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Bagnaia says sorry for blasting Alex Marquez after Aragon MotoGP clash


Francesco Bagnaia has said sorry for criticising Alex Marquez after they collided and crashed out of the Aragon Grand Prix last weekend.

The reigning MotoGP world champion was furious with the Gresini rider, claiming the accident was «dangerous» and said Marquez «didn’t stop accelerating until he threw me off».

Once the Italian had simmered down, the two had a private meeting in a Ducati truck to clear the air and now the factory Ducati rider Bagnaia said he was wrong with his harsh words.

Speaking ahead of this weekend’s San Marino Grand Prix, he said: «First of all, I want to say sorry to Alex for the strong words I said to him. I said in the interviews after the race, I was very angry for what happened, and looking at the telemetry, [the accident] was even worse for my point of view.

«But in any case, I was a bit too strong in my words. I didn’t wanted to say that he made me crash on purpose.

«The thing was that his defence was a bit aggressive, like it’s normal when you’re fighting for podium positions and I’m still thinking the same about the incident but the words I said was a bit too much and I say sorry to to Alex.”

He then added: «Sometimes the angriness makes you say something that you don’t think. From my point of view, he came to our office to say sorry for what happened. Enough said. We are two riders. We have two different points of view and respect.»

Marquez was grateful to Bagnaia for publicly apologising for his comments, but feels the damage to his reputation has already been done after the Italian’s remarks were circulated heavily in the media.

«The fact that he apologised, I like it and it’s something I’m very thankful to him for his words,» he said. «But also it’s true that the damage to my person [reputation], my team and also to my riding image has already been done.

«[Having] said that, I want to close this chapter. I don’t want to speak anymore about that. I’m looking forward. We are coming from a real positive weekend in Aragon, so we look forward [to Misano].»

Marquez had also posted a message on his social media handles earlier this week, saying he would «never deliberately crash with another rider» and that the issue between him and Bagnaia is now «settled».

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team,  Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team, Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Both riders escaped without breaking any bones in the 80mph crash when their bikes became tangled, sending them both skidding across the surface, with Bagnaia’s arm trapped under his bike.

And the Italian says he is still feeling the impact of the accident ahead of his home race this weekend at Misano.

He said: «Physically not I’m not at my 100 percent. I feel a lot of pain on my shoulder and over the collarbone and neck. But in any case, we will try to get ready.

«This is my home grand prix and it is always fantastic to race in front of all the crowd here.»

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Why Marc Marquez’s Aragon win has more implications than people might think


Marc Marquez’s Grand Prix victory at Aragon on Sunday was much more than the end of a three-year drought for the Spaniard. He has kept a much lower profile than usual since he arrived at the Gresini team, while sending out very strong messages below the radar.

Winning again 1043 days since his last success is already a feat for someone who nine months ago made the riskiest gamble of his career. Leaving Honda, his career-long MotoGP home on which he was the flagship totem of the winged empire, to join one of the more modest independent squads in the paddock and ride a year-old bike brought no guarantees of success.

But Marquez’s victory at Aragon hides much deeper consequences than just the story of his return to the top step of the podium. The implications of his superiority around one of his favourite circuits involves much more than most people can imagine, and to delve into them means dissecting the rider’s roadmap; that «plan» that he has been talking about since 2023.

One piece of advice that Carlos Sainz Sr gave to his son when he was trying to convince Red Bull to allow him to debut in Formula 1 was to send messages. “I always told him to try to win because without winning there was no option, and from time to time, as much as possible, he should send ‘messages’ that would attract attention: a ‘pole’ in the wet, a fast lap, things like that,” the two-time world rally champion (1990 and 1992), has said on several occasions.

In the case of Marquez, his messages have accumulated on the track and, lately, off it as well. The strategy has worked out wonderfully in removing a huge weight from his shoulders – “I weigh two kilos less,” he joked – and in allowing him to face the remaining eight Grand Prix much more relaxed, without the expectation and pressure that could have come from not having been able to win yet on a Ducati after 59 victories on the Honda from 2013 to 2021.

“Marc changed brands to be a champion,” one of Marquez’s closest confidants told Motorsport.com after hugging the star of the day. “You don’t have four arm operations and give up a multi-million euro contract like the one he had at Honda, just to have fun. Now he knows that he can win again, and that will be very important for his confidence.”

Marquez's grit since switching to Ducati machinery has finally paid off

Marquez’s grit since switching to Ducati machinery has finally paid off

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

“He is one of the few who, after being injured, had no need to go back to racing,” remarked Pedro Acosta, who finished two spots behind Marquez on Sunday. “He could have gone home. But what he has done defines him as a person.”

Aragon came two weeks after the spectacular comeback he made in Austria, where on Sunday he rose from 13th on the first lap, due to a problem with the ride height device, to finish fourth. His feeling at the Red Bull Ring was already good and arriving at Aragon, where he had previously won five times in the 14 editions of the Grand Prix — he brought out his best.

He was fastest in all the practice sessions in which he participated and took pole position by more than eight-tenths of a second — the largest margin in a dry timed session since 2011. Marquez then dominated the Sprint and was untouchable on Sunday. The only practice session across the three days in which he did not finish P1 was the damp Sunday morning warm-up, where he didn’t even bother setting a lap time.

Sunday’s victory with a slightly inferior prototype takes on even more significance as he subtly reconstructs his profile

“For me, that is a very significant thing,” said the source from his inner circle. “The fact that he decided not to go out for the warm-up, which was held on a half-wet track, shows how clear he was with regards to the race.”

Marquez’s time at Aragon can be interpreted as a declaration of intention. Firstly, because it marks him out as the only rider who has been able to win with a Desmosedici GP23 against those who have the all-powerful GP24. 

Marquez knowingly and willingly accepted the terms by Ducati for 2024 that he would have last year’s bike and has not hidden behind the (at time obvious) shortcomings of the machine compared to the current spec or used this as an excuse for his delay in returning to the top of the podium. Therefore, Sunday’s victory with a slightly inferior prototype takes on even more significance as he subtly reconstructs his profile and establishes ever stronger connections with the brand from Bologna.

Marquez was formerly the king of the paddock and the hood ornament for HRC. He used to be the leading voice in the Friday Safety Commission meetings at every Grand Prix but has not attended them for some time. He plans to do so again when his opinions are valued as before.

Marquez grabbed the Ducati factory ride for next season from underneath Martin's nose

Marquez grabbed the Ducati factory ride for next season from underneath Martin’s nose

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Since he swung a leg over the Ducati, the 31-year-old has stressed that 2024 would be a rebuilding year. Many people interpreted these repeated comments as references to his chances in a competitive field. However, Marquez does not only want to recover the speed that he may have lost in his last months at Honda, but also desires a return to being the reference of the grid, to be the boss again of his domain in many senses.

In Mugello, that first weekend of June when Ducati had chosen Jorge Martin to accompany Bagnaia in the official team from 2025, Marquez raised the alarm and essentially cornered the executives of the Borgo Panigale company. He made Claudio Domenicali, the CEO, change his mind on the fly, and dispense with Martin once he realised that Marquez would reinforce rivals Aprilia. The other Italians finally signed the Madrid native.

The Aragon Grand Prix winner will wear official red in 2025. It was another of the targets that he marked as essential in order to return to the throne he occupied before his accident in 2020, in Jerez. In the pit box, he will share space with Bagnaia, and everything will be on the line. The duel with the double world champion from Turin has already begun, not so much on the asphalt as off it; in small, unseen ways and veiled words.

To face his new chapter in the Ducati factory workshop Marquez has had to relinquish his long association with Red Bull, one of his most loyal sponsors, because the Italian team has a global agreement with Monster Energy. The brand with the claw offered him the same personal terms as Bagnaia, but he declined the offer.

In these times, turning away from figures that only energy drink sponsors are able to pay is nothing less than another statement on the part of Marc Marquez. What will come next?

Where does Marquez's MotoGP story go next?

Where does Marquez’s MotoGP story go next?

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images



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“He didn’t stop accelerating until he threw me off”


Francesco Bagnaia has lashed out at Alex Marquez for their collision in the Aragon Grand Prix, claiming the Gresini Ducati MotoGP rider «didn’t stop accelerating until he threw me off”.

Marc Marquez’s victory dominated the headlines in Spain on Sunday, but the fallout between his younger brother Alex and Bagnaia was also a major talking point after the race.

Alex Marquez collided with the factory Ducati rider with six laps to go when they were fighting for the last podium place, with contact at Turn 13 sending both of them out of the race.

Bagnaia was trapped under the Gresini GP23 as they slid off the track, before he was finally released when the bike flew over him in the gravel.

The crash left left him with a sore neck from the impact but miraculously neither suffered any serious injuries.

After the incident, Bagnaia and Marquez were summoned separately to the Race Direction office, and after presenting their views, both were cleared of any wrongdoing.

But in his post-race interview, Bagnaia put the blame firmly on Marquez, describing the Spaniard’s actions as «dangerous».

He said: «It’s not that I have to explain a lot of things. The dynamic is what it is. It’s worrying that there are riders who do certain things. When I was on the inside I felt a hit of gas, and he didn’t stop accelerating until he threw me off.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team,  Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team, Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

«The worst of all, what makes me most angry is the data. The telemetry reveals that, after the contact, [Marquez] went from accelerating 40% to 60%. It’s dangerous to race with someone who does these things.

«Normally, one tries to avoid contact, although the data shows that there are people who do not see it that way.»

The collision was particularly costly for Bagnaia in the context of the championship battle as he lost further ground to title rival Jorge Martin, with the Pramac rider going on to finish second to increase his advantage to 23 points.

Marquez, on his part, argued that he could not see Bagnaia from his position after the latter had passed him for third.

He believes that the onus was on his rival to avoid a collision.

«Nothing is going to change what happened. If anyone could avoid contact it was him, who knew I was there. I had no knowledge that [Bagnaia] was on the outside,» said the 28-year-old.

«The only thing I told the Race Direction members is that, if he had left a little more space between us and had not traced to the inside, nothing would have happened,» he added.

Bagnaia was upset that in addition to the accident itself that Marquez made no effort to apologise for what happened in the immediate aftermath of the race.

However, Motorsport.com understands that a couple of hours later, when things had cooled down, the two riders met in private in a Ducati truck to clear the air between them.

The meeting was just between the two riders and involved no other team members and lasted less than five minutes in which they exchanged their versions of events.

The meeting took place after the two had spoken with Ducati’s general manager Gigi Dall’igna.

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing crash

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

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Emotional Marquez dedicates Aragon MotoGP win to his closest circle


Marc Marquez declared his first thoughts were to those who helped him through his darkest days when he considered quitting MotoGP after scoring a sensational victory in Aragon.

Gresini rider Marquez celebrated his first win in over 1000 days by pulling a strongman pose as he took the chequered flag. 

It was apt given it was one of the greatest motorsport comebacks, as he displayed herculean strength to return from a career-threatening injury that left him contemplating his future in the sport.

He’s undergone four operations on his right arm, which has seen it cut open and turned 30 degrees to increase mobility.

There have also been a number of high-speed accidents since then, including a spectacular high-side in Indonesia in 2022.

Aside from the crashes, he suffered a detached retina and diplopia double-vision.

Along with the physical pain and rehabilitation, the decline in Honda’s competitiveness forced him to end his contract a year early, but undeterred he took the brave business decision to ride with a satellite team.

Steadfast in his approach, Marquez has not only rebuilt himself but also his racing career as the six-time world champion has rediscovered his form now that he is on competitive machinery again.

The culmination of that hard work was this emotional win in Aragon, achieved in front of his mum and dad and his girlfriend — and he paid tribute to them after taking the chequered flag.

He said: «My first thought was all the people who have helped me during these very hard moments because I’m alone there on the racetrack, but behind me is a very nice team.

«Some very nice people, a very nice family, very nice girlfriend, a brother, and all these people that are helping me day by day.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

«One year ago, I was just thinking about [whether to] stop my career or continue. Someday I will retire. But when I will retire, I will not have any question mark about my possibilities.

«I will try everything to be longer and longer and longer in my career and to be competitive. And the Gresini team gave me this opportunity and I tried to enjoy it. I tried to use this opportunity like a rookie rider, like trying to work more than ever.

«And I’m super happy after that long four years to come back at the top of the podium.»

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Marquez was in a class of one all weekend, winning the sprint race and taking pole at Aragon. It was such a cakewalk that he admitted the hardest part was maintaining his focus for the duration of the race.

He added: «It was super long. The first time I checked the laps were between 14 or 12 and I still had a lot of the race to go, but it was super, super difficult to keep the concentration. That was the most difficult part, because I was riding super good.

«In the middle of the race, even my head start to [think about being] around the podium but just I try, I try to push there to keep again the concentration. But yeah, when I crossed the finish line, it was amazing feeling.»



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Marquez ends win drought, Bagnaia in scary crash



Six-time MotoGP champion Marc Marquez put in a dominant performance to win the Aragon Grand Prix on Sunday, ending a 1043-day victory drought.

The Gresini Ducati rider led from start to finish once more, having already taken pole position and won the sprint at Motorland Aragon in one of the most one-sided performances seen from any rider during 2024.

The Catalan was unchallenged in his flight to a 60th victory in the premier class and his first since standing on top of the rostrum as a Honda rider at the 2021 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

It was an emotional win for the Spanish rider who danced in front of the packed grandstands in celebration after such an incredible weekend, marking an astonishing comeback.

Marquez has battled back from double-vision, four arm operations and a number of crashes — including a highside in Indonesia in 2022.

He said: «What was amazing race to win in front of these amazing, amazing fans.

«Today was a super difficult race, especially because when you have the pace, then with the gap, it was difficult to focus on the on the riding, especially the last laps, but I was able to manage the gap.

«I had something more there on the pocket, just in case, as we saw in the middle of the race. But yeah, happy.»

Jorge Martin was a distant second for the second time this weekend. The Spaniard was almost five seconds behind his countryman but was clearly ‘best of the rest’.

Martin now has a 23-point cushion after world champion Francesco Bagnaia collided with the other Gresini of Alex Marquez while trying to seize third place with six laps remaining.

At the start, Bagnaia suffered wheelspin again on the grid and the dirtier side of the MotorLand asphalt. The surface had been cleaned on Saturday evening but more thunderstorms and rain created wet and slick conditions on Sunday morning.

Thankfully, sunshine and high temperatures ensured the race was dry, but the asphalt was still greasy off line. After dropping places at the start to drop to seventh, he moved up to fourth and closed a two second gap to the back of Alex Marquez, who misjudged his braking into Turn 12 and Bagnaia swooped for the gap.

The factory Ducati rider was ahead as they flicked into Turn 13 and made contact, sending both riders into the gravel.

Bagnaia required a check in the medical centre but was later given the all-clear. It was the defending world champion’s second DNF of the season and ended a run of eight consecutive podiums.

Pedro Acosta, starting from second on the grid, took third place and his first trophy since the Americas Grand Prix in April. The Tech3 rookie was narrowly ahead of factory KTM rider Brad Binder in fourth, as Enea Bastianini rode to fifth in front of three other riders on Ducati machinery: Franco Morbidelli (Pramac), Fabio Di Giannantonio and Marco Bezzecchi (both VR46).

Alex Rins’ ninth position was the Spaniard’s highest classification of 2024 on the Yamaha M1 and he was only half a second ahead of KTM’s Jack Miller, but the latter remains under investigation for a possible breach of tyre pressure rules.

Aleix Espargaro was the first Aprilia rider home in 11th while team-mate Maverick Vinales lacked any feeling or grip whatsoever in a repeat of his malaise from the Saturday sprint. He retired after five laps.

Takaaki Nakagami’s 12th was another season best: the Japanese also the first Honda rider past the flag in Aragon.

Fabio Quartararo had another miserable race and crashed his Yamaha M1 for the second time in three days and by losing control into Turn 5 — the same site as his accident on Friday.

MotoGP Aragon GP — Race results:



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Bagnaia tight-lipped on cause of sprint woe as Aragon issue labelled «unacceptable»


Francesco Bagnaia has provided a cryptic response to questions on his struggles in the sprint for MotoGP’s Aragon Grand Prix.

The reigning world champion finished in ninth place — his worst sprint finish of the year — after struggling for grip throughout.

Bagnaia dropped from third to sixth after a poor start on the dirty side of the track, where he suffered from wheelspin — one of a number of riders to do so at the launch of the 11-lap event.

The championship leader staged a brief fightback to fourth before dropping back to his lowly finish in the race, which was won by Marc Marquez.

When quizzed as to why he struggled so badly, Bagnaia replied: «I will not say what it was but [the problem] was not [coming] from me.

«It was not from the bike and not from the team. My feeling was very bad with the front, honestly. The [tyre] pressure was perfect and temperature was perfect.»

MotoGP bikes typically launch and accelerate with fantastic force and efficiency thanks to electronic aids and start devices, but the opening seconds of Saturday’s sprint were more akin to running on ice.

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

«Last year in Qatar [it] also happened to me on the Saturday, so similar,» added Bagnaia. «But it’s out of our control.»

While the Ducati rider picked up a single point, championship rival Jorge Martin banked seven by finishing second and, in turn, surpassed Bagnaia in the standings, taking a three-point advantage.

«I wasn’t able to fight for a win because looking at the lap[s] that Marc did, [he] was unbeatable,» conceded Bagnaia.

«But my ambition and my potential was to fight against Jorge. All the weekend we have been very close in terms of performance and we just lost a possibility..»

Organisers had scrubbed the MotorLand start grid after requests from riders in the Friday Safety Commission meeting only for thunderstorms later that evening had dirtied the surface.

Yamaha rider Alex Rins described the situation as «unacceptable» and said it was tough to even lean the motorcycle in the Saturday morning FP2.

Honda’s Luca Marini added he wants track bosses to revisit the grid issues, claiming: «We will ask them to clean the positions more because now, it is dangerous.»



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Marquez coy on MotoGP revival rafter first win in three years


Eight-time world champion Marc Marquez claimed a first MotoGP sprint win at the Aragon Grand Prix on Saturday, but the Spanish star insisted that his MotorLand feat is not quite the dawn of a second ‘Marquez era’.

First in every session, and with complete control from the first corner until the last of a hot 11-lap sprint at the MotorLand circuit as a prelude to round 12 of 20 in 2024 on Sunday afternoon, Marquez finally regained P1 status after 1042 days and since ending a career-long premier class association with Honda.

It was also the 31-year-old’s maiden trophy on the Ducati Desmosedici and the year-old GP23 model that aced last season’s championship.

Marquez has been formidable across the resurfaced MotorLand asphalt and a modern and sprawling circuit that first welcomed the series back in 2010.

The 2024 edition is the fifteenth visit by MotoGP to central eastern Spain and Marquez already has five victories at the site. It is also one of five current anticlockwise venues in the world championship and Marquez is especially virulent in left-hand turns.

On Saturday morning he scooped his 94th pole position and, crucially, proved he is the absolute master of low grip or mixed conditions; the overnight thunderstorms in the Aragon region had left a dirty film of dust on the surface making grip hard to judge.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

His principal rivals – Francesco Bagnaia and Jorge Martin – either suffered tyre degradation issues or crashed during qualifying and sprint sessions at MotorLand.

Marquez, who celebrated six titles in seven years in MotoGP, has been building up speed after his surprising defection to the Gresini team and non-works rider status in 2024 and although Aragon has provided both the rider, his fans and all followers of MotoGP, with a reminder of the scale of his ability and the rabid thirst for spoils, the Catalan was playing down talk of a peak resurgence.

“I think, unfortunately for me, it’s only here in MotorLand,” he said when asked if his dominance on Friday and Saturday was evidence of a sluice breaking through the gates. “With the front [tyre] I feel super-good this weekend.

«I’m riding in a good way. I don’t have big problems. Tomorrow, for me, the most important thing is to manage the rear [tyre]. The team is already working there to try to be even more constant. But tomorrow I believe it will be different and I need to push [for] more laps.”

“I feel the pressure and I feel tomorrow I have a big opportunity to finish my job in a good way, my good weekend in a perfect way.”

Marquez sets the standard through his sensitivity, his lean angle and his commitment. On Friday he towed around Gresini Ducati team-mate and younger brother Alex. His sibling then had a solid race to fourth in the sprint.

The six-time MotoGP champion has classified as runner-up four times in sprints in 2024 behind three different riders but the younger Alex could judge that Aragon was the ideal stage for an improvement.

“Here the grip is quite low so if the bikes are quite similar or they are same brand then it is quite equal and it is down to the style of the rider, and we know that with no grip or poor grip Marc is able to make the difference and we have seen that in the past with the Honda also,” Alex Marquez said.

“He is better than everyone here because he’s able to do a big gap. I ask him many times how he does it! But it’s very natural and it’s difficult for him to explain it deeply. He says he doesn’t do anything special…he just tries to flow.

He joked: “He won a race after 1042 days or something like this and I said: ‘keep calm, it’s only a sprint!

“Tomorrow is the race and the important day and he knows but for sure this sprint win will give him a lot of confidence. The 25 points are tomorrow.”

The 23-lap distance on Sunday will be a case of preservation of the Michelin rubber and riders such as Ducati’s Enea Bastianini – the person that Marquez will replace in the factory team next to Bagnaia in 2025 – could come more to the fore.

Bagnaia hinted that he was a victim of a rogue tyre issue in the sprint and the kind of irregularity that spelt disaster for Jorge Martin at the pivotal Qatar Grand Prix towards the end of 2023. The world champion is unlikely to be struck by the same predicament twice in the same weekend.

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Marquez takes dominant sprint win, disaster for Bagnaia


Marc Marquez broke his 1000-day victory drought with top spot in Saturday’s sprint race at the Aragon Grand Prix.

The 31-year-old Catalan, who had topped every single session at MotoLand, controlled the race from the opening corners to convert pole position into a dominant 2.9s win.

It was the former Honda rider’s first victory in more than 1000 days, stretching back to Misano in 2021, and first-ever in the new sprint format.

Gresini rider Marquez, who is also the ninth different rider to triumph on a Saturday since the introduction of the concept in 2023, said: «I feel super good. It was a very good weekend until now but the race always is the race and you cannot do any mistakes.

«I started a little bit stiff on the front lap, but then we started to ride in a better way and we controlled the race but of course, the most important day is tomorrow.

«So today we celebrate, because it’s a sprint Race, but it’s really important for us — the first victory in the sprint and I am, looking forward for tomorrow, in front of these amazing people.»

Jorge Martin rode to a solitary second place with Tech3’s Pedro Acosta another 3.7 seconds adrift completing an all-Spanish podium.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Martin’s comfortable runner-up slot allowed the Pramac man to leapfrog main title rival and world champion Francesco Bagnaia in the standings and convert a five-point deficit to a three-point advantage.

The Italian suffered wheelspin from third on the grid and clearly had a grip issue throughout the race as he buffeted back to ninth and the last points-scoring berth, behind the impessive Fabio Quartararo on the Yamaha.

Alex Marquez rode to fourth for what was a solid day of results for the Gresini team and Miguel Oliveira’s fifth-place finish on the Trackhouse Racing Aprilia was the Portuguese’s second-highest sprint result of the campaign.

KTM’s Brad Binder was one of the flock of riders that profited from Bagnaia’s issues and took sixth ahead of a resurgent Enea Bastianini, who sailed from 14th on the grid to seventh after a poor Q1 outing this morning on the other factory Ducati.

Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro was a victim of the slick grid tarmac and his poor launch was compounded further as he fell into Turn 1 after touching the rear wheel of Fabio Di Giannantonio (VR46).

Other fallers were Honda’s principal hope, LCR rider Johann Zarco, and Pramac’s Franco Morbidelli.

MotoGP Aragon GP — Sprint race results:



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First Ducati MotoGP victory inching closer for rapid Marquez in Aragon


Marc Marquez has never been better-placed to claim a maiden MotoGP win as a Ducati rider than this weekend’s Aragon Grand Prix.

Marquez has walked the top step of the rostrum five times at MotorLand Aragon with Honda, meaning a victorious Prosecco spray for a third of all MotoGP grands prix to have been held at the sprawling Spanish circuit.

After clocking the best lap times in both Friday sessions of the 2024 edition of the event, round 12 of 20 in the current campaign, as well as snaring his first all-time lap record of a season in which the milestones have fallen in all but one fixture, the Gresini rider seems closer than ever to a first win of 2024.

Two weeks ago, Marquez closed the first day of the Austrian Grand Prix fourth fastest but downplayed his possibilities of celebrating a first triumph since 2021 in Misano (coincidentally where the championship will head next week). An issue with his start device on the grid at the Red Bull Ring obliged a strong fightback to fourth in the race.

In Aragon, the 31-year-old has looked more formidable. He was quickest around the slick and greasy new asphalt in the morning and then reset the lap-record by almost three tenths of a second, raising hopes not only of his chances for a first pole position on the Desmosedici GP23 on Saturday but also for top billing through the 27 laps on Sunday.
 
“We started with a very good base and this helps a lot,” he said to assembled media on Friday afternoon on what became a humid and cloudy MotorLand.

“Let’s see if tomorrow we can keep going because the key of the weekend will be to understand the track; the track conditions are improving, improving, and this I predict will make everything closer again.”

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Aside from a strong streak and penchant for Aragon, Marquez claims his superior speed and margin of three tenths of a second over Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro was another demonstration of how the Gresini team is still in a process of familiarisation with the eight-time world champion.

“My technicians, step-by-step, start to understand my riding style better. That is normal. It’s a natural step,” he said. “I expected to be fast because it’s a race track that I like, but not with that gap.”
 
Marquez has shared the grand prix podium with Francesco Bagnaia and Jorge Martin in three of his four appearances in 2024. He believes the Ducati GP24 riders will be hounding his rear Michelin on Saturday at Aragon where his berth in the ‘1m45s club’ might not stay exclusive.

The six-time champion set a best time of 1m45.801s in second practice on Friday, while all his nearest rivals couldn’t break the 1m46s barrier.

“During the weekend they [will] become closer and closer,” he warned. “So, my target tomorrow will be to try to keep my level. Don’t stress a lot. Let’s see the pace before the sprint race. For me, the most important [thing] is that in two consecutive weekends, Austria and here, I had a very good feeling.”
 
Pramac rider Martin is wary of his countryman: “Seems Marc is the strongest at the moment but he has won a lot here so it’s normal he’s fast. I saw his data and he is leaning a lot; it is crazy compared to the other Ducatis.

«It means he is risking a lot also. I can see that I am losing four tenths of a second [to him] in just one corner…but I am confident I can solve it.”
 
Ominously for the rest of the Ducati clique and the Aprilias and KTMs that are trying to separate the Italian force, Marquez doesn’t feel the absolute need for the habitual evening homework of where and how to play catch-up.

“I will not check [the data] today. I will just ride by instinct,” he said. “Today we are first, we are the fastest. I don’t like to put pressure to myself but…”

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