Lorenzo: Team-mate to Marquez, like team-mate to Rossi
'It is more or less the same situation as 2008' - Jorge Lorenzo.
When Jorge Lorenzo joined MotoGP with Yamaha in 2008, it was as team-mate to five-time champion Valentino Rossi 'in the peak of his career'.
Fast forward to 2019 and Lorenzo finds himself joining Repsol Honda as team-mate to reigning five-time champion Marc Marquez.
It's a similarity that has not been lost on Lorenzo.
"During my career in MotoGP I've shared a pit box with four riders; Valentino first, then Spies, then Dovi and now Marc," he said.
"The situation now is quite similar to the when I started in MotoGP in 2008, because at that time Valentino was in the peak of his career.
"He didn’t win [the title] in 2006 and 2007 but he was fighting for the title and he knew the [Yamaha] a lot.
"So it is more or less the same situation that I have now.
"I have come here to a new team with Marc who is a very, very strong team-mate. A world champion who knows a lot about the [Honda]."
Rossi had been at Yamaha for four seasons when Lorenzo arrived, while Marquez has spent his entire six-year MotoGP career with Honda.
Lorenzo won his first MotoGP title as team-mate to Rossi in 2010, took a second alongside Spies in 2012 and third as team-mate to Rossi again in 2015.
That 2015 crown is also the only time Marquez has lost a MotoGP title.
The Spaniard described younger countryman Marquez as having a 'phenomenal' partnership with the RC213V and says he has a lot to learn from the #93.
"Now it is very difficult to adapt in MotoGP as the bikes are very complicated, as I found out with the Ducati. So it is not simple [to change bikes] but my adaption with the Honda, even if it wasn’t feeling [perfectly] right, was going quite well in Valencia and Jerez.
"For sure in that area Marc has an advantage. I’d say he is phenomenal, and I have a lot of things to learn from him. So I come into the team with a lot of happiness and proudness but also a lot of humility to try, little by little, to understand everything and get results.
"Let’s see how it goes."
The triple MotoGP champion underwent surgery on Monday for a broken scaphoid bone in his left wrist, following an 'unlucky' dirt-track training accident, an injury that will rule him out of the forthcoming Sepang test.
"In Valencia, it was all about body position and trying to do as many laps as possible while knowing I wasn’t fit. Then in Jerez, we started testing new parts, especially on the second day, so we could see some new little parts that were better than the previous ones," Lorenzo said of his two Honda outings so far.
"In Sepang, there will probably be even more new pieces to test, but I will not be able to test. Anyway, I will do it at the [last] test in Qatar."
2019 MOTOGP CALENDAR CONFIRMED
PETRONAS YAMAHA CAME ‘VERY CLOSE’ WITH PEDROSA
MOTOGP: WHICH TEAM NEEDS WHAT IN 2019?
While it's a big blow to miss the three-days in Malaysia, Lorenzo knows 'it could be worse'.
"More or less I will have the same number of tests (three) as when I went from Yamaha to Ducati, so it could be worse," said Lorenzo, who was denied an additional test for Ducati while still under contract to Yamaha.
"It could also be worse as in [the injury] could happen during the middle of the championship or missing four races in a row."
Lorenzo, who took 44 victories for Yamaha and then three for Ducati, missed four races near the end of last season when he suffered damage to the radius bone of the same left wrist in Thailand.