Alanf’s blog…
Scattered thoughts

Monday, October 3, 2005

Nothing in the desert…

Author: site admin
Category: MotoGP

“No Arab loves the desert. We love water and green trees. There is nothing in the desert and no man needs nothing.”
— Prince Feisal, _Lawrence of Arabia_

There was so much racing this weekend that I’ll have to split up my coverage in blog entries over the next week or so. First up, the MotoGP race at Losail circuit in Qatar…

Like Sufi mystics, a handful of riders headed out into the burning confines of the Qatar desert with the hope of finding something inside themselves. For Loris Capirossi, it was finding the strength to win a third straight race. For Sete Gibernau, it was breaking his one year old dry spell of victories in the premier class. For Max Biaggi it was to get beyond having his championship chances dashed at Sepang and to now focus on consolidating his second place in the championship. For Colin Edwards it was another chance to build confidence by matching his teammates’ spectacular results. For everyone else it was a chance to prove to themselves and the world that they deserve a ride for next year. …and for all of them the dry sands of Arabia were a harsh place indeed.

Things started out strong for Capirossi who earned his third straight pole position. Unfortunately, other than his one lap wonder on the impressive Bridgestone qualifying tires his lap times weren’t very impressive which meant he would be fighting an uphill battle if he hoped to win the race. Gibernau also came out swinging while the stop watches were ticking to take second on the grid. Also, his practice lap times indicated he had could run the presumed race pace and thus had a chance at breaking “The Curse” and taking a win. Rossi qualified in third position at the track where he crashed last year after the grid cleaning fiasco to make it three different brands on the front row. That kind of machine diversity is good for a series that has been primarily dominated by a single brand all season long. Also, on paper the circuit looks like it would favor the Hondas, as Gibernau’s second and fifth place Melandri proved, so it was nice to see both of the Yamahas and both of the Ducatis in the front two rows showing that overall the bikes may be on a more even footing that the season’s results might initially indicate. While Capirossi was shining at the front his countryman Max Biaggi was sulking near the back of the grid. Biaggi qualified a miserable 12th and his only consolation was that he still out did fellow Honda rider Alex Barros who was one position further back. Things weren’t looking for for the two veteran riders.

When the race got started on Saturday the wind was horrible. Not only does the wind play hell with the bikes stability it also blows a fine dust onto the track surface which makes a slick track even slicker. Capirossi took advantage of the Ducati’s killer horsepower to launch off the line while Hayden and Gibernau resumed their turn one game of bumper cars just as they had done in Sepang. Gibernau again came out the better in the shoving match to join Capirossi, Melandri, Rossi, Hayden and Edwards at the front. Slightly further back, Robert Rolfo was running in an astounding seventh which is about ten places higher than the Dunlop shod, one year old Ducati can normally be found. Biaggi and Barros followed up their awful grid positions with equally poor starts and both were well outside the top ten in the first first few laps.

Two of the men who came to the Losail Circuit with such high hopes had their bubbles burst relatively early in the race. First, Biaggi pulled into the pits with yet another mysterious bike problem. As has been the case a few times earlier in the season the Roman made some vague comments which described some kind of handling problem and retired rather than ride around the problem. Whatever the real problem, there is definitely an attitude problem and his leaving the race is bad for Honda, bad for his sponsors and bad for his image. It is also bad for his chances of strengthening his second place in the championship. The second rider to have a problem was Capirossi who ran wide in one of the many sweeping turns and ran through the gravel trap. Given how dusty the outside edges of the track are, combined with the lack of traction on the plastic astro-turf used around the track instead of grass, the Italian was lucky to keep the bike upright. He rejoined the race but the off track excursion put him out of touch with the lead pack and fighting just to stay in the top ten.

Up front, Gibernau took control and tried to break the following pack of Rossi, Melandri, Hayden and Edwards. He pulled a slight gap but then a few laps later Rossi and Melandri had closed right back up again. During this battle , Nicky Hayden turned in an screaming 1.57.903 lap to break the old track record and cut the gap to third place in half. Edwards, meanwhile, was starting to lose the pace and started the slow drift back from the lead pack. Further back, Suzuki mounted Hopkins had to pull in for a new rear Bridgestone.

At half race distance Melandri passes Rossi for second and immediately starts to pressure his Spanish teammate for the lead. With five laps to go Melandri makes a couple of pass attempts but runs wide in both to immediately hand the position back to Gibernau. However, the pressure is apparently too much and Sete runs off the track and into a gravel trap. He manages to keep the bike upright and returns to the track but like Capirossi earlier he has lost the lead pack. He probably also left a big chunk of his self-confidence sitting in that Losail gravel trap. I don’t know how many more times the talented Spaniard can return to the well to replinish his soul before he comes up dry. Riders like Rossi can suck the spirit right out of competitors and every mistake Sete makes while leading races is just handing his rival the siphoning tube.

Rossi, Melandri and Hayden at Qatar

With Melandri and Rossi out front the pace continues to be fast and Hayden slowly starts to fall back leaving the lead battle to be a mano-a-mano scrap between the two friends: Melandri and Rossi. As we have seen so many times this season Valentino waits until the penultimate lap to make his move passing Marco for the lead. On the last lap Melandri tries a gutsy pass in turn eight but runs a little wide gifting the win to Rossi. The Honda rider recovers before running too far off track and holds onto second place ahead of Hayden.

With Rossi’s 10th win of the season and Edward’s fourth place the Gauloises Yamaha team score enough points to wrap up the Team title. This bucket load of points also helped them to close in even more on the Manufacturer title. Pretty much a perfect weekend for Rossi and the boys but a pretty bleak time for everyone else.

When the points were tallied Max Biaggi still holds onto 2nd but only by two points over Marco Melandri who jumps up to third in the title race. Edwards rises to fourth overall and trails Melandri by five points. Hayden continues to climb up the points table and is now in fifth just two points behind Edwards. Capirossi’s eventual tenth place finish drops him from third to sixth but the race for second overall is still close with only 11 points covering the group from Biaggi to Capirossi.

Other notables finishers were Toni Elias who managed an eighth place finish. The Spanish MotoGP rookie has earned finishes inside the top ten on four different occasions this year all while riding the second string Yamaha. He has also consistently bested his teammate Ruben Xaus (who was 14th at Qater) which is perhaps a better measuring stick for his success. Shinya Nakano brought his Kawasaki home in seventh which isn’t that notable except that it is a finish which is something that has eluded the Japanese rider at the last two races. Alex Barros charged up through the field to eventually finish in ninth. After looking so strong in the middle part of the season Barros needs to finish strong to have any chance of riding in MotoGP next season. Lackluster results now may finally close the book on his long GP career. Suzuki’s continued their trend of frustrating results with Roberts getting 11th and Hopkins the last of the finishers in 17th after his tire change. Rolfo eventually brought the ancient D’Antin Duc across the line in 12th, one spot ahead of Camel Honda replacement rider Shane Byrne. Oddly enough, Byrne ended his final stand-in race on the RC211V in roughly the same ranking as he was earning earlier in the season aboard the Team KR/Proton bike. Food for thought, huh?

Was anyone other than Rossi really a winner in Qatar? Well, Hayden and Melandri both re-closed the gap in the battle for second but neither earned enough points to solidify anything. Biaggi, Capirossi and Gibernau would rather forget about the race all together as none of them accomplished their goals. No one really put in the kind of performance that will help them get a ride next year so it appears everyone will have to hope for better in the greener pastures that are Phillip Island. In the meantime, all the riders came back out of the desert with only Rossi having found any answers.

[image from the MotoGP web site.]