Will a Lorenzo-Ducati partnership bear fruit?

By Trent Price / Roar Guru

Jorge Lorenzo has closed a deal that will see him as a factory Ducati rider in 2017.

Or so said Suzuki team boss Davide Brivio, who presumably leaked the news of the move knowing full well that Yamaha were attempting to poach his young rider Maverick Vinales to replace Lorenzo.

Long-time Ducati sponsors Phillip Morris and Audi have been pushing for Lorenzo for some time now, eager for the team to start winning races (and championships again). But for a rider as hungry as Lorenzo, would jumping into bed with Ducati be a smart move?

On the upside, Lorenzo would relish a garage environment without Valentino Rossi and the inevitable Doohan versus Crivillé – like politics that come with it. But in the absence of a Stoner or Valentino, Ducati now have the unenviable task of dropping either Andrea Dovizioso or Andrea Iannone – both stars on the rise.

Plans to renew Andrea Iannone’s contract before the start of the European season had reportedly stalled after the Italian’s last lap gaffe a week ago in Argentina; taking himself and teammate Dovizioso out when double podium was in the offing.

That might make their decision a little easier, but Dovizioso would still be an interesting proposition for Lorenzo, especially when you consider the Italian/Spanish jingo being hurled around during last season’s championship.

The other hurdle Lorenzo faces is what type of bike he’ll be getting when he walks into Ducati, but the team made a very shrewd decision in 2014 by entering all of its bikes in MotoGP’s ‘Open’ class instead of as a ‘Factory’ team.

Under Open rules, Ducati were then able to use 12 unsealed engines, so could therefore make bore and stroke adjustments usually banned under the Factory regulations. This meant that Ducati could evaluate different engines, electronics and chassis configurations – speeding up development at an exponential rate.

Rossi may have endured two very tough and very public seasons at Ducati, but admits the Italian manufacturer is beginning to find some form.

“I think Ducati is very strong” said Rossi after Argentina. “ They are fast from the beginning to the end. They have, like we know, a very good top speed – but also in a corner they are very fast.

“I think Iannone, if he hadn’t crashed, would stay [out front] until the end.”

Lorenzo has often been accused of not being on the level of Rossi or Marc Marquez when the bike is less than perfect, but will dominate a race if everything is in equilibrium as Honda HRC team principal Shuhei Nakamoto explains.

“Most riders will say ‘the bike is doing this and I want to ride like this. Marquez is different” says Nakamoto.

“We would run two bikes with different set-ups. Marc would tell us which one he liked or didn’t like, but the lap-time was very similar. We couldn’t find any difference in the data, so we went to watch track-side. Then we understood, because the riding style was different. Marc would always adapt to the machine. Always searching for the best style to produce the lap-time.”

“Jorge Lorenzo is different. His riding is like a Swiss watch. Every lap is exactly the same. Then once he finds a good set-up he is unbeatable. With Marc, even if the machine is 100 per cent, he’ll always be pushing. With MotoGP tyres you always lose the grip. Valentino Rossi is very, very good at managing the whole race. At the end of the race he is always fighting at the top. He’s not like Marc and not like Jorge.”

During Casey Stoner’s time at Ducati, he often complained that the bike “would be different every week, so it needed to be ridden in a different way almost every weekend”.

This certainly doesn’t auger well if you subscribe to Nakamoto’s assessment of Lorenzo’s abilities, but there appear to be a few more strings to Lorenzo’s bow than most give him credit for.

The current Michelins have been a troublesome beast for most riders this year, especially going into corners where the tyre requires a leap of faith that tends to spook most riders. Lorenzo however appears to be pushing harder on entry; having somehow found a ‘eureka’ moment that no-one else dares to investigate and thus has reaped the benefits in lap time.

With Lorenzo still expanding his repertoire and Ducati finding form, the stars may be well and truly aligning.

The Crowd Says:

2016-04-30T07:05:26+00:00

Gaz

Guest


Dovisioso and up and comer? Seriously, what is the experience of this journalist when it comes to MotoGP? Dovi is older than Lorenzo and has been in MotoGP since 2008 having recorded 1 race win (wet British GP) whilst at Repsol Honda with Stoner and Pedrosa. Dove is no up and coming rider, he has been there done that already.

2016-04-17T12:52:24+00:00

John Hill

Guest


A dream team for Ducati Stoner and Lorenzo

2016-04-17T08:12:28+00:00

Jonnygp

Guest


I find it even more amazing that Rossi was not disqualified for kicking Marquez of his bike, personally I believe that Rossi didn't deserve last years title. I am not a huge Lorenzo fan but I was happy he won it. As for your anti Spanish rant, Spain have huge numbers of Juniors in Road Racing and it is no wonder they have lots racing at the top level in Moto GP, 2, 3. The Italians have quite a few as well as the sport is just as big there but I am not too sure there is that much corrupt going on and the Spanish certainly are not ruining the sport, I feel its as healthy as I have seen it in years, We have probably 5 or 6 riders that could potentially win any race at the moment. I JUST WAN'T MORE AUSSIES IN IT LOL

2016-04-16T05:30:08+00:00

Junior

Guest


Because he was slower than marquez but fast then lorenzo

2016-04-15T08:46:18+00:00

Speed Dealer

Guest


Why wasn't Rossi good enough to get past Marquez?

AUTHOR

2016-04-13T10:19:22+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


Stoner could get the tricky Ducati differential to work where Rossi couldn't - primarily due to his dirtbike experience. Bike is a very different beast now. Standard electronics have also levelled the playing field.

2016-04-13T09:26:00+00:00

scrubbydog

Guest


Lorenzo to Ducati will be good for the sport, but what amazes me about Lorenzo is how could he be happy to win a title in the way that he did last year.... it was plainly obvious to everyone that if it wasn't for Marquez impeding Rossi then Lorenzo would not have won the title! how can this guy walk amongst his peers and hold his head up? the same goes for Marquez.... simply amazing. Another gripe I have is that motogp is meant to be a global sport, but we have this ridiculous situation where nearly half the field is Spanish, most of the top rides go to Spanish riders, the major sponsors are Spanish, the organising body of motogpo is Spanish and Spain holds more motogp races than any other nation! is it any wonder that in recent years all the world champs have been Spanish? this is a ridiculous situation and as an outsider It would appear that the sport is being corrupted and ruined by the Spanish, last season had the potential to be one of the greatest seasons ever and it was all going so well up until the final three races when we saw the Spaniards basically team up to take out the non spanish championship leader in order to ensure a Spanish champ, absolutely pathetic!

2016-04-13T08:06:50+00:00

DT

Guest


Hi Jacko I was wondering more from an ego POV about Casey Stoner. I couldn't see Rossi wanting to take Stoner's setup advice on a bike, and likewise think Lorenzo's ego is such that, if he started winning races on a Ducati Stoner had helped develop…it might be too much to bear

2016-04-13T04:01:05+00:00

Jacko

Guest


I would love to see another manufacturer really fight for top position. They have certainly been closing the gap on Honda and Yamaha but havnt quite got there yet. The tracks we have seen so far this year have suited their speed but they need the handling to continue to improve for them to be successful on some of the tighter euro circuits. If Lorenzo is signed then I dont see how that will effect Stoners role in the setup as he is only a test rider and his job starts when the big boys finish.

2016-04-13T02:51:47+00:00

DT

Guest


What role for Stoner as test rider if Lorenzo goes to Ducati, I wonder? Especially given the ill feeling a couple of years back when #27 was crook and the Italian manufacturer was trying to lure Jorge.

AUTHOR

2016-04-13T02:21:38+00:00

Trent Price

Roar Guru


Bit like antlers aren't they!

2016-04-12T20:47:07+00:00

nordster

Guest


He is more reliable than the others they have at the minute. Argentina was diabolical.... Just hope he doesnt graze himself on those winglets! They're gonna take someone's eye out i tells ya!

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