Mat Oxley: Wondrous talent that could carry Quartararo to the MotoGP title

“Quartararo was hailed as the next Márquez, even before he got to MotoGP”

Browse pages
Current page

1

Current page

2

Current page

3

Current page

4

Current page

5

Current page

6

Current page

7

Current page

8

Current page

9

Current page

10

Current page

11

Current page

12

Current page

13

Current page

14

Current page

15

Current page

16

Current page

17

Current page

18

Current page

19

Current page

20

Current page

21

Current page

22

Current page

23

Current page

24

Current page

25

Current page

26

Current page

27

Current page

28

Current page

29

Current page

30

Current page

31

Current page

32

Current page

33

Current page

34

Current page

35

Current page

36

Current page

37

Current page

38

Current page

39

Current page

40

Current page

41

Current page

42

Current page

43

Current page

44

Current page

45

Current page

46

Current page

47

Current page

48

Current page

49

Current page

50

Current page

51

Current page

52

Current page

53

Current page

54

Current page

55

Current page

56

Current page

57

Current page

58

Current page

59

Current page

60

Current page

61

Current page

62

Current page

63

Current page

64

Current page

65

Current page

66

Current page

67

Current page

68

Current page

69

Current page

70

Current page

71

Current page

72

Current page

73

Current page

74

Current page

75

Current page

76

Current page

77

Current page

78

Current page

79

Current page

80

Current page

81

Current page

82

Current page

83

Current page

84

Current page

85

Current page

86

Current page

87

Current page

88

Current page

89

Current page

90

Current page

91

Current page

92

Current page

93

Current page

94

Current page

95

Current page

96

Current page

97

Current page

98

Current page

99

Current page

100

Current page

101

Current page

102

Current page

103

Current page

104

Current page

105

Current page

106

Current page

107

Current page

108

Current page

109

Current page

110

Current page

111

Current page

112

Current page

113

Current page

114

Current page

115

Current page

116

Current page

117

Current page

118

Current page

119

Current page

120

Current page

121

Current page

122

Current page

123

Current page

124

Current page

125

Current page

126

Current page

127

Current page

128

Current page

129

Current page

130

Current page

131

Current page

132

Current page

133

Current page

134

Current page

135

Current page

136

Current page

137

Current page

138

Current page

139

Current page

140

Current page

141

Current page

142

Current page

143

Current page

144

Current page

145

Current page

146

Current page

147

Current page

148

Current page

149

Current page

150

Current page

151

Current page

152

Current page

153

Current page

154

Current page

155

Current page

156

Current page

157

Current page

158

Current page

159

Current page

160

Current page

161

Current page

162

Current page

163

Current page

164

Current page

165

Current page

166

Current page

167

Current page

168

Current page

169

Current page

170

Current page

171

Current page

172

mat oxley The French have enjoyed very little success in the premier class of motorcycle racing, which is rather strange, especially because France was the first great motorcycling nation.

French riders and machines dominated the early years of bike racing. Indeed the first great racing motorcycle was a French tricycle, built by De Dion-Bouton in western Paris. Three wheels made a lot more sense than two at a time when roads were rutted, muddy and covered in horse manure. Not a single two- wheeler qualified for the Paris-Marseilles-Paris race of September 1896, but a De Dion-Bouton finished third, chasing two Panhard cars.

Seven years later a fearsome 1500cc Clément motorcycle, manufactured just over the River Seine from the De Dion-Bouton workshop, won the first ‘motorcycling track championship of the world’ at the Parc de Prince cycle track in Paris. The year after, Paris-based Griffon won the inaugural Coupe Internationale motorcycle races around a 33-mile street circuit south west of Paris.

Despite this promising start French riders won just three MotoGP races during the first seven decades of world championship racing: Pierre Monneret in 1954, Christian Sarron in 1985 and Régis Laconi in 1999.

At Jerez in July, Fabio Quartararo became the fourth Frenchman to win a premier-class race, with a smoothly delivered performance in treacherously hot and slippery conditions. The following Sunday at Jerez – MotoGP, like F1, is also using double-headers – he repeated the performance. Few were surprised at the 21-year-old’s success, because five times during his 2019 rookie campaign he came within a second of beating reigning king Marc Márquez.

Quartararo is a perfect example of how the career of a bike racer is a perilous journey, during which poor luck and pitfalls can overpower talent. At the age of 14, and at his first attempt, Quartararo became the youngest winner of the Campeonato de España de Velocidad, the Spanish championship which is now the stepping-stone to grands prix. But he was too young to move into world championship racing, so he stayed in CEV for 2014. He won the title again, creating a flurry of interest from GP teams. However, the 2015 GP season started before his 16th birthday, so he was still unable to step up. MotoGP had a simple solution to the problem – its Grand Prix Commission sat and changed the rules.

Quartararo was hailed as the next Marc Márquez even before he arrived in MotoGP. Many experts expected him to win the Moto3 world title at his first attempt. But he didn’t.

For all kinds of reasons – bike problems, team issues, injuries and perhaps a distracted teenager’s mind – his two seasons in Moto3 were mostly a disaster. In 2017 his manager moved him into the bigger Moto2 class, where again he struggled, until he took his first GP win at Barcelona in June 2018, very much against the run of play. Within weeks he had signed his first MotoGP contract, with the Petronas- and Sepang-backed Yamaha team, alongside Valentino Rossi’s protégé Franco Morbidelli. Quite a turnaround.

“Quartararo has huge talent: cool under fire, fiercely intelligent”

Quartararo – the son of a French racing champion – has a wondrous talent. Obviously he is super-fast, but he has two other attributes that can make the difference at MotoGP level, where everyone has an extraordinary ability to get the best out of an engine and two wheels.

He is very cool under fire and he is fiercely intelligent. His mind is lightning quick, like Rossi’s and Márquez’s, the most successful riders of the last two decades. You find him behind the pits after a practice session, surrounded by a scrum of journalists, all of them firing questions, in English, French, Spanish and Italian. He answers each question in the interlocuter’s own tongue, hardly pausing for breath, laughing all the time.

On track he is pinpoint accurate and unerringly consistent, although he can adapt his riding technique, race by race and even corner by corner, according to the grip available. In MotoGP’s current era of spec software and Michelin tyres this skill is vital, because riders often find their machines outside their sweet spot, so they must improvise to extract maximum performance. Yamaha has had a horrible time since these rules were introduced in 2016. During the first four seasons of this new technical combination the factory’s YZR-M1 won 13 races, compared to 30 during the previous four years. Quartararo – who will replace the ageing Rossi in the factory Yamaha team next season – can ride however his motorcycle needs to be ridden.

When the bike and the tyres allow him to exploit his M1’s excellent corner-speed potential he uses smooth, swooping lines. But if there’s not enough grip to dance on the edge of the tyres he changes his technique to square off corners: late on the brakes, turn the bike aggressively, then on the throttle as quick as he can.

This latter technique works better in a battle, especially when fighting six-times MotoGP king Márquez, whose Honda RC213V usually requires the Spaniard to square off the corners. Quartararo has a great chance to win the COVID-19-truncated MotoGP championship, poor luck and pitfalls allowing. Márquez gave him a head start by crashing out of the first race, breaking an arm. If he does inherit the crown, he will be the first champion from outside a factory team since the 1980s.