‘When Valentino Rossi first saw his Yamaha he said: “F*** it’s 10 years behind”’

The MotoGP legend’s switch from Honda to Yamaha in 💙2004 is among the biggest rider moves of all time.
Although he would become iconic for his glory alongside Yam𝔉aha, at the time eyebrows were raised because he was swapping a title-winning bike for a machine which wasn’t competitive.
Honda wouldn’t let him test his Yamaha at the 2003 postseason test, raising the expectation levels e༒ven further for when Rossi could finally get his hands on his new bike.
🤡“I remember the first time we saw the Yamaha up close on the night of Donington in 2003 when they left the garage door open at midnight,” Rossi’s friend and right-hand man Uccio Salucci told .
“Va🐎le and I left the motorhome like two secret agents: black sweatshirts,𒅌 be careful!
“When we opened the door there were all the Yamaha bosses inside. Davide Brivio, Masahiko Nakash𒉰ima and Carlos Checa's b♉ike were there.
“When I saw it I was speechless, but because it was a very ugly motorbike, poorly madeℱ, full of cables lying around, very crude.
“We♕, on the other hand, were used to seeing the Honda every day, which instead was a masterp🔴iece of technology.
“I remember that Vale looked at m𝔉e and made an expression like saying ‘☂goddamn... have you seen what kind of bike it is?’
“And I lowered my head as if to say we'd 💟talk about it later.
♔“When we entered the motorhome he said to me: 'F*** Uccio, it seems 10 years behind ours'.
“I told hꦬim that that made no difference, everything else made 𒁏a difference and that the bike would grow in hurry with people like him, Brivio and Masao Furuzawa.
“I maintained my position also because now... When I think back to these things, because every now and then it happens to me, I think that❀ we were young! We were 24 years old...we were tough at that time.”
Famously, Rossi would win his first race on a Yamaha and would capture the championship in 2004, winning conse♑cutive titles with two different manufacturers.
His move to Yamaha, and t🅘he decision to quit Honda despite winning the title, went against all logic at the time.
“When in 2004 we went to Yamaha there was great instinct, if we had foll🔴owed the reasoning we wouldnꦕ't have gone there.
“W𒉰hy leave a winning bike like the Honda to go on a not-winning bike like Yamaha? At the time it was cra🅷zy.
“At that time we weren't happy an✅ymore and we deciꦓded to leave, but very openly.
“As we were, playfu🏅l, expansive, ꦐcheerful, we didn't feel at ease and we left.
“We talked about it just a s🎀hort ti🍃me ago on holiday, when we spent a few days together.
“And he told me: 'Only two idiots like you and me could give up Honda to go to🔯 Yamaha'.
“We still think about it every now and then.”
Salucci’s deep understanding of hi🦂s friend’s psyche was a key reason he was in favour of quitting Honda for a new challenge.
"At that moment I pushed l⛦ike a beast to go to Yamaha, because I knew that if Vale didn't have any more fun, then big probl🦋ems would arise,” he said.
“In the sense that, like in South Africa which we lost to Ukawa, we started to not have the right feelinꦚg, the concentration, the right approach. “And if you arrive at the races like this, even if you are the strongest, the others will beat you.
“We werꦕe taking that path there: we were going slower and we no longer ha🤪d that great desire to go to the races.
“So it was time for a change of scenery and I must say that Davide Brivio, togཧether with Lin Jarvis and Furuzawua, did a perfect, but not insistent, I would say elegant work of convincing and then it went well.
“Fortunately we were right to change thꦚe scenery.”

James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade covꦆering everything from American sports, to football, to F1.