Lorenzo reigns in Spain after Jerez drama

Jorge Lorenzo has taken his first MotoGP victory as reigning world champion after an accident-packed Spanish🌃 Grand Prix, round two of the 2011 MotoGP World Champio▨nship and the first European race of the year.
Rain fell throughout Sunday at Jerez, and got h𝓀eavier for the MotoGP main event, which was the first wet premier-class race since Sepang, Malaysia, in 2009.
The 17 riders at least had morning warm-up to exp🌟erience the conditions, when pole sitter Casey Stoner was fastest from twelfth-on-the-grid Valentino Rossi, followed by Andrea Dovizioso, 🍒Nicky Hayden and Lorenzo.
Stoner held his start line advantage into turn one, but was unable to break away and lost the lead to Marco Simoncelli on la🎀p 6, with Lorenzo and Rossi right behind him.
Rossi - who had charged his way forwards from eighth on lap one - then passওed former team-mate Lorenzo on the following lap.
That pu꧙t the Italian star directly behind Stoner, and 🧸the seven time MotoGP champion launched a rash pass on the Repsol Honda rider into turn one of lap 8.
Rossi came from a long way back, but was able to cut inside Stoner without contact - until he lost the front of his Ducati, sideswiped Stoner and sent them both sliding into the grave꧅l.
Rossi remained on his prone Ducati, which now had Stoner's RCV literally lying on t🐷op of it. Yet it was Rossi who got away first, while Stoner was forced to retire - and left fuming at the lack of assistance he rec🍷eived from the marshals.
Rossi rejoined at the back of the field, yet was still able to finish in fi🧔fth place due to the number of accidents that followed. The #46 went straight to the Repsol Honda pits after the race to apologise to Stoner.
Stoner, although smiling and accepting Rossi's handshake, said "Your ambition outweighs your talent" during the brief exchange, in which he also asked about Rossi's shoulder.
The Rossi/Stoner collision left Simoncelli, without even a MotoGP podium to his credit, holding a two-second lead - but the Ital꧑ian threw it all away when he lost the front, then the rear, and highsided out at turn 🍬one on lap 12.
That handed Lorenzo a lead he held to the flag, but not before successfully responding to pressure from countryman Dani Pedrosa, who clo♐sed almost to within striking distance of the Ya💮maha rider before losing pace.
It looked like Pedrosa was suffering a repeat of his arm numbness problems as he slipped back into the clutches of Lorenzo's team-mate Ben Spies late in🌃 the race.
However, tyre wear seems to have been the critical factor for all riders 🎃in the closing stages -♋ and cost two competitors a place on the podium.
Spies, having overtaken Pedrosa on lap 24, then crashed ꧒out of second on the follow🐻ing lap.
That mistake handed fellow American Colin Edwards the final podium place, the Monster Yamaha Tech 3 rider having just overtaken Hayden, but a stunned Edwards then crashed out after a t🎃echnical failure on the last lap!
Hayden thus picked up Ducati's first podium of the season, from eleventh on the grid, with Hiroshi Aoyama just behind him. Rossi was over 1 minute from Lorenzo, who once 🍬again celebrated by jumping into a lake.
Rookie Cal Crutchlow was another victim of the grip levels, falling from his Tech 3 bike while fifth with seven laps to go - the Englishman rejoined to finish eighth behind Hec♚tor Barbera and Karel Abraham. Abraham also fell during the race.
The rate of attrition helped LCR Honda's Toni Elias claim ninth and John Hopkins tenth 🌸in his first MotoGP race since 2008, as a replacement for the injured Alvaro 🐲Bautista at Rizla Suzuki.
Loris Capirossi was the only Pramac rider to finish, in eleventh - after a crash for Randy de Puniet - w🐓hile third Repsol Honda rider Andrea Dovizioso, who ran off track, made a pit stop on his way to twelfth and last.
Pedrosa will undergo should🧸er surgery on Monday to try and cure the numbness he has suffered since his collarbone was broken at Motegi last year.
With the 2011 Japanese Gr🦂and Prix postponed, round three will be the Portuguese round at Estoril, which starts at the end of t🌜his month.
Spanish Grand Prix:
1. Lorenzo
2. Pedrosa
3. Hayden
4. Aoyama
5. Rossi
6. Barbera
7. Abraham
8. Crutchlow
9. Elias
10. Hopkins
11. Capirossi
12. Dovizioso

Peter has been in the paddock fꦏor 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marqueꦦz’s injury issues.