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Ogier: Solberg WRC Canary Islands fight is a rarity in modern rally

WRC
Rally Islas Canarias
Ogier: Solberg WRC Canary Islands fight is a rarity in modern rally

WRC Canary Islands: Ogier and Solberg set for final-day duel

WRC
Rally Islas Canarias
WRC Canary Islands: Ogier and Solberg set for final-day duel

Why Marquez avoided a penalty for his pitlane entry in the Spanish MotoGP sprint

MotoGP
Spanish GP
Why Marquez avoided a penalty for his pitlane entry in the Spanish MotoGP sprint

Can Ducati end Aprilia's MotoGP winning streak at the Spanish GP?

Feature
MotoGP
Spanish GP
Can Ducati end Aprilia's MotoGP winning streak at the Spanish GP?

DTM Red Bull Ring: Preining beats Engel to win opener

DTM
Red Bull Ring
DTM Red Bull Ring: Preining beats Engel to win opener

MotoGP Spanish GP: Marquez wins chaotic sprint race despite crash

MotoGP
Spanish GP
MotoGP Spanish GP: Marquez wins chaotic sprint race despite crash

Russell and Mercedes wary of F1's "2022 scenario" – but is it a fair comparison?

Feature
Formula 1
Russell and Mercedes wary of F1's "2022 scenario" – but is it a fair comparison?

WRC Canary Islands: Solberg closes gap to leader Ogier as rain hits

WRC
Rally Islas Canarias
WRC Canary Islands: Solberg closes gap to leader Ogier as rain hits

Bridgestone airs groove concerns

Bridgestone's technical manager, Hisao Suganuma, is concerned that the wearing of tyre grooves by cars doing an entire race on the same set of fronts, is against the spirit of the regulations

Television images of cars in parc ferme at the end of a race regularly show grooves that appear to have worn down completely to the point where the tyre is slick. In fact, the driver has often been off the racing line on his slow-down lap and the tyres have picked up discarded rubber, or 'marbles,' which fill up the grooves. When this debris is scraped away, the groves are still apparent.

The Canadian Grand Prix, however, heightened Bridgestone's concerns, when pit stops revealed Michelin cars with what appeared to be well-worn grooves at a time when the drivers had not been off-line. Michelin-shod teams often elect not to change the fronts because retaining scrubbed tyres solves understeer problems caused by graining.

Suganuma said: "Bridgestone's tyres don't suffer from this problem which is why it is rare to see a Bridgestone team using scrubbed tyres. Personally, I think that if the front tyres are worn so much that you can't see the grooves, then that is against the spirit of the regulations."

The FIA, meanwhile, has always taken the stance that it will closely monitor tyre performance to ensure that no company is constructing a tyre that gives a performance advantage when in a worn condition. It can do this by monitoring lap times while factoring in reducing fuel loads.

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