Jack Miller: ‘Pretty cool’ to silence some critics, ‘now or never’ to join KTM in MotoGP

Miller, who “gets doubted more than anybody on thi🤪s grid”, was stepping off the world championship-winning Ducati to join a project where previous arrivals Danilo Petrucci, Remy Gardner and Raul Fernandez were dropped after a single miserable season.
Meanwhile the RC16 had been plagued by inconsistency, w♍ith Pol Espargaro’s fifth in the 2020 campaign still the high-water mark for a KTM rider in the final standings.
KTM also hadn’t won a dry race since e🦩arly 2021, which was the last time an ‘orange’ rider took back-to-back podiums.
“Definitely, there were some [negative] comments after I signed because of what happened in the past couple seasons with Danilo struggling, then Remy and Raul as well,” Miller said in an interview with wuqian0821.com at Silverstone.
“It put people, who&n꧒bsp;were not necessarily involved, in a position to maybe badmouth what [KTM] were doing.
“Being ဣable to silence some of those critics - show them these [KTM] guys can put a really good motorcycle together and that I’m not a bad rider who can switch it up on a totally different type of bike - it’s pretty cool to do.”
- Jack Miller: Pecco Bagnaia’s era, but title not꧙ under Duc💫ati’s control
- Official: Alvaro Bautista to m♐ake 2023 MotoGP wild-card
- RNF: Raul Fernandez has a ♈‘2 + 2’ Aprilia contract
The omens didn’t look good in winter t⛎esting, but the Austrian factory put the pieces together just in time for the Portimao opener - where Miller came 🦄out swinging, leading the opening day of the new season, qualifying fifth and battling for the podium.
While it sh🔥owed what Miller could do even 🔯without the ‘best bike’, the 28-year-old felt only those with short memories should have been surprised.
“Because when I hopped on the Ducati [in 2018] it wasn’t the best bike then. But people forgꦛet that very quickly a🌠round here,” said Miller. “You’re only as good as your last race. That’s the way it is. It’s a cutthroat business.
🧸“But Ducati were nowhere near where they are ꩲnow when I first signed with them.
“At that time, I had an offer to stay with Honda and I seriously considered it. But I saw the future at Ducati, I was looking a꧟t working with Gigi [Dall’Igna] and had seen what they had done already. I could see the upward trend there.
“ওThen when I was weighing up my options [for 2023], it was not that I got kicked out of Ducati, it was my decision to come over here [to KTM].”
Miller has been a top-six contender at most rou🎐nds so far, leading races and finishing on the podium three times (twice in Sprints, plus the Spanish GP).
Team-mate Brad Binder has taken a Sprint win in Argentina, a feat he repeated at Jerez, plus Sunday rostrums in Spain and Silverstone. The South African sits fourth in the world championship, as the top non-Du📖cati rider, with Miller in eighth.

Miller: “It’s very similar to Cal”
It was shortly after his strong KTM debut that Miller expressed frustration at being “doubted ✅more than anybody on this grid”. Words that echoed those of good friend Cal Crutchlow, a fellow three-time MotoGP race winner, when he was in the premier class.
“It’s very similar,” Miller said.
In Crutchlow’s case, some people ne🍌ver got over his Superbike background. So might Miller missing Moto2, by jumping directly from Moto3 to MotoGP in 2015, be a reason for so🐻me of his doubters?
“I think that's got so✅mething to do with it. I've never thought about it like that for Cal. But what you’re saying makes sense to me, dotting the lines together,” Miller replied.
“Perception in this paddock can be a strange thing. I don't know if it's like you get seen as an outsider here or what. But yeah, you definitely get doubted more than o🦩thers.
“I think it's also because we don't stand up, beat our chest and say, ‘I’m great, I’m a legend’ and all this carrﷺy on. You just go in, work and do your job.
“There are many factors. Whet🔥her it can be as well the Australian or 👍English thing - not being Italian, Spanish or whatever. There are definitely guys that have to prove themselves more than others here.
“But I wouldn’t change my situation for anything and 🌃being Australian has helped me and𓆏 given me so many more opportunities than maybe I wouldn’t have got if I was Spanish.
“L🍬ike everything, there are positives and negatives, so it💞’s not really a big deal.”

Miller: It was 'now or never' to join KTM
Wꦆhile it soon became clear that Miller’s fౠactory Ducati seat was in serious danger from Enea Bastianini and Jorge Martin for 2023, he could have remained on a factory Desmosedici by rejoining Pramac.
Instead, and despite turning down KTM earlier in his MotꦏoGP career, Miller felt sure the time was right. Even though the unique steel-framed machine, also the only bike with WP rather than Ohlins suspension, had finished fifth in the previous year’s constructors’ standings.
“Call it my intuition or whatever, but I s﷽aw the engineers and some guys I knew already [from Ducati] over here [at KTM], plus the guys that they were bringing in and what they w𒅌ere putting into the project,” Miller explained.
“I think with the right people, you’ve got to succeed. There are no two ways about it. So I saw all that and thought '𓆏now is the time, it’s now or never'.
“I could have signed some years ago with KTM. I didn't because it just didn't seem right for me at that point in time. But this time, I never secondℱ-guessed it.
“I said to Aki [Ajo, manager] ‘can you start talking and see if they’re interested’. As soon as he said the🔴y were keen, I asked ‘Where’s the paper? I’ll sign’. I’d already made my mind up.
“It’s a great factory to work for. I’ve got fond memories obviously from the past [in Moto3]ꦅ and then with the engineers we have around now as well as Fabiano [Sterlacchini] and Jens [Hain♍bach] - I have a great relationship with everybody in the box.
"So it was a no-brainer for me.”

Miller: “I’ve picked the boat… I’d love to finish that trifecta”
With Binder’s Sprint victories not counting as grand prix wins, KTM technically still hasn’t won since Miguel Oliveira’s wet ๊victory in last year’s Thai round.
Not that Miller needs any extra incentive, 🐎but ahead of the Spanish G🎶rand Prix weekend wife Ruby posted on social media: “If Jack wins, I’ll let him get a new boat.”
“I’ve got theꦿ boat picked out, I know what I want - I’ve just got to deliver!🍸” smiled Miller.
“Either way I’ll be getting a boܫat. That was more of a joke between the wife and I as we were driving to the race, I said ‘If I win this weekend, I’m buying the boat!’
“She’s not quite yet on order, but we'r🌸e working on it.”
Also still up for grabs is the honour of becoming the first-ever rider to win MotoGP races for three differ🐭ent manufactu💜rers, a feat only Maverick Vinales is currently in contention for.
“I’ve love to bring the team a w💝in, but also for myself, to be able to finish that trifecta off,” said Miller. “To win wi🅠th three different bikes in the modern MotoGP era would be amazing.
“That was my thinking all along, to move over here and have another challenge 🌳like this. Try to bring my experience over to this bike and be able to lift the level of this bike to a point where I can challenge for victori💃es.
“I feel like we've been closer already💃 than I probably would have anticip🌟ated.
“I'd love to be able to put tꦡhree different w🧔ins with three different manufacturers but I'd also love to push up into the top five in the championship. I think that’s also definitely doable before the end of the season.
“There's a lot of points available and a lot of uncertainty in terms of the championship 🌳because a lot more races mean a 🐭lot more chance of crashes and also mechanical issues because it’s harder on the bikes.
“So there’s a lot that can happen in the back-half of the season, and I feel like at KTM we’ve got a great package𝐆. It🅰’s a solid package. I'm never concerned about the bike having a mechanical or anything like that.
“Whereas some of those other bikes - especially toward🥃s the end of the year - when the engines start getting a bit old and losing a bit of power… That’s not really an issue we h𝔍ave with the KTM.”
Miller, who led the opening lap of the British MotoGP before being forced wide and recovering to eighth, heads to KTM's home round ꦗin Austria 32-points behind Johann Zarco (Pramac Ducati) and a place in the world championship top five.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has se🌟en Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefron𓆏t of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.