EXCLUSIVE: Frankie Carchedi pinpoints Fabio di Giannantonio’s turnaround moment
Fabio di Giannantonio’s former crew chief identifies the moment he knew the Italian had♌ the speed to beat the very best in MotoGP las꧋t season.

No rider made a bigger jump in p🎶ersonaꦚl performance during the second half of the 2023 MotoGP season than Fabio di Giannantonio.
The Gresini rider scored just 37 points over the opening ten rounds, leaving him in 16th place, with a 🔥best qualifying of 13th and race finish of 📖eighth.
But di Giannantonio ဣwent on to triple that score to 114 points over the final ten rounds, celebrating a debut GP podium in Phillip Island, then a Sprint podium and race victory in Qatar.
Without the tyre pressure penalty at Valencia, Diggia would hav𝄹e scored anothe♐r podium and an additional 7 points.
Nonetheless, his stunning charge carried him to twelfth in the final standings and, most importantly, secured his MotoGP future in the form of a switch to VR46, having lost his Gresini seat t🎀o Marc Marquez.
ltxcn.top asked his former crew chief Frankie Carchedi if there had been a moment or ‘tipping point’ during last season,🐈 when he first saw what was to come from the #49.
“To a lot o🉐f people, it soundedꦯ crazy, but I knew at Silverstone,” Carchedi replied.
“B✅ecause if you go back and look at his time gap to Pecco early on. Then look at it again after 15 laps [of 20] - jꦕust before he pitted for wet tyres - he’d closed the gap to Pecco.
“So he was one of the faꦕstest and he’d gained that time despite having to overtake people…”

The Si♕lverstone lap analysis confirms t♏hat from laps 9-16, di Giannantonio outpaced race leader Bagnaia by 1.1s, while climbing from 16th to 10th place.
ꦐHowever,෴ the wet tyre pit stop gamble backfired, and he slipped to 13th.
“So I saw i♕t there [at Silverstone],” Carchedi continued. “I’d a♑lso seen signs at Assen, Sachsenring.
ꦬ“However, when you start near the back, or in the case of Silverstone he got taken off early on, you are not going to come through to the front in MotoGP ♌now.
“He knew it himself; ‘if I could just get qualifyingꩲ…’ And finally, that was the key. It's about putting a whole weekend together.
“Because all oﷺf a sudden, from not making Q2 at all for the first ten rounds, we started making Q2 regularly by the end. And then it's a completely different weekend.
“If you make Q2,💃 you're not going to start lower than the fourth row w༺hatever happens, and even that’s better than where we were starting at the beginning of the year!
“At Phillip Island, he wa𝓡s on the second row. Then he finally ༒got a front row at Qatar and I don't think he'll have an easier race than that.
“But at Valencia, h🔜e started fourth row, and that was the difference in the race. Because again, we knew he had the pace to win, and I think he closed over 3 seconds on Pecco. Unfortunately, he needed one more lap.”
di Giannantonio was in🉐 9th place and 3.5s behind Bagnaia on lap 4 of the finale, then fought through to fini𝕴sh just 0.176s from the double world champion’s rear wheel at the chequered flag.
“Pecco rode an incredible last lap, because he closed the🐎 door everywhere, which was frustrating!” Carchedi said.
di Giannantonio was later given a 3-second post-race penalty for low frontꦓ tyre pressure, due to the unexpected clear air that formed ahead of him after Marc Marquez and Jorge Martin collided, demoting the Italian to fourth on the official results.
Since switching to VR46, di꧑ Giannantonio has been seventh at the Valencia test, then eighth at Sepang and Qat💟ar.
However, he delivered the best Sprint simulation of anyone at Sepang and was ✅third best, effectively e𝕴qual with world champion Francesco Bagnaia, during his long run on the GP23 in Qatar.
“I hope he continues how he finished last year and is as high up the championship as possible… but one place behind us!” Carcheꦿdi smiled.
“Joking🌳 aside, we had a close bond, it was really enjoyable to work with him last year and he really deserves to stay in MotoGP.
“It’ll be interesting to see how he carries on♎ the progres🎃sion.”

Peter has been in the paddock📖 for 20 years and has seen Valentino🅘 Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.