AMERICAN Ben Spies destroyed the opposition to win the famous Dutch TT at Assen on Saturday afternoon. Spies took full advantage of another costly crash from Marco Simoncelli to record his maiden win in the premier class of motorcycling. He is the first rider who came from World Superbikes to win a round of MotoGP since Troy Bayliss triumphed at the 2006 season finale in Valencia.
Practice and qualifying was held in tricky weather conditions and all three Honda works riders had accidents in the early moments of qualifying. Despite this, Casey Stoner still lined up on the front row, behind Simoncelli, who showed his raw pace against and Spies. Yamaha were portraying a different colour scheme, to celebrate their 50th year of Grand Prix racing. Spies took off the startline fastest, but Simoncelli’s habit of crashing to the tarmac continued to haunt him at the third bend of the race.
Like in Estoril, he pushed too hard on cold tyres and dropped his bike, taking out world champion Jorge Lorenzo. Both managed to remount, but they lost loads of ground on the leaders. The drama continued on the opening couple of circuits, with crashes from Karel Abraham and Randy de Puniet. Abraham broke his little finger in his accident, whilst de Puniet’s tumble was the last thing the Premac team needed, as Loris Capirossi had crashed earlier in the weekend. The veteran Italian fractured his shoulder, which ended his participation in the event early.
MARGIN: Spies built up a healthy advantage throughout |
In all the confusion, Spies opened up a solid advantage over Stoner, enough to allow him to cruise through a dull second half of the event. Stoner seemed content to settle for second, knowing that he was beating his title rival Lorenzo and extending his points advantage. The only other incident of significance was a tyre problem for Cal Crutchlow. Crutchlow, who qualified a tremendous sixth on the grid, despite having had major surgery on his collarbone earlier in the week, was a brilliant fifth when the rear Bridgestone tyre destroyed itself and forced him into the pits.
Andrea Dovizioso continued his consistent run of points finishes, ending up third, whilst Valentino Rossi came up to fourth from a lowly 11th on the grid, on a brand new Ducati bike. Lorenzo did brilliantly to recover to sixth, behind the second Ducati of Nicky Hayden. Colin Edwards was seventh, ahead of Hiroshi Aoyama, who had an unspectacular run on the third of the works Honda bikes. Dani Pedrosa, still mysteriously missing is expected back in the saddle for the Italian round at Mugello this weekend. A devastated Simoncelli came back to ninth, but faces a race ban, if he doesn’t calm down on his over-exuberant riding.
This was a deserved win for Ben Spies and it was nice to see a different winner in MotoGP, but ultimately, the big winner again was Casey Stoner, who extended his already healthy margin at the top of the championship.
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