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Sve što je postavio član: MoToM
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Carmelo Ezpeleta And Vito Ippolito To Address Teams And Riders Ahead Of Valencia https://motomatters.com/news/2015/11/02/carmelo_ezpeleta_and_vito_ippolito_to_ad.html
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Ajmo sad jednu peticiju za FIM, da se pod hitno uvede pravilio koje kažnjava nerviranje dragog nam rosija na stazi!
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Javio se i Nakamoto Q&A with Shuhei Nakamoto, HRC Executive Vice President http://www.hondaracingcorporation.com/news/qa-with-shuhei-nakamoto-hrc-executive-vice-president/#.VjcJka9co6M.twitter
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Dobro, da vidimo šta kažu kolege, bivše kolege i stari majstori... Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda): “It’s a bad incident for our sport. There are so many people that are watching us and these things shouldn’t happen. Valentino Rossi is one the greatest of this sport, he has many fans and many young people look at him as an example. Everyone can make a mistake. We need to understand exactly what happened.” Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati): “Marquez was racing for the podium, but also to disturb Rossi. Valentino’s reaction exceeded the limits and it is not what we want to see. I believe Marc was provoking him and Rossi fell into his trap. Rossi contributed to the rising tension [with his comments] on Thursday and we can say that their relationship is finally over. For sure, Marc was playing with Valentino, but he remained within the rules”. Andrea Iannone (Ducati): “It’s a complicated and delicate situation and everyone has his own opinion, but for sure no one likes what happened. I think Marc was riding a bit too slow. You cannot go one second slower than the pace you had just a few hours before [in the warmup]. In my opinion, Marc had the potential to stay with Pedrosa and Lorenzo.” Bradley Smith (Tech 3 Yamaha): “I saw the incident, and I don’t agree with it. It’s not something that should be allowed in MotoGP. It’s not a normal incident—knocking another rider down—and I have to follow what the Race Direction decided to do. We are all here to race and do the best possible. What Marquez decided to do against Valentino is up to him. We are 24 riders on the grid and we are allowed to do exactly what we want, even if we are not fighting for the championship.” Pol Espargaro (Tech 3 Yamaha): “I can understand Rossi’s frustration with Marquez’s disturbing him, but you cannot touch a rider deliberately and raise the foot in that way. From one side, Marc was not playing fairly; he was playing with Rossi’s championship. On the other side, I’m surprised that a mature and experienced rider like Rossi could react like this. Valentino never did something like this before. Race Direction, the Safety Commission and IRTA (International Road Racing Teams Association) are there to evaluate incidents like this. Valencia will be an interesting race.” Danilo Petrucci (Pramac Ducati): “It’s a very delicate situation and the stakes are really high. Using an image taken from football [soccer]: When a foul occurs, only the defender and the lineman know exactly what really happened.” Casey Stoner If anyone else had done what Valentino did we would have been black flagged immediately, no questions asked. More from Stoner: “There is a Massive difference between reckless riding and intentionally taking someone out.” Carl Fogarty Think if It was any other rider they would of been disqualified from the race for sure... Ben Spies There's no question @marcmarquez93 asked for it and there's no question that @ValeYellow46 took him out. Maybe didn't mean too but did.... More from Spies: “Gonna be interesting. @marcmarquez93 asked for it the whole race and @ValeYellow46 intentionally gave it to him so both riders are at fault”. “And yes I agree @marcmarquez93 should have been penalized for today as well. If people can’t understand that @marcmarquez93 was faster at PL and Sepang than @ValeYellow46, they’re crazy!” Josh Brookes MM was riding like a dick to block VR. VR gave him looks of warning & MM didn't accept. You try ride on outside & catch, it's what happens More from Brookes: “VR’s race was already penalized by having to deal with MM. Points should be left. Race Direction shouldn’t be deciding the championship.” “Yes VR intentionally ran wide to make a statement…but MM had more options than the one he chose to take.” “MM could’ve turned back & got up the inside but he stayed outside & continued to push on VR, then fell onto him, that dragged VR’s leg off.” “I think we need to focus on the real crime here. Why was VR a gentleman for so long? He should have grassed him a lot earlier.” Troy Bayliss All I will say is 46 and 93 would not have been able to continue to race like that all race, I'm happy it happened at slow speed. Jeremy McWilliams My feedback initially started in favour of Marquez but soon turned totally in favour of Rossi (by a long way). Colin Edwards Ok, my opinion: MM is fighting for pride, not a championship. VR gets tired of MM's close racing. Michael Laverty Marc broke the unwritten rule, always RESPECT those fighting for a Championship when you're not. Vale got enraged and hung him out to dry. Giacomo Agostini (told the Italian newspaper, Gazzetta dello Sport, about the incident): “Valentino fell into Marquez’s game that this time was smarter than him. He should have expected such a reaction: Marc had nothing to lose. They passed and re-passed each other thousands of times. You cannot fall into this trap, you cannot do this maneuver, going so wide, especially if you are Valentino Rossi. What happens in a racer’s mind in those moments? I’m convinced that Valentino was angry, exhausted and frustrated, but until that turn it had been a great fight. But Valentino was surprised. He is a great professional. In his place, I also would have been very angry with Marquez, who provoked and exasperated him.” Agostini added: “If you look back, when it was about winning, Valentino has never been soft with his rivals, just think of Casey Stoner or Sete Gibernau. You cannot condemn a rider like Marquez who is putting up a show.” Rossi “lost his head” during Marquez fight, says Agostini 15-time champion Agostini told Spanish publication AS: “I think that Valentino lost his head. “He was very nervous, fighting for the title. I can understand that, but you cannot make a move like this. “Everyone saw his actions: he nearly stops, looks at [Marc] and tells him to piss off. “He’s a great champion who knows how to keep everything under control, but this time perhaps he was out of control.
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Idemo ponovo...
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To je povodom rosijevih tvrdnji da su se udružili protiv njega. Pa i da jesu, pa šta, šta im može? Naveo čisto kao primer. Mislio sam na komentatore na snimku. Julian Ryder i Keith Huewen, dvojac sa BTSporta.
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To je povodom rosijevih tvrdnji da su se udružili protiv njega. Pa i da jesu, pa šta, šta im može? Naveo čisto kao primer.
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Deo teksta Dejvida Emeta History repeats itself It is not even unique to this race at Sepang. The example which sticks most in my memory is of , when Dutchman Hans Spaan went to the last 125cc race of the year trailing Loris Capirossi by just two points. Spaan started from pole, and all he had to do was finish ahead of Capirossi to lift the title. The problem was that Spaan lined up ahead of a gaggle of Italians, all of whom were out of contention for the title, and were working together to help Capirossi win. The scrap that developed became legendary, Dario Romboni, Fausto Gresini and Bruno Casanova all blocking Spaan at every pass and trying to push him wide. In the end, Spaan lashed out at Gresini, trying to punch the Italian out of sheer frustration. The plan of the Italians worked, Spaan finishing fourth and Capirossi taking the crown in his rookie season, an amazing debut.Was it the Italians' fault that Spaan was robbed of the title? There is nothing in the rulebook about helping other riders, or trying to slow them down, as long as it is done safely (a word open to interpretation). But you could turn that question on its head: was it Capirossi's fault that Spaan was not quick enough to shake his pursuers off? What happens out on the track is racing, and any result, any motive is a valid one. The primary goal of racing is to finish ahead of your rivals. Sometimes, though, the reason you want to finish ahead of someone is more than just the position on the grid. The rulebook says nothing about motives. Spaan had his fate in his own hands in the same way that Rossi had his fate in his own hands at Sepang. If Rossi had had the speed to hold off Lorenzo for third, he would not have got tangled up with Márquez. If Rossi had had the outright speed to leave Márquez behind, he would not have had to slug it out over several laps. Without the speed to do either of those things, then collecting sufficient points to get his hands on the championship was always going to be difficult.
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Nije ga navukao, Kejsi je sam priznao da je pogrešio.
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Paolo Ciabatti (Motor Sports Director of WSBK) stated his viewpoint very clearly (this weekend at Monza): "If I was in the place of Race Direction at Laguna Seca in 2008, I would have given Rossi a ride through." Rossi passed Stoner on the outside under braking, but he couldn't make the corner and instead went straight, putting both tires on the dirt - therefore completely off track - and reentering the circuit in front of Casey, who in turn had to stand up his bike to avoid contact. Did he gain an advantage from the situation? Undoubtedly, as he ended in ahead of the Australian. Making Rossi give the position back to Stoner would have been just, but a ride through penalty would have essentially handed the win directly to Stoner. Instead no decision was made at all. Did this influence the outcome of the race? Maybe, but you can't say for sure. http://www.gpone.com/201105103653/Ciabatti-would-have-penalized-Rossi.html
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Da, možeš misliti. Dosadilo čoveku da mu buču kad razbije rosija, kao u Donigtonu na primer.
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MotoGP™ @MotoGP Emili Alzamora talks to the media after @marcmarquez93 was assaulted at his domicile by two Italian reporters
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Diretno naravno nema, ali indirektno još kako ima. Ako to ne vidiš onda jbg... Po meni bi trebao da se povuče posle svega. Neka uzme tu hebenu titulu kad mu već toliko znači i neka ode. Bolje sad nego kasnije, jer ko zna šta još može da se desi...
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KTM RC16 MotoGP Racebike Hits The Track http://blog.motorcycle.com/2015/10/30/manufacturers/ktm/ktm-rc16-motogp-racebike-hits-the-track/
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https://translate.google.rs/translate?sl=es&tl=sr&js=y&prev=_t&hl=sr&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.marca.com%2F2015%2F10%2F30%2Fmotor%2Fmundial_motos%2Fgp-valencia%2F1446238320.html%3Fcid%253DSMBOSO34503%2526s_kw%253DtwitterCM%3DTwitter&edit-text=&act=url
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E ako ne bih voleo da se to desi! Zatrpati rupu do kraja i poravnati! Bogami kako je krenulo, stvari su se poprilično odmakle kontroli. http://www.marca.com/2015/10/30/motor/mundial_motos/gp-valencia/1446238320.html?cid%3DSMBOSO34503%26s_kw%3DtwitterCM=Twitter Jedino rešenje je ili da ih nateraju da se javno pomire (kao u Asenu posle Katalunje sa Maksom) ili Rosija pod hitno poslati u penziju sporazumnim raskidom ugovora.
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Onda je ona zadnja krivina u Herezu, kad je bio klinac... Aprilia 50cc Cup 1998 ili 1999. Ovo? A ima i ovo...
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http://www.superbikeplanet.com/2015/Oct/151029-60-smokes-em.htm
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Onda je ona zadnja krivina u Herezu, kad je bio klinac... Aprilia 50cc Cup 1998 ili 1999.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k6llrYTfTw
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A Lorenco par godina pre takodje isprobao U 250 ili u GP-u? Nemoj me drzati za rec ali nisam siguran .. Secam se da je nakon trke 2013 kada ga je Marcc obisao , podosta se ljutio , a videh na nekom klipu da je on to isto nekom uradio par godina pre .. Ja jedino čega se sećam je ovo...
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Odličan tekst! Dirty tricks of the racetrack http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1sno44r
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The race direction of the Malaysian Grand Prix gathered Valentino Rossi and Marc Márquez in a room to analyze the images of the fall of Spanish while fighting alongside Italian. The tension could be cut with a knife when Valentino entered the room. The moment was captured by television cameras and 'Four' issued the complete sequence. Márquez waited sitting on a sofa with arms crossed and serious expression. The Italian, even with race overalls and sweaty from the effort, was the first to launch an ironic comment. "Bravo, eh! Great race!" Rossi released while looking for a chair to sit in front of the TV. The Spanish did not hesitate to answer with another poisoned dart: "Good kick, eh".