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The Australian Grand Prix at
Phillip Island turned out to be a nail-biting battle for Kawasaki's
Randy de Puniet and Anthony West, with their final placements
being sixth and 12th respectively.
Having started from sixth on the grid after a healthy qualifying
session yesterday, de Puniet lost places as the race began, finding
himself in 10th position by the end of lap one. He was then relegated
to 11th when he was overtaken by his team mate, Anthony West,
but the Frenchman soon fought back, taking West and Shinya Nakano
to move up to ninth.
From there, he overtook John Hopkins and everybody moved up a
place when Nicky Hayden dropped out on lap 13. Then, he passed
Marco Melandri, all the while holding off the efforts of John
Hopkins, who was unable to move past the 26-year-old Ninja ZX-RR
rider.
Finally finishing in a comfortable sixth, de Puniet succeeded
in surpassing Kawasaki's previous best premier class result at
Phillip Island, which was Shinya Nakano's 7th, back in 2005.
West, meanwhile, struggled to maintain his positive early momentum.
From his starting position of 10th, he changed places a number
of times and ended up fighting hard in a group consisting of
himself, Carlos Checa, Chris Vermeulen and Colin Edwards. Much
overtaking and re-taking took place, making for some great racing,
until the 26-year-old Australian went over the line in 12th.
It was a disappointment for West, who had hoped for more at his
home round but, yet again, he battled well and continued his
run of bringing home championship points at every round since
he joined the championship in June: no mean feat for a rider
in their rookie year.
Both riders and the team will travel to Malaysia this week for
next Sunday's race at Sepang. There, they hope to continue to
improve on their results at what will be the penultimate round
of the 2007 MotoGP World Championship. |
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Randy de Puniet - 6th Position
"Unfortunately, like many
for me this year, my start was bad, so I still need to work on
those. I got behind Nakano and tried to pass but I made a mistake,
losing the rear, and nearly went into the gravel at turn four.
I lost another place and was behind Shinya and Anthony, and then
it was impossible to overtake, so I waited four or five laps
and went for it. Then I got Hopkins and Melandri, who I think
had a tyre problem or something, and I finished sixth. It's not
a bad result but sure, after the practices, I expected to do
better in the race."
Anthony West - 12th Position
"My start wasn't that great but I started to work my
way through and did okay; I was feeling good. I tried to push
as much as I could until I'd pretty much destroyed the rear tyre.
I couldn't keep my speed up through the corners and, as has been
the case over the past day or so, it was particularly difficult
to feel comfortable when the bike was leaned over on the left
hand side. I was working to stay at the front of my group but
by the last few laps I don't think the tyre had anything left.
I'm not very happy about my result but the fans here have been
really supportive so hopefully, by the time we come back here
next year, I can give them some more to cheer about."
Michael Bartholemy - Kawasaki Competition Manager
"I'm feeling pretty happy, over all. Randy's sixth is
a good result and, while I'm a bit disappointed that Anthony
wasn't able to finish a bit higher by the end of the race, it
looks like he may have had a few problems with his tyres. This
seems to have made him lose some places at the end of the race,
which is a shame, but at the end of the day, both riders rode
well for us today and kept fighting until the end. We can now
look forward to Sepang: we test a lot there and know the ZX-RR
is well-suited to it, so we'll see what happens next weekend." |
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MotoGP Race Result
1. Casey Stoner (AUS) Ducati Marlboro
Team 41'12.244;
2. Loris Capirossi (ITA) Ducati Marlboro Team +6.763;
3. Valentino Rossi (ITA) Yamaha Factory Racing +10.038;
4. Dani Pedrosa (SPA) Repsol Honda Team +11.663;
5. Alex Barros (BRA) Pramac d'Antin Ducati +19.475;
6. Randy De Puniet (FRA) Kawasaki Racing Team +27.313;
7. John Hopkins (USA) Rizla Suzuki MotoGP +29.243;
8. Chris Vermeulen (AUS) Rizla Suzuki MotoGP +34.833;
9. Colin Edwards (USA) Yamaha Factory Racing +35.073;
10. Marco Melandri (ITA) Honda Gresini +36.971;
11. Carlos Checa (SPA) Honda LCR +37.721;
12. Anthony West (AUS) Kawasaki Racing Team +38.426 |
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