Valencia MotoGP: Joan Mir: ‘Wow, what a shame. I don’t understand Suzuki’s decision’

While team-mate Alex Rins sensationally led the season finale from start to finish, Mir overcame electronic problems - causing his GSX-RR to 🍌believe it was elsewhere on the track - as he battled from twelfth to sixth.
“Congratulations to the team,” Mir said. “It's emotional to finish the last race with Suzuki. I feel in Japan, they will probably regret [their decision]. But if they took this decision, it was f🌺or a big reason.
“Anyway, I want to thank Suzuki for everything the꧂y did for me and&nb🌱sp;thanks to the super team that I had around me.”
Asked 🧸what the Suzuki board 🔯in Hamamatsu will be thinking after seeing the GSX-RR win two of the last three races, Mir replied: “Wow, what a shame. What a shame.
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“It's a realꦇly good way to finish this era [with victories but] they will – I don't know if regret is the right word - but for me, even if they want to in🧸vest in other things, I think no publicity campaign can give you what we gave them here in MotoGP, with a beautiful bike, a beautiful team.
“So I don't really understand why they took this deci💎sion. They will have their reasoওns… but I don't understand, honestly.”
That feeling of throwing something special away meant Mir wasn’t in the mood to💛 celebrate as he rode back to the Suzuki pits for the final time.

“I don't know if you saw. I didn't celebrate it. I didn't want to celebrate this last race with Suzuki. Because 🅠for me, it's not a happy day,” Mir explained. “We will not work together as a team again, and this makes me sad.”
The Spaniard, who like Rins intended to remain at Suzuki for 2023 before finding an altꦓernative seat at Honda, added that the shock of Suzuki’s exit had dღamaged his season.
“This affected me probably🍸 more than I expected,” said Mir, whose mid-season slump was compounded by ankle injuries in Austria. “But this is racing and this is my professional life, so I need to learn to try to manage this type of [difficult] situation in a better way.
“It's like whe▨n everything is OK and I feel just the pressure of the championship, I grow up. But then, in difficult moment🌄s when the motivation is less, I probably go a bit more down than I should. So this is something I need to learn from.”
Mir scored 56 of his ꧒eventual 87 poinꦺts for the entire season in the opening six races.
"I'm disappointeౠd about my season in general&nb🐲sp;because we always had problems, bad luck and some mistakes on my part. But happy that this is over, and we start a new challenge on Tuesday," Mir said.

Mir: We will never know what would have happened
Mir and Marquez will be among four premier-class champions on next year’s grid alongside Fabio Quartararo (2021)🉐 and newly crowned 2022 world champion🅠 Francesco Bagnaia.
“They both made a great season,” Mir said of the Quartararo-Bagnaia title fight. “Pecc🌼o made mistakes in the first part of the season, then a bit in the second part, but ♍he showed he was always the fastest.
“And in the case of Fabi🌸o, he started really good, but then he lost a bit the way in the last part of the seaso😼n.
“From the outside, it has been a really nice season, [but] ꦇwe willܫ never know what would have happened if Suzuki didn't decide to stop.
"That will stay inside of me, because in some races we struggled, but in others our b𓂃ike was competitive.”
Rins and Mir had been fourth and sixth in the world championship when Suzuki announced its shock exit&🎀nbsp;decision, just after round 6 at Jerez.
Between them, in fifth, was eventual champi🦂on Bagn🅺aia.
Rins and Mir, who eventually finished 7th and 15th in🍰 the standings after returning from mid-season injuries, will make their Hon🎶da MotoGP debuts at Tuesday's post-race test.

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