Pol Espargaro says he is “super-excited” by KTM’s potential in MotoGP this year, after claiming the Austrian marque’s best dry-weather result to date.
Espargaro recorded KTM’s best qualifying result, fifth, at the Circuit of the Americas which he then converted into an eighth-place finish in the race – his highest since joining the team, excluding his Valencia podium scored last year in wet conditions.
The Spaniard had previously claimed that the first three rounds would be a difficult part of the season for KTM, and that things would improve once the European leg kicked off.
“I’m super excited about what the guys are trying in the factory, how the work is going in Austria, I am super proud,” said Espargaro, now ninth in the standings, in Austin.
“Looking the results of last year or two years ago, or what we are doing now, I am proud of what we are doing and what we are achieving.
“It feels like also the people here in the paddock are starting to see what is our work and what’s been our work in the last two years and what I am doing and this makes me proud.
“It is everything I need to keep pushing and to keep putting this orange rocket on the top.”
He added: “[These first races] are the most difficult for us and we go now to Jerez with some improvements on the bike, very positive for the future.
“I think we are getting better results and I think we can do very good but just I want to arrive there [Jerez] and see how everything is going, but I’m quite optimistic.”
Espargaro’s encouraging start has been in contrast to the difficult trio of events endured by Johann Zarco, who moved across to KTM for 2019 after two years on Yamaha machinery.
Zarco took his best result on a KTM yet by placing 13th in Austin, but Espargaro still beat him by 13 seconds.
The Frenchman said after qualifying down in 19th that he was resigned to struggling until the post-race test at Jerez, where he hopes KTM can help provide a “solution” to his current woes.
Post-race, Zarco added he is wary of expecting too much improvement at Jerez, a track where he previously rode the RC16 in post-season testing lest November.
“If I expect too much from changes of the bike and it doesn’t come, I will maybe be even sadder,” he said. “I try to come as neutral as possible, and take the most information I can.
“Pol is riding the best the bike this moment, he got this top 10 that I’m trying to catch at the moment.
“If small things give me the good way to improve feelings, and be able to use my quality, I will be the first one [to be] happy.”