theophil
07/06/2005, 09h15
Mamola Takes Miss Italy For A Ride On The Ducati Desmosedici Two-seater At Mugello
Jun 06, 2005
From a press release issued by Ducati Corse:
F1 STAR & MISS ITALY TASTE SOME MotoGP ADRENALINE
Up-and-coming Red Bull F1 driver Tonio Liuzzi was one of Randy Mamola's lucky passengers on the Ducati Marlboro Team two-seater at sun-blessed Mugello this morning. Other passengers included the reigning Miss Italy, Cristina Chiabotto, and Nelson Piquet Junior, another bright young hope of the car world.
Confident that Liuzzi and Piquet were up to some serious high-speed riding, Mamola rode as hard as he could with the car racers. "The only time I've ever ridden the two-seater harder was when I had Luca Cadalora with me here, and he's a former 250 World Champion," said Mamola, a 13-time GP winner.
Liuzzi was delighted with his taste of MotoGP action. "I love adrenaline and that was pure adrenaline," grinned the 24-year-old Italian. "It's a different kind of craziness from F1, just awesome. It's incredible what these guys do on bikes, especially when there's such a fine line between going fast and crashing! The way Randy controlled the bike, braking deep into corners, then having the thing sliding around on the exit was incredible. We were so far over that I felt like my face was on the ground, and the wind was so strong on the straight that I thought we'd take off. Now I realise the kind of kick that bikes can give you I'm going to buy another road bike!"
Miss Italy reckons her two-seater experience will stay with her for the rest of her life. "It was a big emotion, even better than I had expected, something I will never ever forget," said Chiabotto, from Turin. "Thanks to Ducati for this amazing experience, thanks also to Randy, I'm proud to have ridden with him, he was great!"
Nineteen-year-old Piquet Junior, son of the former F1 World Champion, and a contender in the 2005 GP2 championship, was similarly gobsmacked by his experience. "I did a parachute jump last week and I thought that was crazy but this was much worse!" he smiled. "Just hanging on was really difficult. I can't even imagine what it's like riding 15 seconds a lap faster on your own."
Jun 06, 2005
From a press release issued by Ducati Corse:
F1 STAR & MISS ITALY TASTE SOME MotoGP ADRENALINE
Up-and-coming Red Bull F1 driver Tonio Liuzzi was one of Randy Mamola's lucky passengers on the Ducati Marlboro Team two-seater at sun-blessed Mugello this morning. Other passengers included the reigning Miss Italy, Cristina Chiabotto, and Nelson Piquet Junior, another bright young hope of the car world.
Confident that Liuzzi and Piquet were up to some serious high-speed riding, Mamola rode as hard as he could with the car racers. "The only time I've ever ridden the two-seater harder was when I had Luca Cadalora with me here, and he's a former 250 World Champion," said Mamola, a 13-time GP winner.
Liuzzi was delighted with his taste of MotoGP action. "I love adrenaline and that was pure adrenaline," grinned the 24-year-old Italian. "It's a different kind of craziness from F1, just awesome. It's incredible what these guys do on bikes, especially when there's such a fine line between going fast and crashing! The way Randy controlled the bike, braking deep into corners, then having the thing sliding around on the exit was incredible. We were so far over that I felt like my face was on the ground, and the wind was so strong on the straight that I thought we'd take off. Now I realise the kind of kick that bikes can give you I'm going to buy another road bike!"
Miss Italy reckons her two-seater experience will stay with her for the rest of her life. "It was a big emotion, even better than I had expected, something I will never ever forget," said Chiabotto, from Turin. "Thanks to Ducati for this amazing experience, thanks also to Randy, I'm proud to have ridden with him, he was great!"
Nineteen-year-old Piquet Junior, son of the former F1 World Champion, and a contender in the 2005 GP2 championship, was similarly gobsmacked by his experience. "I did a parachute jump last week and I thought that was crazy but this was much worse!" he smiled. "Just hanging on was really difficult. I can't even imagine what it's like riding 15 seconds a lap faster on your own."