HomeBike NewsMahindra BikesMahindra MGP3O's Miguel Oliveira finishes 4th in Qatar

Mahindra MGP3O’s Miguel Oliveira finishes 4th in Qatar

Miguel Oliveira said, “To be honest, I didn’t expect this result. I always felt confident on the bike but I was having some problems in one section, and qualifying on the fourth row was pretty bad. I was hoping to get away with the front group, and from the start I just tried to keep up, to wait and see what would happen at the end. On the last lap I tried everything, but with this long straight it was very hard to get the podium. But it was a crazy race, and I am happy with my performance.”

Arthur Sissis ‘Did Not Start’ and said, “The bike felt good, the rider not. I tried in warm-up, but I could only do four or five laps at a not very fast speed, and after that I couldn’t concentrate any more. I had tonsillitis, and I’ve been taking a real lot of pills. I’m gutted not to ride, but there was no point in battling on for 18 laps for the last positions. I’m looking forward to the next one now.”

Mufaddal Choonia, CEO Mahindra Racing said, “My heart is still beating at 200 beats per minute – it was an incredible race. Hats off to Miguel, and hats off to the technical team, who managed to do something almost unbelievable, I think. We were less than three tenths from victory and in a photo-finish for the podium. I don’t think we could ask for a better start to the season. I am phenomenally satisfied: it shows that all the work over the winter was in the right direction.”

It was a thrilling climax to a tense opening race under floodlights at the Losail circuit, with the first five in the Moto3 class crossing the finish line within 0.369 of a second, and the leader of the next group just two-tenths behind.

Oliveira, who claimed the only Indian manufacturer in MotoGP’s first podium last season, had qualified on the fourth row, but showed his race-craft and intelligence as he got away with the leading group, then gradually picked his way to the front of a high-class gang disputing third.

By the finish they had all closed up and the fight was for the lead. Oliveira was third as they came onto the long finishing straight, but with five riders all slipstreaming and fighting for advantage, he narrowly lost the position over the line.

New Mahindra rider Arthur Sissis was forced to withdraw from his first race for the team, after suffering a savage attack of tonsillitis. Still suffering in morning warm-up, the team withdrew the Australian before the start.

The Qatar GP is the first of 17 rounds in the 2014 World Championship.

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