Sorry, i just share the same opinion as the riders, journalists and fans.
The 500cc two stroke era and then the following 1000cc 4 strokes with their more basic throttle responses and torque curves, were absolutely stupid to ride.
You can see it in the body language, the riding styles and the fact the interest in the sport as dwindled over the years.
Why do we not see riders spinning up the rears to slide round the apex? Gary McCoy and other wheel spinning artists would exit a corner with the rear spinning and the front wheel 2 inches off the ground, and thats what was needed to ride these on the edge, it was incredible to watch, and a skill that only the top few would have.
These days we don't see it because there is no need, power comes on better, the bikes engine output is mapped for a more 'Easy' to live with power delivery.
It's has been the main focus of so many teams this season, it is why Suzuki have pulled out of motogp and are prototyping an inline 4 cylinder gsxr-type engine... they believe the timing options available to them will give more driveability over shear power.
This has been said to be copying honda, its terms of what they want from an engine.
Yes it is my opinion, but if the teams and the riders are all saying the bikes are now easier than ever to ride, then i don't think im generally wrong, although i wish i was, it is boring... the bikes dont scream like they are being ripped through hell anymore, and i miss it.
Kenny roberts makes a good point... the latest motogp are all more or less traction controlled up to their eye-balls:
Mine doesn't have all those electronic devices on it and it's wheelying everywhere. I don't know how they ride it. It wheelies everywhere, it doesn't have anti-wheelie. If you wheelie it more than two seconds, it blows up because it's missing oil. So, they said don't wheelie for more than two seconds. Why would you make a motorcycle that you can't wheelie, but that wheelies everywhere? And you can't wheelie it for more than 2 seconds. So it's bullshit. I wouldn't like that."
I rode the old 500 a week ago in England, and I liked it a lot better than I like this.
I think, for me, saying that motogp bike are easier to ride these days is the same as saying F1 is safer. It both is and isn't. The rawness of motogp has gone, and the exposure to danger to an f1 driver as decreased significantly, that doesn't mean there aren't new challenges for the riders/drivers, it just means motogp has suffered from it... and formula 1 has gained, safer racing whilst having cars that are on knife edge is beautiful.
Seeing someone make a pass round the outside of another rider whilst doing this is quite something special, that not everyone on the grid could do:
Plus it has been proved time and time again, if you can get the slide right, it will be a faster line through a corner, which of course is the opposite in 4 wheeled racing.
All these opinions are just balls anyway, because by the end of this season the tyres would have ruined F1 for the drivers anyway, and more fans