Randy de Puniet gave his team something to celebrate today when he rode to a
spectacular fourth position in the Malaysian Grand Prix at Sepang. However, in
an unfortunate turn of events, Anthony West made an error on the starting grid
that cost him a potential MotoGP career-best result.
Frenchman de Puniet shot off from fourth on the line as the race began,
showing brilliant progress in an area which has vexed him in the past, and
clinched third place from Marco Melandri in turn one. A leading group of Casey
Stoner, Dani Pedrosa, de Puniet and Melandri quickly formed, with the Kawasaki
number 14 pilot maintaining third until the Italian overtook him on lap five.
But he never let up throughout the race and, whilst riding his 800cc Ninja ZX-RR
to the maximum, held his position, eventually landing himself 13 championship
points and taking 11th position in the current standings.
A delighted de Puniet came home to an uproarious reception from his crew
after a weekend which has seen him relentlessly topping the timesheets and
consistently displaying both talent and courage on the 4.55km circuit. Bike,
rider and Bridgestones shone for the entire, 21-lap race.
Fortune did not smile, however, on Anthony West. Upon lining up for the
start, the 26-year-old Australian placed himself on a 250cc grid position,
marked on the track adjacent to the MotoGP spot. This was officially flagged as
a jump start and he was given a ride-through penalty, which he fulfilled at the
end of lap five, surrendering a very-promising fifth place in the process.
It was a heartbreaking turn of events for West, after he had clocked
spectacular times throughout the weekend and qualified in a personal best fifth
position on the grid. He re-joined the race in 20th place but, in typical West
fashion, other riders were overtaken and he finally finished 15th, miraculously
maintaining his run of scoring points at every round since he began racing in
MotoGP in June.
The team now leave Malaysia and head back for Europe, where the final round
of the MotoGP World Championship will take place at Valencia in two weeks'
time.
Randy de Puniet:
"I’m very happy, it was a good race. For the first time in 17 rounds, I
managed a good start and then I took Melandri by the first corner, holding third
for a few laps. After that he passed me and I tried to stay with the leading
group. I did make some small mistakes during the race but the gap between me and
the others didn't change and towards the end I got within less than a second of
Pedrosa. But then I had a few problems with stability under braking and decided
to hold my place rather than push too hard and take any risks. The bike worked
very well today and I'm so happy with this result."
Anthony West:
"When I saw the ride through penalty on my pit board, I didn't know what
it was for as I knew I hadn't jumped the start. I didn't know exactly what was
wrong until I came back in at the end of the race. I made up a few places, even
though I felt pretty flat after the ride through. I was really frustrated but
then I saw I was catching up with some guys and kept on fighting although, to be
honest, I didn't feel completely motivated and I'm sure that'll be reflected in
my lap times. The weekend had been so fantastic before this so I'm gutted. I'll
have to come back and take my revenge on Sepang next year."
from Kawasaki Racing