Rossi doesn’t understand his crash in French GP

Rossi doesn't understand his crash in French GP

Valentino Rossi “didn’t understand” why he crashed on the opening lap of the MotoGP French Grand Prix and called his third-successive non-finish a “great shame”.

The Yamaha rider started from 10th and was in the middle of the pack on the run up to the Dunlop chicane on the opening lap of Sunday’s Le Mans race when the rear of his M1 swung round on him.

His crash forced Yamaha teammate Maverick Vinales, Suzuki’s Joan Mir and Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro to take avoiding action and run through the chicane, while Rossi was unable to rejoin.

It marked his third DNF in three races, having crashed out of second in the Catalan GP and retired from the Emilia Romagna GP at Misano following an early fall.

“I’m very sad, crashing like this at the first corner is a bad thing,” Rossi said. “I had a good start and I was already in pretty good shape after the bend. In the first corner on the left we all entered very calmly, because the conditions were very difficult due to the cold.”

“I also entered very slowly, but it started behind me and we honestly didn’t understand what happened. It is a period that I am also quite unlucky I must say, because I have not been able to collect even a point in the last three races even though my performance was not bad, because in practice I have always been quite competitive.” Rossi added.

Rossi wasn’t the only rider who suffered a fall which left them perplexed, as Suzuki’s Alex Rins crashed from second on lap 20. Rins had come from 16th on the grid running the medium rear tyre as opposed to the soft the leaders were using, and by lap 11 was into the podium battle. Having taken second when Pramac’s Jack Miller’s bike expired on lap 19, Rins had a “totally unexpected” tumble at the Dunlop chicane on the following tour.

Rossi doesn't understand his crash in French GP
Valentino Rossi walks away unhurt as the stewards help clear his bike off the track at the French MotoGP at LeMans

“It was a shame; even before the crash it was a great race,” said the Suzuki rider.

“It was difficult for the tyres to warm up, it was difficult but we handled it well, I gained several positions and we moved forward.”

“I had a good feeling with the front tyre, we fought a lot with Dovizioso and Miller,” added the 9-time world champion.

“Petrucci escaped and when Miller’s engine broke, I went forward and I was catching Petrux , just when I fell. I was riding well, braking on the spot, it was totally unexpected.”

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