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Masao Furusawa: Rossi, Ducati and retirement

In a follow-up to the previous feature on Masao Furusawa (see separate story), Hyacintha Bonafacia spoke to the Yamaha MotoGP boss about Valentino Rossi's decision to join Ducati, Furusawa's own retirement and more...
One of the reasons for Valentino Rossi's decision to leave Yamaha for Ducati at the end of this season is Masao Furusawa's retirement.

Rossi said he feared what will become of Yamaha's MotoGP project without Furusawa, in charge since 2003, while Furusawa - who won't severe his Yamaha ties completely - admits he had wanted Rossi to retire with him at the end of the year.

”I will not leave Yamaha, but stay as an adviser," Furusawa told the Koran Jakarta newspaper, Indonesia.

"I wanted Valentino to retire with me and be an ambassador of Yamaha. I missed his position of ambassador with me.

“I have a lot of things to do outside of MotoGP. Life is not so long,” he added.

Furusawa and Rossi have won 45 MotoGP races and four world championship together since 2004. The Japanese and Italian spoke closely about the future.

"Valentino and I discussed the future via email and in face-to-face conversation several times," he said. "Basically I was disappointed to accept his move but Valentino made his mind to have another challenge.

"Now I would like to support him as much as possible until the end of this season. Valentino and I have been united seven years to achieve the same goal in MotoGP.

"Now is the time to go for a next step."

Much debate has been triggered by the news that Yamaha might not allow Rossi to test for Ducati straight after the final race of the year. Furusawa commented that it is "too early to say, because of the point of view of the professional business relationship."

When asked about Rossi's chances of success at Ducati - which last won the world championship in 2007, but hasn't won a race so far this year - Furusawa responded:

“I know the advantages and disadvantages of the Ducati bike. The point is whether or not Valentino can point these out, and then [whether] Ducati can follow his recommendations."

Rossi won the first round of the season in Qatar, but was beaten by team-mate Jorge Lorenzo at the next two races before breaking his leg at round four. Rossi returned at round eight, but is yet to defeat Lorenzo, who has now won seven races.

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    Another one for the sake of brevity...

    Quote:

    "Rossi did not have the best bike in 2004 and he won a title. He arguably didn't have the best bike in 2008, but he won too. He was just the best rider in both seasons."

    He wasn't exactly riding a Kawasaki or an Illmor either was he? He wasn't riding the 3rd or 4th best bike on the grid either.

    Get real. The 80/20 thing is bunk. It takes a good bike to win the title. The only people who you can say won a title on the 3rd best bike on the grid in the last 20 years is Kenny Roberts Jr and Schwantz on the Suzuki 500cc which was never better than the Hondas or Yamahas. I can't see anyone pulling that off in this era of 4 strokes and computers.
    Posted by RawDawg (629 days ago)


    I'm not picking on you man, it's just fun to compare old comments to current comments. :)
    Posted by Realist (12 days ago)
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