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Bikesales Staff4 Dec 2014
NEWS

Jack Miller interview

Following his shoulder operation in Barcelona on Tuesday, motogp.com caught up with the Aussie champ for a quick chat
Ready to take the unprecedented plunge to the MotoGP premier class straight from Moto3, Jack Miller has already taken part in test sessions in Valencia and Sepang. In Malaysia, the Queensland rider climbed aboard the 2015 customer Honda for the first time ahead of his new journey with CWM LCR Honda.
Jack, here we are in the hospital once again. First of all, how are you feeling?
It feels almost like a home from home! I’m definitely feeling a bit lighter on the right side. Dr. Mir has taken out seven screws and two plates.
Please talk us through how the injury was first incurred
I first broke the shoulder back in Moto3™ in 2012. Then I broke it again at Indianapolis last year, but I completed the rest of the season. Because it hadn’t fully healed the plate got bent. Then I crashed in Jerez testing at the end of last year, pulling out the plate and splitting the bone in two like a piece of wood.
Last year I had a big operation to put it back together; basically they put two screws on either side of the bone to make it fuse. This year, because the screws weren’t really fixed into the bone anymore it never really stayed tight, so towards the end of this season it started to get a bit loose and I had this awesome-looking lump at the top of my shoulder.
It’s good to be back to 100 per cent now. I’ll take a couple of days off to let the scar heal and then we’ll be back on the ground for 2015.
What about Sepang testing next February? Will you be 100 per cent fit by then?
Well, I hope so! We’ve got a fair bit of time until then. I’m really happy because we have already been able to do a test at Sepang. It was definitely nice and warm over there [laughs], but I enjoyed it nevertheless. It’s the greatest experience I’ve ever had on a motorbike. The straights go a lot quicker than on the old Moto3 bike and you spend a lot less time tucked in behind the bubble, that’s for sure!
Comparing Moto3 and MotoGP, you have to handle 200 more horsepower than you did previously. That must have been a shock at the first test in Valencia…
It was, for sure. But the new bike I then rode in Malaysia is like nothing else. It’s a further step ahead - it’s incredible. We’re still not using the anti-wheelie or traction control (in order to gain an initial feel for the bike without too many electronic aids), but in a couple of points that is now starting to restrict us and we have a lot of rear wheel spinning.
I come from a dirt track background, so I am enjoying so much the fact that I am able to play with the power and body position to really get the maximum drive out of the corners. In Malaysia, with a nice corner like Turn 3 where you can get a bit of counter-steer, it makes riding a lot more fun.

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