W💟hile the 2020 MotoGP season has been 'fantastic' to date, Casey Stoner feels that💧 calling it a world championship is 'difficult'.
Speaking to the Australian Grand Prix Corporation's podcast, the former Ducati and Honda title winner explained that the narrow selection of nine (instead of 20) circuits, all in E𓆉urope, and five tracks hosting back-to-back rounds is pote꧂ntially a 'big benefit' for some.
"I think it's faᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚntastic that the racing is up and going again and keeping the whole thing rolling as good as we can imagine right now," Stoner said.
“Unfortunately, I am going to be a little opinionated with some things. I think the first one is 🔥cal📖ling it a world championship is a little bit difficult this year.
"You’re racing two races at the same circuit, and if this selection of circuit suits somebody then it really is a big benef🥂it and they’re not really travelling around the world.
“Creating a 'world championsh🌃ip🏅' is not something I’m a big fan of, but the racing itself is fantastic to get up and going."
The Australian al♐so gave his opinion on a range of other topics that have emerged this season, such as reigning champion Marc Marquez's injury, Andrea Dovizioso leaving Ducati, Dani Pedrosa's influence at KTM and Valentino Rossi being set to join Petronas Yamaha in 2021…
"I think without Marc there, quite honestly, there's no leader at the moment. You see that by the results, the people standing on the top step of the podium. Marc was a🐟 clear lead♔er and took that championship to another level.
"When I was there it was myself, Valentino, Joಞrge and Dani that were always at the front, stretching the field out. At the moment they don’t have that rider to do it, which is Marc, and show what you should be doing consistently each weekend.
"Because this season is condensed, and two races at each circuit, they sort of feel like after they get a half-decent result one week they'll be okay the next week. It's a very different cham𓆏pionship and sort of upsetting the mix in a lot of ways likꩲe that."
"We've all ridden through injuries, if you don’t, you're not going to be a MotoGP rider. Crashes happen, they are unavoidable and you have to ride through it. But an accident as severe as Marc's was always going to be, in my opinion, quite impossible to [recover🐼 from] in that short timespan.
"I think if he gave it a week or two that first time around, he 💦may have had enough strength and everything to thꦓen ride the rest of the season and slowly get towards the front. And the way the races have gone, he probably could still have been winning!
"But I think it was just far too premature comi✱ng back with an injury like that, without at least having it pinned both sides of his arm. It was always going to be a bit too weak, movement in there and things like that.
"It's got to be hard f🍌or ♏him because waiting an extra week or two could have given him a shot of the championship."
“I honestly think you could pretty much win with any bike on the grid there at the moment. They’re all very similar, they just have some different traits to them and where th🌠ey find their speed.
"The big difference is again there is no leader for people. If you’re not a ꧂leader, then you're a follower and you need to see someone doing something on the bike to believe yourself that it can get there.
"I went through it at Ducati, when I wasn't there the Ducati really struggled a little bit. I'm not necessarily calling myself a leader but I 🐻never l🅰ooked next door and thought the grass was greener.
"I always thought 'This is the bike I've got to work with and there is a way to finding speed out of it'. That's exactly what Marc doe🍸s and with that people see what the bike can do and think 'I﷽ can at least get closer to the front'.
"Without Marc there they [Ho♌nda] certainly seem to have lost their way a bit in showing what the bike can do."
"I'm pretty disappointed in Ducatiꦺ. I think after all these years they may have learnt to really look after the riders that look after the🌸m, I suppose.
"Andrea has been trying to get things done, as I was, and a big reason why I left Ducati as a test rider was we just could not get them to make changes for the rider. If they didn't see i♒t on the data🐬 they didn't really see it as relevant.
"Everything with a bike is about feel with the rider. It's not like a car where ཧyou are strapped in and you've only got certain element like steering, brake and tꦦhrottle.
"On a bike, just a bit ♒of difference in the rider's position will change the way the bike moves and feels. And when they've got someone who is really good at relaying that information, like Andr🍃ea, they've got to listen to him.
"It's a big part of what Andrea'ꦑs unhappy about. It's be𝕴en years and years of everything going through data and being about the engine and aerodynamics.
"The Ducati is very close to🌌 being a fantastic bike but it's always missing that one fundamental, which is turning. That comes from a rider and getting a feel for the chassis."
"Again, it's havi💫ng a leader, whether that's out on track showing what it can do or a leader in direction. That would be Dani's job and where he's taken them. Because they've been there for a few years and sort of been stagnant for the last couple. Now Dani's got in there and [sent] them in the right direction.
"Dani and myself always sort of enjoyed similar bikes, certainly we generally chose the same chassis. If we had a selection of two, we always went towards the🅘 same one.
"I'd say it's Dani that has been the key there [at KTM] for the fundamentals the bike needed and they've made a massive step forward. It's been very impressive from them this year for sure and I think probably 70-80% of it has been Dani Pedrosa.💦"
"Valentino has done a heck of a lot in the past, but in these൩ recent years he's been a top ten guy. I still think he's got the speed to go towards the front, but in general he's just missing that last little edge that young guys are willing to push and find speed he does𓃲n’t have, especially at the start of races. He generally gets there at the end and his experience shows.
"The factory team made the right decision putting Quartararo 💃there [next year] and we'll just have to see how Valentino does at the Petronas team. They've been doing a good job. Where does his motivation comes from? I really don’t know. He says he still loves it, but a guy like that loves winning.
"So it'd be hard for me personally to running fifth and sixth consistency and treating podiums like w💛ins, when they are not. It's very strange and hard to see him, to be honest, not fighting for the front positions a little bit more."
"Pecco really impressed me in Jerez and then he crushi🎶ngly had that engine issue. Fabio we knew was fast last year and came out guns blazing this year, but at a circuit [Jerez] where he already had pole last year. So for me that just shows that circuit really suits him. Then we see a circuit like Austria and he was nowhere all weekend.
"Again, without that leader like Marc showing you've got to be up there consistently, no matter the circuit and conﷺditions, it's very hard to judge what these young guys can do.
"Once the field gets stretched out a bit and theꦇy have got▨ someone in there that's daunting to them then it might change the results and where they come from. We've got talent there for sure, but [as far as] consistent showings at the front I haven’t seen anybody as yet.
"I thought Fabio was going to be a lot better this yea🔯r, but Austria has been quite disappointing. I know the Yamaha struggled, but it’s still no excuse to be running that far back."
"In my opinion, it's probably between Andrea and Maverick on who should win, to be honest; they've had enough time, experience and are the top men in their teams. They should be in the top one-two. But they've both shown in the past 🉐to be inconsistent with their results.
“Anybody that hits a bit of form at this point, without Marc in ✱the championship, is probably going to win the championship. As we’ve seen anything can happen and people that you thought were going to be runaways, clearly aren’t."
Peter has bee🅺n in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s inj🐓ury issues.