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British Superbike Champion Steve Hislop Loses Ride

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From a press release issued by MonsterMob Ducati:

BIRD LOOKS TO YOUNG GUNS FOR FUTURE

MonsterMob Ducati team owner Paul Bird has today announced that he will not be renewing the contract of 2002 MCN British Superbike Champion, Steve Hislop.

The 40-year-old Isle-of-Man-based Scot has fronted the team’s attack for the past two seasons, finishing second in 2001 before clinching the title at Donington last month but the Penrith businessman is looking towards youth for the foreseeable future.

“Steve’s contract was up and it was a very difficult decision as to whether to renew it or not and the decision not to has not been taken lightly. Obviously Steve has been very instrumental in the team’s success over the past couple of seasons and whilst we’re very grateful to him for that, it was the right time for us to go our separate ways and Steve and I have no animosity towards each other. We achieved our goals together and now it’s right for us both to accept new challenges.

“We have a long-term commitment to Ducati and our sponsors needed a younger profile within the team conducive with their marketing strategy and we are in negotiation with three young riders, all of whom fit the bill perfectly. This is the start of an exciting three-year project which will see us hopefully race in the world superbike and supersport championship starting in 2004, although we may decide to continue racing in the UK until 2005 should circumstances dictate,” said Bird.

Rumours have been increasing in recent days but an official announcement as to who will replace Hislop will be made before Bird and his team jet out to contest the Macau Grand Prix in a month’s time.

Edwards Has Four MotoGP Choices, All On Michelin

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Speaking at MotorSports Ranch today, Superbike World Champion Colin Edwards said he has four MotoGP choices for 2003, all on Michelin tires.

Edwards led a parade lap and signed autographs at the CMRA event in Cresson, Texas Sunday morning, then told Roadracingworld.com’s David Swarts that his MotoGP choices include Honda, Kawasaki, Aprilia and Yamaha.

Edwards said that he will attend next weekend’s MotoGP event at Phillip Island, Australia and hopes to finalize his 2003 deal there.

Where Edwards ends up will have a major impact on the make-up of the 2003 MotoGP paddock, with several riders–all in contention for the same rides that have been offered to Edwards–on hold until Edwards makes his move.

Roadracingworld.com staffers David Swarts and Michael Hannas arrived at Cresson on Friday for a racebike test, and Hannas is racing at the track today as part of that test.

Updated Post: Biaggi Wins Malaysian MotoGP

From a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Race Day, Sunday October 13 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA RULE TOUGHEST GP OF YEAR

Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 rider Max Biaggi won a thrilling Malaysian GP in withering heat and humidity at Sepang this afternoon, coming out ahead of a frantic four-man skirmish with Honda rivals Valentino Rossi, Alex Barros and Tohru Ukawa. Team-mate Carlos Checa had a more difficult day, coming home seventh.

Despite the boiling conditions, with temperatures soaring to 36 degrees and the track surface at 45 degrees, Biaggi’s race time bettered last year’s Malaysian 500 GP by an astonishing 45 seconds. That lightning-quick pace was further proof of the awesome speed of the new-generation MotoGP four-strokes, and none more so than the ever-improving M1, which had 15kmh more speed this weekend than during winter tests here.

“Max made a great job today,” grinned M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda, celebrating the bike’s second win. “He now understands the character of the machine, so he can set it up well. During practice and qualifying we worked hard to perfect the spring balance and chassis balance to help the tyres, and also the engine character to make the bikes easier to ride out of the corners. This worked well for Max but not so well for Carlos; he’s had a difficult weekend and didn’t have so much confidence in the bike.”

Biaggi won the M1’s first victory in August. The bike has also scored four pole positions.

BIAGGI SCORES M1’s SECOND GP WIN, ITALY’S 600th
Max Biaggi’s Sepang triumph was a crucial and landmark success for the Marlboro Yamaha Team man. Not only did the victory lift him to second overall, it was also his tenth premier-class GP win, the M1’s second success and Italy’s 600th. The Italian rode a breathtaking race in what was his 150th consecutive GP start (he hasn’t missed a race since the French GP in 1992), completing the first lap in second, then moving past leader Alex Barros just after half distance and staying ahead till the flag. He crossed the line half a second ahead of compatriot Rossi, the trio of RCV riders bumping and barging into each other for much of the race.

“When you win it’s the best day of your life and I’m very, very happy today because this is a very difficult race, the most difficult of the year,” said a beaming but sweat-drenched Biaggi who started from second on the grid. “I managed to stay second after the start, and when I saw Rossi and Ukawa closing on me and Barros, I went ahead and tried to run a good pace. The heat was incredible, and when you see ‘+0.0’ and ‘+0.2’ on your pitboard all race it’s very tough and not easy to concentrate. But I like this kind of race – push hard and control. I must say thank you to Michelin who are making great tyres. The four-strokes make much more power than the two-strokes, so of course the rear tyre does spin, but with good traction. I ‘d also like to dedicate this win to my team and to Yamaha. They all put in so much effort, even though I won’t be with them next year, but I think I’ve also proved that I don’t give up.”

SET-UP DIFFICULTIES KEEP CHECA SEVENTH
Carlos Checa qualified just a fraction of a second off the front row in yesterday’s final qualifier but was unable to reproduce that pace over race distance. Sixth after the first lap, the Marlboro Yamaha Team star got up to fifth on lap three but then slipped back, ending the race defending seventh place from Kenny Roberts Junior (Suzuki).

“We weren’t able to set up the bike for this track, we lost our way and I’ve not felt confident all weekend,” said Checa, who celebrates his 30th birthday on Tuesday. “I didn’t have the grip to keep rolling the bike into the turns and I couldn’t open the gas out of the corners, I was almost stopped mid-turn. My team worked hard and we tried many things but now we need to analyse what happened here, maybe we will compare our race data to Max’s data.”

ROSSI WINS BARGING MATCH FOR SECOND
MotoGP World Champion Valentino Rossi fought his way into second after a ferocious race to the finish with Alex Barros and Tohru Ukawa, with whom he made contact at least twice. “Our settings weren’t perfect,” said Rossi after his second successive defeat. “I made some mistakes, like when I tried to overtake Barros and ran wide. But I hope this race helps us to make the bike better for the next races.” Barros took third, Ukawa fourth, just 2.2 seconds separating the first four men home.

RESULTS
1. MAX BIAGGI (ITA) Marlboro YAMAHA Team (YZR-M1) 44’01.592

2. Valentino Rossi (ITA) Repsol HONDA Team (RC211v) +0.542

3. Alex Barros (BRA) West HONDA Pons (RC211v) +1.572

4. Tohru Ukawa (JPN) Repsol HONDA Team (RC211v) +2.238

5. Daijiro Kato (JPN) Fortuna HONDA Gresini (RC211v) +8.475

6. Shinya Nakano (JPN) Gauloises YAMAHA Tech 3 (YZR-M1) +23.000

7. CARLOS CHECA (SPA) Marlboro YAMAHA Team (YZR-M1) +24.360

8. Kenny Roberts (USA) Telefonica Movistar SUZUKI (GSV-R) +24.709

9. Loris Capirossi (ITA) West HONDA Pons (NSR500) +27.669

10. Norick Abe (JPN) Antena 3 YAMAHA d’Antin (YZR500) +41.811

CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS
1. Valentino Rossi (ITA) 310
2. MAX BIAGGI (JPN) 189
3. Tohru Ukawa (JPN) 182
4. Alex Barros (BRA) 159
5. CARLOS CHECA (SPA) 136
6. Norick Abe (JPN) 123
7. Loris Capirossi (ITA) 109
8. Kenny Roberts (USA) 92
9. Daijiro Kato (JPN) 91
10. Olivier Jacque (FRA) 66

More, from a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha WCM:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
Sunday, 13th October 2002

GARRY McCOY and John Hopkins ended today’s Malaysian GP in 15th and 18th places respectively as the Red Bull Yamaha team suffered a frustrating day at round 14 of the MotoGP world championship.

As anticipated pre-race by the Australian and American duo, today’s 21-lap battle at the Sepang circuit was dictated by tyres as both struggled to overcome a lack of grip in an effort to better their final positions. McCoy collected a solitary world championship point but it was hardly the boost he was looking for with his home race at Phillip Island, near Melbourne, taking place in just seven days time.

His problems were evident from the time sheets. The 30-year-old’s fastest lap in the race came on lap four, but his time of 2:08.156 was almost three seconds slower than the time he’d produced in an encouraging display to qualify ninth yesterday. Despite making a good start to hold his grid position for the majority of the opening lap, it wasn’t long before McCoy found himself struggling to maintain his pace with the traction problems taking hold from the early stages.

It was a particularly disappointing day for Hopkins, who struggled to recover from a poor start. Pushing hard to try and maintain his impressive points-scoring record in his rookie season, he tumbled off his two-stroke 500 shortly before the halfway point. Although he managed to remount, he ended up 18th.

It promises to be a tough conclusion to the 2002 campaign for the Red Bull Yamaha team in the face of mounting opposition from the increased number of 990cc four-strokes. Proof of the vast gulf between the four-strokes and two-stroke 500s was evident this afternoon. Max Biaggi’s overall race time on the Yamaha YZR-M1 was 45 seconds faster than last year¹s winning time set on a two-stroke when McCoy finished third.

GARRY McCOY, 15th
World Championship ppoints,­ 20th, 33 points
“That was the best I could do and the toughest race I’ve had to score one point. I jumped with the pack at the start but the edge grip on my tyre went away early ­ virtually from the first lap and I was just sliding it into corners on the brakes, gassing it up and holding it sideways. It was really hard work to keep the bike upright and it just wasn’t possible to carry any decent corner speed. In Turn One I was just idling on the throttle. In the end I was just having fun, especially holding big slides through Turn Three. It was the best our race tyres could do today.”

JOHN HOPKINS,­ 18th
World Championship points, 13th, 53 points
“The tyres wouldn’t hook up, it was a bad race, that’s it. I didn’t make the start I wanted and then got stuck behind slow riders. When I crashed I just tucked the front. Nothing more I can say really.”

PETER CLIFFORD – TEAM DIRECTOR
“That was thoroughly disappointing. There¹s not really too many positives we can take away from today at all other than the fact that both guys are in one piece. Performance wise it has got to be better in Australia.”

More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

PITT CLAIMS NEW KAWASAKI’S FIRST GP FINISH
Australian GP beginner Andrew Pitt brought the brand new prototype Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR to its first GP finish at Sepang today, with a steady ride to 19th in baking hot conditions that saw three other starters fall by the wayside.

Pitt, 2001 World Supersport champion, was just six seconds behind Yamaha-mounted John Hopkins at the end of the race, after lapping steadily at the back of the field to give the lime-green bike a faultless first race finish at the second attempt.

The Kawasaki will race at the final two rounds of the season, in Australia and Valencia, in preparation for a full first season next year.

Andrew Pitt – 19th:
The biggest experience was to learn how to ride with the bike sliding. I managed to maintain my lap times all the way to the finish, and it was good to get into the rhythm. Only at the beginning I made too many mistake, because I tried too hard in the first few laps. I opened the throttle too early and too hard, the way I used to do it with the 600, and I had a few big moments because of that. Now I’m looking forward to Phillip Island where we will try some modifications with my seating position and with the handlebars. I would have liked to take same points here, and now I’ll try to do that in Australia!!

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
The most important thing for Andrew and for us was to get a race finish. Andrew could have pushed a little harder in the beginning of the race, but he only experienced later on that the bike was still easy to control when it started sliding. He maintained his pace all the way through and he did lap times in the 2.10s, whereas John Hopkins in front of him slowed down to 2.11s. I’m sure Andrew will be faster again at his home track where he won the World Supersport race at the beginning of the season!

More, from a press release issued by Michelin:

BIAGGI WINS AT SEPANG, OBLITERATES RACE RECORD

Biaggi just beats Rossi and betters Sepang race record by an incredible 45 seconds

This afternoon’s Malaysian Grand Prix was MotoGP racing at its very best – four men battling back and fourth out front and the race record demolished in truly breathtaking style. Max Biaggi (Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1-Michelin) rode magnificently in ferocious heat to beat arch-rival Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V-Michelin) by a half a second, Alex Barros (West Honda Pons RC211V-Michelin) and Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V-Michelin) crossing the line a close third and fourth.

Biaggi’s race time was an incredible 45 seconds quicker than last year’s Malaysian 500 GP, won by Rossi, proving that Michelin technology can handle the 200-plus horsepower MotoGP four-strokes in even the most torrid conditions. Sepang is generally acknowledged as the toughest event of the season but Michelin riders totally dominated the 21-lap race, filling the top 11 finishing positions, the first non-Michelin rider coming in 45 seconds behind the winner.

“This was a good weekend for us – it proved that our four-stroke tyres are at a very good level now, even in such difficult conditions,” said Michelin Grand Prix manager Emmanuel Fournier. “All the first three guys chose exactly the same fronts and rears, while Ukawa had a slightly different rear. Daijiro (Kato, Fortuna Honda Gresini RC211V-Michelin) used a different front from his usual favourite, he chose the same front as the other guys but didn’t like it so much. And it was a good result for Shinya (Nakano, Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 YZR-M1-Michelin) in his first race on a four-stroke.”

Biaggi was as impressed as ever by his tyres. “Michelin are making very good tyres,” he said after his second MotoGP win, which was also his tenth premier-class success and Italy’s 600th all-classes GP victory. “The new four-strokes make much more power than the two-strokes but the tyres handle it well. Of course, you get wheelspin from the rear, but always with good traction. When you win it’s the best day of your life and I’m very, very happy today because this is a very difficult race, the most difficult of the year.”

Starting from second on the grid, Biaggi spent the early laps chasing pole-starter Barros, winner of last Sunday’s Pacific GP, with Rossi and Ukawa chasing hard after passing Kato. Just after half-distance Barros missed a gear and Biaggi pounced, taking the lead and working hard to open a gap. At one point he had two seconds on his pursuers, who were elbow-to-elbow as they squabbled over second, Rossi suffering at least two collisions. In the final laps Rossi did break clear but couldn’t get close enough to launch an attack on first place.

“The heat was incredible,” added Biaggi, now second overall in the 2002 MotoGP series. “And when you see ‘+0.0′ and ‘+0.2′ on your pitboard all race it’s very tough. But I like this kind of race – push hard and control.”

MotoGP champ Rossi, who had qualified eighth, his worst grid slot of the year, suffered set-up problems similar to last Sunday’s Pacific GP when he was beaten by Barros. “My first problem was our settings,” said the Italian. “Also, I lost too much time at the beginning when I made some mistakes overtaking Kato and Ukawa. Hopefully we will learn something from today to make things better for the next races.”

Barros was happy enough with another podium finish in his second RCV ride, though frustrated at losing vital time while battling with Rossi and Ukawa. “Me and Valentino touched while we were fighting and that helped Max, for sure,” he said. “After I dropped to fourth, Ukawa and Rossi were doing the same thing, which helped me close the gap, and when Ukawa made a mistake I got back into third.”

Just 1.5 seconds separated the top-three finishers, Ukawa a further 0.7 seconds down and Kato another six seconds back in fifth. Nakano came through from eighth for his second-best result of 2002, passing Carlos Checa (Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1-Michelin) at two thirds distance. Checa just held onto seventh from Kenny Roberts (Telefonica Movistar Suzuki GSV-R-Michelin). Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500-Michelin) was top two-stroke finisher in ninth, bettering last year’s 500 race time by 17 seconds.

More, from a press release issued by Team Proton KR:

McWILLIAMS IN THE POINTS AT SEPANG

Round 14: Malaysian GP, Sepang
Race: Sunday, October 13, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: 12th Position
Nobuatsu Aoki: Did not finish

Jeremy McWilliams overcame an awful start at today’s Malaysian GP to fight his way through to 12th place from 18th on the first lap, to give Proton Team KR something to cheer about at the home race for their sponsors Proton.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki was poised behind him, planning his own overtaking move for the final lap when his three-cylinder engine cried enough with just three of the 21 laps of the 5.548km Sepang race track left to go.

McWilliams’s stirring recovery ride came after clutch problems on the start line robbed him of the advantage of his excellent second-row starting position. This had been hard won, with a series of blazingly fast laps in qualifying at a track where two consecutive straights take away any advantage accruing to the lightweight three-cylinder Proton KR3 from its much greater corner speed compared with the heavier but more powerful four-cylinder rivals.

In spite of the problems, the race went better than team owner Kenny Roberts had expected. With 990cc four-strokes making half the field in this first year of the new MotoGP series, this was another race where he expected to be battling against enormous odds. As at several other race-tracks this season, the efforts of his riders, the level of refinement of the final version of the KR3 machine and the ever-improving performance of the Bridgestone tyres far exceeded his expectations.

Next year, however, Proton Team KR face the opposition on level terms, with their own new V5 990cc four-stroke, which was officially launched at a packed press conference at the nearby Proton factory on the eve of the Malaysian GP.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
The clutch jammed up on the start line – it was juddering instead of slipping, and I just had to let it out and bog the engine because I was worried that something might break. It was not a good start to the race. After that, I could close up, but with the difference in straight line speed I was yo-yoing back and forth all the time. I caught up to Abe, who finished tenth, but I had chosen a tyre that was more medium-compound than hard, and that was a mistake. It was really spinning up. I wasn’t going forward in turns where I should have been making up time. I just made it too hard for myself. Looking at where Capirossi finished, in ninth, I think I could have been up there, but I just lost too much time going through the traffic. Not a pleasant race.

NOBUATSU AOKI
That was hard work, and for no result. All weekend I’d been having trouble with the bottom cylinder nipping up, and throughout the race I was being very careful, especially not to rev the bike too hard on the back-shifts, especially into Turn One and the last hairpin. Jeremy caught me and went past, but when I was following him I wasn’t going in his slipstream, because that would make the engine run much hotter. My plan was to stay behind, and try to pass him again on the last lap, but I never got there. I was really enjoying myself, and then my engine seized.

KENNY ROBERTS – Team Owner
We knew it would be a long, hot race, which is very difficult for us, and we did get one bike through it. I need to get Nobu on a V5 that he can backshift. He revs the engine high on the shifts, which is hard on the equipment, and for some reason we’re having trouble making him a bike that can live with it. We’re just getting through this season, and looking forward to next year with our new four-stroke.

More, from a press release issued by Honda:

HONDA RACING INFORMATION

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002
MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Race Day, Sunday October 13th, 2002

ROSSI SECOND AFTER BATTLING SEPANG RACE

An incident strewn 21-lap MotoGP race at Sepang delivered reigning World Champion Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) a close second place, his 13th podium finish of the inaugural MotoGP season. The 20 points he earned for second took him through the 300 barrier, to a giddy level of 310, with two races remaining. Only a DNF at Brno spoils his 2002 season podium perfection, having been no worse than second in every race he has finished.

The Italian rider was in pugilistic form at Sepang, trying to overcome an imperfect set-up by attacking his rivals on the brakes, with occasionally unforeseen outcomes. Despite Rossi’s up and down performance on the day, his second place finish was part of a race in which the leading four-stroke machines of the new MotoGP generation cut a monumental 45 seconds off the previous best race time, set in 2001.

Long time leader Alex Barros (West Honda Pons RC211V) was one to be demoted by Rossi’s attempted overtake, dropping both riders out of contention for the immediate lead mid-race and ultimately the race win; eventually taken by Yamaha rider Max Biaggi, by the margin of 0.542 seconds from Rossi.

Said Rossi of his latest MotoGP adventure: “My first rival was Ukawa, my team mate, and it was not such an easy race for me because my set-up was not so good. I lost the front twice and I didn’t have the right feeling from the front from then on. I took Ukawa and Kato but with two seconds to Barros and Biaggi it was very difficult to catch them. When I did, Alex made a mistake and I tried to overtake him but we both arrived too fast, with Biaggi going into the lead. I had to release the brake, touched Alex and we ran wide. We lost the race basically.”

For Barros it was a frustrating day but he was philosophical about not finally challenging for his second win in a week, despite leading for long periods of time, looking to have the measure of the chasing Biaggi.

“Maybe at some time I did the same thing to Valentino; try to overtake but make a mistake,” shrugged Barros. “This is a sport so I do not take it too personally. If you try to pass and have some contact then this is normal. I lost the race when I made two mistakes. In the last laps we made some compromises to make it to the finish, and I could not overtake anyone because we were all evenly matched. This is only my second four-stroke GP race and we have made two podium finishes, so I should be happy and thank my team for that.”

Barros regained enough composure and concentration to take a close third place for his satellite team, and remains fourth in the World Championship overall.

A real tussle with his team-mate Rossi saw Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) fighting for the podium to start, then chase Barros home for an eventual fourth place.

“The first positive thing is that my machine felt good and I didn’t have any major problems,” stated Ukawa. “I got a good start and then started fighting with Valentino and Kato so that Biaggi and Barros wouldn’t get away. I had a few frights with the front end tucking under and the rear sliding, mainly because the track temperature was so high. I can’t complain about losing the podium. It was a good race and I tried as hard as I could.”

Daijiro Kato (Fortuna Honda Gresini RC211V) fell prey to the advance of Rossi on lap five and Ukawa on lap six, running out fifth at the flag, the fourth Honda rider in the top five places.

“I had a little problem on the bike – imperfect settings on the front – and it tucked in on one of the corners, making me run straight on. I have to look to Phillip Island now because fifth place is not my full potential on this machine.”

For front row qualifier Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) the Sepang race was a tough challenge, and his concerns about the competitiveness of the two-stroke machines around the uniquely configured and lengthy Sepang circuit proved to have basis in fact. Capirossi was top two-stroke finisher on his NSR, albeit in ninth place.

“I am a professional and I go out to win every race I enter,” said Capirossi of his Sepang experience. “I do my work as well as I can but it is very frustrating when you are a winning rider to finish 27 seconds behind the race winner. I was still 17 seconds faster than the race winner’s time from last year obviously I tried my best but this circuit is the worst of the year for the two strokes.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500) took 13th place after a race spent making progress from being 17th at the end of the first lap.

“I got quite a bad start and had to fight it out with Aoki, McWilliams and Laconi,” said Jurgen of his early race showings. “We’re getting better on tyre compounds and that shows on the overall lap times. My race time today would have given me second place in the race last year.”

Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) dropped out of the race on lap 11, with no hope of completing the race in a points scoring position.

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) took third place in the 20-lap 250cc event, running at the front in the early laps. The Italian was pleased with his form after a somewhat difficult qualifying session.

“I am very pleased with that after we experienced some problems with the set-up of the machine in practice,” said Rolfo, clearly the quickest Honda rider on display.

“It was good to be challenging for the lead in the early part but it was not easy to try and lap in the 2:09 bracket all the time. I have to say thank you to my team who put in a lot of work, in the right direction, to improve the set-up of the bike and that allowed us to take this podium – even if we did not have too much acceleration in some parts of the track.”

Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) battled through the midfield to finish a charging eighth, running at a good pace and displaying a real hunger for the fight.

“I found the right set-up for the race only in the warm-up,” said the largely satisfied Spaniard. “This made me confident but I got hit by one of the Yamahas after I had got a good start and that pushed me wide. I tried hard and I moved up the order and at the end I was running the same pace as the leaders.”

The best of the privateer Hondas was ridden by Haruchika Aoki (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) scoring a top 12 on the evolution spec machine.

In the 250 title race Rolfo continues in third place overall, the top Honda rider thanks to his total of 186 points, with eighth place Alzamora breaking through the 100 point barrier, on 101.

Daniel Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) overcame the effects of a back and foot injury to score an excellent second place finish across the line at Sepang, only for the race result to be called from the penultimate lap. The revised result was due to the chequered flag being shown to some backmarkers one lap too early. Pedrosa was thus demoted to third but kept his slender World Championship aspirations alive with two rounds remaining, now sitting on 207 points to the leader’s 240.

Leaping into an early advantage from a front row start, Pedrosa was part of the three man breakaway group, eventually growing in size to contain six, but finally whittled down to a last lap four-man shootout for the win.

“That was particularly pleasing considering how I felt after the crash yesterday, even if I did lose second place due to a mistake from the Race Director,” said Pedrosa. “I really hurt my back and feet but I was also helped because my bike was running well in the race. My mechanics worked hard to fix the bike before the race and it all paid off really well.”

The championship packs its travel cases for the penultimate round at Phillip Island on October 20, with the last race of the year taking place at Valencia, two weeks after that.

RESULTS:

MotoGP Race Classification (21 laps = 116.508 km)
1 Max BIAGGI, YAMAHA, 44’01.592
2 Valentino ROSSI, HONDA, 44’02.134
3 Alex BARROS, HONDA, 44’03.164
4 Tohru UKAWA, HONDA, 44’03.830
5 Daijiro KATO, HONDA, 44’10.067
6 Shinya NAKANO, YAMAHA, 44’24.592
7 Carlos CHECA, YAMAHA, 44’25.952
8 Kenny ROBERTS, SUZUKI, 44’26.301
9 Loris CAPIROSSI, HONDA, 44’29.261
10 Norick ABE, YAMAHA, 44’43.403
11 Akira RYO, SUZUKI, 44’44.195
12 Jeremy McWILLIAMS, PROTON, 44’47.353
13 Jurgen vd GOORBERGH, HONDA, 44’49.908
14 Sete GIBERNAU, SUZUKI, 45’02.862
15 Garry McCOY, YAMAHA, 45’14.688

MotoGP World Championship Positions:
1 ROSSI 310
2 BIAGGI 189
3 UKAWA 182
4 BARROS 159
5 CHECA 136
6 ABE 123
7 CAPIROSSI 109
8 ROBERTS 92
9 KATO 91
10 JACQUE 66
11 NAKANO 55
12 AOKI 54
13 HOPKINS 53
14 McWILLIAMS 45
15 GIBERNAU 44

250cc Race Classification 250cc (20 laps = 110.96 km)
1 Fonsi NIETO, APRILIA, 43’28.624
2 Toni ELIAS, APRILIA, 43’29.036
3 Roberto ROLFO, HONDA, 43’31.571
4 Sebastian PORTO, YAMAHA, 43’36.534
5 Franco BATTAINI, APRILIA, 43’37.205
6 Randy DE PUNIET, APRILIA, 43’37.330
7 Naoki MATSUDO, YAMAHA, 43’47.779
8 Emilio ALZAMORA, HONDA, 43’51.083
9 Shahrol YUZY, YAMAHA, 43’51.318
10 David CHECA, APRILIA, 43’57.974

250cc World Championship Positions:
1 MELANDRI 248
2 NIETO 221
3 ROLFO 186
4 ELIAS 161
5 PORTO 156
6 BATTAINI 124
7 LOCATELLI 108
8 ALZAMORA 101
9 DE PUNIET 96
10 MATSUDO 82
11 STONER 59
12 DEBON 58
13 YUZY 52
14 AOKI 49
15 CHECA 42

125cc Race Classification (18 laps = 99.864 km)
1 Arnaud VINCENT, APRILIA, 40’32.656
2 Lucio CECCHINELLO, APRILIA, 40’32.934
3 Daniel PEDROSA, HONDA, 40’33.001
4 Manuel POGGIALI, GILERA, 40’33.469
5 Pablo NIETO, APRILIA, 40’36.303
6 Steve JENKNER APRILIA, 40’38.944
7 Mika KALLIO, HONDA, 40’45.676
8 Hector BARBERA, APRILIA, 40’45.684
9 Masao AZUMA, HONDA, 40’45.911
10 Alex DE ANGELIS, APRILIA, 40’54.150

125cc World Championship Positions:
1 VINCENT 240
2 POGGIALI 220
3 PEDROSA 207
4 CECCHINELLO 152
5 JENKNER 148
6 NIETO 113
7 SANNA 94
8 AZUMA 93
9 KALLIO 78
10 BORSOI 76
11 DE ANGELIS 74
12 UI 62
13 OLIVE 62
14 GIANSANTI 41
15 BARBERA 38

More, from a press release issued by Suzuki:

ALL THREE SUZUKIS IN THE POINTS AT SEPANG

MotoGP – Round 14, Sepang, Malaysia, October 13, 2002.

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki riders Kenny Roberts Jr. and Sete Gibernau finished eighth and 14th in today’s Malaysian GP, with wild card factory Suzuki rider Akira Ryo a fighting 11th in blazing hot conditions at the Sepang circuit outside the capital Kuala Lumpur.

Roberts’s place came after a determined ride near the front of the field around 21 laps of the 5.548km track, and he finished a frustrating small margin behind seventh-placed Carlos Checa, less than four tenths of a second ahead.

Gibernau had a day of very mixed fortunes, after setting good lap times in the morning warm-up only to suffer an engine failure. Riding with a replacement engine that was not perfectly set up, he ran off the track early in the race because of problems under braking. He got back and pulled through from near the back into the points again.

Ryo also had mixed feelings, in his role as development rider for the new-this-year project. His position fell short of his second place at the opening round at Suzuka, but the fast-improving state of the bike left him satisfied with a year of hard work.

From Sepang, the GP circus travels south to Australia for the penultimate round next weekend, before finishing the year at Valencia two weeks after that.

KENNY ROBERTS – Eighth Position
“Our team worked their asses off this weekend, in very hot conditions, with a couple of crashes and engine problems. Our mechanics are probably the best in the paddock, and they just got on with the job, and I went out and gave it my all – 100 percent effort as always It’s disappointing that at this stage this was the best result we could get. Everything I could make up in the corners I’d lose again going into them and coming out again. I’m fighting the motorcycle much more than the others, and there isn’t a moment I can relax. But at least we’re making ground. We know what we need, and the factory engineers are doing their hardest to give it to us. Each race now we’re also racing for next year, to help them develop the machine to a higher level.”

SETE GIBERNAU – 15th Position
“I didn’t get a good start – then it got worse when I ran off. I just touched the grass, but when I got back I

The MotoGP Press Release Race

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Press releases issued by MotoGP teams and sponsors are generally run on Roadracingworld.com in the order of receipt.

The two fastest teams in terms of getting their press releases e-mailed out are Red Bull Yamaha WCM followed by Marlboro Yamaha.

The two slowest teams in terms of getting their press releases e-mailed out are Suzuki and Honda, with the rest in between the two extremes.

A Report From Desiree In Malaysia, With John Hopkins

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Hello everyone around the world.

Well unfortunately John didn’t make any ground on the grid but he did pretty good. He crashed on the hot lap so it put him out. He was going good too, he had a fast time going with two blue helmets but it showed on TV he lost the front tire and slid out. Bummer deal but as long as
he gets a good start I think he’ll make up ground.

Gaz did alright, there are few two-strokes in the top 10. Jeremy McWilliams pulled it together, so did Jurgen vd Goorbergh. Barros was on it again, Biaggi, Kato, and Rossi was 8th. The “Flamboyant Italian” seems to have his work cut out for him now that everyone is getting 4-strokes. Not to mention Bridgestone tires are coming around for McWilliams.

OJ and Nakano received 4-strokes this race but it seems as though it hasn’t done much, ’cause they still ended up the same place they usually are at. So maybe it may be them, or they need “time to adapt.” Who knows, eh? Shit–just jump on and ride hard, you got the power!

Alright, enough with the smart-ass remarks, which are true anyway.

Sorry for the late briefing of yesterday’s Q-session. I wrote it when I got back to the hotel, and I thought I sent it but apparently I didn’t.

The weather here is nice, by the way, a bit cooler then when we last came. I bet in Kuala Lumpur it’s pouring down rain. One thing about here is you never know where a storm will be, it could be anywhere. The track is on the other side of the airport, so if it says rain on the forecast, it could rain at the airport but blow right by the track. It’s crazy. So far it’s been pretty good, hopefully it will stay tommorrow.

Catch ya later.



CMRA Endurance Series: Village Idiots Win Race, One Way Racing Takes Championship

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By David Swarts

Village Idiots won a 4-hour Central Motorcycle Racing Association (CMRA) endurance race–the final round of the 2002 CMRA Endurance Series–Saturday at MotorSports Ranch in Cresson, Texas. Craig Montgomery, Steve Breen, Chris Headley and Steve Morey rode a Yamaha YZF-R6 equipped with an enlarged (5.5-gallon) fuel tank and Michelin DOT-labeled tires for 169 laps of the 1.7-mile road course to take the overall race win and wrap up the team’s second consecutive CMRA Middleweight Superbike Class Endurance Championship.

HAS Racing 3’s Brett Champagne, Heath Small, David Sanders and John Haner finished second overall and second in the Middleweight Superbike class, one lap behind Village Idiots, on a Pirelli-DOT-shod Superstock-spec Yamaha YZF-R6.

Coming into the final round of the 2002 CMRA endurance series, the overall Championship was a two-way contest with Northwest Honda leading One Way Racing by a small amount of points. Basically, the Championship would be decided by which team finished ahead of the other in the final race.

Endurance veteran Ronnie Lunsford raced with his longtime Northwest Honda teammates Rusty Allen and Matt Maschmann on an 8 Point Communications-sponsored Honda CBR954RR. Riding on Michelin slicks, Northwest Honda made three pit stops, including one to change a cold-tearing rear tire, en-route to finishing fourth overall and completing 165 laps.

The day, however, belonged to Green County Honda/Suzuki-sponsored One Way Racing, the team winning its first CMRA Endurance Championship with a third-place overall, first in Unlimited Grand Prix, in the season-ending race. Troy Green, Greg Wanless and Todd Rypka took advantage of the team’s 7.5-gallon fuel tank and employed a two-stop strategy during the race. Thanks in part to no red flags, One Way Racing’s plan worked out, allowing the team to complete 167 laps on a Pirelli-slick-equipped Suzuki GSX-R1000, beating Northwest Honda and winning the Championship.

Annandale Honda’s Ty Howard started the endurance race from row 15, in the third wave of the 47-rider field, and took the overall race lead on lap seven. Howard extended his lead to nearly 30 seconds before pitting on lap 20. Howard was testing suspension parts and Michelin slicks on his Honda CBR929RR.

CMRA Four-hour Endurance Overall Race Results:

1. Village Idiots (Yamaha YZF-R6), Middleweight Superbike, 169 laps

2. Has Racing (Yamaha YZF-R6), Middleweight Superbike, 168 laps

3. One Way Racing, (Suzuki GSX-R1000), Unlimited Grand Prix, 167 laps

4. Northwest Honda (Honda CBR954RR), Unlimited Grand Prix, 165 laps

5. Big Air Racing (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Supersport, 165 laps

6. Silver Bullet (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Superbike, 165 laps

7. Faltless Racing (Suzuki SV650), Lightweight Superbike, 164 laps

8. Desert Rat Racing (Suzuki GSX-R750), Unlimited Supersport, 163 laps

9. Robinson Partners (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Superbike, 163 laps

10. No Homeless (Yamaha YZF-R6), Unlimited Grand Prix, 162 laps

Barros Fastest In Sunday MotoGP Warm-up At Sepang

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

MotoGP Sunday-morning Practice

1. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:04.376
2. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:04.419
3. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:04.760
4. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:04.830
5. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:05.271
6. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.546
7. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.595
8. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.673
9. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.209
10. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.250
11. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:06.423
12. Nobuatso Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.612
13. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:06.698
14. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.729
15. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:06.891
16. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:07.017
17. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:07.124
18. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:07.161
19. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.225
20. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:09.246
21. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:09.330
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:09.998


250cc Grand Prix Sunday-morning Practice

1. Toni Elias, Aprilia, 2:08.516
2. Fonsi Nieto, Aprilia, 2:08.936
3. Marco Melandri, Aprilia, 2:09.098
4. Randy de Puniet, Aprilia, 2:09.650
5. Sebastian Porto, Yamaha, 2:09.780
6. Roberto Locatelli, Aprilia, 2:09.918
7. Franco Battaini, Aprilia, 2:10.337
8. Naoki Matsudo, Yamaha, 2:10.454
9. Alex Debon, Aprilia, 2:10.556
10. David Checa, Aprilia, 2:10.611


125cc Grand Prix Sunday-morning Practice

1. Daniel Pedrosa, Honda, 2:13.310
2. Max Sabbatani, Aprilia, 2:14.007
3. Manuel Poggiali, Gilera, 2:14.164
4. Arnaud Vincent, Aprilia, 2:14.268
5. Pablo Nieto, Aprilia, 2:14.800
6. Steve Jenkner, Aprilia, 2:14.884
7. Joan Olive, Honda, 2:14.909
8. Simone Sanna, Aprilia, 2:14.959
9. Hector Barbera, Aprilia, 2:15.257
10. Lucio Cecchinello, Aprilia, 2:15.325

Updated Post: Barros On MotoGP Pole At Sepang

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Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:04.487
2. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:04.536
3. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:04.680
4. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:04.785
5. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.031
6. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:05.106
7. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:05.170
8. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:05.188
9. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:05.400
10. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:05.671
11. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.800
12. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.911
13. Nobuatsu Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.061
14. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:06.148
15. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.362
16. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.451
17. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.580
18. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.635
19. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:06.857
20. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:07.126
21. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:08.028
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:09.106


More, from a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha WCM:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
Saturday 12th October 2002

AUSTRALIAN Red Bull Yamaha rider Garry McCoy will start from ninth position on the grid for tomorrow¹s 21-lap Malaysian GP.

McCoy slipped slightly down the standings after yesterday¹s excellent performance, but his best time of 2:05.400 this afternoon still left him best of the Yamaha YZR500 two-strokes, and he ended up just 0.3s slower than newly-crowned world champion Valentino Rossi.

His best time came on his final lap of the one-hour session, and but for a small mistake he might have been starting from the second row. The 31-year-old though is predicting a tough race, with prime concerns focused around tyre choice for what is sure to be a punishing examination of both man and machine tomorrow.

Track temperatures at the stifling hot and humid Sepang circuit are several degrees higher than at any other track on the 16-round MotoGP calendar. As a consequence it makes the requirement for good tyre choice even more critical. Track temperatures this afternoon reached a high of 50 degrees, and McCoy and his engineers will be searching for a compromise between a tyre that will offer consistent grip and one that will have the endurance to survive the strenuous conditions.

American rookie John Hopkins found himself in the unfamiliar position of 19th on the grid. His best time of 2:06.857, which slashed 0.9s off his fastest from yesterday, might have been improved had he not slipped off his Red Bull machine on his last flying lap. Before he lost the front end at a slow left-hander, Hopkins was on course for his fastest lap after the first two sections of the 3.447 miles circuit.

GARRY McCOY ­ Ninth 2:05.400
“I thought there was a little bit more in my fastest lap. On my final run I made a small mistake coming out of the hairpin and that unsettled the bike, so I was expecting to be a little bit faster. Ninth is fine against all the four-strokes but it will be tough in the race. When I¹m pushing flat-out, they come flying by a 500 two-stroke like we are standing still. Our race tyre option depends on the track temperature. It was hotter this afternoon than yesterday and the race tyre did not feel as good. The heat seems to vary our tyre performance considerably.”

JOHN HOPKINS ­ 19th 2:06.857
“We spent most of the session playing around with the set-up of the bike trying to find some more grip. I put on a qualifier but I made a bad choice for the front tyre. Before I crashed the front had tucked a couple of times. I guess I just got in there too hot. It just didn¹t work out and all I can do is look forward to tomorrow.”

PETER CLIFFORD – TEAM DIRECTOR
“That was another good ride from Garry. He spent a lot of time working on his race set-up and that took the edge of the qualifying times, but it should pay off with a decent start tomorrow. It was bad luck for John. But for that slip off on his last lap he was going to be faster and a little bit higher up the grid.”


More, from a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Final Qualifying, Saturday October 12 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN FIGHT BACK AT STEAMY SEPANG
Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa shrugged off withering heat and humidity at Sepang this afternoon to qualify second and fifth fastest for tomorrow’s Malaysian Grand Prix.

Both riders had struggled with machine set-up yesterday, clocking sixth- and 11th-fastest times in the first qualifier, but their crews have worked tirelessly since then to dramatically close the gap.

“It’s amazing what the team has been able to do,” said Marlboro Yamaha Team director Davide Brivio. “Everybody – the riders, the engineers and the rest of the crew – have spent many hours in discussion since yesterday afternoon, working to find a solution to the problems. So, I have to say a big thank you to them all, now let’s keep going from here. Yesterday both Max and Carlos had struggled in the corners, so we’ve adjusted chassis geometry and suspension balance to give them the feeling they need to really attack the turns.”

Conditions were more gruelling than ever during today’s session, with 36-degree C ambient heat and 50-degree C track temperature. Tomorrow’s race is expected to run in similar conditions, making it the toughest event for riders and bikes on the 16-round MotoGP World Championship calendar.

BIAGGI FIVE HUNDREDTHS OFF POLE POSITION
Max Biaggi was in extraordinary form this afternoon, slicing a massive 1.375 seconds off his Friday best to lay his claim for pole position at Sepang. The Marlboro Yamaha Team man, who’s currently battling for second in the World Championship, went fastest with just two minutes of the session remaining, only for Alex Barros (Honda) to sneak pole away from him by just 0.049 seconds. But Biaggi was beaming after the session, certain he’d done his utmost and ready to challenge for another win tomorrow.

“First of all, my congratulations to Barros for pole, now he owes me a pizza because he was chasing me for his fastest lap!” grinned a sweat-drenched Biaggi after securing his tenth front-row start of the year.

“I felt I did my best out there today. We made some changes last night and then some more suspension adjustments this morning, which found us some competitiveness, though it’s always difficult to make the bike perfect. I used different compound front and rear tyres this afternoon and just tried my maximum for a good lap time. This race is going to be very tough on tyres, but I’m sure I can go well tomorrow.”



CHECA MISSES FRONT-ROW START BY A FRACTION
Carlos Checa also transformed his performance in Malaysia today, lapping 1.292 seconds faster than he’d managed in yesterday’s opening qualifying outing to lift himself to within a fraction of the front row. In fact The Marlboro Yamaha Team man did move up to fourth with an astounding end-of-session charge, but was demoted to fifth by Loris Capirossi (Honda)in the dying seconds. Like team-mate Max Biaggi, Checa’s revitalised speed was thanks to painstaking work from his technicians and a superb on-track effort.

“We worked all day towards the correct race-distance set-up, then we fitted new tyres at the end and went for it,” he said. “Today we made quite a few changes to the bike, back to stuff we know better. It was just slight modifications to geometry and suspension that improved the overall balance, which I feel confident will make a useful difference to our race performance. Maybe we can still make some more improvements – we’ll probably try a few more things in warm-up.”



BARROS SCORES FIRST MotoGP POLE POSITION
Just six days after scoring his first MotoGP victory in last Sunday’s Pacific GP in Japan, Alex Barros this afternoon scored his first MotoGP pole position. “Considering my team had no data for this track, I’m surprised to get pole,” said the Brazilian who’s riding an RCV four-stroke for only the second time. “The race will be tough, you get so much wheelspin here that you have to concentrate so hard.” World Champion and fellow RCV rider Valentino Rossi, who lost out to Barros in the last race, could only manage eighth today.


More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

PITT QUALIFIED FOR FIRST GP

Australian Andrew Pitt qualified the new Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR comfortably inside the 107 percent cut-off for his first GP, after carving another 1.5-seconds off his best time of yesterday in today’s final qualifying session.

The 2001 World Supersport champion, in at the deep end after being drafted in to replace the injured Akira Yanagawa on the new Kawasaki MotoGP prototype, ended only his second day on the new machine in 22nd position, for a start on the sixth row of the grid.

Pitt (26) had never ridden a GP bike before yesterday, nor used carbon brakes.

The Kawasaki is in its second of four races this year as a wild card entry, in preparation for a first full MotoGP season next year. The 990cc prototype, which uses novel flat-slide fuel injection and striking aerodynamic bodywork, ran for the first time last month. Original rider, factory tester Akira Yanagawa, had been due to ride the machine, but suffered a crack to his pelvis at the Pacific GP at Motegi one week before.

Andrew Pitt – 22nd in 2:09.106:
“We made good progress on our set-up with race tyres, and I improved my lap time further on our first set of soft tyres towards the end of the session. The second set of soft tyres felt different, and I couldn’t go faster any more on my last run. All in all, it’s still a matter of learning the bike and the circuit, and step by step, we’re getting closer. The bike feels okay, and I’m looking forward to going out in the race tomorrow!”

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
“It doesn’t look good when you are four seconds behind, but I’m still satisfied with our progress. Andrew has done a good job, he has improved consistently, and he stayed in the seat safely throughout the four sessions. Our next goal is to take another 1.5 or even 2 seconds off the gap to the fastest guys in Phillip Island, and maybe another second in Valencia, and then we are where we want to be. I am also happy with the bike. We improved the set-up step by step, and we didn’t have a mechanical problem whatsoever. The engine runs like clockwork, and our topspeed of 293 kph is on the same level as the speed of Suzuki, and they have been tuning their bike all year long, where it is only our fifth full day out there. All we need tomorrow is to cover the full race distance!”



More, from a press release issued by Honda:

HONDA RACING INFORMATION

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002
MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Final Qualifying, Saturday October 12th, 2002

BARROS TAKES POLE WITH FINAL QUALIFYING LAP

A superb ride in the final seconds of qualifying gave Brazilian Alex Barros (West Honda Pons NSR500) his fourth career pole position, in only his second race weekend on the all-conquering Honda RC211V four-stroke. His best time of 2:04.487 was 1.2 seconds quicker than the previous 500cc qualifying record, set in the 2001 season, a perfect indication of the performance differential between the new breed of four-strokes and the old guard of 500cc two-strokes.

Barros’ ride to the top of the combined qualifying time sheets maintains his confidence on a high level after his recent race win in Japan, although Barros did not expect to perform quite so well in the steamy Malaysian heat – especially against many riders who have enjoyed Sepang experience on their four-stroke machines during winter test sessions.

“I am surprised to take pole position but I think my team of mechanics made a very good job because we had no data for this track, unlike the other Honda four-stroke riders,” said a delighted Barros, enjoying the status of pole position. “We have started with a base of zero so I am especially surprised to take the pole position. The main problem on the track itself is that the rear tyre is spinning too much, so I will have to concentrate very hard when it comes to the race.”

Daijiro Kato, who was in pole position for much of the final session, was deposed by Barros, although the diminutive Japanese was in his usual competitive form in qualifying and eventually took third place for a first row start. He nonetheless laboured under a small handicap in the final session, in pain from a previous crash.

“I am a lot happier today than yesterday and I have found good settings for both the machine and the tyre selection,” he stated. “My only regret is that I could have been a lot faster towards the end of the session, but my neck was hurting after my Friday crash. Considering this, third was not too bad I think, and I am concentrating on tomorrow now.”

Once more Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) performed heroics on his two-stroke, almost stealing pole right at the end after setting the fastest split times on the first three sections. The extended full throttle sprints along Sepang’s two long straights dropped him to fourth overall, but his earlier cornering prowess was arguably the highlight of the final session.

“I worked so hard all day today,” said Capirossi. “I was much faster in the T1, T2 and T3 splits but the straights in the last part of the track are too long and I lost a lot of time there. Anyway, I got on the front row but tomorrow it will be very difficult to be competitive on a two-stroke, even harder than at Motegi – but I will try my best.”

For new World Champion Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) qualifying at Sepang was not a straightforward exercise, with the Italian rider looking fast and smooth but only taking the last place on the second row, after setting eighth best time, a significant 0.701 seconds behind Barros.

“We were not able to make the bike work better than it did this morning,” said Rossi of the day’s proceedings. “We have made a lot of changes to the bike but we don’t seem to have got anywhere. I was waiting for a special tyre towards the end of the session. I came in and had a different one fitted so I couldn’t improve! I am not satisfied with how we work. A lot of the problems we have are just like in Motegi.”

Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) outperformed his teammate to go sixth on the time sheets, after his usual display of determination on the brakes and intense riding input. On provisional pole on Friday, Ukawa was even more pleased to have found a good set-up, rather than go all out for a single fast lap time in the frantic final session.

Said Ukawa: “From where we were on Friday morning the bike is 100 times better. I’ve got no problem with the clutch, the suspension set-up feels good and the tyre wear is constant. We have a good package for the race.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500), was just over a second off the pole position pace, and tenth fastest in qualifying; two impressive statistics for the NSR rider, who is still undergoing development work for Bridgestone tyres during the racing season.

“I think we did a pretty good job today. The morning free practice was not so good, when we were chasing a better balance of front and rear. I tried a different shape rear tyre and it had better grip but upset the balance. In the afternoon we tried two tyres, both for seven laps, and I could run 2:07s with both. Overall I’m more than happy with tenth place against all the four-strokes.”

Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) fell in the second session, without injury, but lost any chance to improve on his 14th best qualifying position. A total of 22 riders qualified for Sunday’s 21-lap MotoGP race.

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) was once more the top placed NSR Honda qualifier in the quarter litre division, just over 1.5 seconds behind the pole position rider Fonsi Nieto (Aprilia) and in sixth position on the grid.

“We have a strange situation where I am fast in the first two splits but slower in the second two,” said a bemused Rolfo. “It’s not speed really, it’s more like feel from the front end. Also we may change the gearbox ratios tomorrow morning.”

A less fruitful day for his team-mate Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) put him 13th overall, thanks to his Friday time, after a turbulent second qualifying session.

“We have big problems with traction from the rear end, stated the Spaniard, “it is not the tyre, more the set-up of the suspension I think.”

Haruchika Aoki (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) scored 15th best position on the time sheets, taking a fourth row start on his ‘evolution’ spec machine. Jason Vincent (By Queroseno Racing Honda RS250R/W) and his team-mate Leon Haslam both scored top 20 places, with Vincent 18th and Haslam 20th. Jakub Smrz (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) ended the qualifying sessions 23rd from 24.

Daniel Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) was poised in a good position to take pole position before a huge highside crash, with five minutes of the final session remaining, relegated him to an eventual third. His high-speed impact on the Sepang tarmac left him with a severely bruised lower back.

“I was trying to set my best lap and when I opened the throttle out of a corner the bike slid and spat me right over the top,” said Pedrosa, through gritted teeth. “The impact was very hard. Luckily the X-rays confirm that the only consequence is a contusion on my lower back. Nothing is broken so I hope I will be recovered for tomorrow’s race.”

Joan Olive (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) fought hard at the long and technical Sepang circuit, taking the last place on the fourth row thanks to his 16th fastest time. The 17-year-old Spaniard battled hard to move up the grid but was held back by grip problems in the intense heat.

“The high track temperatures meant that the bike slid constantly,” confirmed Olive. “I took the maximum risk and I am feeling satisfied because I gave it everything I had, riding to my limit. StilI, I wasn’t able to open the throttle when I wanted, so out of the turns the other riders accelerate faster than me.”

Rio GP winner Masao Azuma (Tribe by Breil Honda RS125R) used Honda power to take a top ten finish in ninth, with Klaus Nöhles (PEV Moto ADAC Sachsen Honda RS125R) two places lower, in 11th. Mika Kallio (Red Devil Honda RS125R) scored 14th, Mirko Giansanti (Scot Racing Team Honda RS125) 15th.

HONDA TEAM QUOTES:

MotoGP:

Alex Barros, West Honda Pons: 1st: “I am satisfied and surprised because I must admit that I did not expect to be in pole position today. The team put in some great work as we started from zero here, without any previous references from the circuit, unlike the other Honda four-stroke riders. I would like to thank all the team for their excellent work which has given me the opportunity to be the quickest here today. Regarding the race, I have a lot of confidence because I am lapping fast and clearly the goal is to repeat the victory here. The key thing will be the tyres and the winner will be the rider with the most grip during the last laps.”

Daijiro Kato, Fortuna Honda Gresini, 3rd: “I am very happy because we found the perfect race set up, and I have a good feeling with my RC211V. This morning I had whiplash and my neck was locked. Luckily the Doctors could get me back into good shape. This injury held me back a little bit but I’m really hopeful and very concentrated for tomorrow.”

Fausto Gresini: “I saw my rider really determined out there, despite the whiplash, but I’m satisfied, also with the work of the team: they worked very hard to improve the feeling of the bike for Kato. We are still learning, in a really difficult class, but I think that Daijiro will have a really good race. I’m sorry that we didn’t totally exhaust the possibility of the tyre that we put in at the end of practice: we had only two laps and this kind of tyre gives maximum performance only on the third lap. But I don’t worry because Kato made his time without difficulty. Tomorrow it will be a hard race, with really hot weather, but I hope to be celebrating.”

Loris Capirossi, West Honda Pons, 4th: ” I am very happy because I risked everything on the last lap and it came off. I have set a really great time today but tomorrow I will find it difficult up against the four-stroke bikes. I am able to go extraordinarily fast over the first two sections of the track, but when I get the two long straights I lose half-a-second immediately. I have to accept the fact that in Sepang it is impossible to beat the four-strokes.”

Sito Pons: “Every single member of the West Honda Pons team is extremely satisfied because it seems like we are on a winning streak. Our riders have once again demonstrated supreme professionalism and were able to put into practice on the track all the great work of the team. I hope that we continue the progress tomorrow and that we can repeat the last week’s results in Motegi.”

Tohru Ukawa, Repsol Honda Team: 6th: “It does sound a little strange after holding provisional pole and being fastest this morning to say that I’m not unhappy at a second row start because I’m not really. From where we were on Friday morning the bike is 100 times better. I’ve got no problem with the clutch, the suspension set-up feels good and the tyre wear is constant. We have a good package for the race. We had a little chatter from the front this morning but not so much now. Nearly every start I’ve had this year has been on the second row and my position in the championship is not that bad. Tomorrow morning in warm-up we will confirm our race set-up and make any final adjustments but they will only be very minor. I’m looking forward to the race!”

Valentino Rossi, Repsol Honda Team: 8th: “We were not able to make the bike work better from this morning. We have made a lot of changes to the bike but don’t seem to have got anywhere. I was waiting for a special tyre towards of the end of the session. I came in and had a different one fitted so I couldn’t improve! I am not satisfied with how we work. For me the problem was the long run we made at the beginning of the session. We lost too much time to make any improvements. We still have some problem with the clutch system. I fight also with the brake. We seem to have lost all our advantage in braking from the test here. Now I have to brake much earlier. We changed the off-set to improve the braking from this morning but it makes no difference. Many of the problems we have are just like in Motegi. We will have a busy evening looking at data and an important session tomorrow morning working on race set-up. We have a great team who, like me, are very motivated. We like the fight and we will be ready for the battle tomorrow!”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh, Team Kanemoto Honda, 10th: “I think we did a pretty good job today. The morning free practice was not so good, we were chasing a better balance of front and rear. I tried a different shape rear tyre, it had better grip but upset the balance. In the afternoon we tried two tyres, both for seven laps and I could run 2m 07s with both. I have to choose one of the two for thee race but I’m confident with both. I put in a softer tyre for the end of the session and went faster than yesterday, almost one full second. I’m more than happy with 10th against all the four-strokes. My race pace will be more than one second faster than I expected, so I’m looking forward to it. If I’m in the top ten after two corners then the race will really be on for me.”

Team owner – manager Erv Kanemoto: “It was just as we predicted yesterday, the indications were good and final qualifying went very well. Jurgen rode really well, and the race tyres performed well as we kept the temperatures low. Everything is working well in the high-temperatures we get here. Bridgestone have been working hard to improve the they give us for all conditions and the indications are that all their hard work is paying off – but there is still a way to go yet. We are happy with the bike, which is really running well in the extremely hot air conditions. There is not a whole lot to do to the bike overnight, we’re pretty much ready to race. We just hope the conditions stay within 3 – 4 degrees of the last two days.”


More, from a press release issued by MS Aprilia:

Laconi to start from fifth row in Sepang

On the scorching tarmac, which today reached 56°C, the problems faced yesterday by Régis Laconi and the Cube showed no signs of going away. In the opening minutes of today’s timed sessions, Régis improved on yesterday’s speeds and a few moments later had sliced another second off his lap time. A further improvement in the closing stages gave him the 2’07.126 that places him in twentieth position, on the fifth row of the starting grid tomorrow. Régis worked hard on the settings of the Cube, finding a number of good solutions but the lack of grip prevented him from getting a better time.


# 55 Regis Laconi – (MS APRILIA RACING) – 20th – 2’07.126

We’ve made a number of improvements to the bike. The gears are now well suited to the Sepang circuit and adjustment of some details of the frame have given some good results. But I just don’t have grip – I keep sliding on the asphalt. There’s no grip on the corner of the tyre and it’s hard to keep the bike up against the edge of the curve, and then I can’t open up the throttle as I come out. The bike tries to go sideways. In any case, I think I’ve got a very good solution for the front tyre, but we’ve still got to try out a few things tomorrow for the rear before making our final decision. Unfortunately, grip isn’t something you can just invent, so I’m doing all I can to find a good solution for the race.”

Ukawa, Rossi, Kato Fastest In Friday MotoGP Qualifying At Sepang

0

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:05.106
2. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:05.195
3. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:05.356
4. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:05.702
5. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:05.743
6. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.911
7. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:05.994
8. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.047
9. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:06.089
10. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:06.244
11. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.323
12. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:06.570
13. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.691
14. Nobuatsu Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.731
15. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.977
16. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.053
17. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:07.070
18. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.144
19. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:07.761
20. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:08.136
21. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:08.307
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:10.628

Team Press Releases From Sepang MotoGP

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From a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
FRIDAY 11th October 2002

RED BULL Yamaha’s Garry McCoy defied popular opinion by slotting his two-stroke YZR500 into fifth place on the provisional grid for Sunday¹s Malaysian GP.

The Australian finished top two-stroke rider, and his performance went against expectation that the 990cc four-strokes would be dominant at the ultra-modern Sepang circuit.

The superior power of the four-strokes is a significant advantage on the long 3.447 miles lap, particularly on the two long straights running either side of the huge main grandstand.

McCoy elevated himself up to fourth just after the halfway mark, using the extra grip of Dunlop’s qualifying tyre to get himself in a challenging position with a tropical storm threatening to engulf the circuit.

With huge lightning strikes illuminating the gloomy skies above, McCoy’s best time of 2:05.743 almost saw him claim a place on the front row.
A late charge by Pacific GP winner Alex Barros relegated him to fifth. McCoy’s time was 0.2s faster than his previous best at Sepang when claimed a front row start a year ago.

Despite the overcast conditions, air temperatures still reached a gruelling 35 degrees C, with the track temperature peaking at 49 degrees C, making the track slick and grip hard to find.

Teammate John Hopkins will be hoping for better fortunes tomorrow after he ended up 19th fastest. As if the punishing heat and humidity wasn’t a difficult enough challenge to contend with, McCoy and Hopkins find themselves trying to make an impression against a fresh influx of four-strokes.
Three more appeared today, taking the number to 13 out of the 22-strong field for round 14 round of the MotoGP series.

GARRY McCOY ­ Fifth 2:05.743
“It’s my fastest ever lap at this circuit but I was actually hoping to go even faster. It’s good to be where I am but I’m actually disappointed to be only 0.2s faster than my previous best ever time here. At most other tracks I’ve been a second faster and that was what I was hoping for here. It turned out to be a bit of a race against the rain. I put a qualifier in early to get myself up there and I got up to fourth. I don’t have a lot of good options for a race tyre though. I tried another qualifier at the end of the session to go quicker but it didn’t happen.”

JOHN HOPKINS ­ 19th 2:07.761
“I was working through a load of race tyres but if we want more grip we’ve got to keep trying a load of different suspension settings, even though there was more grip than this morning. When I put a qualifier in I made a couple of mistakes in T1 and aborted the lap. I feel in good shape, the conditions are not having a major effect on me and I’m looking forward to a big improvement tomorrow. It’s getting really frustrating now seeing everyone getting four-strokes. There are more coming every weekend and I’ve just got to keep my focus, go day-by-day and concentrate on the weekend.”


PETER CLIFFORD – DIRECTOR OF RACING
“That was an epic ride from Garry. It just shows there’s life in the old dog yet, and I’m not talking about our Australian. We have to say a big thanks to Dunlop and I’m sure John will not be far behind tomorrow.”



More, from a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
First Qualifying, Friday October 11 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN CHASE HIGH-SPEED PERFORMANCE
Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa completed this afternoon’s opening Malaysian GP qualifying session sixth and 11th fastest, looking for more high-speed cornering performance from their YZR-M1s.

With dark storm clouds threatening at Sepang, the pair worked tirelessly in oppressive heat and humidity, and are now consulting their technicians to find a new direction for the rest of the weekend.

“Today has been difficult,” admitted YZR-M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda. “Both Max and Carlos are losing a lot of time through the T3 section, which is mostly high-speed corners. Neither of them feel very comfortable through these corners at maximum lean angle, and it seems we have a lot of rear-suspension movement through these turns. We will now analyse our data and compare it to the data from our tests here last December. Even though the bikes are very different now, maybe we can learn something from that, especially regarding rear-suspension movement.”

BIAGGI ON PROVISIONAL SECOND ROW
Pole sitter three times so far this year, Max Biaggi was sixth at Sepang this afternoon, 0.805 seconds off provisional pole position. The Marlboro Yamaha Team rider, who lapped faster during winter team tests, spent much of the session around tenth, moving up to a provisional second-row slot during his traditional end-of-session charge.

“I don’t really understand why we’re not running as fast as we did when we tested here last December, because the bike is much changed and much better now,” said the Italian. “We tried various different settings this afternoon, so far without any dramatic improvement. It’s too early to predict how the race will go for us, but I hope to cut the gap to pole by at least half tomorrow. Then we’ll see if we can be competitive on Sunday.”

CHECA 11th BUT STILL CONFIDENT
Carlos Checa had a rather more difficult day, ending up provisional 11th fastest. But the Marlboro Yamaha Team man is confident that his crew will be able to take a new direction with settings to get him back on the pace for Saturday and Sunday. So far this year Checa has qualified on the front two rows at 12 of 13 GPs.

“It was impossible to go really fast today,” said Checa. “I tried hard all through the session, with both bikes, but they both pushed the front. We made many changes but only found small improvements to front-end stability and grip. It’s difficult to keep the bike on angle, especially at speed. But I know we can improve from here. We just need to keep working and find a different direction.”



UKAWA HEADS BIGGEST-EVER FOUR-STROKE PACK
Tohru Ukawa was quickest today, just ahead of Honda team-mate Valentino Rossi. “Our bikes were down on power this morning, which knocked out our gearbox and suspension settings that worked so well here during winter tests,” said Ukawa. “But the team worked very hard for this afternoon and things are much better now.”

Olivier Jacque and team-mate Shinya Nakano are the latest four-stroke converts at Sepang where four-strokes account for more than half the MotoGP grid for the first time. “Riding the 500 had been very frustrating,” said Jacque, who’s still adjusting to the M1 and was 16th quickest. “The four-stroke is very fast, though it doesn’t feel as quick as the 500 because the power delivery is smoother. It’s also easier to control wheelspin with the four-stroke.”



More, from a press release issued by Proton Team KR:

McWILLIAMS PILES ON THE PACE AT SEPANG

Round 14: Malaysian GP, Sepang
First Qualifying: Friday, October 11, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: Ninth, 2:06.089
Nobuatsu Aoki: 14th, 2:06.731

Jeremy McWilliams once again exceeded expectations in Malaysia today, with a blindingly fast lap of the Sepang circuit that not only made a nonsense of the team’s fears that they would be seriously off the pace at a track with two long straights, but also put him narrowly third-fastest two-stroke, right among the four-stroke MotoGP machines.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki was 14th fastest, and struggling with settings. To make more progress for Sunday’s race, he expects to make radical changes to the machine overnight for tomorrow’s final qualifying session.

The Proton KR3, racing close to the Malaysian home of the team’s name sponsor and technical partner Proton cars, is a lightweight three-cylinder 500cc two-stroke up against more powerful four-cylinder two-strokes and the new-generation 990cc four-strokes, more powerful again.

The pay-off is agile handling and very high corner speed, but the two straights at Sepang, both approached from slow corners, punish the concept. This was proved by McWilliams’s section times. On the twistier sections, he was fastest or close to fastest; on the final T4 section, including one straight and part of the other, he was losing more than he was gaining elsewhere. He was less than one second off pole time, set by Honda four-stroke rider Tohru Ukawa, but 1.1 seconds slower on T4. But for the straights, he would be a serious candidate for pole.

There are two more hour-long sessions tomorrow before Sunday’s race, the 14th of 16 rounds in the MotoGP world championship. Next season, Proton Team KR will be fielding their own V5 990cc four-stroke, which was launched at a packed press conference at the Proton factory yesterday.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
As always, I was trying pretty hard. I’m less than a second off pole, and I’m losing more than a second on the two straights. That says it all, really, about how I’m trying, and how well the bike is working on the corners. When you look at it in black and white on the time sheets, it’s very frustrating. I was fastest in T2, and third in T3, so I’m picking up a bit there. I think we can make our bike quicker. My chief engineer Tom O’Kane has some ideas on how to make the engine more free revving on the straights. Apart from that, we already have a good tyre – surprisingly in this heat it’s not the hardest, more of a medium compound. If it stays dry, I believe we can race in the top six or eight.

NOBUATSU AOKI
Today was really difficult. At Motegi, we went to very hard settings, and we brought them here too – but they didn’t work at all. I have a real grip problem at the front, even worse than usual. I think tomorrow we’ll go back to standard settings and begin again. It’s not ideal, but always so far my team has been able to give me a good bike in time for the race, and I believe they will be able to do it again here.

KENNY ROBERTS – Team Owner
It’s a lot better than we thought. As at some other tracks where we knew we’d be battling, Jeremy and Nobu have pulled it out of the bag, and they’re running a couple of seconds faster than last year on the same bike. We really need some help on the straights, drafting faster bikes, and Jeremy did that lap all on his own, with no slipstreaming. It shows that if we had another 50 horsepower, we’d be beating them. Take away the second we’re losing on the straight and you can see how competitive the bike can be.



More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

MOTOGP 2002
ROUND 14 – SEPANG, MALAYSIA
11TH OCTOBER 2002 – QUALIFYING PRACTICE 1

PITT SLASHES 2.5 SECONDS IN TWO SESSIONS

Australian rider Andrew Pitt, World Supersport champion in 2001, made a more than promising if unexpected GP debut at Sepang in Malaysia today, with his first ever outing on a full MotoGP prototype, on the brand new Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR.

Not unexpectedly, the young rider was placed at the back of the grid. More significantly, he cut 2.5 seconds off his lap time from the morning to the afternoon session, and was comfortably inside the qualifying time for his first GP.

This is an impressive start, on a bike still in its infancy, and for a rider whose previous experience has barely come close to the levels of power, speed and competitive riders that he met for the first time today. Pitt has never seen the Sepang circuit before, has never before used slick tyres, carbon brakes or a fuel-injected engine, and the ZX-RR has some 80 horsepower more than any other machine he has ridden before.

There is one more day of qualifying for Sunday’s Malaysian GP. Pitt was drafted in to the team at short notice, after regular factory tester Akira Yanagawa was injured in a race crash last Sunday at the Japanese GP at Motegi. Pitt will race the prototype Kawasaki at the remaining three GPs of this season in Yanagawa’s place.

Andrew Pitt – 22nd in 2:10.628:
“I watched the Motegi Grand Prix on television and I thought the bike was a bit of a handful. But when I went out for my first laps this morning, I was very surprised how user-friendly it was, not wild at all, and with a smooth power delivery throughout the power band. Only on the initial part of the throttle opening, the fuel injection system feels a bit rougher than the carburettors. It took me only about one lap to get familiar with the carbon brakes that I’d never used before, and from that point on, it was just a matter of gaining track knowledge and experience with the bike. We didn’t change much on the bike between the sessions, just minor modifications to make it steer a little easier, and I still got faster lap by lap and improved by 2.5 seconds from the morning to the afternoon. Obviously, it’s a big step up from my Supersport bike and the Superbike that I tested occasionally. It’s definitely good to ride a bike that powerful, and it’s amazing to still feel it pushing ahead in top gear at the end of the straight. Tomorrow, I’ll just try to improve further and to take another couple of seconds off my time!”

Takashi Yasui – Staff Officer, Kawasaki Research & Development Division:
“We made some engine improvements after the problems we had in the race at Motegi one week ago, and the bike has been running great on our first day of practice. The biggest task is on Andrew’s side as he has never been on this track before and as he never tested the Ninja ZX-RR, but he already improved significantly in the two sessions of today, and no doubt he’ll go faster again tomorrow as his track knowledge improves!”

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
“Andrew has never been on this track, he has never had carbon brakes, he hasn’t been on slick tyres, hasn’t had a fuel injection, and is confronted with 80 more horsepower than the Supersport machine he rode all year long. Therefore, his progress is remarkable. It was easy to see how he was getting out of the corners better and better towards the end of the first qualifying, and I have no doubt that he will be able to close the gap to the others tomorrow!”


More, from a press release issued by MS Aprilia:

Difficult day for Régis Laconi at Sepang

In the torrid heat of Malaysia, with 39°C in the air and 42° on the tarmac, Régis Laconi and the Cube came up against a difficult first day of tests. Lack of grip on the Malay asphalt prevented Régis from improving his position and going for a provisional position on Sunday’s starting grid worthy of the Cube’s potential and of his skill. His four tenths slower than the time he made in this morning’s free practice put him back in 21st position in today’s qualifying ratings. Just as the MotoGP session came to an end, the first drops of water announced an approaching storm.

# 55 Regis Laconi – (MS APRILIA RACING) – 21st – 2’08.307

“It was very hard today – I haven’t got grip on the corner of the tyres and I haven’t got traction. When I try to open up the throttle as I come out of the corners, the bike starts skating and turns sideways. This obviously means I can’t get the engine’s horsepower down onto the ground. I’ve been having difficulty with the front tyre too: I can’t keep the bike on the trajectory of the curves and I get the feeling the front tyre is just goes where it wants to. It doesn’t seem to bite into the tarmac. This is certainly due partly to the high temperature of the track, but now we need to find a solution so that we can become more competitive.”

British Superbike Champion Steve Hislop Loses Ride

From a press release issued by MonsterMob Ducati:

BIRD LOOKS TO YOUNG GUNS FOR FUTURE

MonsterMob Ducati team owner Paul Bird has today announced that he will not be renewing the contract of 2002 MCN British Superbike Champion, Steve Hislop.

The 40-year-old Isle-of-Man-based Scot has fronted the team’s attack for the past two seasons, finishing second in 2001 before clinching the title at Donington last month but the Penrith businessman is looking towards youth for the foreseeable future.

“Steve’s contract was up and it was a very difficult decision as to whether to renew it or not and the decision not to has not been taken lightly. Obviously Steve has been very instrumental in the team’s success over the past couple of seasons and whilst we’re very grateful to him for that, it was the right time for us to go our separate ways and Steve and I have no animosity towards each other. We achieved our goals together and now it’s right for us both to accept new challenges.

“We have a long-term commitment to Ducati and our sponsors needed a younger profile within the team conducive with their marketing strategy and we are in negotiation with three young riders, all of whom fit the bill perfectly. This is the start of an exciting three-year project which will see us hopefully race in the world superbike and supersport championship starting in 2004, although we may decide to continue racing in the UK until 2005 should circumstances dictate,” said Bird.

Rumours have been increasing in recent days but an official announcement as to who will replace Hislop will be made before Bird and his team jet out to contest the Macau Grand Prix in a month’s time.

Edwards Has Four MotoGP Choices, All On Michelin

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Speaking at MotorSports Ranch today, Superbike World Champion Colin Edwards said he has four MotoGP choices for 2003, all on Michelin tires.

Edwards led a parade lap and signed autographs at the CMRA event in Cresson, Texas Sunday morning, then told Roadracingworld.com’s David Swarts that his MotoGP choices include Honda, Kawasaki, Aprilia and Yamaha.

Edwards said that he will attend next weekend’s MotoGP event at Phillip Island, Australia and hopes to finalize his 2003 deal there.

Where Edwards ends up will have a major impact on the make-up of the 2003 MotoGP paddock, with several riders–all in contention for the same rides that have been offered to Edwards–on hold until Edwards makes his move.

Roadracingworld.com staffers David Swarts and Michael Hannas arrived at Cresson on Friday for a racebike test, and Hannas is racing at the track today as part of that test.

Updated Post: Biaggi Wins Malaysian MotoGP

From a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Race Day, Sunday October 13 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA RULE TOUGHEST GP OF YEAR

Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 rider Max Biaggi won a thrilling Malaysian GP in withering heat and humidity at Sepang this afternoon, coming out ahead of a frantic four-man skirmish with Honda rivals Valentino Rossi, Alex Barros and Tohru Ukawa. Team-mate Carlos Checa had a more difficult day, coming home seventh.

Despite the boiling conditions, with temperatures soaring to 36 degrees and the track surface at 45 degrees, Biaggi’s race time bettered last year’s Malaysian 500 GP by an astonishing 45 seconds. That lightning-quick pace was further proof of the awesome speed of the new-generation MotoGP four-strokes, and none more so than the ever-improving M1, which had 15kmh more speed this weekend than during winter tests here.

“Max made a great job today,” grinned M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda, celebrating the bike’s second win. “He now understands the character of the machine, so he can set it up well. During practice and qualifying we worked hard to perfect the spring balance and chassis balance to help the tyres, and also the engine character to make the bikes easier to ride out of the corners. This worked well for Max but not so well for Carlos; he’s had a difficult weekend and didn’t have so much confidence in the bike.”

Biaggi won the M1’s first victory in August. The bike has also scored four pole positions.

BIAGGI SCORES M1’s SECOND GP WIN, ITALY’S 600th
Max Biaggi’s Sepang triumph was a crucial and landmark success for the Marlboro Yamaha Team man. Not only did the victory lift him to second overall, it was also his tenth premier-class GP win, the M1’s second success and Italy’s 600th. The Italian rode a breathtaking race in what was his 150th consecutive GP start (he hasn’t missed a race since the French GP in 1992), completing the first lap in second, then moving past leader Alex Barros just after half distance and staying ahead till the flag. He crossed the line half a second ahead of compatriot Rossi, the trio of RCV riders bumping and barging into each other for much of the race.

“When you win it’s the best day of your life and I’m very, very happy today because this is a very difficult race, the most difficult of the year,” said a beaming but sweat-drenched Biaggi who started from second on the grid. “I managed to stay second after the start, and when I saw Rossi and Ukawa closing on me and Barros, I went ahead and tried to run a good pace. The heat was incredible, and when you see ‘+0.0’ and ‘+0.2’ on your pitboard all race it’s very tough and not easy to concentrate. But I like this kind of race – push hard and control. I must say thank you to Michelin who are making great tyres. The four-strokes make much more power than the two-strokes, so of course the rear tyre does spin, but with good traction. I ‘d also like to dedicate this win to my team and to Yamaha. They all put in so much effort, even though I won’t be with them next year, but I think I’ve also proved that I don’t give up.”

SET-UP DIFFICULTIES KEEP CHECA SEVENTH
Carlos Checa qualified just a fraction of a second off the front row in yesterday’s final qualifier but was unable to reproduce that pace over race distance. Sixth after the first lap, the Marlboro Yamaha Team star got up to fifth on lap three but then slipped back, ending the race defending seventh place from Kenny Roberts Junior (Suzuki).

“We weren’t able to set up the bike for this track, we lost our way and I’ve not felt confident all weekend,” said Checa, who celebrates his 30th birthday on Tuesday. “I didn’t have the grip to keep rolling the bike into the turns and I couldn’t open the gas out of the corners, I was almost stopped mid-turn. My team worked hard and we tried many things but now we need to analyse what happened here, maybe we will compare our race data to Max’s data.”

ROSSI WINS BARGING MATCH FOR SECOND
MotoGP World Champion Valentino Rossi fought his way into second after a ferocious race to the finish with Alex Barros and Tohru Ukawa, with whom he made contact at least twice. “Our settings weren’t perfect,” said Rossi after his second successive defeat. “I made some mistakes, like when I tried to overtake Barros and ran wide. But I hope this race helps us to make the bike better for the next races.” Barros took third, Ukawa fourth, just 2.2 seconds separating the first four men home.

RESULTS
1. MAX BIAGGI (ITA) Marlboro YAMAHA Team (YZR-M1) 44’01.592

2. Valentino Rossi (ITA) Repsol HONDA Team (RC211v) +0.542

3. Alex Barros (BRA) West HONDA Pons (RC211v) +1.572

4. Tohru Ukawa (JPN) Repsol HONDA Team (RC211v) +2.238

5. Daijiro Kato (JPN) Fortuna HONDA Gresini (RC211v) +8.475

6. Shinya Nakano (JPN) Gauloises YAMAHA Tech 3 (YZR-M1) +23.000

7. CARLOS CHECA (SPA) Marlboro YAMAHA Team (YZR-M1) +24.360

8. Kenny Roberts (USA) Telefonica Movistar SUZUKI (GSV-R) +24.709

9. Loris Capirossi (ITA) West HONDA Pons (NSR500) +27.669

10. Norick Abe (JPN) Antena 3 YAMAHA d’Antin (YZR500) +41.811

CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS
1. Valentino Rossi (ITA) 310
2. MAX BIAGGI (JPN) 189
3. Tohru Ukawa (JPN) 182
4. Alex Barros (BRA) 159
5. CARLOS CHECA (SPA) 136
6. Norick Abe (JPN) 123
7. Loris Capirossi (ITA) 109
8. Kenny Roberts (USA) 92
9. Daijiro Kato (JPN) 91
10. Olivier Jacque (FRA) 66

More, from a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha WCM:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
Sunday, 13th October 2002

GARRY McCOY and John Hopkins ended today’s Malaysian GP in 15th and 18th places respectively as the Red Bull Yamaha team suffered a frustrating day at round 14 of the MotoGP world championship.

As anticipated pre-race by the Australian and American duo, today’s 21-lap battle at the Sepang circuit was dictated by tyres as both struggled to overcome a lack of grip in an effort to better their final positions. McCoy collected a solitary world championship point but it was hardly the boost he was looking for with his home race at Phillip Island, near Melbourne, taking place in just seven days time.

His problems were evident from the time sheets. The 30-year-old’s fastest lap in the race came on lap four, but his time of 2:08.156 was almost three seconds slower than the time he’d produced in an encouraging display to qualify ninth yesterday. Despite making a good start to hold his grid position for the majority of the opening lap, it wasn’t long before McCoy found himself struggling to maintain his pace with the traction problems taking hold from the early stages.

It was a particularly disappointing day for Hopkins, who struggled to recover from a poor start. Pushing hard to try and maintain his impressive points-scoring record in his rookie season, he tumbled off his two-stroke 500 shortly before the halfway point. Although he managed to remount, he ended up 18th.

It promises to be a tough conclusion to the 2002 campaign for the Red Bull Yamaha team in the face of mounting opposition from the increased number of 990cc four-strokes. Proof of the vast gulf between the four-strokes and two-stroke 500s was evident this afternoon. Max Biaggi’s overall race time on the Yamaha YZR-M1 was 45 seconds faster than last year¹s winning time set on a two-stroke when McCoy finished third.

GARRY McCOY, 15th
World Championship ppoints,­ 20th, 33 points
“That was the best I could do and the toughest race I’ve had to score one point. I jumped with the pack at the start but the edge grip on my tyre went away early ­ virtually from the first lap and I was just sliding it into corners on the brakes, gassing it up and holding it sideways. It was really hard work to keep the bike upright and it just wasn’t possible to carry any decent corner speed. In Turn One I was just idling on the throttle. In the end I was just having fun, especially holding big slides through Turn Three. It was the best our race tyres could do today.”

JOHN HOPKINS,­ 18th
World Championship points, 13th, 53 points
“The tyres wouldn’t hook up, it was a bad race, that’s it. I didn’t make the start I wanted and then got stuck behind slow riders. When I crashed I just tucked the front. Nothing more I can say really.”

PETER CLIFFORD – TEAM DIRECTOR
“That was thoroughly disappointing. There¹s not really too many positives we can take away from today at all other than the fact that both guys are in one piece. Performance wise it has got to be better in Australia.”

More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

PITT CLAIMS NEW KAWASAKI’S FIRST GP FINISH
Australian GP beginner Andrew Pitt brought the brand new prototype Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR to its first GP finish at Sepang today, with a steady ride to 19th in baking hot conditions that saw three other starters fall by the wayside.

Pitt, 2001 World Supersport champion, was just six seconds behind Yamaha-mounted John Hopkins at the end of the race, after lapping steadily at the back of the field to give the lime-green bike a faultless first race finish at the second attempt.

The Kawasaki will race at the final two rounds of the season, in Australia and Valencia, in preparation for a full first season next year.

Andrew Pitt – 19th:
The biggest experience was to learn how to ride with the bike sliding. I managed to maintain my lap times all the way to the finish, and it was good to get into the rhythm. Only at the beginning I made too many mistake, because I tried too hard in the first few laps. I opened the throttle too early and too hard, the way I used to do it with the 600, and I had a few big moments because of that. Now I’m looking forward to Phillip Island where we will try some modifications with my seating position and with the handlebars. I would have liked to take same points here, and now I’ll try to do that in Australia!!

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
The most important thing for Andrew and for us was to get a race finish. Andrew could have pushed a little harder in the beginning of the race, but he only experienced later on that the bike was still easy to control when it started sliding. He maintained his pace all the way through and he did lap times in the 2.10s, whereas John Hopkins in front of him slowed down to 2.11s. I’m sure Andrew will be faster again at his home track where he won the World Supersport race at the beginning of the season!

More, from a press release issued by Michelin:

BIAGGI WINS AT SEPANG, OBLITERATES RACE RECORD

Biaggi just beats Rossi and betters Sepang race record by an incredible 45 seconds

This afternoon’s Malaysian Grand Prix was MotoGP racing at its very best – four men battling back and fourth out front and the race record demolished in truly breathtaking style. Max Biaggi (Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1-Michelin) rode magnificently in ferocious heat to beat arch-rival Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V-Michelin) by a half a second, Alex Barros (West Honda Pons RC211V-Michelin) and Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V-Michelin) crossing the line a close third and fourth.

Biaggi’s race time was an incredible 45 seconds quicker than last year’s Malaysian 500 GP, won by Rossi, proving that Michelin technology can handle the 200-plus horsepower MotoGP four-strokes in even the most torrid conditions. Sepang is generally acknowledged as the toughest event of the season but Michelin riders totally dominated the 21-lap race, filling the top 11 finishing positions, the first non-Michelin rider coming in 45 seconds behind the winner.

“This was a good weekend for us – it proved that our four-stroke tyres are at a very good level now, even in such difficult conditions,” said Michelin Grand Prix manager Emmanuel Fournier. “All the first three guys chose exactly the same fronts and rears, while Ukawa had a slightly different rear. Daijiro (Kato, Fortuna Honda Gresini RC211V-Michelin) used a different front from his usual favourite, he chose the same front as the other guys but didn’t like it so much. And it was a good result for Shinya (Nakano, Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 YZR-M1-Michelin) in his first race on a four-stroke.”

Biaggi was as impressed as ever by his tyres. “Michelin are making very good tyres,” he said after his second MotoGP win, which was also his tenth premier-class success and Italy’s 600th all-classes GP victory. “The new four-strokes make much more power than the two-strokes but the tyres handle it well. Of course, you get wheelspin from the rear, but always with good traction. When you win it’s the best day of your life and I’m very, very happy today because this is a very difficult race, the most difficult of the year.”

Starting from second on the grid, Biaggi spent the early laps chasing pole-starter Barros, winner of last Sunday’s Pacific GP, with Rossi and Ukawa chasing hard after passing Kato. Just after half-distance Barros missed a gear and Biaggi pounced, taking the lead and working hard to open a gap. At one point he had two seconds on his pursuers, who were elbow-to-elbow as they squabbled over second, Rossi suffering at least two collisions. In the final laps Rossi did break clear but couldn’t get close enough to launch an attack on first place.

“The heat was incredible,” added Biaggi, now second overall in the 2002 MotoGP series. “And when you see ‘+0.0′ and ‘+0.2′ on your pitboard all race it’s very tough. But I like this kind of race – push hard and control.”

MotoGP champ Rossi, who had qualified eighth, his worst grid slot of the year, suffered set-up problems similar to last Sunday’s Pacific GP when he was beaten by Barros. “My first problem was our settings,” said the Italian. “Also, I lost too much time at the beginning when I made some mistakes overtaking Kato and Ukawa. Hopefully we will learn something from today to make things better for the next races.”

Barros was happy enough with another podium finish in his second RCV ride, though frustrated at losing vital time while battling with Rossi and Ukawa. “Me and Valentino touched while we were fighting and that helped Max, for sure,” he said. “After I dropped to fourth, Ukawa and Rossi were doing the same thing, which helped me close the gap, and when Ukawa made a mistake I got back into third.”

Just 1.5 seconds separated the top-three finishers, Ukawa a further 0.7 seconds down and Kato another six seconds back in fifth. Nakano came through from eighth for his second-best result of 2002, passing Carlos Checa (Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1-Michelin) at two thirds distance. Checa just held onto seventh from Kenny Roberts (Telefonica Movistar Suzuki GSV-R-Michelin). Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500-Michelin) was top two-stroke finisher in ninth, bettering last year’s 500 race time by 17 seconds.

More, from a press release issued by Team Proton KR:

McWILLIAMS IN THE POINTS AT SEPANG

Round 14: Malaysian GP, Sepang
Race: Sunday, October 13, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: 12th Position
Nobuatsu Aoki: Did not finish

Jeremy McWilliams overcame an awful start at today’s Malaysian GP to fight his way through to 12th place from 18th on the first lap, to give Proton Team KR something to cheer about at the home race for their sponsors Proton.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki was poised behind him, planning his own overtaking move for the final lap when his three-cylinder engine cried enough with just three of the 21 laps of the 5.548km Sepang race track left to go.

McWilliams’s stirring recovery ride came after clutch problems on the start line robbed him of the advantage of his excellent second-row starting position. This had been hard won, with a series of blazingly fast laps in qualifying at a track where two consecutive straights take away any advantage accruing to the lightweight three-cylinder Proton KR3 from its much greater corner speed compared with the heavier but more powerful four-cylinder rivals.

In spite of the problems, the race went better than team owner Kenny Roberts had expected. With 990cc four-strokes making half the field in this first year of the new MotoGP series, this was another race where he expected to be battling against enormous odds. As at several other race-tracks this season, the efforts of his riders, the level of refinement of the final version of the KR3 machine and the ever-improving performance of the Bridgestone tyres far exceeded his expectations.

Next year, however, Proton Team KR face the opposition on level terms, with their own new V5 990cc four-stroke, which was officially launched at a packed press conference at the nearby Proton factory on the eve of the Malaysian GP.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
The clutch jammed up on the start line – it was juddering instead of slipping, and I just had to let it out and bog the engine because I was worried that something might break. It was not a good start to the race. After that, I could close up, but with the difference in straight line speed I was yo-yoing back and forth all the time. I caught up to Abe, who finished tenth, but I had chosen a tyre that was more medium-compound than hard, and that was a mistake. It was really spinning up. I wasn’t going forward in turns where I should have been making up time. I just made it too hard for myself. Looking at where Capirossi finished, in ninth, I think I could have been up there, but I just lost too much time going through the traffic. Not a pleasant race.

NOBUATSU AOKI
That was hard work, and for no result. All weekend I’d been having trouble with the bottom cylinder nipping up, and throughout the race I was being very careful, especially not to rev the bike too hard on the back-shifts, especially into Turn One and the last hairpin. Jeremy caught me and went past, but when I was following him I wasn’t going in his slipstream, because that would make the engine run much hotter. My plan was to stay behind, and try to pass him again on the last lap, but I never got there. I was really enjoying myself, and then my engine seized.

KENNY ROBERTS – Team Owner
We knew it would be a long, hot race, which is very difficult for us, and we did get one bike through it. I need to get Nobu on a V5 that he can backshift. He revs the engine high on the shifts, which is hard on the equipment, and for some reason we’re having trouble making him a bike that can live with it. We’re just getting through this season, and looking forward to next year with our new four-stroke.

More, from a press release issued by Honda:

HONDA RACING INFORMATION

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002
MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Race Day, Sunday October 13th, 2002

ROSSI SECOND AFTER BATTLING SEPANG RACE

An incident strewn 21-lap MotoGP race at Sepang delivered reigning World Champion Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) a close second place, his 13th podium finish of the inaugural MotoGP season. The 20 points he earned for second took him through the 300 barrier, to a giddy level of 310, with two races remaining. Only a DNF at Brno spoils his 2002 season podium perfection, having been no worse than second in every race he has finished.

The Italian rider was in pugilistic form at Sepang, trying to overcome an imperfect set-up by attacking his rivals on the brakes, with occasionally unforeseen outcomes. Despite Rossi’s up and down performance on the day, his second place finish was part of a race in which the leading four-stroke machines of the new MotoGP generation cut a monumental 45 seconds off the previous best race time, set in 2001.

Long time leader Alex Barros (West Honda Pons RC211V) was one to be demoted by Rossi’s attempted overtake, dropping both riders out of contention for the immediate lead mid-race and ultimately the race win; eventually taken by Yamaha rider Max Biaggi, by the margin of 0.542 seconds from Rossi.

Said Rossi of his latest MotoGP adventure: “My first rival was Ukawa, my team mate, and it was not such an easy race for me because my set-up was not so good. I lost the front twice and I didn’t have the right feeling from the front from then on. I took Ukawa and Kato but with two seconds to Barros and Biaggi it was very difficult to catch them. When I did, Alex made a mistake and I tried to overtake him but we both arrived too fast, with Biaggi going into the lead. I had to release the brake, touched Alex and we ran wide. We lost the race basically.”

For Barros it was a frustrating day but he was philosophical about not finally challenging for his second win in a week, despite leading for long periods of time, looking to have the measure of the chasing Biaggi.

“Maybe at some time I did the same thing to Valentino; try to overtake but make a mistake,” shrugged Barros. “This is a sport so I do not take it too personally. If you try to pass and have some contact then this is normal. I lost the race when I made two mistakes. In the last laps we made some compromises to make it to the finish, and I could not overtake anyone because we were all evenly matched. This is only my second four-stroke GP race and we have made two podium finishes, so I should be happy and thank my team for that.”

Barros regained enough composure and concentration to take a close third place for his satellite team, and remains fourth in the World Championship overall.

A real tussle with his team-mate Rossi saw Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) fighting for the podium to start, then chase Barros home for an eventual fourth place.

“The first positive thing is that my machine felt good and I didn’t have any major problems,” stated Ukawa. “I got a good start and then started fighting with Valentino and Kato so that Biaggi and Barros wouldn’t get away. I had a few frights with the front end tucking under and the rear sliding, mainly because the track temperature was so high. I can’t complain about losing the podium. It was a good race and I tried as hard as I could.”

Daijiro Kato (Fortuna Honda Gresini RC211V) fell prey to the advance of Rossi on lap five and Ukawa on lap six, running out fifth at the flag, the fourth Honda rider in the top five places.

“I had a little problem on the bike – imperfect settings on the front – and it tucked in on one of the corners, making me run straight on. I have to look to Phillip Island now because fifth place is not my full potential on this machine.”

For front row qualifier Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) the Sepang race was a tough challenge, and his concerns about the competitiveness of the two-stroke machines around the uniquely configured and lengthy Sepang circuit proved to have basis in fact. Capirossi was top two-stroke finisher on his NSR, albeit in ninth place.

“I am a professional and I go out to win every race I enter,” said Capirossi of his Sepang experience. “I do my work as well as I can but it is very frustrating when you are a winning rider to finish 27 seconds behind the race winner. I was still 17 seconds faster than the race winner’s time from last year obviously I tried my best but this circuit is the worst of the year for the two strokes.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500) took 13th place after a race spent making progress from being 17th at the end of the first lap.

“I got quite a bad start and had to fight it out with Aoki, McWilliams and Laconi,” said Jurgen of his early race showings. “We’re getting better on tyre compounds and that shows on the overall lap times. My race time today would have given me second place in the race last year.”

Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) dropped out of the race on lap 11, with no hope of completing the race in a points scoring position.

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) took third place in the 20-lap 250cc event, running at the front in the early laps. The Italian was pleased with his form after a somewhat difficult qualifying session.

“I am very pleased with that after we experienced some problems with the set-up of the machine in practice,” said Rolfo, clearly the quickest Honda rider on display.

“It was good to be challenging for the lead in the early part but it was not easy to try and lap in the 2:09 bracket all the time. I have to say thank you to my team who put in a lot of work, in the right direction, to improve the set-up of the bike and that allowed us to take this podium – even if we did not have too much acceleration in some parts of the track.”

Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) battled through the midfield to finish a charging eighth, running at a good pace and displaying a real hunger for the fight.

“I found the right set-up for the race only in the warm-up,” said the largely satisfied Spaniard. “This made me confident but I got hit by one of the Yamahas after I had got a good start and that pushed me wide. I tried hard and I moved up the order and at the end I was running the same pace as the leaders.”

The best of the privateer Hondas was ridden by Haruchika Aoki (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) scoring a top 12 on the evolution spec machine.

In the 250 title race Rolfo continues in third place overall, the top Honda rider thanks to his total of 186 points, with eighth place Alzamora breaking through the 100 point barrier, on 101.

Daniel Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) overcame the effects of a back and foot injury to score an excellent second place finish across the line at Sepang, only for the race result to be called from the penultimate lap. The revised result was due to the chequered flag being shown to some backmarkers one lap too early. Pedrosa was thus demoted to third but kept his slender World Championship aspirations alive with two rounds remaining, now sitting on 207 points to the leader’s 240.

Leaping into an early advantage from a front row start, Pedrosa was part of the three man breakaway group, eventually growing in size to contain six, but finally whittled down to a last lap four-man shootout for the win.

“That was particularly pleasing considering how I felt after the crash yesterday, even if I did lose second place due to a mistake from the Race Director,” said Pedrosa. “I really hurt my back and feet but I was also helped because my bike was running well in the race. My mechanics worked hard to fix the bike before the race and it all paid off really well.”

The championship packs its travel cases for the penultimate round at Phillip Island on October 20, with the last race of the year taking place at Valencia, two weeks after that.

RESULTS:

MotoGP Race Classification (21 laps = 116.508 km)
1 Max BIAGGI, YAMAHA, 44’01.592
2 Valentino ROSSI, HONDA, 44’02.134
3 Alex BARROS, HONDA, 44’03.164
4 Tohru UKAWA, HONDA, 44’03.830
5 Daijiro KATO, HONDA, 44’10.067
6 Shinya NAKANO, YAMAHA, 44’24.592
7 Carlos CHECA, YAMAHA, 44’25.952
8 Kenny ROBERTS, SUZUKI, 44’26.301
9 Loris CAPIROSSI, HONDA, 44’29.261
10 Norick ABE, YAMAHA, 44’43.403
11 Akira RYO, SUZUKI, 44’44.195
12 Jeremy McWILLIAMS, PROTON, 44’47.353
13 Jurgen vd GOORBERGH, HONDA, 44’49.908
14 Sete GIBERNAU, SUZUKI, 45’02.862
15 Garry McCOY, YAMAHA, 45’14.688

MotoGP World Championship Positions:
1 ROSSI 310
2 BIAGGI 189
3 UKAWA 182
4 BARROS 159
5 CHECA 136
6 ABE 123
7 CAPIROSSI 109
8 ROBERTS 92
9 KATO 91
10 JACQUE 66
11 NAKANO 55
12 AOKI 54
13 HOPKINS 53
14 McWILLIAMS 45
15 GIBERNAU 44

250cc Race Classification 250cc (20 laps = 110.96 km)
1 Fonsi NIETO, APRILIA, 43’28.624
2 Toni ELIAS, APRILIA, 43’29.036
3 Roberto ROLFO, HONDA, 43’31.571
4 Sebastian PORTO, YAMAHA, 43’36.534
5 Franco BATTAINI, APRILIA, 43’37.205
6 Randy DE PUNIET, APRILIA, 43’37.330
7 Naoki MATSUDO, YAMAHA, 43’47.779
8 Emilio ALZAMORA, HONDA, 43’51.083
9 Shahrol YUZY, YAMAHA, 43’51.318
10 David CHECA, APRILIA, 43’57.974

250cc World Championship Positions:
1 MELANDRI 248
2 NIETO 221
3 ROLFO 186
4 ELIAS 161
5 PORTO 156
6 BATTAINI 124
7 LOCATELLI 108
8 ALZAMORA 101
9 DE PUNIET 96
10 MATSUDO 82
11 STONER 59
12 DEBON 58
13 YUZY 52
14 AOKI 49
15 CHECA 42

125cc Race Classification (18 laps = 99.864 km)
1 Arnaud VINCENT, APRILIA, 40’32.656
2 Lucio CECCHINELLO, APRILIA, 40’32.934
3 Daniel PEDROSA, HONDA, 40’33.001
4 Manuel POGGIALI, GILERA, 40’33.469
5 Pablo NIETO, APRILIA, 40’36.303
6 Steve JENKNER APRILIA, 40’38.944
7 Mika KALLIO, HONDA, 40’45.676
8 Hector BARBERA, APRILIA, 40’45.684
9 Masao AZUMA, HONDA, 40’45.911
10 Alex DE ANGELIS, APRILIA, 40’54.150

125cc World Championship Positions:
1 VINCENT 240
2 POGGIALI 220
3 PEDROSA 207
4 CECCHINELLO 152
5 JENKNER 148
6 NIETO 113
7 SANNA 94
8 AZUMA 93
9 KALLIO 78
10 BORSOI 76
11 DE ANGELIS 74
12 UI 62
13 OLIVE 62
14 GIANSANTI 41
15 BARBERA 38

More, from a press release issued by Suzuki:

ALL THREE SUZUKIS IN THE POINTS AT SEPANG

MotoGP – Round 14, Sepang, Malaysia, October 13, 2002.

Team Telefónica MoviStar Suzuki riders Kenny Roberts Jr. and Sete Gibernau finished eighth and 14th in today’s Malaysian GP, with wild card factory Suzuki rider Akira Ryo a fighting 11th in blazing hot conditions at the Sepang circuit outside the capital Kuala Lumpur.

Roberts’s place came after a determined ride near the front of the field around 21 laps of the 5.548km track, and he finished a frustrating small margin behind seventh-placed Carlos Checa, less than four tenths of a second ahead.

Gibernau had a day of very mixed fortunes, after setting good lap times in the morning warm-up only to suffer an engine failure. Riding with a replacement engine that was not perfectly set up, he ran off the track early in the race because of problems under braking. He got back and pulled through from near the back into the points again.

Ryo also had mixed feelings, in his role as development rider for the new-this-year project. His position fell short of his second place at the opening round at Suzuka, but the fast-improving state of the bike left him satisfied with a year of hard work.

From Sepang, the GP circus travels south to Australia for the penultimate round next weekend, before finishing the year at Valencia two weeks after that.

KENNY ROBERTS – Eighth Position
“Our team worked their asses off this weekend, in very hot conditions, with a couple of crashes and engine problems. Our mechanics are probably the best in the paddock, and they just got on with the job, and I went out and gave it my all – 100 percent effort as always It’s disappointing that at this stage this was the best result we could get. Everything I could make up in the corners I’d lose again going into them and coming out again. I’m fighting the motorcycle much more than the others, and there isn’t a moment I can relax. But at least we’re making ground. We know what we need, and the factory engineers are doing their hardest to give it to us. Each race now we’re also racing for next year, to help them develop the machine to a higher level.”

SETE GIBERNAU – 15th Position
“I didn’t get a good start – then it got worse when I ran off. I just touched the grass, but when I got back I

The MotoGP Press Release Race

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Press releases issued by MotoGP teams and sponsors are generally run on Roadracingworld.com in the order of receipt.

The two fastest teams in terms of getting their press releases e-mailed out are Red Bull Yamaha WCM followed by Marlboro Yamaha.

The two slowest teams in terms of getting their press releases e-mailed out are Suzuki and Honda, with the rest in between the two extremes.

A Report From Desiree In Malaysia, With John Hopkins

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

Hello everyone around the world.

Well unfortunately John didn’t make any ground on the grid but he did pretty good. He crashed on the hot lap so it put him out. He was going good too, he had a fast time going with two blue helmets but it showed on TV he lost the front tire and slid out. Bummer deal but as long as
he gets a good start I think he’ll make up ground.

Gaz did alright, there are few two-strokes in the top 10. Jeremy McWilliams pulled it together, so did Jurgen vd Goorbergh. Barros was on it again, Biaggi, Kato, and Rossi was 8th. The “Flamboyant Italian” seems to have his work cut out for him now that everyone is getting 4-strokes. Not to mention Bridgestone tires are coming around for McWilliams.

OJ and Nakano received 4-strokes this race but it seems as though it hasn’t done much, ’cause they still ended up the same place they usually are at. So maybe it may be them, or they need “time to adapt.” Who knows, eh? Shit–just jump on and ride hard, you got the power!

Alright, enough with the smart-ass remarks, which are true anyway.

Sorry for the late briefing of yesterday’s Q-session. I wrote it when I got back to the hotel, and I thought I sent it but apparently I didn’t.

The weather here is nice, by the way, a bit cooler then when we last came. I bet in Kuala Lumpur it’s pouring down rain. One thing about here is you never know where a storm will be, it could be anywhere. The track is on the other side of the airport, so if it says rain on the forecast, it could rain at the airport but blow right by the track. It’s crazy. So far it’s been pretty good, hopefully it will stay tommorrow.

Catch ya later.



CMRA Endurance Series: Village Idiots Win Race, One Way Racing Takes Championship


Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

By David Swarts

Village Idiots won a 4-hour Central Motorcycle Racing Association (CMRA) endurance race–the final round of the 2002 CMRA Endurance Series–Saturday at MotorSports Ranch in Cresson, Texas. Craig Montgomery, Steve Breen, Chris Headley and Steve Morey rode a Yamaha YZF-R6 equipped with an enlarged (5.5-gallon) fuel tank and Michelin DOT-labeled tires for 169 laps of the 1.7-mile road course to take the overall race win and wrap up the team’s second consecutive CMRA Middleweight Superbike Class Endurance Championship.

HAS Racing 3’s Brett Champagne, Heath Small, David Sanders and John Haner finished second overall and second in the Middleweight Superbike class, one lap behind Village Idiots, on a Pirelli-DOT-shod Superstock-spec Yamaha YZF-R6.

Coming into the final round of the 2002 CMRA endurance series, the overall Championship was a two-way contest with Northwest Honda leading One Way Racing by a small amount of points. Basically, the Championship would be decided by which team finished ahead of the other in the final race.

Endurance veteran Ronnie Lunsford raced with his longtime Northwest Honda teammates Rusty Allen and Matt Maschmann on an 8 Point Communications-sponsored Honda CBR954RR. Riding on Michelin slicks, Northwest Honda made three pit stops, including one to change a cold-tearing rear tire, en-route to finishing fourth overall and completing 165 laps.

The day, however, belonged to Green County Honda/Suzuki-sponsored One Way Racing, the team winning its first CMRA Endurance Championship with a third-place overall, first in Unlimited Grand Prix, in the season-ending race. Troy Green, Greg Wanless and Todd Rypka took advantage of the team’s 7.5-gallon fuel tank and employed a two-stop strategy during the race. Thanks in part to no red flags, One Way Racing’s plan worked out, allowing the team to complete 167 laps on a Pirelli-slick-equipped Suzuki GSX-R1000, beating Northwest Honda and winning the Championship.

Annandale Honda’s Ty Howard started the endurance race from row 15, in the third wave of the 47-rider field, and took the overall race lead on lap seven. Howard extended his lead to nearly 30 seconds before pitting on lap 20. Howard was testing suspension parts and Michelin slicks on his Honda CBR929RR.

CMRA Four-hour Endurance Overall Race Results:

1. Village Idiots (Yamaha YZF-R6), Middleweight Superbike, 169 laps

2. Has Racing (Yamaha YZF-R6), Middleweight Superbike, 168 laps

3. One Way Racing, (Suzuki GSX-R1000), Unlimited Grand Prix, 167 laps

4. Northwest Honda (Honda CBR954RR), Unlimited Grand Prix, 165 laps

5. Big Air Racing (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Supersport, 165 laps

6. Silver Bullet (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Superbike, 165 laps

7. Faltless Racing (Suzuki SV650), Lightweight Superbike, 164 laps

8. Desert Rat Racing (Suzuki GSX-R750), Unlimited Supersport, 163 laps

9. Robinson Partners (Honda CBR600F4), Middleweight Superbike, 163 laps

10. No Homeless (Yamaha YZF-R6), Unlimited Grand Prix, 162 laps

Barros Fastest In Sunday MotoGP Warm-up At Sepang

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

MotoGP Sunday-morning Practice

1. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:04.376
2. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:04.419
3. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:04.760
4. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:04.830
5. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:05.271
6. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.546
7. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.595
8. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.673
9. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.209
10. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.250
11. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:06.423
12. Nobuatso Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.612
13. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:06.698
14. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.729
15. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:06.891
16. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:07.017
17. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:07.124
18. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:07.161
19. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.225
20. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:09.246
21. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:09.330
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:09.998


250cc Grand Prix Sunday-morning Practice

1. Toni Elias, Aprilia, 2:08.516
2. Fonsi Nieto, Aprilia, 2:08.936
3. Marco Melandri, Aprilia, 2:09.098
4. Randy de Puniet, Aprilia, 2:09.650
5. Sebastian Porto, Yamaha, 2:09.780
6. Roberto Locatelli, Aprilia, 2:09.918
7. Franco Battaini, Aprilia, 2:10.337
8. Naoki Matsudo, Yamaha, 2:10.454
9. Alex Debon, Aprilia, 2:10.556
10. David Checa, Aprilia, 2:10.611


125cc Grand Prix Sunday-morning Practice

1. Daniel Pedrosa, Honda, 2:13.310
2. Max Sabbatani, Aprilia, 2:14.007
3. Manuel Poggiali, Gilera, 2:14.164
4. Arnaud Vincent, Aprilia, 2:14.268
5. Pablo Nieto, Aprilia, 2:14.800
6. Steve Jenkner, Aprilia, 2:14.884
7. Joan Olive, Honda, 2:14.909
8. Simone Sanna, Aprilia, 2:14.959
9. Hector Barbera, Aprilia, 2:15.257
10. Lucio Cecchinello, Aprilia, 2:15.325

Updated Post: Barros On MotoGP Pole At Sepang

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:04.487
2. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:04.536
3. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:04.680
4. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:04.785
5. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.031
6. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:05.106
7. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:05.170
8. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:05.188
9. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:05.400
10. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:05.671
11. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.800
12. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:05.911
13. Nobuatsu Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.061
14. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:06.148
15. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.362
16. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.451
17. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.580
18. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.635
19. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:06.857
20. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:07.126
21. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:08.028
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:09.106


More, from a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha WCM:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
Saturday 12th October 2002

AUSTRALIAN Red Bull Yamaha rider Garry McCoy will start from ninth position on the grid for tomorrow¹s 21-lap Malaysian GP.

McCoy slipped slightly down the standings after yesterday¹s excellent performance, but his best time of 2:05.400 this afternoon still left him best of the Yamaha YZR500 two-strokes, and he ended up just 0.3s slower than newly-crowned world champion Valentino Rossi.

His best time came on his final lap of the one-hour session, and but for a small mistake he might have been starting from the second row. The 31-year-old though is predicting a tough race, with prime concerns focused around tyre choice for what is sure to be a punishing examination of both man and machine tomorrow.

Track temperatures at the stifling hot and humid Sepang circuit are several degrees higher than at any other track on the 16-round MotoGP calendar. As a consequence it makes the requirement for good tyre choice even more critical. Track temperatures this afternoon reached a high of 50 degrees, and McCoy and his engineers will be searching for a compromise between a tyre that will offer consistent grip and one that will have the endurance to survive the strenuous conditions.

American rookie John Hopkins found himself in the unfamiliar position of 19th on the grid. His best time of 2:06.857, which slashed 0.9s off his fastest from yesterday, might have been improved had he not slipped off his Red Bull machine on his last flying lap. Before he lost the front end at a slow left-hander, Hopkins was on course for his fastest lap after the first two sections of the 3.447 miles circuit.

GARRY McCOY ­ Ninth 2:05.400
“I thought there was a little bit more in my fastest lap. On my final run I made a small mistake coming out of the hairpin and that unsettled the bike, so I was expecting to be a little bit faster. Ninth is fine against all the four-strokes but it will be tough in the race. When I¹m pushing flat-out, they come flying by a 500 two-stroke like we are standing still. Our race tyre option depends on the track temperature. It was hotter this afternoon than yesterday and the race tyre did not feel as good. The heat seems to vary our tyre performance considerably.”

JOHN HOPKINS ­ 19th 2:06.857
“We spent most of the session playing around with the set-up of the bike trying to find some more grip. I put on a qualifier but I made a bad choice for the front tyre. Before I crashed the front had tucked a couple of times. I guess I just got in there too hot. It just didn¹t work out and all I can do is look forward to tomorrow.”

PETER CLIFFORD – TEAM DIRECTOR
“That was another good ride from Garry. He spent a lot of time working on his race set-up and that took the edge of the qualifying times, but it should pay off with a decent start tomorrow. It was bad luck for John. But for that slip off on his last lap he was going to be faster and a little bit higher up the grid.”


More, from a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Final Qualifying, Saturday October 12 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN FIGHT BACK AT STEAMY SEPANG
Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa shrugged off withering heat and humidity at Sepang this afternoon to qualify second and fifth fastest for tomorrow’s Malaysian Grand Prix.

Both riders had struggled with machine set-up yesterday, clocking sixth- and 11th-fastest times in the first qualifier, but their crews have worked tirelessly since then to dramatically close the gap.

“It’s amazing what the team has been able to do,” said Marlboro Yamaha Team director Davide Brivio. “Everybody – the riders, the engineers and the rest of the crew – have spent many hours in discussion since yesterday afternoon, working to find a solution to the problems. So, I have to say a big thank you to them all, now let’s keep going from here. Yesterday both Max and Carlos had struggled in the corners, so we’ve adjusted chassis geometry and suspension balance to give them the feeling they need to really attack the turns.”

Conditions were more gruelling than ever during today’s session, with 36-degree C ambient heat and 50-degree C track temperature. Tomorrow’s race is expected to run in similar conditions, making it the toughest event for riders and bikes on the 16-round MotoGP World Championship calendar.

BIAGGI FIVE HUNDREDTHS OFF POLE POSITION
Max Biaggi was in extraordinary form this afternoon, slicing a massive 1.375 seconds off his Friday best to lay his claim for pole position at Sepang. The Marlboro Yamaha Team man, who’s currently battling for second in the World Championship, went fastest with just two minutes of the session remaining, only for Alex Barros (Honda) to sneak pole away from him by just 0.049 seconds. But Biaggi was beaming after the session, certain he’d done his utmost and ready to challenge for another win tomorrow.

“First of all, my congratulations to Barros for pole, now he owes me a pizza because he was chasing me for his fastest lap!” grinned a sweat-drenched Biaggi after securing his tenth front-row start of the year.

“I felt I did my best out there today. We made some changes last night and then some more suspension adjustments this morning, which found us some competitiveness, though it’s always difficult to make the bike perfect. I used different compound front and rear tyres this afternoon and just tried my maximum for a good lap time. This race is going to be very tough on tyres, but I’m sure I can go well tomorrow.”



CHECA MISSES FRONT-ROW START BY A FRACTION
Carlos Checa also transformed his performance in Malaysia today, lapping 1.292 seconds faster than he’d managed in yesterday’s opening qualifying outing to lift himself to within a fraction of the front row. In fact The Marlboro Yamaha Team man did move up to fourth with an astounding end-of-session charge, but was demoted to fifth by Loris Capirossi (Honda)in the dying seconds. Like team-mate Max Biaggi, Checa’s revitalised speed was thanks to painstaking work from his technicians and a superb on-track effort.

“We worked all day towards the correct race-distance set-up, then we fitted new tyres at the end and went for it,” he said. “Today we made quite a few changes to the bike, back to stuff we know better. It was just slight modifications to geometry and suspension that improved the overall balance, which I feel confident will make a useful difference to our race performance. Maybe we can still make some more improvements – we’ll probably try a few more things in warm-up.”



BARROS SCORES FIRST MotoGP POLE POSITION
Just six days after scoring his first MotoGP victory in last Sunday’s Pacific GP in Japan, Alex Barros this afternoon scored his first MotoGP pole position. “Considering my team had no data for this track, I’m surprised to get pole,” said the Brazilian who’s riding an RCV four-stroke for only the second time. “The race will be tough, you get so much wheelspin here that you have to concentrate so hard.” World Champion and fellow RCV rider Valentino Rossi, who lost out to Barros in the last race, could only manage eighth today.


More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

PITT QUALIFIED FOR FIRST GP

Australian Andrew Pitt qualified the new Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR comfortably inside the 107 percent cut-off for his first GP, after carving another 1.5-seconds off his best time of yesterday in today’s final qualifying session.

The 2001 World Supersport champion, in at the deep end after being drafted in to replace the injured Akira Yanagawa on the new Kawasaki MotoGP prototype, ended only his second day on the new machine in 22nd position, for a start on the sixth row of the grid.

Pitt (26) had never ridden a GP bike before yesterday, nor used carbon brakes.

The Kawasaki is in its second of four races this year as a wild card entry, in preparation for a first full MotoGP season next year. The 990cc prototype, which uses novel flat-slide fuel injection and striking aerodynamic bodywork, ran for the first time last month. Original rider, factory tester Akira Yanagawa, had been due to ride the machine, but suffered a crack to his pelvis at the Pacific GP at Motegi one week before.

Andrew Pitt – 22nd in 2:09.106:
“We made good progress on our set-up with race tyres, and I improved my lap time further on our first set of soft tyres towards the end of the session. The second set of soft tyres felt different, and I couldn’t go faster any more on my last run. All in all, it’s still a matter of learning the bike and the circuit, and step by step, we’re getting closer. The bike feels okay, and I’m looking forward to going out in the race tomorrow!”

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
“It doesn’t look good when you are four seconds behind, but I’m still satisfied with our progress. Andrew has done a good job, he has improved consistently, and he stayed in the seat safely throughout the four sessions. Our next goal is to take another 1.5 or even 2 seconds off the gap to the fastest guys in Phillip Island, and maybe another second in Valencia, and then we are where we want to be. I am also happy with the bike. We improved the set-up step by step, and we didn’t have a mechanical problem whatsoever. The engine runs like clockwork, and our topspeed of 293 kph is on the same level as the speed of Suzuki, and they have been tuning their bike all year long, where it is only our fifth full day out there. All we need tomorrow is to cover the full race distance!”



More, from a press release issued by Honda:

HONDA RACING INFORMATION

MotoGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2002
MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
Final Qualifying, Saturday October 12th, 2002

BARROS TAKES POLE WITH FINAL QUALIFYING LAP

A superb ride in the final seconds of qualifying gave Brazilian Alex Barros (West Honda Pons NSR500) his fourth career pole position, in only his second race weekend on the all-conquering Honda RC211V four-stroke. His best time of 2:04.487 was 1.2 seconds quicker than the previous 500cc qualifying record, set in the 2001 season, a perfect indication of the performance differential between the new breed of four-strokes and the old guard of 500cc two-strokes.

Barros’ ride to the top of the combined qualifying time sheets maintains his confidence on a high level after his recent race win in Japan, although Barros did not expect to perform quite so well in the steamy Malaysian heat – especially against many riders who have enjoyed Sepang experience on their four-stroke machines during winter test sessions.

“I am surprised to take pole position but I think my team of mechanics made a very good job because we had no data for this track, unlike the other Honda four-stroke riders,” said a delighted Barros, enjoying the status of pole position. “We have started with a base of zero so I am especially surprised to take the pole position. The main problem on the track itself is that the rear tyre is spinning too much, so I will have to concentrate very hard when it comes to the race.”

Daijiro Kato, who was in pole position for much of the final session, was deposed by Barros, although the diminutive Japanese was in his usual competitive form in qualifying and eventually took third place for a first row start. He nonetheless laboured under a small handicap in the final session, in pain from a previous crash.

“I am a lot happier today than yesterday and I have found good settings for both the machine and the tyre selection,” he stated. “My only regret is that I could have been a lot faster towards the end of the session, but my neck was hurting after my Friday crash. Considering this, third was not too bad I think, and I am concentrating on tomorrow now.”

Once more Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) performed heroics on his two-stroke, almost stealing pole right at the end after setting the fastest split times on the first three sections. The extended full throttle sprints along Sepang’s two long straights dropped him to fourth overall, but his earlier cornering prowess was arguably the highlight of the final session.

“I worked so hard all day today,” said Capirossi. “I was much faster in the T1, T2 and T3 splits but the straights in the last part of the track are too long and I lost a lot of time there. Anyway, I got on the front row but tomorrow it will be very difficult to be competitive on a two-stroke, even harder than at Motegi – but I will try my best.”

For new World Champion Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) qualifying at Sepang was not a straightforward exercise, with the Italian rider looking fast and smooth but only taking the last place on the second row, after setting eighth best time, a significant 0.701 seconds behind Barros.

“We were not able to make the bike work better than it did this morning,” said Rossi of the day’s proceedings. “We have made a lot of changes to the bike but we don’t seem to have got anywhere. I was waiting for a special tyre towards the end of the session. I came in and had a different one fitted so I couldn’t improve! I am not satisfied with how we work. A lot of the problems we have are just like in Motegi.”

Tohru Ukawa (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) outperformed his teammate to go sixth on the time sheets, after his usual display of determination on the brakes and intense riding input. On provisional pole on Friday, Ukawa was even more pleased to have found a good set-up, rather than go all out for a single fast lap time in the frantic final session.

Said Ukawa: “From where we were on Friday morning the bike is 100 times better. I’ve got no problem with the clutch, the suspension set-up feels good and the tyre wear is constant. We have a good package for the race.”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500), was just over a second off the pole position pace, and tenth fastest in qualifying; two impressive statistics for the NSR rider, who is still undergoing development work for Bridgestone tyres during the racing season.

“I think we did a pretty good job today. The morning free practice was not so good, when we were chasing a better balance of front and rear. I tried a different shape rear tyre and it had better grip but upset the balance. In the afternoon we tried two tyres, both for seven laps, and I could run 2:07s with both. Overall I’m more than happy with tenth place against all the four-strokes.”

Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) fell in the second session, without injury, but lost any chance to improve on his 14th best qualifying position. A total of 22 riders qualified for Sunday’s 21-lap MotoGP race.

Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) was once more the top placed NSR Honda qualifier in the quarter litre division, just over 1.5 seconds behind the pole position rider Fonsi Nieto (Aprilia) and in sixth position on the grid.

“We have a strange situation where I am fast in the first two splits but slower in the second two,” said a bemused Rolfo. “It’s not speed really, it’s more like feel from the front end. Also we may change the gearbox ratios tomorrow morning.”

A less fruitful day for his team-mate Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) put him 13th overall, thanks to his Friday time, after a turbulent second qualifying session.

“We have big problems with traction from the rear end, stated the Spaniard, “it is not the tyre, more the set-up of the suspension I think.”

Haruchika Aoki (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) scored 15th best position on the time sheets, taking a fourth row start on his ‘evolution’ spec machine. Jason Vincent (By Queroseno Racing Honda RS250R/W) and his team-mate Leon Haslam both scored top 20 places, with Vincent 18th and Haslam 20th. Jakub Smrz (DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda RS250R/W) ended the qualifying sessions 23rd from 24.

Daniel Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) was poised in a good position to take pole position before a huge highside crash, with five minutes of the final session remaining, relegated him to an eventual third. His high-speed impact on the Sepang tarmac left him with a severely bruised lower back.

“I was trying to set my best lap and when I opened the throttle out of a corner the bike slid and spat me right over the top,” said Pedrosa, through gritted teeth. “The impact was very hard. Luckily the X-rays confirm that the only consequence is a contusion on my lower back. Nothing is broken so I hope I will be recovered for tomorrow’s race.”

Joan Olive (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) fought hard at the long and technical Sepang circuit, taking the last place on the fourth row thanks to his 16th fastest time. The 17-year-old Spaniard battled hard to move up the grid but was held back by grip problems in the intense heat.

“The high track temperatures meant that the bike slid constantly,” confirmed Olive. “I took the maximum risk and I am feeling satisfied because I gave it everything I had, riding to my limit. StilI, I wasn’t able to open the throttle when I wanted, so out of the turns the other riders accelerate faster than me.”

Rio GP winner Masao Azuma (Tribe by Breil Honda RS125R) used Honda power to take a top ten finish in ninth, with Klaus Nöhles (PEV Moto ADAC Sachsen Honda RS125R) two places lower, in 11th. Mika Kallio (Red Devil Honda RS125R) scored 14th, Mirko Giansanti (Scot Racing Team Honda RS125) 15th.

HONDA TEAM QUOTES:

MotoGP:

Alex Barros, West Honda Pons: 1st: “I am satisfied and surprised because I must admit that I did not expect to be in pole position today. The team put in some great work as we started from zero here, without any previous references from the circuit, unlike the other Honda four-stroke riders. I would like to thank all the team for their excellent work which has given me the opportunity to be the quickest here today. Regarding the race, I have a lot of confidence because I am lapping fast and clearly the goal is to repeat the victory here. The key thing will be the tyres and the winner will be the rider with the most grip during the last laps.”

Daijiro Kato, Fortuna Honda Gresini, 3rd: “I am very happy because we found the perfect race set up, and I have a good feeling with my RC211V. This morning I had whiplash and my neck was locked. Luckily the Doctors could get me back into good shape. This injury held me back a little bit but I’m really hopeful and very concentrated for tomorrow.”

Fausto Gresini: “I saw my rider really determined out there, despite the whiplash, but I’m satisfied, also with the work of the team: they worked very hard to improve the feeling of the bike for Kato. We are still learning, in a really difficult class, but I think that Daijiro will have a really good race. I’m sorry that we didn’t totally exhaust the possibility of the tyre that we put in at the end of practice: we had only two laps and this kind of tyre gives maximum performance only on the third lap. But I don’t worry because Kato made his time without difficulty. Tomorrow it will be a hard race, with really hot weather, but I hope to be celebrating.”

Loris Capirossi, West Honda Pons, 4th: ” I am very happy because I risked everything on the last lap and it came off. I have set a really great time today but tomorrow I will find it difficult up against the four-stroke bikes. I am able to go extraordinarily fast over the first two sections of the track, but when I get the two long straights I lose half-a-second immediately. I have to accept the fact that in Sepang it is impossible to beat the four-strokes.”

Sito Pons: “Every single member of the West Honda Pons team is extremely satisfied because it seems like we are on a winning streak. Our riders have once again demonstrated supreme professionalism and were able to put into practice on the track all the great work of the team. I hope that we continue the progress tomorrow and that we can repeat the last week’s results in Motegi.”

Tohru Ukawa, Repsol Honda Team: 6th: “It does sound a little strange after holding provisional pole and being fastest this morning to say that I’m not unhappy at a second row start because I’m not really. From where we were on Friday morning the bike is 100 times better. I’ve got no problem with the clutch, the suspension set-up feels good and the tyre wear is constant. We have a good package for the race. We had a little chatter from the front this morning but not so much now. Nearly every start I’ve had this year has been on the second row and my position in the championship is not that bad. Tomorrow morning in warm-up we will confirm our race set-up and make any final adjustments but they will only be very minor. I’m looking forward to the race!”

Valentino Rossi, Repsol Honda Team: 8th: “We were not able to make the bike work better from this morning. We have made a lot of changes to the bike but don’t seem to have got anywhere. I was waiting for a special tyre towards of the end of the session. I came in and had a different one fitted so I couldn’t improve! I am not satisfied with how we work. For me the problem was the long run we made at the beginning of the session. We lost too much time to make any improvements. We still have some problem with the clutch system. I fight also with the brake. We seem to have lost all our advantage in braking from the test here. Now I have to brake much earlier. We changed the off-set to improve the braking from this morning but it makes no difference. Many of the problems we have are just like in Motegi. We will have a busy evening looking at data and an important session tomorrow morning working on race set-up. We have a great team who, like me, are very motivated. We like the fight and we will be ready for the battle tomorrow!”

Jurgen van den Goorbergh, Team Kanemoto Honda, 10th: “I think we did a pretty good job today. The morning free practice was not so good, we were chasing a better balance of front and rear. I tried a different shape rear tyre, it had better grip but upset the balance. In the afternoon we tried two tyres, both for seven laps and I could run 2m 07s with both. I have to choose one of the two for thee race but I’m confident with both. I put in a softer tyre for the end of the session and went faster than yesterday, almost one full second. I’m more than happy with 10th against all the four-strokes. My race pace will be more than one second faster than I expected, so I’m looking forward to it. If I’m in the top ten after two corners then the race will really be on for me.”

Team owner – manager Erv Kanemoto: “It was just as we predicted yesterday, the indications were good and final qualifying went very well. Jurgen rode really well, and the race tyres performed well as we kept the temperatures low. Everything is working well in the high-temperatures we get here. Bridgestone have been working hard to improve the they give us for all conditions and the indications are that all their hard work is paying off – but there is still a way to go yet. We are happy with the bike, which is really running well in the extremely hot air conditions. There is not a whole lot to do to the bike overnight, we’re pretty much ready to race. We just hope the conditions stay within 3 – 4 degrees of the last two days.”


More, from a press release issued by MS Aprilia:

Laconi to start from fifth row in Sepang

On the scorching tarmac, which today reached 56°C, the problems faced yesterday by Régis Laconi and the Cube showed no signs of going away. In the opening minutes of today’s timed sessions, Régis improved on yesterday’s speeds and a few moments later had sliced another second off his lap time. A further improvement in the closing stages gave him the 2’07.126 that places him in twentieth position, on the fifth row of the starting grid tomorrow. Régis worked hard on the settings of the Cube, finding a number of good solutions but the lack of grip prevented him from getting a better time.


# 55 Regis Laconi – (MS APRILIA RACING) – 20th – 2’07.126

We’ve made a number of improvements to the bike. The gears are now well suited to the Sepang circuit and adjustment of some details of the frame have given some good results. But I just don’t have grip – I keep sliding on the asphalt. There’s no grip on the corner of the tyre and it’s hard to keep the bike up against the edge of the curve, and then I can’t open up the throttle as I come out. The bike tries to go sideways. In any case, I think I’ve got a very good solution for the front tyre, but we’ve still got to try out a few things tomorrow for the rear before making our final decision. Unfortunately, grip isn’t something you can just invent, so I’m doing all I can to find a good solution for the race.”

Ukawa, Rossi, Kato Fastest In Friday MotoGP Qualifying At Sepang

Copyright 2002, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc.

1. Tohru Ukawa, Honda RC211V, 2:05.106
2. Valentino Rossi, Honda RC211V, 2:05.195
3. Daijiro Kato, Honda RC211V, 2:05.356
4. Alex Barros, Honda RC211V, 2:05.702
5. Garry McCoy, Yamaha YZR500, 2:05.743
6. Max Biaggi, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:05.911
7. Loris Capirossi, Honda NSR500, 2:05.994
8. Kenny Roberts, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.047
9. Jeremy McWilliams, Proton KR3, 2:06.089
10. Tetsuya Harada, Honda NSR500, 2:06.244
11. Carlos Checa, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.323
12. Jurgen v.d. Goorbergh, Honda NSR500, 2:06.570
13. Shinya Nakano, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:06.691
14. Nobuatsu Aoki, Proton KR3, 2:06.731
15. Sete Gibernau, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:06.977
16. Olivier Jacque, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.053
17. Akira Ryo, Suzuki GSV-R, 2:07.070
18. Norick Abe, Yamaha YZR-M1, 2:07.144
19. John Hopkins, Yamaha YZR500, 2:07.761
20. Jose Luis Cardoso, Yamaha YZR500, 2:08.136
21. Regis Laconi, Aprilia RS3, 2:08.307
22. Andrew Pitt, Kawasaki ZX-RR, 2:10.628

Team Press Releases From Sepang MotoGP

From a press release issued by Red Bull Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX
FRIDAY 11th October 2002

RED BULL Yamaha’s Garry McCoy defied popular opinion by slotting his two-stroke YZR500 into fifth place on the provisional grid for Sunday¹s Malaysian GP.

The Australian finished top two-stroke rider, and his performance went against expectation that the 990cc four-strokes would be dominant at the ultra-modern Sepang circuit.

The superior power of the four-strokes is a significant advantage on the long 3.447 miles lap, particularly on the two long straights running either side of the huge main grandstand.

McCoy elevated himself up to fourth just after the halfway mark, using the extra grip of Dunlop’s qualifying tyre to get himself in a challenging position with a tropical storm threatening to engulf the circuit.

With huge lightning strikes illuminating the gloomy skies above, McCoy’s best time of 2:05.743 almost saw him claim a place on the front row.
A late charge by Pacific GP winner Alex Barros relegated him to fifth. McCoy’s time was 0.2s faster than his previous best at Sepang when claimed a front row start a year ago.

Despite the overcast conditions, air temperatures still reached a gruelling 35 degrees C, with the track temperature peaking at 49 degrees C, making the track slick and grip hard to find.

Teammate John Hopkins will be hoping for better fortunes tomorrow after he ended up 19th fastest. As if the punishing heat and humidity wasn’t a difficult enough challenge to contend with, McCoy and Hopkins find themselves trying to make an impression against a fresh influx of four-strokes.
Three more appeared today, taking the number to 13 out of the 22-strong field for round 14 round of the MotoGP series.

GARRY McCOY ­ Fifth 2:05.743
“It’s my fastest ever lap at this circuit but I was actually hoping to go even faster. It’s good to be where I am but I’m actually disappointed to be only 0.2s faster than my previous best ever time here. At most other tracks I’ve been a second faster and that was what I was hoping for here. It turned out to be a bit of a race against the rain. I put a qualifier in early to get myself up there and I got up to fourth. I don’t have a lot of good options for a race tyre though. I tried another qualifier at the end of the session to go quicker but it didn’t happen.”

JOHN HOPKINS ­ 19th 2:07.761
“I was working through a load of race tyres but if we want more grip we’ve got to keep trying a load of different suspension settings, even though there was more grip than this morning. When I put a qualifier in I made a couple of mistakes in T1 and aborted the lap. I feel in good shape, the conditions are not having a major effect on me and I’m looking forward to a big improvement tomorrow. It’s getting really frustrating now seeing everyone getting four-strokes. There are more coming every weekend and I’ve just got to keep my focus, go day-by-day and concentrate on the weekend.”


PETER CLIFFORD – DIRECTOR OF RACING
“That was an epic ride from Garry. It just shows there’s life in the old dog yet, and I’m not talking about our Australian. We have to say a big thanks to Dunlop and I’m sure John will not be far behind tomorrow.”



More, from a press release issued by Marlboro Yamaha:

MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX, SEPANG
First Qualifying, Friday October 11 2002

MARLBORO YAMAHA MEN CHASE HIGH-SPEED PERFORMANCE
Marlboro Yamaha Team YZR-M1 riders Max Biaggi and Carlos Checa completed this afternoon’s opening Malaysian GP qualifying session sixth and 11th fastest, looking for more high-speed cornering performance from their YZR-M1s.

With dark storm clouds threatening at Sepang, the pair worked tirelessly in oppressive heat and humidity, and are now consulting their technicians to find a new direction for the rest of the weekend.

“Today has been difficult,” admitted YZR-M1 project leader Ichiro Yoda. “Both Max and Carlos are losing a lot of time through the T3 section, which is mostly high-speed corners. Neither of them feel very comfortable through these corners at maximum lean angle, and it seems we have a lot of rear-suspension movement through these turns. We will now analyse our data and compare it to the data from our tests here last December. Even though the bikes are very different now, maybe we can learn something from that, especially regarding rear-suspension movement.”

BIAGGI ON PROVISIONAL SECOND ROW
Pole sitter three times so far this year, Max Biaggi was sixth at Sepang this afternoon, 0.805 seconds off provisional pole position. The Marlboro Yamaha Team rider, who lapped faster during winter team tests, spent much of the session around tenth, moving up to a provisional second-row slot during his traditional end-of-session charge.

“I don’t really understand why we’re not running as fast as we did when we tested here last December, because the bike is much changed and much better now,” said the Italian. “We tried various different settings this afternoon, so far without any dramatic improvement. It’s too early to predict how the race will go for us, but I hope to cut the gap to pole by at least half tomorrow. Then we’ll see if we can be competitive on Sunday.”

CHECA 11th BUT STILL CONFIDENT
Carlos Checa had a rather more difficult day, ending up provisional 11th fastest. But the Marlboro Yamaha Team man is confident that his crew will be able to take a new direction with settings to get him back on the pace for Saturday and Sunday. So far this year Checa has qualified on the front two rows at 12 of 13 GPs.

“It was impossible to go really fast today,” said Checa. “I tried hard all through the session, with both bikes, but they both pushed the front. We made many changes but only found small improvements to front-end stability and grip. It’s difficult to keep the bike on angle, especially at speed. But I know we can improve from here. We just need to keep working and find a different direction.”



UKAWA HEADS BIGGEST-EVER FOUR-STROKE PACK
Tohru Ukawa was quickest today, just ahead of Honda team-mate Valentino Rossi. “Our bikes were down on power this morning, which knocked out our gearbox and suspension settings that worked so well here during winter tests,” said Ukawa. “But the team worked very hard for this afternoon and things are much better now.”

Olivier Jacque and team-mate Shinya Nakano are the latest four-stroke converts at Sepang where four-strokes account for more than half the MotoGP grid for the first time. “Riding the 500 had been very frustrating,” said Jacque, who’s still adjusting to the M1 and was 16th quickest. “The four-stroke is very fast, though it doesn’t feel as quick as the 500 because the power delivery is smoother. It’s also easier to control wheelspin with the four-stroke.”



More, from a press release issued by Proton Team KR:

McWILLIAMS PILES ON THE PACE AT SEPANG

Round 14: Malaysian GP, Sepang
First Qualifying: Friday, October 11, 2002

Jeremy McWilliams: Ninth, 2:06.089
Nobuatsu Aoki: 14th, 2:06.731

Jeremy McWilliams once again exceeded expectations in Malaysia today, with a blindingly fast lap of the Sepang circuit that not only made a nonsense of the team’s fears that they would be seriously off the pace at a track with two long straights, but also put him narrowly third-fastest two-stroke, right among the four-stroke MotoGP machines.

Team-mate Nobuatsu Aoki was 14th fastest, and struggling with settings. To make more progress for Sunday’s race, he expects to make radical changes to the machine overnight for tomorrow’s final qualifying session.

The Proton KR3, racing close to the Malaysian home of the team’s name sponsor and technical partner Proton cars, is a lightweight three-cylinder 500cc two-stroke up against more powerful four-cylinder two-strokes and the new-generation 990cc four-strokes, more powerful again.

The pay-off is agile handling and very high corner speed, but the two straights at Sepang, both approached from slow corners, punish the concept. This was proved by McWilliams’s section times. On the twistier sections, he was fastest or close to fastest; on the final T4 section, including one straight and part of the other, he was losing more than he was gaining elsewhere. He was less than one second off pole time, set by Honda four-stroke rider Tohru Ukawa, but 1.1 seconds slower on T4. But for the straights, he would be a serious candidate for pole.

There are two more hour-long sessions tomorrow before Sunday’s race, the 14th of 16 rounds in the MotoGP world championship. Next season, Proton Team KR will be fielding their own V5 990cc four-stroke, which was launched at a packed press conference at the Proton factory yesterday.

JEREMY McWILLIAMS
As always, I was trying pretty hard. I’m less than a second off pole, and I’m losing more than a second on the two straights. That says it all, really, about how I’m trying, and how well the bike is working on the corners. When you look at it in black and white on the time sheets, it’s very frustrating. I was fastest in T2, and third in T3, so I’m picking up a bit there. I think we can make our bike quicker. My chief engineer Tom O’Kane has some ideas on how to make the engine more free revving on the straights. Apart from that, we already have a good tyre – surprisingly in this heat it’s not the hardest, more of a medium compound. If it stays dry, I believe we can race in the top six or eight.

NOBUATSU AOKI
Today was really difficult. At Motegi, we went to very hard settings, and we brought them here too – but they didn’t work at all. I have a real grip problem at the front, even worse than usual. I think tomorrow we’ll go back to standard settings and begin again. It’s not ideal, but always so far my team has been able to give me a good bike in time for the race, and I believe they will be able to do it again here.

KENNY ROBERTS – Team Owner
It’s a lot better than we thought. As at some other tracks where we knew we’d be battling, Jeremy and Nobu have pulled it out of the bag, and they’re running a couple of seconds faster than last year on the same bike. We really need some help on the straights, drafting faster bikes, and Jeremy did that lap all on his own, with no slipstreaming. It shows that if we had another 50 horsepower, we’d be beating them. Take away the second we’re losing on the straight and you can see how competitive the bike can be.



More, from a press release issued by Fuchs Kawasaki:

MOTOGP 2002
ROUND 14 – SEPANG, MALAYSIA
11TH OCTOBER 2002 – QUALIFYING PRACTICE 1

PITT SLASHES 2.5 SECONDS IN TWO SESSIONS

Australian rider Andrew Pitt, World Supersport champion in 2001, made a more than promising if unexpected GP debut at Sepang in Malaysia today, with his first ever outing on a full MotoGP prototype, on the brand new Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR.

Not unexpectedly, the young rider was placed at the back of the grid. More significantly, he cut 2.5 seconds off his lap time from the morning to the afternoon session, and was comfortably inside the qualifying time for his first GP.

This is an impressive start, on a bike still in its infancy, and for a rider whose previous experience has barely come close to the levels of power, speed and competitive riders that he met for the first time today. Pitt has never seen the Sepang circuit before, has never before used slick tyres, carbon brakes or a fuel-injected engine, and the ZX-RR has some 80 horsepower more than any other machine he has ridden before.

There is one more day of qualifying for Sunday’s Malaysian GP. Pitt was drafted in to the team at short notice, after regular factory tester Akira Yanagawa was injured in a race crash last Sunday at the Japanese GP at Motegi. Pitt will race the prototype Kawasaki at the remaining three GPs of this season in Yanagawa’s place.

Andrew Pitt – 22nd in 2:10.628:
“I watched the Motegi Grand Prix on television and I thought the bike was a bit of a handful. But when I went out for my first laps this morning, I was very surprised how user-friendly it was, not wild at all, and with a smooth power delivery throughout the power band. Only on the initial part of the throttle opening, the fuel injection system feels a bit rougher than the carburettors. It took me only about one lap to get familiar with the carbon brakes that I’d never used before, and from that point on, it was just a matter of gaining track knowledge and experience with the bike. We didn’t change much on the bike between the sessions, just minor modifications to make it steer a little easier, and I still got faster lap by lap and improved by 2.5 seconds from the morning to the afternoon. Obviously, it’s a big step up from my Supersport bike and the Superbike that I tested occasionally. It’s definitely good to ride a bike that powerful, and it’s amazing to still feel it pushing ahead in top gear at the end of the straight. Tomorrow, I’ll just try to improve further and to take another couple of seconds off my time!”

Takashi Yasui – Staff Officer, Kawasaki Research & Development Division:
“We made some engine improvements after the problems we had in the race at Motegi one week ago, and the bike has been running great on our first day of practice. The biggest task is on Andrew’s side as he has never been on this track before and as he never tested the Ninja ZX-RR, but he already improved significantly in the two sessions of today, and no doubt he’ll go faster again tomorrow as his track knowledge improves!”

Harald Eckl – Team Manager:
“Andrew has never been on this track, he has never had carbon brakes, he hasn’t been on slick tyres, hasn’t had a fuel injection, and is confronted with 80 more horsepower than the Supersport machine he rode all year long. Therefore, his progress is remarkable. It was easy to see how he was getting out of the corners better and better towards the end of the first qualifying, and I have no doubt that he will be able to close the gap to the others tomorrow!”


More, from a press release issued by MS Aprilia:

Difficult day for Régis Laconi at Sepang

In the torrid heat of Malaysia, with 39°C in the air and 42° on the tarmac, Régis Laconi and the Cube came up against a difficult first day of tests. Lack of grip on the Malay asphalt prevented Régis from improving his position and going for a provisional position on Sunday’s starting grid worthy of the Cube’s potential and of his skill. His four tenths slower than the time he made in this morning’s free practice put him back in 21st position in today’s qualifying ratings. Just as the MotoGP session came to an end, the first drops of water announced an approaching storm.

# 55 Regis Laconi – (MS APRILIA RACING) – 21st – 2’08.307

“It was very hard today – I haven’t got grip on the corner of the tyres and I haven’t got traction. When I try to open up the throttle as I come out of the corners, the bike starts skating and turns sideways. This obviously means I can’t get the engine’s horsepower down onto the ground. I’ve been having difficulty with the front tyre too: I can’t keep the bike on the trajectory of the curves and I get the feeling the front tyre is just goes where it wants to. It doesn’t seem to bite into the tarmac. This is certainly due partly to the high temperature of the track, but now we need to find a solution so that we can become more competitive.”

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