The search for minimal (and crucial) MotoGP™ gains

Factory KTM Team Manager Francesco Guidotti discusses the difficulty of finding the difference when riders are already maxed out

Just a fraction of second can make the difference between victory and a podium, a podium and a near-miss, and collecting crucial Championship points to leaving a Grand Prix weekend empty-handed. MotoGP™ teams are always searching for ways to narrow the gap and eke out an advantage of just a few milliseconds that can turn disappointment into joy. From Test days to Free Practice and qualifying, there is always plenty of innovation on show in the sport, with engineers always working furiously behind the scenes to find the marginal improvements that can make the difference.

Miguel Oliveira, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, Gran Premio Red Bull de España

Equally crucial in a team is someone who can weave together the minutiae details of a GP weekend and a longer-term vision for a team and riders. This is where a person like Francesco Guidotti comes in. The Italian is the Team Manager of Red Bull KTM Factory Racing where he oversees the progress of Brad Binder and Miguel Oliveira as the Austrian marque strive to build upon their recent premier class success. Speaking in a brilliant interview with Adam Wheeler on KTM's official blog, Guidotti discussed how he contends with the demands of two of the sport's top riders. 

“The technical aspect of MotoGP is, of course, still the most important but the difference between the bikes is always less and less,” he describes. “Every season you can see that more bikes are gaining more performance. You get to a situation where the details really count and what the rider brings is also more important every year.”

You can check out his full Q&A below!

So, a rider needs to train his mind more than ever now? It’s the next barrier to breakthrough for elite motorsport?

FG: Yes, and the rider has to realise this and be aware of it because until a few years ago physical conditioning was perhaps more important than the mental side, which you can understand because the bikes have always a been physically-demanding. That aspect – fitness – is always easier to accept and understand because the rider feels how his body reacts and knows how and where he is weaker or stronger. But on the mental side it is a bit tricky to go ‘inside’. They have to be really self-confident but how much? And how? Especially in the difficult moments it can be tough to accept that someone can be like you or even stronger than you. Circumstances in MotoGP™ now mean that you can be the best and feel like the best because of a few milliseconds but then you can also feel very s**t because of a few milliseconds! We have to manage moments like these.

Brad Binder, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, Jerez MotoGP™ Official Test II

It must be hard for you to balance the delicate moments between exhilaration and despair…?

FG: To always find the right moment and the right words to explain things is not easy, it’s almost impossible. The best you can do is keep them in an average good mood and a decent level of self-confidence but not too much. If they are always over-confident then any problems are always on the technical side or the bike or someone or something around him: a good balance is always the best way.

How do you make strong-willed people open-minded? And how do you connect with them to be persuasive?

FG: Well, you can do things like show them data from the technical side of the bike and explain what is good, what is wrong, what can be better…such as using a different line or using the throttle in a different way, braking sooner or later. The technical input is fundamental but it is part of the balance. We also have to consider that we stay with the riders for four days, and then for the next ten they disappear. So, it’s key to keep the connection over distance and away from the race. It’s important because we all want a life away from racing but the difficult part in working with riders is when they are home, not when they are with us at the circuit. We normally see the peak of the performance when we are at the track…but we have no control in the days leading up to this and things can affect them.

Miguel Oliveira, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, SHARK Grand Prix de France

That’s quite a lot of control. Is it because there is more pressure now?

FG: A lot of pressure, massively more. More than ten years ago, if you were a factory rider and you had a bad race, you could finish around the top five because the technical gap between the factory and the Independent teams with the bikes and the tyres was much bigger. At the moment, most of the satellite teams are near the same technical level as the factories. It is much more difficult, it is much closer. Last year I made a statistic for five races in a row and the gap between each rider – from 1st to the 12th in Q2 – was 33 milliseconds. So, for us and for the riders it is so difficult to say, “you made a mistake here” or “the bike is not performing here”. The scenario has changed so much in the last five years and everybody has more pressure but the rider the most because they are risking so much.

Mental coaches and sports psychologists have been in the background of MotoGP™ for a number of years but is the psychological aspect of racing the next big area of training to conquer?

FG: It was 2005 actually when I approached a mental trainer and started believing in it more and more. I believed it could help to keep focused and help limit mistakes at this level and this speed. It can save energy for performance and help with clarity for situations and for details. It will be the next [area]. In a lot of sports it is normal. Everywhere you look in sport there is a mix of physical and mental demands. Here a motorcycle rider is seen like a ‘macho’ guy and that type of mental training is not seen as necessary. That’s just ignorance. This sport is always more and more professional. There is no point having the best bike and the best physical shape if you cannot also use your head at this level. So, you should work on it.

This article was first posted by Adam Wheeler on KTM's blog

VideoPass allows you to watch every single second of every single sector LIVE and OnDemand