MotoGP rookies adapting quickly shows Moto2's high level - Folger
Tech 3 Yamaha rookie Jonas Folger says the current crop of MotoGP newcomers are proving the high level of the intermediate Moto2 class by getting on the pace quickly in pre-season testing.
Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images
The German is one of four riders stepping up from Moto2 this year, along with his new teammate and Moto2 world champion Johann Zarco, Suzuki newcomer Alex Rins and Aprilia signing Sam Lowes.
Folger was 15th fastest in the opening pre-season test at Sepang, and set the 10th and seventh-fastest times on the opening two days at the Australian Grand Prix venue.
He improved again on the final day to end the test fourth, his 1m29.042s effort 0.493 seconds off the pace set by Maverick Vinales.
Fellow Moto2 graduate Rins also shone that day to claim sixth - and said he now felt like a proper MotoGP rider.
Said Folger: "Almost every rookie is adapting quite fast. That means Moto2 is quite the high level, for sure.
“It will be really tough [to be top rookie], because Rins will be there in the race, fighting with me for sure.
“He’s a really strong racer - and also Johann is very constant and if everything comes together Johann is also fast, no doubt.”
Folger, who finished seventh in his third season in Moto2 last year, admitted he did not expect to end up as high as he did on the final day of the Phillip Island test.
“I was surprised after the laptime that I made [on Friday] morning, and what was good was that many times we were close to that lap," he said.
“So it was not just one quick lap but also we were quite constant and also on used tyres we were able to set up electronic settings, which worked really well on used tyres and will be important for the race.”
Folger did crash within the final hour of the test, but was able to get back out on track.
“I lost a bit the confidence, I was a bit worried, I didn’t want to end the day like this,” he said.
“So we put new tyres on bike number two and a full tank and we went out again, we said ‘OK, maybe we can not make a race simulation, but at least I tried to make as many laps as possible’.
“I did 11 laps and also on the last lap I was doing a 1m29.3s and every lap I went faster, so it was quite positive and it was important after the crash to get the feeling back.”
Additional reporting by Oriol Puigdemont
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