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01/06/08 -
Amidst blazing sunshine and starting from pole position
at a track where he had been untouchable for the past
six years, Valentino Rossi claimed a third consecutive
victory of the season in the Gran Premio d´Italia Alice.
The script had been written, but it was still up to the
Fiat Yamaha rider to perform when the lights went out.
Taking the lead from 2007 World Champion Casey Stoner on
the fourth lap, Rossi then set about creating a gap
between himself and the chasing pack. He did so with a
series of increasingly faster times, and eventually
crossed the line with a comfortable advantage for
Mugello premier class victory number seven. His rivals
must now wait another year to attempt to dethrone the
`King of Mugello´.
The supporting cast to the Rossi show was headed by
Ducati Marlboro rider Stoner, on the podium at Mugello
for only the second time in his Grand Prix career. The
result helps Stoner make up ground in the MotoGP
standings, in which he maintains fourth place but
narrows the gap between himself and Jorge Lorenzo.
Second in the World Championship, Dani Pedrosa completed
the podium places, having got off to a fantastic start
courtesy of his Repsol Honda RC212V. The Spaniard will
next week be chasing victory on home soil in Catalunya.
A best result of 2008 for Alex de Angelis was another
reason for Italian fans –who had seen home victories in
all three classes- to be cheerful, with the San Carlo
Honda Gresini man taking fourth place. The San
Marino-born rider was riding what was effectively his
local race, and had shown his cards early with the
fastest time in the morning warmup.
The Tech 3 Yamaha duo of Colin Edwards and James
Toseland were fifth and sixth respectively, ahead of
Rizla Suzuki´s front row starter Loris Capirossi and
Italian JiR Team Scot rookie Andrea Dovizioso.
Before the halfway point there were a number of riders
withdrawing from the action. First out were Marco
Melandri and Randy de Puniet, both sliding off track
whilst battling amongst themselves. They were followed
by Kawasaki rider John Hopkins and, in a blow to his
world title chances, second Fiat Yamaha rider Lorenzo. A
lowside by the Spaniard left him with a DNF mark by his
name for the first time in his MotoGP career.
Valentino Rossi – Race Winner
"It's a great feeling, like always. A lot of my family
and close friends have come to see me. I tried to push
hard and my Yamaha and Brigestone worked very well,
right to the end. During part of the race I was faster
than Stoner, but he came back and made me work hard.
It´s wonderful to be on the podium with two very strong
riders."
Marco Simoncelli provided the home fans with their
second Italian victory of the day in the 250cc class,
his first in the quarter litre category. Involved in a
two-way fight with Hector Barbera for the duration of
the race, a home straight crash by the Spaniard left the
last lap decidedly more comfortable for the Metis Gilera
rider.
Simoncelli and Barbera had exchanged harsh words and
almost come to blows at last year´s visit to Mugello,
but they left their latest clash until the start of the
final lap. Trailing the eventual race winner, Barbera
clipped his rival´s bike and was thrown off his own in a
100th Grand Prix heartbreak for the Team Toth rider.
The fall elevated Lotus Aprilia´s Alex Debon to second
place, with the Le Mans racewinner himself involved in a
duel with Thomas Luthi over the course of the 21 lap
showdown. Missing out on second place, Luthi contented
himself with a first podium in the 250cc class, from
eighth on the grid.
Crashes from the likes of early leader Alvaro Bautista
and front pack runners Hector Faubel, Lukas Pesek,
Manuel Poggiali and Yuki Takahashi gave a welcome boost
to World Championship leader Mika Kallio. The Red Bull
KTM rider had a second consecutive race off the podium
at a difficult track for his Austrian machinery, but
still holds the advantage in the quarter litre class
courtesy of fourth place.
Polaris World´s Mattia Pasini and second Metis Gilera
man Roberto Locatelli added to the home presence in the
top six. Cardion AB´s Czech rider Karel Abraham took a
best dry result of seventh place, whilst Hiroshi Aoyama
ran wide on the final lap battling with teammate Kallio
and dropped down the order. Aleix Espargaro and
Ratthapark Wilairot completed the first ten past the
chequered flag.
A home race win and the lead of the 125cc World
Championship was just reward for Simone Corsi, coming
out on top in a sprint to the line. The Jack&Jones WRB
Italian star made a phenomenal move at the start of the
twentieth and final lap and held on for his third win of
the 2008 season.
As the riders had expected, the race was almost as
tightly packed as the Mugello grandstands, with nobody
able to break away even by the midway stage. Battles for
the lead took place at every corner for the duration of
the race, leaving a last lap sprint between the lower
cylinder class stars to decide the final placings. Never
one to shy away from a risky manoeuvre, Corsi took a
gamble to pass four of his lower cylinder class rivals,
and on this occasion fortune favoured the brave.
Unable to break away after taking the holeshot, World
Champion Gabor Talmacsi also left it late, the Bancaja
Aspar rider pick-pocketing Pol Espargaro by little more
than a wheel´s length as the podium places were decided.
Belson Derbi rider Espargaro took his second rostrum of
the season, the youngster supervised by his older rivals
in taking a deserved swig of the Cava after an
exhausting effort.
Conceding the lead in the standings by virtue of race
wins, Mike di Meglio was off the podium for the first
time in three races in fourth place, whilst fifth went
to a rider favoured to win heading into the final lap.
Polaris World rider Bradley Smith held the lead as the
riders prepared for the ultimate time around the track,
but the injured Briton conceded the place and a spot on
the podium.
Sergio Gadea, Nico Terol, Sandro Cortese, Joan Olive and
Stefan Bradl completed the top ten, separated by less
than 5.5 seconds from Corsi
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