The motorcycle racing series MotoGP has been to a host of
countries this season and Germany is up next.
And the Fiat Yamaha Team will face the first half of a
transatlantic double-header this weekend as the MotoGP World
Championship heads to Germany for the tenth round of the
season, followed immediately by a trip to the USA for round
eleven. The two races are separated by just seven days and a
distance of some 9,400 kilometers, representing a grueling
final push before the four-week summer break.
The Sachsenring circuit traditionally produces close racing
and Valentino Rossi has unsurprisingly been involved over
recent years, starring in some of the most exciting MotoGP
race finishes of all time. The most memorable was in 2006,
when the Italian stormed from eleventh on the grid on his
Yamaha to lead home the closest top-four ever in MotoGP,
separated as they were by just 0.307 seconds. Rossi, who is
set to break Max Biaggi’s record of 201 consecutive Grand
Prix appearances this weekend, has had three other victories
at Sachsenring in all classes and he is keen to add to that
tally as the season crosses its midseason equator with Dani
Pedrosa on the top of the standings - just four points clear
of the Italian.
Rossi took time out of his training schedule last weekend to
visit Misano for Yamaha Fest, where he was joined for the
first time by his Fiat Yamaha team-mate Jorge Lorenzo. After
recovering his confidence with two sixth place finishes in
the last two rounds, the 21-year-old Mallorcan is relaxed
and ready to re-ignite his challenge for the top positions
at a circuit where he has only once previously made the
podium, in the 250cc race in 2006.
Located in the heartland of the former East Germany’s once
glorious motorcycle racing industry, the Sachsenring is
built right next to the old road course, a characteristic
the track shares with Brno in the nearby Czech Republic. The
second shortest track on the calendar features a series of
tight and relatively slow corners juxtaposed with some
dazzlingly fast ones – including a stomach-churning downhill
right hander which was added in 2003.
Valentino Rossi answer to a victory? 'No more mistakes'.
“Last year in Sachsenring I made a mistake and crashed, and
at the last race in Assen I also made a mistake, so I hope
that I’ve now had my bad moment for this year! Sachsenring
has been a great track for me in the past and it’s a great
place to race at; it’s very tight and twisty but it
generally suits the Yamaha very well and in 2006 I had a
fantastic race there, winning from 11th. We are going there
having lost our championship lead but we’re only four points
behind so the situation is certainly much better than it was
at this point last season. I was disappointed with myself in
Assen because I missed a great chance but I have put that
behind me and I am completely focused on the next race now.
We need to be at 100% from the first practice and hopefully
we can have a good weekend with no more mistakes!”
Jorge Lorenzo takes a different approach. “I have recently
started to train normally again after a gap of two months,
which has been quite hard for me and I have been very tired
lately! Since the accident in China I haven’t been able to
use the exercise bike or do proper cardiovascular work until
last week, so I am just having to take my regime
step-by-step to try to build my strength; I know that
building my fitness back up is the best way to return to my
former level. Even though it’s been a hard time for me
through the last two months I think that the crashes have
made me stronger mentally; when you win it’s easy but when
things are going badly, this is when you learn more about
yourself and this is very important to make you a better
competitor. For the next race I have to keep trying to build
my confidence with the bike. Sachsenring is a complicated
track and my best result there is only third, but I don’t
think about statistics when I race. I just want to arrive at
Sachsenring feeling relaxed and do my best to enjoy it.”
“We are coming into the second half of the season and it
seems the competition is getting harder and harder," says
Davide Brivio, "Of course, Casey Stoner is in great shape –
he has won two consecutive races – and Dani Pedrosa is also
very consistent so we have to try to respond. Our target, as
always, going into the weekend is the podium but we will
work our hardest during practice to try and achieve the
maximum on Sunday. I think when our package is at the same
level as the others it is difficult to beat Valentino but
currently in MotoGP everything has to be perfect. The rider
who achieves this is normally able to dominate so we have to
do our job in practice. It doesn’t mean any more pressure
than normal because we always strive for perfection and when
you fight for championships this is what you get used to.
Basically we will try not to make any mistakes and hope
everything is in place for Valentino to fight for victory,
as he did a couple of races ago.”
And finally, Daniele Romagnoli. “It has not been an easy
period for Jorge but he is getting more confidence back with
every practice session and this is the important thing.
Unfortunately his progress wasn’t reflected in the race at
Assen because the setting was not perfect, specifically in
the electronics and the chassis, but we know which areas we
need to work on and we are confident we can give him a
better package at Sachsenring. It is a different kind of
circuit, a different kind of setting and we have to make a
clean start on Friday morning. Side grip is very important
at Sachsenring because the riders spend a lot of time a
maximum angle on the left-hand side, so this is an area we
will be looking to strengthen. It is not Jorge’s favourite
track so I’m sure it will be a difficult Grand Prix but we
are all approaching it in a very positive and optimistic
way.”