posted April 10, 2005 08:34 AM
Edited By: Editor on 10 Apr 2005 12:40
Rossi Starts Title Defence With a Victory April 10, 2005
Valentino Rossi began his MotoGP World Championship defence with a determined performance at Jerez today, snatching victory from home favourite Sete Gibernau in a dramatic final corner manoeuvre. A minute's silence in memory of Pope John Paul II provided the calm before the storm as Rossi stalked Gibernau for virtually the entire race, making his move on the penultimate lap only to make a mistake in the final circulation and hand the lead back to the Spaniard.
It set up a breathtaking finale, with the pair exchanging places in the fast right corners which lead into the final left-hand hairpin, where they collided as Rossi forced his way up the inside. Gibernau ran it wide into the gravel but returned to the track to limp across the line in second place, benefiting from the huge gap the two riders had opened up over third-placed Marco Melandri, who completed the podium in his first MotoGP appearance for Honda.
"This was for sure a great race, especially after the problems I had in the morning," said Rossi, who had crashed out of the warm-up and caused extensive damage to his number one Yamaha machine. "Sete rode a great race and set a very fast pace. I attacked at the end but made a mistake on the last lap and then we touched in the final corner. I'm sure Sete's angry about it right now but racing motorcycles is hard. There are 16 races to go and it will be a hard battle."
Melandri took third place after Nicky Hayden had crashed out with just eight laps to go, ending hopes of what looked like a certain podium for the American, the only rider to match the pace of Rossi and Gibernau throughout the race. Alex Barros clinched a distant fourth after a hard battle with Kawasaki rider Shinya Nakano and his Honda team-mate Troy Bayliss, who took a creditable sixth place on his debut for the Japanese factory.
Max Biaggi recovered from his worst ever grid position of 16th to take seventh after overcoming the challenge of Honda colleague Makoto Tamada and Yamaha's Colin Edwards, whilst Carlos Checa fought through the pain of a recovering shoulder injury to complete the top ten at his home circuit on the Ducati.
Despite Gibernau's misfortune in the premier-class the 127,000 crowd had plenty to cheer in the 250cc race, as reigning World Champion Dani Pedrosa and his Honda stormed to a clear victory over Aprilia's Sebastian Porto. Randy de Puniet and Casey Stoner both crashed out of third place to leave Aprilia colleague Alex de Angelis with his third career podium in the quarter-litre class ahead of Honda debutantes Andrea Dovizioso, Hector Barberá and Andrea Dovizioso.
Marco Simoncelli proved his wet victory here last year was no fluke as he went from pole position to the top step of the podium for the second successive season in the 125cc. The Aprilia teenager rode a controlled race in a typically frenetic lead group, which saw home hope Pablo Nieto crash his Derbi just two laps from the end when challenging for second place. Nieto's misfortune opened the way for KTM rider Mika Kallio to snatch second with a last-corner move on Fabrizio Lai, who took third on his debut for Honda.
Source: Dorna Communications Photo: Yamaha Factory Racing
posted April 11, 2005 09:47 AM
i think sete changed his line to close the door on rossi half way through the corner, he could have kept his line and finished the corner... (probaby), but rossi would have run him wide and won then, too, probably.
either way, that was one awesome shoulder ram by Sete.
Rossi:
"Sete rode a great race and set a very fast pace. I attacked at the end but made a mistake on the last lap and then we touched in the final corner. I'm sure Sete's angry about it right now but racing motorcycles is hard. There are 16 races to go and it will be a hard battle."
Sete:
"It's going to be a long and hard championship. I don't want such a great race to be reduced to what happened in the final corner. I love this sport and I don't want to get involved in politics, I just want to stay strong and calm and remain focused on our dream. I led the race from the start, I wanted to have a look at Rossi's pace and I think it was the right strategy. We have to keep going now."
posted April 11, 2005 02:50 PM
sete was keeping a tighter line, you can see the rubber lines down on the track in the pic above. If the doors closed you shoulden't knock it down. that is racing but it was desperate.
racing goes on. look for sete giving rossi some of his own medicine.
Needs a life
Full throttle!
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posted April 12, 2005 05:11 AM
They were very dominating in endurance racing in the 90s. They've won numerous 600cc titles, Daniel. That question shows that you really haven't paid attention to the subject matter at all. That's equivalent to sitting through a history class and then at the end of the term, standing up and asking 'so who was that Columbus dude anyway?'.
Needs a life
Full throttle!
Posts: One MEEEEEELLION
posted April 12, 2005 05:13 AM
Watched the race. Rossi stuffed it in there. I swear, he had a guilty look on his face. One thing for sure, the crowd didn't appreciate it.
posted April 12, 2005 09:56 AM
can someone explain this to my non-racing mind please? i've seen the clip several times and it looks to me like sete was the one who touched rossi. they're goin around the corner with sete on teh outside and it appears that all of a sudden he tightened it up hard and bumped into rossi, then went wide. is it jsut the camera angle? i dont get it.