- Joined
- Jun 17, 2023
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Have you watched any races in this decade?Thats because there is only about 3 overtakes in a F1 race
Have you watched any races in this decade?Thats because there is only about 3 overtakes in a F1 race
Sadly they vote and worse still, they reproduce. We've all seen Idiocracy....Somebody has to pump gas and make cardboard boxes.
Sure. The net result was that the bike wasn’t great, if only in comparison with a GP 24 rather than the other bikes on the grid.. Even in 2023 it wasn’t a great advance over the GP22, and the late season version that the satellite teams probably didn’t get in 2024 was better than the early season version.The GP23 was better in 23 than it was in 24 due to a change in tyres that didn’t suit the GP23
This years engine is the GP24 engine and that cannot be changed though they can change the chassis and other bits
But that is my point. Marc pushed the front because he HAD to. The Honda was designed to be a front end beast around the Bridgestones and struggled ever since they went to Michelins imo. I rewatched most of the sessions over the weekend, and Marc looked on the Ducati more like Jorge Lorenzo did on the Yamaha, sikly smooth. Maybe it's coming out that he was all over the place on the Honda because he absolutely had to ride it that way.
Again, I reiterate. I don't think we are going to see that level of dominance at every race. But it certainly is a wake up call. Especially with the developments that even when he was gapping the field by 0.5s per lap, he was not pushing the front tyre enough to heat it up to the expected operating window.
An interesting article here states that, like most people have considered on here, Marc has matured tremendously since his 2020 accident, and arguably is now a better, more complete version of his previous self.
https://www.motorsport.com/motogp/news/most-extraordinary-version-marc-marquez-motogp/10700081/
Some are saying on the basis of the laps when MM wasn’t worried about tyre pressure that he might have had more than 10 seconds on the field. It would appear he can learn to ride a bike quite differently than he did the HRC bike all those years and faster than a very talented rider brought up with the bike, a bike specifically designed to negate the advantage of MM’s previous riding style, and all this at the age of 32. He is clearly a genius on a bike in addition to having the fast reflexes upon which Nakamoto remarked in his early years with HRC, which I suspect he retains.My point is that the ability to push the front so far past its' limit was a large part of what separated him from the rest.Just stuff it into a corner far harder than anyone else was able to, made it possible for him to get past almost anyone most of the time. That appears to have been largely negated.
Yep he has matured, I hope enough that he doesn't over ride, like he had to on the Honda, when Pecco is fast. There will be tracks where that is the case. Pecco is not without talent.
Taking that race and preseason he has the ability to get away from others on a machine that will improve. It is just one race however.
Some are saying on the basis of the laps when MM wasn’t worried about tyre pressure that he might have had more than 10 seconds on the field. It would appear he can learn to ride a bike quite differently than he did the HRC bike all those years and faster than a very talented rider brought up with the bike, a bike specifically designed to negate the advantage of MM’s previous riding style, and all this at the age of 32. He is clearly a genius on a bike in addition to having the fast reflexes upon which Nakamoto remarked in his early years with HRC, which I suspect he retains.
DigiI riding with a recently broken collar bone says the GP24 is much better than the GP23, maybe by a second a lap.