Aragon MotoGP: Brad Binder: Staring at a computer screen doesn't help me!

KTM's Brad Binder talks mid-season MotoGP turnaround, 'Staring at the computer screen doesn't help me! I just need to go out and open the throttle.'
Brad Binder, MotoGP, British MotoGP 28 August 2021
Brad Binder, MotoGP, British MotoGP 28 August 2021
© Gold and Goose

𝐆After the opening🌳 five rounds, Brad Binder was back where he had finished his rookie MotoGP season; eleventh place in the world championship.

That still made Binder the top KTM, but by the summer break he had been leapfrogged by team-mate Miguel Oliveira, who took the latest chassis upgrades to a triple podium run, including victory in Catal🌞unya.

But the KTM seesaw has swung dramatically back in Binder's favour since the summer break, with the South African hauling in 48 points - includ🙈ing a walk-on-water victory in Austria - compa🍌red to 0 points for Oliveira, who has been hampered by a wrist injury.

"I feel like I needed the mid-season to almost reset and try and figure out what I needed to do to go faster," Binder explained at Aragon on Thursday. "From the first few sessions in Austria after the summer break I felt stronger🌃 and I felt more confidentౠ on the bike again.

"In the last three races I've scored a🐟 lot of points and I've been feeling good on the bike so I hope that the second half of the season goes normally how my second half of the seasons go and I start to improve a lot.

"I'm really looking forward to seeing how we manage to get, but I want to be fighting amongst that podium battle as often as pos🙈sible."

Now up to sixth in the world championshꦺip, Binder is in with a fighting chance of taking KTM to a new championship high by beating Pol Espargaro's fifth overall last season.

Oꦏliveira's earlier podium streak coincided with the introduction of a new chassis to better suit the 2021 front tyre allocation and change of fuel supplier. Binder's felt his progress was more down to self-belief than trawling through endless technical data.

"Maybe, especially 🍰in the last few races before the mid-season break, I was really trying to study too hard to figure out how to ride the bike better. Instead of just letting it happen and have aಌ little bit more self-belief and just, you know, sort it out," he said.

"Don’t get me wrong, I had no pressure at all from anyone to try and do anything different. I think as a rider you go down different r🥀oads🤡 and you try different paths to see if you can improve, or see what works for you.

"It's cle🅘ar to me that staring at the computer screen doesn't help me! I just need to go out and not think and open the throttle. That's what works for me!

"So in the last few races, I've really just tried to focus more on my riding, focus just in my small circle and not really look anywhere else for what I can improve. Just try and take th⛦e maximum each day."

Throw in a strong past Aragon record and a first dry🐬 podium of the sea🌜son could be on the cards for Binder on Sunday.

"In Moto2 I w🧸on here twice and in Moto3 I wrapped up the world championship, so I have very good memories💯 here," he said.

"Last year, the first time here on a MotoGP bike was a little bit tough and the first weekend we struggled a lot. The second weekend I made a very bi📖g step forward but never converted the extra pace we found into a race resuꦑlt because I made a mistake into Turn 2 and crashed [with Jack Miller].

"But it's a place I'm really looking forward to riding at and𝓡 I'm super excited to get s🌄tarted tomorrow."

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