The Citizen (Gauteng)

Team-mates, enemies

SPANISH DUO: LORENZO JOINS MARQUEZ AT HONDA BUT EYES 2019 TITLE

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Jorge Lorenzo concedes he could have “thrown in the towel” after a frustratin­g two-year spell at Ducati, but the three-time MotoGP champion feels rejuvenate­d and once again ready to challenge the supremacy of champion Marc Marquez – his new Honda stablemate.

Marquez has taken the sport by storm since his 2013 debut, winning the championsh­ip in five of the past six seasons, with compatriot Lorenzo standing between him and perfection having captured the 2015 title.

Yet injury clouds hover over both ahead of this weekend’s season-opener in Qatar. Marquez has rated his fitness at “almost 100 percent” following rehabilita­tion from shoulder surgery, while Lorenzo missed the first pre-season test at Sepang after fracturing his wrist in a dirt bike crash.

Marquez has won just once at the Losail circuit in Doha, a venue where Lorenzo has triumphed on six occasions across three categories – including a hat-trick of MotoGP victories.

“This winter has been different due to the surgery, I worked hard with five hours of physio per day with only one goal: start in the best conditions in the first race,” the 26-year-old Marquez said.

“At the Qatar test I felt much better than at the Malaysia test and now I can say that I start at almost 100 percent.

“Honda have done a lot to improve the bike and in the test we were feeling strong, especially for a circuit which usually isn’t the best for us,” he added.

After a fruitless 2017 campaign, Lorenzo rebounded with three wins a year ago – in Italy, Catalonia and Austria – before injury wrecked the latter part of his season.

He finished a career-worst ninth after missing four races having hurt his wrist following a nasty crash ahead of October’s Thailand Grand Prix.

“Last year was tough and I went through a period of emotional instabilit­y. I could have thrown in the towel, but that’s not who I am,” Lorenzo said.

“Signing with Honda has been a massive injection of motivation. I’m convinced that, through my mentality, ambition and sacrifice, I can be very competitiv­e. Fighting with Marc is a challenge for any rider and, at this point in my career, it’s a great boost.

“So far, I’m the only rider who has managed to win a title against Marc. Nothing is impossible and with effort, I want to prove it again.”

Italy’s Andrea Dovizioso, who finished second to Marquez, is confident of launching a more consistent title bid and will be joined by compatriot Danilo Petrucci at Ducati this term.

“2018 was a very positive year for me. We started with a victory and, even if we had some ups and downs, the difficulti­es pushed us to look in new directions and halfway through the season we made a big step forward,” he said.

Valentino Rossi, 40, is coming off just a third winless season in 19 at the top level as he finished a distant third overall.

The Italian lagged behind Yamaha team-mate Maverick Vinales during February’s testing in Qatar, but team boss Massimo Meregalli is convinced he will shake off his early struggles.

“He hasn’t been that fast, but I’m not worried because, considerin­g our previous experience­s, we know that on Sundays at race time he’s in front,” Meregalli told Motorsport.com.

Four rookies will join the 22man field, with Moto2 champion Francesco Bagnaia making the step up alongside French teenager Fabio Quartararo.

Last year’s Moto2 runner-up, Miguel Oliveira of Portugal, and Spanish 2017 Moto3 champion Joan Mir also make their premier class debut this weekend. –

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? READY. Spain’s Jorge Lorenzo is back on a Honda as he bids to reclaim the MotoGP crown.
Picture: Getty Images READY. Spain’s Jorge Lorenzo is back on a Honda as he bids to reclaim the MotoGP crown.

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