Ducati Preview
The Ducati Marlboro Team
travels to Malaysia on the back of two
unforgettable races, aiming to maintain the
momentum all the way to the end of this
historic season.
In Japan last month Casey Stoner wrapped up
the factory's first MotoGP riders' crown
while Loris Capirossi won the race. In
Australia last weekend Stoner won the race,
his ninth victory of the season, while
Capirossi finished second to help secure the
constructors' title for Ducati and the
team's title for the Borgo-Panigale-based
squad.
LIVIO SUPPO, Ducati MotoGP project director
"We go to Malaysia in very good mood after
two unforgettable races and we hope we can
maintain our momentum at Sepang, where we've
had some great results. Two years ago we
scored our first double podium result there
and last year Loris fought for victory until
the last lap, so in theory it's a good track
for us. We hope to score another podium
because so far this season we have had a
Ducati rider on every podium apart from
Jerez. We are also aiming to keep Casey's
points average - at the moment he is
averaging 20.125 points per race which is an
incredible performance."
CASEY STONER, World Champion, on 322 points
"I'm still trying just as hard to win races
now that we've got the title, because every
race is as important as the others to me,
but being champion does make it different,
it makes the racing more enjoyable because I
can relax a bit more. I'm looking forward to
Sepang - it's always been a pretty good
circuit for me. I won there two years in a
row on the 125 and 250 in 2004 and 2005. I
think last year was my worst race there, so
I'm looking forward to getting back to
having a nice, strong event there. The
circuit has got a bit of everything, there's
some really good, nice flowing corners and
there's some tight, dicky ones. There's a
lot of long corners, so you spend a lot of
time on the brakes and on the side of the
tyres, so you need to be very confident in
the front to push it into the corners. At
the same time you also need that drive on
the rear. But now with the recent
resurfacing work we don't know what the
track's going to hold."
LORIS CAPIROSSI, 7th overall on 150 points
"These last two races are really important
to me and I love to ride Sepang, so I will
be working hard to get another good result
there. The track really suits me, the Ducati
has always gone well there and the
Bridgestones work well too, but we will have
to wait and see what happens this time
because it seems like they have had some
problems resurfacing the track. They laid a
new surface a couple of months ago but it
was too bumpy, so they had to put down
another new surface in some areas recently,
so everything will be completely new from a
tyre point of view. I just hope the surface
is okay because the last two years I have
had great weekends there - first in 2005, a
very close second place last year. The
Sepang layout is great - very wide and with
some fast corners, so it's a lovely circuit
to ride and it's great for fighting, so you
get some exciting races there. Of course,
the weather is very hot and humid but that
is okay for me, this is what we train for."
THE TRACK
Sepang is MotoGP's longest racetrack and is
also one of the widest tracks in the world,
putting riders and machines to the test with
an excellent variety of corners and
high-speed straights. Withering heat and
humidity are further challenges, not only
for riders and machines, but also for
technicians and everyone else working in pit
lane.
Sepang hosted its first Grand Prix in April
1999 and was an instant hit with riders and
teams. The state-of-the-art complex, carved
out of the jungle adjacent to Kuala Lumpur's
international airport, took circuit and
infrastructure design to a new level,
combining a fast, safe track layout with
ultra-impressive pit, media and corporate
facilities. The venue replaced Malaysia's
original GP tracks at Shah Alam and Johor.
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