MotoGP Mugello: ‘Really difficult’ - Fabio Quartararo 15sec slower than last year

While Francesco Bagnaia repeated last year’s home Mugello MotoGP triumph with a race time 2.060s faster, his 2022 victory rival Fabio Quartararo was 15.165s slower in eleventh.
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, Italian MotoGP, 11 June
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, Italian MotoGP, 11 June

It was the second time in a row that the 2021 world champio🌳n has been unable ⛦to match past performances on the M1, having also set a slower race time than last year at Le Mans (+13.092s).

A possible factor was the switch from the soft rear tyre he had used on his way to tenth place ꦬin the Saturday Sprint, to a medium for the full-length race. Team-mate Franco Morbidelli remained on the soft and finish🃏ed a fraction ahead of Quartararo.

“Really 💧difficult,” Quartararo said. “I was feeling much better with soft, but we talked with the team, that the soft was n⛄ot going to handle the race. I was feeling great, but we chose the medium that for me was not the best decision.

“But we took that and i𒆙t was difficult. I was 🧸behind Enea all the race and I could not even try to overtake.

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“Then with the hard front, the temperature, the pressure was 𒈔a little bit too high, but it's difficult to control when you make all the race stuck behind [other riders].”

Morbidelli said of his tyre choice: "I was able to be quick also with the medium in practice, but I deඣcided to gamble and go with the ⛄soft. It dropped at the end, but the front was more the problem than the rear."

Either way, although a repeat of last year’s speed would ♐have been good enough for Quartararo to claim fourth on Sunday, a repeat of his 2021 race time (41m 16.344s) would have seen him take victory by half-a-second.

“What is true is that the lap time I made in 2021 was much beꦦtter than this year,” Quartararo said. “So if I did better,ღ I don't know, but the lap time is what counts, and the results.

“Of course it's a totally different era, because already in 2021 I was doing 1m 46s ওin the race and was super fast. Today I didn't do one 1m 47s low. So it's difficult.”

Quartararo’s b𝕴est race lap in 2021 was a 1m 46.836s (second best lap of the race after Johann Zarco), followed by a similar 1m 46.868s in 2022 (beaten only by Bagnaia and Bezzecchi) and then a 1m 47.624s (16th best) on Sunday. Morbidelli set a 47.344s (11t💟h best).

That is despite Quartararo's race top speed, along the fastest straight of the season, increasing from 343.9km/h (2021) to 350.6km/h (2022) and 356.4km/h. His weekend best was an impressive 360.0km/h, joint seventh and only 6.1km/h from the new all-time 🌱record by KTM's Brad ♔Binder.

Increasing top speed from the M1 engine had been Quartararo's top priority over the winter, but Mugello added further weight to the theory the power increase ﷽has been at the cost of performance in otꦆher areas.

"Unfortunately, everybody else improved much more than what we didꦕ. And to give more power to the engine, we lost some rideability, unfortunately, and that thing is killing us right ♊now," Morbidelli said earlier in the weekend.

"So we wanted more top speed. We have more top speed, but unfortunately 🧔we lost some rideability along the way, and that's killing us."

Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, Italian MotoGP, 11 June
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, Italian MotoGP, 11 June

Past lap time comparisons underline why Quartararo, after trying various parts and set-ups in winter testing and the early rounds, has now effectively settled on pairing the new engi𓄧ne with last year’s chassis and aero, plus a base set-up from the past.

However, “even if we put the same setup, the bike is different⛄. So we cannot compare with 2021, and even with the 2022.”

“From the be♏ginning of the year, we are trying to improve, but made one step forward, one step backward, we never really found a solution, so we decided to go with a setup that we know,” he added.

Leading the world championship after Mugello last season, Quartararo - who announced a surprise split from manager Eric Mahe over the Mugello weekend - is just eighth in this year’s standings, wit🍸h one p🐽odium (COTA).

The Frenchman now heads for the Sachsenring, where he took 🐈victory one year ago.

“It's difficult to𒀰 expect something when you mak💎e this kind of race [at Mugello],” he said. “We are missing turning, that is something that, especially in the last corner I was struggling, and Sachsenring is a track where you have to turn a lot. So hopefully we can really find something in Germany.”

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