New WorldSBK rider Alvaro Bautista has adapted well to WorldSBK as it stands, although the rider himself says that he has a lot to learn in his new role as factory Ducati V4R rider. But in finishing day two at Portimao in third place overall, he obviously moved on as he set more consistent fast laps.
The main challenge of day one at Portimao is the roller-coaster circuit, and all those blind and dramatic changes of direction. It was all-new to him and it challenged him in the early stages.
“For me this was a new track and in the first morning I struggled a lot because it was quite difficult with all the up-and-downs, and I was lost during all the laps,” said the Spanish rider. “I made a lot of mistakes then, running wide and the references were wrong. So I needed a lot of time to understand the track and conditions. The track is also so bumpy, so I had to adjust the bike. It was a very tough first day for me but in the end I started to feel better on the bike and have better references on track.”
On the first day at Portimao Bautista, a class rookie to WorldSBK entirely, was understandably unsure as to how ready he would be for the WorldSBK championship if the race started the next day, rather than more testing. “I dunno because test are tests, and races are races. For sure I feel better than Jerez. But not 100%. I think myself with the bike we are 85% (speaking after the first of two days at Portimao). And the bike needs also to improve. I think we have some room for improvement. And at this new track, so difficult like this one, the room is even bigger. But if the second day at Portimao was race day? I do not know what position we could fight for. For sure it is much better to start racing in Phillip Island. It is a track that I know, and I like it.”
Although Bautista is yet to take part in a WorldSBK race weekend yet, and there for it is a slightly unfair question to ask, he was asked for his experiences of the is the contrast between WorldSBK and MotoGP.
“At the end I work with my team, my mechanic, my engineers, and inside the box the working is basically the same,” said Bautista. “The only difference is the bike, tyres, electronics, brakes, but at the end you work with your team is basically the same. The Pirellis are different. But for sure they have a different feeling so you have to adapt. You have some positive but also some negative points when comparing the MotoGP tyres. I need to understand more, especially when the conditions are cool I feel worse than when the conditions are hot. But I have to understand how to manage I different conditions.”
Bautista, like most of the rest of his new peer group, has two more days of testing in Australia to do before the racing starts for real at PI on the last Saturday and Sunday of February.
By Gordon Ritchie
Photos GnG