Monday, July 18, 2011

Japanese GP stand-off a recipe for red faces



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Japanese GP stand-off a recipe for red faces - Eurosport.com ASIA

The German GP was certainly a treat for racing fans this past Sunday. More of the same is hoped for in the coming months, but the big question in the paddock remains whether or not the riders will attend the scheduled race at Motegi.

There is no getting away from the issue, and it has created a curious divide in opinions. The major development at the Sachsenring was an explicit declaration that the top three finishers in last Sunday’s race will not be going to Japan. Before, it had been a statement of intention or preference. This time it was an unequivocal answer.

First things first: the riders have the choice as to whether or not they participate in the Japanese round. Just as they have the choice as to whether or not they race next week at Laguna Seca. What they also have to do is accept the consequences of their decision.

The more farcical element of the saga becomes apparent the more the riders open their mouths. In all likelihood, someone giving their reason for not going as “I just don’t feel comfortable going there” would be taken as misguided but acceptable. To give specific reasons opens the floodgates to analysis and criticism.

Jorge Lorenzo says that he won’t go. That he might want to start a family in later life. That it is too risky. This isn’t a stance based on studies of radioactivity levels at Motegi. And, to be fair, nobody expects a MotoGP world champion to be au faitwith scientific studies on radioactivity - fallings out, rather than nuclear fallout, is more their style. He has declared that he made up his mind a long time ago, in a manner last seen when Alan Partridge was asked if he would consider driving a Mini Metro.

You can’t blame the riders for answering questions either. Everything that has been said on the matter has been because somebody has been asked, rather than volunteering the information.

Where they have jumped the gun is in declaring their intentions before the independent study - requested by the riders - has been concluded. That just makes their argument look more baseless.

The studies are important, however, for Dorna, Motegi and the FIM. If the track is safe, travel is safe and there is no reasonable case for the race not going ahead, then the event itself WILL be held. Cancelling or postponing a race is something that the riders have experienced before with the aborted Hungarian GP project and the 2010 Japanese round, which maybe gives the impression that it is an easy call to make.

Not so. The contract with Motegi is an important one that cannot afford to be broken, financially and in terms of reputation. Even if nobody from the regular field decided to attend, a Dorna-run FIM Motorcycle World Championship race will take place if the July 31 findings give the all-clear.

After that decision is taken then it is up to the riders. Nobody is going to take them to Narita airport by force, but they do have to live with the consequences of going against the factory’s wishes. Honda, Yamaha and Suzuki will be putting pressure on them to go. Few are the riders who can afford to get on the wrong side of motorcycle racing’s top three Japanese manufacturers, which makes the situation a lot different to a boycott of, for example, Le Mans.

This saga is likely to run and run, but at some point there will be backtracking to be done. If they don’t feel safe in Japan now for a specific reason, then when will they? Will those who skip the race have to change their opinion and backtrack at some point in the future?

It is nice to see a bit of unity between those in MotoGP, but those most vocal about missing Motegi have not closed the book on the matter just yet.

Sachsenring discussion – Comments welcome

They call it a ‘go kart track’, but those twisty turns gave every bit as much action as the free-flowing circuits held in greater regard. Pedrosa goes well at the track, but who expected him to be so strong towards the end?

Bridgestone deserve credit for their speedy reaction to rider complaints and discussion in the Safety Commission meeting. They have asked for an extra choice of rear rubber post-haste. It would be easy to get complacent as a single tyre manufacturer, or grow weary about complaints. Full marks to them for showing that feedback is taken into account.

What bike will Rossi have next weekend? The GP11.1 hasn’t worked, and this is getting embarrassing for ‘The Doctor’ and Ducati. Will they revert to the GP11?

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