Qatar MotoGP: Jack Miller forced out as bike 'gets lost', becomes 'foreign'

An electronics issue caused Ja💞ck Miller's factory Ducati to get 'lost' during Sunday's 𓄧Qatar MotoGP.
Qualifying fourth and confident in his race pace, Miller looked set to pla💟y a starring role in the season opener and erase🌸 last year's ninth place disappointment.
But the behaviour of his GP22 became 'foreign' from the start, dropping him to tenth on lap 1 and 16th on la🅠p 6, after whiဣch he retired.
The problem described b🔯y Miller, and fitting with the term 'lost', suggests his Ducati's engine management became out of sync with his actual location on the race track.
Things like power delivery are♐ tuned corner-by-corneꦑr so that, for example, 50% throttle during a change of direction will provide a different level of power to 50% throttle on the main straight.
The problem seems to🃏 be that Miller's bike was providing 'full' main straight power in twisty sections and then a soft delivery on the straight.
"From the get-go the bike wasn't fantastic, there was somet♏hing missing in the electronics," Miller explained. "The bike was quite lost, let's say. I had 100% power in some very strange points of the track, and then coming onto the front straight, I had no power.
"I had to go to fourth gear pretty much directly out of the ♛last corner. Everybody was passing me. I honestly thought I was going to get run up the arse, simply because I was that slow.
"I tried everything I could, swapped from [engine] map A to B to C, system on, system off. Tried my best, but nothing. At one poiܫnt, especially over the back part of the track, it kept firing me in-bet🧔ween corners, it would give me a massive burst of throttle.
"Of course my throttle is open, but I'm not expecting that. And then also the fear of almost get💎ting run up the arse every time I came out of the last corner, because I'm on the racing line and not accelerating.
"I just deci♊ded it was better to just pull in. So, not a great day.
"The bike was foreign, let's say. Very foreign. It is what it is. We know the issue, we know wha༺t happened. It's unfortunate, and hopefully it won't happen again."
Team-mate and title runner-up Francesco Bagnaia completed a night to fo🃏rget for the factory Ducati team when he fell and took down Pramac's Jorge Martin.

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