Title contender Pedrosa crashes out
MotoGP: Steve Parrish on Dani Pedrosa's rotten weekend
Dani Pedrosa must be wondering just what he did to deserve his shocker of a race day in Misano.
After qualifying in pole position, Pedrosa went into Sunday's San Marino Grand Prix just 13 points behind title rival Jorge Lorenzo and very much the man in form after winning the previous two races.
But after a disastrous run of events, Pedrosa leaves a huge 38 points behind Lorenzo with only five races remaining.
MotoGP standings
- Jorge Lorenzo (Spa): 270 points
- Dani Pedrosa (Spa): 232
- Casey Stoner (Aus): 186
- Andrea Dovizioso (Ita): 163
- Cal Crutchlow (GB): 122
Maybe he is destined to always be the runner-up, as you have to now make Lorenzo a huge favourite to regain the crown he won in 2010.
We have been saying all season that this championship could come down to who makes the fewest mistakes - and while it wasn't his fault he didn't finish, Pedrosa has been punished in lethal style by Lorenzo.
Pedrosa ultimately crashed out on lap one when he was bowled off by Hector Barbera, but his troubles started before that in one of the most bizarre starts to a race I have ever seen.
First of all the original start was cancelled because of Karel Abraham stalling, which is a very rare occurrence, and then Pedrosa had a problem with his bike on the grid. It all conspired to produce disaster.
His team managed to solve the problem with his front brakes, but not before pushing his bike off the grid.
Misano MotoGP: Top three riders
Once you do that, you have to start from the back of the grid. Whereas, given how quickly they then seemed to resolve the problem, you suspect that if they had persisted a few seconds longer on the grid, he may still have been able to start from the front.
That, of course, would have meant he would not have been mingling with Barbera in midfield and I truly think that Pedrosa would have won this weekend without that crash.
He looked good, he is in terrific form and he could have been looking at a single-figure deficit in the championship after this race.
As it is, the lead is now massive for Lorenzo. It means he can finish second and even if Pedrosa wins every race it will not be enough.
Dani Pedrosa in MotoGP
- 2006: Two wins, eight podiums, 215 points, 5th overall
- 2007: Two wins, eight podiums, 242 points, 2nd overall
- 2008: Two wins, 11 podiums, 249 points, 2nd overall
- 2009: Two wins, 11 podiums, 234 points, 3rd overall
- 2010: Four wins, nine podiums, 245 points, 2nd overall
- 2011: Three wins, nine podiums, 219 points, 4th overall
It is a real shame for the championship.
Valentino Rossi did a good job to come second - sending the fans at his home race mad - and I'm hoping he has turned a corner here.
We have not seen him so close to the front for practically two years and he had that real desire back in his eyes.
It's a good sign for the rest of the season and also for next year, when he will be on the same bike as Lorenzo and may be back challenging more regularly.
With Casey Stoner retiring, the sport needs an on-song Rossi and maybe we saw the first signs this weekend that he can be a force again.
Steve Parrish was talking to BBC Sport's Tom Rostance
Comments
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Comment number 25.
cra1918th September 2012 - 17:09
Is it just me or did everyone else miss the interview with dani's crew chief, whom stated "because dani fell behind the safety car on the warm up lap (2nd one) he therefore had to start at the back of the grid... the tyre warmer got caught in the mudguard and that only got released after they pulled the bike off the grid"
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Comment number 24.
Sportsmad1918th September 2012 - 11:49
Pedrosa has been so consistent this season and overall, has performed better than Stoner, which is an achievement in itself. Even though Stoner has had more spectacular rides, it is Pedrosa who is leading Honda's challenge. We should only judge Pedrosa to be the "nearly man" at the end of his career. He is with Honda for at least the next two years and don't rule him out this season just yet.
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Comment number 23.
daggersfan317th September 2012 - 15:57
One more point, as Rach1985 pointed out, Lorenzo got a punt through no fault of his own at Assen but turned that fury into determination. Pedrosa for once doesnt go into the race following a heavy fall with an injury.
Lorenzo is still an engine down isnt he? Im pretty sure that despite going easy on his bike yesterday hell still have problems before Valencia juggling his engines.
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Comment number 22.
daggersfan317th September 2012 - 15:47
@15, Italian or not, one thing which Andrea has, and Cal has noticeably been short of, is patience.
Dovi waits for gaps, but at Estoril, Sachsenring and now Misano Cals been way too eager with the throttle.
And the Ducati doesnt appear to be for the impatient. If you could pick a two rider team to take development forwards, Nicky would be top of your list followed by a man like Andrea.
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Comment number 21.
HaiRai17th September 2012 - 13:38
@5. I think Marco would have smiled a whole lot more if it had been Lorenzo who had been taken out. It was Lorenzo and Marco who squared up verbally in front of the worlds media....
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Comments 5 of 25