Luca Marini on Jorge Martin: “His feeling with the bike is incredible”

Francesco Bagnaia finished on the podium in eight out of nine races (including five wins) from Assen to Sepang last season, allowing him to catch and th𝓀en snatch the 2022 title from Fabio Quartararo.
However, the factory Ducati star is now on the receiving end of similar crushing💝 mo💎mentum from 2023 championship rival Jorge Martin.
The Pramac Ducati rider has stormed to ten podiums (eight wins) in the last twelve races (including Sprints)꧂ to sit just 13 points behind Baဣgnaia with three rounds to go.
But it’s not just Bagnaia who is no doubt casting a care❀ful eye oveꦉr Martin’s data.
The open data sharing policy at Ducati, which is thought to include a personalised report from Ducati Corse, outlining each rider’s strengths and weakness from the data after each event, meanไs all the other Desmosedici competitors can also see where Martin is gaining.
VR46’s Luca Mar💧ini explained that, rather than a specific riding technique or technical setting giving Martin the edge, it is the Spaniard’s sky-high confidence that is encou✱raging the #89 to push the limits.
"At this moment, Martin is making an amazing job, also his feeling with the bike is incredible,” Marini said. “Every time you look at [his] data, he♔ can turn the bike on a [drinking] glass, as we say in Italian.”
Asked if Martin’s extreme lean-angle s🍨tyle was ๊the key to his cornering ability, Marini insisted:
"No, because Jorge’s [ridin♍g style] is the same - also last year he was riding in an amazing way, but [his results were] not so fantastic.
“It depends a lot♉ on the bike balance, the feeling and confidence you have on the bike, which can help you push more and ride well. But everybody rides very well [in MotoGP].”
Instead, Marini added weight to the༒ theory that Pramac has found a set-up that perfectly suits Martin’s style and are not deviating from it.
“It’s just he’s found a very good [bike𓆉] balance that works very well at every circuit,” Marini said.
“We need to keep working like this. But we are doing 𓆏a great job ourselves. It’s normal he’s going🃏 a bit faster than us because he has a factory bike and after all the upgrades now to their bike and my [2022] bike, the gap is a little bit bigger.
“But it’s not an excuse for us because with our bike we can make a poꦕdium at every GP."
Although still seeking his second grand prix podium after♐ a career best runner-up finish in COTA, Marini has been in the top three at the last two Saturday Sprint ra🦩ces (Indonesia and Thailand).
But he left Buriram disapointed with seventh place (following Aleix Espargaro's penalty) in the Sunday꧂ race.
"I expected a little bit better. For sure the top three guys [Martin, Bagnaia, Binder] were really strong, reall▨y fast," he said. "I was trying to manage the rear tyre a lot but in the end I finished it 🉐before the other riders.
"I was struggling especially on stopping the bike and corner entry, because when I was sliding it was difficult to have a good turning inside the corner, so this penalised my 🌱exit. This [problem] was in entry in my opinion.
"We need to look at the data to understand in which part I was using the rear tyꦿre too much, which temperature, and if we can find a solution for next time, which can also be Malaysia because there is a lot of temperature also there. It will be very important to keep down the temperature of the tyres."
The Malaysian MotoGP starts on Friday.

Peter has been in🍬 the paddock for 20 y🍎ears and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.