Dragging shoulder: Explaining MotoGP's unbelievable lean angles (2024)

  • Dragging shoulder: Explaining MotoGP's unbelievable lean angles (1)

    Austin Lindberg, Senior EditorMay 9, 2024, 09:33 AM ET

Fifty-two years ago, Kenny Roberts changed the course of motorcycle racing. The three-time MotoGP world champion from Modesto, California, is widely considered the first to regularly drag his knees across the pavement while cornering.

That knee-dragging style has been a pillar of the sport ever since. It's a skill that riders don't think twice about, but newly introduced onlookers can hardly believe. And for the better part of 40 years, those mechanics of cornering didn't change much.

Then riders started brushing their elbows against the kerbs. Two-time champion Casey Stoner was photographed doing that at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in 2011, setting the series alight.

"When Casey did it in Catalunya, he kind of destroyed [the elbow of his protective leather suit] in the process," Chris Hillard, communications director for Alpinestars, a manufacturer of protective equipment, told ESPN. "When we changed the arm, we gave him the arm. The whole idea was to make a memento of it that showed how rare it was to do."

What was once rare is now commonplace. Roberts duct-taping the knees of his leathers eventually brought about the introduction of knee sliders, and for more than 10 years now, Alpinestars has been installing elbow sliders on its leathers.

It may soon have to start adding shoulder sliders.

"Touching the elbow is a really normal thing because it's like a reference for us, but when you lean that much and you touch with the shoulder, it's something special," 2024 MotoGP world championship leader Jorge Martín said to ESPN at the Grand Prix of the Americas in Austin, Texas, last month.

The 26-year-old from Madrid is pushing the envelope of what's possible on two wheels. He did more to just set the sport alight when his shoulder-dragging spectacle at Catalunya last season, his exploits went mainstream, crossing over into the world beyond bikes.

Are the extraordinary talents of Martín and his contemporaries solely responsible for this progression of eye-catching cornering? Or are the efforts of an army of engineers in MotoGP's paddock concocting a new wave of tech that makes it all possible?

There isn't just one answer to that question, and they're all interconnected.

"Grip is playing the magic role here," head of vehicle department at Aprilia, Marco de Luca, told ESPN. At the most fundamental level, that is undoubtedly true: the grip produced by MotoGP tire supplier Michelin is better than ever.

The French manufacturer is regularly introducing new tire compounds to improve grip. It is constantly researching and developing the construction of its tires, finding ways to allow for more deformation, which increases the amount of tire that's in contact with the pavement, while still providing enough structural support to cope with the extreme forces the rubber endures.

Then there's the matter of how MotoGP machines exploit the grip on offer.

The series' standardized electronic control units minimize the time tires are overpowered by their 300-horsepower engines, and the less time a tire spends spinning, the less likely it is to overheat, maximizing performance over full race distances. The sport is also in the midst of an aerodynamic renaissance, a winged revolution that is smashing lap record after lap record, with ground-effect fairings and diffusers and downwash ducts yielding mid-corner performance that was once unthinkable.

"When you put all this together, with the ability of the riders that are the best riders in the world, you can see this lean angle that is just unbelievable," Michelin's two-wheel motorsport manager Piero Taramasso said to ESPN from Circuit of the Americas in Austin. "The technology is pushed to the limit everywhere: tires pushed to the limit, aerodynamics pushed to the limit, the chassis pushed to the limit, and the riders too."

There was some level of consensus among everyone ESPN spoke to for this story, though. The advancements in technology may be playing a supporting role, but the biggest reason for riders striving for lean angles that put their shoulders on the ground corner after corner is the riders themselves.

"I rode my [road legal Ducati] Panigale [at Portimão in Portugal] and I was touching almost the same as the MotoGP bike, so I guess it's more about the rider or the style, the precision," Martín said. "We are improving now, every year you try to be more and more precise and you need to be super close to the kerb."

And MotoGP's manufacturers are very aware of that phenomenon. Aprilia's De Luca said that the bikes are getting smaller every year -- "this year's bike [could fit] inside the bike of three, four years ago" -- which creates a more optimized center of gravity, making for more maneuverable machines, and also allows riders greater freedom of movement.

"The rider is pushing the bike, the bike is getting smaller, cleverly designed to permit the rider to lean out, to force the bike to sustain and to tolerate the higher and higher roll angle," De Luca said. "The key here is that you use your body to lean more than the bike, so the center of gravity of the rider on the bike is in the best location ever, compared to the old riding style in which [the rider is more on top of] the bike."

These machines are more complex and capable than ever, but they're being designed with riders in mind. That even applies to aerodynamics, with manufacturers forecasting how their star pilots can help manipulate the air around the motorcycle.

Alpinestars is seeing firsthand how the riders' inputs are having a greater effect on the bikes. Not long ago, just a few of its riders had strips of silicone material applied to the insides of their thighs to allow them to better grip the motorcycle as they hung off of it in the corners. Now, more and more Alpinestars-equipped riders are using silicone strips to help grip the bike, Hillard said, and in more places and in greater quantities. It's all in the quest to achieve greater cornering performance. And if the jaw-dropping exploits of Martín and his cohorts are anything to go by, we're about to witness a whole generation of riders comfortable getting their shoulders on the asphalt.

Dragging shoulder: Explaining MotoGP's unbelievable lean angles (2024)

FAQs

What is the steepest lean angle in MotoGP? ›

Lean angles are normally 65 or 45 degrees. this is the first time someone did a 68 angle in the sport's history.

Why does MotoGP lean so much? ›

The answer is that MotoGP bikes have more grip, go through corners faster, and therefore have a greater lean angle. At some point the bike scrapes, and from there the only way to go faster is to position your body inside of the bike to move the center of mass without causing more lean angle of the bike itself.

Who leans the most in MotoGP? ›

Marc Márquez a World Champion of Motorbike riding
  • 01 Winning against all odds, Estoril 2010. 02 From last to first place in Valencia 2012. 03 Fastest lap in his MotoGP debut. ...
  • 06 The youngest rider in history to win a MotoGP World Championship. 07 68 degrees, the record leaning angle in MotoGP.

How do MotoGP riders lean without falling? ›

Basically speaking when riding around a corner at speed we are keeping the cornering and gravitational forces in equilibrium. These forces act through the combined (motorcycle & rider) centre of gravity.

What is a good motorcycle lean angle? ›

There have been instances when riders have managed to get more lean angle, like Moto GP rider Marc Marquez, who leaned his Honda over to a dizzying 70°, but realistically, a rider riding on the road shouldn't expect to exceed 25° of lean angle.

Why do MotoGP riders stick their legs out? ›

There are mainly three reasons why MotoGP riders put their leg out during a braking section: to increase air resistance, to make it easier to enter a corner, and to prevent an inside overtake by a rival. A fairly new riding technique, introduced by Valentino Rossi, that everyone is now adopting.

What is the rake angle in MotoGP? ›

For motorcycle road racers, however, the angle of lean is much greater than 20 degrees. In fact, MotoGP bikes–which have the most ground clearance and use tires with the most grip on the world's smoothest racetracks–produce 65 degrees of lean angle.

What is the fastest corner in MotoGP? ›

Mat Oxley
  • Mugello's 220mph kink is MotoGP's fastest, scariest, riskiest corner, but for how much longer?
  • Jorge Lorenzo at around 220mph, front wheel off the ground Photo: Motorsport Images.
  • Mugello's sixth-gear kink is a corner with no name (left). ...
  • Joan Mir lines up the kink on the pitlane kerb Photo: Suzuki.
Jun 4, 2019

What is the maximum lean angle in MotoGP? ›

MotoGP machines attain lean angles of up to 60 degrees, by using tires (or tyres) that offer the maximum adhesion, for which they are carefully engineered in terms of compound, interior support (e.g. radial) and sidewall characteristics.

How fast do MotoGP bikes go mph? ›

MotoGP bikes can accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in less than three seconds and reach top speeds of over 220 mph. They can also achieve incredibly fast lap times, with the current lap record at the Circuit of the Americas set by Marc Marquez in 2014 at 2:02.135.

Who is the greatest MotoGP of all time? ›

Marc Marquez – 65
PositionRiderNumber of wins
1Marc Marquez65
2Mick Doohan58
3Valentino Rossi55
4Jorge Lorenzo43
1 more row
Aug 27, 2024

What is a lean angle? ›

Lean angle is the angle at which your bike is leaned at the corners or while turning. Maximum lean angle is the angle at which you are physically able to lean the bike without touching the bike parts to the ground.

What is the lean angle for WSBK? ›

MotoAmerica, BSB, WSBK pros are usually at about 60-62 degrees. MotoGP guys will hit 64-65 degrees, but they're also on tires and bikes that none of us can really get.

What is the maximum lean angle for a road bike? ›

'Cyclists tend to stay in the positive trail region and don't exceed 45° of lean,' he says. 'It's usually less, though when the turn is greater than 5m radius, you can reach 45°.

What is lean angle mode? ›

Lean Angle Mode

The system uses the gyroscopic sensor on the phone to record the racer's lean angle through the corners. The level of lean is displayed on the racing console while the app records the in-dept angle of lean through a lap.

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