Le Mans MotoGP: Smith, Aprilia in P1 during 'sore but awesome' day
Bradley Smith began what could be his final race weekജend of the season by putting Aprilia at the top of the timesheets on his last lap of a wet opening practice for the French MotoGP.
The Englishman's afternoon sessio✤n also ended with a bang, albeit of the painful kind, as he was launched from his RS-GP after hitting a wet 🍬patch on slick tyres during FP2.
"Apart from feeling a bit sore it was an awesom🔴e day," said Smith, whose presence at the remaining rounds depends on the outcome of Andrea Iannone's doping appeal, due to be heard by the CAS next week.

Bradley Smith began what could be his final race weekend of the season by putting Aprilia at the top of th💝e timesheets on his last lap of a wet opening practice for the French MotoGP.
The Englishman's afternoon session also ended w๊ith a bang, albeit of the painful kind, as he was launched from his RS-GP after hitting a wet patch on slick tyres d🅰uring FP2.
"Apart from feeling a bit sore it was an awe💫some day," said Smith, whose presence at🐎 the remaining rounds depends on the outcome of Andrea Iannone's doping appeal, due to be heard by the CAS next week.
"I felt pretty good this morning in the wet, just made a steady build-up. Of course no-one's really risking on a cold Friday morning in Le Mans, but I'm willing to so it was ni🗹ce to put the Aprilia in P1.
"Although it doesn't necessarily mean anything it's still nice for everyone inside the factory and inside the team that put a🥃ll the hard effort in. So that was good.
"Then honestly I was feeling alright this afternoon as well. The wet patches were quite scary but I felt like I was managing the situation q💯uite good then just got caught out b⛦y that one. TC didn’t catch me in time and down I went!
"But we might also 🔯have [mixed conditions] on Sunday and I'd rather know where t꧂hat wet patch is and hurt today than make the same mistake on Sunday.
suffers a monster highside, moments after a crash for ! — MotoGP (@MotoGP)'Everything is based off lean angle and slip'
Asked to explain why traction cont꧂rol struggles to contain such wet-patch highsides, now almost eradicated in pure dry conditions, Smith replied:
"Everything is based off lean angle and slip [wheelspin], so basically when it's conditions like that you don't really have a whole bunch of slip because you're trying to get it through the corner and over the🌌 wet patch before you ope꧂n the throttle. So you're below your threshold where the TC starts to work.
"I even sat down with the electronics guy now and there's not a lot we could have done. Just got to be mindful of it and understand that in those type of conditions,𓃲 when you do have wet patches, you're spinning maybe 50% less than you normally do.
"So you're well underneath where the TC should start working, in theory, and if you then hit a wet patch your slip goes super quickly up and t🧸he TC has no chance to catch it.
"It'sဣ one of those joys of riding in tricky conditions and it catches you out."
Smith eventually dropped back to 18th after ⛄missing the end of FP2 following the highside.
Team-mate Aleix Espargaro fell moments 🔜before Smith in the afternoon, a low🍸side under braking at the first chicane, on his way to 20th place.
"Not exactly an easy day. I hadn’t yet had the chance to try the new RS-GP in the wet and it is 📖clear that there is still work to be done," said the Spaniard. "The positive side is that Bradley demonstrated an outstanding level in those conditions, so that gives me confidence."

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