EXCLUSIVE: ‘Remember one guy, Valentino Rossi?’ Rider still makes the difference
Tech3 boss Herve Poncharal believes Pꦺedro Acosta’s rookie performances show the rider still makes the difference in MotoGP.

When Valentino Rossi turned his back on Honda at the end of 2003 it was to try and show that, despite the new era of exotic four-stoke technology, the ღrider was still the main element for MotoGP success.
The Doctor proved his theory not only by winning on his M1 debut en route to Yamaha’s first premier-class title in a decade, but also by being the only 🃏Yamaha race winner for the next four years.
Watching Rossi’s remarkable run from the satellite Yamaha garage was Tech3 boss 🍌Herve Poncharal, who cites the stand-out results of Rossi and later Marc Marquez at Honda when describing the arrival of his 2024 star rookie Pedro Acosta.
"Everything plays an important part in MotoGP success, and I understand a lot of fans and media are very interested in the technical side,” said Poncharal, whose Tech3 team now runs under the GASGAS/KTM banner, during an exclusive interview with mahbx.com at Portimao.
“So sometimes we spend weeks or months talking about a new aero device, or a new holeshot device, thinking it'🅠s going to be a ꦓnight-and-day difference.
“But what is still good in our sport - ඣand I think this is also the main contrast with four-wheel racing - is that the input of the rider is essential. And this is why I really love the sport in every class. Mo🃏to3, Moto2 and MotoGP.
“Sure, it's better today to be on a Ducati than on an ‘X’ bike from the Far East. But remember what one guy, Valentino Rossi, was doing on a Yamaha for years when ಞthe others were nowhere. I was with Yamaha then and we were not even in the points sometimes.
“🃏Or when Marc Marquez was with Honda, what were the other Hondas doing?
“So the rider is essential. And although we’ve had a lot of t🧸op riders recently - Moto2 world champions like Remy and Augusto, plus Raul who was vice-champion - when we saw Pedro coming, we saw this guy is special, this guy is different.”

‘Acosta has something in his DNA. He just understands a bike’
The moment Acosta arrived well and truly on Poncharal’s radar won’t come as a surprise: It was the youngster’s debut Moto3 victory, in only his second race🌊, despite starting from pit lane in Qatar 2021.
“I had followed him in the [Red Bull] Rookie, but then what he did in his second Mo🔥to3 race in Qatar, starting 🦋from the pit lane and winning…
“Then he won the Moto3 title, but it was how he won it. Because he was ridiꦅng like the smartest and most experieꦍnced guy out there, even though he was a rookie!
“Then he won another title in year two of Moto2. But still I said wait and see, because once you jump on a MotoGP bike you have different tyres, different brakes, a lot of electronics, two bikes to work with, technicians talওking to you. Sometimes it takes a while before you are fast.
“He first came to us in Valencia for the test. He was tired after finishing the season, the conditions were cold and windy. There was some dust on the track. So you are always a bit scared,♈ 🦩you know?
“But woah, what he did was impressive - on tr𒐪ack but also in the pits.
“I asked Paul Tre🌱vathan, his crew chief, at the end of the day, ‘How would you describe Pedro?’ജ And he said, ‘he’s a sponge’. And I like that description very much because it’s true.
“Every time Pedro c🥂omes back after a run, he’s digesting everything. And the next run, he puts into practice what he learned in the run before.
“This is not noꦏrmal. Normally, you try something based on the rider feedback and you do a run. Then you have a debrief with the team. Sometimes the rider says what you tried works and sometimes not, so then you go back a step to what you had before.
“So far, almost all the time, for Pedro it's better, better, better, better. He's very methodical. He's very clever. He has something in his DNA. He just ꦚunderstands a bike.
“He sits on the bike with these tyres, these brakes, this special technology. Everything so different to what he’s had before. And you don't have to tell him wh🌠at to do or ඣwatch out for. He's immediately in harmony. He has a kind of understanding of the package.
“So the winter tests 🐼were super good. But we didn’t know what to expect when it really counted at round one. And it was fantastic. He got the fastest lap of the race and broke the previous lap record. Even though he had some issue with ওhis arm, maybe to do with [the positioning of the handlebar switches] on the bike.
“But without this smallℱ physical problem, I believe it was a possibility to fight for a podium…”
Acosta duly went on to take his debut MotoGP podium in Portimao, a few days after this interview was conduc🍎t♓ed.

Acosta ‘one of the key players in this championship, very soon’
Like his teenage rider, Poncharal is keen to𒉰 avoid setting precise targets, which can quickly become a millstone around your neck if not a💧chieved.
But the Frenchman - who founded Tech3 in 1990 and has competed in the premier-class, with Yamaha and then KTM since 2001 – had already seen enough to know that Acosta will be a ‘key player’ in MotoG🌟P ‘very soon’.
“He’s a rookie. We did a great winter, great round one, and we will see. But for sure Pedro Acosta is going to bꦉe a top rider for the🌱 next I don't know how many years in MotoGP.
“For sure, he will be one of the key players in this champ🦄ionship, ꧅very soon.
“I'm very happy he🐭's doing his rookie season with us. And I'm very happy Pierer Mobility Group [KTM, GASGAS etc] has got a rider like that.
“The Pierer Mobility Group have pushed so much and worked so hard 𝓀on this project, but if you don't have the right guy on the bike – who also trusts the project.
“Becaus♉e some that guys came here said, ‘this is not a winning machine’. But Pedro arrived with no pre-conceived ideas, an open mind and after the first lap he said: ‘I love this bike!’ And still he says, ‘I love this bike. I feel good on this bike’.
“Now with Brad [Binder], who has experience, and Pedro, who has the potential as a rookie, I think these two guys will become the leaders of the Pierer Mobility Group 💦p💃roject.”

Acosta ‘not dreaming, ready to struggle more’
Despite Acosta’s instant success, Poncharal repeatedly highliཧghts that the Spaniard is ‘ready to struggle’ and knows MotoGP won’t be a walk in the park.
“What I like is that he’s humble. He works hard and has ambition, but also has respect for ever🍸yone,” Poncharal s🃏aid.
“He comes from a modest family, which I like a lot. His father, who is a fisherman from a small Spanish port, and mother are normal p𝔍eople. They are both here. And he's also got a good education.”
“💫After completing a full weekend in Qatar – qualifying, Sprint race, main race - he’s more calm [in Po🧜rtimao]. And he knows his potential.
“🌊But he’s not dreaming. He's ready to struggle more. He knows that will be part of the rookie season process. He is here to l💞earn.
“But we are very happy. W✅e have an exceptional rider and a great person with us. And for me, after all these years, the main thing is to get results but also part of that is to have a great human relationship.
“Because a happy rider is a fast rider, and to make the rider happy you need to have a grou♍p that he feels good with. That he trusts. This is my target at Tech3.
“Pierer Mobili💞ty dev🍬elop the bike and I am here to give him the group he needs and the group he deserves around him.
“Then it’s a win-win situation for all of us.”

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at t🥀he forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.