COTA has traditionally been a happy hunting ground for the Japanese manufacturer as Marc Marquez has won all six MotoGP races to be held so far at the Texan venue.

By contrast, Lorenzo’s best result at the track is a second place in 2016, his final year as a Yamaha rider, with his last two visits aboard a Ducati having only yielded ninth- and 11th-place finishes respectively.

The Spaniard admits that the low-grip nature of COTA and its numerous heavy braking zones do not play to his strengths, even though the circuit suits Honda.

“The Honda turns better [than the Ducati], it has a lot of agility to enter the corner, you can brake late and enter very fast and turn very well,” said Lorenzo. “We lose a bit of mechanical traction, but not so much because our engine is very fast at this moment.

“It’s a good track for Honda, but not so good for my riding, not the best track to get the best of my riding. Probably also the low grip of the track doesn’t help, and also probably braking. I’m not the best braker, which is probably why I didn’t win yet here.”

Assessing his progress aboard the RC213V bike more generally, Lorenzo admitted that he still lacks the necessary experience of his new machinery to challenge teammate Marquez.

“For sure, some negative circumstances didn’t help to get the best results in the first two races,” he said, “starting from the injury of the scaphoid that stopped me from testing in Sepang, followed by some problems in Qatar, in Argentina.

“But anyway, I still don’t have the level enough to compete with Marc for example, or even with Cal [Crutchlow]. I need more kilometres and to understand certain things that will make me go faster on the bike.”

Quizzed on why he felt Marquez was so strong at Termas de Rio Hondo, Lorenzo replied: “Just [the] track. Marc has his favourite tracks, and tracks where he struggles more. At the tracks he struggles more, he is still able to fight for the win, and the tracks he likes, he wins with [an] advantage, at this moment.”

Lorenzo, who admitted he would prioritise preserving his fitness in Argentina, said that he is feeling “quite well” ahead of this weekend’s track action.

“The scaphoid is coming better and for riding it will not be a problem,” he said. “And the rib is healed completely. So I’m quite well. It’s a step forward [from Argentina].”

Additional reporting by Charles Bradley