Brno: Thoughts after Qualifying
admin | 15 August 2009With the racers off the track and the pole position finalized, lets take a look at the three competitors whose performances today give something to watch for tomorrow
Jorge Lorenzo/Valentino Rossi
The Yamaha duo has become the ultimate force to be reckoned with, with two of the three Untouchables performing in such a dominant display of force that it’s hard to imagine anyone else beating them. The battle tomorrow will undoubtedly be between these two, and picking out which of the two will will is nigh impossible. Lorenzo dominated both of the Free Practice sessions, posting times that were nearly half a second faster than Rossi when both sessions were over. Rossi, however, took the pole out from under Lorenzo by just .050 seconds, but then soon found his bike out from under him. Rossi’s lowside crash during QP might shake up your average racer, but don’t think for a second that it’ll keep the Italian from pushing just as hard tomorrow.
Mika Kallio
The Finn has been making good use of his factory ride, finishing in 7th in FP1, 8th in FP2, and qualifying in 10th position. This race is incredibly crucial for Kallio, as he will be trying to prove to all the factory teams—most importantly Ducati Corse—that he can handle a factory ride. Indeed, Kallio has shown to be one of the remarkably few riders who, despite his erratic results, can perform well on the Ducati. While he certainly won’t win tomorrow, expect a strong showing from Kallio, perhaps even finishing in 5th or 6th. His lowside during QP might give him a bit of the jitters, but I expect he’ll put it behind him and strive to finish just behind the Untouchables—a feat he might be capable of, if it weren’t for…
Colin Edwards
What a remarkable change in pace and performance we’ve seen from Edwards recently. Ever since his performance in Donington, he’s been superb onboard that Tech 3 Yamaha, finishing ahead of both factory Suzuki riders *and* every single Ducati on the field–in every outing this year in Brno. And Edwards has repeatedly stated that this is *not* one of his better circuits–just look at his track record. Ever since his MotoGP debut in 2003, his best finish in Brno has been 7th– all the way back in 2005. Last year, he finished in 14th, the year before that he crashed out, and the year before that he finished in 10th. And now, Edwards will start in 5th position tomorrow, ahead of Donington race winner Andrea Dovizioso and within striking distance of Rossi. Then again, The Texas Tornado is a patient storm, preferring to move his way up to the front than to shoot out of the gate and run at the start.
Saschenring: Qualifying Chaos
admin | 18 July 2009MotoGP put up a free video highlighting the chaos that went down earlier today at turn eight. For some truly terrifying footage of what went wrong, take a look at this:
A selection of the most spectacular crashes at the Alice Mottad Grand Prix MotoGP Qualifying Session
Footage, in order:
Randy de Puniet
Niccolo Canepa
Marco Melandri
Toni Elias
Alex De Angelis
Nicky Hayden and Niccolo Canepa (again!)





