News 16 Nov 2016

Vinales fastest in Yamaha debut as Ducati's Lorenzo also shines

Timesheets tight on opening day of 2017 MotoGP testing at Valencia.

Source: Supplied.

Source: Supplied.

Maverick Viñales (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP) has topped the first test day for the 2017 MotoGP season, up to speed quickly before then stealing the top spot from new yet veteran teammate Valentino Rossi as the day wore on.

With a 1m30.930s, Viñales beat his nine-time world champion teammate by only 0.020s on the first day, after Rossi led the timesheets for some time.

The man he replaced, Jorge Lorenzo, was third quickest in his first outing with the Ducati Team, only a tenth off the top and ultra-impressive aboard the Desmosedici.

As the lights went out to signify the start of the first of 2017 testing, somewhere in the midst of a huddle of photographers there was a black-liveried 2016 Ducati preparing to meet its new rider – Lorenzo. Quick to exit the pits once action was underway, the 99 had a new 99 on the bike, with double devil horns.

After a few laps well off the pace, Lorenzo was soon up to speed, smiling and making adjustments in the pits in good company of test rider Casey Stoner.

One of the biggest stories of the day had a happy first chapter, as the number 99 settled into the top ten around six tenths down and then went for a final blast around the lengthening shadows of the circuit on the 2016 bike to go red in the first two sectors and cross the line in P3, only 0.122s down. He then did a short run on the 2017 bike he is expected to run tomorrow.

New teammate Andrea Dovizioso was running the 2016 bike in full red and the 2017 in a full black testing livery, ending the day in fifth with a 1m31.31s. ‘DesmoDovi’ was also one of the riders testing new front forks from Öhlins, alongside Rossi and Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team).

Marquez spent his first day in defence of his 2016 world championship in third on the timesheets after proving an early leader in the morning. A best of 1m31.102s after 53 laps saw him slot into the timesheets just 0.050s behind Ducati’s Lorenzo.

Marquez’ teammate Dani Pedrosa also led the timesheets for a window in the middle part of the day, doing 42 laps despite his ongoing recovery from a broken collarbone and registering a best of 1m31.306s as he closed out the top ten.

There were a number of victims of turn 10 on day one, including Movistar Yamaha’s Valentino Rossi falling in the morning, as well as Red Bull KTM Factory racing’s Pol Espargaro and Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Andrea Iannone.

Iannone impressed on his first day at Suzuki, fourth for much of the day before the crash and eventually ending up seventh on the timesheets, just behind fellow crasher Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda).

Crutchlow, as well as riding his LCR Honda, got a taste of a full Repsol Honda machine with LCR livery, ending the session with a best of 1m31.156s after 69 laps over the day. He also suffered a crash at turn 14, the same place he crashed out of the 2016 season finale.

Compatriot Scott Redding (Octo Pramac Yakhnich) finished the day in eighth and three tenths off the pace, completing 71 laps, with teammate for the test, Michele Pirro, in P13 as he sits in for Danilo Petrucci, who has returned to Italy for family reasons and is missing the test.

Hector Barbera and Loris Baz began Avintia Racing’s 2017 with a solid performance, with Barbera in ninth and 0.020s ahead of Pedrosa, three tenths down on P1.

The Spaniard was on the 2016 Ducati – the bike he raced in red when replacing Andrea Iannone for two races this season – with Baz a further second back in P15 as he looks to get back to full fitness after a tough season.

Aprilia Racing Team Gresini saw their new arrivals start to settle in. Aleix Espargaro ended the first day in 14th and 1.2s back from first, after also proving a key member of the top 10 for much of the first few hours of the session.

Sam Lowes, who does have some previous experience of the Aprilia machine following in-season tests, began his MotoGP career in earnest with a slightly more difficult day. He registered a 1m33.359s as his best lap over 63, then crashed out in the last minutes of the day, but walked away unscathed.

Jack Miller (Estrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS) was P11 in an impressive return to the track and only half a second back from the front, with teammate Tito Rabat putting in the most laps at 72 and finishing up P18 on 1m32.578s, a few tenths off his best from Q2 during the Valencia GP.

Alvaro Bautista had a happy return to Aspar with the Pull&Bear sponsored team, closing out day one in P12 and seven tenths off P1, the last man on the timesheets within a second of Viñales.

Monster Yamaha Tech 3’s new line-up, Moto2 graduates Jonas Folger and Johann Zarco, had a good first day on track as they gradually improved laptimes, down to around a second and a half off the fastest of the day by the end of their first taste of MotoGP and both incredibly split by only 0.015 in P16 and P17.

With Iannone ending the day on a 1m31.165s on his first impressive showing for Suzuki, new teammate Alex Rins also had a good first day as the rookie chipped away at the laptime in his first experience of MotoGP.

Completing 71 laps on his first day in the premier class, the white-liveried number 42 Suzuki got down into the 1m32s by 4:00pm, ending the day with a 1m32.811s.

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing duo Pol Espargaro and Bradley Smith debuted in their new colours in 19th and 20th respectively, with Espargaro one of the fallers at turn 10, but ending the day two tenths quicker than his recovering teammate as the pair get to grips with the switch to KTM.

Francesco ‘Pecco’ Bagnaia was another on track and completed the timesheets, getting a ride on the Aspar Ducati after winning a bet in the team that he could test the MotoGP bike if he won two races in Moto3 this season with Pull&Bear Aspar Mahindra.

2017 MotoGP Valencia test Tuesday times:
1. Maverick Viñales 1m30.930s
2. Valentino Rossi 1m30.950s
3. Jorge Lorenzo 1m31.052s
4. Marc Marquez 1m31.102s
5. Andrea Dovizioso 1m31.131s
6. Cal Crutchlow 1m31.156s
7. Andrea Iannone 1m31.165s
8. Scott Redding 1m31.242s
9. Hector Barbera 1m31.286s
10. Dani Pedrosa 1m31.306s
11. Jack Miller 1m31.477s
12. Alvaro Bautista 1m31.674s
13. Michele Pirro 1m32.068s
14. Aleix Espargaro 1m32.177s
15. Loris Baz 1m32.315s
16. Jonas Folger 1m32.450s
17. Johann Zarco 1m32.462s
18. Tito Rabat 1m32.578s
19. Pol Espargaro 1m32.613s
20. Bradley Smith 1m32.806s
21. Alex Rins 1m32.811s
22. Eugene Laverty 1m32.935s
23. Karel Abraham 1m33.231s
24. Sam Lowes 1m33.359s
25. Takuya Tsuda 1m34.110s
26. Francesco Bagnaia 1m36.940s

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