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Randy de Puniet gave his team
something to celebrate today when he rode to a spectacular fourth
position in the Malaysian Grand Prix at Sepang. However, in an
unfortunate turn of events, Anthony West made an error on the
starting grid that cost him a potential MotoGP career-best result.
Frenchman de Puniet shot off from fourth on the line as the race
began, showing brilliant progress in an area which has vexed
him in the past, and clinched third place from Marco Melandri
in turn one. A leading group of Casey Stoner, Dani Pedrosa, de
Puniet and Melandri quickly formed, with the Kawasaki number
14 pilot maintaining third until the Italian overtook him on
lap five. But he never let up throughout the race and, whilst
riding his 800cc Ninja ZX-RR to the maximum, held his position,
eventually landing himself 13 championship points and taking
11th position in the current standings.
A delighted de Puniet came home to an uproarious reception from
his crew after a weekend which has seen him relentlessly topping
the timesheets and consistently displaying both talent and courage
on the 4.55km circuit. Bike, rider and Bridgestones shone for
the entire, 21-lap race.
Fortune did not smile, however, on Anthony West. Upon lining
up for the start, the 26-year-old Australian placed himself on
a 250cc grid position, marked on the track adjacent to the MotoGP
spot. This was officially flagged as a jump start and he was
given a ride-through penalty, which he fulfilled at the end of
lap five, surrendering a very-promising fifth place in the process.
It was a heartbreaking turn of events for West, after he had
clocked spectacular times throughout the weekend and qualified
in a personal best fifth position on the grid. He re-joined the
race in 20th place but, in typical West fashion, other riders
were overtaken and he finally finished 15th, miraculously maintaining
his run of scoring points at every round since he began racing
in MotoGP in June.
The team now leave Malaysia and head back for Europe, where the
final round of the MotoGP World Championship will take place
at Valencia in two weeks' time. |
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Randy de Puniet #14 - 4th
position
"I'm very happy, it was a good race. For the first time
in 17 rounds, I managed a good start and then I took Melandri
by the first corner, holding third for a few laps. After that
he passed me and I tried to stay with the leading group. I did
make some small mistakes during the race but the gap between
me and the others didn't change and towards the end I got within
less than a second of Pedrosa. But then I had a few problems
with stability under braking and decided to hold my place rather
than push too hard and take any risks. The bike worked very well
today and I'm so happy with this result."
Anthony West #13 - 15th position
"When I saw the ride through penalty on my pit board, I
didn't know what it was for as I knew I hadn't jumped the start.
I didn't know exactly what was wrong until I came back in at
the end of the race. I made up a few places, even though I felt
pretty flat after the ride through. I was really frustrated but
then I saw I was catching up with some guys and kept on fighting
although, to be honest, I didn't feel completely motivated and
I'm sure that'll be reflected in my lap times. The weekend had
been so fantastic before this so I'm gutted. I'll have to come
back and take my revenge on Sepang next year."
Michael Bartholemy - Kawasaki Competition Manager
"This weekend has been amazing. We've had some great results
over all three days, which is particularly pleasing because we
had many problems when we debuted the 800cc machine during testing
here at Sepang just 12 months ago. Somehow, this weekend has
been pay back for us. We've seen the real potential of the bike,
we've been in the top five all weekend, Randy finished in the
top five and yes, Anthony made a mistake but, if that hadn't
happened, I'm sure he could have finished sixth at least. Ultimately,
the team and riders have shown what a competitive package we
have now at Kawasaki." |
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MotoGP Race Result
1. Casey Stoner (AUS) Ducati Marlboro
Team 43'04.405;
2. Marco Melandri (ITA) Honda Gresini +1.701;
3. Dani Pedrosa (SPA) Repsol Honda Team +2.326;
4. Randy De Puniet (FRA) Kawasaki Racing Team +3.765;
5. Valentino Rossi (ITA) Yamaha Factory Racing +4.773;
6. Toni Elias (SPA) Honda Gresini +17.667;
7. Chris Vermeulen (AUS) Rizla Suzuki MotoGP +20.950;
8. John Hopkins (USA) Rizla Suzuki MotoGP +22.198;
9. Nicky Hayden (USA) Repsol Honda Team +22.450;
10. Colin Edwards (USA) Yamaha Factory Racing +29.746;
...
15. Anthony West (AUS) Kawasaki Racing Team +49.658 |
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