Petrucci 'last normal person to make it in MotoGP' - Miller: 'He's a legend'

Danilo Petrucci bids an emotional farewell to MotoGP saying he was 'the last 'normal person' that can make it'. Bagnaia and Miller disagree: 'The guy is a legend'.
Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP race, 14 November 2021
Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP race, 14 November 2021
© Gold and Goose

Danilo Petrucci was in tears even before starting his final MotoGP race at Valencia on Sunday, the Italian overwhelmed by the reception he was given throughout p𒉰it lane.

"It was really, really nice. When I parked the bike on the grid I said to myself, 'now please don’t cry'. But then people staꩵrted to come, eve🅺ryone I've worked with and all the people, all the friends in the paddock. I say hello to everyone.

"Then I went to the toilet as alwa𓆏ys, but then walking back all pit lane started making an applause. All the KTM team and all the Ducati team. I had to say hello to ✃everyone. I just had to cry.

"Fortunately, we were at the beginning of pit lane front. Otherwise, it was difficult to start the race. It was three minutes to go an𒉰d they said, 'you need to hurry'! So I was already sweating, crying.

"I was re🤡ally happy to see all this love. In Mugello, the first time on the podium, I cried. I cried again when I was first. Unfortunately, when I’m happy I cannot help it!

One of those ﷺto greet Petrucci before his final race was Valentino Rossi, preparing for his own farewell.

"He said to me, 'you are going to r🎐ace like this!?' I was wearing the tie and hat. I said to Valentino I cannot stop crying!'

Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP race, 14 November 2021
Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP race, 14 November 2021
© Gold and Goose

Taken out by other riders in the last two races, Petrucci initially battled with the likes of Maverick V▨inales and Luca Marini before easing off an൩d soaking up his last racing laps on a MotoGP bike.

"I tried from the first moment, but I wanted to finish after the last two r🌳aces. In the first two laps everyone was so aggressive. I tried to stay there. Then my front tyre got really high pressure and it was not possible to bℱrake hard," said Petrucci.

"I said, 'don’t think about it. I have a KTM MotꦰoGP bike all for me and a track. I want to enjoy these last kilometres on this bike'. It was a great pleasure to see all the people. I’m really happy."

Petrucci 'last normal person to make it in MotoGP' - Miller: 'He's a legend'

The only rider on the current MotoGP grid not 🌃to have raced in any of the smaller grand prix categories, Petrucci reached the premier-class straight from Superstock, on a CRT entry, in 2012.

"When I started this adventure in 2012, I don’t know if I was lost. But for sure in the first race, I was last and I broke also the bike," Petrucci reflected. "Until 2014, for many races I was last in practice, last in qualifying and last in the race. I think I ꦕwas the only one still believing [in myself]. I never quit. One day the dream has come true."

Managing to score points with the underpowered Iꩲoda and then Aprilia CRT machines, Petrucci finally got his big break when he joined Pramac Ducati for his fo🍸urth MotoGP season.

The first of ten podiums came in the wet at Silverston🔴e and he was Pramac's most successful rider by the time he was picked to replace the departing Jorge Lorenzo at the factory Ducati team, alongside countryman Andrea Dovizioso, for 2019.

A dream last-lap home Mugello victory over Dovizioso and Marc Marquez followed, before the podiums dried up in the second half of the season. Replaced by Miller before the Covid-delayed 2020 campaign even began, Petrucci added a second MotoGP victory in th൩e rain at Le Mans before spending a tough final season with Tech3 KTM.

Petrucci 'last normal person to make it in MotoGP' - Miller: 'He's a legend'

"Maybe I’m one of the last 'normal people' that can make it [in MotoGP] without being a phenomenon, something ultra-natural🐼," Petrucci said. "When I was young I was just a good rider. I was fast but there were people faster than me.

"But I never stopped believing I was the best. Two times in MotoGP I shoꦇwed I was the best in that circuit, on that day. It was a big relief. If there was just Mugello [2019] maybe it was a ‘one day hero’. But then I showed to myself in Le Mans [2020] I can still win races.

"I have no regrets. It’s easy to look back an꧅d say things could’ve gone better. For sure sometimes I made mistakes. In 2016 I was maybe able t💧o win in Sachsenring in the rain. Then in Assen the same year I was leading and my bike broke.

"Maybe in 2019 [at the factory Ducati team] I was really fast but suffered a lot… the tea🧸m, there was clearly a firsཧt and second rider. Even when I was fast, I was not always taken in consideration. I suffered a lot. I started to make mistakes and I lost third in the championship.

๊"But I always gave my best and I am really happy with what I’ve done.

"MotoGP never saw a rider with my size and there won’t be again. I don’t think there will be (another rider) 1m 80cm and 83kg naked. I'm over 90kg on the bike. When 💙you say this to the engineers, they just start to lose their hair! It was really a bet on me and we won."

Jack Miller, Danilo Petrucci, Qatar MotoGP test, 12 March 2021
Jack Miller, Danilo Petrucci, Qatar MotoGP test, 12 March 2021
© Gold and Goose

'The guy is a legend'

Told of Petrucci labelling himself as a 'normal' rider, cu🎀rrent factory Ducati stars Francesco Bagn🐠aia and Jack Miller swiftly disagreed:

"I’m don't agree with Danilo that he was the last without [supe𝓀rnat♏ural] talent to win a race, because he was with talent," said race winner Bagnaia.

Miller, a former team-mate of Petrucci at Pramac Ducati, added: "Danilo is one of these guys. He wants to sel🥀l himself short every time.

"We all go through this, you say the non-phenomenon 💦word… A lot of people ha💜ve come in [to grand prix] as a phenomenon and gone back down to planet earth and then [sometimes they] come back up.

"The phenomeno꧙n thing I don't think exists. Maybe Pedro Acosta or somebody like that, but they’re few and far between.

"Danilo had a talent. But not only a talent, he worked fꦬor it. If you see photos of him on the Ioda with 𒁏a [big] face out here like a moon and then when he hopped on the Ducati what he did to his body [weight loss] to change it, to be competitive here, he worked for it.

"The guy is a legend."

Petru𝓰cci meanwhile named the Australian - alon🍷g with his fellow Italians - as those he will be cheeering for when he watches MotoGP as a fan from the sofa next season.

Petrucci 'last normal person to make it in MotoGP' - Miller: 'He's a legend'

'Happiness for me is to go fast on a bike'

Fittingly, while Petrucci's entry into MotoGP was unique, so is his exit route; swapping aspha𒉰lt for dirt with 𝓀the Dakar Rally.

"My career has been quite unique," Petrucci admitted. "I was coming from Superstock. No one has ever picked a [Superstock] rider and let him race in MotoGP. No one trusted me. But day after day I 𓂃started to learn.

"I have been quite unique also the way I’m leaving. Since last year I s🧔tarted to feel not so good, not really enjoying what I was doing. Because the pr🅘essure maybe. I spent so much effort, so much strength to be in MotoGP I was not enjoying.

"So I started to think, OK, 'what’s your deep instinct?' I answered, 'I just want to ride the bikes'. So I asked, 'which is the sport where you riജde th🐎e bike the most?' It’s the Dakar.

"Since 15 years old I was racing motocross. I said maybe I can do it. Thanks to KTM, I will go training in the next m💦onths a lot. I’ll try to race the Dakar and finish the Dakar because it’s a dream of mine and then I need to understand if I can be happy.

"The happiness for me is to go fast on a bike. If not, I can just go with my bike around the mountains, around my track, or just to take a coffee. Unfortunately, I always want to see a time and fight the stopwatch. Maybe it’s my way. I need to𒈔 understand if it’s true…"

Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP, 14 November 2021
Danilo Petrucci, Valencia MotoGP, 14 November 2021
© Gold and Goose

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