- Offizieller Beitrag
HONDA RACING INFORMATION
ZitatAlles anzeigen2013 FIM Roadracing World Championship Grand Prix Round 9 of 18, US GP, Laguna Seca
19-21 July 2013
Preview: MotoGP
HONDA LEADS THE WAY TO THE WEST COAST ROLLER-COASTER
Honda takes the road west to California looking for a third consecutive win at the United States Grand Prix, with Honda riders holding the top two positions in the World Championship as the season reaches its halfway break.
Repsol Honda RC213V riders Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa lie first and second overall, and aim to consolidate their positions at half-time. They are separated by only two points, so the result will be crucial for each.
The race, at the charismatic Laguna Seca circuit between Monterey and Salinas, comes just seven days after a dramatic German Grand Prix at the Sachsenring, where the Repsol Honda pair suffered wildly contrasting fortunes.
Class rookie Marquez claimed a confident second win of the year to overtake his team-mate and re-assume the World Championship lead. Still only 20, he is the youngest rider in history to do so.
Pedrosa suffered a vicious accident in the third free practice session, and was forced to withdraw from the race.
Marquez’s progress since he came to MotoGP this year as Moto2 World Champion has been sensational. The rider from Cervera, outside Barcelona, has been breaking “youngest-ever”
records ever since his first pole position and then first race win at only the second round, in Austin, Texas.In the eight races since, Marquez has been on the rostrum every time but once – a late-race crash ruled him out of the Italian GP, when he was in a confident second place. The final jewel in the crown was his German GP win last Sunday, also achieved from pole position.
The highly technical Laguna Seca circuit presents a new challenge. He has ridden in 125 and Moto2 classes at all the circuits on the calendar except in Austin, Texas. That track was new to all riders, and he was victorious. By contrast, his rivals all have several years of experience of the tricky Californian track; he has never seen it before.
Pedrosa’s season had been even stronger in championship terms. He has led on points from round four until his enforced withdrawal in Germany’s round eight. Consecutive race wins in Spain and France showed the strength of the 27-year-old Spaniard’s title challenge. A register of consistently strong rostrum or top-four finishes in every other race underlined its depth and maturity.
Hiatus in Germany was the result of a violent low-speed high-side crash on his first flying lap of Saturday morning’s free practice: a cold track took part of the blame: the rider was not yet pushing at full speed. A heavy impact left Pedrosa with a partially fractured left collarbone, but it was low blood pressure attributed to shock that saw him ruled out by track medical authorities on race morning, in spite of his initial willingness to ride.
Pedrosa returned to Barcelona and quickly cast off the symptoms, telling fans on Tuesday he “felt good”, and was looking forward to the race and a satisfactory end to the first half of the season. Dani has claimed four podium positions in eight visits to the circuit, including consecutive top-three results in the last two years. The highlight was victory in 2009.
It is the second visit to the Californian circuit for German LCR Honda RC213V rider Stefan Bradl.
He arrived last year in the same position as Marquez this year: reigning Moto2 champion but circuit novice. He rode to an impressive seventh place.This year, Bradl (23) consolidated a row of improving results with his second fourth place this year at home in Germany. He has his sights firmly set on attaining a first MotoGP-class rostrum at the Californian track.
Spaniard Alvaro Bautista (Team GO&FUN Honda Gresini RC213V) raced to fifth in Germany, his best result of the year as he regains momentum after falling victim to two consecutive first-lap crashes in rounds five and six.
The former 125cc World Champion has a dual role as racer/tester: he alone uses Showa suspension, helping with pioneering development. Bautista and his Gresini team have recorded steady progress with this task over the first eight races of the season, and he hopes to improve on his eight-placed finish in last year’s race.
Team-mate Bryan Staring (Team GO&FUN Honda Gresini FTR Honda) is approaching his first visit to Laguna Seca in sober frame of mind, after a bruising series of crashes in Germany. Still hungry to add to the first two points he gained in Catalunya in round five, the Australian has adapted well as he gains experience on the CBR1000RR-powered CRT bike. At the same time, learning the intricacies of the circuit pose a new challenge.
Laguna Seca is a long-established circuit in hilly country inland from Monterey’s picturesque bay and historic Cannery Row.
At 2.243 miles (3.610 km) it is the shortest circuit of the season, but not the slowest (that mark belongs to the next circuit on the calendar, Indianapolis), and Turn 1 is a famously challenging sweep taken at close to top speed while preparing for the much tighter corner to follow.
Even more famous is the Corkscrew, a tortuous left-right approached from a blind rise, with a giddying drop in the middle of it. Races have been won and lost at this notorious corner set.
Laguna first hosted the US GP in 1988, in an interrupted six-race series that terminated in 1994. The race returned in 2005, now uniquely for the MotoGP class only; and in the last nine years has been re-established as a charismatic highlight of the calendar.
As the ninth of 18 rounds, it also marks the mid-point of the 2013 season. There is a three-weekend summer break, then MotoGP begins in earnest once more, with the all-classes Indianapolis GP on August 18.
Honda has a strong record on the Californian roller-coaster track, with five victories in nine visits. Nicky Hayden won the first two years in a row, Dani Pedrosa in 2009, and Casey Stoner in 2011 and 2012.
Honda MotoGP rider quotes
Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda
“Winning in Germany was good experience, although I perhaps prefer races that are a little more of a battle, and also with Dani and Jorge Lorenzo present. I hope they are recovering well. Laguna Seca will be a hard GP for me because I’ve never ridden there. We’ll take it step-by-step and remain calm, and learn the lines. I will prepare by watching a lot of videos of races there.”
Dani Pedrosa, Repsol Honda
“I want to thank everybody for the many messages of support I have received. The important thing is that I feel good. I will have to see how things go with regards to the collarbone, but as for the rest of the problems the really important thing is that I am feeling well. It was a real blow because we arrived at the Sachsenring in a good position in terms of the World Championship, but that’s racing and you have to keep looking forward. The championship is long and we are still only roughly halfway through it, so a lot can still happen yet.”
Stefan Bradl, LCR Honda MotoGP
“We have been very competitive and very fast for the whole weekend in Sachsenring and the great support of my fans made this round even better for me. Now it’s time to enjoy the Corkscrew again. Laguna Seca race track is great and I have more experience this year to cope with the rollercoaster there. Actually our overall package is pretty competitive so we aim to catch the podium in the US. It won’t be easy but, in the last rounds, we have demonstrated our skills racing with the guys in the front, so a podium-finish would a perfect result before the summer vacation.”
Alvaro Bautista, FUN&GO Honda Gresini
“It wasn’t an easy weekend in Germany but we came out of it with a positive result. I found more confidence with the bike around most of the track but I was losing too much time in the second sector and we didn’t manage to fix it in time for the race. Anyway, we made some positive steps and certainly improved on Assen. It has helped lift morale in the team and now we go to another tricky circuit in Laguna, with its elevation changes and blind corners. It is a tough track but we will do our best to adapt quickly. We struggled with the suspension here last year but we have made some good progress in this area since then and I am sure that if we are methodical in our work we can make sure we have a competitive RC213V to race on Sunday. I am confident because the team is working well and this makes me think we can be fighting for a good result this weekend.”
Bryan Staring, FUN&GO Honda Gresini
“I am still upset with the weekend at
Sachsenring. Four crashes in one weekend is too much and I feel sorry for the team because they are putting so much work in. I knew it was going to be hard but I didn’t know it would be this hard. My confidence has taken a battering and Laguna Seca is not the easiest circuit to be going to next. It is a difficult track but I have to stay calm, work hard and rely on the unrelenting hard work of the team. I will have to concentrate hard from the start to learn the best lines around the track and then start working on the set-up of the bike as quickly as possible. We will be doing everything we can to put the weekend in Germany behind us.”