Hayden Anxious to Get Going

Henny Ray Abrams | January 12, 2010

Nicky Hayden starts his second season with the Ducati Marlboro team with a more complete understanding of what it’s going to take to get the job done after a difficult 2009 campaign.When Hayden last arrived in Madonna di Campiglio,the idyllic ski resort high in the Italian Dolomites that hosts the team intro, he was full of promise and hope for the year ahead. But the season was a disappointment, beginning with a massive highside during qualifying for the season-opening Qatar Grand Prix. That set the tone for the first half of the season, during which he’d often finish Friday practice in frustration near the bottom of the time sheets. His results picked up in the second half, with the highlight being a podium finish in his home grand prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The season ended on an up note, with fifth olace finishes in the final two races. Still, he was well behind the ‘aliens’ – Stoner, Rossi, Lorenzo, and Pedrosa – the four riders who dominated the front of the field.A year on Hayden is again excited to get going and now with a new weapon. When he visited the Ducati Corse workshop in December, he was so enthused at the sight of the GP10, that he posted a photo on his website, which he soon realized was a mistake. Still, his motives were pure and he could be forgiven for enthusiasm.”I was just like a kid,” he said. “Any time you get a new toy you want to show all your friends. And the bike didn’t have the graphics on it or anything and I thought most people had pretty much seen it at Valencia. So I just put the picture on my website and shared it with my fans and probably got me in the doghouse a little bit, but I was just excited. So it happens and just lesson learned.”With the limited amount of off and in-season testing, “it’s not like you can go and make a bunch of radical new changes [to the GP10].”The team took the GP09, which Stoner proved was a race winner at the end of the season, and made improvements. Hayden said “some stuff with the engine certainly will help us next year to make it more rideable and more consistent as the season goes on and we got a couple different little tweaks and stuff. Sure the bike is good. We have a strong package for 2010 and some changes with the team and a lot of things that I think has got a lot of excitement about the season for me and for everybody involved and going to be some big changes. But with changes you get big opportunities and we brought in some new guys and the enthusiasm’s there and some fresh energy and we see what it amounts to.”The personnel changes began during the season and continued into the off-season to improve communications. Longtime team manager Livio Suppo was replaced late in the year by Vito Guareschi, the former rider who’s done most of the development work, and Alessandro Cicognani, who will take over Suppo’s marketing tasks. Suppo was a vital part of the team, a constant presence who always seemed to have his cell phone pressed to his ear. It was Suppo who made the decision to use Bridgestone tires, which, at the time, weren’t in vogue. It would later prove to be a wise choice.Though Hayden admits he’ll miss him, he says that Guareschi and Cicognani aren’t two guys who were “pulled off the production line who was putting kickstands on 848s. These guys have been around and I think can be a big help to us. I mean we’ll have Alessandro now focus more on the sponsoring side and Vito in the garage, which, before, Livio was doing it all and was a big job for one guy. Was too much to ask.”Hayden pointed out that, as a rider, Guareschi had been on the podium of World Superbike and “is the one really responsible for this bike. He’s the one who’s done all the testing and we think having him around will help have a closer link to Filipo from the track to the factory and we see. So I think that’s the biggest change. We’ve made a few little changes within the team, a few mechanics swapping around, which is a normal deal. But I think everybody is excited about the opportunity and definitely got some fresh faces and some new energy. Sure they’ve big shoes to fill, because Livio, as we all know, did a lot, was a big part of our team. But these guys I think have been around him enough to learn from him and now they got a big opportunity so let’s see what they can do.”For Hayden to improve he needs to be better in all areas, he said.”I think it’s a combination; it’s bike, rider, team. It’s all one package. You have to use the bike as a tool and obviously I didn’t get the most out of it, but I think now I have a better feel for it. In the beginning it was always really difficult. I could never get a good understanding from lap to lap and get the feedback and know where the limit was. so I don’t think it’s just one area. I think part of it is adjusting my style, my approach to the bike. But also adjusting the bike and the set-up to me. So I think it’s a combination.”Asked if the past few seasons had been frustrating, he said, “Well, yeah, it’s been frustrating. You go from being the world champ to running around mid-pack is tough at times when I expect a lot from myself. And, sure, it’s not fun. But the bike, I have no doubt about my bike, my team and even my potential. I know we have all the ingredients we need, it’s just to put it all together and make it happen, so it’s pretty simple.”The Hayden family will be represented in three championships this year; Tommy Hayden is now the senior rider on the Rockstar Makita Suzuki team and Roger Lee Hayden (Pedercini Kawasaki) will be the first in the family to race World Superbike full-time after a number of Moto2 deals fizzled. After laying out the various calendars, Hayden said he planned to take in both AMA and World Superbike races when his schedule allows.”So it’s going to be cool. One racing in AMA, one in World Superbike, one in MotoGP is pretty neat. I was hoping he [Roger Lee] would go Moto2. He had a couple opportunities that it was a possibility and I thought that would be really cool to be able to share the weekend and go to the races together and be like the old days. I mean, I shared a room with him until I  graduated high school, so on the inside, being a bit greedy, I thought that would be cool. But he’s got an opportunity in World Superbike. The situation in America now is really tough with the series, with the economy. That championship is not as strong as it once was, so this’ll be a good deal for him if he can make the most of it. You know, starting a little bit behind. He hasn’t ridden that bike yet or anything, so he’ll get his chance later this month. But let’s hope he can get some results.”Results weren’t something Hayden got in 2009, admitting he had a “little bit higher expectations than how we went. It was tougher than we had hoped, but life is like this sometimes and things don’t always go exactly how you draw them up and how you lay in bed and envision them. And, sure, we started off the season and had a couple big crashes and got beat up and just really couldn’t get any momentum going. But I think the thing that we gotta be positive about is the progress we made, thankfully with a lot of hard work from everybody at Ducati to really listen to me and give me the help I needed to make the progress and the people from Philip Morris. We were able to slowly but surely start working our way toward the front. And finish the season really positive. I mean, was it enough? No, but was able to get on the podium at Indy and then finish the season with two top fives in a row and make some big steps with myself, with the bike, with the team, with the set-up in a lot of areas. So we’re really excited for the new season. Need to pick up right where we left off and keep trying to close that gap to the front.”But he knows that words don’t mean a thing unless he can back it up on the track.”No need to sit here talking about it and blowing a lot of smoke and making a lot of predictions. Just need to get ready to when we get to Qatar and the lights go out to be able to get up front.”

Henny Ray Abrams | Contributing Editor

Abrams is the longest-serving contributor at Cycle News. Over the course of his 35-some years of writing and shooting photos, he’s covered events from MotoGP to the Motocross World Championship - and everything in between.