
Originally Posted by
pritch
On a positive note there is Eugene Laverty's performance on an aging Ducati. His team is really short of cash and consequently had personnel problems, but he is ahead of both Ducati factory riders in the championship. Laverty should definitely send Iannone a thank you card.

Going on his performances this season, especially when the difficulties the team has had with cashflow and personnel are taken into account, he's a candidate for a Pramac seat. Redding's is the only one of the Pramac and factory seats that may be up for grabs next year as Lorenzo, one of the Andrea's (hopefully Dovi) and Petrucci are all right until the end of 2017.

Originally Posted by
Autech
To be fair though Marquez jumped on the Honda straight into a factory seat when the bike was at its best and the Yamaha not quite as good. If he had jumped on a sat or open class bike would he have set the world on fire? Who knows.
All we know is that this year and last both the factory riders are struggling, which doesn't bode well for the customer bikes who wont be getting the attention required to perform.
Its easy to sit here and laugh at how Miller and Crutchlow are spending more time sliding down the road than on it. But do any of us know how hard it is to ride?
Marquez was already signed up with HRC when the seat came up. They signed him without knowing exactly where they were going to put him, then Stoner left and it was a given. Honda certainly didn't sign him for his development abilities as the RCV has gone from being the best to being worst of the factory bikes (not counting the Aprilia which is still in it's early stages).
Anyone who laughs at any MotoGP rider is a moron. Those guys are 100 times better on a bike than anyone on this forum and they earned the chance to have a go at being the best.
Zen wisdom: No matter what happens, somebody will find a way to take it too seriously. - obviously had KB in mind when he came up with that gem
Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity
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