Pedrosa dominates in Germany
Pedrosa and his Honda RC212V were peerless today. From second on the grid he made a perfect start, was first into Turn 1 and was never headed for the entire 30-lap race. His early pace was relentless as he held off and then steadily edged away from series leader and pole position man Casey Stoner, who at this stage lay in second place. On his way to victory Pedrosa set the fastest lap of the race, a time of 1m 23.082s which bettered the lap record he set here last year aboard the 990cc RC212V. This was Pedrosa’s third win of his MotoGP career and his first since taking victory at Donington Park last season. He remains in third place in the World Championship but has closed the gap to Valentino Rossi, who crashed out today, to twenty points.
While Pedrosa dominated at the front, team-mate Hayden was performing heroics as he battled through from his lowly grid position. A good start elevated the World Champion to tenth at the first corner and, despite early worries about an unusual noise coming from his machine, Hayden began picking off riders in spectacular fashion. By half distance he’d climbed to seventh and suddenly the impossible looked possible. By now lapping at a similar pace to Pedrosa, the 25-year-old American soon dispensed with Randy de Puniet before catching and dispatching Colin Edwards and a slowing Casey Stoner on the same lap. With Melandri overtaken a lap later Hayden crossed the line in third place to record his second podium in succession and create a welcome springboard for his home race, the U.S. Grand Prix which takes place at Laguna Seca in one week’s time.
Dani Pedrosa
“I’m very very happy with the result today. This is a victory I’d like to dedicate to the Repsol Honda Team and to HRC because they have been working really hard for a long time without getting the results and I’m very happy they’ve kept motivation and put in maximum effort at every race. Now they have some reward. Also I’m pleased for the fans because they’ve given me great support even when I wasn’t winning. The race went very well obviously. I made a good start, pushed hard from the beginning and was able to open up a gap and control things from the front. The tires were really good today and Michelin did a very good job, especially as some riders were having difficulties. Towards the end of the race the gap was big so I could take it relatively easy, which I was grateful for because it was very hot out there. The result closes the gap slightly in the championship which is good, but the really important thing about today is that we are winning again. Hopefully we can move on from this result and continue getting stronger."
Nicky Hayden
“It’s great to be on the podium after what started as a really tough weekend. The team did a great job overnight and made some big improvements to the machine. I came out in the warm-up and it was a lot quicker so even though I was starting from 14th I still had some confidence for the race. I made a decent start – not as good as the one at Assen – but I made up a few places into the first corner. Then I heard a strange noise from the bike and slowed for a couple of laps trying to figure out if it was a problem. It didn’t seem to make any difference though so I just got my head down and started picking up places. The tires worked really well today, so a big thanks to Michelin. It’s a good result ahead of Laguna but I need to put the whole weekend together on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. We lost almost all of Friday with problems and Saturday didn’t go much better which cost us a lot. Dani rode really well to win the race and two riders on the podium is a really good result for the Repsol Honda Team. Now I’m just going to go home to the U.S. GP, enjoy the race and try to have some fun at Laguna."
Results
Pos Name Bike Time/Behind
1. Daniel Pedrosa Honda 41:53.196
2. Loris Capirossi Ducati + 13.166
3. Nicky Hayden Honda + 16.771
4. Colin Edwards Yamaha + 18.299
5. Casey Stoner Ducati + 31.426
6. Marco Melandri Honda + 31.917
7. John Hopkins Suzuki + 33.395
8. Anthony West Kawasaki + 41.194
9. Alex Hofmann Ducati + 43.214
10. Michel Fabrizio Honda + 44.459
11. Chris Vermeulen Suzuki +1:01.894
12. Kurtis Roberts KR +1:10.721
13. Makoto Tamada Yamaha + 2 laps
14. Carlos Checa Honda + 3 laps
DNF:
Name Bike Laps
Randy de Puniet Kawasaki 29
Shinya Nakano Honda 19
Alex Barros Ducati 9
Valentino Rossi Yamaha 5
Sylvain Guintoli Yamaha 3