JORGE LORENZO
Lorenzo was born on the Balearic island of Mallorca, Spain on
4th May 1987. He began riding motorbikes at home at the tender age of
three and within months of taking to two wheels was competing in his
first minicross races. In 1995, aged eight, he won the Balearic title
and followed that up the following year by taking the Island's
minicross, trial, minimoto and junior motocross titles.
Lorenzo graduated to road racing and national competition in 1997 and it
didn't take him long to adjust, winning the Aprilia 50cc Cup in 1998.
Despite officially being too young, a special dispensation in 2000
allowed him to compete in the Spanish 125cc series at the age of 13 and
he made history the following year when competing in Europe and becoming
the youngest ever winner of a European 125cc race.
The precocious teenager, once again showing that age was no limit to a
quick rise up the ranks of motorbike racing, made his first foray onto
the world stage with Derbi at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jerez in 2002,
the third round of the season. He did not reach the legal age of 15
until Saturday and therefore missed the first day of practice but was
unfazed this and impressed the paddock by qualifying for the race,
cementing his position in the World Championship over the course of the
season as he got to grips with the circuits. The young Mallorcan hit the
big time the following season, winning his first 125cc Grand Prix in
Rio de Janeiro and then going on to win three more races the following
season, finishing fourth in 2004 and taking his podium tally to nine
before making the step up the quarter-litre class and switching to Honda
machinery.
Six podium finishes and four pole positions in his rookie 250cc season
sealed fifth in the championship and, with a move to the Aprilia factory
team, 2006 was widely expected to be his defining year. Lorenzo indeed
surpassed all expectations in 2006, dominating the class with eight wins
and a record-equalling ten poles, clinching his first world title
convincingly. 2007 saw more of the same and an incredible nine pole
positions saw him win from every single one of them, claiming his second
world title at the penultimate round in Sepang. He also became the most
successful 250cc Spanish rider of all time in the process.
He joined Yamaha in 2008 and exploded onto the MotoGP scene with an
outstanding pole position at the opening round in Qatar, before
finishing second in the race. A second pole position and another podium
in round two proved it was no fluke, before he went on to take an
incredible third pole and a deserved maiden win at the third race in
Estoril. He returned to earth with a bump in China, when a crash in
practice saw him fracture both ankles, although he battled on to finish
fourth in the race before coming back with another podium next time
around in France.
The middle part of the season was difficult for the young Spaniard as
several more crashes left him with further injuries and battered
confidence, but he never gave up and made it back to claim two more
podiums. He finished the season in fourth position as rookie of the
year, the most successful debutante since the start of the four-stroke
era. The 2009 season witnessed Lorenzo take four wins, standing on the
podium an additional nine times and only missing out once in all 17
rounds on a front-row qualification, a remarkable show of consistency.
He was Rossi's only championship challenger in the latter half of the
season and once that chance was gone he focused on securing the number
two spot, which he duly did in Valencia.
The 2010 season saw him take up where he left off in 2009, taking the
fight to team-mate Rossi from the first race. It soon became clear that
Lorenzo was the man to beat last season, the young Mallorcan went on to
clock up an impressive nine race wins on his way to securing his first
ever MotoGP World Championship title. In doing so he also broke the
record for the number of points earned in a single season, accumulating
383 by the last race in Valencia.
For the 2011 MotoGP Championship the then reigning World Champion teamed
with a new racing partner, 2010 MotoGP Rookie of the Year Ben Spies.
The Texan moved up from theTech3 Yamaha Team to join Yamaha's Factory
Racing outfit in the bid for glory. Lorenzo put in a spirited fight to
defend his title, recording three race wins and a total of ten podium
finishes during the season. A serious crash during round 16 at Phillip
Island brought a premature end to the Mallorcan’s season, securing
second in the final standings with 260 points. The 2012 season proved to
be a great one. Against arguably the toughest challengers of his career
in protagonists Casey Stoner and Dani Pedrosa he excelled from the
start, taking the victory at the opening round of the year under the
floodlights at Qatar. He went on to achieve and incredible record,
taking six race wins over the season and always finishing either in
first or second place with the exception of two DNFs. Lorenzo claimed
his fourth World title, his second in the premier class, at Phillip
Island with one race remaining.
The 2013 season then unfolded as an incredible drama filled spectacle
with extreme highs and lows. Rookie rider Marc Marquez became Lorenzo’s
nemesis, the young Spaniard snapping at his heels and grabbing race wins
wherever possible. The defending champion Lorenzo fought back against
the onslaught, scoring multiple race wins in the early part of the
season until disaster struck in Assen when a high-speed crash in
practice left him with a broken collarbone. Racing fans were then
treated to an incredible display of strength and courage as Lorenzo
returned to the track just 24hrs after surgery to compete in the race
and limit any damage. Disaster then struck again with another major
crash, this time in Germany at the Sachsenring circuit, and further
collarbone damage. The second half of the season saw a return to form
with stunning victories in Japan, Australia and Spain bringing Lorenzo
within a few points of a third title. His second place in the final
standings was considered one of his greatest victories.
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