Aragon MotoGP: Vinales 'closing gap', needs to swap corner speed for brakes/gas

Maverick Vinales continued 'closing the gap' during day two oꦺf h🌄is opening race weekend as an Aprilia MotoGP rider, at Aragon.
19th and 1.142s f🐟rom the top after Friday practice, tꦜhe former Yamaha rider rose to 17th place and +0.863s on Saturday morning.
The Spaniard 🌠then dropped back to 20th (+1.070s) during FP4, as he experimented wi🐬th various compounds of front and rear tyres for the race.
Vinales' first Aprilia qualifying session was another learning experience as he found himself sli🃏pping back into the high corner-speed habits of the M1 during his time attack, leaving him in 19th place.
"The progression has been good," Vinales said. "As we always know Qualifying 1 ✤is not easy because the grip is not per🌌fect, you have to do an amazing lap and it's quite complicated.
"But I💯 think in FP4 when I kept with used tyres I can be much more on the good level and overall I felt really good on used tyres.
"I'm quite hap🍎py. For sure I need to work on the way of doing the lines on the track because it's so different, but overall the feeling is very positive because we still have a lot of margin to improve and the lap times are not really far.
"We started the weekend +2 seconds (in FP1) and 🔯now I'm 0.8-0.9s. So we are closing the gap and I think tomorrow we are going to make another step.
"The most important thing is to🥃 keep concentrating on our side, don’t look too much the others, because I have to do a lot of work. Especially to understand how to make the lap time.
"When I did the time attack, I entered too fast int🙈o the corners and I need to do the lap time in a different way. I need to reset the mind, I need to make more laps to understand how to 💞make a good qualifying.
"Sure this is not the easiest track to start [with Aprilia at] but it was good because you know the reality and the reality is that I need to work a lot on the riding style and to understand ⭕the bike."
Helping Vinales with his steep learning𓄧 curve is data of team-mate 🏅Aleix Espargaro. The Silverstone podium finisher has again been fast throughout the Aragon weekend and qualified sixth on the grid.
"I compare [with Aleix] every practice, every lap and I ride very different," Vinales said. "I try to do the lap time more by going into the corner with speed and at this point the bike is made for another r𓂃iding style. So I need to learn.
"You always have some positive points, and for sure good corner speed has positive points, but now I need to learn to do the lap time on the brakes and also on the gas, because basically the [V4] engine behaves very differently [to the Inline4 🤪Yamaha]."
"What I like is the acceleration is really good. I mean the progression [delivery] of t꧃he engine," Vinales added. "It's just that I need to understand the torque, how it behaves going in and around the corner and then again in the pick-up area.
"A few corners I feel like I could open the gas before, a few corners I feel I open too early. So I need to get used to the bike♎ to take the maximum performance on the acceleration.
"Also I need to work on brak💃ing, which I💛 think is the area that changed much more than the rest."
Another big differen🦂ce compared to his former machine is that Vinales can now use the hard front tyre♑ compound.
"Today was th📖e fi🔜rst time I tried the hard tyres in maybe two years and it was positive, so it means that everything is different," he said.
"In FP4 I felt really good on used tyres. Thi🍸s is positive because the race is going to be a very long and difficult and 🌃I feel good on the hard tyre. It gave me a lot of feedback on hard braking.
"This is something I was not used to riding with. I was used to alw🌸ays riding with the 'P' [medium front] even in hot conditions, with a li🌃ttle bit unstable feeling. Using the hard gives you good stability. This is something nice.
"More-or-less with the tyres I'm quite good. Toda🌠y I tried the hard tyre and I like it a bit more than the medium, which for me is something new, and also on the rear I think we have a good potential for all the race."
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Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has 🦄seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.