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Honda hero Valentino Rossi (Repsol Honda Team RC211V) heads to South
America this week ready to secure his fourth World Championship
in just seven years. The remarkable 23-year
old has dominated this year's first-ever
MotoGP series, winning nine of the first 11 races, and carries
an 89-point advantage into Saturday's Rio Grand Prix. If he wins
the race, with sole title rival Tohru Ukawa
(Repsol Honda Team RC211V) fourth or lower,
Rossi will be crowned World Champion. The Rio omens are good for
Rossi. The Italian has been victorious on his
last four visits to Jacarepagua, in fact he's only once failed to win at
the circuit, during his debut 125 GP campaign way back in 1996.
He won the '97 Rio 125 GP on his way to that
year's 125 World Championship, he won the '99
250 GP to clinch that year's 250 crown, he scored his first dry-track
500 success at Rio the following year and last November he won
the season-ending Rio 500 GP, having already
wrapped up to the last-ever 500 title. So he
obviously gets on well with the bumpy and slippery track.
"For sure it would be good to win the title in Rio because it's a
great place to party!" smiles Rossi, who
enjoyed a riotous title-winning celebration at
a Rio yacht club after his 250 victory three years ago. "But
the only important thing is to win the title, 'when' doesn't
matter. I think we can have a good weekend
because we sorted a few problems at Estoril
two weeks back. Since Brno we'd been having some braking trouble,
it was difficult to get the bike stopped but that's fixed now, so
I'm enjoying riding the bike again."
Rossi's overall Honda record is phenomenal. Since joining the marque
at the start of the 2000 500 season, he has
won 22 premier-class GPs from 43 starts. But
winning again on Saturday may not be enough to hand him the
title with the Pacific, Malaysian, Australian and Valencia GPs
still to go. Team-mate Ukawa is also pretty
handy at Jacarepagua, situated close to the
South Atlantic coastline 20km outside the city of Rio de Janeiro, and if
the Japanese finishes in the top three, Rossi will have to wait a
few weeks longer for his coronation. Ukawa
took pole position for last year's Rio 500 GP,
when, like Rossi, he was riding a Honda NSR500, though he crashed out
of the race. And he's finished on the Rio 250 GP podium on three
occasions, in 1999 and 2000, when he finished
second, and in 1997, when he was third. Also,
Ukawa is on fine form at the moment, finishing third at the last
three GPs, despite suffering the effects of two big accidents.
"I want to continue the good podium run I'm having at the moment,"
says Ukawa who is most concerned with
defending second overall from Max Biaggi
(Yamaha), who is just 12 points further back. "My third place at Estoril
increased the gap between me and Biaggi and I need to keep it
that way for the rest of the season. I like
the Rio track, I've had three 250 podiums
there and last year I scored my first-ever 500 pole at the circuit. This
year I must make sure I don't crash again, I can't afford to lose
the points."
If Rossi's focus is aimed at securing the MotoGP title, Brazilian
Alex Barros (West Honda Pons NSR500) is
concerned only with winning his home GP for
the first time. Barros has been contesting World Championship events in
Brazil since 1988, scoring his first home-country points the
following year when he finished tenth in the
Brazilian 250 GP, then held at Goiania. In '92
he took eighth in the Brazilian 500 GP at Interlagos. And two years ago
he came within 0.970 seconds of winning his home GP when he
chased Rossi over the line at Jacarepagua. But
the 32-year old from Sao Paulo knows that he
will have a difficult job trying to stay with Rossi's RCV V5
four-stroke.
"It will be another difficult race for us, because Rio is a fast
track," says the top two-stroke MotoGP rider
who hopes to have his first race on an RCV at
the Pacific GP on October 6. "The four-strokes are much faster than
the 500s in a straight line, there's no way we can even hold
their slipstream, so they'll have a big
advantage down the main straight. I think we
can be faster through the curves, I know I'm really quick through the
final section of the circuit, and I know I'm very strong on the
brakes, which is useful at the end of the big
straight. But it's a case of weighing up the
time we gain and the time we lose, and overall the four-strokes will
be faster. The only time we really have an advantage is on
Friday, when the four-strokes are starting
from zero on set-up, because this is their first
time at the track."
Daijiro Kato (Fortuna Honda Gresini RC211V) aims to get back on track
at Rio after recording a no-score at the
Portuguese GP two weeks ago. Racing an RCV V5
for only the second time, after he'd finished a brilliant second
in his Brno debut, Kato slid out of the rain-lashed GP. "I want
it to be dry for Rio!" smiles the reigning 250
World Champion who won last year's damp Rio
250 GP. "Estoril was difficult for me because I've had so little
time on the bike, it was wet for much of the second day of
practice and then it rained heavily for the
race. If the conditions are better at Rio I
believe I can fight up front, just like I did at Brno. Rio is never an
easy track because it's slippery even when
it's dry, especially if the weather is hot.
Riding the RCV there will be very interesting!"
Barros' team-mate Loris Capirossi (West Honda Pons NSR500) also
tumbled at Estoril and he too hopes to be back
in the points at Rio. "But I think we will
have trouble staying with the four-strokes," says Capirossi, who has
only once finished on the podium in Brazil, when he took third
place in the 1999 Rio 250 GP. "Maybe the
weather may intervene like last year, because
the confusion could help us close the gap on the four-strokes."
Tetsuya Harada (Pramac Honda NSR500) expects a challenging weekend at
a track that has never been kind to him. The
Japanese finished outside the top ten in his
two previous premier-class outings at Rio, in 1999 and 2000,
and never did better than second in his various 250 rides at the
track. "Much will depend on the conditions,
sometimes Rio is very slippery, other times
it's just a little bit slippery," he says. "This will be my first
time there with a V4 500 and we'll need all the set-up time we
can get, so I hope the track isn't too dirty
when we start practice on Thursday, and I hope
it stays dry."
Jurgen van den Goorbergh (Kanemoto Racing Honda NSR500) had been
hoping for his best result of the year in the
rain at Estoril but he was sidelined by a
quickshifter problem after running third in the early stages. "That's
sometimes how things turn out you're all set for your best
result, then something tiny goes wrong," says
the Dutchman. "Rio will be interesting for us
because it's got a strange surface, but Bridgestone have been making
some good strides forward, and I'm sure they'll have something
good for the conditions."
In the 250s, Robby Rolfo (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) plans to put
the memory of a miserable Portuguese GP well
and truly behind him. The Italian was given a
stop-and-go penalty for allegedly jumping the start, but came
back superbly to finish fourth, just 23 seconds down on winner
Fonsi Nieto (Aprilia). Without the
controversial penalty, he would surely have won the
race. "I was robbed, there's no way I jumped the start," says
Rolfo. "For Rio I want to get the
best-possible result to erase that memory. I need
maximum points, though it's going to be tough for me to catch
Nieto in second overall."
Rolfo's team-mate Emilio Alzamora (Fortuna Honda Gresini NSR250) had
a great race in Portugal, taking sixth place
in his comeback ride following surgery to
correct 'arm pump' problems. "The surgery seems to have worked
really well," says the Spaniard. "So now I'm just looking forward
to getting back to riding like normal. Rio is
always a complicated weekend because the
asphalt is in poor condition, but it's the same for everyone,
of course. If we can work well during the first two days of
practice, I'm confident I can get a good race
result."
Daniel Pedrosa (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) comes to
Rio holding third overall in the 125 World
Championship, just five points behind
second-placed Manuel Poggiali (Gilera) and a further 23 behind
series leader Arnaud Vincent (Aprilia). The 16-year old took a
brave tenth-place finish at Estoril, despite a
mid-race fall, but had hoped for better after
taking pole position for the fourth time this year. "We got
the bike perfect for the dry but then it rained for the race,
that's the second time that's happened this
year!" he smiles. "Rio is quite difficult
because it's so bumpy, but we got the bike working well at Estoril.
It'll be an important race because I've not
given up on the title yet. I just hope it
doesn't rain again because I don't like riding in the rain."
Team-mate Joan Olive (Telefonica Movistar Jr Team Honda RS125R) is
chasing a place in the World Championship top
ten. A no-scorer at the past two GPs, Olive
knows he needs a good points haul at the next few races. "Luck was
against me again at Estoril, maybe it'll be better at Rio where I
had one of my best rides last year," says
Olive.
GP racing stays out of Europe for the next month, with the Pacific GP
at Motegi, Japan, followed by the Malaysian
and Australian GPs on the following two
weekends. The 2002 season concludes back in Europe, at
Valencia in Spain, on November 3.
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