Ajo KTM team

Tech3 KTM team

Couldn't they at least made some effort to look different so that you can notice which rider is which with a glance and not have to concentrate to see if there is white at the bottom of the bike or not.
I also waiting a comment from him but I couldn't find yet. I don't think he has pain ( if he has but everything ok, then still no problem) but he may have muscle related something.Andres125sx wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 07:53Any comment from MM after the race?
I see everybody assuming if he finished everything is ok, but that´s a bold assumption. At the end of the race I´m not sure if he was emotional or maybe he was in huge pain
https://www.motorsport.com/motogp/news/ ... l/6332428/“Of course, emotions is the correct word,” he said when asked by Motorsport.com if he ever thought today was possible.
“I’m a person who likes to keep the emotions inside, but when I arrived in the box with all my mechanics I just exploded and I couldn’t control the emotions.
“[It] has been a very long time that I’ve been dreaming about today, finishing a MotoGP race and it’s the biggest step in my rehabilitation, my recovery and to feel again [being] a MotoGP rider was my dream and it’s what I did today.
“So, when I arrived in the box, of course I was tired and I was exhausted.
“But it was the explosion of emotion that I couldn’t control, but was very nice.”
Marquez says the opening laps were tough because it was “not my place” and concedes he was simply “sitting on the bike” in the final six laps as his arm lost energy.
“Maybe the hardest thing was the first laps because I was not in my place,” he added.
“You know in school when you play football with the older guys, they overtake you where you want.
“So, in the first laps I didn’t feel in my place, I didn’t have the pace, I didn’t have control of the bike and then everybody started to overtake me.
“But then I was calm, didn’t fight and just found my place and as soon as I found my place I started to increase my rhythm step-by-step and I was able to do my personal best lap in the end of the race.
“In the end I felt better and I was trying to catch [Aleix] Espargaro again, but then suddenly my body said ‘now it starts here’.
“The last six laps I just was sitting on the bike trying to finish the race. But the most important thing is to finish the race.
“And then if we check, to finish the race only 13 seconds behind Quartararo, this is something incredible.”
Great, this is very good news then. Last six laps without energy look normal IMHO after so long, if that was the biggest problem I think he´ll be at 100% again in some weeksetusch wrote: ↑19 Apr 2021, 14:25He just need to get form
https://www.motorsport.com/motogp/news/ ... l/6332428/“Of course, emotions is the correct word,” he said when asked by Motorsport.com if he ever thought today was possible.
“I’m a person who likes to keep the emotions inside, but when I arrived in the box with all my mechanics I just exploded and I couldn’t control the emotions.
“[It] has been a very long time that I’ve been dreaming about today, finishing a MotoGP race and it’s the biggest step in my rehabilitation, my recovery and to feel again [being] a MotoGP rider was my dream and it’s what I did today.
“So, when I arrived in the box, of course I was tired and I was exhausted.
“But it was the explosion of emotion that I couldn’t control, but was very nice.”
Marquez says the opening laps were tough because it was “not my place” and concedes he was simply “sitting on the bike” in the final six laps as his arm lost energy.
“Maybe the hardest thing was the first laps because I was not in my place,” he added.
“You know in school when you play football with the older guys, they overtake you where you want.
“So, in the first laps I didn’t feel in my place, I didn’t have the pace, I didn’t have control of the bike and then everybody started to overtake me.
“But then I was calm, didn’t fight and just found my place and as soon as I found my place I started to increase my rhythm step-by-step and I was able to do my personal best lap in the end of the race.
“In the end I felt better and I was trying to catch [Aleix] Espargaro again, but then suddenly my body said ‘now it starts here’.
“The last six laps I just was sitting on the bike trying to finish the race. But the most important thing is to finish the race.
“And then if we check, to finish the race only 13 seconds behind Quartararo, this is something incredible.”
Double 125cc world champion and veteran team boss Gresini died in February after a two-month battle with COVID-19.
The team – which operates in Moto3, Moto2 and in MotoGP currently as Aprilia’s factory entrant – vowed to continue racing despite Gresini’s tragic passing.
As the squad gets set to return to independent status in 2022, Padovani will take over the roles previously occupied by her late husband – while their sons Lorenzo and Luca will take on roles within the team.