Portimao MotoGP: Alex Rins: ‘From the footpeg to my arse is shorter!’

With less than five days of proper testing to switch from the GSX-RR, with which he won t🀅wo of the last three races, to the RC213V, Rins heads into Friday’s practice sessions with dev💞elopment work still to do.
“The bike is ready to start the GP weekend, but still we have items to try,” he said. “We had. 2.5 days in Malaysia, because it was raining one day, and then the two days here. So still for tomorr🧔ow we have planned to re-test some things.”
Nonetheless Rins, directly behind🎃 Repsol Honda r🍬iders Joan Mir and Marc Marquez on last weekend’s Portimao test timesheets, feels “quite adapted to the bike. For sure I didn’t make any races yet, so let's see how it goes in a real condition. But I feel prepared."
Marquez predicted he could fight for a position somewhere betw🅠een fifth and tenth after the Portimao test, an estimate Rins roughly agrees with.
“It w𝔍ill be difficult to be in the top five,” he said. “Many Ducatis in the front, Yamaha there, Aprilia… We will try our best. I don't know the final position. But if you look at the pace we were on P10 mor𒐪e or less. But then in a race things can change, for positive or negative.”
The RCV was♌ the only bike that failed to win a race last season and, from the winter timesheets, still looks to be a step behind the likes of Ducati, Aprilia and Fabio Quartararo’s Yamaha.
“I 𝕴don't say negative, let's🌊 say things we still need to improve - a little bit the aerodynamic side and the grip exiting from the corners. The bike is still moving and we spin a little bit,” he explained.
Unlike the factory Honda team, Rins♔ doesn’t yet have the new carbon clutch, which has proved tricky for Marquez and Mir during practice starts.
“They are using a different spec compared to me, they are using the carbon and I'm using the metal one,” Rins said. “So for sure [that is] different to the 🌃Suzuki one. But I need to wait more races to get that one.
“In my case, for m😼y clutch and the spec that I have, more or less it’s similar to the Suzuki one.”
'From the footpeg to my arse is shorter!”
In terms of the biggest difference he has felt compared to the Suzuki, Rins revealed that aside from engine config𒅌uration (V4 instead of Inline 4), it’𒀰s the ergonomics.
“Compared to the other bike I rode, this bike from the footpeg to my arse is ꧃shorter!” he said. “I felt this immediately when I jumped on at Valencia. This is the unique, big difference I felt.
“OK for sure the engine also. But i🦩n rider position, this one. I tried to modify a little bit, but we cannot go so m༒uch lower [with the footpeg] because otherwise the footpeg will touch on the ground.”
H🎶owever, Rins denied that the Honda feels taller than the Suzuki, in terms of weight transfer under brakin🎃g and acceleration.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi cꦍome and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and 🔯Marc Marquez’s injury issues.