Dorna love the controversy! They'll be a hell of a lot more people interested in the final round than ever before...sad thing is Pedrosa had a ride for the ages and was the guy who came out of all of this mess with the most class yet he's all but forgotten.
Finding a calm voice in this is tough - Rossi has a legion of fans who think he's the best rider of all time (for the record, I don't think that title can go to one person) and then there are the rest of society who like a rider and/or a manufacturer.
It's funny reading the comments of ex-riders - most (Stoner, Forgarty, Beatie) think it was a dangerous move by Rossi as he turned left on a right corner. A few others (McWilliams, Edwards) think what Rossi did was fine too. Troy Bayliss thought it was amusing watching two ego's clash, noting it was good the crash happened at low speed.
From my days watching the World Superbikes back in the 1990's, I love the commentators known as 'Keith and Julian'. Julian Ryder, along time MotoGP and WSBK commentator posted the following on Twitter: "
Also amazed at the puritans outraged by people racing title contenders at this stage of season. Moto3 must have been hell for them".
For me, Motor racing is about you getting past your oppostion, not asking them to get out of the way because they have a title to win. Remember Rossi was famed for toying with his rivals in his heyday, now it's considered bad because the new generation want to beat him?
The fact is Rossi started this drama in the Thursday press conference, accusing Marquez of helping Lorenzo at PI - which is idiotic given Marc won the race thus
taking 5 points off Lorenzo. Marquez is about winning races at this point and I'm sure he doesn't care about who he mugs to do so and neither do HRC.
Rossi hasn't got a clean slate and nor has Marquez and in the end the opinion that really matters is that of Race Direction who reviewed the incident after the race and awarded Rossi three penalty points.
Further, it was the opinion of Race Direction that both riders were at fault: “
Finally, we actually believe there is fault on both sides. Despite what Marquez said we think he was deliberately trying to affect the pace of Valentino. However he didn't actually break any rules. Whatever we think about the spirit of the championship, according to the rule book he didn't make contact. His passes were clean. He rode within the rules."
All of which sets up an epic final round. If Rossi wins the world title from the back of the grid, the image of him as the G.O.A.T by his fans will be cemented for all time. If Lorenzo wins, it'll likely be remembered as the title that Rossi lost because of outside influences, just like when Nicky Hayden won the world title in 2006.