Kawasaki Day One Report
Dramatically fluctuating
weather conditions marked the start of the
Australian Grand Prix today as MotoGP
returned to Phillip Island for the 16th
round of the world championship.
The first practice session,
held after a prolonged morning downpour, saw
the riders head out on to the 4.45km track
with Kawasaki's Randy de Puniet and Anthony
West showing early promise ahead of Sunday's
27 lap race. Both were soon featuring at or
near the top of the time sheets before the
heavens opened again, prompting virtually
the whole field to return to the pits to sit
out the worst of it.
The afternoon session was run
on a dry track and de Puniet took his 800cc
Ninja ZX-RR to fifth fastest on combined
times by the end of the hour, fractionally
behind Valentino Rossi with a gap between
them of a mere 0.062 seconds. The
26-year-old Frenchman's time was also within
a second of the day's leading rider,
newly-crowned world champion, Casey Stoner.
Encountering only a few,
minor problems during practice, de Puniet
ended the day in positive mood. Already
confident in the dry-weather tyres he used,
he hopes that during the rain forecast for
tomorrow, he'll be able to define a wet set
up too, leaving him fully prepared for the
race.
Australian, Anthony West, enjoying the first
day of his home Grand Prix, also seemed
pleased with progress made, despite the
changing conditions. Small issues with grip,
a common feature of the circuit where the
abundance of long left-handers can prove
problematic, failed to prevent a very
substantial improvement in his lap times and
he completed both sessions confident of
further advancements to come.
The 26-year-old from
Queensland's Gold Coast managed a best time
of 1'32.459, beating nearest rival, John
Hopkins' time by 0.815 seconds. He also
clocked a top speed of 310.8kph, just behind
de Puniet's peak of 311.1kph: a good sign
that both Ninjas are on the case for Sunday.
#14 - 5th - Best Lap 1'31.996
"I rode about 15 consecutive laps on the
same rear tyre this afternoon and my times
were pretty good. I'm in fifth position at
the moment, which isn't bad but, with a new
tyre, I feel I could improve by half a
second straight away. The bike's feeling
good. Today, we worked mostly on tyre choice
because we never know what the conditions
are going to be like here, which makes
things quite difficult. However, if tomorrow
is wet for qualifying, then we'll be
prepared whatever the weather does on
Sunday. We had a bit of movement in the rear
tyre today but nothing too bad; every year
we have this problem but we all have to deal
with the same thing. The chassis feels okay:
we tried some different settings, and I'm
happy with it, but still, tomorrow we can
improve the bike and the lap times, I'm
sure."
#13 - 10th - Best Lap 1'32.459
"We had some problems with the tyre spinning
but I think it was just the cold track and
there wasn't much we could do about that.
Then we had that rain in the middle of the
last session, as well as the rain this
morning, so we've lost a bit of time to
perfect our set up for the race, but I'm
feeling good so far. Also, I've been taking
it fairly steady, not pushing it 100 per
cent yet, so I'm comfortable with times
we're doing, considering I'm not on the
limit. The wind's blowing us around on track
quite a bit, so it's hard to judge the set
up sometimes, but yeah, we're doing okay!"
Kawasaki Technical Manager
"Tyre selection here in Phillip Island is
quite hard as there are many left hand turns
so we need to use tyres with a particularly
hard compound on that side. This imbalance
then makes it a bit trickier to control the
tyre under hard acceleration. But this is
the same for all the riders. Tomorrow, we
need to make some adjustments to both bikes
to bring our lap times down. Just
alterations to the whole package, really, to
bring us right up to speed, put us in a
race-winning position and close the gap on
Stoner."
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