But it depends in which area. I’m struggling so much to turn the bike that sometimes I lean my body out of the bike so far that my [outside] foot doesn’t even touch the footpeg!
Through the long right at COTA [Turns 17 and 18] my left foot was a bit like this [he waves his left foot in the air]. This means I’m really pushing to turn the bike, but then I can’t push on the footpegs with my feet to find grip for the exit.
Do you destroy the soles of your boots by pushing into the ’pegs?
You can see some small holes in the soles from where I’m pushing with my feet. Some riders burn their boots when they dangle the leg, because their feet are on the asphalt. I don’t really do that but you can really see how much force I push into the footpegs.
What changed from 2021 to 2023? You won the title in 2021, fought for the title in 2022 and last year you finished tenth.
Already in 2021 our bike wasn’t the best, then in 2022 we didn’t change anything but the others improved. Last season we improved the engine a little bit but the chassis got worse, while the others improved.
The biggest change was that in ’21 we had a lot of potential, especially over one lap [Quartararo scored five pole positions and a total of ten front-row starts that year], then I only got two poles in ’22 and last year I got no poles and only two front rows.
I think it was more the fact that the others made big steps and we stayed in the same place for too long. Sometimes we took one step forward in one area and then one step backwards in another. If you check the lap times they show that in many areas we didn’t improve.
Apart from the horsepower of the other bikes, what made them better – downforce and grip?
The others made a massive change in grip, turning and the wheelie area.
Now you need engine power not only for the power, but for the possibility to use more downforce, because if you don’t have a strong engine and you have a lot of downforce you will lose more than you gain.
Last year we were often on the limit with the engine in acceleration, even with low downforce, so if we added more downforce the bike was even worse, so we couldn’t do it.
Also, most people only talk about grip in acceleration but it’s also the grip you can generate in braking. The grip you have when you are stopping and the grip you need to have the confidence to lean the bike really fast into the corner is the point where I think we really need to improve because from straight up to full-lean angle we are really slow. This is grip, not only downforce. We are trying to figure it out.
All the rival bikes are V4s, so you can’t use the M1’s strong points because you’re surrounded by riders doing something really different and they’re usually in the way, so has your riding technique had to change because of that?
People say to me, ‘Ah you’ve been with the same brand for six years, so you really know the bike’, but the bike is completely different now.
My riding has changed a lot in these six years and especially this year, because from last year to this year I’ve had to completely change my riding style and the team is still asking me try to do this or try to do that. You have to adapt a lot to how the bike is working. Like I said, we make a step in one area and lose in another, then I have to adapt to that.
How has your technique changed?
I was a rider that used really round cornering lines. Now I’m using V lines much more, but we are missing some turning from the bike – and using V lines without turning is complicated. You always try to adapt and create a situation where you can be as fast as possible.
How have downforce and ride-height devices changed the way you ride?
It’s changed a lot, because of the way of the engineers can increase the powers out of corners. With the downforce and the device, which gets the rear of the bike so low, you can use a lot more power. But the device also changes everything when you arrive in the braking area – the bike is much lower, so you have to brake and then the bike has to come back up.