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Smith column: Ready and waiting.

If you've got to hang around waiting for something big to begin, then the Ritz's Carlton hotel in Qatar is the right place. On the edge of the desert overlooking the sea, with a brilliant gym, swimming pool and those really comfortable beds, it makes the wait for the 2008 MotoGP season start with practice on Friday evening just about bearable.

This is it. The moment everybody has been waiting for. All those cold cycle rides around the Chilton Hills and the runs over Shotover Hill on the outskirts of Oxford are forgotten as we prepare for a 17-round World Championship that will take us round the globe.

Both myself and the team are ready for what lies ahead.

Pre-season testing has been fantastic, but racing can be so very different. None of us are getting carried away because, for 40 minutes in a race, you have to put in those fast laps when it counts. In practice and testing, you get a second chance if you make a mistake but, in the race, you don't have that luxury.

I led the way after three nights of testing in Qatar, which was due to a lot of hard work by a lot of people, including my Polaris World team and my trainer, who put together a fantastic plan to prepare me for racing at a strange time and under floodlights.

It was the very first time I'd ever ridden a motorbike at night, and it certainly was very different and made me concentrate very hard. The track is well lit, but you can see nothing else which is really strange. It took a little getting used to because the track appeared shiny with a glaze-like surface. Also, there were a couple of problems with shadows, but you have to accept that and get on with it.

The first day was a disappointment when we completed a load of laps for nothing. The second day, we went back to the settings we used when we led the testing at Jerez. It worked perfectly and I was able to improve my times by one second and lead the way. The last night, I was careful with that first race so close. We completed some tyre testing and a race distance with no big dramas or anything crazy. I was second fastest and my time from the night before was the fastest of three days.

Before I left for Qatar, I sat down with my trainer to work out how my body would cope having to practice, qualify and race at such different times to normal with our race starting at eight o'clock at night rather than eleven o'clock in the morning. It's worked brilliantly and I've certainly been alert while riding but, once I stopped, all I wanted to do was get to bed.

I've been getting up at nine and then having breakfast before going for a run and a swim. Then it's a power nap for around an hour before leaving for the circuit, which is about ten miles from the hotel out in the desert. Between sessions, I've been eating cereals and, when we've finished on the track, it's time to eat again and then get to bed for a minimum eight hours sleep.

It was a big move for me to leave the Repsol Honda team after two years of grands prix racing with them. I was worried about moving to Polaris World Aprilia, but I should not have been. The team have been fantastic and we gelled immediately. I was really honoured when they approached me last year and I aim to pay back the faith that a Spanish team have put in a young English rider.

The really big step has been the bike, which has already proved a grand prix winner in the hands of the team. Also, being the only rider in the 125cc team, we can use all the data obtained from their four grand prix victories last year and everybody is just working for me, which has already been a really big help.

Roll on Friday evening and that first practice session. Now what's next, power nap, swim, run or yet another bowl of cereal.

Bradley

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