Kawasaki’s John Hopkins will start tomorrow’s French Grand Prix from the
third row of the grid, after qualifying his Ninja ZX-RR in ninth place during
this afternoon’s hour long timed session.
Hopkins used the first half of the qualifying session to identify the best
front tyre option on his Ninja ZX-RR, before switching to a rear qualifier with
just 23 minutes remaining.
The 24-year-old Anglo-American looked set to steal pole with the fastest time
through the first three sectors on his first flying lap, but had to settle for
provisional sixth place on the grid, after being baulked by Honda’s Alex de
Angelis and then suffering a big rear slide through the final sector.
The Kawasaki pilot had two more runs on qualifying tyres and, despite having
to run a front tyre that didn’t work as effectively in combination with the
super-sticky Bridgestone rear, marginally improved on his lap time with his
final flying lap.
Hopkins goes into tomorrow’s 28-lap race confident that his Ninja ZX-RR is
more than a match for his factory rivals in race trim.
Anthony West was, once again, left looking for answers after being plagued by
the rear traction problems that have so far hampered his first full season as a
factory MotoGP rider. As a result, he was only able to make a small improvement
to his fastest lap time after switching to qualifying tyres.
The Le Mans circuit is not an easy one at which to overtake, which means the
Kawasaki pilot faces a tough task tomorrow starting from 18th position, and the
back row of the grid. But West is nothing if not a battler, and the 26-year-old
Australian heads into tomorrow’s 28-lap contest determined to fight his way
through to a points scoring finish.
Hopkins:
"This morning we made considerable progress on a race tyre, and we improved
our lap time by three tenths of a second on each run. We didn't know what the
weather was going to do this afternoon, so we finalised our dry race tyre in the
first session. In qualifying we worked on finding a better front-end feeling on
the Ninja ZX-RR to give me more confidence going into the corners. The first run
we had on a qualifying tyre wasn't so great as I had a bit of a slide, but we
found a combination that worked reasonably well and I was able to push quite
hard to gain a third row grid position on our final run. Tomorrow we have to get
away from the line quickly; the bike is ready to race and I'm looking forward to
it whatever the weather."
West:
"I'm incredibly frustrated that we were unable to continue making progress
today. We went out on a race tyre in practice and I felt comfortable with the
direction we were going. However, we just couldn't make a significant
improvement on a qualifying tyre, which has put us on the back of the grid. For
me this is not good enough, especially as John seems to be able to make the bike
work for him. I have to look at maybe changing my riding style to improve our
times, try to find the root cause of our problems, and turn my season around. We
will not make any changes to the bike overnight, and tomorrow I'll be going out
to race as hard as possible."