MotoGP Jerez: Jack Miller “comfortable getting sideways” on KTM, the Ducati “didn’t like it”

Both RC16 riders were repeatedly getting their bikes out of shape under hard braking, in contrast to the more whe😼els-in-line technique of their rivals.
Miller explained t💟hat the ability to slide into the corner was a crucial ‘tool’, helping to take weight off the🅺 front and aiding passes on the brakes.
KTM celebrated a double podium w👍ith both its riders at Jerez, wi🌌th 1-2 finishes for Binder and 2-3 for new signing Miller.
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“I feel very🥀 comfortable with the bike going sideways in braking,” said Miller after his fourth race weekend with the Austrian team. ꦉ“With the Ducati, I could not really do this [even] if I wanted to. It was a really stable bike and you couldn't really get it to slide.
“Having the opportunit🌳y to be able to slide the bike when you want is like another tool in your pocket.
“As we saw on the weekend, especially nowadays with𝐆 the front tyre temperature coming up and needing to try and pass people, having a bike that you can use the𓄧 rear tyre as well to stop the bike is a massive tool in your pocket.”
But Miller emphasised that the KTM works 🅷well with a variety of styles.
“You don't need to ride the bik𓄧e like that. Dani [Pedrosa] doesn't ride the bike like that. It's just Brad and myself. It’s what we've always done and it works,” Miller said.
“It's nice to have that freedom again because my general riding style was like this and in Ducati, I couldn't do🌺 it.
“[The Dܫucati] didn't like too much negative spin in the rear. But there are so many different things [with the KTM] - the WP suspension, steel chassis.
“The KTM 👍is a KTM and it does what it does very well. And the Ducati is what it is, and does its things very well. So we just try t🌞o take our positives and try to work on our negatives.”

Binder: I don't plan to slide that much!
Binder, who pa🅷ssed Miller with a thrilling knee-down slide into Turn 6 during the Sprint race, was asked if this year’s KTM responds better to that kind of aggressive style than in the p🃏ast:
“It's got a little bit less grip on entry than last year’s, and I don't plan to slide that much! But unfortunately sometimes if you're not stopping the only way to really get the thing to the apex is to jam the rear brake and just try and scrub 💜the speed to the corner,” Binder replied.
“Normally I wouldn't slide that much, but the reality is if you go [wide] to the middle of the track and cut back. You've lost those 2-3 tenths that you worked so hard to try and find. So if c𒈔an just kind of scrub the speed off, even if it does go a little bit too sideways, it's al💝ways better to hit the apex.”
Meanwhile, not only is KTM the only manufacturer running a steel frame ra🍌the💎r than aluminium, but they also use their own in-house WP suspension instead of Ohlins.
“Loving it. Fantastic, can't fault it in any way, shape or form,” Miller said of the suspension, before admittin♏g it had been a ‘question mark’ after using Ohlins at Honda and Duca🌄ti.
“That was definite𓂃ly one of the bigger question marks, my whole MotoGP career has been on Ohlins, so how will I adapt to the WP? And I can hap🐬pily say that it's unreal.”
Pressed on what he likes most, the Australian added: “We get a very close relationship withಞ them, as you can imagine. Being the ꦫonly guys on [WP], they're pushing proper hard and we're working in other areas that everybody else on the grid isn't.”

Miller: Starts? Some guys get in their head a little bit much
Asi🅘de from their sideways style, the other eye-catching performance from the KTM was the way both Miller and Binder blasted off the line during the four race starts (due to𝕴 the red flags).
“Nothing's changed, to be honest,” said Binder. “I think the guys have got the launch control working very well, clearly. And starts have always been my strong 🎐poiᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚnt as well.
“It's great to have in your pocket. Because when you qualify at the back, normally you need a good start. So I think it's something I've always had to real𝓡ly rely on. So it works in my favour.”
Miller also felt strong starts are more down t♒o the rider than the machine.
“Our bi♔ke works well, but some guys get in their head a little bit too much. Generally, when I was at Ducatཧi, it was the same comment by the same riders, saying that the Ducati launch device was much better than everybody else,” Miller said. “And now I'm at KTM we're in a similar position.
“Generally I knew when I was on the Ducati that if I was starting on the first or second row, I coul💙d holesho🍷t it. It's not so much about the start itself, it's your timing and how you approach the start, I think, more than anything.”
In an a𒆙pparent refe💜rence to Aprilia’s pole starter Aleix Espargaro, Miller, who qualified in second, said:
“One guy on the weekend, for example, every single start was more worried about me c❀oming up his inside than worrying about his own start. So if you're already thinking about what the guy behind you is going to do off the start, you're at a disadvantage in my opinion.”
Binder and Miller are now thir✅d and fourth in the worl🥂d championship, respectively, heading into next weekend’s French MotoGP at Le Mans.

Peter has been in the paddock for 2🌠0 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and🎶 Marc Marquez’s injury issues.