Aragon serves up best MotoGP race of 2021 thus far

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship
Round 13 – Aragon


Aragon produced the MotoGP race of the season overnight after Pecco Bagnaia and Marc Marquez went head-to-head over the final laps in a tense battle that was truly magnificent to watch.

Despite yet more crashes during practice the mental strength of Marc Marquez was on display as soon as the lights went out as he propelled himself into the battle for the lead with a daring display of other-worldly motorcycle control.

As the race wore on it was only Marquez that could take the battle for victory up to Bagnaia after the Italian had scored the holeshot from pole position and led every single lap of the race.

Bagnaia and Marquez battled in close-quarters through every turn over the final laps

Over the final laps Bagnaia was a measure of calculated control as he fended off a flurry of thrusts and parries from Marquez that were simply breath-taking in both daring and volume.

Every time Marquez slotted his Honda up the inside or outside of the Ducati, Bagnaia answered with an amazing display of strategy and control that earned him his first ever MotoGP victory under what was immense pressure from the eight-time World Champion.

What a way to take your first victory…

As Marquez said himself after the race, it was a Dovizioso-like display from Bagnaia, but with even more corner speed.

Marquez piled the pressure on Bagnaia but the Italian resisted

The win moves Bagnaia up to second place in the championship while series leader Fabio Quartararo still enjoys a 53-points lead despite a lack-lustre eighth place finish at Aragon.

Joan Mir took third place at Aragon and holds down third place in the championship, a slim four-points behind Mir.

With five rounds now remaining it is fair to say that Quartararo certainly has one hand on the championship trophy. Only a series of major disasters can prevent the 22-year-old from being crowned champion.


MotoGP Race Report

As the lights went out, polesitter Bagnaia got away well and held on for the holeshot, with team-mate Jack Miller going in a bit deep at Turn 1 and that allowing Marc Marquez to grab P2 after a lightning start for the number 93. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) was up to P4, with Championship leader Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) losing out and down to fifth 5th. Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) then crashed at Turn 5, rider ok.

Aragon MotoGP

As Bagnaia and Marc Marquez led the train away, Quartararo was struggling. Both Mir and Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) passed the Frenchman next as he slipped towards the clutches of eighth place Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), but nobody in the early stages was showing their cards, with only 2.2 seconds covering the top six.

Championship leader Quartararo slipped backwards

Just outside that top six remained Quartararo, however. By now, the Frenchman had the rapid starting Iker Lecuona (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) climbing all over him, and at the end of Lap 6, the number 27 was through. A couple of laps later, another KTM was ahead as Binder followed Lecuona after the Spaniard had despatched him too, and Quartararo was suddenly down to P9.

Bagnaia and Marquez pulled clear of Miller and from then on it was a two-man race for victory, and what a race it was

With eight laps gone, the cards were beginning to appear on the table. Bagnaia and Marquez were just over a second clear of Miller in third, and that advantage was soon up to nearly two with 13 to go. Miller headed wide at Turn 16 not long after too, allowing Aleix Espargaro and Mir to cut through. The reigning World Champion then managed to despatch the Aprilia to take over in third, but the gap to Pecco and Marquez was now nearly three and a half seconds.

To compound the gap, the pace was far from slowing. The two leaders were exchanging 1:48s lap after lap, with the rest in the 1:49s and below. They’d carved out a 4.3s lead over Mir and Aleix Espargaro with nine laps to go, but then it was into tyre life territory. Would that play a role? With five to go though, there was no change, with both riders still in the 1:48s… and it seemed it was going to the finish.

With four laps left, the pressure from Marquez was ramping up. Getting closer and closer until he was glued on, a lap later the first move finally came. The Honda rider went for a lunge into Turn 5, but he was in a little hot and slightly wide, Pecco replying unflustered to get back into the lead. So Marquez next shoved his RC213V up the inside at Turn 15, but again, the Italian got the cutback and held P1. Two down, how many to go?

On the penultimate lap, another. An exact copy and paste at Turn 5, Marquez again lunged late and again got a quick reply. The exact same thing happened at Turn 15 too, and again, Bagnaia carved back past. And so it was going down to some final lap fireworks…

This time, Marquez tried his luck at Turn 1, but that didn’t stick either. So, of course, Turn 5 saw another lunge for the third lap in a row, with the exact same result. That made six attempts from the number 93, each of which had been on to try but each of which had been greeted with a swift reply.

The pressure from Marquez was unrelenting

Marquez is Marquez though, so a seventh attempt then came at Turn 12. The number 93 got a great run out of his own namesake Marc Marquez Corner and was up the inside at the downhill left-hander, not a move he’d tried yet but ultimately one that wasn’t going to work either. Struggling to get it hooked up to the apex, Marquez was wide and onto the green, and Pecco needed no second invitation to sweep back past, keep it pinned and finally gain a few metres of breathing space.

From there the Italian made no mistake and crossed the line to complete a perfect weekend: pole position to maiden MotoGP victory, the eighth winner of 2021, defeating Marc Marquez on his home turf.

Bagnaia kept his head to take a brilliant victory

His victory is also the 250th for Italy in the premier class, adding Francesco Bagnaia next to a little chapter of a rich history. Emotional in parc ferme, Bagnaia was just sublime on Sunday at Aragon.

Bagnaia congratulated by Ducati management Paolo Ciabatti and Gigi Dall’Igna

Marquez threw absolutely everything at it as he sought that seventh win at MotorLand though, coming up just six tenths short. Still, it’s another podium and a leading role in an all-time classic, as well 20 points to add to his tally – and he’ll likely sleep rather well knowing he left it all out there, seven times.

Joan Mir was the quiet achiever and again bagged good points to rank third in the championship, 20-points ahead of Zarco

Behind, Mir kept it tidy in third to take his fifth rostrum of 2021, in some space alone as he escaped Aleix Espargaro but couldn’t get onto terms with Bagnaia and Marquez.

Alex Espargaro crossed the line in fourth, another great result for Aprilia and one that moved him up to seventh in the championship standings

Aleix Espargaro’s P4 is another excellent ride from the Spaniard though, and he’s the top Independent Team rider. Miller couldn’t recover ground later on and finished a lonely fifth.

Bastianini showed glimpses of brilliance and got the better of Quartarararo

Reigning Moto2 World Champion Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) claims sixth for his best premier class result, putting the cherry on top of an impressive weekend. The rookie beat Binder by just 0.3s, and both escaped Quartararo by a good margin. A tricky day at the office for the World Championship leader and his second worst result of the season sees his lead cut, but it’s still a healthy 53 points with five races to go.

Martin took P9 less than a tenth behind Quartararo too, with Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) 10th in the same pack as Bastianini, an earlier sparring partner, was able to break away from the Japanese rider. Lecuona made a mistake with a handful of laps to go that saw the Spaniard slip outside the top 10, but it was nevertheless a great ride from the 21-year-old and a stunning early charge.

Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) pocketed P12 from P20 on the grid, gaining some ground, and it was a quieter day for Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) in P13, just ahead of Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and 15th place Danilo Petrucci (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing).

Cal Crutchlow (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) were P16 and P17 respectively, with Maverick Viñales taking P18 on his Aprilia Racing Team Gresini debut. Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) and Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia) were the final finishers, with Jake Dixon (Petronas Yamaha SRT) joining Alex Marquez in the DNFs, crashing out on Lap 2 and rider also ok.

Valentino Rossi has only scored 28-points so far this season and ranks 21st in the championship

So, a magnificent MotorLand battle sees Bagnaia finally claim that illustrious first MotoGP win. Next up: his home race at Misano. Remember that time he disappeared in the lead and then crashed? The Italian will be looking for a replay of the first half, and has never seemed less likely to recreate the second… save the date as MotoGP gets ready to take on the Riviera di Rimini.

Bagnaia’s heart rate monitor saw him running around 175 bpm, I think if they had one on Tardozzi in the pit garage he would have fried its wiring…

MotoGP Aragon 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 41m44.422
2 Marc MARQUEZ Honda +0.673
3 Joan MIR Suzuki +3.911
4 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +9.269
5 Jack MILLER Ducati +11.928
6 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +13.757
7 Brad BINDER KTM +14.064
8 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha +16.575
9 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +16.615
10 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +16.904
11 Iker LECUONA KTM +17.124
12 Alex RINS Suzuki +17.71
13 Pol ESPARGARO Honda +19.68
14 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM +22.703
15 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM +25.723
16 Cal CRUTCHLOW Yamaha +26.413
17 Johann ZARCO Ducati +26.62
18 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +27.128
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +32.517
20 Luca MARINI Ducati +39.073
Francesco Bagnaia – P1

A lot of emotion today. I’m so happy. We worked a lot to achieve this result, every time we were close, something happened and this dream to take my first victory, every time it was far. So to win today is a great liberation. I’m so happy, I have to say thanks to all the team, my family, my fantastic girlfriend, who are with me every day. It’s difficult to say something now, but it was not easy. I knew it wasn’t easy to stay in front of Marc at this track. His body isn’t at 100% but I think today with the hunger to win he was very, very competitive, and… I just tried to do my best and finish first. It’s a dream come true.

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 214
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 161
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 157
4 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 137
5 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 129
6 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 117
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 96
8 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 95
9 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 87
10 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 79
11 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 71
12 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 68
13 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 64
14 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 55
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 49
16 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 45
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 40
18 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
19 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
20 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 28
21 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 28
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 11
23 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
24 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
25 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 3
26 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1

Moto2

Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) pulled another sensational win out of the hat at Aragon, despite a crash at Silverstone leaving him on the back foot and a crash cycling for which he needed surgery on his hand just before the race weekend. Nevertheless, he dominated to equal Marc Marquez’ record of five wins as a Moto2 rookie, with teammate and Championship leader Remy Gardner taking second. With that, Red Bull KTM Ajo wrapped up the Teams’ Championship, and the win was also their hundredth too. Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) completed the podium for another rostrum finish as he shows more good 2021 form, storming through from 12th on the grid.

Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo)

Off the line it was Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) who held firm from pole from Gardner and Raul Fernandez, opening up an advantage of 0.6 on the opening lap as Raul Fernandez then passed title rival Gardner for second at Turn 12. Just behind, Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) grabbed P4 from Hector Garzo (FlexBox HP 40). The fastest lap of the race on Lap 2 for Raul Fernandez saw him cut Lowes’ lead to just 0.2, with Gardner sitting twice that down on his teammate, in third.

The number 25 then decided to attack for the lead at the beginning of Lap 4, with Gardner exchanging P3 with Ogura just behind. The Australian was having a scrappy opening handful of laps, wide at Turn 12 and once again conceding P3 to Ogura. Soon after, Garzo was also ahead of Gardner. It was a fascinating scrap the Aussie found himself in, but in getting caught up with the likes of Ogura and Garzo – who crashed at Turn 8 on Lap 5 – the gap to Lowes and Fernandez was up to 1.9s. By 10 laps down, Raul Fernandez was still holding Lowes at bay by just over a second and Gardner was over three seconds down on them, with Jorge Navarro (+EGO Speed Up) and Aron Canet (Kipin Energy Aspar Team) in hot pursuit.

On Lap 12, the first drama for a frontrunner: Marco Bezzecchi’s (Sky Racing Team VR46) quiet weekend came to a premature end at Turn 8, putting a dent in his standings. And then, after seeing Raul Fernandez stretch his lead to nearly one and a half seconds, a gift was handed to both Red Bull KTM Ajo riders as Lowes was the next to slide out. Rider ok, the Brit stacked it at Turn 7 with nine laps to go, leaving Raul Fernandez with a huge, six-second lead over Gardner.

Despite the pain barrier, the number 25 was unstoppable. Keeping that gap to the end, Raul Fernandez took his fifth win to take back to the top step in style, with the deficit to Gardner in the Championship down to 39-points as they swept the Teams’ title too.

2021 Aragon Moto2 Podium
1 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 39:49.990
2 Remy Gardner – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – +5.408
3 Augusto Fernandez – Elf Marc VDS Racing Team – Kalex – +6.824

In even more good news for Aki Ajo, future Red Bull KTM Ajo rider Augusto Fernandez took the final place on the podium. After starting 12th the Spaniard make good progress to slice his way up to the fight for the rostrum, with Navarro his final obstacle. The two had a good duel before the number 37 was able to just pull away to take that third.

Teams Title already wrapped up

Navarro nevertheless took another strong result in fourth, with Canet finishing three seconds down on the rostrum fight in P5. P6 went the way of Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), as newly crowned Moto2 European Champion Fermin Aldeguer (+EGO Speed Up) claimed a stunning P7 – his best yet despite already having made quite an impression. Ogura faded slightly and took P8, with fellow rookie Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP) finishing P9 in a much improved race day for the Italian.

The experienced Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) rounded out the top 10, the Italian beating Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Marcos Ramirez (American Racing), Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team), Cameron Beaubier (American Racing) and Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) as they locked out the remaining point scoring positions.

Moto2 Aragon 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 39m49.990
2 Remy GARDNER Kalex +5.408
3 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex +6.824
4 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro +7.051
5 Aron CANET Boscoscuro +10.695
6 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex +15.16
7 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro +16.73
8 Ai OGURA Kalex +17.085
9 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex +17.704
10 Simone CORSI MV Agusta +20.121
11 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex +20.852
12 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex +24.602
13 Joe ROBERTS Kalex +26.086
14 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex +29.101
15 Celestino VIETTI Kalex +30.301
16 Barry BALTUS NTS +30.42
17 Manuel GONZALEZ MV Agusta +34.977
18 Stefano MANZI Kalex +35.789
19 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS +36.036
20 John MCPHEE Kalex +47.756
21 Xavi CARDELUS Kalex +47.834
Not Classified
DNF Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 4 Laps
DNF Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 5 Laps
DNF Sam LOWES Kalex 8 Laps
DNF Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 9 Laps
DNF Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 9 Laps
DNF Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 14 Laps
DNF Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 16 Laps
DNF Hector GARZO Kalex 17 Laps
DNF Xavi VIERGE Kalex 18 Laps
DNF Thomas LUTHI Kalex 18 Laps
DNF Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI Kalex 19 Laps
Raul Fernandez – P1

It was really difficult race, all this weekend. At the end I’m really happy, the race was really strong, I couldn’t do more with my hand, I couldn’t brake the last five laps. It was really difficult for me but I’m really happy to be here. I want to thank Dr Mir, his team, the Clinica, Alpinestars, my team and family I’m here because of them. Thanks everyone, and this victory is special because it’s my first one here in Spain, with the fans here and my friends. But especially because Hugo Millan’s family is here, this is for him. I’m really happy and this is for his family.

2021 Moto2 Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex AUS 251
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 212
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex ITA 179
4 Sam LOWES Kalex GBR 127
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 108
6 Aron CANET Boscoscuro SPA 103
7 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex ITA 101
8 Ai OGURA Kalex JPN 95
9 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex GER 80
10 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro SPA 71
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex SPA 67
12 Joe ROBERTS Kalex USA 59
13 Celestino VIETTI Kalex ITA 47
14 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex ITA 40
15 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex NED 40
16 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex THA 35
17 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex USA 28
18 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro SPA 23
19 Jake DIXON Kalex GBR 21
20 Stefano MANZI Kalex ITA 20
21 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex SPA 20
22 Thomas LUTHI Kalex SWI 16
23 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro SPA 13
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta ITA 13
25 Hector GARZO Kalex SPA 12
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex ITA 12
27 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex ITA 10
28 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS MAL 8
29 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro SPA 4
30 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta ITA 3
31 Barry BALTUS NTS BEL 2

Moto3

Moto3 brought the serious drama at MotorLand, with three Championship contenders all finding bad luck or trouble on race day. The first was for Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) as he was forced into the gravel, then Championship leader Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) crashed and, right as he seemed set to make huge gains, so did second overall Sergio Garcia (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team). But one contender held firm and avoided it all, with Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) pulling off a tactical masterclass to take his third win of the year and move back into third overall.

The Italian just defeated another stunner from Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3), the Turkish rider impressing once again but forced to wait for that first win. Completing the podium was Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3), the Japanese rider digging deep and taking an emotional second rostrum after a difficult few months of injury, bad luck and more.

Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) kept the lead initially as the South African held on for the holeshot, but Garcia was quick to attack. As ever though, the moves came thick and fast and a leading freight train formed. Öncü took over at the front, with Acosta, Garcia and Binder shadowing in the early stages.

Drama hit on Lap 5 for Silverstone winner Fenati. Front row starter Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) suddenly crashed in front of the Italian, and he was forced to take avoiding action into the gravel – rejoining well down the order, a postcode off the points.

There was also an early touch between Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing) and Acosta but no harm done. Meanwhile Öncü rolled on at the front, able to stay ahead down the back straight too as a group of nine formed at the front followed by SIC58 Squadra Corse duo Lorenzo Fellon and Tatsuki Suzuki.

After chipping away at it, they tagged onto the back to make it 11 riders fighting for the win, but it was a costly push for Fellon as the French rookie then got a Long Lap penalty for track limits. Taking it dropped him back in behind the chasing trio of Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46 Academy), double 2020 winner at the track Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride).

Antonelli and Nepa were next to tag on, but then drama whittled the group down again… and key drama. After a season of history making, Acosta made his first big race day error of the year, heading up the inside of Artigas and then losing it, skittling both out. And he couldn’t rejoin, leaving Garcia with an open goal…

Starting the final lap, Foggia led Öncü led the two GASGAS machines of Garcia and Izan Guevara (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team). Öncü then hit the front, the Turk digging in on the search for that elusive first victory, and even more drama soon hit just behind. Despite the huge chance to home in on Acosta, it just wasn’t to be. Garcia suddenly slid out as he fought to gain more ground, rider ok and able to rejoin but no points coming his way.

Meanwhile, Öncü remained ahead and the Turk led heading onto the back straight – as he had a good few times during the race, able each time to keep it too. But this time, Foggia had the legs and the incredible straight-line speed of the Leopard Honda struck, the number 7 slicing past. Öncü tried to reply on the drag to the line and almost did, but he’s forced to settle for another second, just 0.041 off the win.

After a weekend of more muted timesheets at times from Sasaki, the Japanese rider played his cards to perfection on race day. Making moves through the group late on, the number 71 took his second Grand Prix podium by just 0.064, denying Guevara as the Spanish rookie was forced to wait for that first podium once again, just as at Silverstone.

Antonelli stormed the latter stages the come home in fifth, able to pull out a few tenths on compatriot Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team), who nevertheless bounced back after a tough-to-take technical DNF at Silverstone. Binder took seventh nearly a second further back, with Nepa half a second behind him. Suzuki lost out to the Italian by 0.101 as he took ninth, with Masia completing the top ten a couple of seconds off the front group, not finding his 2020 MotorLand magic this time around.

Ryusei Yamanaka (CarXpert PrüstelGP) took P11 with a little breathing space ahead of Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), with Syarifuddin Azman (Petronas Sprinta Racing) only a tenth and a half off the number 31 by the flag. No mean feat, and the Malaysian impressively scores points on his Grand Prix debut.

Rather stunningly, behind him came Fenati. The veteran Italian dug in to try and gain ground back after being forced wide, and gain ground he did. Making up the gap to the next riders, passing them, and then rinsing and repeating, the number 55 took 2 points for 14th.

Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride) just pipped Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power) to the final point, with a late crash seeing Jeremy Alcoba (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) and Fellon both fail to make the flag.

2021 Aragon Moto3 Podium
1 Dennis Foggia – Leopard Racing – Honda – 37.53.710
2 Deniz Öncü – Red Bull KTM Tech3 – KTM – +0.041
3 Ayumu Sasaki – Red Bull KTM Tech3 – KTM – +0.644

Moto3 Aragon 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 37m53.710
2 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM +0.041
3 Ayumu SASAKI KTM +0.644
4 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS +0.708
5 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM +0.878
6 Andrea MIGNO Honda +1.18
7 Darryn BINDER Honda +2.133
8 Stefano NEPA KTM +2.685
9 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda +2.786
10 Jaume MASIA KTM +4.714
11 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM +8.275
12 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna +9.499
13 Syarifuddin AZMAN Honda +9.645
14 Romano FENATI Husqvarna +14.797
15 Riccardo ROSSI KTM +18.88
16 Kaito TOBA KTM +18.894
17 Yuki KUNII Honda +19.272
18 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS +19.888
19 Maximilian KOFLER KTM +19.933
20 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda +38.64
21 Alberto SURRA Honda +38.744
Not Classified
DNF Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 1 Lap
DNF Lorenzo FELLON Honda 1 Lap
DNF Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 4 Laps
DNF Pedro ACOSTA KTM 4 Laps
DNF Carlos TATAY KTM 7 Laps
DNF Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 14 Laps
DNF Filip SALAC KTM 17 Laps
Dennis Foggia – P1

It was incredible, specially the last lap with Deniz. He was so strong braking, but my bike was so fast on the straight. I wanted to win, but also to open up the Championship. On the last lap I saw on my dash that Acosta was out, and on the last lap Garcia crashed… winning is special. I’d like to thank my team for the bike, my family who support me and also my dad.”

2021 Moto3 Standings

Pos Rider Bike Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM SPA 201
2 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS SPA 155
3 Dennis FOGGIA Honda ITA 143
4 Romano FENATI Husqvarna ITA 134
5 Jaume MASIA KTM SPA 111
6 Darryn BINDER Honda RSA 104
7 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM ITA 98
8 Ayumu SASAKI KTM JPN 87
9 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM TUR 73
10 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS SPA 72
11 Andrea MIGNO Honda ITA 68
12 Kaito TOBA KTM JPN 62
13 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda JPN 61
14 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda SPA 60
15 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda ARG 60
16 John MCPHEE Honda GBR 53
17 Filip SALAC KTM CZE 46
18 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM JPN 42
19 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda SPA 30
20 Stefano NEPA KTM ITA 30
21 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM SWI 27
22 Riccardo ROSSI KTM ITA 24
23 Carlos TATAY KTM SPA 20
24 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna SPA 20
25 Yuki KUNII Honda JPN 15
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM AUT 10
27 Elia BARTOLINI KTM ITA 7
28 Syarifuddin AZMAN Honda MAL 3
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda INA 3
30 Daniel HOLGADO KTM SPA 1
31 Lorenzo FELLON Honda FRA 0
32 Joel KELSO KTM AUS 0
33 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda JPN 0
34 Alberto SURRA Honda ITA 0
35 David SALVADOR Honda SPA 0

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship calendar

Round Date Location
Round 1 Mar-28 Qatar, Losail (night race)
Round 2 Apr-04 Doha, Losail (night race)
Round 3 Apr-18 Portugal, Portimao
Round 4 May-02 Spain, Jerez
Round 5 May-16 France, Le Mans
Round 6 May-30 Italy- Mugello
Round 7 Jun-06 Catalunya, Barcelona
Round 8 Jun-20 Germany, Sachsenring
Round 9 Jun-27 Netherlands, Assen
Round 10 Aug-8 Styria, Red Bull Ring
Round 11 Aug-15 Austria, Red Bull Ring
Round 12 Aug-29 Great Britain, Silverstone
Round 13 Sep-12 Aragon, Motorland Aragon
Round 14 Sep-19 San Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Americas, Circuit of the Americas
Round 16 Oct-24 Italy e dell’Emilia Romagna, Misano
Round 17 Nov-7 Portugal, Algarve
Round 18 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Brookes books his place in showdown with Silverstone podiums

2021 Bennetts British Superbike Championship
Round 8 – Silverstone National

The eight Title Fighters who will battle to be crowned the 2021 Bennetts British Superbike champion were finalised at Silverstone on Sunday afternoon, as it went down to the wire in the final race of the Main Season as five riders duelled for the final three positions ahead of the Showdown.

After 24 races in the Main Season, which has seen seven different race winners and a total of 12 podium finishers, the leading contenders in Bennetts BSB battled to join Jason O’Halloran, Tarran Mackenzie, Christian Iddon and Tommy Bridewell at Silverstone.

Peter Hickman had guaranteed his position following Saturday’s opening race for the FHO Racing BMW team, whilst Glenn Irwin had edged closer to securing Title Fighter status with his first victory of the season in Saturday’s Race.

Bennetts British Superbike Championship
Standings ahead of the Showdown

  1. Jason O’Halloran (McAMS Yamaha) 1071
  2. Tarran Mackenzie (McAMS Yamaha) 1041
  3. Christian Iddon (VisionTrack Ducati) 1026
  4. Tommy Bridewell (Oxford Products Racing Ducati) 1024
  5. Peter Hickman (FHO Racing BMW) 1015
  6. Danny Buchan (SYNETIQ BMW 1014
  7. Glenn Irwin (Honda Racing) 1012
  8. Josh Brookes (VisionTrack Ducati) 1002
Showdown Eight is settled

Superbike Race One

Glenn Irwin became the seventh different race winner in the 2021 Bennetts British Superbike Championship, scoring victory in a dramatic BikeSocial race at Silverstone, as the McAMS Yamaha team-mates crashed out of the two leading positions.

Superbike Race One

The race began with Tarran Mackenzie hitting the front of the pack after a rapid start from the front row. However as the pack streamed across the line for the first time, Tommy Bridewell had claimed the advantage on the Oxford Products Racing Ducati.

On the second lap the drama began; Peter Hickman had a high-speed crash at Becketts, but the FHO Racing BMW rider had his Title Fighter position confirmed in the Showdown, having a 70-point advantage over ninth place in the standings ahead of Sunday’s two races.

The battle for the Title Fighter positions continued to rage throughout the pack. On the same lap, Danny Buchan went for a move on the inside of Ryan Vickers at Woodcote and they collided sending them both crashing out of the action.

Buchan went down and took Vickers with him

There was heartbreak for Lee Jackson too as a technical issues forced him to retire his FS-3 Racing Kawasaki; the three riders remain in a position to secure one of the final three places tomorrow.

As Keith Farmer and Takumi Takahashi crashed out, the BMW Safety Car was deployed on lap four. The pack formed up with Bridewell leading Jason O’Halloran, Gino Rea, Glenn Irwin and Andrew Irwin plus Christian Iddon. Mackenzie meanwhile had dropped to seventh ahead of Josh Brookes after the opening laps.

When the race resumed on lap seven, O’Halloran was instantly attacking; making a move at Copse to snatch the lead from Bridewell. The Oxford Products Racing Ducati rider responded instantly to regain the position at the front of the field, as Glenn Irwin moved into third.

Mackenzie was making up ground though, he was up to second by lap 21 and the McAMS Yamaha rider was pushing for a repeat of his Snetterton victories.

However on the penultimate lap, Mackenzie had taken the lead and was defending hard from his team-mate when he high-sided at Brooklands, collecting O’Halloran and bringing out the red flag.

Mackenzie sustained a fractured fifth metacarpal on his left hand and will not take part in the races tomorrow, whilst championship leader O’Halloran is expected to race.

That awarded the win to Glenn Irwin, who had been holding third ahead of Iddon before the incident, as the VisionTrack Ducati rider returned to the podium for the first time since Thruxton. Bridewell completed the podium, adding to his Podium Points.

A fourth place for Brookes promoted him up ninth in the standings, just six-points adrift of Bradley Ray who held the last place in the top-eight ahead of Sunday’s two races following his fifth place finish.

Gino Rea claimed sixth place, but both him and Andrew Irwin were now out of the running for the final Title Fighter positions. Rory Skinner, Kyle Ryde, Xavi Forés and Luke Stapleford completed the top ten.

Glenn Irwin – Race One Winner

“It was a chaotic race, but I wanted to be one of those not making lunges at the beginning. I had to play it quite safe as I know the place in the Showdown is what we need this weekend. I saw with about eight laps to go Jason [O’Halloran] was starting to push and I did feel okay. But we also have a bad sector, which is sector three – Brooklands. I lose a little bit of traction front and rear and I start to understeer a lot, so we’ll sit down and look and see if that’s something we can improve for tomorrow. But a win – what a way to kick-start this Showdown decider weekend. There is pressure; we put ourselves under the maximum, but I like that because I think that’s when I perform and I’m really happy with today. When the Fireblade is good like it is this weekend, I’m up to fight for the wins and podiums. I’ll be trying my best again tomorrow, I think now we can go really get stuck in. To lose a 32 point buffer in two races would be silly, so let’s go get stuck in!”

Glenn Irwin
Christian Iddon – P2

I’m really happy to be back on the podium as I’ve been off the pace recently and had a few tough rounds so it’s nice to get this feeling again. Even at the start of this weekend, I was only average, but we made some improvements during qualifying, and I kept moving forward the whole race. Gino Rea looked to have that bit more on the Suzuki, but I was confident I could get by Glenn Irwin although the crash changed everything, and we ended up second. I’m really strong in some parts of the track but weak in others so if we can get off the corners better, I think we’ll be in a really good position for tomorrow’s races.”

Silverstone Superbike Race One Results
1. Glenn Irwin (Honda Racing)
2. Christian Iddon (VisionTrack Ducati) +0.229s
3. Tommy Bridewell (Oxford Products Racing Ducati) 1.038s
Josh Brookes – P4

The wheel spin and lack of grip I’ve been encountering continues but I’ve almost learnt to live with it although it does make the races hard work. We only have a small window where the bike works and just the slightest movement out of that window leads to big mistakes which is why I’m up and down a bit during the races. I’m not known for making mistakes or for getting bad starts but that’s what’s happening although as the race goes on, the other riders come back to me. I can see them spinning up in the second half of the race but because I’ve had that from the start, I’m able to make up ground in the latter stages. It’s not ideal and it’s still frustrating but I’ll take the positives and the fourth place.

Superbike Race One Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Glenn IRWIN Honda  21m02.781
2 Christian IDDON Ducati +0.229
3 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati  +1.038
4 Josh BROOKES Ducati  +1.272
5 Bradley RAY BMW +1.810
6 Gino REA Suzuki +2.906
7 Rory SKINNER Kawasaki +4.699
8 Kyle RYDE BMW +5.481
9 Xavi FORÉS BMW +5.742
10 Luke STAPLEFORD Suzuki +8.501
11 Andrew IRWIN BMW +9.619
12 Ryo MIZUNO Honda +9.714
13 Dan LINFOOT Honda +10.911
14 Bjorn ESTMENT Suzuki +1 Lap
15 Storm STACEY Kawasaki +1 Lap
16 Dean HARRISON Kawasaki +1 Lap
17 Luke HOPKINS Honda +1 Lap
18 Brian McCORMACK BMW +1 Lap
Not Classified
DNF Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha 1 Lap
DNF Tarran MACKENZIE Yamaha 1 Lap
DNF Sam COX BMW 9 Laps
DNF Lee JACKSON Kawasaki 14 Laps
DNF Takumi TAKAHASHI Honda 21 Laps
DNF Keith FARMER BMW 21 Laps
DNF Peter HICKMAN BMW 22 Laps
DNF Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki 22 Laps
DNF Danny BUCHAN BMW 22 Laps

Superbike Race Two

In the second race of the weekend, Mackenzie claimed his fifth win of the season, bouncing back from his huge crash yesterday to snatch victory from a resurgent Brookes on the final lap.

Mackenzie had undergone further rigorous assessments by the BSB Medical Team this morning after sustaining a fractured fifth metacarpal on his left hand in yesterday’s crash, and was passed fit to ride.

At the start of race two, Gino Rea launched to the front of the pack from pole position, but a lap later Brookes had made up three positions to put the VisionTrack Ducati into the lead.
Mackenzie was in the mix with the leading contenders as Bradley Ray moved into second to fight for his position in the Showdown.

Bridewell was soon on the move and he dived down the inside of Ray at Copse to claim second position for the Oxford Products Racing Ducati team. The pair traded blows for several laps in the battle for second, as the Rich Energy OMG Racing BMW rider fought to remain in the top eight.

Mackenzie though had moved back up the pack and into second place ahead of Ray and his teammate O’Halloran, who was also still battered and bruised after yesterday’s crash.

On the final lap Mackenzie lunged down the inside of Brookes at Copse to take the lead, but the defending champion also had O’Halloran for company, and he made his move at Luffield to push their VisionTrack Ducati rival back into third at the chequered flag.

Superbike Race Two Results
1. Tarran Mackenzie (McAMS Yamaha)
2. Jason O’Halloran (McAMS Yamaha) +0.083s
3. Josh Brookes (VisionTrack Ducati) +0.370s

Ray ended the race fourth to keep himself in contention ahead of the final race as Bridewell completed the top five, fending off the challenges from Rea and Iddon.

Superbike Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Tarran MACKENZIE Yamaha 26m56.075
2 Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha +0.083
3 Josh BROOKES Ducati +0.370
4 Bradley RAY BMW +0.456
5 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati +1.313
6 Gino REA Suzuki +1.469
7 Christian IDDON Ducati +5.908
8 Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki +6.330
9 Rory SKINNER Kawasaki +7.020
10 Peter HICKMAN BMW +7.589
11 Lee JACKSON Kawasaki +8.975
12 Danny BUCHAN BMW +10.245
13 Glenn IRWIN Honda +13.762
14 Luke STAPLEFORD Suzuki +14.033
15 Kyle RYDE BMW +15.584
16 Ryo MIZUNO Honda +16.347
17 Dan LINFOOT Honda +22.010
18 Xavi FORÉS BMW +22.172
19 Storm STACEY Kawasaki +37.589
20 Dean HARRISON Kawasaki +38.162
21 Bjorn ESTMENT Suzuki +38.379
22 Takumi TAKAHASHI Honda +38.549
23 Luke HOPKINS Honda +1m10.000
Not Classifed
DNF Brian McCORMACK BMW 9 Laps
DNF Andrew IRWIN BMW 12 Laps
DNF Sam COX BMW 21 Laps

Superbike Race Three

The final three Title Fighter positions would be decided in the final race and Glenn Irwin, Danny Buchan, Ray, Brookes and Jackson prepared for one last bid for Title Fighter status.

Whilst O’Halloran became the third different race winner of the weekend, Brookes battled to a hard-fought podium in race three to secure his positon in the Showdown by just four points, knocking Ray out of contention.

The race had earlier been red flagged due to track contamination when Luke Stapleford crashed out at Brooklands. At the stoppage, Brookes had been leading the pack from Bridewell, O’Halloran and Mackenzie ahead of an 11-lap restart.

On the restart, Brookes was determined to secure his position, firing himself to the front ahead of Rea, Bridewell and O’Halloran. However, there was disappointment on lap two when he crashed the Buildbase Suzuki out of second place.

O’Halloran had moved into second before grabbing the lead on the seventh lap as Mackenzie also pulled a pass on Brookes to push the defending champion into third.

By lap 12 the McAMS Yamaha pairing were dicing for the lead again with the pair trading blows until the chequered flag, with O’Halloran holding the advantage by just 0.124s following a last lap scrap.

After the race one incident there would have been some nail biting going on in the McAms Yamaha garage…

Brookes held onto third following an intense last lap battle with Bridewell and Buchan, who also confirmed his position in the Showdown for SYNETIQ BMW with fourth place after getting the better of the Oxford Products Racing Ducati rider.

Superbike Race Three Results
1. Jason O’Halloran (McAMS Yamaha)
2. Tarran Mackenzie (McAMS Yamaha) +0.124s
3. Josh Brookes (VisionTrack Ducati) +2.188s

Iddon finished the final race of the Main Season in sixth place ahead of Ray, who dropped out of a Showdown position at the final stage. Jackson finished in eighth place, with Glenn Irwin in ninth to secure his Title Fighter status.

The Title Fighters are confirmed: O’Halloran, Mackenzie, Iddon, Bridewell, Hickman, Buchan, Glenn Irwin and Brookes.

Six different teams will line up to battle for the title over the final three round Showdown representing four different manufacturers, with the first round taking place at Oulton Park on 24-26 September.

Superbike Race Three Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Jason O’HALLORAN Yamaha 13m28.557
2 Tarran MACKENZIE Yamaha +0.124
3 Josh BROOKES Ducati +2.188
4 Danny BUCHAN BMW +2.357
5 Tommy BRIDEWELL Ducati +2.713
6 Christian IDDON Ducati +2.749
7 Bradley RAY BMW +4.840
8 Lee JACKSON Kawasaki +5.062
9 Glenn IRWIN Honda +5.453
10 Ryan VICKERS Kawasaki +5.720
11 Andrew IRWIN BMW +5.769
12 Peter HICKMAN BMW +6.847
13 Dan LINFOOT Honda +8.304
14 Xavi FORÉS BMW +8.617
15 Ryo MIZUNO Honda +8.818
16 Rory SKINNER Kawasaki +8.981
17 Kyle RYDE BMW +9.178
18 Storm STACEY Kawasaki +15.976
19 Bjorn ESTMENT Suzuki +16.355
20 Luke HOPKINS Honda +25.280
21 Dean HARRISON Kawasaki +25.628
Not Classified
DNF Gino REA Suzuki 14 Laps
DNF Sam COX BMW 14 Laps

Jason O’Halloran

“After yesterday, to walk away with the same championship gap we had when we came here is a good result. To win in that final race means a lot, it wasn’t easy but I was determined to get to the front and keep out of the battles and that’s what we did. Taz tried at the end but we were straight back at him so I’m really happy with that as I’m quite second hand. Thanks to everyone at the medical centre and McAMS Yamaha. We’ve had a great year, so it would have been a shame to lose our advantage going into the Showdown so to stay ahead is really good. I can’t wait to get stuck in at Oulton Park.”

Josh Brookes

“That third race was a lot more hard fought so I’m proud of our efforts today. In the earlier race this afternoon, to get mugged at the end was a bit of a downer. I ended up in the same position in race three, but I feel a lot better about it. I raced from a position, we had the stoppage and then in the restart I got a good start for once! I had a good battle with Tommy as well. All around it’s been positive. I actually didn’t know Danny was there too on the last lap, I just saw Tommy come past and I didn’t want to give up the position. I didn’t know where other people were in the race and potentially losing another place would’ve meant I may have been out of the Showdown. I had a couple of motivating factors to be sure I got back. The point where I wanted to get back past him I couldn’t actually do the move. Tommy outbroke himself, so we eventually achieved the same result. I’m just pleased for the VisionTrack Ducati team, the sponsors and everyone that supports me. Last time we were at Oulton Park I had a lot of problems getting performance, but we seemed to make some good changes to get the bike up to the speed we’re at now, so if Silverstone is a gauge, this is a track we’ve normally, not sucked at, but not particularly gone good at. So if this is an example, then maybe we’ll go good at Oulton Park too. I’m as curious as anyone to find out so we’ll see what happens in the Showdown.”
Mackenzie was victorious despite his huge crash yesterday


Bennetts British Superbike Championship
Standings ahead of the Showdown

Pos Rider Points
1 Jason O’HALLORAN (Yamaha) 1071
2 Tarran MACKENZIE (Yamaha) 1041
3 Christian IDDON (Ducati) 1026
4 Tommy BRIDEWELL (Ducati) 1024
5 Peter HICKMAN (BMW) 1015
6 Danny BUCHAN (BMW) 1014
7 Glenn IRWIN (Honda) 1012
8 Josh BROOKES (Ducati) 1002
9 Bradley RAY (BMW) 182
10 Lee JACKSON (Kawasaki) 167
11 Ryan VICKERS (Kawasaki) 150
12 Rory SKINNER (Kawasaki) 143
13 Andrew IRWIN (BMW) 114
14 Gino REA (Suzuki) 108
15 Kyle RYDE (BMW) 69
16 Dan LINFOOT (Honda) 65
17 Xavi FORÉS (BMW) 52
18 Danny KENT (Suzuki) 49
19 Storm STACEY (Kawasaki) 31
20 Dean HARRISON (Kawasaki) 17
21 Joe FRANCIS (BMW) 12
22 Luke STAPLEFORD (Suzuki) 10
23 Ryo MIZUNO (Honda) 9
24 Tim NEAVE (Suzuki) 7
25 Takumi TAKAHASHI (Honda) 3
26 Bjorn ESTMENT (Suzuki) 3
27 Luke HOPKINS (Honda) 2
28 Joe SHELDON-SHAW (Kawasaki) 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Brown victorious amidst some serious comebacks on Sunday

On comeback watch though, after only a handful of laps the three riders somewhat out of position had been absolutely storming through. By Lap 4, O’Gorman was at the head of the group chasing to catch the lead gaggle, up into eighth, and the 67 cut the gap quickly. Next it was the turn of Mounsey – up from 31st and the very back – as he led Belford and tucked in to push forward, both also managing to bridge that gap before long.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Ivan Ortola wins thrilling 2021 Rookies Cup finale

“It was an incredible race for me. My last race here in the Cup was amazing and thanks to the Rookies Cup family for everything. It was a difficult race because of the track conditions, very hot, the back tyre was sliding but I had a good feeling with it this weekend. I am very happy with my last race, I did a good job here this weekend and I thank my supporters and family.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Bagnaia prevails in an Aragon epic vs Marc Marquez

Ducati vs Honda, Italy vs Spain: Pecco claims maiden victory in a spectacular battle vs the eight-time World Champion at MotorLand

After a trio of second place finishes in 2021, Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) is finally a MotoGP™ winner after emerging victorious from an enthralling Gran Premio TISSOT de Aragon battle with Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team). The duo were in a league of their own on Sunday afternoon as the 25-point haul fight goes down to the wire; reigning World Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) claims the final podium spot in P3.

Pecco vs Marc Marquez – a battle for the ages

As the lights went out for the main event in Aragon, polesitter Bagnaia got away well and held P1 into Turn 1, with Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) going in a bit deep up the inside. This allowed Marc Marquez to grab P2 from fourth on the grid, Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) was up to P4 with Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) 5th. Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) was down at Turn 5 on the opening lap, the 2020 podium finisher gingerly walked away, as the rest of the riders completed Lap 1.

In the early stages, Quartararo was struggling. Mir and Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) passed the Frenchman as Quartararo slipped into the clutches of eighth place Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing). Up front, Bagnaia and Marc Marquez had opened up a 0.5s advantage over Miller at the beginning of Lap 4.

Every rider was running the soft Michelin rear tyre, and tyre management was key. Nobody in the early stages was showing their cards, with 2.2s covering the top six. Quartararo was seventh and had the rapid starting Iker Lecuona (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) climbing all over him, and at the end of Lap 6, Lecuona was through. A couple of laps later, another KTM was ahead – Binder following Lecuona through, Quartararo was down to P9.

With eight laps gone, Bagnaia and Marc Marquez were now 1.2s clear of Miller. That advantage was soon up to 1.9s with 13 laps to go, as Miller then took the car park route around Turn 16. The Aussie was wide which allowed Aleix Espargaro and Mir to cut through, the reigning World Champion then soon got the better of Espargaro for P3. The gap to Pecco and Marquez was now 3.3s, the top two showing superior pace as the race approached half distance.

Bagnaia and Marquez were exchanging 1:48s lap after lap, with the rest languishing in the 1:49s and below. The duo had a 4.3s lead over Mir and Aleix Espargaro with nine laps to go, but this was now the territory of the race where tyre life was crucial. Who had conserved their soft rear tyre best? With six to go, no change. Still both riders were in the 1:48s, and they were again with five to go.

With four laps left, Marquez was closer than he was on previous laps. Then, with three laps to go, the first move was made by Marquez. The HRC star lunged into Turn 5, but he was in a little hot and slightly wide. Pecco was back into the lead. Marquez then shoved his RC213V up the inside at Turn 15, but again, Pecco got the cutback and held P1.

Two laps left in Aragon. It was an exact copy and paste at Turn 5, Marquez again lunging late, but there was no way through. The exact same thing happened on the same lap at Turn 15, but again, Bagnaia carved back past. Then it was time for an epic final lap. Marquez tried his luck at Turn 1 this time, but it didn’t stick. Turn 5 then reared its head and for the third lap in a row, Marquez was up the inside, before Pecco fought back.

That was six overtakes that hadn’t stuck for the eight-time Champion, a seventh attempt then came at Turn 12. Marquez got a great run out of the Marc Marquez Corner and was up the inside at the downhill left-hander. Struggling to get it hooked up to the apex, Marquez was wide and onto the green turf, which allowed Pecco to hold P1. With Marquez as wide as he was, it was battle won for Pecco. Ducati’s star made no mistake and crossed the line to complete a perfect weekend: pole position to maiden MotoGP™ victory, the eighth winner of 2021. 

0.6s split the top two in the end, Marquez threw everything in his locker to try and win for the seventh time in Aragon, but the number 93 was happy with P2. Mir returns to the rostrum for the first time since the Styrian GP, that’s his fifth rostrum of 2021.

Quartararo struggles in Aragon

Aleix Espargaro couldn’t hold onto the reigns of Mir in the closing stages, but a P4 is another excellent ride from the Spaniard. Miller couldn’t recover from his mistake and finished a lonely fifth, as reigning Moto2™ World Champion Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) claims sixth for his best premier class result. The impressive rookie beat Binder by 0.3s, and 2.5s behind the South African was Quartararo. A tricky day at the office for the World Championship leader, his second worst result of the season, but his lead is still a healthy 53 points with five races to go.

Martin took P9 less than a tenth behind Quartararo, with Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) taking 10th in the same pack. Lecuona made a mistake with a handful of laps to go saw the Spaniard slip outside the top 10, it was nevertheless a great ride from the 21-year-old, as Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) pocketed P12 from P20 on the grid.

Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) had a quiet day and finished P13 ahead of Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and 15th place Danilo Petrucci (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing). Cal Crutchlow (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) were P16 and P17 respectively, with Maverick Viñales taking P18 on his Aprilia Racing Team Gresini debut. Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) and Luca Marini (SKY VR46 Avintia) were the final finishers, with Jake Dixon (Petronas Yamaha SRT) crashing out on Lap 2.

A magnificent MotorLand battle sees Bagnaia finally claim that illustrious first MotoGP™ win. Next up: his home race at Misano.

Top 10:
1. Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team)
2. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) + 0.673
3. Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) + 3.911
4. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) + 9.269
5. Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) + 11.928
6. Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) + 13.757
7. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) + 14.064
8. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha) + 16.575
9. Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) + 16.615
10. Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) + 16.904

Every practice session, qualifying battle and race, exclusive interviews, historic races and so much more fantastic content: this is VideoPass!

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Surgery to victory: Raul Fernandez takes Aragon by storm

The rookie sensation takes a heroic win just seven days after metacarpal surgery and closes teammate Gardner down in the title race

We’re running out of superlatives to describe Raul Fernandez’ (Red Bull KTM Ajo) 2021 campaign. Just seven days after undergoing surgery on a fractured metacarpal, the rookie sensation blitzed his way to Moto2™ victory at the Gran Premio TISSOT de Aragon to beat second place Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) by 5.4s, as Red Bull KTM Ajo claim the 2021 Team title. Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) produced a fantastic comeback ride to pick up the final podium spot.

Astonishing Raul Fernandez strikes again

The top three on the grid all got away well and polesitter Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) was the last of the late brakers to grab the holeshot, as the British rider led from Gardner and Raul Fernandez. Lowes opened up a 0.6s advantage on the opening lap as Raul Fernandez passed title rival Gardner for second at Turn 12, as Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) grabbed P4 from Hector Garzo (FlexBox HP 40). The fastest lap of the race on Lap 2 for Raul Fernandez saw him cut Lowes’ lead to just 0.2s, with Gardner sitting 0.4s down on his teammate in third.

The battered and bruised Fernandez then decided to take the lead at the beginning of Lap 4, with Gardner exchanging P3 with Ogura just behind. Gardner was having a scrapping opening handful of laps in Aragon, the Aussie was wide at Turn 12 and once again conceded P3 to Ogura. Soon after, Garzo was also ahead of Gardner. It was a fascinating scrap that Gardner found himself in, but in getting caught up with the likes of Ogura and Garza – who crashed at Turn 8 on Lap 5 – the gap to Lowes and Fernandez was up to 1.9s.

With 10 laps down, Raul Fernandez was holding Lowes at bay by just over a second. Gardner was over three seconds down on Lowes and had Jorge Navarro (+EGO Speed Up) and Aron Canet (Kipin Energy Aspar Team) in hot pursuit. On Lap 12, Marco Bezzecchi’s (SKY Racing Team VR46) quiet weekend came to a premature end at Turn 8, the Italian slid out of contention unhurt – his title aspirations now hanging by a thread.

After seeing Raul Fernandez stretch his lead to nearly one and a half seconds, a gift was then handed to both Red Bull KTM Ajo riders. Lowes was in the gravel – uninjured – at Turn 7 with nine laps to go, the British rider’s race was over, as Raul Fernandez now held a 6.3s lead over second place Gardner.

In the end, Raul Fernandez was unstoppable. Fighting the pain, the gap to Gardner in the Championship is down to 39 points, as Fernandez becomes the first Moto2™ rookie to take at least five wins since Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team). Red Bull KTM Ajo are confirmed as the Team Championship winners in 2021, a fully deserved accolade and just to top it off, Fernandez’ win was Ajo’s 100th in Grand Prix racing. Future Red Bull KTM Ajo rider Augusto Fernandez was as low as 15th at one point, but the Spaniard dug deep to claim a fourth podium in five races.

The remaining point scorers

Navarro narrowly missed out on a second consecutive podium, with Canet finished three seconds down the rostrum fight in P5. P6 went the way of Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), as newly crowned Moto2™ European Champion Fermin Aldeguer (+EGO Speed Up) claimed a stunning P7 – watch out for his name in years to come. Ogura slipped back and took P8, with fellow rookie Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP) finishing P9.

The experienced Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) rounded out the top 10, the Italian beat Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Marcos Ramirez (American Racing), Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team), Cameron Beaubier (American Racing) and Celestino Vietti (SKY Racing Team VR46) in the remaining point scoring positions.

Who’d have thought it? Raul Fernandez, riding with a fractured hand, storms to victory. Gardner said his second feels like a victory, and the Aussie holds a 39-point lead heading to Misano.

Top 10:
1. Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo)
2. Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) + 5.408
3. Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) + 6.824
4. Jorge Navarro (+EGO Speed Up) + 7.051
5. Aron Canet (Kipin Energy Aspar Team) + 10.695
6. Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) + 15.160
7. Fermin Aldeguer (+EGO Speed Up) + 16.730
8. Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) + 17.085
9. Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP) + 17.704
10. Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) + 20.121

Every practice session, qualifying battle and race, exclusive interviews, historic races and so much more fantastic content: this is VideoPass!

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Foggia capitalises as Acosta and Garcia both crash

A third win of the season came the Italian’s way in Aragon as we witness Championship drama aplenty; Öncü and Sasaki pick up podiums

Leopard Racing’s Dennis Foggia claimed a third victory of the season in a hugely dramatic Moto3™ encounter at the Gran Premio TISSOT de Aragon. The Italian overtook second place finisher Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3) on the final lap to emerge victorious, as Ayumu Sasaki joined teammate Öncü on the rostrum. The top two in the World Championship, Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Sergio Garcia (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team), both crashed and scored zero points on home turf.

Championship drama aplenty

Polesitter Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) launched away from the line well and grabbed the holeshot into Turn 1, with Garcia making a fast start from P4 to make his way up to second by the time the riders had raced through Sector 1. Garcia then looked to take the lead down into Turn 12, however, the Spaniard got it a bit wrong and ran wide, dropping to P4. Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) took the lead heading down the back straight for the first time and led over the line, with all riders safely negotiating Lap 1.

Acosta was battling away inside the top 10, as he and Rodrigo made contact on Lap 3 at Turn 9. Filip Salač (CarXpert PrüstelGP) crashed out of the top 10 at Turn 12, rider ok, as we witnessed a very frantic opening few laps. Acosta and Garcia were both scrapping inside the top five, but they had plenty of hungry riders for company. Öncü looked comfortable holding the P1 baton, but further back in the lead group, Rodrigo suffered a highside at the final corner. The Argentine was out of the race, thankfully up on his feet, as British GP winner Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) had to take to the gravel to avoid contact.

At half race distance, Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing) took his turn leading, Öncü soon returned to the lead though as we saw an 11-rider lead group form. Garcia vs Acosta was in full flow, the two title rivals were squabbling in P4 and P5, with both Leopard Racing Hondas a constant threat. Izan Guevara (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team), Sasaki, Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) and Binder were locked together, with Öncü still leading with four laps to go.

Then, with four laps to go, huge drama. At Turn 5, Acosta and Artigas were down and out of the race. Acosta dived up the inside of the Leopard rider and tucked the front, causing the Championship leader to hit Artigas’ rear wheel. Now, all eyes were on Garcia. How much damage could the GASGAS star inflict on his rival’s title lead? Garcia was P3 with two laps to go as Foggia passed Öncü at Turn 1, before Garcia climbed to P2 at Turn 8. However, Öncü was straight back up the inside at Turn 12.

Incredible Moto3™ title drama as top two crash out in Aragon

Final lap time, Foggia led Öncü, Garcia and Guevara. Contact at Turn 2 between teammates Garcia and Guevara occurred as the Spaniards connected three times halfway through the lap, as Öncü carved up the inside at Turn 5 to take the lead. Yet more Championship drama was about to unfold though. In an incredibly fierce final lap, Garcia was third but was late on the brakes into Turn 12. It turned out to be too late, as the Spaniard crashed unhurt. This left Öncü leading Foggia for the race win, but on the back straight, Foggia unleashed his Honda power and drafted past the Turkish rider, held it around the final two corners to claim victory. Öncü missed out on a maiden victory by just 0.041s, as Sasaki made it two Tech3 riders on the rostrum with a brilliant P3.

The remaining point scorers

After showing great pace all weekend, Guevara picked up a second consecutive P4 finish as his podium wait continues – but it’s not far away. Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46 Academy) picked up P5 ahead of compatriot Migno and seventh place Binder, as Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) earns P8. Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) was a tenth behind Nepa in P9, Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) had a quiet race and eventually claimed P10 on home soil.

Ryusei Yamanaka (CarXpert PrüstelGP) crossed the line in a relatively lonely P11, Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) picked up P12, John McPhee’s Petronas Sprinta Racing replacement Syaifuddin Azman earned P13 on his World Championship debut, with Fenati salvaging P14 after getting unfortunately caught up in Rodrigo’s crash, Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride) was the final point scorer.

As the dust settles on a scintillating Moto3™ race, Acosta’s lead in the Championship remains unchanged. 46 points are his advantage over Garcia, with Foggia now just 12 adrift of second place with his victory. Next up: Misano. What will we witness at Round 14?

Top 10:
1. Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing)
2. Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3) + 0.041
3. Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3) + 0.644
4. Izan Guevara (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) + 0.708
5. Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46 Academy) + 0.878
6. Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) + 1.180
7. Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) + 2.133
8. Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) + 2.685
9. Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) + 2.786
10. Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) + 4.714

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Polesitter Bagnaia quickest in delayed Warm Up

Foggy Sunday morning conditions at the Gran Premio TISSOT de Aragon caused all the Warm Up sessions to be delayed, but at the end of the 20-minute MotoGP™ stint, polesitter Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) finished top of the pile. The Italian’s 1:48.054 was enough to edge out Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) by 0.030s as the Japanese rider gets set for his 200th GP start, reigning World Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) claimed P3.

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Augusto Fernandez a tenth clear in 10-minute session

In a reduced 10-minute Moto2™ session due to fog causing all the Gran Premio TISSOT de Aragon Warm Up sessions to be delayed, Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) claimed top spot ahead of teammate and polesitter Sam Lowes. The Spaniard’s 1:52.880 was good enough to beat World Championship leader and third place finisher Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) by 0.218s.

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