Monday 02 April: Jorge Lorenzo has returned to winning ways in a dramatic Hertz British Grand Prix at Silverstone, beating championship leader Marc Marquez by less than one tenth of a second. Dani Pedrosa completed the podium as home favourite Cal Crutchlow struggled to seventh place.
Critically for Lorenzo, the Mallorcan made another strong start and
dived into the lead at Copse corner. In a near repeat performance to
Brno last weekend, he would proceed to resolutely defend from both
Repsol Honda Team riders. Marquez then seized the advantage at
Brooklands just over two laps from home, only for Lorenzo to retake the
lead as he confidently out-braked his opponent at Vale. On the final
lap, Marquez again grabbed the advantage at Brooklands, before Lorenzo
re-passed in a confident move at Luffield which featured slight contract
between the two bikes.
The leading duo crossed the finish line separated by just 81
thousandths of a second, meaning Silverstone continues a pattern from
Brno of witnessing the closest finish of the season so far. The triumph
also marks Lorenzo’s first win since Catalunya in mid-June. Struggling
for rear grip, Pedrosa was a further one and a half seconds behind,
having been unable to take advantage of the battling pair in front of
him. In fourth spot was Rossi who, having dropped back after his strong
start, had become involved in yet another entertaining battle with
GO&FUN Honda Gresini’s Alvaro Bautista, while LCR Honda MotoGP’s
Stefan Bradl finished in sixth place.
Having missed his home race in 2011 before starting at the back in
2012, Cal Crutchlow had hoped for a much stronger Silverstone weekend in
2013. He crashed twice on Saturday and again in Sunday’s Warm-Up, then
paid the price for a poor getaway as the Tech3 rider plummeted from
third to sixth at the start. He would fall back to his eventual
finishing position of seventh when the charging Bautista – who had lined
up eighth on the grid – overtook at the end of Lap 1.
Crutchlow’s teammate Bradley Smith again found himself dicing with the
pair of Ducati Team riders, but was ultimately taken advantage of by
Nicky Hayden for eighth place. Smith would end the day ninth, while
Andrea Dovizioso crashed out on the penultimate tour. The Italian joined
second-lap faller Lukas Pesek (Came IodaRacing Project) on the
sidelines, promoting Power Electronics Aspar’s Aleix Espargaro into the
top ten despite a broken finger and injured neck after a Saturday crash;
he therefore led home the CRT riders as PBM’s Michael Laverty ended his
maiden home race in 19th position, ahead of Colombian teammate Yonny Hernandez.
With the triple-header of Indianapolis, Brno and Silverstone now over,
MotoGP™ returns in two weekends’ time with the GP Aperol di San Marino e
della Riviera di Rimini from Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli.
With six events remaining in 2013, debutant Marquez carries an advantage
of 30 points over Pedrosa, with Sunday’s winner Lorenzo now trailing
the championship leader by 39 points. After the race, it was announced
that Marquez had received two penalty points for his part in the
Crutchlow Warm-Up incident, having not slowed sufficiently under yellow
flags.
Yamaha Racing image
Jorge Lorenzo (courtesy of Yamaha): "This was one of the best races I’ve ever had. I’m really happy and
really pleased. It’s a very important win. I pushed from the beginning
to try and open a gap, even more than in recent races but it was
impossible. Marc never gives up, even if he’s a little bit injured after
the warm up. He overtook me three laps from the end so I studied him a
little for one lap and I saw he was struggling in some braking so I
overtook him on the corner where he crashed. I pushed in the last lap to
the maximum, I opened a little gap but I made a mistake in braking and
almost crashed. When he overtook me three corners from the end I thought
it was over again and second place but then he opened a little gap in
the last corner so I thought "now or never" and I tried and got it. To
be honest I’m not thinking about the championship, I’m thinking just to
enjoy this victory which was very special to get then focus on Misano!”
Moto2™ championship leader Scott Redding has won his home Grand Prix at
Silverstone. The Marc VDS Racing Team rider, who took the lead off the
start line, was assisted in the closing stages as a tight battled raged
for second place. Pole-sitter Takaaki Nakagami and Tom Luthi completed
the podium.
On Saturday, Japan’s Nakagami had claimed his second pole position
within the space of a week, but it was Redding who seized the lead as
the red lights went out. Critically for the English rider, much fighting
over the remaining rostrum places would prove a decisive element in his
first home victory since 2008, when he had claimed a career-first win
in the 125 class at Donington Park.
A race-long duel between Nakagami (Italtrans Racing Team) and Luthi
(Interwetten Paddock Moto2 Racing) featured various changes of position,
not least on the last lap when the duo swapped places at Vale and Club
corners before battling deep into the Brooklands complex. The Japanese
would finish ahead of the Swiss, with Tuenti HP 40’s Tito Rabat and
Technomag carXpert’s Dominique Aegerter in close attendance. Redding’s
teammate and Brno winner Mika Kallio was sixth.
Sunday was a difficult affair for title contender Pol Espargaro.
Following a crash at the start of the Warm-Up session, the Tuenti HP 40
rider started sixth on the grid but lost ground in the early stages of
the race – falling to as low as 11th. He fought back up to
eighth behind Came Iodaracing Project’s Johann Zarco, but crucially
loses a further 17 points in his championship fight with Redding. Six
races remain in 2013.
Three riders failed to finish. Argiñano & Gines Racing’s Alberto
Moncayo was an early faller, while British wildcard Gino Rea (Gino Rea
Montaze Broz Racing, fracturing the fourth metacarpus of his right hand)
and Xavier Simeon (Maptaq SAG Zelos Team) crashed across the final pair
of laps.
At JiR Moto2, Australian Jason O’Halloran finished 25th as
he replaced France’s Mike di Meglio, injured at Brno, while both Blusens
Avintia’s Dani Rivas and Argiñano & Gines Racing’s Steven Odendaal
missed the race following a multiple collision at the end of the morning
Warm-Up.
Moto2™ continues in two weekends’ time, with the GP Aperol di San
Marino e della Riviera di Rimini at Misano World Circuit Marco
Simoncelli. Scott Redding - who has become the first Briton to win an
intermediate class race in his home country since Tom Herron triumphed
at the Isle of Man TT in 1976 - will head to Italy with a 38-point
championship advantage over Pol Espargaro.
Moto3: Salom pips Rins to Silverstone victory
Luis Salom has extended his Moto3™ championship lead with a second
consecutive victory, beating Alex Rins by just 49 thousandths of a
second in the Hertz British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Alex Marquez
rounded out the rostrum while pole-sitter Maverick Viñales just failed
to establish a new podium finishes record.
Silverstone marked the end of the triple-header which had first taken
the championship to Indianapolis and Brno; with this in mind, many were
keen to sign off with victory ahead of a two-week break until the next
race.
Salom started as he meant to continue by shooting into the lead from
third on the grid. Before the 17 laps were completed, however, the Red
Bull KTM Ajo rider would exchange positions on various occasions with
Team Calvo’s Viñales and Estrella Galicia 0,0’s Rins, with Rins’
teammate Marquez also very much in the battle. Salom would confirm his
sixth win of the season by less than half a tenth of a second, with
second-placed Rins having had to defend as well as attack on the final
tour.
Marquez’s top three result was his second in three races, while in
fourth Viñales finished off the podium for the first time this year; in
the process, he just misses out on becoming the first rider in history
to claim 11 successive podium finishes from the start of a season in the
lower class of the World Championship. The top six was completed by
Mahindra Racing’s Miguel Oliveira and Mapfre Aspar Team Moto3’s Jonas
Folger, while Britain’s John McPhee (Caretta Technology – RTG) scored
two points in his home Grand Prix, finishing 14th.
Four riders failed to see the chequered flag, including La Fonte
Tascaracing’s Alessandro Tonucci who was involved in a high-speed
Woodcote collision with Aspar’s Eric Granado in the closing stages of
the races. The first pair of retirements were CIP Moto3’s Juanfran
Guevara and teammate Alan Techer, both out of the race in a first-lap
collision at Vale with Racing Steps Foundation KRP’s Wayne Ryan.
Zulfahmi Khairuddin, teammate to Salom, recovered to 20th place after being forced to start from the pit lane following technical problems on the grid.
Salom’s championship lead over Viñales is now 26 points, with Rins a
further seven behind. Moto3™ continues at the Misano World Circuit Marco
Simoncelli, with the GP Aperol di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini
taking place in two weeks’ time.