Italian Francesco Bagnaia

MotoGP: Bagnaia retakes points lead as Martin chokes

Using his superior Ducati power, Italian Francesco Bagnaia took a vital Indonesian GP victory to retake the MotoGP points lead after race leader Jorge Martin choked.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

Martin had taken the points lead from Bagnaia Saturday by winning the Sprint Race, and was leading the feature race Sunday by a comfortable margin 3 seconds, but choked and crashed on lap 13 of 27.

When Martin went down, Vinales took the lead, but Bagnaia hunted him down from his 13th place starting position and passed him for the lead with three laps remaining.

From P13 on the grid Francesco Bagnaia is back on the top spot, and in the championship lead, following a dramatic Indonesian GP in which championship rival, and leader after yesterday's Sprint, Jorge Martin, crashed out from the lead of the race!
From P13 on the grid Francesco Bagnaia is back on the top spot, and in the championship lead, following a dramatic Indonesian GP in which championship rival, and leader after yesterday’s Sprint, Jorge Martin, crashed out from the lead of the race!

Fabio Quartararo completed the top three on his factory Yamaha.

How the Race Unfolded

From lights out, Bagnaia was off on a mission, making quick work of the journey up into third. From there, he was chasing Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing) as Martin disappeared into the lead, and then came the truly pivotal moment of the Grand Prix. After achieving near perfection of late and taking that hard-fought lead on Saturday, the number 89 suddenly slid out at Turn 11 – leaving an open goal for Bagnaia.

The reigning Champion didn’t miss, but he most definitely had to work hard for it – getting past Viñales late on before the Aprilia and Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) both homed right in at the final corner. Still, Pecco held on to leave a tough weekend at Mandalika with an 18-point lead as Viñales and Quartararo followed him home. Pivotal? It could well prove so.

A dramatic opening few laps 

As the lights went out in Indonesia, Martin got the race start of all race starts as he shot into the lead from sixth on the grid. The Spaniard was absolutely flying too as he led the way from Viñales, already a few bike lengths clear, with Quartararo holding on in third.

Martin and Viñales began to check out as a queue started to build up behind Quartararo, but Bagnaia had been given the wake-up call on Sunday morning as he came out of the gates ready to race and carved his way through the riders ahead, climbing up from 13th on the grid to third by the start of Lap 3.

The drama was elsewhere. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) crashed out, rider ok, and then Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) went for a pickpocket on Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team), but the South African made contact and the Italian slid out. Binder was given a Long Lap for it, and Marini did rejoin at least to do his he’d earned a few races ago.

The race then began to settle, but Martin was pulling the pin in the lead and breaking away from Viñales. Fastest lap after fastest lap came in from the number 89, the Pramac putting down a pace that no other could match as he went 2.7s clear of Viñales with 17 laps remaining. 

They say to always expect the unexpected in motorcycle racing, however, and that statement proved itself true in MotoGP™ as Martin went from hero to zero in a matter of seconds. A costly mistake at Turn 11 saw his Prima Pramac Ducati bounce through the Indonesian gravel trap and that was that for this Grand Prix – with Bagnaia left with an open goal and now, only one machine ahead of him: Viñales.

Bagnaia on the charge

Viñales may not have yet taken that win with Aprilia, but he’s no stranger to the top step and Bagnaia had to be patient to pull the number 12 back to within striking distance. The Italian took small chunks out of the Spaniard and slowly but surely was edging closer and closer.

From P13 on the grid Francesco Bagnaia is back on the top spot, and in the championship lead, following a dramatic Indonesian GP in which championship rival, and leader after yesterday's Sprint, Jorge Martin, crashed out from the lead of the race!
From P13 on the grid Francesco Bagnaia is back on the top spot, and in the championship lead, following a dramatic Indonesian GP in which championship rival, and leader after yesterday’s Sprint, Jorge Martin, crashed out from the lead of the race!

As the reigning Champion got within touching distance, he didn’t waste time. It was a tense contest to watch but it didn’t seem it for those involved, with Pecco putting in a perfectly calculated move at Turn 10 to take the lead with 8 laps to go. From there, he started to ask big questions of Viñales on the chase. 

In the meantime, all eyes were on Quartararo, who was still third but running faster than both riders ahead of him. And a LOT faster. It only took the 2021 World Champion a couple of laps to reel in Viñales, but passing him was going to prove to be a much tougher task. 

They held station, but the race was far from over as both started to edge closer to Bagnaia. By two laps to go, we had three nationalities on three different manufacturers scrapping it out for victory – with the Championship leader and a little history on the line.

As the last lap started, it looked like Bagnaia had enough in hand. But the tension rose and rose as the Aprilia and the Yamaha steamrollered the gap, almost within striking distance by the final two corners. But neither could quite make a move and the Ducati crossed the line for a pivotal and historic win, with Bagnaia becoming the first rider to win from outside the top four rows in a dry race since Marco Melandri at the 2006 Turkish GP.

Race Results

POS RIDER NAT TEAM BEHIND
1 Francesco Bagnaia ITA Ducati Lenovo (GP23) +0.000s
2 Maverick Viñales SPA Aprilia Racing (RS-GP23) +0.306s
3 Fabio Quartararo FRA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +0.433s
4 Fabio Di Giannantonio ITA Gresini Ducati (GP22) +6.962s
5 Marco Bezzecchi ITA Mooney VR46 Ducati (GP22) +11.111s
6 Brad Binder RSA Red Bull KTM (RC16) +11.228s
7 Jack Miller AUS Red Bull KTM (RC16) +12.474s
8 Enea Bastianini ITA Ducati Lenovo (GP23) +12.684s
9 Alex Rins SPA LCR Honda (RC213V) +22.540s
10 Aleix Espargaro SPA Aprilia Racing (RS-GP23) +30.468s
11 Takaaki Nakagami JPN LCR Honda (RC213V) +30.823s
12 Miguel Oliveira POR RNF Aprilia (RS-GP22) +36.639s
13 Raul Fernandez SPA RNF Aprilia (RS-GP22) +42.864s
14 Franco Morbidelli ITA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +4 laps
15 Johann Zarco FRA Pramac Ducati (GP23) DNF
16 Jorge Martin SPA Pramac Ducati (GP23) DNF
17 Joan Mir SPA Repsol Honda (RC213V) DNF
18 Augusto Fernandez SPA Tech3 GASGAS (RC16)* DNF
19 Marc Marquez SPA Repsol Honda (RC213V) DNF
20 Luca Marini ITA Mooney VR46 Ducati (GP22) DNF
21 Pol Espargaro SPA Tech3 GASGAS (RC16) DNF

*Rookie

Rider Point Standings

Pos. Rider Num Nation Points Team Constructor
1 Bagnaia Francesco 1 ITA 346 Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati
2 Martin Jorge 89 SPA 328 Pramac Racing Ducati
3 Bezzecchi Marco 72 ITA 283 Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati
4 Binder Brad 33 RSA 211 Red Bull KTM Factory Racing KTM
5 Espargaro Aleix 41 SPA 177 Aprilia Racing Aprilia
6 Vinales Maverick 12 SPA 165 Aprilia Racing Aprilia
7 Zarco Johann 5 FRA 162 Pramac Racing Ducati
8 Marini Luca 10 ITA 144 Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati
9 Miller Jack 43 AUS 135 Red Bull KTM Factory Racing KTM
10 Quartararo Fabio 20 FRA 132 Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Yamaha
11 Marquez Alex 73 SPA 108 Team Gresini Racing MotoGP Ducati
12 Morbidelli Franco 21 ITA 79 Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Yamaha
13 Oliveira Miguel 88 POR 73 RNF MotoGP Team Aprilia
14 Di Giannantonio Fabio 49 ITA 70 Team Gresini Racing MotoGP Ducati
15 Fernandez Augusto 37 SPA 67 Tech3 GASGAS Factory Racing KTM
16 Marquez Marc 93 SPA 64 Repsol Honda Team Honda
17 Rins Alex 42 SPA 54 LCR Honda Honda
18 Nakagami Takaaki 30 JPN 50 LCR Honda Honda
19 Fernandez Raul 25 SPA 39 RNF MotoGP Team Aprilia
20 Bastianini Enea 23 ITA 36 Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati
21 Pedrosa Dani 26 SPA 32 KTM Test Team KTM
22 Mir Joan 36 SPA 20 Repsol Honda Team Honda
23 Espargaro Pol 44 SPA 12 Tech3 GASGAS Factory Racing KTM
24 Savadori Lorenzo 32 ITA 9 RNF MotoGP Team Aprilia
25 Folger Jonas 94 GER 9 Tech3 GASGAS Factory Racing KTM
26 Bradl Stefan 6 GER 8 Repsol Honda Team Honda
27 Petrucci Danilo 9 ITA 5 Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati
28 Pirro Michele 51 ITA 5 Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati
29 Crutchlow Cal 35 GBR 3 Yamaha Test Team Yamaha