Marquez wins at Jerez, takes point lead
Marc Marquez powers to victory in Spain |
After falling in Austin while leading, Marc Marquez recovered and held off Alex Rins to win the MotoGP Spanish Grand Prix and take a slender one-point lead in the world championship standings over race runner-up Rins.
As the lights went green, Marquez and Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati) launched exceptionally well from 3rd and 4th on the grid to go into Turn 1 ahead of the Petronas Yamaha SRT machines, but Dovi was on the outside and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) forced his way up the inside to push the Championship leader wide and down to 5th as Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) and Vinales slotted into 3rd and 4th.
So, Plan A for Marquez was perfectly executed as he led the MotoGP freight train around the first lap, but would he be able to pull away from the pack straight away? The answer was no, Morbidelli and Quartararo weren’t letting the number 93 get away. The top three were eking out a gap to Vinales and Dovizioso, with Rins making a good start from ninth to get himself into the top six.
[adinserter name="GOOGLE AD"]It was as you were for the opening laps with a tenth here and a tenth there fluctuating between the top three, the other chasers losing touch ever so slightly. But then, on Lap 10, Marquez pulled the pin. A 1:38.4 compared to Morbidelli’s 1:39.1 suddenly saw Marquez with a gap of over a second, and it kept on creeping up until Quartararo was able to get past his teammate into second – Morbidelli seemingly starting to struggle. The flying Frenchman immediately gapped his more experienced teammate but the gap to Marquez was still climbing. Meanwhile, Vinales and Rins were being frustrated by Morbidelli.
However, the cruelest of luck then struck Quartararo. On Lap 14 as he wound his Yamaha up for the back straight, Quartararo slowed. The problem? A gearing issue, replays showing the youngest ever polesitter was stuck in third gear. A terrible shame for the rookie who looked set for a maiden podium as he returned to the garage in tears.
Marquez gaps the field early |
This left Rins to pick up the second place baton after he and Vinales had managed to navigate Morbidelli, with Rins pulling out a gap to over a second to Vinales but by this time, race leader Marquez was over three seconds up the road. A race for the final podium position it was then with Vinales having the two Bologna bullets swarming, Dovi and Petrucci could smell blood and just behind those pair, Morbidelli was having to fend off Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) and Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) – both of whom dispatched it Italian with relative ease.
With three laps to go it became a two-horse race for third, Petrucci losing touch with Dovi and Vinales as Rins held the gap to his compatriot to over a second. There was no way through for Dovizioso though as we headed onto the last lap, with the number 04 putting in his personal best lap in on the penultimate lap. Vinales was under pressure, but would he fold? No, as Marquez wheelied over the line, Rins rocked home second and the Yamaha man took his first podium since winning in Australia.
Dovizioso had to settle for fourth as he loses his Championship lead to Marquez, four manufactures finishing inside the top four in Jerez, with Petrucci picking up his best result of the year in fifth. Rossi would salvage sixth from 13th on the grid, yet another top-class Sunday performance from The Doctor, with Morbidelli eventually able to better Crutchlow for seventh and top Independent Team honors.
Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) finished just two tenths off his teammate in eighth as a trio of Honda riders closed out the top ten – Team HRC’s Stefan Bradl crossing line in an impressive tenth.
Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) crossed the line in 11th with Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) 12th in Jerez. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Pol Espargaro and Johann Zarco pick up points in P13 and P14 respectively, with Tito Rabat (Reale Avintia Racing) taking his second point of the season in P15.
Marquez celebrates in front of fellow Spaniards |
Marc Marquez, 1st
“This race was a mental race, more than a physical one. After the mistake in Austin it wasn’t easy to lead the race like that from beginning to end, but I knew I had the pace to do it and the bike to do it. I wanted to do a race like in Argentina and at the start in Austin to prove it was a mistake there. I felt good all weekend, smooth, comfortable and able to ride how I want. Thanks to the Repsol Honda Team, they’ve done an amazing job over the last few weeks and here this weekend. It’s great to be leading the championship again."
Spain – Race Result
Pos. | Num. | Rider | Nation | Team | Bike | Time/Gap |
1 | 93 | Marc MARQUEZ | SPA | Repsol Honda Team | Honda | 41'08.685 |
2 | 42 | Alex RINS | SPA | Team SUZUKI ECSTAR | Suzuki | +1.654 |
3 | 12 | Maverick Vinales | SPA | Monster Energy Yamaha | Yamaha | +2.443 |
4 | 4 | Andrea DOVIZIOSO | ITA | Mission Winnow Ducati | Ducati | +2.804 |
5 | 9 | Danilo PETRUCCI | ITA | Mission Winnow Ducati | Ducati | +4.748 |
6 | 46 | Valentino ROSSI | ITA | Monster Energy Yamaha | Yamaha | +7.547 |
7 | 21 | Franco MORBIDELLI | ITA | Petronas Yamaha SRT | Yamaha | +8.228 |
8 | 35 | Cal CRUTCHLOW | GBR | LCR Honda CASTROL | Honda | +10.052 |
9 | 30 | Takaaki NAKAGAMI | JPN | LCR Honda IDEMITSU | Honda | +10.274 |
10 | 6 | Stefan BRADL | GER | Team HRC | Honda | +13.402 |
11 | 41 | Aleix ESPARGARO | SPA | Aprilia Racing Team Gresini | Aprilia | +15.431 |
12 | 99 | Jorge LORENZO | SPA | Repsol Honda Team | Honda | +18.473 |
13 | 44 | Pol ESPARGARO | SPA | Red Bull KTM Factory | KTM | +20.156 |
14 | 5 | Johann ZARCO | FRA | Red Bull KTM Factory | KTM | +26.706 |
15 | 53 | Tito RABAT | SPA | Reale Avintia Racing | Ducati | +28.513 |
16 | 17 | Karel ABRAHAM | CZE | Reale Avintia Racing | Ducati | +36.858 |
17 | 38 | Bradley SMITH | GBR | Aprilia Factory Racing | Aprilia | +41.390 |
18 | 88 | Miguel OLIVEIRA | POR | Red Bull KTM Tech 3 | KTM | +41.570 |
19 | 55 | Hafizh SYAHRIN | MAL | Red Bull KTM Tech 3 | KTM | +50.568 |
20 | 43 | Jack MILLER | AUS | Pramac Racing | Ducati | 3 Laps |
21 | 36 | Joan MIR | SPA | Team SUZUKI ECSTAR | Suzuki | 5 Laps |
22 | 20 | Fabio QUARTARARO | FRA | Petronas Yamaha SRT | Yamaha | 12 Laps |
23 | 63 | Francesco BAGNAIA | ITA | Pramac Racing | Ducati | 19 Laps |