Race 1 starts in 4 weeks, 1 day, 6 hours, 12 minutes

Donington Park
Sunday, July 26th, 2009

A serious gamble on the part of the factory Ducati team saw both of their riders start off on wet tires while every single other rider choose slicks. With the race having been declared wet, it was an arguably genius move. Unfortunately for the riders in red, whatever information their teams had about the weather was wrong and both riders were lapped by the race leaders before the halfway point of the race.

Toni Elias led for a few brilliant laps at the beginning, but was quickly swallowed by faster riders. He was still in contention when he ran just a little too wide, hit the slippery white line, and high sided his way out of the race. He came away unharmed, but with nothing to show for his brilliant early form.

Jorge Lorenzo was the next to crash, leading the race with a decent margin, he too caught the edge of the white line and got flung into the gravel for his efforts. He got up uninjured, but his bike hit the wall and was unrecoverable. Back in the pits he had to watch as Valentino Rossi took his hard earned lead and ran with it. But Rossi wasn’t having a runaway as might have been expected. Dani Pedrosa was having problems of his own and was slipping all the time towards the middle of the pack as his team mate Andrea Dovizioso was sat right on the very tail of Rossi’s Yamaha M1.

Dovi showed Rossi his front tire on a few occasions, but Rossi kept him behind him as they both made their way through the very treacherous conditions. Until Rossi’s back tire went out from under him and he slid out of the lead. He and his M1 were OK and able to get back up, but the damage was done and he wasn’t going to win the final race at Donington Park.

In the end, Andrea Dovizioso held onto his lead and won his first MotoGP race. Colin Edwards made his way from 15th position to finish a brilliant 2nd, Tech 3 Yamaha’s first podium of the season, and Edward’s first time on the box in far too long. Randy De Puniet raced brilliantly, reeling in Dovizioso and fending off Edwards for much of the last half of the race, and finished in 3rd. His first podium, and well deserved after his form this season. The factory Ducati riders ran in last place for the entire race, likely coming up with ways in which to torture whomever tipped them off on the weather for much of their time out on the track.

Rossi grabbed extremely valuable championship points and is now one race’s win ahead of tittle rival and team mate Lorenzo. Who watched on from his box as Rossi threw away a point scoring position only to remount and score more points. The gods of racing were not looking too kindly down on Jorge Lorenzo and Ducati it seems.

Pos. Rider Team Total time    Km/h     Gap
1 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Repsol Honda Team 48′26.267 149.498  
2 Colin EDWARDS Monster Yamaha Tech 3 48′27.627 149.429 1.360
3 Randy DE PUNIET LCR Honda MotoGP 48′27.867 149.416 1.600
4 Alex DE ANGELIS San Carlo Honda Gresini 48′35.225 149.039 8.958
5 Valentino ROSSI Fiat Yamaha Team 48′47.889 148.394 21.622
6 James TOSELAND Monster Yamaha Tech 3 48′48.732 148.352 22.465
7 Marco MELANDRI Hayate Racing Team 49′01.551 147.705 35.284
8 Niccolo CANEPA Pramac Racing 49′05.036 147.530 38.769
9 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 49′08.379 147.363 42.112
10 Mika KALLIO Pramac Racing 49′12.112 147.177 45.845
11 Loris CAPIROSSI Rizla Suzuki MotoGP 49′19.457 146.812 53.190
12 Gabor TALMACSI Scot Racing Team MotoGP 49′38.582 145.869 1′12.315
13 Chris VERMEULEN Rizla Suzuki MotoGP 49′46.665 145.474 1′20.398
14 Casey STONER Ducati Marlboro Team 49′25.241 141.641 1 Lap
15 Nicky HAYDEN Ducati Marlboro Team 49′43.835 140.758 1 Lap
  DNF
  Jorge LORENZO Fiat Yamaha Team 12′33.642   22 Lap
  Toni ELIAS San Carlo Honda Gresini 11′02.391   23 Lap
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