Метка: San Marino GP

The key rider traits that led Oliveira to Pramac Yamaha


Miguel Oliveira’s MotoGP experience and rider character have been identified as the key reasons for Yamaha to secure his signature at its new satellite squad Pramac.

The most drawn-out rider change for 2025 MotoGP was finally announced on the set-up day at the San Marino Grand Prix when Portugal’s sole representative on the grid was confirmed for Pramac Yamaha for 2025 and 2026 and for his fifth team and third brand in the premier class.

The 29-year-old, with five MotoGP wins to his name, has ridden KTM RC16 machinery for Tech3 and KTM and then the Aprilia RS-GP for RNF and his present Trackhouse Racing team during a six-year MotoGP stint. Oliveira has only made the MotoGP podium once with the Italian motorcycle, in this year’s German Grand Prix sprint, but is taking an even bigger step with his move to Japanese equipment for what will be his 15th season at world championship level – having started on a Suter/Honda in his first full-time year of Moto3 in 2012 before a spell steering Indian and European tech.

Even though Oliveira is a proven winner in all three classes, his input to a range of bikes and projects meant he was a valued target for Yamaha as they plough resources and cash into improving their MotoGP competitiveness. “[He] has the technical know-how, experience, speed, and precision needed to improve the performance of the Yamaha YZR-M1,” Yamaha boss Lin Jarvis stated in the official press release.

“Yamaha does not want to wait much longer to come back to the top,” Oliveira said in the Thursday press conference. “After being involved with two different manufacturers, I feel my adaptation capability is quite high. I’m riding in totally different way than I rode two years ago and I think this can help for sure give feedback and get things going quicker.

“Having a second factory team and being involved in such a team as Pramac is a huge motivation for me, as you can imagine, and I can’t wait to get started.”

Miguel Oliveira, Yamaha Factory Team, Lin Jarvis, Managing Director Yamaha Motor Racing

Miguel Oliveira, Yamaha Factory Team, Lin Jarvis, Managing Director Yamaha Motor Racing

Photo by: Yamaha

Current team-mate Raul Fernandez has gleaned a lot from Oliveira’s systematic approach to try and extract the best from the seemingly temperamental RS-GP. Even more so when the Spaniard also adopted the latest ’24 model midway through this campaign.

“When I had a lot of problems to understand the bike, especially last year, I saw a lot of his data to understand what happened,” said the Spaniard. “He’s a really good rider, especially when we have difficult track conditions like we did in Aragon. You can always learn something [from] Miguel. He is a gentleman on the track and in the box.”

Oliveira’s versatility was felt at his previous team and KTM was eager to re-sign #88 until he opted for a change of scene with RNF in 2023.

“We had a long history with Miguel, coming from the other classes, and when he came to the MotoGP project — as a very smooth rider — he had a big contribution to how we developed the bike,” KTM’s MotoGP technical manager Sebastian Risse, explained.

“The results were polarising, let’s say, everything worked perfectly or it was difficult to find average performance. We had super-good moments and we also shared a lot of difficult moments together. We’re still connected and I’m glad he’s still on the grid and we can fight with him now.”

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“Being sensitive is a very global thing,” the German added, specifically on Oliveira’s riding traits. “There were some areas [of the bike] where he was very sensitive and others that he could just ride around. He had his character, mainly related to his riding style; some things had to be perfectly as he wanted…and then he could also deal with a lot of things.”

Brad Binder was Oliveira’s team-mate in Moto2 and also for 2021 and 2022 at the factory KTM squad. “He’s a great rider and I think his style can suit this Yamaha, from what we see,” the South African said.

“He’s the kind of guy that maybe isn’t the latest braker…but he’s super-good at letting the bike roll and picking it up on the exit. I think he could be a good benefit for Yamaha and I think it will suit him. He was always super-open and helpful and that’s maybe what they need.”



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Bagnaia swoops to lead practice at Misano


MotoGP world champion Francesco Bagnaia has responded to recent form threats from Marc Marquez and Jorge Martin to set the fastest lap at Misano on Friday.

Bagnaia was quickest in hot afternoon temperatures at the San Marino Grand Prix and his home circuit where he won MotoGP races in 2021 and 2022. The Italian is still struggling to change direction smoothly on the GP24 after his crash in Aragon last Sunday and waited until the final minutes to clock a time just three-tenths of a second from the lap record, set by Martin last year.

Martin, the current championship leader, was third fastest and less than three tenths behind his main title rival, with Marc Marquez splitting the pair in second. The Catalan is competing at the venue of his previous win in 2021 with Honda – having ended his win drought last weekend at Aragon.

Franco Morbidelli claimed the San Marino GP in 2020 and was able to enter the top 10 and therefore also Q2 with his last flying effort. The Italian placed leapt up to fourth place and registered his lap time in spite of a crash by Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro that activated yellow lights and flags through Turn 1 and Turn 2 with less than two minutes to go.

In fifth was Bagnaia’s team-mate Enea Bastianini who classified ahead of Tech3’s Pedro Acosta in sixth – the first of the non-Ducati riders.

The Spaniard initially fronted the session by matching the best lap times from FP1, but then had a slow speed crash into Turn 8, one of only six left hand corners at the historic layout, with seven minutes of the session remaining.

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull GASGAS Tech3

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Another local, Marco Bezzecchi, was seventh for VR46 Ducati with Maverick Viñales as the first of the Aprilia quartet in eighth.

Fabio Quartararo hovered in the top 10 for most of the session despite a glitch with a swingarm wing that snapped off his Yamaha on the approach to Turn 8 as well as several off-track or off-line excursions. The Frenchman produced his most competitive practice pace of the season for ninth place and a Q2 spot.

Jack Miller grabbed a tow from Bagnaia to occupy 10th and the last Q2 spot, but KTM team-mate Brad Binder was 11th and the main victim of Morbidelli’s last-gasp effort, and being dumped out of the top 10 in the dying seconds means the South African has work to do in order to burst out of Q1 on Saturday morning.

Aleix Espargaro led his younger brother Pol, as the siblings settled in 12th and 13th for Aprilia and KTM respectively, with Miguel Oliveira 14th for Trackhouse Aprilia.

Honda could again count on Johann Zarco as its leading rider on the RC213V, as factory rider Joan Mir missed the Friday action due to a stomach virus, but he should be able to join Q1 tomorrow.

MotoGP San Marino GP — FP2 results



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Martin sets the pace in opening practice


Jorge Martin was just over a second away from his MotoGP lap record at Misano and a slender 0.037s faster than Aragon winner Marc Marquez in opening practice for the San Marino Grand Prix.

In hot and sunny conditions, Martin, who is struggling with the residue of a stomach virus and less than peak fitness, set his best effort on his 13th of 20 laps in the session to top FP1 ahead of Marc Marquez and KTM wildcard Pol Espargaro.

Espargaro initially headed the list on the development version of the KTM RC16 and has good previous form with the Austrian bike at the track, having finished on the podium at Misano in 2020.

The Catalan was the first of three KTMs in the top 10 as Brad Binder took seventh — just three tenths from leader Martin — and Pedro Acosta on the Tech3 10th, having also posted the highest top speed of 301.6kph (187.4mph).

Franco Morbidelli, who took the first of his three career grand prix victories at Misano in 2020, was fourth for Pramac Ducati and in front of Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo.

The Frenchman started the day promisingly at the site where he celebrated the 2021 MotoGP championship and where Yamaha has been conducting the majority of its testing programme in 2024 as it maximises the concessions allowance.

Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing

Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Aleix Espargaro was the quickest Aprilia in sixth just ahead of Binder, with world champion Francesco Bagnaia, who said he is still suffering pain in his neck and shoulder after his race crash last weekend, in eighth.

Maverick Viñales rode the other factory Aprilia RS-GP24 to ninth ahead of Acosta.

Jack Miller, expected to be announced as a Pramac Yamaha rider here when the series returns for the next round in two weeks, was 11th with the resurgent Augusto Fernandez in 12th.

Enea Bastianini, a rider with three MotoGP podium finishes at Misano, was 0.761s from top spot in 13th and was in front of the first Honda rider in the FP1 classification of Johann Zarco.

Repsol Honda has been reduced to one-man representation in open practice as Joan Mir could not contest the session due to illness. The 2020 world champion needed medical treatment for a stomach virus on Thursday and was still not fit enough to ride Friday morning.

Luca Marini was 18th fastest and over a second slower than the top Ducati runner.

MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix — FP1 results



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2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix – How to watch, session times & more



Pramac’s Jorge Martin leads the championship by 23 points heading into the first of the two races at Misano after factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia retired from the Aragon Grand Prix in a collision with Alex Marquez.

Marc Marquez is back in third place in the championship following his impressive comeback win in Aragon on the Gresini GP23.

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings

Session

GMT

BST 

CEST

ET

PT

AEST

JST

IST

FP1

08:45

09:45

10:45

04:45

01:45

18:45

17:45

14:15

FP2

13:00

14:00

15:00

09:00

06:00

23:00

22:00

18:30

FP3

08:10

09:10 10:10

04:10

01:10

18:10

17:10

13:40

Qualifying

08:50

09:50 10:50

04:50

01:50

18:50

17:50

14:20

Sprint

13:00

14:00 15:00

09:00

06:00

23:00

22:00

18:30

Warm up

07:40

08:40

09:40

03:40

00:40

17:40

16:40

13:10

Race

12:00

13:00

14:00

08:00

05:00

22:00

21:00

17:30

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in the UK and Portugal

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1: 10:45 — 11:30 BST
  • Free Practice 2: 15:00 — 16:00 BST

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 3: 10:10 — 10:40 BST
  • Qualifying: 10:50 — 11:30 BST
  • Sprint: 15:00 BST

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Warm up: 09:40 — 09:50 BST
  • Race: 13:00 BST

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in Europe 

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1: 11:45 — 12:30 CEST
  • Free Practice 2: 16:00 — 17:00 CEST

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 3: 11:10 — 11:40 CEST
  • Qualifying: 11:50 — 12:30 CEST
  • Sprint: 16:00 CEST

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Warm up: 10:40 — 10:50 CEST
  • Race: 14:00 CEST

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in the US

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1:  05:45 — 06:30 ET / 01:45 — 02:30 PT
  • Free Practice 2:  10:00 — 11:00 ET / 06:00 — 07:00 PT

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 3: 05:10 — 05:40 ET / 02:10 — 02:40 PT
  • Qualifying: 05:50 — 06:30 ET / 02:50 — 03:30 PT
  • Sprint: 10:00 ET / 07:00 PT

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Warm-up: 04:40 — 04:50 ET / 01:40 — 01:50 PT
  • Race:  08:00 ET / 05:00 PT

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in Australia

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1: 19:45 — 20:30 AEST

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 2: 00:00 — 01:00 AEST
  • Free Practice 3: 19:10 — 19:40 AEST
  • Qualifying: 19:50 — 20:30 AEST

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Sprint: 00:00 AEST
  • Warm-up: 18:40 — 18:50 AEST
  • Race: 22:00 AEST

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in Japan

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1: 18:45 — 19:30 JST 
  • Free Practice 2: 23:00 — 00:00 JST 

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 3: 18:10 — 18:40 JST 
  • Qualifying: 18:50 — 19:30 JST
  • Sprint: 23:00 JST

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Warm-up: 17:40 — 17:50 JST
  • Race: 21:00 JST

2024 MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix session timings in India

Friday 6th September 2024

  • Free Practice 1: 15:15 — 16:00 IST 
  • Free Practice 2: 19:30 — 20:30 IST

Saturday 7th September 2024

  • Free Practice 3: 14:40 — 15:10 IST 
  • Qualifying: 15:20 — 16:00 IST
  • Sprint: 19:30 IST

Sunday 8th September 2024

  • Warm-up: 14:10 — 14:20 IST
  • Race: 17:30 IST

Can’t find your country or region in the list? Check the MotoGP schedule page for the broadcast times in your local timezone.

Can I stream the San Marino MotoGP?

MotoGP has its own on-demand streaming service, offering live broadcast of practice, qualifying and the Sprint, as well as highlights. The MotoGP Video pass is available for an annual fee of 139.99 euros. Several local broadcasters also stream MotoGP races on their official websites.



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MotoGP still dealing with ‘aftershock’ of Bagnaia and Marquez Aragon clash


MotoGP is still dealing with the after-effects of Francesco Bagnaia’s collision with Alex Marquez in the Aragon Grand Prix.

While Marc Marquez’s stunning comeback win in Spain after a 1000-day drought generated plenty of headlines, the aftermath of the weekend was dominated by reactions and public judgement over the crash between his younger brother Alex and world champion Bagnaia six laps from the chequered flag.

Both were lucky to escape injury and the comprehensive TV coverage from multiple angles could not clearly discern blame.
 
Bagnaia’s immediate comments in the wake of his second DNF this season and while nursing a painful neck — “I had 170kg on top of me” — were pointed towards younger Marquez and what he felt was a purposeful move to end his race.

It was an accusation that the Gresini Ducati rider denied to the media and then in a direct social media post.
 
Bagnaia, walking wounded for the second year in a row coming into his home grand prix (he lives only a few kilometres away in Pesaro), apologised in his media duties on Thursday at Misano and reiterated his lament again in the press conference.

The incident lost Bagnaia control of the world championship standings to Jorge Martin, leaving him with a 23-point deficit ahead of the Misano double-header.

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 prang instigated debate online and through MotoGP’s official social media channels. A video clip of the incident on the series’ Instagram account registered over 317,000 likes and was the most popular premier class clip of the grand prix — and was accompanied by a long scrolling list of comments.

Bagnaia’s words compounded the drama. Alex Marquez accepted the apology in Misano but said the “damage to my person, my team and my image has already been done,” in reference to the reactions.

Several other riders in the paddock also chipped in with comments about the situation.
 
“There are a lot of hooligans that take the words of the riders to go against the others and this is very bad,” opined KTM test rider Pol Espargaro on the wider context.
 
“This is the world we live,” attested Aprilia racer Aleix Espargaro, commenting on the tribal nature of MotoGP and fans groups that tend to flare-up at flash points like Aragon.

“Luckily it is not like football but sometimes it’s close. It’s the worst part, especially for the athletes. Today you cannot disappear. You cannot just focus on racing and forget social media. You need to grow up and deal with social media, the pressure, the critics. It is part of our job but not the most beautiful.”
 
The clash created attention and movement among the MotoGP community and only two weeks after the Austrian Grand Prix had provided one of the more static and uninspiring races of the season.

“Depends how you see it,” Marquez said in the press conference on whether the crash fallout had been ‘good’ for the series.

“Like I said the damage [for me] is already done. I think it is not good for the sport in general. I don’t want to speak more about this chapter. I appreciate that he apologised for his words. That’s it. We are here and we need to be focussed on the track, this is where our job is.”

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Pramac-Yamaha signs Oliveira as first 2025 MotoGP rider


Miguel Oliveira has signed a deal with Yamaha to compete for its new satellite team Pramac in the 2025 MotoGP season.

As was widely expected, Oliveria will leave Trackhouse/RNF Racing after two seasons to become a factory Yamaha rider next year, racing an M1 at the title-winning Pramac team.

The Portuguese rider brings with him a wealth of experience from both KTM and Aprilia and will join Pramac with at least five victories and seven podiums to his name.

His departure from the Aprilia fold was confirmed last month when Trackhouse hired Moto2 race winner Ai Ogura to partner incumbent Raul Fernandez in 2025.

“It’s a great privilege for me to represent such an iconic brand in our sport as Yamaha,” said Oliveira. “Through my years of progression and arriving in MotoGP, I’ve always looked upon the blue bikes with great enthusiasm. 

“It’s now a reality, and I want to thank Yamaha Motor Company for its commitment to me in such an important transition phase of the project. Mr. Lin Jarvis was a key figure in starting discussions and making this happen. 

“I believe I can be useful in this transition period of bringing the bike back to the top. I want to thank Mr. Campinoti, Gino Borsoi, and all the Pramac staff for embarking on this journey together. I can’t be happier and more excited to get this new chapter started.”

Miguel Oliveira, Trackhouse Racing Team

Miguel Oliveira, Trackhouse Racing Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Pramac is ending a two-decade partnership with Ducati to join the Yamaha fold as its first satellite team since 2022, ironically after Oliveira’s current squad Trackhouse (then operating as RNF Racing) left the Japanese manufacturer to join forces with Aprilia.

Yamaha is directly recruiting the riders for Pramac and is expected to imminently announce Jack Miller as its second rider.

The second Pramac seat is the last remaining spot on the 2025 MotoGP grid.

“We are pleased to announce that a professional and experienced rider like Miguel Oliveira is joining the Yamaha line-up for 2025-26, and we bid him a warm welcome to the Yamaha MotoGP Project,” said Yamaha MotoGP boss Lin Jarvis.

“Miguel is a rider who has the technical know-how, experience, speed, and precision needed to improve the performance of the Yamaha YZR-M1. We are really looking forward to working with him as a key member of the Yamaha MotoGP project, and he can count on our full support.”



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