Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Why revised Le Mans MotoGP schedule is important for Vinales

Maverick Vinales says this weekend's revised French Grand Prix schedule, in which MotoGP will race before Moto2, will be an important opportunity to understand the behaviour of his Yamaha

Vinales has typically struggled with grip in the early parts of races on his Yamaha, forcing him into recovery rides after showing race-winning pace throughout practice.

This proved to be the case at the San Marino GP, when he went from setting a record lap in qualifying to being a "kitty" in the race when he finished 5.3 seconds off Yamaha-mounted race winner Franco Morbidelli in sixth.

A change in approach in practice for the second Misano race, where Vinales focused exclusively on high fuel runs, paid off in the race and he inherited victory after a late crash for Francesco Bagnaia.

Part of the issue for Vinales' form loss in races has always been thought to relate to the high quantity of Moto2 Dunlop rubber left on the track after the race which is held directly before the MotoGP race - something reflected at the post-San Marino GP test, which Vinales topped on a circuit caked in Michelin rubber.

With the MotoGP French GP starting at 1pm local time, and Moto2 moved to after it to avoid clashing with the Formula 1 Eifel GP, Vinales has an opportunity to test this theory should it remain dry on Sunday.

"Le Mans is a track where we're used to being on good grip and riding on a good way," Vinales said. "Last year in FP1, FP2 we were very strong.

"This is the facts and we need to try to especially understand if before the Moto2 race the feeling is the same or not, because normally in the practices we can be strong.

"But normally in the race we go backwards. So, this weekend is a good opportunity to understand many, many things for us."

Vinales won at Le Mans in 2017, while Yamaha has won eight times in the modern MotoGP era at the French GP.

As a result, Vinales believes it's a circuit where he can "take out the maximum" from the M1.

"For me it's very important to understand many things this weekend," he added. "First of all to see if our new bike is good in the wet because it will be wet most of the practices.

"And then, we will see if before Moto2 we have the same conditions as we have all weekend. This will be important for us.

"After all, I think Le Mans is a track where I can take out the maximum performance easily on the bike, [as] I understand very well what to do to go fast."

Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Espargaro: Portimao "borderline" on MotoGP safety
Next article Bagnaia says he 'deserves' MotoGP factory Ducati promotion

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe