Aleix Espargaro: Satellite teams one of the secrets of Ducati’s MotoGP success

The Spaniard took༒ Aprilia’s first MotoGP win last season and remained in the thick of the championship battle until the RS-GP’s form faded over the unfamiliar flyaway r💛ounds.
That wasn't helped by Espargaro and team-mate Maverick Vinales being the only Aprilia riders on the grid, starving 💜the factory of track data.
By contrast, Ducati, which fills a third of the MotoGP grid courtesy of its eight riders, was able to overcome early proble🤡ms with its GP22 and win the title with Francesco Bagnaia.
“I think tꦬhat one of the secrets of Ducati’s success has been to work together with its satellite teams, to improve the level of the factory team,” Espargaro said.
“They proved that [last] year when the🅰y started the season with a lot of problems bu💖t worked really well together and achieved the title.”
Bagnaia and the🔯 GP22 didn’t winꩵ a race until round 6, but went on to bridge a massive 91-point deficit to Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo.
Ducati 'not relying only on one fast rider'
Ducati Corse technical director Davide Barana confirmed that the factory's long-running ei♐ght-bike🎃 ‘strategy’ had paid off.
“The season seems to demonstrate that our technical and sporting management style is paying back. To h♔ave on track eight different riders with very competitive skills allows up to collꦰect a lot of data,” Barana said.
“That’s also useful for each rider. It has always been our policy to share completely the information betwee🍌n our teams. And also helps a lot to develop the bike for sure because we are not relying only on one fast rider but a lot of them.
“Each has his own character, his own skil✤ls and ability, and combining all these different inputs we are sure is one of the key factors to develop our best bike.”
On overcoming the GP22’s early troubles, Barana added: “༒For racing management, also🐠 from a technical and sporting point of view, it’s not an easy job. We always struggle between the need to develop the bike and also to keep confidence on the bike for our riders, also for the technicians to manage properly the bike.
“Once you reach a certain level of performance, sometimes you are scared to more or change s⛦omething. This is always a risk, but it’s a risk that we have to take because once you stop, once you believe you have ‘arrived’, you start to lose.
“So in the beginning of this season we continued to be aggressive on the development of the bike despite it already being a good bike [at the end of 2021]. And this is the reason it took a while for us and our riders to get th🌺e same confidence as with the previous bike to achieve the best results.
“But it’s important🌺 for us to never stop development.”

‘The Ducati report’
During last season, eventual MotoGP Rookie of the Year Marco Bezzecchi let slip that Ducati uses its wealth of data𓆉 to prepare a special report for each of its eight riders after every event, to help them understand where th𝕴ey can improve.
“Almost all the track [at Mugello] I could brake lik🦩e Pecco, but there arꦕe some places where he makes the difference on braking and entry,” Bezzecchi had said. “It’s where I’ve been working since the beginning of the year.
“In Le Mans I was very good, in Mugello I was very good, with just two corners where I was still missing something. But looking at the report from🅰 Ducati I am satisfied with my work..."
“I lose only in two places - Corner 4 and 6, in braki♊ng - the rest I do well," Bezzecchi continued. "I was riding well in almost all the track but in these two places I✤ could do a little bit better.”
Pressed on what other information is included in the Ducati report, the yo♉ung Italian said: “It’s a little bit secret! It’s a report from the [previous] race weekend. I cannot say more.”
Do you get to see the reports made for the ot🔯her Ducati riders? “No, it’s [just] my report.”

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RNF will make Aprilia more ‘data rich’
While Espargaro and Vin𒅌ales continue at the factory team this year, the new RNF Aprilia squad will run five-time MotoGP winner Miguel Oliveira and 2022 rookie Raul Fernandez on year-old machin🌺es.
While Espargaro and Vinales will hope to benefit from the kind of extra riꦡding insight contained in 🅠the Ducati reports, Aprilia technical director Romano Albesiano expects the doubling of track data to substantially increase their understanding of the RS-GP.
“Our job is basically to increase our understanding of the motorcycle and having different riders, andꦕ next year we will have four riders, will make us even more♋ rich in terms of data,” Albesiano said.
“Different riders with a differꦬent style, different approach, just gives us more information and to follow a different way of riding [for each] is not difficult honestly.
“Okay you cannot make confusion, but if you have clear ideas🤡, you can do it easily, because these bikes have such a wide range of adjustability.”
D𝐆ucati continues with eight riders this season, spread across the facto꧒ry, Pramac, Gresini and VR46 teams.
Aprilia now joins Honda and KTM wit🃏h four entries while RNF’s switc💛h and Suzuki’s exit leaves Yamaha as the only factory without a satellite team.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefron🎀t of the Suzuki exit story aܫnd Marc Marquez’s injury issues.