Oliveira: “Amazing to have the whole country with you” | Jose Mourinho said MotoGP “better than F1”
Miguel Oliveira's Portimao M👍otoGP features massive home support and a visit from Jose Mourinho: 'I don't think [fighting] for a world championship would be more pressure than this!'

It was a cruel twist that when 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Miguel Oliveira dominated the inaugural Portuguese MotoGP at Portimao in 2020 - pole position, fastest lap an🐟d victory – the home fans were absent due to Covid restr🎐ictions.
During MotoGP’s five visits since, the fans have flocked back to support Oliveira – reaching a new high of 72,549 fans on Sunday and 174,6🅺14 for the Po♐rtuguese weekend.
But unfortunately, Oliveira is yet to match his 2💫020 home heroics, with a next best of fifth place, for KTM, in 2022.
Tꦯhis year’s return, now on a factory Aprilia RS-GP for Trackhouse, provided promise on paper, but the 29-year-old is yet to get fully comfortable. Qualifying just 15th on the grid⛎, Oliveira was just eleventh in the Sprint race.
However he enjo🔯🐻yed a stronger showing in the grand prix, overtaking both factory Yamahas to reach ninth, before a tangle with Marco Bezzecchi sent him back to twelfth.
That became ninth when Maverick Vinales, 🥃Marc Marquez and Francesco Bagnaia all hit problems in the closing stages.
“It was OK. It could have been 6th place but I got a little too close with Bezzecchi in the first corner, when he pulled next to me and pushed me to the left side of the track🦹,” Oliveira explained.
“I braked on top of the kerb, just went straight and lost three places there. But until then I could at least fight. I made൩ a good start, also a good opening lap and overtook two Yamahas. So not too bad.”

It may not have been the result he or the home fans wanted, b𒈔ut that didn’t dampen the support he received all weekend.
“I think I only saw this [much support] in the years ✃I wa⛦s in the championship with one rider. And he's retired already. You know who it is,” Oliveira said, referring to Valentino Rossi.
🅰“It's quite amazing to have not just the track but the whole country with you. I can't describe the feeling.
“A little bit of pressure because everyone is shouting your name. But it's good because after this ꩲI donꦆ't think even [fighting] for a world championship would be more pressure than this… unless it's here! But yeah it was really cool.”

The sup🌟port for Oliveira echoed across the main straight and into the garages from fans singing in the grandstand: “Yeah [football is a big thing here] - you♓ see how when they shout my name, it’s kind of like a football song!”
Speaking of football, a certain Jose Mourinho was a special guest of MotoGP at Portimao, where he waved the chequered flag in Sunday🌳’s race.
“He watches MotoGP,꧟” Oliveira said. “He likes it. He confessed to me that it's better than F1 - and he has been to a few F1 races!
“So that w🎃a♎s a really cool to hear. It was just a normal chat. It was cool to meet him.”

Peter has been in the padಌdock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc M🌠arquez’s injury issues.