Could a short MotoGP season boost chances for Satellite riders?
One theory is that, as a MotoGP season goes on, factory team riders gain a greater advantage over their satellite counterparts because they are first to receive techn💛ical upgrades.
Assuming that's the case, might the unique 2020 world championship - a late start🙈 and perhaps only ten rounds at best - put the Independent riders on a more level playing field?

One theory is that, as a MotoGP season goes on, factory team riders gain a greater advantage over their satellite counterparts because they are first to receive technical upgr🎉ades.
Assuming that's the case, might the unique 2020 world championship♎ - a late start and perhaps only ten rounds at best - put the Independent riders on a more level🎉 playing field?
The long delay caused by the coronavirus means the four manufacturers (Honda, Ducati, Yamaha and KTM) supporting satellite teams have plenty of time to produce all of the latest&nb🍰sp;parts needed by the opening race.
That means there is no excuse for Petronas Yamaha (Quartararo), Pramac Ducati, Tech3 KTM and LCR Honda (Crutchlow), which are all due to race '2020' bikes, not having exactly the same spec as their respective factory team𓂃s for round one.
Meanwhile, Independent riders set to run year-old machineꦬry (LCR's Nakagami plus Avintia Ducati's Zarco and Rabat, Petronas rider Morbidelli having a different (A-spec) engine design to the other M1s) might well start the year with upgr🅠ades that were not due to be delivered until later in the season.
Once competition is underway, the compressedꦉ calendar would allow little time for factories to design and deliver new developments based on race data, meaning even the factory team bikes might change little from the start until the end of the championship.
That's the theory anyway.
In practice, Tech3 bos♐s Herve Poncharal doesn't think there will💖 be a 'dramatic change' in the championship outcome compared with if a normal 2020 season had gone ahead as planned.
"It's difficult to say, but why not?" Poncharal told wuqian0821.com, when asked if a short season could heꦺlp the satellite riders. "A different environment could ♋change some things.
"But I think we could already see the potential of each of the manufacturers and riders [during testing] and I'm not so sure it's going to change dramatically from what we were thinking 🀅would happen this season, before this crisis.
"But if it did [ꦯhelp the satellite riders cause a⛄ surprise], many people would be happy."
Fabio Quartararo (7), Jack Miller (5) and Cal Crutchloꦍw (3) took podiums as satellite r꧋iders last season.
With engine and aerodynamic design 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:set to be frozen until 2022, all of next year's grid should start on the 'latest' spec machines for the first time in the MotoGP era, assu🎉ming those currently on year-old bikes are upgraded as usual over the winter.
Latest 2020 MotoGP Calendar (April 7) | |||
Round | Date | Race | Circuit |
1 | 8 March | Qatar (MotoGP cancelled) | Losail |
? |
| Spain (postponed) | Jerez |
? |
| France (postponed) | Le Mans |
? |
| Italy (postponed) | Mugello |
? |
| Catalunya (postponed) | Barcelona |
2 | 21 June | Germany | Sachsenring |
3 | 28 June | Netherlands | TT Circuit Assen |
4 | 12 July | Finland | KymiRing (Subject to homologation) |
5 | 9 August | Czech Republic | Brno |
6 | 16 August | Austria | Red Bull Ring |
7 | 30 August | Great Britain | Silverstone |
8 | 13 September | San Marino | Misano |
9 | 27 September | Aragon | Aragon (rescheduled) |
10 | 4 October | Thailand | Buriram (rescheduled) |
11 | 18 October | Japan | Motegi |
12 | 25 October | Australia | Phillip Island |
13 | 1 November | Malaysia | Sepang |
14 | 15 November | Americas | COTA (rescheduled) |
15 | 22 November | Argentina | Termas de Rio Hondo (rescheduled) |
16 | 29 November | Valencia | Ricardo Tormo (rescheduled) |

Peter has been 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 injury issues.