Was lucky enough to meet Neil at some Motogp dinners and he managed to take the most complex engineering solutions and make them seem very simple even for a guy like me. He has a great understanding of all things technical and explains them eloquently.
Great to hear Spalders. That voice takes me back. He knows his shit. The guest line up on OMG has been brilliant. Request for future guest... JB The great Jeremy Burgess. His story would need a 2 hour+ episode. Mamola, Gardner, Doohan, Rossi. Learning under Kanemoto. One of, if not the most successful crew chiefs of all time. Still can't believe a proper documentary hasn't been made about the guy.
Thanks for bringing Neil on Keith. And if you are clever you should have him on regularly. He is a very clever man and great at observing and explain to audience the technical side of things and overall knows MotoGP inside out. I miss a lot the days when Toby, Julian and Neil were together in the commentary booth.
Dear God, how I’ve missed listening to Spalders…..the best interview podcast I’ve listened to. Period. Much as we like Simon up and down the MGP pit lane, listening to Neil for 45 mins was an absolute revelation, understanding tyre tech and the knock on effects being explained is the kind of thing we’ve been missing from the coverage since Eurosport lost it. Thanks Spalders, thanks Keith, please can we make this a regular podcast to recap on Neils thoughts after every 2/3/4 GP’s? Oh, and I’d also really like one of his 853 kits for my 748R, lol.
Bloody excellent to hear Spalders, a smattering of his profound technical knowledge and anecdotes from his years following racing. Thanks guys :- On the back of the interview with a certain Mr.S. Crafar Esq., this is proving to be a veritable treatfest.
Wow man, that was one of the best pod cast, thanks Neil and everyone for bringing this to us, so much knowledge and interesting stuff to listen too. Having Crafer on last time was super too!
Fascinating! Thought I’d seen all the opinions on the rule changes and the future but as always, Spalding wakes me up with his view. Top man. Well done, Keith!
Thanks for coming on Neil! Not only were Jules/Toby a delight but having some juicy tech segments with Neil made a super team in the booth! Thank you and cheers!
On Eurosport the commentators were not afraid to be critical and the knowledge was of the scale, today, especially on the MotoGp channel the commentators are woefully biased and ignorant at times, seam to have no clue about the evolution of the sport the last 20 years, everything is the best now and all the riders are the best we ever seen! In my opinion, there is only one alien at the moment and that is still Marc Marquez, maybe Quartararo and Acosta, but time will tell with him. If it were not for Simon Crafer on the MotoGP channel I would probably watch without the sound off😂
What another quality pod cast love Neil so tech savvy liberty wouldn't go far wrong with getting his involvement in some form or another for the future
Like Blundel in F1 Spalders makes sense of the complex stuff, loved him on Eurosport, how does moto GP survive without him involved in one way or another!!!!!!!
The reduction in Prototype motorcycle racing to safely operate in FIM circuits must mean a proportional reduction in Production motorcycle racing. Stopping 1000cc production superbike racing to go back to 750cc must be next to reduce speed emissions and injuries. This will align with the unreasonable contraints on proportion bikes that is causing manufacturers to abandon production superbikes as not economically viable. Less capacity less emission lower cost more riders...
Wow, my two favorite people talking MotoGP. Spalders with the technology knowledge and a fantastic way of making it understandable for the average person and suitable grumpy more often than not 😂 OMG MotoGP should have him on more often, great show guys. I agree on Honda, they do not want to lose the way they are at the moment, on Yamaha, I was really afraid that they would do as Suzuki, but thank god they are still in it. On the rule changes, I think they sound sensible, but I would like a really sticky front tire and a looser rear tire, so we could get more riders sliding the rear out, also don’t let manufacturers control the turbulence behind the bikes, we need too have the still air behind so slipstreaming is possible again, it is strange seeing guys in the ‘slipstream’ not gaining on the rider in front and being able to overtake!
@@macsmith6216 I understand where you are coming from, but should be possible to design a rear tire that had a gradual wear, so the riders still could get enough feedback without getting to the point of high siding.
The end of the 800cc era was 2011, not 2012, which was indeed won by Casey Stoner on Honda. Nicky Hayden did win the last 990cc era after Rossi suffered a number of mechanical problems throughout the season. However, Honda had already won 2002 and 2003 championships with Rossi. Honda has already won several 1000cc championship with Marc Marquez and I don't see why they need to win another one before 2027 as Mr. Spalding claimed.
If you think motorcycles are about personal freedom, why would you support manufacturers from CCP, best known for disrespect of fair trade, international rule of law, intellectual property and human rights? While BMW are not in F1, MotoGP is a reasonable prototype racing series for them to prove that they are world class engineers. Bring it on! IoM TT victory, and progress in WSBK so MotoGP next..
@@lonpfrb If you are basing your purchases off the politics of the country of origin, your consumer options are extremely limited. Where do you think the components for the phone or device you typed that jingoistic drivel on was assembled?
@@sburns2421 Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand and the list goes on of acceptable emerging or leading economies. I have 40 years experience working in international supply chains so I'm well aware how it works. Not having a moral preference is not ethical and accepting the status quo without question is morally bankrupt. So making that choice is a start and the market will follow the demand. It always does.
euro-sport motogp coverage was best, i didn't watch motogp for years after it left euro-sport, i couldn't afford to. Hopefully Liberty media do a better job than the dorna mess of the last 10 years of gp coverage
remember when you could smoke on airplanes, and elevators? That's how racing a gas powered bike will seem in 20 years. It will all be alright - just stick a card in the spokes. As to Honda suddenly deciding to win - they have destroyed careers and broken riders' spirit - and they have very good riders right now, but ya wouldn't know it. so the idea that all they have to do is try real hard, would come as a shock to very good riders trying very hard on bad and vicious machines. Do'n't see it happening.
Keith and Julian best announce team ever period would like to hear some stories thanks
Was lucky enough to meet Neil at some Motogp dinners and he managed to take the most complex engineering solutions and make them seem very simple even for a guy like me.
He has a great understanding of all things technical and
explains them eloquently.
His MotoGP Technology book is a great read, capturing those early years of the four-stroke era.
Great podcast Neil please come back sometime 😊
Great to hear Spalders. That voice takes me back. He knows his shit.
The guest line up on OMG has been brilliant.
Request for future guest... JB
The great Jeremy Burgess. His story would need a 2 hour+ episode.
Mamola, Gardner, Doohan, Rossi. Learning under Kanemoto. One of, if not the most successful crew chiefs of all time. Still can't believe a proper documentary hasn't been made about the guy.
Thanks for bringing Neil on Keith.
And if you are clever you should have him on regularly. He is a very clever man and great at observing and explain to audience the technical side of things and overall knows MotoGP inside out.
I miss a lot the days when Toby, Julian and Neil were together in the commentary booth.
Dear God, how I’ve missed listening to Spalders…..the best interview podcast I’ve listened to. Period. Much as we like Simon up and down the MGP pit lane, listening to Neil for 45 mins was an absolute revelation, understanding tyre tech and the knock on effects being explained is the kind of thing we’ve been missing from the coverage since Eurosport lost it. Thanks Spalders, thanks Keith, please can we make this a regular podcast to recap on Neils thoughts after every 2/3/4 GP’s? Oh, and I’d also really like one of his 853 kits for my 748R, lol.
This is the best OMG podcase I've seen, The rider interviews are next best, but this one was clearly the tops!
Neil Spalding! You are wonderful ❤️ 💖 ...
First Simon now Spalders, excellent 😊
Awesome! Would love to see more episodes focusing on the technical history of MotoGP!
Thanks for the tech talk & historical perspectives!
Stand up ovation 👌👏👏👏👏
Bloody excellent to hear Spalders, a smattering of his profound technical knowledge and anecdotes from his years following racing. Thanks guys :- On the back of the interview with a certain Mr.S. Crafar Esq., this is proving to be a veritable treatfest.
Wow man, that was one of the best pod cast, thanks Neil and everyone for bringing this to us, so much knowledge and interesting stuff to listen too. Having Crafer on last time was super too!
Too quick of a convo guys. Mega as always.
Excellent interview 👏 get Mr Spalding back for more thoughts 👌
Yes yes yes yes. More like this and Simon!
Fascinating! Thought I’d seen all the opinions on the rule changes and the future but as always, Spalding wakes me up with his view. Top man. Well done, Keith!
Thanks for coming on Neil! Not only were Jules/Toby a delight but having some juicy tech segments with Neil made a super team in the booth! Thank you and cheers!
On Eurosport the commentators were not afraid to be critical and the knowledge was of the scale, today, especially on the MotoGp channel the commentators are woefully biased and ignorant at times, seam to have no clue about the evolution of the sport the last 20 years, everything is the best now and all the riders are the best we ever seen!
In my opinion, there is only one alien at the moment and that is still Marc Marquez, maybe Quartararo and Acosta, but time will tell with him.
If it were not for Simon Crafer on the MotoGP channel I would probably watch without the sound off😂
Fantastic technical discussion,which is greatly appreciated as a mechanical engineer.
What another quality pod cast love Neil so tech savvy liberty wouldn't go far wrong with getting his involvement in some form or another for the future
I was completely fascinated with his thoughts and views. He made me excited for the future! Great job boys!
Spalding still sounds like a young man, top job.
He’ll be happy to read this 😂
Superb!
Very interesting interview Keith, really enjoyed it. What a decent guy.
a tremondously interesting man i could listen to him all night much as I did when he stayed with us some 14 years ago in the south of France
#
Fantastic podcast. Insightful minds of both. Appreciate it!
Very much enjoyed that interview.
Like Blundel in F1 Spalders makes sense of the complex stuff, loved him on Eurosport, how does moto GP survive without him involved in one way or another!!!!!!!
Ahh good to hear Spalders. Julian, Toby and Randy were a real dream team in my view.
Great show and interview!!!
Thank you very much. .
excellent podcast! I've confirmed what I knew for 2 decades and learned much more... loved it!
Good one, enjoyed that
That was fabulous, in the top 2. Can't decide either 1 or 2.
Great podcast. 👏
Brilliant interview and what an education ❤
Just caught up with this, absolutely brilliant... Thanks guys.
His MotoGP Technology books are brilliant!
The reduction in Prototype motorcycle racing to safely operate in FIM circuits must mean a proportional reduction in Production motorcycle racing.
Stopping 1000cc production superbike racing to go back to 750cc must be next to reduce speed emissions and injuries.
This will align with the unreasonable contraints on proportion bikes that is causing manufacturers to abandon production superbikes as not economically viable. Less capacity less emission lower cost more riders...
Bloody brilliant that! Really interesting 👌👍👍
Would love to here his theory on the riders ,he witnessed ! The future crop ,brilliant interview
Have Spalders and Harry Metcalfe ever been seen together??
😂😂😂
Wow, my two favorite people talking MotoGP. Spalders with the technology knowledge and a fantastic way of making it understandable for the average person and suitable grumpy more often than not 😂 OMG MotoGP should have him on more often, great show guys.
I agree on Honda, they do not want to lose the way they are at the moment, on Yamaha, I was really afraid that they would do as Suzuki, but thank god they are still in it.
On the rule changes, I think they sound sensible, but I would like a really sticky front tire and a looser rear tire, so we could get more riders sliding the rear out, also don’t let manufacturers control the turbulence behind the bikes, we need too have the still air behind so slipstreaming is possible again, it is strange seeing guys in the ‘slipstream’ not gaining on the rider in front and being able to overtake!
They had that before before in the Bridgestone era great front tyre not so good rear
Highsides galore and injuries
No thanks
@@macsmith6216 I understand where you are coming from, but should be possible to design a rear tire that had a gradual wear, so the riders still could get enough feedback without getting to the point of high siding.
The end of the 800cc era was 2011, not 2012, which was indeed won by Casey Stoner on Honda. Nicky Hayden did win the last 990cc era after Rossi suffered a number of mechanical problems throughout the season. However, Honda had already won 2002 and 2003 championships with Rossi. Honda has already won several 1000cc championship with Marc Marquez and I don't see why they need to win another one before 2027 as Mr. Spalding claimed.
People won't want to read this, but I would see QJ or CFMoto in the premier class before Triumph and probably even BMW.
If you think motorcycles are about personal freedom, why would you support manufacturers from CCP, best known for disrespect of fair trade, international rule of law, intellectual property and human rights?
While BMW are not in F1, MotoGP is a reasonable prototype racing series for them to prove that they are world class engineers.
Bring it on!
IoM TT victory, and progress in WSBK so MotoGP next..
@@lonpfrb If you are basing your purchases off the politics of the country of origin, your consumer options are extremely limited.
Where do you think the components for the phone or device you typed that jingoistic drivel on was assembled?
@@sburns2421 Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand and the list goes on of acceptable emerging or leading economies.
I have 40 years experience working in international supply chains so I'm well aware how it works.
Not having a moral preference is not ethical and accepting the status quo without question is morally bankrupt.
So making that choice is a start and the market will follow the demand. It always does.
watching from the Philippines... its like listening to sir Michael Caine
One more go for Suzuki perhaps ? That would be nice..
Brilliant
Today I learned it's Michelin's fault why MotoGP is a Ducati Cup now. The competition shouldnt be limited to one tire brand
As Spalders says, it's up to the factory to understand the tyre and build to the optimum level, around every component.
Yes that was cool Peace out
Spalders what a lege💚🇬🇧🌱
euro-sport motogp coverage was best, i didn't watch motogp for years after it left euro-sport, i couldn't afford to.
Hopefully Liberty media do a better job than the dorna mess of the last 10 years of gp coverage
Indeed, and understand that two passports are not enough for a global series.
Must have US and UK riders, as a minimum, FR, DE, JP ideally..
remember when you could smoke on airplanes, and elevators? That's how racing a gas powered bike will seem in 20 years. It will all be alright - just stick a card in the spokes.
As to Honda suddenly deciding to win - they have destroyed careers and broken riders' spirit - and they have very good riders right now, but ya wouldn't know it. so the idea that all they have to do is try real hard, would come as a shock to very good riders trying very hard on bad and vicious machines. Do'n't see it happening.