| Jorge and Valentino |
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On Sunday night I decided to stay over at the circuit in my motorhome because we had an early start for the test but I went to bed very late. My good friend Ricky Cardús stayed with me and after going for a walk around the paddock, a few games of motocross on the computer and watching the race again in the Yamaha hospitality, before I knew it the time was 2am!
I don’t usually watch the races back and if I’m honest I only watched the last ten laps of this one. I’m not very good at watching myself because I am constantly picking up on the things I need to improve, so I don’t really enjoy it, but this time there wasn’t much I could improve on! I looked really smooth and precise out there – the only mistake I made was in the final corner, when I didn’t close the door tightly enough. I have seen the overtake from every camera angle and the best one is from above – you can see the distance between us and Rossi’s position perfectly. You can see how close to me he was out of the previous bend, which is when he began to prepare himself for the pass. I was also a little wide in the last three corners, which gave him the opportunity to get so close.
It is hard to find the motivation to get back on your bike for a test on the day after a race as intense as Sunday’s because there is nothing at stake but that is what I had to do on Monday. Basically I worked on improving my braking and trying to brake later than I did in the race because that is the area Rossi was able to make time up on me.
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Jorge with fans |
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You could say that situation between Rossi and myself at the moment is a little bit like the battle at the start of the 1990s between Wayne Rainey and John Kocinski. I say that because of the age gap between us and for the fact that they were Yamaha team-mates. One of them had won a lot of titles and the other was new on the scene. In that respect our story is similar but with respect to Kocinski I just hope I can win more races and titles against Rossi than he did against Rainey!
Finishing second in Mugello was good as a win for me after an unbelievable race – it was like a movie! In the morning warm-up I was quite worried because I was slow in the rain, then on the sighting lap I slid off into the gravel pit. All I could think about was making it back to the pits as quickly as possible in case there was still a chance to make the grid and luckily I made it just in time. My team had the second bike ready and I was able to still start from the pole position. On the grid I tried not to think about the crash, I just tried to focus. But then I had a big slide off the line and the first part of the race wasn’t so good for me. My guys did a brilliant job getting the damaged bike ready for the change to slick tyres and after that everything changed. I had a great rhythm and I was able to stay on fighting to the end and take second place.
I have received hundreds of emails to my website congratulating me on my performance at Montmeló – many of them from FC Barcelona fans! It was an honour and a privilege to wear their colours on Sunday and a small payback for the enjoyment I got from watching them win the Champions League final in Rome before the Mugello race. I was there when they won the same trophy in Paris a few years ago but Rome was incredible. The feeling I had there was indescribable – I think you have to have seen your team in a big final to understand it.
I live in Barcelona and as you saw from the television on Sunday the weather here is fantastic at the moment. It means I can take advantage of any free time between training to catch some sun, although I like to be indoors too, playing the ‘Pro Evolution’ football game on my console with friends. I’m also really into ‘Gran Turismo’ at the moment and I’m trying to get my gold licence, which allows you to buy better cars. My best car at the moment is a 550bhp Ford GT and I love driving it around Laguna Seca! I am also involved in some charity work in the city and a few weeks before the race here I visited a hospital, to help open a specialist unit where children suffering with cancer are cared for. When you go to a place like this you realise that life is not always as fair as we want it to be. Some children suffer a lot with their health and to be able to give a little bit of time to them, to try and motivate them is a good thing for me to do. It also makes you realise, if you didn’t already know, that whilst winning is currently the most important thing about my job, it is not the most important thing in the world.
I hope some of those children were able to watch and enjoy my battle with Valentino on Sunday and I hope there will be many more like it, starting at Assen next Saturday!
Best regards
Jorge #99







