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・ 1989 Israel Super Cup
・ 1989 Italian Grand Prix
・ 1989 Italian Open (tennis)
・ 1989 Italian Open – Men's Doubles
・ 1989 Italian Open – Men's Singles
・ 1989 Italian Open – Women's Doubles
・ 1989 Italian Open – Women's Singles
・ 1989 Italy rugby union tour of Argentina
・ 1989 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation
・ 1989 Jamba Hercules crash
・ 1989 Japan Series
・ 1989 Japan Soccer League Cup
・ 1989 Japan Women's Football League
・ 1989 Japanese Formula 3000 season
・ 1989 Japanese Grand Prix
1989 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix
・ 1989 Japanese Regional Leagues
・ 1989 Jeux de la Francophonie
・ 1989 John Hancock Bowl
・ 1989 Jonesborough ambush
・ 1989 Jordan League
・ 1989 K League
・ 1989 Kangaroo Tour of New Zealand
・ 1989 Kansas City Chiefs season
・ 1989 Kansas City Royals season
・ 1989 Kansas Jayhawks football team
・ 1989 Kansas State Wildcats football team
・ 1989 Kedah Madrasah fire
・ 1989 Kentucky Derby
・ 1989 Kentucky Wildcats football team


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1989 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix : ウィキペディア英語版
1989 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix

The 1989 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix was the first round of the 1989 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. It took place on the weekend of 24 to 26 March 1989 at the Suzuka Circuit.
==500 cc race report==
Wayne Rainey gets the lead and opens a small gap in the first lap, with Kevin Schwantz moving into second to chase him down. Wayne Gardner and Freddie Spencer go off-track, but get back in the race, while Doohan has a mechanical and Pierfrancesco Chili crashes out.
Schwantz soon catches and passes Rainey at the chicane in a typical late-braking move that leaves Rainey without much room. Rainey, not wanting to let Schwantz through, almost hits Schwantz’ back wheel and loses a lot of time. Schwantz will repeat the chicane pass two more times. From about half-race on, Rainey and Schwantz get in an epic fight, seemingly incapable of wanting to let the other take the lead. Rainey is so committed to staying in front of Schwantz that he does a downhill wheelie on the approach to the hairpin; on this lap alone they swap the lead at least 5 times.
Last lap sees Rainey ahead on the straight, but Schwantz passes into Turn One and manages to hold the lead to the finish line. Crossing the line, Rainey’s arm-flailing betrays his fury, but he manages to extend a hand of congratulations as he comes alongside Schwantz on the cool-down lap. Lawson battles his way through a handful of riders to take 3rd.
Rainey says of the last lap: “I couldn’t see my pit board so I was watching the circuit’s own lap counter over the start line. That clicks down as the leaders go underneath it, but I didn’t realize that. I read L2. I was following Kevin and thinking: why’s he riding so wild when there’s still another lap left? He was being real aggressive, and I was sitting right on him, planning how the next lap I’d draught him on the back straight, then not let him pass me at the chicane. Then we came across the start-finish line and there was the checker. It really pissed me off. Towards the end of 1988 we’d started saying hello to one another. It wasn’t just the two of us anymore. Now our rivalry started to heat up again.”〔Scott, Michael: "Wayne Rainey", pages 135-136. Haynes Publishing, 1997.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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