Why so many crashes on the first day of testing when riders should be getting back up to speed, recalibrating their brains to 220mph MotoGP bikes, reawakening their muscle memory, rather than pushing the limit for fast lap times?
Some riders thought it was the morning’s windy conditions, when most riders fell.
“I’d say it was the wind – it was really strong,” said Yamaha’s Alex Rins. “I lost a lot of time waiting for the wind to go down.”
Others thought it was the tyres.
“We don’t have enough soft rears, which is the only tyre that works here,” said Aprilia’s Marco Bezzecchi. “The medium rear is very tricky, very difficult, the grip level is low.”
Others thought it was the usual issue – riders simply trying too hard.
“Now everybody wants to push a lot,” said Honda’s Luca Marini. “If you don’t make a 59 [the Sepang lap record is 1min 58.979sec] in your first exit you are nothing! Everything is on the limit – the riders are better prepared and you try to find the limit from the first day. I think this is the biggest issue.”
Lap times at this stage may not be important, but anyway, Fabio Quartararo ended the day fastest, partly because Yamaha’s inline-four continues to improve and partly because he rode in last week’s shakedown tests at the track, thanks to MotoGP’s concession rules.
There is no Yamaha V4 here. Last year Rins announced that he hoped to ride the V4 for the first time during a private Yamaha test at Jerez in December. Now it seems the bike won’t be ridden by Yamaha’s MotoGP full-timers until much later this year.
“I think they will bring it when it’s better than the current bike,” said Rins today. “But to have a V4 isn’t ‘mandatory’, because Honda has V4…”
In other words, the current inline-four M1 hasn’t yet been given the death sentence.