Austin American-Statesman

SIMMERING FEUD HIGHLIGHTS MOTOGP AS CIRCUIT HEADS TO AUSTIN

Watch for fireworks as Marquez, Rossi don’t exactly like each other.

- By Kevin Lyttle klyttle@statesman.com

As the world’s premier motorcycle circuit gears up for its Austin stop this week, the buzz is the simmering feud between the young King of COTA and the legendary veteran known as The Doctor.

Marc Marquez, the 25-year-old Spaniard, carries a spotless record at Circuit of the Americas — five races, five victories. He wears the title belt until proven otherwise.

Valentino Rossi, the 39-yearold Italian with nine Grand Prix championsh­ips, reached the podium in the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas two of the past three years.

Practice sessions at COTA will be on Friday, ahead of qualifying on Saturday. Races for MotoGP, Moto2 and Moto3 are all on Sunday. There is a chance of rain for Saturday’s qualifying rounds.

From time to time, Marquez and Rossi have clashed, and Rossi reignited the rivalry after their latest scuffle in Argentina, charging that the Honda rider has “destroyed” the sport.

Marquez was penalized multiple times for “irresponsi­ble riding,” including squeezing Rossi’s Yamaha onto the wet grass, leaving him little chance of recovery.

“This is a very bad situation, because he destroyed our sport, because he doesn’t have any respect for his rivals. Never,” Rossi told reporters after the race.

“You can make a mistake in braking; you can touch the other guy; this happens; this is racing. But from Friday morning, he did this with (Maverick) Vinales, (Andrea) Dovizioso. He did this with me on Saturday morning, and in the race he went straight to four riders, because he does this purposely.

“These were not mistakes ... because he knows he doesn’t crash but you crash. He hopes that you crash. So if you start to play like this, you raise the level to a very dangerous point, because if all the riders race like this, without any respect for rivals, this is a very dangerous sport, and it will finish in a bad way.”

Marquez, a four-time series champion, took a certain level of accountabi­lity and also blamed a wet track for losing control a few times.

“What happened to Valentino was a mistake, a consequenc­e of the track conditions because I locked the front,” he told reporters. “One line was dry, but I was on a wet patch. OK, I had the contact. I tried to turn, and then when I saw he crashed, I was sorry.

“It was a tricky Sunday on the track. I didn’t make anything crazy.”

These two have a history dating back to the 2015 season when Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo were battling for the title.

In the next-to-last event in Malaysia, Rossi was penalized for crashing out Marquez after the Italian had accused the Spaniard of blatantly aiding Lorenzo, Marquez’s teammate. Lorenzo did win that title, his third.

Now it’s reached the point where Rossi said he’s fearful of what might happen in a sport with straightaw­ay speeds beyond 200 mph.

“I’m scared on the track when I am with Marquez,” he said. “You have to hope you don’t crash.”

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