Casey Stoner blames Ducati’s lack of MotoGP title success on ‘band-aid’ fixes

A former MotoGP champion with Ducati and Honda, Casey Stoner has blamed Ducati for covering up deficiencies with its previous bikes by using electronic quick fixes.
Stoner blames Ducati’s lack of MotoGP title success on ‘band-aid’ fixes

Stoner, who won his first MotoGP championship with Ducati in 2007 - which remains the Italian manufacturer’s only premier class title thus far - believes Ducati have shot themselves in the foot by taking electronics to a new lev🦋el. 

The reason for this is Sওtoner believes piling on electronics to a machine covers up the real deficiencies of a bike, something he battled hard with his own crew chiefs about. 

Blaming Ducati’s lack of success on this reason, Stoner recently told the ‘': "It’s something that I enjoy and I hꦰave a lot of experience (being a rider coach). 

"That word [experience] is something I never reallཧy enjoyed when I was younger but I do have experience in the right ways. I think this generation has lost a little bit of understanding of what goes into a weekend, whether you’re trying to save your tyres, whether you’re trying to set the bike up foꦐr the long runs etc, because so much of it now is electronics. 

"They just pour the electronics on and I like to 🌠call it a band-aid fix. They're not the real fix and it’s not what’s 🔥underneath. 

"When I was racing I always had a fight with my engineer to get rid of as many el🏅ectronics as I could through the practice sessions and test sessions, things like that to really understand what’s happening with the bike underneath.&n🎀bsp;

"Because you keep pouring these electronics on and it’s like putting a band-aid on top and just fixing the outer la𒊎yout, outer crust and not actually fixing the issues underneath. 

Casey Stoner (Ducati Malboro - Ducati) in action © mirco lazzari / wsm / grazia neri -
Casey Stoner (Ducati Malboro - Ducati) in action © mirco lazzari / wsm / grazia neri -

"I think that’s something Ducati have failed with all these years and why they havenꦓ’t won championships." 

Current MotoGP riders ‘haven’t grasped’ consistency wins championships - Stoner

Switching away from electronics and onto the 2022 title fight, Stoner also spoke about the current state of play which sees 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Fabio Quartararo narrowly lead the way from 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Francesco Bagnaia.

Stoner alluded to many of the riders trying to win the cham𝓡pio🌸nship too early, thus making unforced errors that could come back to bite them.

"I mean, Fabio [Quartararo] started a little 🐭bit rough bu෴t then took his stride and got himself a healthy points lead when everybody else was just crumbling around him," said Stoner. 

"It seems to be that the last few years in MotoGP all you have 🐈to do is finish consistently towards the front and you’re going to win a world championship. 

"None🔯 of the riders have seemed to grasp that properly. They’re all trying to win the championship early in the year but going down often, then trying to play catch up and things like that. 

"It🐬’s definitely been a rollercoaster the last few seasons and you’ve always found someone in form at different stages of the season which has made it exciting. Pecco’s obviously cleaned up his mistakes since last year and earlier this year. 

"I think Ducati actually missed the ball earlier in the season when their 21 bike was clearly better than the 2022 and I actually still think it’s a better bike. You’ve got 168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Enea Bastianini and it’s the same thing - 𒁏if he just finished some of the races then he would be leading the championship right now.&nbs𓃲p;

"There’s a lot going on and there’s a lot of deserving riders. Will just have to see how this championship pans out. Fabio has got that pressure on𒁏 him."

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