This just in from HRC:
HONDA RACING INFORMATION
Grand Prix of Spain at Jerez
28, 29, and 30 March 2008
DANI FIT AND READY TO GIVE IT EVERYTHING AT HOME
After a forceful ride in Qatar earlier this month
Spanish star Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda RC212V)
is set to make the first of three races in Spain
his signal that he is more than ready for the
challenge of the 2008 World Championship.
But the way the World Championship is shaping up
so far, he won't be the only frontline Spanish
rider to be gunning for the big prize on Sunday.
Dani will relish the rivalry with Jorge Lorenzo
(Yamaha) this weekend. And now he is nearing full
fitness again, after injuring his throttle hand
in a crash while testing in Malaysia, he is itching for action.
Pedrosa won here on a 250cc machine here in 2005
and he has also finished on the podium here for
the last three years. His team-mate Nicky Hayden
(Repsol Honda RC212V) also scored a podium finish
here in 2006 and the Repsol duo are sure to put
up a determined display here for one of Honda's long-term sponsors.
The Honda factory has won here in the premier
class 15 times - most recently with Sete Gibernau
in 2004. But another Spaniard, former World
Champion Alex Criville triumphed here in 1997,
1998 and 1999. Mick Doohan took the spoils in 1996.
With 17 races still to go, this the second of
them, the first in Europe is a vital pointer to
what might unfold as the MotoGP series gathers
the inexorable momentum that has put it firmly on
the map as one of the biggest attractions in motorsport.
| "Nowadays you can design a
racetrack on the computer, you can do whatever
you want - make that, generate this, design that
- you can use every trick in the book, but if the
place don't have that atmosphere, money can't buy
that." -- Nick Hayden |
Last year a crowd of nearly a quarter of a
million people (244,600 to be precise) witnessed
some of the best racing of the season with the
top ten riders on the grid covered by just 0.325
seconds. It will be tight again during qualifying.
The circuit presents a challenge on two fronts;
rider rhythm is vital with front tyre and rear
edge grip at a premium. Laid out among natural
contours with eight right and five left-hand
turns, Jerez was built in 1986 and hosted its
first Grand Prix the following year. It has never
been off the Grand Prix calendar since - a
measure of the quality of racing it provides.
Jerez makes demands in all areas of machine
set-up with short, medium and long straights,
uphill and downhill braking areas, and two
second-gear hairpins. But the biggest test is
whether a rider can make a series of consistent,
flowing laps in race conditions when the ideal
lines through turns on this 11m wide circuit may be occupied by rivals.
Bikes have to be stable to cope with bumps on the
entries to key turns. Under hard braking, the
undulations into turn one at the end of the
start/finish straight can pose problems and
another tight right-hander at the end of the back
straight is a challenge too - especially as these
are recognised ?passing places'. The longest
straight is only 600m making a high top speed
less of a requirement than at other tracks.
Jerez also boasts one of the most spectacular
run-ins to the finish line - two 100mph right
turns, with rear wheels spinning-up, and then
desperate braking into the final tight left -
where many a race has been won and lost, often amid fierce controversy.
Andrea Dovizioso (JiR Scot Honda RC212V) hot from
his fighting fourth place in Qatar will be aiming
to show he has the quality to ride another race
right at the front while Randy de Puniet (LCR
Honda RC212V) is likely to be among the top men too.
Alex de Angelis (San Carlo Honda Gresini RC212V)
crashed at Losail and the San Marinese rider will
hope for better here Similarly Shinya Nakano (San
Carlo Honda Gresini RC212V) knows he can go
better than he did in the first Grand Prix of the season.
Dani said: "I've been training since Qatar to get
back to full strength and I hope my right hand
should be 100 per cent at Jerez. It's a very
important race for me and I really enjoy it. What
I like most about racing at Jerez is the huge
crowd and the great atmosphere. The track is
quite safe, though it could be improved in a few
areas. There are a few bumps too, though not too
many, and the tarmac offers good grip. Top speed
doesn't matter too much at Jerez. But you need a
very well balanced chassis that allows you to
brake hard and tackle both fast and slow corners.
It's a circuit that requires quite an aggressive riding style."
Nicky Hayden said: "Qatar wasn't a great weekend
for us but we'll be working hard to move on from
that at Jerez. Our bike should work good at Jerez
and in the past the Michelin tyres have worked
really good there. I think it's a cool track and
it's not a top-speed track. I like tracks where
you've got to put sections together, and Jerez
all flows together pretty good. The atmosphere is
pretty cool - you come into the stadium section
[the Nieto and Peluqui turns] on Sunday morning
and it's wild. Nowadays you can design a
racetrack on the computer, you can do whatever
you want - make that, generate this, design that
- you can use every trick in the book, but if the
place don't have that atmosphere, money can't buy
that. It's a good track and one of my favourites."
Andrea Dovizioso said: "Jerez is not my
favourite, but with my MotoGP bike I did very
well there in testing as I was riding
consistently and I did some very good times. I'm
confident that we can do very well and now we
have done the first race I've learnt a lot of
things that you can only learn while racing with
other riders on the track at the same time. It
will be a very hard weekend, because the other
riders want to give their maximum performance -
more so than at the World Championship tests. I
think we have a good technical base set-up but
during practice we have to work on the braking of
the bike and also the acceleration in low the RPM
regimes from around 2000-4000rpm."
Randy de Puniet said: "I like this track even
though it's not my favourite. It's very technical
but the straights are not very long. I know this
track very well and we had a very good test in
the winter. I can't say we'll be able to repeat
the good performance we had in the tests. I
expected the same during the race in Qatar some
weeks ago because the tests were pretty positive
but the race was totally different. However my
pace on race tyres during the winter tests was
consistent and fast but the conditions were a bit
different at that time. We'll focus our work on
the bike setting trying to get a better position on the grid on qualifiers."
Alex de Angelis said: "We'll be able to work
calmly during practice at Jerez to try and
prepare as well as possible for the race, because
during the IRTA test we were able to gather a lot
of data. We also start the weekend knowing how
the bike and tyres will perform, so I'm sure
we'll be able to work well, as we did in Qatar.
As far as my crash in the first Grand Prix is
concerned, it was obviously a bit disappointing
but it would have been much worse if we hadn't
shown we can go fast. In Qatar, during the test
and the weekend of the race, I was always just
outside the top five and that's important. The crash is behind me now."
His team-mate Shinya Nakano said: "In a way you
could say that my 2008 season starts properly at
the Grand Prix of Spain. Racing at night in Qatar
was enjoyable but it was a special Grand Prix.
Thirteenth place wasn't the result we were
expecting but Jerez will be another story: I like
the circuit because it's so technical and in the
past I have performed well in qualifying and in
the races. My objective is to finish in the top
six. Since Qatar I've spent my first days in
Italy in an apartment the team have made
available to me - it's close to the team, the
Misano circuit and the beach. I understand even
more now that Gresini Racing really is a big family."
250cc
Honda's Yuki Takahashi (Humangest Racing Honda
RS250RW) now feels he has the speed to compete
again at the sharp end after suffering an
injury-prone 2007. He is confident and as a fan
of the track layout could well be one of the main men here.
He said: "The first race was very important for
me, because I was looking for confirmation about
my physical condition I'm very satisfied of the
result as Doha is a very difficult circuit for
us. Jerez is very good for the Honda's
characteristics and also I like the track a lot.
In the corners I'm very strong but perhaps not so
strong on the straight. In the last few rights,
I'm very quick and that shows that it's important
to get a good setting for Jerez's combination of corners."
Ratthapark Wilairot (Stop And Go Racing RS250RW)
will be aiming to score points again and said:
"Taking 13th in Qatar was a good result, it
proved that we're doing a good job -efforts
always get rewarded. However, we saw in Losail
that the Championship is very competitive and it
will be tough to score points every weekend. My
goal will always be to finish among the first
ten, but to make it possible, we have to be
realistic and never lower our guard. It will be
the second time I ride at the Jerez circuit this
year (after testing). This track is much more
complicated than Losail and we'll have to work
hard from the very first practice session."
125cc
Rookie Louis Rossi (FFM Racing Honda RS125R)
arrives here for the first time and the young
Frenchman knows this race is about learning and
gaining track craft. There are few better places to do it then here.