Jack Miller: “No f****** way this will stop, first exit before eyes adjust”
Jack Miller explains shock of hitting 300km/🔥h after time away f♍rom a bike

Jack Miller has provided a fascinating insight into the importance of a MotoGP rider’s eyes adjusting to speed.
The 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Pramac Yamaha rider has pointed out how time away from riding at peak MotoGP speeds can mean eyesight re🐭quires an intense rea🐟djustment.
Miller insists the first lapౠs of a new season are crucial to redevel🌄oping the senses needed to travel at such velocity.
“It’s the eyes,” he told the Gypsy Tales podcast. “Winter break gets you - you go away, go back to Australia, I didn’t touch a bike from the༺ Barcelona test in November to the first week of February.
“So you haven’t done 300km/h since then.
“You’ve got things going througಌh your head. I’ve been doing it for eons but still ‘will I remember how to ride? Can I do what I did three months ago?’
“Your eyes are the first thing. Always in Sepang.
“I know from doing copious amounts of laps there, you know exꦡactly where the braking marks are. You know ♔where you’re safe, where you’re not stretching it. You’ve got a good window.
“You come out the corner, up the gears, you’re not worriꦡed about the ride-height device, you’re just worried about getting around.
“You go into the bra𒀰king zone and think ‘t🤪here is no f***** way this thing is going to stop!’
“Your eyes are all over the place. It takes the first exit before your eyes adjust to that speed, aꦕnd🔯 you start seeing things in a different light.
“It takes😼 five or six laps to really adjust. Then it comes back like muscꦡle memory.”
Jack Miller 'hyper aware particularly if I am focused'

Miller insists the adjustm🤪ent is even more severe on four wheels.
He explai♐ned: “I hav🌞e done a bit in go-karts. That’s another step, the Formula 1 guys, that sort of thing.
“You are so low ♔to the ground, your corner speed is so high. Your eyes are working.
“In go-karts, your eyes take a couple💞 of laps to adjust to how quick things come in the corners, and how much 🌳corner speed you take.”
He continued: “I feel like my peripheral v🌟ision is pretty good.𝔍 I see a lot, especially in a car, a bicycle or a motorcycle.
“I am hyperꦬ aware of what people are doing, particularly if I am focused on driving a car or riding a bik🌠e.
“I can see a lot. That definitely comes back to racing. Youౠ can feel or hear a motorcycle pass you before you see the bike. Your senses work in overlꦯoad.
“You try to avoid a block pass, pull it up earlier to cut back, especially now because there is n♏o margin for error.”

James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade cover🧔ing everything from American sports, to football, to F1.