Метка: Americas GP

2024 MotoGP title «not the priority» as expectations mount


Although there were high hopes for Acosta given his stellar record in junior categories, the Tech3 GasGas rider has defined even the loftiest of expectations by becoming the youngest rider to score back-to-back podiums, as he followed his third place in Portugal last month with a second-place finish in the Americas GP on Sunday.

This has propelled the Spaniard to fourth in the standings, 26 points behind championship leader Jorge Martin on Pramac but ahead of defending champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati) and the factory KTM of Brad Binder.

With Acosta showing he can take the fight to the very best in the premier class, there have been suggestions that he could potentially win the title in his rookie season — something not witnessed since Marc Marquez’s sensational debut campaign with the factory Honda team in 2013.

But the 19-year-old is not allowing himself to be weighed down by expectations, as he insists his focus at the moment is not on mounting a title bid.

«Let’s start to think [about the next round] in Jerez and not about the championship,» he said. «All the people talking around, it’s only pressure. 

«We are in a sweet moment with the bike, with the team, with Pierer Mobility. 

«Let’s enjoy this moment and cross the fingers for sure if we can fight for the championship. It’s a long season, but it’s not the priority now.»

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Photo by: Rob Gray / Polarity Photo

Acosta led the early stages of Sunday’s grand prix at the Circuit of Americas and returned to the front when Marquez crashed out on lap 11 with what he described as an ‘unexpected brake problem’.

But a maiden MotoGP win wasn’t to be for Acosta in Austin, as polesitter Maverick Vinales recovered from a poor start to snatch the top spot on lap 13.

Asked if he thought he could catch the Aprilia rider late in the race, the reigning Moto2 champion conceded that his countryman was in a different league to the rest of the field.

«No one in this world can catch him today,» he said of Vinales. «You only have to see the pace. Also, when I see him from [Saturday], the pace that he had in the sprint, [he] was on another world. 

«It was difficult. I tried, when [he] passed me I tried to block him. But he was really good. 

«Also, I was talking with him and when he passed me I was trying to brake harder into Turn 12 and it was impossible. Today was not my day.»

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Watch: MotoGP: Vinales recovers from 11th to win | 2024 #AmericasGP



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Vinales clutch issue had Aprilia “worried” ahead of Americas MotoGP fightback


Vinales scored his first grand prix win since 2021 last Sunday at the Circuit of the Americas, having taken victory in the sprint and also qualified on pole.

Previously leading from start to finish in the sprint, Vinales didn’t get the best of launches in the grand prix and was bumped down to 11th after contact at Turn 1.

But he fought his way back through the field to take the lead on lap 13 of 20 and got to the chequered flag 1.7 seconds clear of the field.

Vinales revealed after the race that he had a clutch issue from the morning warm-up that “worried” his Aprilia team which ultimately forced him into a fightback.

“Actually, this morning I had an issue with the clutch and the team was quite worried,” Vinales said on Sunday afternoon.

“So, they didn’t really want to touch anything. I had the same thing in the race, but I was not bad. I was second, third, so that was ok.

“But I saw Pecco [Bagnaia] enter and push me very wide. But because also Jorge [Martin] was on the inside, so that was a racing incident and after that I said ‘no, come on, no!’

“So, I kept concentrated, and I kept believing that I was able to do it.

“The way I see I was recovering the gap so quick to the front guys, I said ‘one at a time man’.

“I did it and it was crazy. I was enjoying every single lap. Some riders overtook me again, but I braked late enough to make them go wide.”

Vinales’ first grand prix win as an Aprilia rider makes him the first competitor in the modern MotoGP era to have scored a victory with three different manufacturers.

And in the history of MotoGP, only four other riders over the last 75 years had achieved that feat before him – the last being Loris Capirossi when he won for Ducati in 2003.

Vinales said achieving this bit of history with Aprilia is “a dream” given the marque had only just scored its first podium prior to him joining late in 2021.

“To be honest, you are never looking at that but when you see it, it makes you feel very special because not many riders can do things like that,” he said of his new record.

“However, to arrive to the top with Aprilia… I don’t know, I think it’s a dream.

“It’s not the same as when you go to a team that’s already winning, you know the bike is fantastic.

“We arrived to Aprilia, Aleix [Espargaro] achieved two victories and then leaves a good bike and I’m taking this next step [with it].

“It’s so fantastic. I need to thank Aleix for the work he is doing and to Aprilia.”

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How Vinales finally banished his Yamaha MotoGP demons


Maverick Vinales’ MotoGP career has so far run for 163 rounds since he made his debut with Suzuki in 2015. In that time he has taken 10 grand prix wins, which equates to a winning average of just 6.135% — or one per season, with the Spaniard now in his 10th in the premier class.

His latest came last weekend at the Americas Grand Prix, in which he became the first rider in the modern MotoGP era to win races on three different manufacturers. In MotoGP’s 75-year history, only Loris Capirossi (Ducati, Honda, Yamaha), Eddie Lawson (Honda, Yamaha, Cagiva), Randy Mamola (Suzuki, Honda, Yamaha) and Mike Hailwood (MV Agusta, Norton, Honda) have done what Vinales has.

Truly, Vinales is an enigma. He was the hottest property in the paddock when he stepped up to MotoGP with the fledgling Suzuki project in 2015, having won the Moto3 title in 2013 (a year after he walked away from the 2012 fight over a dispute with his team at the time) and finished third in his only Moto2 campaign in 2014.

His first MotoGP win came in 2016 at the British GP on the Suzuki, by which time Yamaha had already prized him away from its Japanese rival to replace Ducati-bound Jorge Lorenzo. Two races into his Yamaha career in 2017, Vinales had a 100% win record Lorenzo struggled on the Desmosedici, while a third victory followed in a dramatic French GP when he beat team-mate Valentino Rossi in a duel the Italian crashed out of.

Then it all just fizzled out. The M1 package proved inconsistently competitive, with Vinales not winning again until Australia 2018. He won twice in 2019, once in 2020 and once in 2021 at the season-opening Qatar Grand Prix.

But, as team-mate Fabio Quartararo dragged the bike to the championship, Vinales slumped. Poor starts meant he couldn’t fight much on the underpowered Yamaha, while discontent brewed behind the scenes. Yamaha’s replacement of crew chief Esteban Garcia didn’t sit well, while Vinales grew ever more frustrated at feeling like he was becoming a test rider.

Vinales showed plenty of potential with Yamaha before relations soured and he was dropped after the 2021 Styrian GP when in his frustration he deliberately over-revved the engine

Vinales showed plenty of potential with Yamaha before relations soured and he was dropped after the 2021 Styrian GP when in his frustration he deliberately over-revved the engine

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

A lowly 19th at the German GP as he simply gave up saw the cracks widen, as he felt Yamaha’s responses to his woes were “starting to seem disrespectful”. Showing little emotion for his podium at the following Dutch TT, Yamaha announced it had agreed to end Vinales’ two-year deal with it on the Monday afterwards. Then he was dropped with immediate effect after the Styrian GP, as boiling over frustrations led him to deliberately overrev his Yamaha’s engine as he retired from the race.

Vinales has always had his backers, though. In 2021, Cal Crutchlow noted: “If I look at Maverick Vinales, his speed and talent-wise, along with Marc Marquez, there is nobody faster in the championship and he could win a world title with his eyes closed if he puts everything together.”

Aprilia CEO Massimo Rivola is another who has always backed Vinales, offering his career lifeline partway through 2021 and sticking by the Spaniard through 2022 and 2023 when his results were far from where they needed to be.

Aprilia could afford to be more patient than Yamaha. At the time of his souring relationship, Yamaha had been a title contender the year before with Quartararo and was doing so again. The slump it is currently in seemed unfeasible at the time

“We see Maverick very delicate about his performance on the feeling, it’s very much related to the balance of the bike,” Rivola told TNT Sport during the 2024 Americas GP weekend. “More than other riders, but when we find that balance and find that window, now we can work on finding a larger window. I know it’s sounds strange.”

In many ways, Aprilia could afford to be more patient than Yamaha. At the time of his souring relationship, Yamaha had been a title contender the year before with Quartararo and was doing so again. The slump it is currently in seemed unfeasible at the time. Aprilia, by contrast, hadn’t even reached the podium with its RS-GP by the time Yamaha let Vinales go in Austria.

“Obviously the win with Aprilia has a different value because when I sign for them they were P15, P10, and looking how much we grew up this factory,” Vinales noted last Sunday after his Americas GP win. “Obviously, we are a big factory. Still, we need to time to improve and be more constant, but I see this year with a lot of potential in front of us.

“We must be very smart and very focused on the job, and especially things like happened in Portimao [with the gearbox]. It’s about getting more experience and more time in the front, and that confidence we build up. We have to continue, we are a big factory and big factories win races. We did it today, so we need to be very happy and very proud of the job we did. But obviously it’s more difficult what I did right now because we came from the back and today we are on top.”

Vinales backed up team-mate Espargaro in an Aprilia 1-2 at the Catalan GP last year, but had yet to show race-winning form until this season

Vinales backed up team-mate Espargaro in an Aprilia 1-2 at the Catalan GP last year, but had yet to show race-winning form until this season

Photo by: MotoGP

In 2022, Vinales scored three podiums on the RS-GP. Team-mate Aleix Espargaro scored a victory and five other rostrums. The gulf in the championship between the pair was 90 points. In 2023, Espargaro won twice while Vinales could only tally three podiums. This time, though, just two points separated the pair.

The progress, then, has been steady but Vinales has often failed to marry fast practice and qualifying speed with genuine race results. And as 2024 began, as Espargaro raved about the new Aprilia, Vinales admits he “had no confidence” on it from the very first laps in Malaysia in February.

Ninth in the sprint and 10th in the grand prix in Qatar spoke to his lack of confidence on the Aprilia. But from Portugal, the page started to turn. While the Algarve track has always been a good one for Vinales, his ride to sprint victory signalled a serious shift. And a podium was surely on offer in the Sunday race had it not been for the gearbox issue he later revealed was caused by a “human problem”, which led to him crashing out on the last lap.

Convinced he could be just as quick at the Circuit of the Americas last weekend, Vinales followed through. Pole with a new lap record, an emphatic sprint win and easily his best grand prix ride ever provided the proof.

There are two factors which made Vinales’ grand prix win stand out. The first was the fact this form came at a track that is typically weak for the RS-GP. While Vinales was strong at COTA in 2023, finishing fourth, the stop-and-go nature of the track is at odds with the Aprilia’s supreme ability to flow through corners. Indeed, looking at the sector times from Q2, Vinales was fastest through sector 2 (the esses section) and sector 4 (the sequence of fast rights at the end of the lap).

Secondly, Vinales nailed the start in the sprint as he keenly pointed out to the media that his complaints about Aprilia’s clutch in recent years was validated. But an issue in the grand prix mean his launch wasn’t as clean, while contact with Francesco Bagnaia at Turn 1 dropped him to 11th. Come lap 13, he was in the lead again and he would never lose it, getting to the chequered flag 1.7s in front of Tech3 rookie Pedro Acosta.

“In my favour is obviously in the past I didn’t have the weapon I have now, especially to overtake because you know very well I was struggling to be close to the other riders in the past,” Vinales said, in what can be viewed as a shot across the bows of Yamaha. “But how I have the bike right now, how I can really over-brake all the time, it seems that of course it’s not easy to pass but I can try it. And that’s fantastic.

“I have the weapon to try it and that’s huge because obviously you cannot always start and lead the race from the first corner. So, you must fight, and all these guys are braking late, fighting. And I am there also, so this is fantastic.”

Vinales was in peerless form at COTA and charged to victory despite a less-than ideal start

Vinales was in peerless form at COTA and charged to victory despite a less-than ideal start

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Once again, this all comes down to patience. Vinales’ form surge and his finding of the balance sweet spot on his Aprilia, he noted, is in large part down to the time taken for the rider and new crew chief Manu Cazeaux (who previously worked with Alex Rins at Suzuki) to gel in 2023.

“That belief and confidence came from last year,” he said, when asked about the doubts he has received in recent years. “It took one full year with my new crew chief to understand really the bike and what we needed. But it was worth it because since Qatar I’ve been always in the top, or I’ve been fighting for the top positions.

“Obviously when we changed to the new bike it was not easy, but in Portimao we understood well what we needed to do and now I feel very well with the bike. The thing is, when I can ride the bike with my own riding style and being effective, I’m really calm and confident. So, we need to always have a look to the balance, trying to always have the bike on this kind of balance to be able to push and do the best.”

«Every time it repeats, that phrase in my head, ‘never give up’ because hard work pays off and it’s paying off»
Maverick Vinales

Vinales running around in a batman cape, playing to the crowd in Austin with a smile beaming from ear to ear, is a sight MotoGP has seldom seen from the Spaniard since the Yamaha debacle. Motorsport.com reporter Oriol Puigdemont commented to Vinales after his sprint win that he looked like he did in his earliest Yamaha days in 2017 when he looked on course to be a title contender. Vinales felt in every way he is better.

“No, now I’m in a totally different level,” he said. “I wish I was feeling like now some years ago because I have the experience and physically, I feel so strong. This is the year I feel stronger physically speaking, I work a lot for it. I just feel that experience, strong, and the technique I have on the bike is matching together to do these results. That’s fantastic.

“Every time it repeats, that phrase in my head, ‘never give up’ because hard work pays off and it’s paying off. I’m extremely happy. Obviously, I’m doing a lot of effort and my family is doing a lot of effort.”

If there is one rider who embodies the mantra ‘never say die’, it’s Vinales. Many thought the switch to Aprilia was career suicide. And as the results didn’t justify its commitment to him, it was hard to view Vinales as anything other than being lucky to still have a factory ride.

After last Sunday, there isn’t a soul involved in MotoGP – this writer included – who isn’t more than happy to have been proved wrong. Perhaps now, the Vinales that we thought we’d got back in 2017 is finally here to stay…

Vinales has proven his doubters wrong, but can he continue his recent stellar form to recapture his early career momentum?

Vinales has proven his doubters wrong, but can he continue his recent stellar form to recapture his early career momentum?

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images



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Bagnaia in ‘race of defence’ as Ducati chatter strikes again in MotoGP


After battling with Marc Marquez, Pedro Acosta and Jorge Martin early on for the race lead, factory Ducati rider Bagnaia slipped to fifth place at the chequered flag, finishing over seven seconds behind race winner Maverick Vinales.

Not only did Bagnaia lack the pace to stay with Aprilia’s Vinales and second-placed Acosta on the KTM in the second half of the 20-lap contest, he also could not put up a fight to the Ducati GP24s of team-mate Enea Bastianini and Pramac rider Martin, as he lost touch with the lead pack.

The Italian ran with a soft rear tyre at the Circuit of Americas, a choice that helped Bastianini to grab third position on lap 18, having successfully tested the longevity of the compound in the warm-up earlier on Sunday.

But a return of the tyre vibration problem that plagued him in the Qatar sprint and impacted his Portugal weekend meant he had no option but to conserve his position and salvage as many points as possible in Austin.

«My race started well, I was feeling good. I was thinking after lap six that I was able to fight for a win or a podium,» he said.

«But I started to have a lot of chattering, a lot of vibrations on the left side and it was very difficult to manage everything.

«I completely destroyed the tyre on the right side. So, it was also difficult to do corners on the right side.

«So, I raced in defence after seven laps, six laps, and it was very difficult. I tried to manage everything but like this, for sure we have to understand the situation and solve the problems because right now it’s very difficult.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

«The situation is very similar to 2022, that in the start of the season I had to race in defence. All my trust is in my team that we will solve the problem. We will be battling for the top again.»

The US round was arguably Ducati’s least competitive weekend of 2024, as Vinales recovered from 11th on the grid to take a stunning victory and Tech3’s Acosta finished second to leave Ducati as the third-best marque.

Saturday’s sprint was also rough for the Italian manufacturer, with Bastianini and Bagnaia only managing sixth and eighth — although Martin did grab third place on the Pramac.

Asked if he was worried about the chattering issue, given how difficult it is to solve for engineers, Bagnaia said: «It’s strange because Enea didn’t have any chattering this weekend, but he was really in trouble all weekend.

«I was feeling good, Martin was fast, but today we struggled. So, it’s difficult to understand with three bikes, because Franky [Morbidelli] is still learning so it’s difficult to put him on the same package.

«Enea was struggling with the brakes, struggling to let the bike turn. But today was super fast and without problems [I] was able to fight for the win. I was able to fight for the win for just six laps, and after that I started to struggle.»

Reigning champion Bagnaia sits fifth in the standings after the opening three rounds of the season, already 30 points off championship leader Martin. However, the picture in the riders’ table is skewed by the 27-year-old’s DNF in Portugal, caused following a collision with Marquez.

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‘Unexpected brake problem’ caused Marquez’s crash from COTA MotoGP lead


Qualifying third on the grid, Marquez was tipped by many coming into Sunday’s grand prix to add an eighth Americas GP win to his tally.

A factor in that victory battle, Marquez took the lead of a race for the first time as a Ducati rider on lap 11 when he carved past Tech3 rookie Pedro Acosta at Turn 1.

But Marquez crashed out going into Turn 11 just moments later, which he said was down to an issue with his front brake that meant “nobody was there” when he grabbed the lever.

“Disappointing especially because I was feeling good, I was feeling hard, strong,” he said.

“But yeah, I’m more disappointed because today the speed was there, the feeling was there, but I had unexpected problems with the front brake during all the race that gave me a lot of difficulties to ride.

“Even like this I was even able to be in the top group because the pace was not fast, and then I tried to lead as soon as possible to see if the temperature changed on the brake or something.

“And it was improving the brake feeling. But unfortunately, when I braked on that Turn 11, I braked and nobody was there [no pressure] and then on the second time it was better but still too much speed and I lost the front.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

“But the most important thing is I feel competitive and this gives me a good mentality.”

He added: “On data we saw the problem was there and for example we saw on the brake point where I crashed, I braked two times.

“I pulled the brakes, nothing there, no pressure. And then I pulled a second time and it was a bit better but there was no pressure.

“So, now they need to understand. Not only there, also in Turn 12 I was braking two times, three times. So, we need to understand the thing to improve for the future.”

While believing he could have fought at least for the podium through to the chequered flag, Marquez feels this problem is a normal part of a new project and says the Gresini team is quick at generating answers to issues.

“You know that I’m a guy that if I crash I say ‘sorry, I crashed’,” he noted. “Today we had a lot of problems but the good thing is they are normal problems in a new project.

“When we have problems we need to create the answer, and now today we had the problem and we need to create the answer. I think the team is quite quick and we will have an answer for the future.”

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Vinales recovers from 11th to win, Marquez crashes from lead


Going without a grand prix win since the start of the 2021 season prior to his acrimonious split with Yamaha, Vinales won the sprints in Portugal and Austin.

Despite being dropped to 11th from pole on the opening lap of Sunday’s 20-lap Americas GP, Vinales fought his way back to take victory by 1.728s to become the first rider in the modern MotoGP era to take grand prix victories for three different manufacturers.

Vinales beat Tech3 rookie sensation Pedro Acosta, celebrating his best MotoGP result, while Enea Bastianini denied championship leader Jorge Martin a podium with a late overtake.

Francesco Bagnaia was fifth after a tricky race, while seven-time COTA winner Marc Marquez crashed out of the lead on lap 11.

Acosta shot into the lead from second on the grid as poleman Vinales found himself dumped back to 11th in the Turn 1 melee.

An aggressive move for Martin to get up to third from sixth saw him force Bagnaia to sit up at Turn 1, nudging into Vinales and sending the Aprilia rider down the order.

Through the opening sequence of corners, Martin got himself into second behind Acosta and ahead of Bagnaia.

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Martin made a move for the lead on Acosta into Turn 11 on lap two, but ran wide and let the Tech3 rider back past.

Behind, Marquez and Miller connected on the exit of Turn 11 as the Gresini rider attempted an overtake on the way into the corner for fourth.

Both survived the clash, but Marquez’s GP23 suffered wing damage to its left side. However, he moved ahead of the KTM at the final corner moments later.

Martin tried to take the lead from Acosta again on lap three at Turn 11, but ran wide again, before finally making a move stick on the fourth tour at Turn 7.

Marquez passed Bagnaia for third a corner later and took advantage of Acosta running wide at Turn 11 for second.

Vinales had worked his way up to seventh by the end of lap four as Martin led by just over three tenths from Marquez.

Marquez lined up a pass for the lead into Turn 20 on the fifth lap, but touched the Pramac Ducati’s rear wheel. Martin held the lead as Marquez dropped to fourth behind Bagnaia and Acosta.

Acosta took second from Bagnaia into Turn 1 at the start of lap seven, with Marquez passing the Ducati for third at Turn 8. Martin led by close to a second at this stage of the race, but Acosta and Marquez were able to bring him back into striking range come lap 10.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Acosta took the lead again at Turn 11 with a hard move, which opened the door for Marquez to outbrake the Pramac rider into Turn 12.

Marquez then carved past Acosta into Turn 1 on lap 11 to lead for the first time on a Ducati. But it would last just 10 more corners as the Gresini rider lost the front braking for Turn 11.

This released Acosta back into the lead, but the danger rider now was Vinales, who sat third after overtaking Bagnaia on lap nine for fourth.

Martin succumbed to Vinales’ advances at Turn 20 on lap 11, before the Aprilia rider eventually found a way through on Acosta on lap 13 after several failed attempts.

Setting the best lap of the race on lap 14, Vinales’ lead swelled above a second and he would come under minimal threat through to the chequered flag. Beating Acosta by 1.728s, Vinales is the first non-Ducati grand prix winner since Aprilia team-mate Aleix Espargaro won the Catalan GP.

Bastianini completed the podium behind Acosta and Vinales after overtaking Martin for third on the penultimate lap, while Bagnaia was fifth.

VR46 Ducati rider Fabio Di Giannantonio was sixth from Espargaro, Marco Bezzecchi (VR46), KTM’s Brad Binder and Trackhouse Racing’s Raul Fernandez.

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Miguel Oliveira was 11th on the sister Trackhouse Aprilia, with Fabio Quartararo sole Yamaha at the chequered flag after team-mate Alex Rins crashed out.

Miller faded dramatically to 13th after his early podium charge, with Tech3’s Augusto Fernandez and Gresini’s Alex Marquez – who crashed on lap 11 — securing the final points.

Luca Marini was the final finisher on the factory Honda, with all of his HRC stablemates dropping out. Pramac’s Franco Morbidelli also crashed out.

Martin’s championship lead has been cut to 21 points over Bastianini, with Vinales jumping up to third a further three points back.

MotoGP Americas Grand Prix — Race Results



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Martin ‘wouldn’t be here’ if COTA MotoGP qualifying crash was a highside


Having smashed the lap record in Friday practice, Pramac’s Martin was expected to challenge for pole at the Circuit of the Americas on Saturday.

But two crashes left him sixth on the grid, with the latter a fast rear-end off going through Turn 18 on his second flying lap after his first fall.

Explaining his qualifying crashes after the sprint, in which he was third, Martin admitted he was “lucky” to walk away from his Turn 18 spill.

“Well, I was coming really hot in the first lap, for sure improving already the lap from yesterday by three tenths in the first sector,” he said.

“So, it was going to be a good lap, but then I was losing during all the weekend in T11.

“So, I tried a bit too much in a place where I was already over the limit. Then I picked up the bike and I thought ‘Ok, the bike is ok, let’s try for another try’.

“And I was coming good, improving also the lap time from yesterday – not that much, but it was a good lap, to be maybe in the top three.

“But I was too aggressive to the throttle in that corner. I was lucky because if I highsided in that moment I wouldn’t be here today talking to you.

“And with the second bike with the soft front, for me it was impossible to be the same competitiveness. So, I was happy with that sixth position. I take that, it was ok.”

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing, after his qualifying crash

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing, after his qualifying crash

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Martin didn’t get the best of starts in the 10-lap sprint but recovered to finish third to extend his championship lead to 24 points.

He feels had he been able to clear the riders ahead of him quicker, he could have got on terms with eventual winner Maverick Vinales on the Aprilia.

“I think I was late into the moves because I think if I maybe didn’t lose two, three positions in the first corner with Enea [Bastianini] and Aleix [Espargaro], then I would have gone a bit further,” he added.

“But overtaking them I think everything went a bit hot with the front and I struggled to stop the bike.

“Pedro [Acosta] was braking really late, so it was difficult to make a move and finally as soon as I was making moves I was pulling a gap to the guy behind.

“So, I think tomorrow if I can focus a bit more on the start I can be maybe battling with Maverick. Hopefully.”

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing

Jorge Martin, Pramac Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

While Martin struggled with the lack of rear grip, his factory Ducati counterparts Bastianini and Francesco Bagnaia did, he says the rear vibration issues that have plagued him at various stages this year were his biggest issue.

“Yeah, I think it was a bit less than normal,” he said of the grip. “But also we had a lot of vibrations.

“From the second lap I was struggling a lot with the vibrations in a lot of corners.

“So, we need to, together with Ducati, understand how to improve because I think we are losing opportunities to make better results.”

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Bagnaia fumes over “impossible” COTA MotoGP sprint woes


The factory Ducati rider was amongst the list of favourites to challenge for victory in Saturday’s 10-lap sprint at the Circuit of the Americas after qualifying fourth.

But from the off Bagnaia’s pace was nowhere near the leaders’, as he plummeted to 10th off the line and could only fight back to score two points in eighth – 9.349 seconds behind race winner Maverick Vinales.

He blamed a lack of rear grip on his rear Michelin medium tyre but stopped short of pointing the finger at the French brand for a potentially faulty option.

“Much more difficult compared to this morning in FP2 when three laps more than a sprint race I was doing 2m02.4s on the last lap,” he said.

“And today, 2m02.8 or 9s was impossible. So, we have to understand and tomorrow we have another race and we have to check the data tonight.

“First of all the start, I spin at the start and already everything was f*****.

“And then it was very difficult to push. Every time I was trying to push, the rear was sliding a lot, I was losing the rear everywhere and it was very difficult to perform how I wanted.”

Enea Bastianini, Ducati Team

Enea Bastianini, Ducati Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Factory Ducati team-mate Enea Bastianini, who was tipped by a number of riders on Friday as being a threat in the sprint, also struggled with a lack of rear grip.

The Italian, who was sixth in the race, says his rear grip was “zero” and “the worst feeling of the weekend”.

Asked if his problem was similar, Bagnaia replied: “Maybe the same thing. I saw we were both in trouble.

“It’s something that can happen sometimes, it happened many times in the past.

“And it happened again. But the thing that makes me angrier is this morning I was super-fast.

“My pace was one of the strongest and it was impossible to do it this afternoon.”

At the time of speaking to the media on Saturday afternoon, Bagnaia had yet to speak with Michelin about his issues.

“I didn’t speak with Michelin but we have time to speak to them, to check the data,” he added.

“Maybe it was the temperature, maybe it was the conditions.

“But I saw the lap times of Maverick and it looks amazing. My target and my ambitions and my feelings of what I could do was the same pace as Maverick.”

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Yamaha made ‘more bike changes than all of 2023’ in COTA MotoGP round


The 2021 world champion scored one of his three grand prix podiums of the 2023 season at the Circuit of the Americas last year, but has been far off repeating that this season.

Qualifying 16th, Quartararo could only go one place better in Saturday’s 10-lap sprint, as he beat Yamaha team-mate and 2023 Americas GP winner Alex Rins.

As it tries to develop its way to the front of the grid again, Quartararo says Yamaha has tried “something big” on the M1 in every session and feels this is the only approach the Japanese marque can take while its results are lowly.

“Yes, I mean also this weekend every run we did was trying something big on the bike,” Quartararo said.

“Even for the sprint we went out with a bike we never used, and I think that is quite good in the position that we are in now to try big things.

“To finish P13 or P15 will not really change anything for us, and I think the way we are working is good even if the result is not showing anything. But we are trying things we never did in the past.

Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing

Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

“I think tomorrow morning [in warm-up] we will try something new again and if we have an idea for the race we will try it also I think.

“There is no point to being conservative in the position we are in now.

“I think doing these things, we have quite a lot of direction to see, especially we move the bike up, down, low, front, rear and I think we have made more changes in one race than a whole year last year.

“So, it’s a little bit difficult but I think it’s the good way for us to find I would not say the good way, but at least some positive ideas for the future.”

On Friday Motorsport.com reported that long-time Yamaha MotoGP boss Lin Jarvis would be stepping down from his role at the end of the year.

Asked about Jarvis’ departure, Quartararo commented: “I mean, of course Lin is someone that stayed for… I think there is no team boss who has stayed for as long as him.

“But for sure he will stay a little bit, he will not really be 100% like now but he will still come to many, many races.”

Watch: What we learned on Friday | 2024 #AmericasGP

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