Flashback: Estoril 2006

At wuqian0821.com, we consider the 2006 Portuguese Grand Prix to have been the 'best' all-round race of the MotoGP era. With the 2011 Estoril round this weekend, we make no apologies for again running this 'flashback' feature, first published here in 2009...
Rossi leads, Portuguese MotoGP Race 2006
Rossi leads, Portuguese MotoGP Race 2006
© Gold and Goose

The 2006 Portuguese Grand Prix remains one of the most dramati🉐c races of the MotoGP era.

The 16th and penultimate ಞround of the 2006 world championship, Estoril was action-packed from start to finish - culminating in a thrilling three-way last lap victory battle between Kenny ⛎Roberts, Valentino Rossi and Toni Elias.

The significance of what happened in that race has since grown, with many of the landmarks set that 💟day still in pl🤡ace.

Here is a summary of the most significant moments from tꦯhe 2006 race:

o The motorsport world was🌠 stunned when Nicky Hayden was in accidentally taken out by Repsol Honda team-mate Dani Pedrosa on lap 5 of 28, costing the American the world championship lead 𒀰he had held since round three in Turkey. The significance of the clash even caught the attention of mainstream media.

o The accident⛦ marked Hayden's only DNF o🔯f his title winning season.

o Toni Elias took his first and so far only MotoGP win, and with it 🌸his first ever premier-class podium. The Spaniard began the last lap in third place, but overtook both Rossi and Roberts into turn one. Rossi then got back in front, but Elias shot past him out of the final turn.

o Elias won by just 0.002sec𝐆, to equal the closest ever recorded finish in the premie♛r-class since the introduction of electronic timing.

o Elias' victory remains the last time that a satellite ri🥀der has won a MotoGP race. Elias, who was riding for Gresini Honda, looked set to lose his seat for 2007 until he took that win.

o The nex🍬t time a MotoGP race🍨 was won by a last lap pass was at Catalunya in 2009 - when Rossi was the winner.

o Second place at Estoril meant Rossi took the title lead for the first (and last) time during the entire 2006 seasonಌ, having been as far as 51 points behind Hayden after rou♏nd 11 of 17.

o Rossi went on to lose the 2006🐼 world championship by five points when he fell at the Valencia season finale - the same number of points he lost by finishing second to Elias at Estoril.

o 2000 world champion Roberts Jr took third place, marking the 22nd and final podium of his grand prix career and the last bꦺy Team Roberts, which withdrew at the end of 2007.

o Roberts Jr took the lead on the penultimate lap, having thought the race was over one lap e𝔍arly. Unlike Julian Simon at Catalunya 200🅠9, Roberts kept on the throttle when he failed to see a chequered flag.

o KR JR's Estoril performance with theಞ Honda-🌳powered KR211V marked the last time a bike built by a privateer team has led a MotoGP race or taken a MotoGP podium.

o Casey Stoner crashed on lap 2 of the race, bringing down factory Ducati rider Sete Gibern🐟au. Gibernau hit the Australian's LCR Honda, causing the Spaniard to once again injure his collarbone.

o That injury ruled Gibernau out of Valencia, where he was replaced by Troy Bayliss - who sensationally claimed his first (and last) MotoGP win. In a further twist, Stoner🌠 took Gibernau's Ducati seat for 2007 and won Ducati's first world championship🔥.

o Estoril marked Gibernau's last MotoGP start before he announced his🐟 retire🐻ment. The Spaniard later made an ill-fated return with the Grupo Francisco Hernando team in 2009.

o Estoril 2006 saw the debut of the new Ilmor team, whose rider Garry McCoy was credited with 15th despite bein🅠g classified four laps down after pitting with electrical problems.

o The Australian and his X3 motorcycle therefore claimed the first ever MotoGP point for an 800cc machine, which officially replaced 990cc bikes from the fo🍌llowing year.

Do you agree with us that the 2006 Estoril race was the best so far of the four-stroke MotoGP era? Leave your comments below...

British Eurosport will be🍬 showing a re-run of the 2006 Portuguese MotoGP before its delayed coverage of this Sunday's 2011 race.

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