Метка: Misano

double Misano win will be a long shot


Marc Marquez felt he wasn’t in the same league as Francesco Bagnaia and Jorge Martin in Friday practice for the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

Gresini MotoGP rider Marquez returned to Misano on Friday on the back of his stunning victory at the Italian circuit. A fortnight ago, the Spaniard charged through the field during a brief mid-race shower and continued to show strong pace in low-grip conditions to clinch his second win on the trot.

But with practice for the second event at Misano taking place in largely dry conditions, Marquez trailed both pacesetter Bagnaia and Martin, lapping three tenths off the pace at the end of a tightly contested FP2.

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That prompted the six-time champion class to concede that he doesn’t have the same speed as his two Ducati stablemates this weekend — although he reckons the field will be bunched up this weekend due to the data teams collected at the San Marino Grand Prix.

“I expected [to be] more back [behind] on the positions,” he said. “We know that on the second GP, in the COVID times, it was super tight. And in fact everything is very tight, everything is fast, everybody is fast. 

“But it’s true that when it’s better grip conditions, the pattern of this year looks like Martin and Bagnaia, there, they do a step – and in fact, today, they were much faster than us.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

“We are there in the second group like in Misano 1. In Misano 1 we have drops in the middle of the race that helped us to win the race.”

There has been a lot of debate surrounding the apparent gulf between Ducati’s latest GP24 prototype and the year-old GP23 bike the likes of Marquez have been riding in 2024.

There is a general belief that Ducati had made a major leap with the GP24 this year, but Marquez managed to win on his old-specification Desmosedici at Aragon earlier this month and then followed that triumph with another victory in the mixed-weather San Marino round.

However, the 31-year-old said he didn’t want to get bogged down by this debate, as he insisted his focus was on the deficit he is facing to the two championship protagonists this weekend.

“My concentration every race and these last seven races is not GP24/GP23. It’s just me, myself and the fastest one, that is Pecco and Martin. 

“So right now it’s three tenths or even four tenths per lap on the medium rear tyre. 

“Okay, then on the time attack we were able to be there on one lap, but it looks like they are in an easier way on the lap times.”

Bagnaia and Martin traded the fastest time throughout the afternoon session, with the factory Ducati rider eventually securing the top spot by just under two tenths of a second.

Marquez and Enea Bastianini on the second works Ducati finished a further tenth adrift, while fifth-placed Fabio Quartararo trailed Bagnaia by 0.6s at the end of the day’s running.

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Martin said he was surprised to see himself and Bagnaia having a clear margin over the competition on the opening day of the weekend.

“Now we can be fast but the important thing is to be fast in qualifying and to be fast in the race,” he said.

“But at the moment Pecco and I, we have a step in front. I didn’t expect it, I expected Enea or Marc like in the test but it seems like today the conditions were a bit weird.”



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MotoGP San Marino GP: Moto2 and Moto3 results


Leopard Honda’s Angel Piqueras competed a remarkable Moto3 win at Misano in the San Marino Grand Prix.

For the second occasion in a week a Spanish teenager walked the top step of the podium for the first time, following KTM Ajo’s Jose Antonio Rueda’s success in Aragon last Sunday.

The 17-year-old had to negotiate two Long Lap penalties after a collision with Britain’s Scott Ogden on Saturday and charged back from the deficit to defeat GASGAS Tech3’s Daniel Holgado by 0.035s — the closest ever race finish at Misano.

The triumph signified the first win for the 2023 Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup champion in his debut Moto3 term after a gripping race between five riders at the front and frequent overtaking.

Holgado was runner-up for his sixth podium finish of the season and rose to second in the championship standings as a consequence. MT Helmet-MSI’s Ivan Ortola was the first KTM rider in the classification and rounded out an all-Spanish top three.

Honda Team Asia’s Taiyo Furosato took his Honda to fourth and the Japanese’s contact with world championship leader David Alonso on the last lap of 22 dropped the Columbian to sixth; later the CFMOTO Aspar man was demoted to seventh after a track limits infringement on the same circulation. Alonso’s championship lead has been trimmed to 70 points

Australian Joel Kelso was therefore pushed up to sixth on the BOE KTM. Husqvarna IntactGP’s Tatsuki Suzuki rode from 23rd on the grid to finish eighth.

Honda riders Luca Lunetta and Adrian Fernandez were both adjudged to have jumped the start and had to serve two Long Lap penalties. Lunetta had qualified on the front row and the sanction snuffed out hopes of home glory but he rallied to ninth. SIC58’s Filippo Farioli was 10th.

Rueda went from the high of home grand prix spoils to the low of a second corner crash as his race lasted all of a few seconds, while BOE Motorsports’ David Munoz and CIP Green Power’s Ricardo Rossi were the other fallers in the incident.

Moto3 San Marino GP — Race results

1

Á. Piqueras Leopard Racing

36 Honda 20   148.9   25
2 Spain D. Holgado Red Bull GASGAS Tech3 96 GASGAS 20 0.035 148.9   20
3

I. Ortola MT Helmets — MSI

48 KTM 20 0.191 148.9   16
4 Japan T. Furusato Honda Team Asia 72 Honda 20 0.033 148.9   13
5

C. Veijer Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP

95 Husqvarna 20 0.232 148.9   11
6 Australia J. Kelso BOE Motorsports 66 KTM 20 0.486 148.8   10
7

D. Alonso CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team

80 CF MOTO 20   148.9   9
8 Japan T. Suzuki Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP 24 Husqvarna 20 3.160 148.6   8
9

L. Lunetta SIC58 Squadra Corse

58 Honda 20 3.033 148.4   7
10

F. Farioli SIC58 Squadra Corse

7 Honda 20 1.299 148.3   6
11

D. Almansa Kopron Rivacold Snipers Team

22 Honda 20 0.034 148.3   5
12

J. Roulstone Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

12 GASGAS 20 0.278 148.3   4
13 Mexico A. Fernandez Leopard Racing 31 Honda 20 0.966 148.2   3
14 Italy S. Nepa LEVELUP — MTA 82 KTM 20 0.545 148.2   2
15 United Kingdom S. Ogden FleetSafe Honda — MLav Racing 19 Honda 20 1.156 148.1   1
16

N. Fabio LEVELUP — MTA

10 KTM 20 6.055 147.7    
17 Japan R. Yamanaka MT Helmets — MSI 6 KTM 20 13.362 146.7    
18

X. Zurutuza Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

85 KTM 20 1.557 146.6    
19

J. Rosenthaler Liqui Moly Husqvarna Intact GP

34 Husqvarna 20 0.097 146.6    
20

N. Dettwiler CIP

55 KTM 20 5.942 146.2    
21

T. Buasri Honda Team Asia

5 Honda 20 0.068 146.2    
22

J. Esteban CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team

78 CF MOTO 20 5.812 145.8    
dnf Italy M. Bertelle Kopron Rivacold Snipers Team 18 Honda 16 4 Laps 148.7 Accident  
dnf Spain V. Pérez FleetSafe Honda — MLav Racing 21 Honda 16 4.295 148.3 Accident  
dnf

J. Antonio Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

99 KTM 0     Accident  
dnf Spain D. Munoz BOE Motorsports 64 KTM 0     Accident  
dnf Italy R. Rossi CIP 54 KTM 0     Accident  
Ai Ogura, MT Helmets MSI

Ai Ogura, MT Helmets MSI

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Moto2 was aced by MT Helmets -MSI’s Ai Ogura, as the MotoGP-bound Japanese rider beat Fantic Racing’s Aron Canet and Marc VDS’ Tony Arbolino for his third victory of the campaign.

KTM Ajo’s Celestino Vietti tumbled out of contention for victory from fourth with three laps to go at Turn 16.

QJMotor Gresini’s Manuel Gonzalez rode to a lonely fourth as a result, as Aragon GP winner CFMOTO Aspar’s Jake Dixon capped the top five.

Another MotoGP class conscript for next year, Sync SpeedUp’s Fermin Aldeguer, erased some of the disappointment of his crash at Aragon last weekend with sixth place.

Arbolino’s team-mate, Filip Salac took seventh and headed the four-way fight between Italtrans Racing’s Diogo Morira, QJMotor Gresini’s Albert Arenas and IntactGP Husqvarna’s Darryn Binder in 10th.

SpeedUp Racing’s Alonso Lopez crashed on lap two and later received a Long Lap penalty for exceeding track limits.

Sergio Garcia made an emotional charge from 24th on the grid to 12th but was unable to prevent Ogura from taking the Moto2 championship lead, the Spaniard in tears after the race, while the Japanese rider is now nine points ahead of his MT Helmets – MSi team-mate at the top of the standings.

Moto2 San Marino GP — Race results



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