Rossi whips low-powered Yamaha to finish on top

Valentino Rossi, Italy's effervescent motorcycling superstar, swept to victory in the British MotoGP at Donington Park yesterday, and left his rivals wondering what they must now do to stop his championship charge.

The 25-year-old had such a comfortable lead that he slowed down on the approach to the finish line in order to stage a mammoth stand-up wheelie as he extended his title lead.

He beat Honda's Colin Edwards, who took the first podium position of his MotoGP career, by 2.94sec, with Spain's Sete Gibernau in third.

"I made a good start on the first lap, but I couldn't get a good feeling from my rear tyre because it was cold," Rossi said. "Then after two laps I got the feeling back, and I was able to overtake and open up a gap. I had problems when some soft rain fell, but everybody else slowed down and fortunately the good weather came back."

Edwards, the former World Superbike champion who has been criticised for his lack of success in MotoGP, responded to his second place in ebullient fashion: "To all the naysayers, I'm up here, I'm back and I'm ready."

Gibernau saw Rossi's championship lead stretch to 22 points, but was content with his finish after crashing in the two previous rounds. "We couldn't find a good set-up this weekend," he said. "But last night we changed everything on the bike, and it worked. This is much more than I could have expected on a track that I don't like." Rossi dominated qualifying, but this was a race no one could predict. He gained his fourth pole position of the year in dry conditions, where his controlled aggression chopped 2.02sec from the circuit record.

But Australian Troy Bayliss led the wet warm-up session on Ducati's V4 Desmosedici, and Gibernau, who excels in the rain, finished second. Briton Shane Byrne, who had qualified only 17th, also sparkled, finishing ninth on Aprilia's three-cylinder bike. Yamaha, however, are still having problems finding a good wet-weather set-up for Rossi, and he trailed in ninth place, 3.5sec behind Bayliss.

The roulette wheel of British weather eventually gave the riders a dry track.

Rossi gunned into the lead as they rounded the first turn at Redgate, but Loris Capirossi put a Ducati ahead in a MotoGP race for the first time this season with an audacious swoop on the downhill Craner Curves.

On the second lap Rossi performed one of his trademark overtaking manoeuvres: he split from the pack on the entrance to the Esses and regained the lead.

Now he focused on building a gap. After six laps he was 1.19sec ahead of Edwards. By nine laps the cushion was 1.5sec, and by 18 laps 2.15sec. His four-cylinder Yamaha lacks power compared to the five-cylinder Hondas, but Rossi's skills and crew chief Jeremy Burgess's bike settings had eliminated the disadvantage.

With eight laps remaining Edwards trailed Rossi by more than three seconds. Max Biaggi, only one point behind Rossi before this race, had a disastrous day. Only eighth fastest in qualifying, he pulled up to seventh, but dropped to 13th place with gearbox problems on his Honda.

Britain's World Superbike champion Neil Hodgson started from the fifth row of the grid in 13th place on his year-old Ducati, but he was determined to reward the 81,000 fans who lined the Leicestershire circuit. By lap 14 he was in 12th place, 1.8sec behind Ruben Xaus, his team-mate in the Madrid-based d'Antin squad. Six laps later he had ground his way past Xaus - an important blow in the psychological war between team-mates. And when Norick Abe joined the so-called "Craner Club" by plunging off his Yamaha on the downhill swoop, Hodgson made 10th place, his goal for the weekend.

Byrne also performed well on a bike that was not competitive with the leaders, working his way from 17thon the grid to 14th.

Now the MotoGP circus heads for Czechoslovakia on 22 August. Hodgson needs more finishes that will guarantee his future in MotoGP, and Byrne will seek a 2005 ride that better matches his talent. Suzuki's fast-improving V4 - American John Hopkins finished eighth on one at Donington - could suit him.

PROMOTED VIDEO
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
News
Angelina Jolie with her father Jon Voight
people
News
Bill Kerr has died aged 92
people
Sport
footballPremiership preview: All the talking points ahead of this weekend's matches
Arts and Entertainment
Warner Bros released a mock-up of what the new Central Perk will look like
tv'Friends' cafe will be complete with Gunther and orange couch
News
Keira Knightley poses topless for a special September The Photographer's issue of Interview Magazine, out now
people
Voices
The Ukip leader has consistently refused to be drawn on where he would mount an attempt to secure a parliamentary seat
voicesNigel Farage: Those who predicted we would lose momentum heading into the 2015 election are going to have to think again
Arts and Entertainment
Cara Delevingne made her acting debut in Anna Karenina in 2012
film Cara Delevingne 'in talks' to star in Zoolander sequel
News
i100
Sport
Mario Balotelli pictured in his Liverpool shirt for the first time
football
Life and Style
tech
Caption competition
Caption competition
Latest stories from i100
Daily Quiz
Have you tried new the Independent Digital Edition apps?
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

Career Services

Day In a Page

Ukraine crisis: The phoney war is over as Russian troops and armour pour across the border

The phoney war is over

Russian troops and armour pour into Ukraine
Potatoes could be off the menu as crop pests threaten UK

Potatoes could be off the menu as crop pests threaten UK

The world’s entire food system is under attack - and Britain is most at risk, according to a new study
Gangnam smile: why the Chinese are flocking to South Korea to buy a new face

Gangnam smile: why the Chinese are flocking to South Korea to buy a new face

Seoul's plastic surgery industry is booming thanks to the popularity of the K-Pop look
From Mozart to Orson Welles: Creative geniuses who peaked too soon

Creative geniuses who peaked too soon

After the death of Sandy Wilson, 90, who wrote his only hit musical in his twenties, John Walsh wonders what it's like to peak too soon and go on to live a life more ordinary
Caught in the crossfire of a cyber Cold War

Caught in the crossfire of a cyber Cold War

Fears are mounting that Vladimir Putin has instructed hackers to target banks like JP Morgan
Salomé's feminine wiles have inspired writers, painters and musicians for 2,000 years

Salomé: A head for seduction

Salomé's feminine wiles have inspired writers, painters and musicians for 2,000 years. Now audiences can meet the Biblical femme fatale in two new stage and screen projects
From Bram Stoker to Stanley Kubrick, the British Library's latest exhibition celebrates all things Gothic

British Library celebrates all things Gothic

Forthcoming exhibition Terror and Wonder: The Gothic Imagination will be the UK's largest ever celebration of Gothic literature
The Hard Rock Café's owners are embroiled in a bitter legal dispute - but is the restaurant chain worth fighting for?

Is the Hard Rock Café worth fighting for?

The restaurant chain's owners are currently embroiled in a bitter legal dispute
Caribbean cuisine is becoming increasingly popular in the UK ... and there's more to it than jerk chicken at carnival

In search of Caribbean soul food

Caribbean cuisine is becoming increasingly popular in the UK ... and there's more to it than jerk chicken at carnival
11 best face powders

11 best face powders

Sweep away shiny skin with our pick of the best pressed and loose powder bases
England vs Norway: Roy Hodgson's hands tied by exploding top flight

Roy Hodgson's hands tied by exploding top flight

Lack of Englishmen at leading Premier League clubs leaves manager hamstrung
Angel Di Maria and Cristiano Ronaldo: A tale of two Manchester United No 7s

Di Maria and Ronaldo: A tale of two Manchester United No 7s

They both inherited the iconic shirt at Old Trafford, but the £59.7m new boy is joining a club in a very different state
Israel-Gaza conflict: No victory for Israel despite weeks of death and devastation

Robert Fisk: No victory for Israel despite weeks of devastation

Palestinians have won: they are still in Gaza, and Hamas is still there
Mary Beard writes character reference for Twitter troll who called her a 'slut'

Unlikely friends: Mary Beard and the troll who called her a ‘filthy old slut’

The Cambridge University classicist even wrote the student a character reference
America’s new apartheid: Prosperous white districts are choosing to break away from black cities and go it alone

America’s new apartheid

Prosperous white districts are choosing to break away from black cities and go it alone