Yamaha: Franco Morbidelli ‘fast, but he has to rediscover himself’

𝓀Morbidelli was the first satellite rider to achieve such an accolade since Marco Melandri iꦉn 2005, but he hasn’t finished higher than seventh in the wet and tenth in the dry during the past 29 races.
That left Morbidelli 19th in last year's worl🦋d championship with a score of just 42 points compared to 248 for factory Yamaha team-mate Fabio Quartararo, the ൩rider Morbidelli outperformed at Petronas SRT in 2020.
As ever in motorsport, there are many potential factors to consider. The first is that Morbidelli’s results haven’t been the same since undergoing major knee ligamen🐠t surgery in the summe🦂r of 2021.
Then when Morbidelli returned it was not with Petrona💮s, but a different (factory-spec) bike and crew at the Monster team, where he was parachuted in as a replacement for Maverick Vinales.
- Yamaha ‘already looking’ for new satellite MotoGP𝄹 team
- Exclusive: Cancelled laps for breaching MotoGP🔜 tyre pressures in 2023
- Triumph: Electrꦐic power? ‘Let’s not kid ourselves...’
“The knee injury was the turning point only in the sense that Frankie was out for five races, then we brought him into the factory team after the Vinales affair,” Yamaha Racing managing director Lin Jarvis told ltxcn.top.
“So we were faced with an extraordinary situation, we drafted Frankie into the factory team at Misano 2021 and he did the last five races of the season with us, but he wasn't fiꦛt.
“He took the role, joined our [factory] team, but arguably it was too early. In reality, he was not🍬 race-fit at that stage. So that was a reason for last year’s [performance].
“But for this year [2022], that's not been an issue. He trained well throughout the winter and I think he'd be the first to say ‘no, this year I've been physica🗹lly capably ♎fit’.
“But something has been missi﷽ng and he's never been able to truly find the confidence with the bike.”

Frankie ‘has to rediscover himself’
The paradox i🐓s that, while Yamaha has been criticised for not developing its M1 enough in recent seasons, the changes made since the 2019 model (that Morbidelli took to the runner-up spot in 2020) have still been enough to knᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚock the former Moto2 champion’s form completely out of kilter.
“Frankie just hasn't been able to have that same speed, aggression on braking and fast corner speed, which yo🍨u need for the Yamaha,” Jarꦦvis said.
“To ♐make the Yamaha perform well, you need to be aggressive on the brakes and you need to enter the corner fast.
“But you need a lot of confidence to do that, and that's something which I would say is Fabio’s forte. He has a lot of confidence with the front end of the bike and Frankie has just been struggling to find th🅠at.
“Frankie's been looking for different solutions and tryi🌺ng to change settings and setups and it just hasn't worked out.
"We know Frankie can be fast. He's a race winner in MotoGP, and ဣhe’s a vice-champion in MotoGP, so the capacity is there. But he has to rediscover himself and we have to give him better tools to help him in that process.
“Our target is obviously to give him a better🔯 bike for the future.
“We have to make the bike more user-friendly. But part of that will be creating a little bit more margin in the performance I think. Because now in order to keep top speed, you need to be able to exit the corners super-fast as well bec💃ause we don't have the pureꦡ horsepower, which means you need to carry more speed in the corner.
“Fabio is very clever to extract the maximum potential out of the package. So let's see.✅ Frankie can do it, but he must rediscover his confidence.”

‘There are some similarities to Marquez and Honda’
Jarvis - who has overseen MotoGP title success for Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo as well as Quartararo - acknowledged that there’s also the psychological aspect of being outpaced 𒁃by someone on the same bike week in, week out.
“It's not 🥂easy having a team-mate as fast as Fabio,” Jarvis said. “I've seen that witꦜh other riders, when the team-mate is extraordinarily fast, sometimes it's tough to be on the other side of the garage looking at the data and saying ‘how is that possible?’”
It’s a situation the Englishman likens to Marc Marquez’s team-mates at🔯 Honda.
“I think there are some similarities to Honda. I think over many, many recent years Marc has always been the extraordinary performer that can do things that other riders just have not been able to🧸 do and to follow.
𝓀“So let's hope that Frankie rediscovers himself. “
Adding to the pressure on Morbidelli’s shoulders is that his current contract expires a🍰t the end of 2023. The 28-year-old could face competition to keep the seat from the likes of Yamaha’s WorldSBK champion Toprak Razgatlioglu and Pramac Ducati’s Jorge Martin.

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