Pedrosa takes victory in Portugal

Dani Pedrosa has taken his first MotoGP victory since Misano 201📖0 after a late pass on world championship leader Jorge Lorenzo at Estoril on Sunday.
World champion Lorenzo had never been beaten as a MotoGP rider at the Portuguese circuit, while Pedrosa - riding in his first race sinc💖e a collarbone operation - had never w☂on.
Lorenzo converted his fourth successive Estoril pole into the early lead, with Pedrosa retaining second through turn one. The battle for victory remained exclusively between them thereafter🦂.
Pedrosa, unsure if the shoulder operation had cured his arm-numbness problems and still tender from surgery, then stuck😼 doggedly to Lorenzo for lap-after-lap.
When Pedrosa was still in Lorenzo's wheeltracks as the race passed the 2🅘0-lap point, of 28, the perception of Pedrosa had changed firmly from 'clingin📖g on' to 'planning a pass'.
The Spaniard's factory RCV was quicker than Lorenzo along the straights, but he didn't look to have a decisive straight-line advantage.🔥.. until he breezed alongside Lorenzo on the home straight and into the lead with four laps to go.
Whether Pedrosa had been backing off in previous laps, or simply got a better exit on that lap, isn't yet known - but what is clear is that Pedrosa seemed to have been saving something, as he🍷 quickly put a second of track between himself and Lorenzo.
Pedrosa beat fellow Spaniard Lorenzo by 3.051sec at the chequered flag and is now just four points behind the #1 in the world championship. A relieved Pedrosa later reported no arm numbness during the race🔴.
Pedrosa's Repsol Honda team-mate and fellow 2011 race winner, Casey Stoner, rode to a lonely third despite suffering a 'twinge'ꦫ in his back iꦏn the closing stages.
S✅toner inherited third on the opening lap when Marco Simoncelli saw his best ever MotoGP qualifying position, of second, wasted after a huge highside. Simoncelli (third) and Stoner (fourth) had previously survived a scare on the exit of turn one.
Simoncelli's highside - which was followed moments later by an accident at the same corner for H▨ector Barbera - blew the lead group apart.
Valentino Rossi made use of the incidents to carve his way up to fourth on lap 1, from ninth onဣ the grid, then spent most of the race trying to hold off the third Repsol bike of Andrea Dovizioso.
Rossi succeeded until the final few metres of the race, when fellow Italian Dovizioso snatched the place from him by just 0.025sec. Fifth is Rossi's best dry result as a Ducati rider an🧔d matches his🍬 wet finish - after a crash - at Jerez.
Monster Yamaha Tech 3's Colin Edwards held siꦗxth p💝lace for almost the entire race, with Simoncelli's San Carlo Honda Gresini team-mate Hiroshi Aoyama taking seventh place after a long battle with Edwards' rookie team-mate Cal Crutchlow.
Joining Simoncel🌠li and Barbera on the DNF list were Lorenzo's team-mate Ben Spies and rookie Karel♔ Abraham.
Spies dropped from fifth to tenth after a mistake on lap two, ꦏand later tagged the rear of fellow American Nicky Hayden🌠 as he made his way back up the order.
The Texan's progression came to an end when he crashed out of eighth place on lap 12, his second DNF from the three r⛄ounds this year.
Ducati riders Hayd𓆉en and Randy de Puniet were ninth and tenth at the flag, with LCR Honda's Toni Elias eleventh. Loris Capirossi took twelfth on the second Pra🅠mac bike.
Rizla Suzuki's Alvaro Bautista - returning to action after breaking his left femur during prac♛tice for round one in Qatar on March 18 - rode an understandably conservative race to 13th and last.
Estoril be🌄came round three of the 2011 world championship after the postponement of the Japanese Gra💧nd Prix.
A one-day test takes place at the track on Mon🍸day.
Portuguese Grand Prix:
1. Pedrosa
2. Lorenzo
3. Stoner
4. Dovizioso
5. Rossi
6. Edwards
7. Aoyama
8. Crutchlow
9. Hayden
10. de Puniet
11. Elias
12. Capirossi
13. Bautista

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefronౠt of the Suzuki exit st♚ory and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.