MotoGP: Danilo Petrucci: Body fat, braking, overtaking and Toprak - Exclusive

Danilo Petrucci’s victory at the 2020 French MotoGP remains the last in the premier-class by a rider from a Superbike background - will Toprak Razgatlioglu be the next?
Danilo Petrucci MotoGP race race , French MotoGP. 11 October
Danilo Petrucci MotoGP race race , French MotoGP. 11 October

Prior to Petrucci only Makoto Tamada, Troy Bayliss, Nicky Hayden, Ben Spies and Cal Crutchlow had&nbꦇsp;moౠved to MotoGP straight from Superbike racing and gone on to stand on the top step of the podium.

Petrucci, runner-up in the 2011 FIM Superstock series before 𒁃joining the premier-class, eventually did it twice, an emotional home win at Mugello 2019 being followed by the wet French victory, also in Factory Ducati colours.

Reigning world champion Toprak Razgatlioglu is the next big hope for an SBK-to-MotoGP winner, the Turkish star recently testing an M1 e💟ven though he won’t now 𓃲have a chance of a MotoGP race seat until 2024.

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“I think that Toprak shows incredible skills, he is absolutely a beast on braking!” said Petrucci, during an exclusive interview with ltxcn.top.

“I don’t know if in MotoGP ♉he can brake as hard as he is doing now in World Superbike, but it's really a pleasure to see him racing and I think he can do well in MotoGP.

“It depends on which🅘 bike he is going to ride, but he is an incredible talent.

“For sure, he's using all his skills and all the potential that his b𒈔ike has in World Superbike at the moment.

“Bautista, Toprak and Rea are three incredible talents. The Superbike c🅠hampionship is great to watch this yea⛄r and I'm curious to see Toprak in MotoGP. I think he will be fast.”

Toprak Razgatlioglu, Estoril WorldSBK, 20 May
Toprak Razgatlioglu, Estoril WorldSBK, 20 May

MotoGP favours corner speed, acceleration

Razgatlioglu is famous for his extravagant hard-braking ‘stoppie’ style. But Petrucci, whose biggest strength was also on the brakes, warned that the character of the latest Michelin tyres rewards corner♌ speed in MotoGP.

“You cannot brake as hard as we did in the past [in MotoGP], because the tyres are so sensitive,” Petrucci explained. “My difficulties began at the beginning of 2ꦚ020, when the [revised] rear tyre didn’t h♔elp me to stop the bike. So I got worse on braking, which was my strongest point.

“You can see clearly that under braking we just had a little bit of a stoppie. But if you ꦑcompare with photos of some year⛎s ago, the bikes were braking with the rear tyre high in the air all the way to the corner.

“Now you don't see this anymore because the stopping power [of the tyres] is reduced to have more corner speed. So you cannot make a big difference on braking, you can make more difference 🅠in the corner speed and acceleration.

“I sta๊rted to struggle with this. I was so strong in 2017-18-19 when the construction of the rear tyre was so hard and we always chose the softest compound and tried to manage the race.

“Dovi was 🧔really really good at m🦹anaging the tyre during that period, to be fast in the last ten laps.

“At the same time, Pedrosa was reꦚally in trouble, because such a str♚ong tyre construction didn't help him with his light weight. But maybe it was helping me, because I remember so many times I was the fastest in FP3, in the cool morning conditions, because I was able to push the tyre.

“Since 2020, this was not possiꦛble for me anymore. But if you see Dani at the Red Bull Ring last year for example, he was faster than all the other KTMs in FP3!”

Danilo Petrucci, Algarve MotoGP, 6 November
Danilo Petrucci, Algarve MotoGP, 6 November

‘Wings? In the slipstream you don't have the ‘air’ to stop you’

Another new dimension for Razgatlioglu to contend with in MotoGP would be the advanced level of aerodynಞamics, increasingly blamed for hampering overtaking.

“In MotoGP now it is really difficul♉t to overtake beca💛use the bikes are so fast on the straight and so precise with the aerodynamics,” Petrucci said.

“It's especially difficult to make overtakes because the aerodynamics don't help you when you♍ are in the slipstream; you don🍸't feel the advantage, instead you feel more the disadvantage under braking.

“You need to be out of the line to try an overtake, because if you brake behind another r🐟ider you just don't have the ‘air’ to stop you.

“And all these small things make qualifying much more important, you have to start in a good position and then it’s a matter of having the best tyre 🧸possible for the last 10 laps.

“But to do this you can’t stress the tyres by making overtakes, trying to brake harder or pushing more on 🔴the rear tyre.

“Every year is much more difficult in th𒀰is respec🍃t.”

Danilo Petrucci: Body fat, braking, overtaking and Toprak - Exclusive

‘If you are short and light, you have an advantage in MotoGP’

Asid♈e from their hard braking styles, another similarity between Petrucci and Razgatlioglu that could be of potential concern for the Turkish star is physical size.

At 1.81m and ꦗaround 80kg, Petrucci spent much of his Grand Prix career fighting an increasingly difficult battle to overcome time lost to his lighter riv🐠als in acceleration.

The good news for Razgatlioglu is that, although slightly taller than Petrucci at 1.82m, he weighs only 68kg, gꦫiving him a height/weight ratio almost i🍬dentical to current MotoGP title contender Aleix Espargaro.

“Now🌠 if you are short and light,🤪 you have an advantage,” Petrucci said.

“My problem last year was theꦏ straights and this handicaꦰp of 0.2-0.3s is something you cannot give away in MotoGP anymore.

“If you are 10kg 🏅lighter you can have 0.2s advantage on the straight, which in a race of 20 laps is four-seconds by the finish.

“We saw the differenc🉐e between me and the other KTMs last year was 0.3-0.4 tenths, because I was bigger and the bikes are getting smaller and smaller.”

Pedrosa, Lorenzo, Petrucci, Catalunya MotoGP
Pedrosa, Lorenzo, Petrucci, Catalunya MotoGP

Rider and bike MotoGP minimum weight ‘the right thing’

“I think the right thing would be to putꦕ a ride✨r-plus-bike minimum weight, like in Moto2 and Moto3,” Petrucci said.

It’s a concept that has been regularly brought up in the past, but ultimately never ad꧋opted for the premier-class.

“Some smaller riders would be penalised, but they can increase their weight by gaining more 💟muscle,” Petrucci continued. “That’s quite easy to do. And if you grow muscle, you are more powerful and you can ride the bik💛e better.

“But if you think about me, last year I weighed 81kg with 9% of fat, which is quite low [elite male athletes ].

“Yeah, it was possible for me to drop my weight down♋ to 75kg, but it was not possible to ride the bike. I me♍an, I tried at the beginning of 2018, I was 76kg, but I had no energy.

“I remember, for two months, Deceꦑmber and January, I had just a potato and a carrot at dinner, with two or three pieces of broccolis. All steam🍌ed!

“I arriᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚved in Thailand [for testing] 5kg lighter. But it was simply not possible for me to stand this situation, because the gap to the lightest rider was still 15kg but now my physical condition [strength/endurance] was worse.

“Size was always my proble🦋m in MotoGP and maybe setting a [comᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚbined] weight can help some riders that are struggling a bit.

“If you look now at the MotoGP grid, they are getting really sm🅷all. Espargaro is quite tall (1.80m), only a little bit shorter than me, but he’s really, really skinny (66kg).

“I think I heard Luca Marina [1.84m/69kg] complaining about the same problem as me. When you just need to find that 0.2-0.3s tenths on the straight under acceleration, which can rea💮lly change your race and your cha🎶mpionship, it’s really disappointing.

“Because you are fighting with the top guys in the world, everybody is so good at ev🔥erything a♒nd so losing something just because you are taller is difficult to accept.”

Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP, 12 November
Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP, 12 November

‘It destroys your brain’

After the revised rear tyre added to his size issues in 2020, and having already lost his♛ factory Ducati seat to Jack Miller, Petrucci made a frꦆesh start with a return to satellite status at Tech3 KTM for 2021.

Petrucci had spent much of his grand prix career as a satellite rider, including six podiums and two fastest laps for Pramac Ducati from 2015-2018. Results 𓃲that saw him picked to take ꦦover from Jorge Lorenzo at the factory team.

But the increa🧸singly fine margin between success and failure in MotoGP&n𝕴bsp;again proved insurmountable on the RC16.

“In MotoGP, 99% it's not enough,” said the 31-year-old. “Being in the top ten or out of the points is a matter of 0.2-0.3s. But for a rider, the feeling you have inside is such a big🍒 difference.

“Fighting for the top 10, or top 5, staying around there, is something I always liked in the past. But when in 2020 and ’21, I was struggling to get the points and not having fun, everything became more di🤡fficult.

“Especially when you try your best at home, at the track, in the garag🍌e and the results are not coming - it’s something that destroys your brain.

“By then I was one oꦡf the old school riders in MotoGP, heavier, not physically at 100% because I had a lot of crashes during my career, not big ones, but they were adding up with age!

“So I decided, if I want to stay in MotoGP it’s not to be at the back. I recognised that I was not the best and cannot win any more races – unless𒆙 it rains!”

Danilo Petrucci: Body fat, braking, overtaking and Toprak - Exclusive

Petrucci’s size also ruled him out of KTM MotoGP test riꦬding duties:

“We had some talks about this with KTM but they said if you are a test rider for usꦐ, then we would have the smallest rider with the biggest rider, Pedrosa and you. So which way would we follow?”

Partly to get away from such neg𝄹ativity, and rejuvenate his love of motorcycling, Petrucci veered off road - literally - for his next adventure, in the form of January’s Dakar Rally.

“The Dakar for me was a big, big relief because it showed, es💞pecially to myself, that I still know how to ride a bike!” smiled Petrucci, who made history as the fi💜rst MotoGP rider to take a Dakar stage victory.

Danilo Petrucci , American Superbike, race 2, Grand Prix of the Americas, 10 April
Danilo Petrucci , American Superbike, race 2, Grand Prix of the Americas, 10 April

MotoAmerica instinct vs MotoGP method

After the Dakar came another bold new challenge in the form of MotoAmerica, where Pe🦹trucci is currently leading the st𝓡andings for Warhorse Ducati after five of ten rounds.

“In MotoAmerica I’m having fun because you can make ℱthe extra difference by braki𒀰ng as hard as hell, or going into the corner even if the bike is moving and shaking and still get pole position,” he said.

“You can still use your strengths, your instincts. In MotoGP now you need to use a lot of method. It’s not natural. But fo💙r sure, I miss riding the fastest bikes in the world!”

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