Quartararo: I’ve haven’t felt good on Yamaha since Le Mans
Fabio Quartararo admits he hasn’t had a good feeling on his Petronas SRT Yamaha since the Le Mans race last month, after crashing out again in Sunday's MotoGP Valencia Grand Prix.

Quartararo was forced into a recovery ride when he ran off track at Turn 2 on the opening lap of Sunday’s race, before crashing out at Turn 6 on the ninth tour while running outside of the points. This compounded another difficult weekend at the Ricardo Tormo Circuit for Quartararo.
“The feeling since the Le Mans GP is not there, we are trying to work in the best way possible, we are not fast and we need to find a solution,” Quartararo rued on Sunday. “I hope to find it in Portimao because we are missing speed and this is not normal.
“When we arrive to a track like Jerez, Barcelona, it was great straight away, but Misano and all the other tracks we are struggling way too much and I think we need to find a solution to be competitive like last year in every track.”
Read Also:
Quartararo labelled his Friday at the Valencia GP one of the worst days of his season, after turning the M1 upside down and making no improvement with the set-up. In the eight laps he completed of Sunday’s race, he admitted his problems persisted and believes he now has to adapt himself to the bike’s issues instead of making major set-up changes.
“We have been here for two weeks and in two weeks we have not made any improvement on the bike,” he added. “We try many things, but I think we need to go with our base and adapt. I need to adapt myself to the bike because we saw [in] doing all these changes nothing was working.
“So, I think the best is to go with our base. If we see that everything is going well in the position of the bike, of course we don’t change nothing. If we see something strange, of course we change [it]. But I think we just need to adapt ourselves to the bike and see what we can do.”
Having led the championship for much of the season, Quartararo’s disastrous Sunday has dropped him to fifth in the standings and ended his slim championship hopes.
Quartararo praised new world champion Joan Mir and the consistency he showed in 2020, which was something the Frenchman admitted was missing.
“For me, he did an amazing season,” he said of Mir. “The consistency he had, that’s why he won the championship because the consistency was amazing from race four to the end. He deserves a lot this title because that’s what we were missing this year – consistency, to fight for much more podiums.
“Apart from the three wins, we made zero podiums. You can’t win a championship this way, and I’m struggling a lot to know why we were like this. Joan deserved the championship and big congratulations to him.”

Previous article
Yamaha “didn’t have anything” to fight for MotoGP title – Vinales
Next article
Morbidelli hails “best race in MotoGP” after Valencia win

About this article
Series | MotoGP |
Event | Valencia GP |
Drivers | Fabio Quartararo |
Author | Lewis Duncan |
Quartararo: I’ve haven’t felt good on Yamaha since Le Mans
Trending
Marc Marquez is back
MotoGP Starting Grid: Portugal Grand Prix
MotoGP Winglets
How Yamaha's rookie-spec MotoGP star is taking charge
Fabio Quartararo is on a roll in 2021 after storming to victory at a venue five months earlier served up one of his worst races. Contrasting Portuguese GPs for Yamaha's factory duo make it hard to understand just how good its 2021 MotoGP bike is, but the Portimao weekend did at least expose one key improvement compared to 2020
The hurdles Marquez faces next in his Portugal MotoGP return
Even by Marc Marquez’s own high standards, his MotoGP comeback on Friday at the Portuguese Grand Prix will be considered a success even if he didn’t top the times. But having shown competitive pace on his first day back, both Marquez and his rivals know plenty more challenges are to come...
Where does Espargaro sit ahead of Marquez's return?
Pol Espargaro’s first results as a Honda MotoGP rider may not appear special. But dig a little deeper and a clearer picture of his performance emerges. And, as Lewis Duncan writes, it’s cause for celebration at Honda with the return of Marc Marquez set to provide Espargaro with the reference he has been missing so far this year
The "pit bull" MotoGP rookie already drawing legendary comparisons
MotoGP’s 2021 rookie crop is one of the strongest in recent years, but one is already standing out. Jorge Martin’s Doha GP heroics have courted many to compare him to numerous MotoGP legends. Autosport spoke to Pramac boss Francesco Guidotti to find out why MotoGP’s latest Spanish star is already making such an impact
Why MotoGP's stewards must revisit Miller and Mir's Losail clash
Despite Suzuki’s decision not to appeal against Race Direction’s refusal to penalise Jack Miller following the incident with Joan Mir in Losail, something must be done to avoid a repeat of such an incident, which could have easily ended in tragedy
Why MotoGP’s top gun looks more dangerous at the Doha GP
Lightning hasn't struck twice for Maverick Vinales since 2017 and his wayward form of recent years makes predicting how he'll fare each MotoGP race weekend tricky. But fresh from his Qatar GP win, Vinales looks like an even more dangerous prospect for the Doha GP following an intriguing Friday practice.
Why MotoGP’s new Amazon Prime series is long overdue
OPINION: MotoGP is getting its own version of Drive to Survive on Amazon Prime at some point in the near future. It was news welcomed by the grid’s leading riders. And following the impact DTS has had on Formula 1, MotoGP desperately needs the same boost.
The key changes behind the latest 'return of the Mack'
Maverick Vinales’s authoritative victory at the MotoGP season opener came during a period of personal and professional change for the Yamaha rider. Can it be the springboard for a title challenge?