Rossi Is Undefeated In MotoGP At Phillip Island

Rossi Is Undefeated In MotoGP At Phillip Island

© 2005, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Categories:

MotoGP flocks south for the Polini Australian Grand Prix The MotoGP World Championship’s intercontinental caravan takes to the skies again this week as the riders, teams and officials make their way to the south coast of Australia for the fifteenth round of the season at the picturesque Phillip Island circuit. After a two-week break since contesting three consecutive races across Asia and the Middle East, the Polini Australian Grand Prix will be the 17th consecutive year that the series has visited the country, with the first two events having been held at Phillip Island, followed by six at Eastern Creek, before returning to the current venue in 1997. Valentino Rossi’s record at the fast and flowing circuit is second to none, with no fewer than six Grand Prix victories there in all classes and an unbeaten MotoGP record that stretches back to 2001. The MotoGP World Champion will be hoping his siege of the island can continue this weekend as he aims to clinch his eleventh victory of the year and match his record total of wins in a season, set in 2001 and 2002 when riding for Honda. A win for the Italian will also secure the constructors’ title for Yamaha, who need just one point more than Honda to make sure of the honour for the first time in five years. A host of riders will be combining duties for Honda this weekend as they aim to halt Yamaha and Rossi’s progress, as well as staking their claim for second place in the championship. Max Biaggi, Marco Melandri and Nicky Hayden are three of five riders separated by just eleven points in the battle for runner-up honours and all have happy memories of Phillip Island. Biaggi took victory, albeit for Yamaha, in the 500cc class in 2000 whilst Marco Melandri has had two wins at Phillip Island in the smaller classes, including a title-clinching 250cc success in 2002. Hayden, meanwhile, stood on the podium for the first time in his career at the Victorian circuit two years ago and will this weekend be aiming to score back-to-back rostrum finishes for the first time this season after finishing in third place at Qatar. The other two riders battling for second spot are Yamaha’s Colin Edwards and Ducati rider Loris Capirossi. Edwards has finished on the podium in World Superbike races at Phillip Island on eight occasions, including a win in 2001, whilst Capirossi took victory in the 125cc class back in 1990 and has had four podiums there in the last five years, including his only podium of 2004. The in-form Italian has won two of the last three races and will be looking for his fourth consecutive pole position when qualifying takes place on Saturday. Dani Pedrosa gets his first chance to seal the 250cc World Championship for the second successive season in Australia despite coming under pressure from his nearest rival Casey Stoner. Pedrosa, who finished fourth at Phillip Island last year to clinch the championship in his rookie season, will take the title if he wins the race and Stoner fails to score more than a single point. However, the Australian is the category’s form rider and after back-to-back victories in the last two rounds he has reduced the gap to the leader to just 26 points ahead of his home round. At the front of the queue of riders looking to stop a potential party for either Pedrosa or Stoner will be Jorge Lorenzo, who has until the end of this year to become the youngest ever rider to win a 250cc Grand Prix and last year’s Phillip Island winner Sebastián Porto, who also holds the quarter-litre lap record. A controversial twist to the 125cc World Championship in the last round at Qatar means Mika Kallio is now leading by just two points from Thomas Lüthi with three rounds remaining. Kallio saw victory snatched from his grasp by his KTM team-mate Gabor Talmacsi on the finish line in Doha and will be looking to take matters into his own hands this weekend at a circuit where he has not enjoyed the best of fortune in past seasons. Kallio, who has finished either first or second at the last five races, has failed to finish in each of his three previous starts at Phillip Island, crashing in both 2002 and 2003 and retiring with handling problems last year. However, Lüthi also has a poor record in Australia, failing to score points there in three previous visits.

Latest Posts

Video: Push The Limit – Harley-Davidson King Of The Baggers Season 2, Chapter 1

As the 2023 MotoAmerica Mission King Of The Baggers...

American Flat Track: Series Resumes April 27 With Mission Texas Half-Mile

Progressive AFT’s Stars to Shine Big and Bright at...

MotoGP: Quartararo Says Main Goal Right Now Is Bike Development

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Set Up for Spanish GP...

Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup: 18th Season Starts April 26 At Jerez

Rookies start 18th season with racing rivalries and records Drama...

Canadian Superbike: Championship Point Structure Altered

Bridgestone CSBK tweaks point structure for 2024 Hamilton, ON – The...