This is it! The new era is about to begin as the FIM Enel MotoE™ World Championship descends on Le Mans, and ahead of the first track action of a historic season, some key protagonists joined us in the pre-event Press Conference. Heading the line-up was Roberto Cané, Ducati’s director of E-Mobility as the Borgo Panigale factory joins the competition as the manufacturer, and he was joined by two experienced riders and two rookies in the competition: 2020 & 2021 Cup winner Jordi Torres (Openbank Aspar Team), 2019 Cup winner Matteo Ferrari (Felo Gresini MotoE™), Randy Krummenacher (Dynavolt Intact GP MotoE™) and Luca Salvadori (Prettl Pramac MotoE™).
Here are some key quotes!
“The challenge is incredible because at first, it was the very first time Ducati challenged themselves with this kind of project. So we had to create it, and it was also a purpose of this project to create internal know-how in order to be able to build this kind of motorcycle. So we took advantage of the group experience and of some suppliers that helped us to develop this bike. But at the same time, we are it and we built a little group in internally inside Ducati to design these motorcycles. The idea is to get all the knowledge to be ready in the future to fully design and produce also road bikes.”
What are the biggest things that set the bike apart from petrol bikes?
“I would say that racing for Ducati is some kind of advanced field, area where you design, test, and improve the new technology. So it’s a parallel to MotoGP tests something, and MotoE is meant to test the other stuff. Then I would not say battery, but let me say everything related to the electric mobility has to be tested to be developed and to be designed to reach the goals we have. Because you know, Ducati is not only mobility, but it’s also passion, its performance, it’s style, you know? So we have to design the bike, I mean also the road bike, in order to reach the targets that Ducati has.”
“I think the timetable is good for the rhythm of the category. At the moment we don’t do many laps, the bike works well and the tyres work well… it depends on the weather but for sure having two races on Saturday is challenging but we’ll get a lot of information to innovate in Race 2.”
“I’m happy about the timetable. On Saturday or Sunday you only had races so it’s hard to arrive early in the morning and wait for the race, and only a few laps. And you have to be ready from the first laps! I think the second race will be really nice for all the riders. We won’t have too much time to work on the data but it’s a new format and I think it will be good for the riders.”
“The timetable will be a new challenge for everyone but also races between 8 and 10 laps is new for me! I thought it would be physically easier, but the laps are so on the limit that in the end it’s the same! Everyone pushes so hard. But I like to do something new so I’m really motivated.”
“With my height and weight it might be a little difficult for me, but I think the races are something else! So we can make a good step, and for me a top ten is a good result for a rookie.”
Following a crash in Race 1 of the Catalan round of WorldSBK, Eric Granado won’t be out on track for the LCR E-Team this weekend at Le Mans. The Brazilian broke the lap record in both MotoE™ tests this season so far and tops the table in the Championship by nearly every metric, so he will be one to watch when he (hopefully – watch this space!) returns to action next time out for the triple-header. Speedy recovery, Eric!
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