MotoGP Austria: Brad Binder to Francesco Bagnaia: “You bastards did something on the start!”

And Bagnaia later admitte♊d Binder was correct.
KTM’s launch superiority♍ is well known this season and, with Binder starting from a rare front row, not far behind pole man Bagnaia, the South African must have fancied his chances of beating the Ducati to Turn 1.
Although Binder (and team-mate Jack Miller) le🧜ft second on the grid Maverick Vinales for dust, Bagnaia comfortably won the holeshot battle in both the Sprint and Grand Prix. The pair then remained first and second, respectively, to the chequered flags.
While waiting for Sunday’s podium ceremony Bagnaia, Binder and third-place Marco🔯 Bezzecchi were shown a replay of the start on TV.
“Hey, you bastards did something on the start, ꩲeh?” Smiled Binder, tapping Bagnaia on the shoulder with his fist.
“My start was f**king▨ good, but… not as good as 𒈔normal!” Binder added.
"You b******* did something at the start!"
— MotoGP™ (@MotoGP)
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Bagnaia didn’t respond and continued watching the replℱays.
But when later quizzed by the media about why the꧋ Ducati seemed to have been so much stronger off the line, he confirmed:
“For the start, it’s clear that it’s something [new] we had to our bike, but it’s something that I prefer someone above - in Ducati -&🍎nbsp;to speak about because I don't wa▨nt to be the first one [to say what it is].
“It’s something that helped me in the first part of acceleration. That was the moment I was losing the most because they [KTM] can be super aggressive in the fir𓂃st part of acceleration, and us with the carbon clutch it's more difficult, this kind of acceleration.
“But we improved ಌon that and it was so helpful. We won both races and we already had a great chance to do that, thanks to ꦺthe start.”
MotoGP.com commentator and pitlane reporter Simon Crafar suggested there was also something different about Ducati's holeshot device switch i🍃n Austria.
LIGHTS OUT fires off the line!
— MotoGP™ (@MotoGP)

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.