Rubber on asphalt decides everything. The expert’s odd silhouette, bike sharply canted while the torso stays nearer vertical, is not style; it is a negotiation with friction and gravity under the rules of rigid‑body dynamics.
The common instinct is wrong. Beginners lean as a single block, shifting both bike and body together, which drags the combined center of mass far inside the turn and forces the tires to carry a large lateral load at a high lean angle. Skilled riders instead separate roles: the bike leans to generate the centripetal force vector through the contact patch, while the rider’s mass stays slightly higher and more over the contact patch line, trimming the effective lean of the center of mass and keeping a reserve of traction.
Control is the hidden gain. By pressing the frame down with the inside thigh and hip, the rider can fine‑tune lean without yanking the handlebars, exploiting countersteering and steering torque more delicately. This lets them adjust the resultant of gravitational acceleration and lateral acceleration so it passes through the tire footprint with minimal slip angle. An almost‑upright torso can still move, unweight, or correct mid‑corner; a fully committed body lean cannot. The bike is allowed to approach the grip limit while the rider keeps a margin for error.