In the absence of the signature that will make Luca Marini a factory Honda MotoGP rider for the next two seasons, one of the main keys to the deal is the Italian's ambition and desire to go his own way, without the supposed shelter provided by his brother Valentino Rossi.
It is striking that Marini would choose to give up a Ducati, the most competitive bike on the grid, to embark on a project with Honda - which has the worst bike judging by its results. However, the move is even more paradoxical when considering the driving force behind it.
That is Marini's desire to leave VR46, the team bearing his brother's initials, to enter a more than uncertain future with HRC. Its bike has become a machine that leaves its riders crushed and seems to be going nowhere from a technical point of view.
Marini will follow the same path as Marc Marquez but in the opposite direction. At first glance, that does not seem to offer too many guarantees of success unless Honda undergoes a revolution in its working methodologies. Despite this, the 26-year-old has decided to leave VR46, the team that many might consider to be his comfort zone. But was it really?
Rossi hardly appears at any grand prix, but indirectly his spirit is represented by Uccio Salucci, his right-hand man and the team manager. The key is that Salucci is Rossi's close friend, not of his brother, who has a very different sensitivity.
Rossi's team is built on the pillars that have always accompanied the seven-time MotoGP champion; an organisation that well defines the concept of a tribe. This sense of family is as important for some, like Marco Bezzecchi, as it is relative for others, like his garage neighbour Marini. For Bezzecchi, staying with his people is so important that he would have put it before the promotion that would have meant racing for Pramac next season, where he would have competed with the most evolved Desmosedici specification.
Source: Autosport