How This One Man Changed An Entire Sport ( Valentino Rossi Documentary)

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#valentinorossi

This is a repost of the popular Valentino Rossi mini-documentary, Because of this, there are a few spots where my commentary doesn't match the video, and while that sucks I did the best job I could. The original vid got 2.6 million views so share like and sub and let's see if we can get this one up there.

Special thanks to
@GoPro
@dainese
@MonsterEnergy
@yamahamotoreu
@valentinorossiracingVR46
@GoodwoodRR
MCN
@andreabalda
@rai
@1998julieta
@alanflack
@blazebaker
@marvinjurgens9459
@elwinracing
@RevZilla
@nwadventuremike

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YouTube Music

Rise Again
Wasteland
Shadow Of Conviction-Notize
The Gamer- The Cliff
Evolve Or Die
Moonlight Tears- The Moody Monarch
2050-Game Over
In Dusk
Riding The Hills
Regrets
Unfathomable Brooding
Cursed Corridors
Desolate Churn
2050 Vader
Twisted Inside-Noperc
Game Of Drones
Enzalla - Lost

Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing."

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how legend he is?
in Indonesia, when i was a child and want to play motogp in playstation rental, we don't say "i want to play motogp" to the operator, but we say "i want to play motor rossi".
he could even change the motorsport name in our heart:)

pocketprime
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I am italian and the difference between Rossi and other sport millionaire is that Rossi still talk with anyone in his native village or wherever he goes in the world, He doesn't look down on anyone just because he's famous. He was and has remained the same village boy who helps others. Sometimes you can also see him in London where he has a house, and loves the English, and unless he's in a hurry with his family you can talk to him comfortably. Rossi has maintained the roots of a simple boy, difficult to see in other famous ones. And this makes the difference of why people love him as well as the skill of his motorcycle riding.

DH
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Lots of riders have their style of winning in a race. Doohan let you behing 5 laps and than he just disappear. Casey, Lorenzo and Marquez have the same style, to dissappear from start and kill you mentally. But Rossi had the hardest style, it's called 'cat and mouse'. Let you pass him, then he passes you, and in the last lap or lap early he just passes you and win. That is the hardest thing you can play with your opponents. That's why he is master class

SerbiacarFan
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Injuries and Age, take everyone, no exceptions. "You didnt go to watch MotoGP, you went to watch Valentino Rossi perform magic"
Actually fighting, surpassing his limits, not just dominating and going home, made him truly the G.O.A.T

epickat
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Greatest of his era? Absolutely, yes. Greatest of all time? Without question, there has never been anyone like Rossi. The guy is a magician.

robertrishel
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There’s winning, and there’s winning with style. What a character. Made MotoGP so much more than bike racing.

f.kieranfinney
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Even when I didnt know anything about motor racing, I knew about Rossi and Schumacher. They took their otherwise niche sports to global recognition

twistdgUt
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You know he's the GOAT, when you watch MotoGP on TV and your Mom/Sister/whoever people that never watch motogp Passes by then ask "hey where is Rossi? or "Oh, you're watching Rossi Again" Even tho he already retired at this point

fauzanramadhan
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The number 46 is so strong that almost every biker has a sticker of that number in his helmet or bike here in Brazil, and 90% of that guy's never watched motoGP, but everyone knows the doctor, he's a legend.

melo
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When you stack his career up against other incredible champions like Doohan, Stoner, Lorenzo and Marquez - Rossi's longevity and durability is honestly insane. The fact his last MotoGP win came 17 years after his first at the age of 38 is honestly mind blowing in a sport where a couple of injuries can dramatically change the course of people's careers.

Mynamenotjeff
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I was named Valentino after Valentino Rossi and 16 years after I was named that we found out I had the same birthday as well! Complete coincidence but what a worthwhile man to be named after 😊

fluuufeyb
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I was at COTA in Austin, TX for the races and Rossi's farewell season. He didn't finish anywhere near the front, but easily more than half of the crowd in attendance was cheering him on. Yellow smoke was everywhere and it was clear that even in the twilight of his career that 46 was #1 in the fan's eyes.

edjohnston
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Last ever 500cc champ, Won in every class he participated in, before his big injury in 2010 he beat all the rivals that were thrown at him. He's the greatest to me! Only Marc can rival him in the sense of being a step above the others. I'm just glad I was alive during his reign, to watch him perform magic.

KJ_XCV
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The craziest thing about rossi in my eyes is that he's insanely quick no matter what vehicle. F1 car, GT car, motorcycle... he can do it all

adenkyramud
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thanks for reuploading this. I missed it the first time it was uploaded, but this was genuinely one of the best motorsport documentaries I've ever seen.

BananaChair
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This man is a big part of the reason I fell in love with motorcycles and just bought my first one today

jamescarrot
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I cant be more grateful that i watched live all Schumacher and Rossi era races with my dad as a small child. I was more Biaggi fan but later on i knew Rossi is a legend because he was in the sport so long. And me as a huge endurance and GT3 fan i love that his passion continues on.

Thanks for this flashback of his carrier. Nice vid.

chlievcinema
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This is one of the best documentaries I have seen on Rossi and I have seen many! I loved the fast paced coverage of his career... there were no fillers in the doco, and hence no boring bits at all. I'm so honoured to have followed Rossi's career and watched him race live at Phillip Island. What a legend, and look at what he's still doing for the sport. He's doing more than any of the Spanish riders + Dorna combined! What happened to him in 2015 was disgraceful and MM admitted he provoked the incident because he preferred his Spanish compatriot to win the championship. If not for that incident, the broken leg and moving to Ducati, he could have had a couple more Championships and cemented his place statistically as the best ever.

funcool
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Watched his whole career and what he did to his opponents with the mind games was amazing. I think there was no greater shot called in all of sports than when he vowed that Gibernau would never win another race then made sure that it didn't happen.

shannonchurchill
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When Barry Sheene talked about this young kid who would be World Champion one day, my ears pricked up. So I watched Vale from his first race in 125's to his final race in MotoGP. This year I got to see him driving a GT3 BMW in the Bathurst 12 Hour, and noted how good he was with fans who lined up for hours to say Hello.

oldieman