MOTO GP
Valentino Rossi acknowledges Yamaha's weakness
The Italian heads into a crucial 2020 MotoGP campaign undecided over whether he will continue beyond this season or call time on his career, with his competitiveness during the opening rounds set to play a crucial part in this decision.
The seven-time premier class champion was comfortably outpaced by Maverick Vinales and Fabio Quartararo in 2019, Rossi explaining his dip in form as being down to rear tire degradation over the course of a race.
Indeed, although it was a problem that hampered all Yamaha riders at times in 2019, the issue was more magnified by Rossi because he often failed to qualify as strongly as Vinales and Quartararo.
While it has been a fairly strong pre-season for Rossi - albeit generally adrift of the pace of his stablemates - he says the problems with rear tire life returned on the final day of testing.
"Today we are a little bit worried because - not so much about the position, because unfortunately I crashed with the second tire and I think I could have improved the lap time - but more about the pace," said Rossi, who featured in the top three during the final day but was eventually left twelfth in terms of best lap.
“We tried to make a long run, but we had some problems with the tires very similar to last year. So it looks like, that after some laps, unfortunately I have to slow down so this is not good news.
"I feel good with the bike. I am quite fast, especially in the first 5-6 laps my pace is good. Unfortunately, [at the moment] it's not enough to try for the win.
"But now the tests are finished and we will see during the race weekends. In the races, it’s always different."
Viewed in isolation, Rossi’s results during pre-season testing have been fairly good. The Italian rarely worries about pumping in a fast lap time, not least because it is over a longer distance where he needs to focus on improvements.
owever, compared with Vinales, Quartararo and even Franco Morbidelli there has been little evidence he has the performance over a single lap or a race distance to come close to them.
At the end of Monday’s race simulation Vinales and Quartararo were pumping in 1m 54.7s and 1m 54.9s times by lap eight. By contrast, Rossi was coming through with a 1m 55.8s.
It will be a last-minute crisis of confidence for Rossi at the end of a test where Yamaha will otherwise be attempting to temper their own having largely dominated proceedings from day one in Sepang. It was quickest on five of the six days contested, with Vinales, Quartararo and Morbidelli filling out the top three on Qatar’s combined timesheets.
by Ollie Barstow/Mundoquatrorodas
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