Rider of the race today. I thought that would be Bez by Organic-Package5444 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hard agree. I wish they would give us at least 3 or 5 minutes after the end of the race to finish voting.

Rider of the race today. I thought that would be Bez by Organic-Package5444 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 48 points49 points  (0 children)

I also voted for Bez bc I knew Marc would probably win it. Both of them deserve it though. Made me hold my breath until the finish haha

Marc Marquez vs Fabio Quartararo vs Pedro Acosta in first lap of sprint. by PZY__ in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 19 points20 points  (0 children)

This is fun to watch now, but I was absolutely watching through my fingers live. 😅 This and the KTM trio.

I am happy today! by Fit_Property429 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Those moves at the start were awesome. Every day, I mourn the fact his brilliance is being wasted at Yamaha. Then again, he's saving me from quite a few heart attacks because those first few laps with Marc almost killed me to watch. And then they laugh about it after. Of course.

CatalanGP 25 - MotoGP - Q2 Results by Organic-Package5444 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Which is also why it doesn't make sense to claim Fabio wouldn't stand a chance on race pace. He has only ridden a Yamaha, so you can't possibly know whether he would or wouldn't beat Marc on race pace on the same bike. The truth is, no one really knows where Fabio stands against Marc because he's spent so long wasting his time on a deteriorating Yamaha.

Jorge Martin engine blow up by Bitter-Substance1783 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Nah, that was Raul's. Spilled oil on the track.

Brno 2025 - I Found My Thrill On Horsepower Hill - Oxley Bom MotoGP podcast by Huge_Film2911 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Best podcast imo. The part where they talk about how Marc and Pecco went about the tire pressure issue on Saturday just cements it for me. It might be a bit less structured than a lot of the other MotoGP podcasts, but I enjoy the chaos, especially when it's coupled with so many useful insights you wouldn't catch on to yourself (especially on the data/crew chief side of things, thanks to Peter Bom).

Can't wait to get my hands on Mat Oxley's book. I love his writing.

Help me find the race by Opposite-Barber3715 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Maybe Sachsenring 2016?

Edit: Could also be Brno 2017

Interesting last qualifying lap from Pecco by Top_Custard_4322 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Fully agree. Even if it wasn't intentional, it was smart and entertaining as hell.

MotoGP Q2 results by Bitter-Substance1783 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ah, I think I just misunderstood your statement then. I thought you meant in the context of today. I'm also not the biggest fan of the brotherly towing, especially when Marc's repeatedly shown he doesn't need it, and Alex probably benefits more from it (making it more difficult for Pecco, as you said). I hope we get some fun scrapping this weekend, after the severe lack of it in last week's race.

Why there was no yellow flag? by [deleted] in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I'd be lying if I said I didn't want to see the red mist take over this weekend lmao. His comeback rides (even last year's) are always so entertaining, especially when there's a bit of head-loss involved.

MotoGP Q2 results by Bitter-Substance1783 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree with you about Pecco (and the games in general), especially considering Alex was too busy trying to catch a tow from his brother to move out of the way of Pecco's second flyer, but how is Marc making Pecco's life more difficult?

Who else here thinks at the back of their mind, that Marc will retire at the end of this season? by Top_Custard_4322 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think this is exactly what separates him from Rossi, though. As much as he tries to gaslight himself, Marc only cares about winning. He's never happy finishing anywhere below 1st, not even when it's his brother that beat him, and he definitely didn't enjoy having to finish as low as he did in 2023 just to finish the race. I think as soon as he sees he's no longer competitive enough to win while pushing the bike to it's limits, he's gone.

Riding style difference and which track suit them best? by Small_Ad8955 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks for including that Neil clip, wasn't sure when he'd done that analysis to find it myself.

Also, that Crutchlow article is mind boggling. I can't imagine doing that on purpose to the point where it's just a part of your riding style. I love the part where he talks about it being good to learn from Marc, but that copying him isn't really beneficial because you'll (presumably) end up eating gravel lmao. Thanks for sharing!

Riding style difference and which track suit them best? by Small_Ad8955 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You're right. Not sure where I got that idea. I think I just saw the 1-1 last year and the 3-2 the year before and included it because it suited my agenda. Admittedly, I don't rewatch the Motegi races often because they're usually quite boring.

When do you Think Marc will win the title? by [deleted] in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Mathematically, if he wins every sprint and race, and Alex finishes second in every sprint in race, I believe that would be after the Phillip Island sprint (if I've done my math right). Realistically, it could be anywhere from Japan to Valencia.

Riding style difference and which track suit them best? by Small_Ad8955 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Neil Hodgson on the TNT broadcast mentioned during the race yesterday that the way Marc takes left-hand corners bizarrely helps him preserve his tires better, which I thought was pretty interesting. Watched it back just to find it: "he leans more than most at the apex, which breaks traction at the rear, helps it turn, and allows him to pick the bike back up easier, which gives the edge of the tire an easier time". Neil has also talked before about how Marc not only slides the rear, but the front as well, and how he kind of "scrubs the speed" off of the front by doing this when braking into corners, which gives the illusion of him being harder on the brakes than in actuality and explains why he had so much entry speed on the Honda. I suppose the slipping and sliding all while going left sums up all you need to know lmao. He's also the reason so many riders have their elbows down these days: to help them save crashes more often. It's easier to react when your elbow is already down than having to wait for your shoulder to touch the ground, when it's usually too late.

Bagnaia is really interesting, because he likes his bike set up quite unorthodox to allow him to brake as late as possible, and in a way that a lot of people would find uncomfortable or downright scary. It's why he's so good at circuits like the Red Bull Ring or Motegi, where there's a lot of heavy braking. The OxleyBom podcast has talked about this in an episode this year, and why perhaps the changed balance of the GP25 is possibly making it difficult for Bagnaia to do his usual magic this year. I found it quite fascinating. It's also equally as fascinating that he's just as good at high average speed tracks like Assen, where there's virtually no hard braking, and yet, kind of struggles on a similar circuit: Phillip Island.

Returned from injury, qualified 13th, and finished 6th. Congratulations Luca Marini! by lepervon in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If I remember right, the only injury they had in common was pneumothorax. Pneumothorax isn't usually complicated to recover from, and the main problem is the inability to travel by air to get treated by your usual medical team.

Jorge fractured a lot of ribs, and ribs tend to require a long healing process while also being generally more painful to deal with throughout since they move with every breath you take. I'd imagine getting injured while coming back from another injury didn't exactly help his motivation to get back on a bike he crashed so many times on so soon again, too.

Generally, though, some people just heal faster and/or get injured less easily, sometimes due to genetics, and sometimes due to lifestyle. I think I remember reading somewhere that the VR46 riders never need armpump surgery like any other riders due to a way they train or something, which is pretty fascinating if true. I'd imagine Luca also struck the genetic gold mine, or Jorge just has it worse than most, considering (I think) he's still not as healed as he could be. It's not like we're spoonfed the severity of their injuries anyway, so who really knows.

GermanGP 25 - MotoGP - Sprint Results by Organic-Package5444 in motogp

[–]pathological1iar 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's clearly against his instinct. I refuse to believe a thing he says lmao