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13/07/08 -
MotoGP World Champion Casey Stoner continued his
spectacular return to form with victory at the Alice
Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland, his third win in as
many races. The Ducati Marlboro rider braved the wet
conditions of the Sachsenring circuit and appeared
equally adept to the task as he had been in the dry
practice sessions, a sign that will have his title
rivals preoccupied for the second half of the season.
The race had looked set to be a wet weather repeat of
Dani Pedrosa´s comprehensive 2007 victory, after the
Repsol Honda rider once again used his finely-honed
launch control to take the holeshot. He stormed out of
the blocks and immediately created a 2 second gap. The
advantage increased to 7.5 seconds by the time the
Spaniard crossed the line for a sixth time, but just
moments later disaster struck as he lost control of the
RC212V and picked up his first DNF of 2008.
Pedrosa´s crash allowed Stoner to return to the script
written in practice sessions for the German race, and
the Australian needed no further invitation. He assumed
the reins in the same style with which he had taken the
win at the past two races, breaking free and riding solo
for 23 laps right up until the chequered flag was waved.
Second place from the third row of the grid was a
more-than-respectable result for Valentino Rossi, and
the runner-up spot allowed the Fiat Yamaha rider to
reassume the leadership of the MotoGP World
Championship. Heading to the Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix in
just a week´s time, the five-time title holder now holds
a 16-point advantage over Pedrosa, whose broken finger
picked up in the crash may affect his form in the Laguna
Seca race.
Rizla Suzuki´s Chris Vermeulen forced his way through
the pack for a first podium of 2008, in doing so denying
MotoGP rookie Alex de Angelis his maiden rostrum
placing. Both had great rides in the wet, with the San
Carlo Honda Gresini rider equalling his best premier
class result to date and becoming the highest-finishing
Honda man.
Andrea Dovizioso finished in the top five for the fourth
successive race, after getting a fantastic start onboard
his JiR Team Scot Honda. Dovizioso came in ahead of
Sylvain Guintoli, Loris Capirossi, Randy de Puniet,
Shinya Nakano and Anthony West, with all riders outside
the top ten lapped on the second shortest MotoGP
circuit.
Besides Pedrosa´s tumble, there were also crashes for
Jorge Lorenzo, Colin Edwards and Marco Melandri as they
fell foul of the tricky conditions.
Casey Stoner – Race Winner
"I saw Dani (Pedrosa) riding off into the distance and
thought `fair play´, there was no way I would have been
able to go so fast at that time. We used a harder
compound on the tyres and they were taking time to warm
up. Then I saw Dani tumbling and rolling in the gravel.
Given his past record in the wet, he was riding very
well up until then. From then on it was just a matter of
making sure of increasing a small advantage with every
lap. We ran the harder compound on the left side, with
just some small `loses´ during the race which worried me
a bit. Thanks to the team for everything, and it´s nice
to close the championship up a bit more."
Amidst difficult rainy conditions in Sachsenring, Marco
Simoncelli stormed to his third victory of the season at
the Alice Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland. Riding with a
new Gilera RSA, the Italian dominated proceedings in the
250cc race to win the race and take the leadership of
the World Championship heading into the summer break.
Over seven seconds separated Simoncelli from the chasing
pack with just a third of the race completed, and those
behind him could do nothing to stop the Metis Gilera
rider from breaking free.
Simoncelli´s great escape to victory did not signal an
end to the action, however, as a five-rider battle raged
on for second place. Hector Barbera led the charge
onboard his Team Toth Aprilia, taking his third rostrum
finish of the year. He held off the challenge of Alvaro
Bautista despite some tough competition from his fellow
Spaniard.
Bautista had experienced a terrible start to his race,
and had to work hard to rejoin the podium fight. Mapfre
Aspar´s former 125cc World Champion made a spectacular
comeback on the slippery track, recording some of the
fastest laps of the race and salvaging a fourth
consecutive podium.
Mika Kallio performed an exercise of damage limitation
as he conceded the lead of the overall classification,
ensuring that the advantage held by Simoncelli could be
easily closed when the series returns in mid-August. The
Red Bull KTM rider came in ahead of Repsol KTM´s Julian
Simon, who took his best result of 2008 to date.
Mattia Pasini and Thomas Luthi both picked up valuable
points in sixth and seventh place, respectively, whilst
Kallio´s teammate Hiroshi Aoyama completed the race in
eighth despite breaking his fairing in a late crash.
Yuki Takahashi and Roberto Locatelli were the remaining
two riders in the first ten across the line.
Mike di Meglio took his third victory of the 2008 season
in the 125cc Alice Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland. The
Frenchman controlled the latter stages of the race after
taking the lead on lap seventeen, crossing the line with
a two second advantage over his nearest rival and
maintaining the lead in the World Championship
classification. A 30-point cushion in the title chase
means that it will be a relaxing summer for the Ajo
Motorsport rider.
Sachsenring runner-up Stefan Bradl gave German fans
their first home 125cc podium in ten years with an
assured display from third on the grid, battling to a
best ever Grand Prix finish onboard the Grizzly Gas
Kiefer Aprilia RSA. The teenager had taken the holeshot
and had his turn at leading the race, and held off the
challenge of World Champion Gabor Talmacsi in the fight
for second place.
Talmacsi had been gunning for his second consecutive
victory after taking pole position for the German
showdown, but gave his fellow riders a head start when
he experienced a mechanical problem taking off from the
top spot on the grid. The Bancaja Aspar rider had to
work hard to bring himself back into contention, and was
rewarded for his efforts with a fifth podium of the
year.
Bradley Smith once again led a race before missing out
on the podium spots, finishing fourth after heading the
field at the midway point. The Briton was unable to hold
on after making a break, caught by the eventual rostrum
finishers courtesy of some of the fastest laps of the
race. He led Talmacsi on the final lap, but was unable
to stave off the challenge of the reigning World
Champion on the final corner.
Front row starter Simone Corsi came home in fifth, ahead
of Emmi-Caffe Latte´s home rider Sandro Cortese and his
Jack&Jones WRB teammate Nico Terol. Scott Redding,
Esteve Rabat and Marc Marquez completed the top ten.
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