Casey Stoner: “Some riders wouldn’t get same results without traction control”
Casey Stoner says some MotoGP riders are “are often faster ♊than they should bไe"

168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Casey Stoner claims that some front-running MotoGP riders wou🥀ldn’t achieve the same good results without the help 🐬of traction control.
Stoner is a vocal critic of the technology in 💛today’s MotoGP.
Traction control - which has improved safety and reduced highsides by limiting wheelies - is also responsible for improving the performance of some riders, according to Stoner🦂.
He w♊as asked by if the bike is now important than the rider, and he replied: "I think so and I don't agree with this progression.
“Some riders are much better at exiting corners and having more control during accelerat꧙ion, like D🍸ani Pedrosa.
“The qualities needed to demonstrate superior, quality riding❀ no longer e🎃xist.
“The only way you can make a difference is to brake ๊later to enter the co𒁃rner.
“For example, in 201ཧ1 Dani Pedrosa was almost two tenths faster than me on the same bike.
“He did something incredible with the rear brake to stop wheelies and gain a lot of dist👍an✃ce.
“There was no dဣifference, he was simply better than me.
“Now the rider’s control elements such as traction, 𒐪tyre management and wheelie risk are masked by electronics."
Could back-to-back premier c🐭lass champion Francesco Bagnaia be as dominant without the help of electronics?
Stoner said: "Pecco ra🌟ces on dirt tracks, which is why he knows how to mꦐanage sliding and spinning.
“These are just some of the many ridingဣ elements that disappear b✨ehind the help of extra components.
“In my🌠 opinion Marco Bezzecchi, for example, would probably be mo♚re competitive.
“There are some riders who run at the front who I don✱'t think wo🍸uld get the same results if traction control were removed…
“They are often faster than they should be."
Stoner believes the technology is⛦ also having an impact off-track.
Commenting on his former team 😼Honda, he said: "Alberto Puig isn't working badly in my opinion, but the circumstances have put Honda in difficulty.
“I also undꦑerstand their position: at the moment the championship doesn't seem to have rigid regulations, the rules can be adapted and ch🉐anged depending on the preferences of the manufacturers.
“Why should Honda commit to the development of a mot🐻orcycle when the rules change again and again to make them adapt to someone else?
“There is too much movement behind the scenes."
Stoner is a two-time MotoGP champion💜 who won his titles wi𓆏th Ducati and Honda.
It took Ducati 15 years after Stoner’s 2007 success to win again, via 𒁏Bagnaia in 2022.
Stoner has part-blamed the increasing amount of technology for his retiremen☂t at the age of just 27.
“I loved riding bike😼s the most, I loved eking everything that I could out of a bike. I was very self-critical,” he has previously said.
“When these bikes became too much electronics, too much wheelie-control, the🃏 enjoyment disapp☂eared.
“The series became political.”

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