Le Mans: 'No gambling' as Miller secures front row
Mixed weather conditions for the Qualifying 2 pole position shootout at Le Mans provided the opportunity for someone 🥃to take a tyre gamble on slicks.
Jack Miller would be top of most peo🐲ple's lists to throw caution to the wind and give it a go.
But the Australian decided it would be a mistake, and was proven correct when the Yamaha ride♎rs pulled straight back in for wet tyres.
"Once you've had꧋ success gambling on tyres, people automatically look at you and think you'll be the first out ꦦthere," Miller said.

Mixed weather conditions for the Qualifying 2 pole position shootout at Le Mans provided the oppor🔯tunity for someone to take a tyre gamble on slicks.
Jack Miller would be top ꦬof most people's lists to throw caution to the wind and give it a go.
But the Australian decided it would be a mistake, and 🅘was proven correct when the Yamaha riders pulled straight back in for wet tyreꦇs.
"Once you've ﷽had success gambling on tyres, people automatically look at you and think you'll be the first out th♒ere," Miller said.
"But I took a little look at what was going on in Qualify🅰ing 1 and had been watching the times from FP4, when we were sat in the box pretty much the whole time while the other boys were out on wets and did a '39.
"I'd done a '42 high in FP3 in the wet, so to do a ‘39 I knew the track had to be in pretty good condition. But then seeing it start going bad at the end of Qualifying 1 on slicks, when even Valentino had some moments and it loo൩ked like the rain was rolling In.
"So I just thought to go and check it out [on wets♈]. When I got to Turn 4 there was quite heavy rain. So I knew I had to push because it was going to soak that part of the tra꧅ck.
"I was able to get a cleanish lap on my first flying lap. On my second I got really good drive through the first sector and then I just lost the rear trying to stop the bike. It was just a lot more wet than you were expecting and with the tyres overheating on the dryer parts of the asphalt it's almost like yo꧟u're on slicks again."
The worsening conditio𝓰ns ultimately meant♍ the grid was decided in the opening minutes, with Miller securing his first front row appearance of the season with a 1m 41.3s, behind Marc Marquez (Honda) and Danilo Petrucci (Ducati).
Nevertheless, with little to lose, Miller still pushed all-out on his final run, only to slide ofꦿf at the first chicane.
"At the end I just had to go and wing it! I pushed r💖eally hard into turns two and it didn't want it," he smiled.
That spill was the latest in series of accidents for the y💧oung Australian this weekend, who is confident he has podium pace for the race.
"Yeah definitely. Friday morning went really great. I think we did our best💯 time on lap 17 of the tyres and were r🀅eally competitive," he said.
"Thankfully that was enough to get me through to Q2 because yesterday afternoon everything wen𝔉t wrong! I tried the medium tyre, crashed, then I tried the softs and crashed on them too.
"So we've got a lღot o🎐f gravel, enough to make an aquarium when we get home!
"I'm happy to have the pace. Wet or dry I feel we’re♕ pretty strong, but I'd much prefeဣr a dry race.
"27🍌 laps around here - I can barely stay on for fiওve in the wet, so I’d prefer it to be dry!"
Miller, who took his first podium of the season at Austin, is cuℱrrently seventh in the world championshi🌜p.

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