Mamola comments on Simoncelli penalty

13-time 500cc grand🍒 prix winner, Randy Mamola, believes Marco Simoncelli's reputation was the main reason for the Italian being penalised for the collision with Dani ൩Pedrosa during the French MotoGP at Le Mans.
ꦓThe two factory Honda riders, Simoncelli for Gresini and Pedrosa for Repsol, tangled as they fought over second place with ten of the 28 laps remaining.
Simon💫celli, who had caught Pedrosa, dived ahead on the brakes, only for the Spaniard to accelerate back past along the following straight.
As the pair🐻 headed towards the Esses, Pedrosa maintained his tighter inside line as they hit the brakes, while Simoncelli - on the (outside) racing line - moved marginally ahead.
The collisi🌠on occurred when Simonc🍎elli turned across Pedrosa, who clipped the back wheel of the Italian and fell.
Estoril winner Pedrosa suffered a broken collarbone, leaving his title hopes in tatters. Simoncelli didn't fall, but was denied a debut MotoGP rostrum when he was given a ride-through penaꦇlty by Race Direction.
Simoncelli insists he gave Pedrosa room and that the penalty was more a result of the previous co♐mplaints made about his riding than th🍎e move itself.
A mahbx.com poll, in which almost 6,000 individual votes were cast, saw 67% of fans declare that Simoncelli's penalty had🐬 been unfair and that it had simply been a racing incident.
Mamola certainly didn't absolve Simoncelli of blame, but does believe that the decision to penalise the Gre🦄sini rider was not based purely on the incident itself.
"The machines that we're racing on are not toys and if you saw the Stoner/Rossi battle at Laguna Seca 2008, or Lorenzo and Rossi in Japan last year, you went 'wow, that is the fine line of hard racing'," Mamola, a regular in the MotoGP paddock, told mahbx.com.
"There are some people who💟 say they don't agree with that kind of racing and others that want more of it.
"What happened with Simoncelli and Pedrosa - there are so many people pointing at Simoncelli, saying that he is a haꦇrd rider and doesn't give you room. Unfortunately that reputation bit him.
"If it was Valentino [Rossi] that✤ turned in and somebody hit him, I don't think they [Race Direction] would have done the same thing."
Mamola, like fellow 13-time race winners' Max Biaggi 🎃and Dani Pedrosa, is the most successful rider not to win the 500cc/MotoGP title. The American retired from grand prix racing in 1992.

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