By Peter McLaren
If
Valentino Rossi's Sepang race simulation is anything to go by then the Italian looks to have made a giant leap forward in the three-and-a-half months since last October's Malaysian Grand Prix.
The Fiat Yamaha rider finished fifth in the Sepang race, riding the '07 YZR-M1 with Michelin tyres, but the Bridgestone-shod 2008 machine delivered a dramatic improvement in pace.
The fastest race lap during the 21-lap grand prix was a 2mins 2.108secs, set by Ducati's
Casey Stoner, on his way to victory.
But on Thursday, Rossi put 16 of his 21 laps under that time, with a best of 2mins 1.437secs and a worst of 2mins 3.419secs (his first lap). In total, 14 laps were in the 2min 1secs bracket and all but his opening lap was under 2mins 2.312secs.
It is impossible to directly compare Rossi's full 21 laps with the 2007 race times, due to the standing start for the grand prix, but if for the sake of comparison the first lap of both the real race and Rossi's simulation are removed then the shortened 'race times' are as follows:
2007 Malaysian Grand Prix (laps 2-21):
Rider: Time over 21 laps - first lap =
Time over 20 laps
Casey Stoner: 43mins 4.405secs - 2min 9.233secs =
40min 55.172secs
Valentino Rossi: 43mins 9.178secs - 2mins 12.729secs =
40mins 56.447secs
February Sepang test race simulation (laps 2-21):
Rider: Time over 21 laps - first lap =
Time over 20 laps
Valentino Rossi: 42mins 41.066secs - 2mins 3.419secs =
40mins 37.646secs
That means Rossi was 17.525secs faster than Stoner's 2007 grand prix winning pace, over the 20 laps in question, and 18.8secs inside his own grand prix time.
Of course, direct comparisons with Stoner are far from fair - not only was the reigning
MotoGP world champion not at Sepang this week, but he was also obviously riding last year's version of the Desmosedici during the race.