seasons.

There are some other interesting numbers to look out for amongst the rookies this season, with Spies settling for 11 after missing out on his preferred 19 to Alvaro Bautista and Hector Barbera taking 40 in a shrewd sponsorship deal with Spanish pop chart radio station 'Los 40 Principales'.

Down one, fellow Spaniard Esparagaro is at 41 - cleverly incorporating the number to make the AL at the beginning of Aleix on his name graphics and logos.

Dani Pedrosa poses with the factory Honda
Pedrosa has been struggling with the factory Honda

Espargaro is not the only forward thinker in the Pramac Ducati garage, which will be splashed in garish green paint this season in an attempt to raise environmental awareness. The team plans to use solar panels and wind turbines to power their hospitality units and trucks, although they chose an ironic venue to launch the initiative.

The 3,600 light fixtures that illuminate the Losail circuit require 5.4m watts of power - enough, the owners proudly claim, to light a street from Doha to Moscow. And who provides the generators? You guessed it… Pramac.

Green is not the only new colour to be appearing on a Ducati this season, with Team Aspar stepping up to MotoGP with backing from Spanish telephone directory 'Paginas Amarillas' (Yellow Pages), meaning the combative rookie Hector BarberΓ‘ will be very much the yellow peril of the premier-class.

However, with three wins from the last three visits to Qatar, it is likely to be the more traditional red Desmosedici of Casey Stoner that steals the limelight on 11 April.

Heatseek

Valentino Rossi wins Qatar MotoGP as Stoner crashes out

Rossi wins opening race (UK users only)

Defending world champion Valentino Rossi won the opening race of the 2010 MotoGP championship in Qatar after Casey Stoner crashed while in the lead.

Stoner, who had won all three previous races at the venue, crashed out on lap five when well clear of Rossi.

The Italian held off Andrea Dovizioso's challenge to break clear and win by more than one second, so the real drama was in the battle for second and third.

Jorge Lorenzo came second and Dovizioso edged Nicky Hayden for third.

Having started from pole, Stoner slipped back at the start but soon regained the lead and seemed in command of the race when he unexpectedly slid off on the fifth lap.

606: DEBATE
anthomas

Rossi then moved into the lead but could not shake off Dovizioso in second place.

Eventually the world champion managed to open up a decent gap on the field, and Dovizioso's attentions turned to holding off the challenge of Hayden in third.

Lorenzo, who admitted he had come into the weekend still not fully recovered from a pre-season hand injury, had a quiet race until he suddenly leapt into contention with two laps to go, bursting into second place.

Qatar win 'like gold' - Rossi

Hayden and Dovizioso then had a fierce battle for third, with the Italian edging out the American off the podium by just 0.011 seconds right on the finish line.

Rossi's victory was the 104th of his career, and he admitted it had been hard work.

"It was a tough race, very very difficult," he said afterwards.

"Stoner was incredibly fast and I thought he was going to win so when I saw him make a mistake I knew we had to continue to push.

"It was tough because we struggled with the engine and we were slow on the straights.

"Dovizioso was taking half a second a lap from me on the straight so I had to ride very hard on the infield.

"It is a bonus 25 points with Stoner not finishing and it is a great start to the season for us."

Lorenzo, who finished runner-up to Rossi in last season's championship, was thrilled with second place after his injury-blighted pre-season.

"I feel so happy with second, more than some victories in the past," he told BBC Sport.

Japan's Shoya Tomizawa won the inaugural Moto2 race, ahead of Alex Debon and Jules Cluzel, with Great Britain's Scott Redding back in 23rd, and the 125cc race was similarly disappointing for the British riders.

Bradley Smith could only come home in eighth place and Danny Webb 11th, as Nico Terol, Efren Vazquez and Marc Marquez ensured an all-Spanish podium.


Qatar MotoGP result:

1 V Rossi (It) Fiat Yamaha 42:50.099
2 J Lorenzo (Sp) Fiat Yamaha 42:51.121
3 A Dovizioso (It) Repsol Honda 42:51.964
4 N Hayden (US) Ducati 42:51.975
5 B Spies (US) Tech 3 Yamaha 42:54.002
6 R de Puniet (Fr) LCR Honda 42:59.421
7 D Pedrosa (Sp) Repsol Honda 43:06.607
8 C Edwards (US) Tech 3 Yamaha 43:09.966
9 L Capirossi (It) Suzuki 43:10.992
10 H Aoyama (Jpn) Honda 43:11.199
11 M Simoncelli (It) San Carlo Honda Gresini 43:21.737
12 H Barbera (Sp) Aspar Ducati 43:22.672
13 M Melandri (It) San Carlo Gresini Honda 43:30.879

Moto2 race result:

1 S Tomizawa (Jpn) Suter 41:11.768
2 A Debon (Spn) FTR 41:16.424
3 J Cluzel (Fr) Suter 41:16.557

125cc race result:

1 N Terol (Spn) Aprilia 38:25.644
2 E Vazquez (Spn) Derbi 38:28.039
3 M Marquez (Spn) Derbi 38:28.064
8 B Smith (GB) Aprilia 38:39.363

Heatseek

Volcanic ash cloud forces postponement of Japan MotoGP

The ash cloud has blown across the Atlantic from Iceland
The volcano continues to billow ash and smoke into the air

The Japanese MotoGP at Motegi has been called off because of air travel problems caused by the cloud of volcanic ash in Europe.

Circuit officials said next Sunday's race had been postponed and that details of alternative dates would be announced from the start of the week.

Reports suggest it may be moved to 3 October as round 14 of the championship before Malaysia and Australia.

The next round will now be at Spain's Jerez circuit on 2 May.

While most of the freight will have been flown straight on from last weekend's season-opener in Qatar the cloud of ash has created a no-fly zone over much of northern and central Europe and made it impossible for many team personnel to reach Japan.

606: DEBATE

Formula 1 teams, a majority of them British-based, and international media were already facing significant difficulties in returning from China after Sunday's grand prix in Shanghai.

Heatseek

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×