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Tag: featured
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Max Verstappen takes second pole position of his F1 career; Vettel P2, ahead of Hamilton

Max Verstappen (centre) takes pole in Brazil. An FIA image Sao Paulo, 16 Nov 2019: Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen scored the second pole position of his Formula 1 career after beating Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel to top spot in qualifying for the Brazilian Grand Prix by just over a tenth of a second, with Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton third. The top three in the session were covered by just 0.137s.
At the start of Q1 Ferrari were the first of the likely frontrunners on track and when their drivers crossed the line Vettel led the way with a lap of 1:08.556. His time was a little under four hundredths of a second ahead of team-mate Charles Leclerc.
They were soon eclipsed by Alex Albon, with the Thai driver beating Vettel’s time by five hundredths of a second and giving the first indication that Red Bull were right in the mix.
Albon’s hold on P1 didn’t last long, however. Team-mate Verstappen was also on track, and despite encountering traffic towards the end of his lap, the Dutchman took P1, 0.254s clear of his team-mate. Leclerc then went for a second run and he managed to split the Red Bulls, running just 0.007s quicker than Albon. Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas also improved to claim fourth place ahead of Vettel and Hamilton after the opening batch of runs.
The order at the top remained static thereafter, and though both Ferrari drivers went out on track at the end of the session there were no improvements.
At the other end of the table, Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat was eliminated in P16 ahead of Racing Point’s Lance Stroll, the Williams cars of George Russell and Robert Kubica and the McLaren of Carlos Sainz, who failed to set a time in the session after experiencing an engine problem on his out lap at the start of Q1.
Verstappen was again to the fore in the opening runs of Q2. Hamilton established an early lead, with Albon slotting into P2, but after Leclerc and Vettel moved ahead of both, Verstappen powered through to claim top spot. His impressive time of 1:07.503, put him almost four tenths of a second clear of Leclerc.
The Ferrari driver had set his time on medium tyres, however, and though he would go out on softs in the final runs, his quickest time was set on the yellow-banded compound, however. That allows him to start tomorrow’s race on that compound, a bonus given the 10-place grid drop he will take due to an engine change.
Behind Leclerc, Vettel took third in the segment, on soft tyres, with Hamilton fourth ahead of Albion and Bottas. Haas’ Romain Grosjean progressed to Q3 in P7 ahead of the sole remaining Toro Rosso of Pierre Gasly and the second Haas of Kevin Magnussen. The last man through to the final segment was Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen.
Eliminated at the end of Q2 was 11th-placed Lando Norris – who had been edged out to P11 by Räikkönen by just one hundredth of a second – Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo, the second Alfa of Antonio Giovinazzi, the second Renault of Nico Hulkenberg and Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez.
In Q3 Verstappen completed his dominance of the session. The Dutchman took provisional pole in the first runs with a lap of 1:07.623 – just eight thousandths of a second ahead of Vettel.
Verstappen erased any lingering threat in the final runs, though, with a final lap of 1:07.508 that edged Vettel by 0.123s. Hamilton took third place a further 0.068s back.
Fourth place in the session went to Leclerc, with Bottas fifth and Albon sixth. Behind the top three teams, Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly will start in seventh place ahead of Haas’ Romain Grosjean, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen and the second Haas of Kevin Magnussen.
2019 FIA Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix – Qualifying
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:07.508 6 229.786
2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:07.631 0.123 6 229.368
3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:07.699 0.191 6 229.137
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:07.728 0.220 6 229.039
5 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:07.874 0.366 6 228.547
6 Alexander Albon Red Bull Racing 1:07.935 0.427 6 228.341
7 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 1:08.837 1.329 6 225.349
8 Romain Grosjean Haas 1:08.854 1.346 6 225.294
9 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo 1:08.984 1.476 6 224.869
10 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:09.037 1.529 3 224.696
11 Lando Norris McLaren 1:08.868 1.365 6 225.248
12 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:08.903 1.400 6 225.133
13 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1:08.919 1.416 5 225.081
14 Nico Hülkenberg Renault 1:08.921 1.418 6 225.075
15 Sergio Pérez Racing Point 1:09.035 1.532 6 224.703
16 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:09.320 1.078 10 223.779
17 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1:09.536 1.294 9 223.084
18 George Russell Williams 1:10.126 1.884 9 221.207
19 Robert Kubica Williams 1:10.614 2.372 9 219.678
– 55 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 2. -

Quartararo draws first to deny Marquez the final pole of 2019 at Valencia
The rookie once again topples the reigning Champion in qualifying – but it’s as close as ever

Miller p3, locks out the front row in Valencia on Saturday. A MotoGP image Valencia, 16 Nov 2019: On Friday at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, it was all about one man: Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT). A day later and the headlines don’t need too much adjusting, with the French rookie putting in another superlative performance in qualifying to take the final pole position of the season – his sixth in his rookie year. It was a close run duel with reigning Champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team), however, with the number 93 losing out by just 0.032 despite a crash in FP4. Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), another man with some serious pace so far, converted that into a front row start and he’ll start third.
The chill had been taken out the day by the time qualifying came around, and in Q1 it was Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) vs Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) in a duel for supremacy – with the former coming out on top, but by just 0.005. Johann Zarco (LCR Honda Idemitsu) was the man who just lost out in P13, with the 12 men ahead of him then heading out to fight for pole.
Given his performances in qualifying so far this season, it was no surprise to see Quartararo on provisional pole after the first run, but Miller was coming. The Australian was able to take over at the top as the riders headed back out, but it didn’t take too long for Quartararo to strike back. Provisionally fastest once again and Marquez taking over in second, there remained one more shot at it for most. Could the reigning Champion ruin the rookie party?
As the clock ticked down, many were still pushing but the timing screens remained resolutely free of red. Quartararo couldn’t better himself, and Marquez and Miller had no answer for the Frenchman. So a sixth pole of the season is the number 20’s sign off from rookie Saturdays, and he’ll be aiming, as ever, for a maiden win on Sunday. But Marquez will doubtless be keen to stand in his way as he homes in on 400 points, with Miller with his own high stakes as he aims to stop Quartararo taking the title of top Independent Team rider too.
On the second row it’s Sepang winner Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) in fourth, with Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) in a solid fifth. Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) slotted into sixth as the only man who improved on his final lap, aiming to stop Marquez from giving Repsol Honda the teams’ Championship.
Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) got the better of Q1 graduate and teammate Alex Rins to take seventh, with Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) completing the third row alongside the two Suzukis. Ducati Team’s Danilo Petrucci rounds out the top 10 in Valencia.
Pol Espargaro managed to beat Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) to P11, with the KTM man aiming even higher on race day. But on that race day, Rossi will be eager to hit back and move a good way forward – with Saturday sessions largely having seen ‘The Doctor’ further forward, despite a tough Friday.
Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team), meanwhile, will begin an emotionally-charged final race of his career from 16th.
Can Quartararo grab that first MotoGP™ win before the 2019 season comes to a close? The scrap for the final 25 points of the year looks set to be a cracker, with plenty on the table and history guaranteed to be made. Tune in for the Valencia GP at 14:00 local time (GMT+1).
Qualifying Result Top-3:
1 – Fabio Quartararo* (FRA – Yamaha) 1’29.978
2 – Marc Marquez (SPA – Honda) +0.032
3 – Jack Miller* (AUS – Ducati) +0.108*Independent Team rider
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Lewis Hamilton quickest ahead of Verstappen in FP3: Brazilian GP

Hamilton tops FP3. An FIA image Sao Paulo, 16 Nov 2019: Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton edged Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by just two hundredths of a second to take top spot in a tight final free practice session for the Brazilian Grand Prix, the penultimate round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship here on Saturday morning. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was third fastest, three tenths of a second further back.
Verstappen led the way in the opening half of the session with the Dutchman posting a time of 1:09.063 to sit almost four tenths of a second clear of Hamilton with Valtteri Bottas third.
With just under 20 minutes to go in the session Verstappen shaved four thousandths of a second off his best time but the Ferraris of Sebastian Vettel and Charles Leclerc were already on track for their qualifying simulations and both brushed past the Red Bull driver’s first period benchmark with Leclerc taking over in P1 on a time of 1:08.611 with Vettel just five hundredths of second behind in P2.
However, three minutes later Hamilton and Bottas took to the track and Hamilton powered to the top of the order with a lap of 1:08.320 improving on his earlier time by over a second. Bottas, however, couldn’t find a similar improvement and his time of 1:09.224 was just three tenths better than his earlier time.
It was then the turn of the Red Bulls to do their qualifying simulations and Verstappen pumped in a fastest first sector to put pressure on Hamilton’s benchmark. The Red Bull driver lost out in the twisting middle sector however and he had to settle for P2 with a lap of 1:08.346, just 0.026s behind Hamilton.
Verstappen’s team-mate, Alex Albon, claimed P5 in the session with the Thai driver profiting from Bottas’ lack of significant improvement.
Albon endured a difficult Friday on his first outing at Interlagos, crashing out in FP1 and the failing to make the most of his qualifying simulation in FP2. And he again looked uncomfortable in FP3, complaining of trouble with his front tyres as he finished the session almost eight tenths of a second off his team-mate.
With Bottas sixth, best-of-the-rest honours were taken by Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat, with the Russian finishing 1.095 off Hamilton, though he was just five hundredths of a second ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi.
Ninth place in the session went to McLaren’s Lando Norris, with the rookie finishing just three thousandths of a second ahead of 10th-placed team-mate Carlos Sainz.
2019 FIA Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix – Free Practice 3
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:08.320 17 227.055
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:08.346 0.026 18 226.968
3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:08.611 0.291 20 226.092
4 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:08.664 0.344 22 225.917
5 Alexander Albon Red Bull Racing 1:09.136 0.816 17 224.375
6 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:09.201 0.881 20 224.164
7 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:09.415 1.095 22 223.473
8 A.Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1:09.462 1.142 20 223.322
9 Lando Norris McLaren 1:09.585 1.265 18 222.927
10 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren 1:09.588 1.268 21 222.917
11 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo 1:09.619 1.299 21 222.818
12 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 1:09.625 1.305 19 222.799
13 Nico Hülkenberg Renault 1:09.650 1.330 17 222.719
14 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:09.713 1.393 18 222.518
15 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:09.761 1.441 17 222.364
16 Romain Grosjean Haas 1:09.798 1.478 20 222.247
17 Sergio Pérez Racing Point 1:09.995 1.675 19 221.621
18 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1:10.312 1.992 16 220.622
19 George Russell Williams 1:10.843 2.523 19 218.968
20 Robert Kubica Williams 1:11.205 2.885 23 217.855 -

AndrewZh takes stunning Championship victory in a dramatic season finale
The three title contenders delivered the drama in a thrilling finale that went all the way to the final corner of the final race!

AndreqZH wins MotoGP eSport World title on Saturday. A MotoGP image Valencia, 16 Nov 2019: Ducati Team’s AndrewZh is the new MotoGP eSport World Champion thanks to two faultless performances in a thrilling Global Series finale at the #ValenciaGP that went all the way to the final lap of the final race to cap off a vintage season of competition here on Saturday.
The Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia, Spain played host to a star-studded final round, which featured appearances from three MotoGP™ riders, a roster of glitzy prizes and high drama that had all in attendance on the very edge.
In the end just five points covered the first three riders – AndrewZh, Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s trastevere73 and Cristianmm17, representing Team Suzuki Ecstar – in the Championship after three action-packed rounds in the Global Series. All three contested the podium places in the final race, with the victory fight going right the way to the final corner.
Before the lights went out for Race 1, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Pol Espargaro took to the stage to offer the finalists tips on how to attack the Phillip Island Circuit, the scene of the first of the evening’s two races. Having dominated the intermediate class outing there in 2012, the Spaniard was better placed than most do so.

Podium celebrations on Saturday. Photo MotoGP From the first lap, trastevere73 heeded Espargaro’s advice, storming into an early lead from pole position ahead of adrianDP26 (Team Suzuki Ecstar). The early exchanges were akin to the recent Australian Grand Prix, with as many as ten riders contesting the leading positions. But reigning champion trastevere73 eventually broke clear, demonstrating his trademark consistency from the first lap to the end to win by 2.033s.
The drama came thick and fast behind. A mistake on the fifth lap demoted AndrewZh from second to fourth. But the Championship’s form man fought back to put maximum pressure on adrianDP26 for second. And the Team Suzuki Ecstar rider would crack, crashing at turn one on the final lap, handing a crucial second to the Ducati Team man with Cristianmm17 close behind in third.
The double points on offer in the final round meant trastevere73 led AndrewZh by just six points going of the final race. Cristianmm17 ensured it was a three-way fight until the end, 21 points back.
Prior to the evening’s second encounter, five-time World Champion Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) was on hand to present the Tissot Pole of Poles Award to AndrewZh after the Italian gamer took the highest number of pole positions in this year’s series. And the celebrity appearances didn’t end there: Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) joined commentary duo Matt Dunn and Jack Appleyard for the second race, with the entertaining Italian offering his unique wit and insight to proceedings.
The season finale would prove to be a lights-to-flag triumph for Cristianmm17. Shadowed by AndrewZh and trastevere73 in the early laps, the Team Suzuki Ecstar gamer remained calm in the face of relentless pressure from AndrewZh, who knew second place enough to secure his maiden MotoGP™ eSport crown. A trastevere73 mistake on the seventh lap ultimately decided the contest.
A tearful AndrewZh accepted the brilliant first prize of a rapid BMW M135i xDrive before Dorna CEO Carmelo Ezpeleta handed out the silverware in the final podium ceremony. While disappointed on missing the chance to win his third successive eSports title, trastevere73 picked up a new Yamaha YZF-R3 for finishing second overall. Cristianmm17 received a Lenovo Legion™ Y730 high-speed computer as reward for third.
After a brilliant finale, all three contestants will no doubt be back for more in an expanded eSports Championship that returns for a fourth instalment in 2020!
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Vips secures lights-to-flag qualification race victory in Macau: F3

Vips wins qualification race at Macau on Saturday. An FIA image Macau, 16 Nov 2019: Juri Vips claimed a commanding victory in the Macau Grand Prix Qualification Race ahead of tomorrow’s FIA F3 World Cup.
The Hitech Grand Prix driver sped away from pole position and never looked back, despite coming under race-long pressure from SJM Prema Theodore Racing rival Robert Shwartzman, as the duo went on to secure a relatively comfortable one-two finish.
Third place went to the impressive Christian Lundgaard, who admitted yesterday that his fourth place qualifying position was ‘unexpected’, but the Dane went one better during Saturday’s race.
ART Grand Prix driver Lundgaard got the jump by third placed Callum Ilott off the line and was seemingly bringing Jenzer Motorsport’s Arjun Maini along with him, before his striking blue machine was tipped into a spin at Lisboa on the first lap.
A number of cars were caught up in the typical Macau incident and a brief Safety Car period was called for to remove Maini’s stricken machine.
When the dust eventually settled, Lundgaard surged on to complete the podium positions, whilst MP Motorsport’s Richard Verschoor also got the better of Ilott to take fourth.
Logan Sargeant took sixth for Carlin Buzz Racing, despite being part of the lap one incident, whilst Alessio Lorandi (Trident Motorsport) and Ferdinand Habsburg (ART Grand Prix) completed the next two positions.
Trident’s David Beckmann and Campos Racing’s Leonardo Pulcini rounded out the top ten.
The FIA F3 World Cup at the 66th running of the Macau Grand Prix will take place at 15:30 (local time).
Juri Vips said: “I didn’t want to take full risk at the beginning and I guess that is the same for everyone. The track changes overnight so it’s never really perfect or the same as the previous day, but I made no mistakes and it was a good race. To be honest, I expected pole position to not be such a good thing but today I really got a mega start and I don’t think Robert got the best one. I think that’s the reason I led into the third corner. I think if people around me get good starts tomorrow it will be harder, but I will of course try my best.”
Robert Shwartzman said: “It wasn’t the best start. It was okay, but for sure it wasn’t as good as Juri’s start and I lost a bit of pace. Also, Christian was right behind me coming to Lisboa and it was really close on the outside. We were taking it safe as there is no point of risking the first lap and with the DRS there is still time to get close. Then after the restart Juri made a good getaway. Juri was good at the beginning and he built up the gap, but then towards the end I was able to catch him a bit. Pace wise we are really close so tomorrow is going to be interesting.”
Christian Lundgaard said: “The race itself was pretty safe for me in comparison to the pace we have had in both practice sessions and the first qualifying. To come away with P3 today was certainly something we never saw coming so for me I can only be happy. It is my first time coming here I can’t really describe it. You need to be sure and confident that you can do it. After today I am quite confident that we can win if everything is in place.”
You can watch LIVE streaming of every session of the FIA F3 World Cup and FIA GT World Cup via the FIA website and on the official FIA Facebook page.
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Double trouble: Quartararo takes top honours on Day 1; MotoGP final round
Frenchman fastest in FP1 and FP2, with Viñales the closest man on the chase

Quartararo in action on Friday. A MotoGP image Valencia, 15 Nov 2019: FP1 pacesetter Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) made it double trouble for his rivals on Friday at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, topping the timesheets again in the afternoon for dominion on Day 1. He has a tenth and a half in hand over fellow Yamaha rider Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), with World Champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) placing P3 so far.
After a chillier start, conditions were slightly warmer in the afternoon and allowed some riders to head out and post their best times of the day early in FP2, one of whom was Marquez as he sat on top of the standings in the opening exchanges. He and Viñales had got the better of Quartararo’s FP1 time fairly early on and leapfrogged the Rookie of the Year on the combined times, with Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) putting in some impressive laps to claw his way up to P2 overall with around 10 minutes left to play as well. But the clock was ticking down and that meant a shuffle on the way.
Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) moved himself into the top 10, Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) took P2 and P3 on the combined times respectively and at this stage, FP1 leader Quartararo hadn’t improved. So it was instead Viñales who first displaced Marquez from P1, but the Frenchman was on a charge and made his first gains to get up into second and then go top with an even better effort.
That sees him top so far from Sepang winner Viñales and Champion Marquez, with Miller in fourth at the end of the day despite a crash – and the Australian was second in FP1. Morbidelli takes P5, ahead of Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar). The two-time premier class race winner got the better of rookie teammate Mir in the end, but not by much as the number 36 ends Friday in seventh.
Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) impressed in P8, with late times from Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) and Johann Zarco (LCR Honda Idemitsu) seeing them grab a top 10 place in ninth and tenth respectively. Zarco’s temporary teammate Crutchlow was the man to lose out as he ended the day in 11th.
He’ll be a big name hoping to improve in FP3, and perhaps the biggest name has the same task ahead of him on Saturday: after crashing in FP1 at Turn 4, Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was unfortunately in the gravel again in FP2. This time it was the fast right-hand Turn 10 that caught ‘The Doctor’ out and thankfully the nine-time World Champion was ok, but the same couldn’t be said for his YZR-M1. He was 14th and will be aiming to leapfrog Michele Pirro (Ducati Team), Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) and Crutchlow as a minimum before qualifying…
Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) ended his final Friday in the sport in 16th, but just 0.012 off Francesco Bagnaia (Pramac Racing) ahead of him. What will Saturday bring? The final fight for automatic entry into Q2 begins at 9:55 (GMT +1) local time, before qualifying starts at 14:10. Will Quartararo keep his dominion on Day 2? Tune in to find out.
MotoGP: Friday’s Fastest:
1 – Fabio Quartararo* (FRA – Yamaha) 1’30.735
2 – Maverick Viñales (SPA – Yamaha) +0.148
3 – Marc Marquez (SPA – Honda) +0.239
4 – Jack Miller* (AUS – Ducati) +0.265
5 – Franco Morbidelli* (ITA – Yamaha) +0.464*Independent Team rider
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We were hoping to be fifth: Racing Point’s Otmar Szafnauer
TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Toyoharu TANABE (Honda), Otmar SZAFNAUER (Racing Point), Christian HORNER (Red Bull Racing), Frédéric VASSEUR (Alfa Romeo), Mario ISOLA (Pirelli)
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Mario, if we could start with you please. Cast our minds back a couple of weeks please, to Austin, when the 2020 tyres were tested by the teams. The feedback was mixed, what did the teams tell you, and what’s the plan going forward with these tyres?
Mario ISOLA: Yeah, as you said, the feedback was mixed. I believed that we had quite difficult conditions in Austin. It was very cold and the new tyres are designed with a different philosophy. So the plan now is to test them again in Abu Dhabi where we have a two-day test planned specifically for testing the new construction and new compounds, so we will have a comparison that is more reliable compared to Austin. We tested this new construction during the year with the teams and with their cars and we found an improvement in terms of overheating, in terms of compounds with a wider working range – but mainly the new construction was designed because every year the performance of the cars is increasing and obviously we have to follow this increase in performance. If we don’t change the construction, the only possibility is to raise the starting pressure – and raising the starting pressure is making the overheating worse and the behaviour of the tyre in general worse. So, the new construction has been designed with the target to keep the pressure as low as possible, according to the improvement in the performance of the cars. So, I hope that we can have a test in Abu Dhabi that is more representative. I fully understand during the race weekend all the teams are focussed on the race weekend itself, so they cannot adjust the set-up of the car – the aero-balance of the car – and the new tyres have a different profile. They are wider, especially on the rear, and this has an impact on the downforce of the car, as well as the balance of the car. So, we need a bit more time to test them properly on long runs, to understand if we achieve this target. After that, obviously we are very happy to accept any… not accept any decision but to discuss the result of the test and to see what is better for the sport.
Q: Looking further ahead, the 18-inch tyres for 2021 were tested by McLaren at Paul Ricard recently. What feedback did you get from the drivers and the team?
MI: It was positive feedback. They said that the 18-inch tyres were better than expected. They are more reactive, we confirmed some results that we had with Renault at Paul Ricard in September. So now we are finalising the 2020 test plan. Obviously we will have another 25 car-days of tests but I’m very positive. And in any case, what we have developed for the 2020 tyres, we have some concepts that we can transfer to the 18-inch tyres. So, it’s useful to keep this direction for the future.
Q: Fred, coming on to you. We’ve asked you this question for a while now and you’ve finally got an answer for us: Alfa Romeo have re-signed Antonio Giovinazzi. Can you tell us your reasons for that?
Frédéric VASSEUR: I think he did a very strong second part of the season, he improved a lot. He is now matching Kimi in quali and I think the issue is not on the driver side. We have to stay focussed on this and keep a consistent line-up, and it will be the best thing to do.
Q: You say the issue isn’t with the drivers. Let’s turn our attention to the team. How well has this year gone for you and what are your plans for the team in 2020?
FV: The plan is to do a better job next year for sure. We started pretty well this season, we were P4 after five or six races and then we started to have an issue. Different issues, not always the same, but we didn’t score a point in the second part of the season – or one or two points – but it’s not an issue always with the pace and, at the end of the day, we are doing too many mistakes collectively and this is the big issue.
Q: Otmar, Checo told us in the press conference yesterday that 2019 has been a difficult and disappointing year for Racing Point. Would you agree with him?
Otmar SZAFNAUER: Well, it’s not what we wanted. We definitely wanted to be a little bit further ahead. We’re just one point ahead of Toro Rosso and 18 behind Renault, so yeah, we were hoping to be fifth or fourth this year, so from that regard, it’s a bit disappointing. However, having looked back at what happened the year before this, when this year’s car was in development, we were in a bit of turmoil, especially financially, so it’s not surprising – although as a team we always want to do better.
Q: As you say, you’re 18 points behind Renault, two races to go. How do you fancy your chances of catching them and even beating them?
OS: Well, we’ll do our best. If we can mind the weighbridge and not start from the pitlane, that should help. Collectively, if we do a good job… but I think it’s not just up to us. I think we’ll need a bit of luck to be able to catch them – but we’ll do the best we can.
Q: Tanabe-san, has this been a better first season with Red Bull than you expected?
Toyoharu TANABE: So far, after 19 races in this season with Red Bull, we achieved positive results compared to previous years. And then two wins, one pole position and then, additionally, both teams on the podium in German Grand Prix. We made considerable good progress in the year. We want to do our best in the rest of two races in this season and then we want to carry over this positive progress and the momentum for next year.
Q: As you say, lots of progress but has it been better than you expected, coming into the relationship?
TT: In terms of the relationship, I think very good. And then, so far the results of the race depends on the performance compared to other competitors. It’s not easy to say good or bad. As a result, as I said, we got wins and a pole position. It’s good progress in the relationship.
Q: Thank you. Christian, perhaps I could bring you in on this. How would you sum up progress with Honda during this first season together?
Christian Horner: I think it’s been really positive. It’s been a great relationship. The two companies are working really well together. In our first year we have achieved seven podiums to date, two grand prix victories, two pole positions – albeit that we only started from pole once – but yes, the progress that has been made with the introduction of each engine has been great to see. Reliability has been strong. This year was always going to be a transitional year in this first year of this new partnership but it feels like momentum has built through the year and with stability of regulations in all areas for 2020, we’re really looking to take the positive momentum from RB15, the current car, into RB16, which will be our 2020 contender.
Q: Better than expected?
CH: I think in many respects, yes. I think if you look at… there were a lot of questions as to why we had made the move to Honda. I think very quickly, at the first grand prix, we achieved a podium. We’ve scored more points than we had at this time last year. All around, reliability has been strong, performance has been getting better and better. I think on the chassis side we were affected more than we thought going into the year by the front wing regulation change and Honda have certainly exceeded our expectations in all areas. So, it has been a really very positive start to this partnership.
Q: Christian, just one more question for you. You’ve re-signed Alex Albon for 2020. Just your reasoning behind that?
CH: Obviously Alex has done a very good job in his first year in Formula 1. He started the year at Toro Rosso and we then took the opportunity at the summer break to promote him into the senior team. The reason behind that was to have a look at him within our own environment. And since stepping into that seat he’s finished in the top six at every grand prix, sometimes having to start from the back of the grid or even the pit lane. So, he’s driven exceptionally well. He’s given great feedback; his pace is improving and improving, at many circuits at which he’s never been to before or countries he’s never been in, like here in Brazil this weekend. He’s earned the seat on merit. We’re excited about his potential for the future. It was a relatively straightforward decision to come to, to extend his relationship with the team as the partner for Max in 2020.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Scott Mitchell – Autosport) Christian, on Alex: he’s had a pretty rollercoaster 12 or 13 months from thinking he’s racing in Formula E to getting his F1 opportunity, driving an F1 car for the first time just before pre-season testing in the shake down and then obviously the Red Bull call–up. Now he’s going to be going into next year in a car you hope is going to be fighting for the title. Have you ever seen a turnaround like this in someone’s career and how well do you think has Alex handled that?
CH: What it demonstrates from Alex’s side is great tenacity. Originally he was part of the junior programme, he was released from that early on in his career and he really had to fight to retain a career in motorsport and rely on his talent, tenacity and never-give-up attitude. And the way he applied himself, you know, driving for Fred’s team in Formula 3, he pushed Leclerc hard that year. Formula 2 he graduated to and he had a strong career in Formula 2 and then, as you say, he was off to another discipline and then, ironically, trigged by the events created by Daniel’s decision to leave to Renault created this opportunity for him to join Toro Rosso and then very quickly you could see that he had a decent talent and great race craft and that’s continued and grown. And then the opportunity came for us to have a look at him within Red Bull Racing. It just shows that if you have the right commitment, the right attitude then things can turn around and talent does always rise to the top.
Q: As a follow-up to that, can you compare and contrast Alex with Pierre Gasly?
CH: I think that obviously for Pierre it was very tough for him coming into the start of the season off the back off two accidents in pre-season and that I think definitely affected his confidence and of course being the team-mate to Max Verstappen is a very tough job to have, having that reference point. For Pierre, it was a difficult first half of the season for him. Obviously we felt that with the pressure building on him, the public pressure, the media scrutiny, it was right to remove him from that and put him into the slightly less pressured environment of Toro Rosso. And since that switch I think he has driven again exceptionally well. You can see his confidence is growing. He’s driven some very strong races and his pace is getting better and better. He looks happier in that environment, which is good to see.
Q: (Jesus Balseiro – Diario AS) Christian again, also about your drivers. Carlos Sainz used to be a Red Bull driver. What’s your opinion about his performance this year. And also, at any point did you regret losing him, just considering him as a good option for the second Red Bull this season?
CH: Well, I think it’s been good to see Carlos get into a good car this year and he has done a very good job. He has done a very good job. He has driven well. He has very much been the best of the rest after the group of the top three teams and he’s driven some very strong races this year. We elected to go our different ways but we are still proud that we gave him the opportunity to come into Formula 1 and that he’s managed to use that opportunity to carve himself our a career, albeit now with another team.
Q: (Marcel Teixeira – Reuters) I would like to know from the three team bosses how useful was this first session, because of the climate conditions, of course? It seems we’re going to have wet weather again this afternoon.
OS: We didn’t do much running so… We did a little bit of running on the intermediate tyres so it was useful to do that. We gained a bit of understanding and a bit of data on what to do here on the intermediate tyre but we’ll see what the rest of the weekend holds. I believe tomorrow and Sunday will be dry.
CH: Well, for us it was quite an expensive session. It started good. Alex, first time in Brazil, first time on the track, went fastest on the intermediates and then as the circuit looked like it was starting to get dry, I think there were ten cars that went out on slicks and Max went off at turn two – but on his own this time…
OS: On his own last time too, by the way!
CH: And Alex unfortunately, with cold brakes, he locked up into the last turn and did a bit of damage so it’s dented the mechanics’ lunch break to get the car ready for the next session.
FV: For sure it’s not an easy session, it was much less expensive for me than for Christian, but he has much more money also. But no, at the end, the evolution of the track was so huge that it was difficult to do comparison. You had some cars on track with slicks, with wets, with inters [so] I’m not sure it was the best session of the season.
Q: (Emerson Furkim – Car Magazine) I would like you to talk a little bit about the new regulations for the 2021 season, so I have two short questions. The first one: do you think that the budget cap will really close the gap between the teams? And the second question is will the fans really see more overtakes on track with the new cars?
TT: For the PU manufacturers, we don’t have a budget cap. In the regulations, we have a testing time limitation, big reduction required and in terms of the teams, I need to hear from the other people. Also that area of chassis development required (for more overtaking) we will see. From a PU point of view, we try to make a strong PU and then make the race more fun.
OS: Well, the budget cap… we’re going to be nowhere near it so it will not have a big impact on us but some of the bigger teams that will have to perhaps downsize I’m sure it will have an impact in the short term and then they’ll hit some type of equilibrium where they’ll continue to be strong but I think it will have an impact at the beginning. Will the new regulations help overtaking? I can’t predict that. We thought that the new front wing this year was going to do that and it didn’t so I’m unsure. Hopefully the work that’s been put in with creating a different wake of the leading car will have an impact on the following car but whether it allows more overtaking, I can’t predict that.
CH: Well the budget cap question… what you have to remember about the budget cap is that it’s fixed for a five year period so for certainly the top three teams it’s a considerable challenge to get into a position to obviously get under that cap for 2021 onwards. And then obviously once we are there we have to stay there for five years, so whilst there may still be some divergence between the smaller teams and the larger teams over a period of time and hopefully as revenues continue to grow within the sport with the plans that Liberty… and the growth that they expect to see during the next five years I think things will naturally converge. I think the frustration about the regulations are it makes next year very expensive because we have effectively three things going on: we have the current car to develop, we have tyre testing on behalf of Pirelli with a sort of an interim car and then we have the development of a new car to a new set of regulations, so next year is a big challenge. And in terms of the outcome to the rules, do they achieve the target? Only time will tell. I think the intention is great in what they are wanting to achieve with this high wake concept. Whether that’s achievable only time will tell. The cars are going to look a lot different, it’s very much a clean sheet of paper, the regulations, so with that you tend to get divergence rather than convergence and obviously the cars are a little simpler, there’s not as many aerodynamic influencing elements all over the car so it’s certainly going to be interesting and hopefully the intention is to get it to be more driver influenced which I think is only a positive thing.
FV: Yeah, the situation is a bit different compared to the teams but for sure the budget cap won’t affect at all the six or seven teams on the grid. It will affect the top teams but on the other hand they will have more resources to develop the new car next year as Christian said before, but the most important thing for me is the stability of the regulations of other period but if we change the regulations another time in ’23 or ’24 but it will be very difficult for the small teams to have an advantage on this. And then on the overtaking, I think the target is clear but the FIA and the FOM worked pretty hard to reduce the wake of the cars and to have a better understanding of this but now we will see only in Melbourne ’21 what is the situation.
MI: To reply to the question, we are not subject to the budget cap. About the regulations, I want to be positive because if it is true that the cars that are following are losing a lot less downforce, obviously this is a big help for the tyres not to overheat and to keep the performance and this should help overtaking, then obviously we will know in Melbourne 2021 but I want to be positive. I think we are taking the right direction.
Q: (Scott Mitchell – Autosport) Christian, you mentioned Alex’s off in FP1. Obviously the conditions were quite a significant factor in that, so can you just sort of brush this one aside or has he got a little bit of a nasty habit of this, because we’ve seen a few times in practice this year he’s had quite costly accidents?
CH: I think today wasn’t… you can’t put on Alex’s account. I think maybe we were a little bit too optimistic getting out there, trying to get him laps in on a track that was still pretty damp in the middle sector. Max, as I say, he had a moment at turn one, turn two. There were other cars that were running wide so I don’t think today we can blame that on Alex but he has had a few little incidents this year. Thankfully they’ve all been on Fridays and Saturday mornings. When it’s come to it in qualifying and the race he’s absolutely delivered.
Ends
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Alex Albon quickest in FP1 before crashing out: Brazilian GP

Albon tops FP1 before crashing out. An FIA image Sao Paulo, 15 Nov 2019: Newly re-signed Red Bull Racing driver Alex Albon set the fastest time of the opening practice session for the Brazilian Grand Prix before crashing out late in the rain-hit session at Interlagos.
In his first outing since Red Bull this announced that the Thai driver will be staying with the team for 2020, Albon hit the top of the timesheet late in the session with a run intermediate tyres that left him half a second ahead of Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas.
However, after moving to slicks on an improving track Albon lost control in the penultimate corner. He hits the barriers hard, causing substantial damage to the front right corner of his car and the red flags were show. With just two minutes remaining, the session was not restarted.
With torrential rain falling overnight and in the hours before the start of the session, there was a slow start to running on an extremely wet track at Interlagos.
Sebastian Vettel was the first to sample the conditions, with the Ferrari driver using full wet, blue-banded Pirelli tyres.
It would be a further 20 minutes before the first times appeared on the board, however, with Carlos Sainz topping the timesheet briefly before Charles Leclerc ousted the Spaniard by a second and then, on an improving track, by a further four seconds.
The Monegasque driver remained at the top of the order until the track had improved to the degree that intermediate tyres became the order of the day.
Vettel then jumped to the order with a time of 1:17.041 before Bottas eclipsed that lap of 1:16.693s. Albon then took the track on intermediates and posted a time of 1m16.399s to top.
The Red Bull driver’s team-mate Max Verstappen then went out on track but the borderline nature of the circuit was demonstrated when the Dutchman lost control in Turn 2. He managed to avoid any calamities but when Albon came out on track on the same compound he pushed past the level of adhesion and crashed out, ending the session.
His crash meant that even though the bulk of drivers had taken to the track on slick tyres, there were no improvements elsewhere. Albon thus headed the timesheet ahead of Bottas, Vettel and Leclerc. Sainz finished fifth for McLaren with the Renaults of Nico Hulkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo. Pierre Gasly was eighth for Toro Rosso ahead of team-mate Daniil Kvyat, while Lando Norris was tenth in the second McLaren.
Albon’s crash also meant Romain Grosjean, Sergio Perez, Verstappen and Hamilton all failed to set a time.
2019 FIA Formula One Brazilian Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
1 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing 9 1:16.142
2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 10 1:16.693 0.551
3 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 13 1:17.041 0.899
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 13 1:17.285 1.143
5 Carlos Sainz McLaren 16 1:17.786 1.644
6 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 8 1:17.899 1.757
7 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 9 1:17.985 1.843
8 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 17 1:18.100 1.958
9 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 16 1:18.274 2.132
10 Lando Norris McLaren 15 1:18.559 2.417
11 George Russell Williams 18 1:18.779 2.637
12 Kevin Magnussen Haas 10 1:19.247 3.105
13 Lance Stroll Racing Point 6 1:19.414 3.272
14 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 12 1:19.532 3.390
15 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 18 1:19.600 3.458
16 Nicholas Latifi Williams 16 1:20.010 3.868
17 Romain Grosjean Haas 3
18 Sergio Perez Racing Point 1
19 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 3
20 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 3 -

Valencia Press Conference: the MotoGP season finale and goodbye Lorenzo
Riders gear up for the final round and share some words on a great rival set to retire

Riders pose after the Thursday press conference in Valencia. A MotoGP image Valencia, 14 Nov 2019: After 18 rounds of incredible racing in 2019, it’s time for the Circuit Ricardo Tormo to host the season finale. The pre-event Press Conference for the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana saw reigning Champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) joined by Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team), Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar), Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) to talk shop – and share a few words on rival Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team), who announced his retirement earlier in the day.
Marquez was first to speak. “Malaysia was not the best weekend for us but in the end we achieved a good result in the race which is the most important thing, we finished in second. At Valencia we will see, it’s time to finish the season in a good way, work hard next week for 2020, and there’s the team Championship where we’ll fight against Andrea and Danilo, and apart from that just try to enjoy it, the last race weekend and a home GP. Last weekend in my hometown in Cervera was amazing with my brother too, and I’ll just try to enjoy this, no pressure.”
Next up was Dovizioso, who also spoke of 2020… “We really would like to finish the season in a good way, we’ve confirmed a strong second overall, it’s not the Championship but we have to be happy with it. For sure we’ll have something to try at the test, and for sure we have to improve our situation if we want to fight with Marc so we’ll be focused on that.”
Then, Sepang winner Viñales talked through his recent form and geared up for Valencia. “I am really happy about the end of the season because somehow I felt we’ve grown a lot, especially with the team, and also with the bike and that was the most important; that was the objective of the last races: trying to going up and up with the bike, and it’s what we did. So, we arrive here in Valencia with the same mentality. I will go for everything. I will try to push myself and the bike at the maximum and then we will see, but I will give my maximum as always.”
Rins was next on the mic, and he’s facing down Viñales for third overall. “We have really good memories here in Valencia, last year in the rain but also in my first year I finished fourth here. So let’s see what happens, for sure I’ll try to fight, I don’t want to be focused on the final position overall, the important thing is that we’re getting information and experience for next year, so let’s see what happens. I’ll try and start tomorrow at 100%.”

Rossi’s mammoth career rolls on…can he take another podium at Valencia? After the Spaniard, the ‘Doctor’. Rossi has had ups and downs at Valencia, but he definitely arrives on the up after an incredible battle with Dovizioso for the podium in Malaysia. He missed out, but it was close… “We arrive from a good weekend in Sepang, so we have to try and continue like this. Valencia is completely different: the track, the temperature and the conditions are the opposite. It will be interesting to understand our speed and try and be competitive all weekend – and be strong on Sunday.”
Finally, we had chance to hear from Franco Morbidelli after he came home top Independent at Sepang. And it’s his first race on the Yamaha at Valencia. “In Japan and Malaysia I thought we had the speed to fight for the podium and we really don’t know why but in the race I struggled, I started to struggle a lot generally with lack of speed. So here in Valencia will be another important occasion to have good practices and try and have a good weekend until the race – and then try and maintain the practice speed on Sunday.”
Sunday sees the curtain go up for the final premier class race of the season at 14:00 (GMT +1) local time, with the Team Championship, third overall and top Independent Team rider still up for grabs – alongside another 25 points and a goodbye from Jorge Lorenzo. Don’t miss it.
Riders on Lorenzo: rival, and idol? -

5-time World Champion Jorge Lorenzo announces retirement
The Spaniard announces his retirement from MotoGP after 18 seasons of stunning racing

Dorna’s Carmelo Ezpeleta applauds as Jorge Lorenzo starts the Press Conference to announce his retirement after 18 seasons. A MotoGP image Valencia, 14 Nov 2019: After 18 seasons in the MotoGP paddock, five-time World Champion Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) has announced his retirement. The Spaniard was joined by Dorna Sports CEO Carmelo Ezpeleta in a Press Conference at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia to break the news, bringing the curtain down on an incredible career.
Lorenzo made his debut in the 125cc World Championship in 2002, missing the first day of his first Grand Prix because he was still too young. But his 15th birthday fell on qualifying day and the young Spaniard headed out to do the first laps of what would go on to become one of the most successful careers of all time. By his fourth race he had scored his first points, and his best finish that year was seventh, taken in Rio de Janeiro. A year later in Rio, he would win his first Grand Prix.
From there the momentum would grow. Three wins and four further podiums in the 125cc World Championship the following year saw him finish fourth overall, setting solid foundations for a move onto 250cc machinery in 2005. There he took six podiums as a rookie, and his first titles were just around the corner as he began 2006 with back to back wins. He’d wrack up another six by the end of the year, taking his very first World Championship after a stunning season that announced him as a serious force to be reckoned with. In 2007 he stayed in the class to defend the crown and did so, this time with an incredible nine wins. From there, MotoGP™ beckoned with Yamaha.
There are few better ways to make a splash in the premier class than taking pole for your first race, and that’s exactly what Lorenzo did – setting a new lap record that stood for ten years. He was on the podium in both of his first MotoGP™ races too before taking to the top step for the first time on only his third appearance. That was at Estoril, as he beat two men he’d continue to compete with for years to come: Dani Pedrosa and Valentino Rossi, then his teammate. Injury struggles and crashes would mar the rest of 2008 for Lorenzo as Rossi lifted the crown, but 2009 saw the Spaniard bounce back and make his first run at defeating the then eight-time World Champion on the other side of the garage. Rossi was victorious, but 2010 would turn the tables.
Lorenzo took podiums in the first 12 races of that year, only one of which was a third place. Seven were wins. By Malaysia, it was match point and the number 99 wrapped it up with another podium, becoming a MotoGP™ World Champion for the first time. He also rounded out the season with another two wins to make it nine victories overall in one of the most impressive seasons ever put together.
2011 was more difficult. As great rival Casey Stoner took back to the top, the bad luck that had hit Rossi the year before hit Lorenzo, and the Spaniard ceded the title fight after a crash at Phillip Island. But 2012 saw him back in the running from the off as he won the season opener, and he took podiums in every single race bar two – including six wins. At Phillip Island, he was crowned a two-time MotoGP™ World Champion, and then came 2013: a new era in the premier class.
In 2013, Stoner retired, Rossi returned to Yamaha and Marc Marquez made his debut in MotoGP™. The year became the reigning Champion vs the rookie, with the battle going all the way down to Valencia and the season finale. Marquez would ultimately come out on top, but Lorenzo would do everything he could to take him on – and some career-defining moments and races were created on the way.
The journey to the final round wasn’t a smooth one for the number 99. The first hurdle was a collarbone broken on Thursday at the TT Circuit Assen. Lorenzo had already put in a number of iron man-esque performances in his career, but this was another level. After having the collarbone plated after the crash, the number 99 returned to the track to race – and came fifth. It was a stunning statement of intent that he wouldn’t go down without a fight.
The next hurdle, however, came soon after. Another big crash at the Sachsenring damaged the collarbone once again and Lorenzo was forced to forfeit the round, but he was back by Laguna Seca and back on the podium at Indianapolis. Silverstone then staged one of the greatest races of all time as he and Marquez traded provisional pole on Saturday and duelled it out to the line on Sunday. Lorenzo was a man on a mission and a stunning move from the number 99 put him back on the top step and back in the game. Drama for Marquez in Australia saw the rookie disqualified for making a mandatory pit stop at the wrong time – and as the number 93 took home a 0, Lorenzo won. By the season finale, all Lorenzo could do to try and take the crown was win the race, and that he did. It wasn’t quite enough, but the season was an instant classic.
2014 saw Marquez hit top gear, with Lorenzo only winning his first race of the season at Aragon and the momentum remaining with the number 93. But 2015 would flip the form book once again as Lorenzo became the only man to beat Marquez to the crown so far – and the only other name on the trophy since 2011. The season was Lorenzo vs Rossi and one of the most dramatic ever, although it was Marquez and Rossi in the spotlight for a number of incidents. The biggest of which was at Sepang as the two clashed, leaving the Italian with the penalty of starting the season finale from the back of the grid. And Lorenzo? He would aim to take his third premier class crown from pole, and did so with his seventh win of the season.
2016 was another slightly tougher year, but the Spaniard once again took a slew of wins and podiums. And the last win of the season at Valencia was also his last with Yamaha as nine seasons together came to an end after 44 wins, 107 podiums and 39 pole positions. From now, Lorenzo would race in red…
His switch to Ducati was tougher at first, although a first podium wasn’t long in coming as he took third on home turf at Jerez. Flashes of speed shone through but it wasn’t till Aragon that Lorenzo was back on the rostrum, taking another third place, and he was close to the win at a wet Sepang later in the season. A warning shot for his rivals came at the same venue at the start of 2018 as Lorenzo smoked the lap record in testing.
It would take a few more races of speed that the ‘Spartan’ struggled to convert into podiums before a switch suddenly seemed to flick – and what a place for everything to come together. Mugello, Ducati’s home Grand Prix, had seen Lorenzo master its curves on many a Sunday. And in 2018 he did so once again for an emotional first win in red, destroying the opposition. Was this the start of something? Another win at Catalunya said it may well be.
Another of Lorenzo’s best races came later in the season as he won a stunning showdown at the Red Bull Ring in Austria, taking victory from Marquez by only just over a tenth. His final win so far, it was also another rider-defining display of excellence.
After crashes at Aragon and Buriram, injury would then strike again, however, and a difficult period followed. For 2019 though, Lorenzo was back and took on another new challenge as he moved to partner Marquez at Repsol Honda and once again began to adapt to another new bike. But injury struggles struck again, and broken vertebrae interrupted the season, necessitating a long recovery. Although the five-time World Champion once again showed his mettle as he returned to race, Lorenzo has now announced his retirement – bowing out on home turf, and one of the venues he has ruled more than many.
18 seasons, 68 wins, 152 podiums, 69 pole positions and 37 fastest laps: that’s five-time World Champion Jorge Lorenzo, one of the true greats. He will also be inducted as a MotoGP™ Legend next season at the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez.

The packed Press Conference room in Valencia on Thursday. Photos by MotoGP Jorge Lorenzo: “Thank you very much to everyone who accepted my invitation and attended this press conference, it really means a lot to me and makes me very happy. I always thought there are four significant days in the career of a rider. Your first race, your first win, your first Championship and then the day you retire. Well, as you may imagine, I’m here to tell you this day has arrived for me. I want to announce this will be my last race in MotoGP, and that at the end of this race I will retire from professional racing.
“I was 3 years old when everything started. Almost 30 years of complete dedication to this sport, my sport. The ones who worked with me, know how much of a perfectionist I am, how much hard work and intensity I put into this. Being like this requires a high level of motivation, that’s why after nine unforgettable years with Yamaha (without a doubt the most glorious of my career) I felt I needed a change if I wanted to maintain this high commitment to my sport. Moving to Ducati gave me that big boost I needed and even though the results were bad I used that extra motivation as fuel to not give up and finally win that special race at Mugello, in front of all the Ducati fans. After that, when I signed for Honda I got similar feeling, achieving one of the dreams of every rider: to be an official HRC factory rider.
“Unfortunately, injuries came soon to play an important role in my season, being unable to ride in normal physical conditions. This, plus a bike that never felt natural to me, makes races very difficult. Anyway, I never lost the patience and I kept fighting, just thinking that was a simply matter of time and that after all things would get into the right place. But, as I started to see some light I had this bad crash at the Montmelo test, and some weeks later that ugly one in Assen. At that point I had to admit, that when I stopped rolling into the gravel, the first thought that came into my mind was ‘What am I doing here? Is this really worth it? I’m done with it.’ Some days later after reflecting a lot about my life and career I decided to give it a try. I wanted to be sure I was not making an early decision.
“The truth is from that crash, the hill became too high for me, and even if I try I couldn’t find the motivation and patience to be able to keep climbing it. You know, I love this sport, I love to ride, but above all things I love to win. I understood, that if I’m not able to fight for something big, to fight for the title or at least to fight for victories I cannot find the motivation to keep going specially at this stage of my career. I realised that my goal with Honda, at least in a short time, was not realistic. I have to say I feel very sorry for Honda, specially for Alberto, who really was the one who trusted me and gave me that opportunity. I remember that day in Montmelo when we meet and I told him “Don’t make a mistake signing the wrong rider Alberto, trust me and you will not regret it’. Sadly, I have to say that I disappointed him, so I did to Takeo, Kuwata, Nomura San and all my team, who I have to say they always treat treat me in a exceptional way. However, I really feel this is the best decision for me and for the team, Jorge Lorenzo and Honda cannot be here just to score some points!
“Coming back to my beautiful and successful career, I have always said I’m a very lucky guy. Sometimes I feel a bit like the movie ‘One in a Billion’, the documentary about the only Indian who ever came to the NBA. During my career I raced against dozens and dozens of exceptional riders of my generation, some of them even more talented than I am. Some of them have not been as successful as me, but specially most of them did not even make it to the World Championship, having to go to work in normal jobs. That’s why I feel so lucky to be able to achieve much more than I ever imagined I could achieve when I first started. And yes, it’s true, I always worked very hard, but without being at the right place at the right time, and especially without the help of many people who worked with me through my career, would have been impossible for me to achieve what I have done.
“That’s why I would like to thank sincerely all of this people. Specially Carmelo and Dorna for the treatment and for making MotoGP so great. Derbi, Aprilia, Yamaha, Ducati, Honda, specially Giampiero Sachi, Gigi Dall’Igna, Lin Jarvis and Alberto Puig. Obviously my mother for bringing me to this world. My father, for showing me the passion for this sport and all the sacrifice he has made for me during these years. My fans and my fan club for the unconditional love through all these years. Thank you to all the people of work with me as a personal team, with specially mention to Albert Valera, for being always honest and loyal. So this is it, with all my heart, I really wish you all the best, professionally and personally. Thanks for all.”
The grid came out in force Lorenzo embraces Dorna CEO Carmelo Ezpeleta Lorenzo and Alberto Puig, his Repsol Honda Team Principal Lorenzo with Lin Jarvis, Managing Director of Yamaha Motor Racing & Team Principal of Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Lorenzo With Paolo Ciabatti, Ducati Corse Sporting Director Lorenzo with Luigi Dall’Igna, Ducati Corse General Manager


























