Tag Archives: Catalunya

MotoGP riders reflect on the ups/downs of Catalan GP

MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven – Catalunya
Rider Quotes


Miguel Oliveira – P1

“This is almost hard to put into words. I had one of the best races of my career so far. Everything was so hard; the tire management and keeping my cool when Fabio was putting pressure on me for so many laps. I really kept cool when he overtook me and took my chance on the straight to get him back. It was a perfect race, and I cannot thank the Red Bull KTM guys enough for giving me a perfect machine to get back here to the top of the podium. I also want to thank the fans. Everything has been amazing, having the public here and getting back to normal.”

Miguel Oliveira ran to the crowd to get a Portuguese flag
Johann Zarco – P2

“I am very happy, it was an incredible race filled with the unexpected and many twists. I tried my best, and second place is a great result. We worked very well and I couldn’t be happier.”

Johann Zarco
Jack Miller – P3

“So, that was a good day for me. Really good. First time on the podium here in Barcelona, I gained a place in the championship to be third now, and I kept my good run going. Definitely no complaints here.

Jack Miller on the grid

“The race went really well for me and I executed the plan to perfection. Well, nearly anyway. I got out front in the beginning and I was trying to manage the pace, but I missed a gear going back into Turn 5 and I lost a couple of positions. From there, the front tyre temperature went through the roof so I spent quite a while trying to avoid being in the slipstream of the guys in front so I didn’t send it over the edge. I tried to get some cold air on the tyre but the temperature just wouldn’t come down, so that got the stress level up a bit. It was playing on my mind, definitely.

Jack Miller

“I hung in there and it looked like fourth was the best I could do, but then I had something go my way when Fabio (Quartararo) went off the track at the first corner and re-joined. I knew he’d have to drop a second for re-joining the track so I just made sure I stayed right behind him on that last lap. We all know the rules with this corner, so I wasn’t really surprised when they pulled me into parc ferme for the podium even though I’d crossed the line fourth.

Oliveira, Quartararo,Miller

“Nobody wants to get a podium this way, you’d prefer to finish inside the top three on the track itself, but the rules are the rules and I knew that if I stayed where I was, I’d be going up to the podium. That wasn’t a surprise – to be honest the really surprising bit was how steep the stairs were getting up there, because I’ve never been up them before!

2021 Catalunya MotoGP podium
1 Miguel Oliveira – Red Bull KTM Factory Racing – KTM – 40:21.749
2 Johann Zarco – Pramac Racing – Ducati – +0.175
3 Jack Miller – Ducato Lenovo Team – Ducati – +1.815

“It was a good way to end a weekend where there was a bit going on. Saturday was a pretty hectic day – I didn’t make it to Q2 directly for the first time all year, got through in Q1, towed Marc Marquez around for a couple of laps, had a big high side in Q2 and made a mess of my leathers, and missed pole by three-hundredths of a second. No dull moments there! I’ve had way less drama to start second on the grid before, that’s for sure.

Marc Marquez tried to get a tow off Miller in qualifying

“Everyone wanted to talk about what happened with Marc – probably because he’d done the same thing to Maverick (Vinales) at the last race in Mugello – and the funny thing was he and I actually joked about it the day before, he knew he was struggling for a pace a bit and probably needed a tow, so I told him he had to pay for one from me! And then it actually happened. We had a good laugh about it. Anyway, the first tow is free but I might send him the bill if it happens again, him or the Honda boys anyway …

“You can get all annoyed about it and whatnot but the most important thing in this situation, something I’ve learned over the years, is that you need to focus on your job, what you’re doing. It’s a mindset. If you go out there thinking about the guy behind you, you’ve already lost. If there’s someone else behind you, so be it. If there’s three of them, whatever.

“After qualifying I was pretty happy I hadn’t hurt myself because usually there’s no small high sides at Turn 3, that’s a fast old corner here. I just got carried away on the throttle … anyway, thankfully it spat me forward rather than up so for a Turn 3 crash I actually felt alright afterwards. Good to be in one piece! Normally the tyre is better on the second flying lap and sure, I was giving it some, but it just let go super quickly. It sent me over the front but I came out of it pretty good, slid on my back and I was alright.

“Anyway, that’s three podiums now in four races, and I feel like I’m in a good groove. It’s the same feeling I had back at the end of last year. I’m in a good rhythm, I feel comfortable on the bike and I’m able to be there or thereabouts on Sundays. It’s only getting better week by week.”

Jack Miller
Joan Mir – P4

“We didn’t make the right decision with the tyres today, I switched to the medium-medium on the grid and then I had to battle against the rear spinning and it was a struggle, especially in the last part of the race. It’s a shame because I felt I had podium pace, but in the end I still achieved 5th place which isn’t bad. I tried my best to manage the situation and stay on the bike. The first four riders in the race had the hard rear tyre and it seems that was the better choice, but we will learn from this mistake – both me as a rider and the team too. Tomorrow we will try a few things and let’s see if there’s something that can help us in the future.”

Joan Mir chasing Jack Miller early on in the race
Maverick Vinales – P5

“I‘m happy. It‘s been a very positive race. For sure, when you start there, from the second row, it‘s difficult. You are fighting with everyone, and I just lost too much time. On the first lap I lost 3-4 seconds, which is what we missed to be at the front. But at the end of the day, I think we were riding fast. In the middle of the race we had a good pace, and I was managing the tyres quite well, but then I arrived behind Mir. I couldn‘t overtake and I was too slow. Anyway, this weekend has been positive. It has given us a lot of motivation and concentration for tomorrow‘s test.”

Maverick Vinales
Fabio Quartararo – P6

“Unfortunately I can‘t explain what happened yet, we are still looking into it. It‘s a bit disappointing but, anyway, we can still be satisfied with our race, because I feel like I gave it 100%. I‘m happy because our pace was fast all weekend. In the race I didn‘t feel that good. We had a moment in Turn 7. I went wide, then retook the lead, and then had an issue. But getting fourth on a bad day is actually quite good.” (subsequently demoted further to sixth for chest protector/leathers infringement).

Quartararo
Francesco Bagnaia – P7

“Unfortunately, my race today was affected by our tyre choice. We wanted to try the medium, but unfortunately, it did not turn out to be the best solution. I tried to manage the consumption until the end, but I never felt completely comfortable. It was a difficult weekend, and we finished seventh. Now we have to stay focused and try to get back to fighting for the top positions starting from the next race. Tomorrow we will already get back to work during the day of testing that we have here at Montmeló”.

Francesco Bagnaia battling with Rossi and Lecuona
Brad Binder – P8

“It was a really tough race. I didn’t get the best of starts because someone hit me in Turn 2 and I lost a few positions. I tried to fight my way through but I was really struggling to get out of the corners. I was catching the group in front of me but then with three laps to go my rear tire was finished and it was like my speed fell off a cliff: it was impossible to keep going forward. I would have liked to have done a lot better than eighth place because I felt we had the potential, but I struggled with that rear traction today.”

Brad Binder
Franco Morbidelli – P9

“I was hoping for more but in the race I realised that I wasn’t able to truly show my speed, and several riders overtook me in the early stages. After that I was able to settle into a good rhythm and I felt okay with the bike until the end. It’s a top-ten though so it isn’t too bad; I’m satisfied with that. Tomorrow we have the test here and we’re just planning to get on track with some new tyres, maybe look at small things with the brakes. I hope that at Sachsenring it will be better for us.”

Franco Morbidelli
Enea Bastianini – P10

“It was a good race and I enjoyed it. I tried to cut as much time as possible to the riders in front and I’m happy with the position, but a little bit less so because of the gap to the first. I suffered a lot under braking and today I didn’t feel 100%. Fortunately, tomorrow we have a test here where we can work and prepare for the next race and maybe get the confidence I lost with the crash on Saturday.”

Álex Márquez – P11

“P11, we got some points and finished the race which is always important. I’m not really happy because our pace was not bad, but for the last 10 laps I didn’t feel good enough with the bike. Anyway, I gave 100% to finish as best as possible for me and obviously for the team. Now, we need to look forward and keep going and be positive for the test tomorrow. Hopefully, We can solve some problems and be faster.” 

Álex Márquez
Luca Marini – P12

“It was a good weekend and the race went more or less as expected. I rode well, I managed the tires well, both front and rear. It’s a pity I made a mistake in the first corner, I was following Marquez and Rossi and I was fighting with them. The tire overheated and the pressure also increased. I lost a couple of seconds there, then I recovered and I was also lucky because a lot of people made mistakes. The track was slippery and I am happy to bring home 12th place. I picked up a lot of information and four points. Tomorrow we have a test day and I’m expecting a lot because we are not far away from being with the front guys, just a few more tenths and we can find them.”

Takaaki Nakagami – P13

“At the beginning of the race, I’m not sure which lap, I couldn’t stop at turn one and I went straight on. I lost my position and some time and then after two laps I got a long-lap penalty. Afterwards, unfortunately, I got a second long lap penalty because I touched the green limit line for a few centimetres.  Anyway, apart from that, our pace was not so bad until the middle of the race and, as you saw, there were many crashes but we finished the race and we collected some points. So, we’ll take the positives. We need to improve our bike package to use its full potential and for this, tomorrow will be a very important test.”

Takaaki Nakagami
Jorge Martín – P14

“It was tough. My wrist was hurting, and I wasn’t sure I would be able to make it, but I am happy that I finished. Slowly I will be back in form and will be competitive. My objective now is to get back into shape.”

Lorenzo Savadori – P15

“Unfortunately, we were unable to figure out the tyre and setup situation this weekend, so we were a bit unprepared for the race. At the beginning I managed to stay with the group, but from the seventeenth lap on, the drop in performance was clear and I was just trying not to make any mistakes in the finale. It’s all part of the experience. We’ll just have to do better in the upcoming races.”

Lorenzo Savadori
Iker Lecuona – DNF

“I think the end of the weekend didn’t reflect our potential. Before the crash, I had a very good race. I kept the gap to [Franco] Morbidelli and I tried not to lose too much time to the front guys. I felt quite good but I made a mistake in turn 13 and lost the front. We have been working very hard so I need to say thanks to my crew and also the guys from Danilo’s side, who helped to fix my both bikes from yesterday. Thanks to the team and sorry for the crash. For sure, we learned a lot, we are very competitive and on the way to the top. Tomorrow in the test, we will continue to work in order to improve.”

Iker Lecuona
Danilo Petrucci – DNF

“We knew this could be a difficult racebut mainly for the straight, which is the trickiest part for us. The first laps, I was not holding the slipstream of the others there, so I really struggled to stay in contact. On the rest of the track, I felt quite ok. I overtook Valentino [Rossi] in turn four and tried to catch Marc, but I lost the front without any warning and crashed. I didn’t expect this at all. I’m disappointed and very sorry for the team.”

Aleix Espargaro – DNF

“I think the soft rear tyre was the right choice for today, partly because, with the medium in warmup, I didn’t feel at all good. In the race I was able to be competitive. I lost a bit of time with Marc and when Maverick overtook me, but other than that things were going as expected. Unfortunately, on this track, with poor grip, it is hard to exploit the Aprilia’s speed on the turns, whereas the bikes that accelerate well on the straights have it easier. Pushing hard on the braking sections to make up lost ground, the front tyre temperature rose a bit and when I stressed it on turn 10 I crashed. I’m disappointed with the end result and I apologise to my crew for that, but I’m not disappointed with the overall performance. On this track where we struggle, it was still an encouraging weekend.”

Aleix Espargaro
Marc Marquez – DNF 

“My intention today was to start well and push because I thought maybe the others would try to manage their tyres. I gave everything in the beginning because if I didn’t do this, I wouldn’t have slept well today. Ok, I crashed but I showed to myself that I can do it, so this was one positive. Instead of finishing in 12th or 13th place, today was the day to take some risks. Tomorrow we have a test, it’s an important day – more important than today. We keep working and never give up.”

Marc Marquez
Pol Espargaro – DNF 

“We are having a tough time, we crashed in the race. We chose the hard tyre which was the best tyre given the conditions that we saw today but we are struggling with grip and we are losing time from this. It was a frustrating race, but we need to keep positive and keep working. We need to turn the situation around, there’s still over half the championship to go. Tomorrow there’s a test and we are looking for big solutions.”

Pol Espargaro
Valentino Rossi – DNF

“We expected a lot more from the race today, because I had a good pace yesterday morning. I tried the hard tyre in FP4 and I felt good, I was fast after a few laps on them, so we decided to use the hard rear in the race. Unfortunately, from the first lap, I didn’t have the grip I expected on the rear and I lost time each time. In the end I had some vibration and crashed in Turn 10. It’s a great shame and something we need to understand. Tomorrow we have a test here, I think we will try the medium tyre, to understand the feeling it gives, and there might be some other things we test as well.”

Valentino Rossi

Team Managers

Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Race Manager

“The emotions are very high! Today shows that the KTM MotoGP project is heading in a great direction. Miguel rode an outstanding race. What a performance. There was not a single mistake through the whole distance and at a difficult track. Brad also had a great race even if he is not too happy but these types of races make riders strong. The Moto2 project is also going really well and it’s so nice to watch. I have to say a big thank you to all the KTM people both at the track and at home in Mattighofen. We have to keep pushing because we can see the progress we make. The race team have been fantastic. The start of the season was not so easy for us but nobody lost belief. We have all kept strong and this is also an achievement.”

Oliveira and KTM celebrate victory
Pit Beirer – KTM Motorsports Director

“This is why we go racing. The level of competition on the track and in the pitboxes in MotoGP is so high and to have days like today give enormous pride to the company and everyone wearing an orange shirt. We kept believing, kept working and kept pushing. We have such a strong team of guys and experts and that’s what you need to succeed. This is the perfect motivation for us for really open the gas fully for the rest of the season.”

Oliveira and KTM celebrate victory
Massimo Meregalli – Yamaha Team Director

“It’s a bit of a disappointing end to an otherwise good race weekend. We knew the final laps of the race would be decisive but, even though Fabio tried to manage the tyres as good as possible, we lost some performance on the left side. We don’t know what happened yet with Fabio, but regardless of what caused the situation, he showed what a fighter he is by hanging on to third place. The 3-second penalty moved him back to fourth, but that’s still a good result when an issue beyond our control happens (these comments made before another three-second penalty was added for the chest protector/leathers issue).”

Razlan Razali – Petronas SRT Team Principal

“It was another strange weekend for both of our MotoGP riders, and the pace was not what we expected it to be for either Franco or Valentino. To make matters worse, Valentino unfortunately crashed. Ninth for Franco was not what we hoped for, but we will work hard to improve this for the GermanGP.”

Shinichi Sahara – Suzuki Project Leader and Team Director

“In spite of only getting 10th on the grid yesterday, as usual Joan made a good start and recovered positions very quickly to get up to the front. Due to the tyre choice and maybe a few other factors, Joan couldn’t keep hold of a podium position, but 5th is still a nice result and it’s very important for the championship, so we’re feeling pleased. There are still a lot of races left this season, it’s a very long championship, so we will work to improve and continue getting strong results. I’ve realised this weekend how important it is to have two riders in the box, for comparisons and for judging the situation, but hopefully Alex will come back for the next race. Anyway, overall, this Top 5 result from Joan has been important for us.”

Ken Kawauchi – Suzuki Technical Manager

“Today we couldn’t replicate last year’s race where we managed a double podium, but last year we had the advantage of better tyre longevity. This time around we couldn’t manage the same durability of the tyres, and this is a pity and a shame for Joan. However, Joan did a very good job to hold onto a Top 5 finish in this difficult race. We will continue pushing and developing, we also have a test here tomorrow which could be useful. So now we’ll be turning our focus towards the next races and trying to build on our championship points. Hopefully at the next round in Sachsenring Alex will be able to rejoin the team and begin riding again.”

Hervé Poncharal – Tech3 KTM Team Manager

 “This is a very disappointing result for the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing team. We were having a relatively good feeling before the start of the race, but unfortunately, Danilo left the race early crashing out. The good news is, that he is absolutely fine. Therefore, the whole interest of the team was focused on Iker, who did a brilliant race until he also crashed. I think he was keeping Morbidelli at bae, who wasn’t getting any ground on him. We were just counting down the laps and praying that he was going to bring the bike home in ninth position, which would have been a great result for us and of course for KTM.”

“Unfortunately, he crashed also, which is a big shame. This is not the way to go. We can see that Miguel and Brad are definitely turning their fortune in a much better way than the start of the championship. We were there, we were close. A top 9 would have been a great reward for the end of the weekend, but nobody finished the race, which is a shame. I can’t say I’m happy, but unfortunately, this is part of racing.”

“Before finishing, I would like to pass my warmest congratulations to KTM, to the whole group working so hard and of course to Miguel, who did a brilliant race and demonstration of his talent. I think Brad did also a great race. It’s good to see KTM where they are and we would like and we should be also close to them. So, we are not doing what we should do and sometimes it’s important to see the glass half full and not always half empty.”

“Hopefully, we can turn our luck around for the next round, but for the moment, we are just leaving Catalunya with a sad feeling. The good news is, there is a test tomorrow, where they can find a few interesting things, but the race is gone and we leave with zero points.”


MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven
Catalunya – Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 40m21.749
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati +0.175
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +1.99
4 Joan MIR Suzuki +5.325
5 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha +6.281
6 Fabio QUARTARARO (+6 sec penalty included) Yamaha +7.815
7 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati +8.175
8 Brad BINDER KTM +8.378
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +15.652
10 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +19.297
11 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +21.65
12 Luca MARINI Ducati +22.533
13 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +27.833
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +29.075
15 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia +40.291
Not Classified
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 8 Laps
DNF Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 9 Laps
DNF Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 14 Laps
DNF Marc MARQUEZ Honda 17 Laps
DNF Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 19 Laps
DNF Pol ESPARGARO Honda 20 Laps

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 115
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 101
3 Jack MILLER Ducati 90
4 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 88
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 78
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 75
7 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 54
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
9 Brad BINDER KTM 43
10 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 40
11 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 31
12 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
13 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 26
14 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 25
15 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 19
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Luca MARINI Ducati 13
22 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
23 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 4
24 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

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 Jul-11 Finland, KymiRing (subject to homologation)
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 Sam Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Japan, Motegi
Round 16 Oct-10 Thailand, Chang International Circuit
Round 17 Oct-24 Australia, Phillip Island
Round 18 Oct-31 Malaysia, Sepang
Round 19 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo
Round 20 TBA Argentina, Termas de Rio Hondo
Round 21 TBA Americas, COTA

Source: MCNews.com.au

CatalanGP Race Reports, Results, Points | All Classes

2021 Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya


Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) put in an outstanding performance in the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya to take back to the top step, the Portuguese rider storming Barcelona for back-to-back podium finishes and his first win in Red Bull KTM Factory Racing colours. First he out-duelled Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) to keep the lead before just out-pacing Johann Zarco after a late charge from the Pramac Racing rider. Zarco took second, with Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) completing the podium. The Australian crossed the line fourth, behind Quartararo, but was promoted to third following the first of two penalties for El Diablo on Sunday.

2021 Catalunya MotoGP podium
1 Miguel Oliveira – Red Bull KTM Factory Racing – KTM – 40:21.749
2 Johann Zarco – Pramac Racing – Ducati – +0.175
3 Jack Miller – Ducato Lenovo Team – Ducati – +1.815

Catalan GP Race Report

CatalanGP

Miller was king of the brakes into Turn 1 to take the holeshot off the front row, blocking Quartararo as Oliveira then shuffled the Frenchman down to third too. El Diablo, in a very busy opening handful of laps, looked a bit impatient and a mistake at Turn 7 saw him drop to P5, with Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) making a phenomenal start from 10th to get into the top three in the early stages. Oliveira then took the lead from Miller on Lap 2 and was able to stretch a one-second advantage out, but Quartararo was able to carve his way back up to P2 by Lap 7.

CatalanGP

Oliveira was doing an outstanding job out front, but some low 1:40s saw Quartararo able to reel the KTM back in, with Mir, Miller and Zarco line astern behind the World Championship leader. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) and Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) lurked too, two seconds off the top five in P6 and P7.

On Lap 12, Quartararo made his move for the lead. A good exit from Turn 4 saw the Frenchman able to slice his way up the inside of Oliveira at Turn 5, but the latter returned the favour at the start of Lap 14. The KTM grunt, coupled with a dose of slipstream, saw Oliveira able to stick with the Frenchman and then re-take the lead into Turn 1, with just 1.3 covering the front five: Oliveira, Quartararo, Mir, Miller, and Zarco.

Quartararo chasing Oliveira

By nine to go, Oliveira and Quartararo were edging clear but Zarco and Miller were both past Mir and just 1.2 behind Quartararo, who, in turn, was staying tucked up behind the race-leading KTM. Who had something to spare?

Oliveira, Quartararo,Miller

By five to go, Zarco had closed the gap to the front two to under a second and it was fourth place Miller who was the fastest of the leading quartet. And with four to go, Oliveira was really starting to stretch his legs again, suddenly 0.9 clear of Quartararo as the latter had his closest title rival homing in on him: Zarco.

Quartararo, Zarco, Miller

The Pramac Racing Ducati tagged on and then passed Quartararo on the straight, the Yamaha following that up with a moment at Turn 1. The polesitter was forced to run wide and slotted back on track in P3, and we saw a unique situation unfold – Quartararo’s leathers were undone, his chest protector was thrown clear and Miller was right behind him after his off-track excursion too.

Quartararo

Up ahead, Zarco was just half a second down on Oliveira as the riders headed onto the last lap, and the Frenchman had been 0.4 quicker on the previous lap. Could he do it? The gap was down to under four tenths through the second split but the Ducati man wasn’t close enough into Turn 10, the last real overtaking spot, and in the end he was forced to settle for second. Oliveira held his nerve to claim a phenomenal Catalan GP victory: his first in factory colours, his third in MotoGP and third for KTM, making it back-to-back podiums after his second place at Mugello.

Miguel Oliveira ran to the crowd to get a Portuguese flag

Zarco took the flag just 0.175 behind in a marvellous second place, and Quartararo was handed a three-second penalty for gaining an advantage when going wide at Turn 1. That put Miller on the podium as the Australian had another good weekend, starting to rake in some serious points after a tougher start to the year.

Oliveira celebrates victory

Quartararo was classified fourth in the direct aftermath of the race, but the Frenchman was then handed another three-second sanction for riding with his leathers undone and without the required chest protector. That shuffles him back to sixth in the final results.

Oliveira celebrates victory

Mir faded slighty in the final stages but is ultimately classified fourth for more good points, and from 10th on the grid it was a solid Sunday. The number 36 was able to keep Viñales at bay, and the number 12 is now fifth to end the day just ahead of his teammate Quartararo in the final results. Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) was 1.8 down on Viñales at the chequered flag in a quieter outing for the Italian in P7. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) took P8, just 0.2 behind Pecco after shadowing the Italian for much of the race.

Oliveira celebrates victory

Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) was another rider to have a quiet afternoon, the Italian finishing a lonely P9. 3.6 adrift of Morbidelli in P10 was rookie and reigning Moto2 World Champion Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama), his third top 10 of the season. Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol), Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia), Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu), Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) – who crashed on the sighting lap and was forced to start from the back of the grid upon his return from injury – and Lorenzo Savadori (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) picked up the remaining points on offer in Barcelona.

Oliveira celebrates victory

Both Repsol Honda Team machines suffered DNFs in the early stages, Pol Espargaro and Marc Marquez going down uninjured at Turn 4 and Turn 10 respectively. Aleix Espargaro and Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) were two others who, like Marc Marquez, crashed at Turn 10. Danilo Petrucci and Tech3 KTM Factory Racing teammate Iker Lecuona also crashed out on Sunday afternoon – all riders ok.

Oliveira and KTM celebrate victory

Oliveira and KTM deliver an outstanding Sunday performance to win their first race of 2021, following up from their first podium of the season. The Austrian factory are back in business this season after a tricky opening few rounds, with Ducati also impressing on Sunday once again. And in terms of the World Championship, Zarco has closed the gap to Quartararo after a dramatic day in Barcelona for the latter. Now, it’s just 14 points… and next up it’s the Sachsenring. What awaits in Germany? We’ll find out in two weeks!

2021 Catalunya MotoGP Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 40m21.749
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati +0.175
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +1.99
4 Joan MIR Suzuki +5.325
5 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha +6.281
6 Fabio QUARTARARO (+6sec penalty included) Yamaha +7.815
7 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati +8.175
8 Brad BINDER KTM +8.378
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +15.652
10 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +19.297
11 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +21.65
12 Luca MARINI Ducati +22.533
13 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +27.833
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +29.075
15 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia +40.291
Not Classified
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 8 Laps
DNF Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 9 Laps
DNF Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 14 Laps
DNF Marc MARQUEZ Honda 17 Laps
DNF Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 19 Laps
DNF Pol ESPARGARO Honda 20 Laps

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 115
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 101
3 Jack MILLER Ducati 90
4 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 88
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 78
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 75
7 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 54
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
9 Brad BINDER KTM 43
10 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 40
11 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 31
12 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
13 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 26
14 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 25
15 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 19
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Luca MARINI Ducati 13
22 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
23 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 4
24 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

Moto2

Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) capped off a week of headline-stealing – following a new MotoGP contract for next year – with another win in the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, going back-to-back for the first time in his career. That means, for the first time since Casey Stoner in 2005, an Australian has won two intermediate class races on the spin. Gardner’s rookie team-mate Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took second, with Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) completing the podium, back on the box for the first time since 2018 and on home turf.

Winning on the track, and winning a MotoGP contract for 2022. Things are on the up for Remy

2021 Catalunya Moto2 Race Report

Gardner was able to get the start he would have wanted from pole, the Australian earning the holeshot as team-mate Fernandez held P2 also. Bo Bendsneyder (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) likewise got a great launch and troubled Raul Fernandez at Turn 5, the Dutchman making a clean move stick before the number 25 was able to strike back at Turn 7.

2021 Catalunya Moto2 Race

Gardner was into a rhythm at the front but his team-mate, with a bit of clear track in front, was able to slowly creep his way up to tag onto the back. Bendsneyder and Vierge were able to stay within touching distance of the Red Bull KTM Ajo riders though, with fifth place Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) 2.3 back from the race lead on Lap 10 of 22.

Gardner leading Fernandez

The lead then changed with 11 laps remaining. Raul Fernandez drafted Gardner down the straight, pulled alongside on the brakes and made a clean and concise move stick. Bendsneyder was still a close third, with Vierge and Bezzecchi less than a second down, as Gardner clung onto the coattails of Fernandez.

Fernandez leading Gardner

At the beginning of Lap 20, Gardner pounced. A late lunge at Turn 1 saw the Aussie cut past his team-mate and a 1:44.399 helped him edge out a 0.6 lead. Heading onto the last lap, it was up to 1.1 and that sensational final trio of laps saw Gardner claim a second victory in a row, extending his lead in the title race over his team-mate to 11 points as Raul Fernandez took second. Vierge fended off Bezzecchi to hand Petronas Sprinta Racing their maiden Moto2 rostrum in third.

Bezzecchi threatened to steal the podium in the closing stages but it was P4 for the Italian, with Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) equalling his best result of the season in P5 – an important one for the Spaniard after good speed but bad luck of late.

Remy Gardner takes victory

Bendsneyder faded in the latter stages but picks up a great P6, the Dutch rider 0.3s ahead of seventh place Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) after a solid race for the Brit, who needed a finish. Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) and Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) completed the top 10 in Barcelona.

Jorge Navarro (MB Conveyors Speed Up) missed out on a top 10 by less than a second in P11, with reigning Moto3 World Champion Albert Arenas (Inde Aspar Team) having a good ride to end the day P12 on home soil. Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) and Tom Lüthi (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) were the remaining points scorers.

Remy Gardner

In the beginning I tried to break away but didn’t want to burn up the rear tyre so I was just trying to be smooth. I thought if I could break away like that perfect, but I saw it was half a second the whole time. I didn’t know who was behind but Raul made a push and I thought ‘alright I’ll follow you’. He wasn’t pulling away and I just sat behind managing the tyres. I knew I had a bit more in me, I had half the race to study him and I said to myself, ‘alright two laps to the end I’m going to pass him and just go for it’. I saw the opportunity at Turn 1 and went ‘alright, let’s do it’, put the hammer down and pulled away. Couldn’t be happier, another 25 points.”

2021 Catalunya Moto2 podium
1 Remy Gardner- Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 38:22.284
2 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – +1.872
3 Xavi Vierge – Petronas Sprinta Racing – Kalex – +2.866

2021 Catalunya Moto2 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 38m22.284
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex +1.872
3 Xavi VIERGE Kalex +2.866
4 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex +3.207
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex +3.899
6 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex +4.541
7 Sam LOWES Kalex +4.875
8 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex +15.973
9 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex +17.515
10 Joe ROBERTS Kalex +19.838
11 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro +20.571
12 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro +22.512
13 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex +22.558
14 Celestino VIETTI Kalex +23.238
15 Thomas LUTHI Kalex +23.958
16 Simone CORSI MV Agusta +25.099
17 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex +31.344
18 Jake DIXON Kalex +37.129
19 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex +37.895
20 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS +38.438
21 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro +40.247
22 Barry BALTUS NTS +40.674
23 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta +40.784
24 Stefano MANZI Kalex +48.588
25 Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI Kalex +49.64
26 Keminth KUBO Kalex +49.694
Not Classified
DNF Hector GARZO Kalex 2 Laps
DNF Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 2 Laps
DNF Ai OGURA Kalex 3 Laps
DNF Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 4 Laps
DNF Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 15 Laps
DNF Aron CANET Boscoscuro 16 Laps

Moto2 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 139
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 128
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 101
4 Sam LOWES Kalex 75
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 60
6 Joe ROBERTS Kalex 50
7 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex 49
8 Xavi VIERGE Kalex 42
9 Ai OGURA Kalex 39
10 Aron CANET Boscoscuro 35
11 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 35
12 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex 34
13 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex 30
14 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro 24
15 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex 20
16 Stefano MANZI Kalex 17
17 Celestino VIETTI Kalex 15
18 Jake DIXON Kalex 11
19 Hector GARZO Kalex 11
20 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 11
21 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 10
22 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 9
23 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS 8
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta 7
25 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 5
27 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro 4
28 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 3
29 Thomas LUTHI Kalex 2
30 Barry BALTUS NTS 0
31 Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 0
32 Tommaso MARCON MV Agusta 0
33 Miquel PONS MV Agusta 0
34 Fraser ROGERS NTS 0
35 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro 0
36 Taiga HADA NTS 0
37 Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI Kalex 0
38 Keminth KUBO Kalex 0

Moto3

Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) took his second Grand Prix victory of the season in the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, the Spaniard battling through to come out on top in one of the hardest-fought races of the season. Jeremy Alcoba (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) took second from second on the grid, with Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3) crossing the line fourth but promoted to third – and a first Grand Prix podium – as Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) exceeded track limits on the last lap.

2021 Catalunya Moto3 podium
1 Sergio Garcia – Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team – GASGAS – 38:33.760
2 Jeremy Alcoba – Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3 – Honda – +0.015
3 Deniz Öncü – Red Bull KTM Tech3 – KTM – +0.118

Polesitter Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) took the holeshot ahead of Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3) and Alcoba, and so began the battle. A huge group fought it out for the points from there on out, with the long main straight in Barcelona seeing the slipstream play a key part in the shuffle as riders went four, five and more wide into Turn 1. Garcia, from the back end of the top 20 on the grid, made quick progress to get into the freight train fight.

From then on, the group see-sawed with the slipstream, positions changing nearly every corner. Just before the field raced across the line to start the last lap, Alcoba was leading. But not wanting to get swamped down the straight, the Spaniard sat up and looked behind between Turns 13 and 14, and Masia emerged in the lead for the first time and held the baton all the way to Turn 1. But then Garcia pounced just as rookie teammate Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) tucked the front from P3 and luckily took no one with him.

Some contact was then made between Garcia and Alcoba on the run into the penultimate corner, Garcia held on and held firm though to take the chequered flag in P1 by just hundredths. With it he returns to second in the World Championship standings. Alcoba was the man denied, with Öncü crossing the line fourth but promoted to third for an emotional first podium. Masia ran onto the green asphalt on the exit of Turn 4, and was demoted a place from P3.

Masia therefore takes P4, with Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) cementing a P5, the South African a constant threat at the front throughout. Rodrigo will feel hard done by to finish P6 after looking so strong in the closing stages, with Championship leader Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) coming from P25 on the grid to P7. The rookie sensation took his turn leading before losing out near the end, but his lead is 39 points heading to Round 8. Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3), Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power) and Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) completed a top ten covered by 1.1s.

Behind the front few over the line however, the race was Red Flagged after a crash for Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech 3), collecting Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) and Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing), and Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) also dropped back but stayed in the race. The Leopard riders hitched a ride back to pitlane, with Sasaki taken to local hospital for checks. He suffered a concussion is kept in overnight for observation as a precautionary measure.

Moto3

Fenati, Yuki Kunii (Honda Team Asia), Elia Bartolini (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3), Ryusei Yamanaka (CarXpert PruestelGP) and Daniel Holgado (CIP Green Power) completed the points. John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) crashed out the lead and Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) and Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) went down too, and Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride) before the start.

2021 Catalunya Moto3 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 38m33.760
2 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda +0.015
3 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM +0.118
4 Jaume MASIA KTM +0.079
5 Darryn BINDER Honda +0.204
6 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda +0.317
7 Pedro ACOSTA KTM +0.38
8 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM +0.798
9 Kaito TOBA KTM +0.933
10 Stefano NEPA KTM +0.983
11 Romano FENATI Husqvarna +3.334
12 Yuki KUNII Honda +1 Lap
13 Elia BARTOLINI KTM +1 Lap
14 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM +1 Lap
15 Daniel HOLGADO KTM +1 Lap
16 Lorenzo FELLON Honda +1 Lap
17 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda +1 Lap
18 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda +1 Lap
Not Classified
DNF Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 1 Lap
DNF Ayumu SASAKI KTM 1 Lap
DNF Dennis FOGGIA Honda 1 Lap
DNF Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 1 Lap
DNF Filip SALAC Honda 6 Laps
DNF Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 10 Laps
DNF John MCPHEE Honda 12 Laps
DNF Andrea MIGNO Honda 12 Laps
DNF Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 12 Laps
Not Starting
DNS Riccardo ROSSI KTM 0 Lap

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 120
2 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 81
3 Jaume MASIA KTM 72
4 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 61
5 Darryn BINDER Honda 58
6 Ayumu SASAKI KTM 57
7 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM 55
8 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 51
9 Andrea MIGNO Honda 47
10 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 45
11 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 39
12 Filip SALAC Honda 35
13 Kaito TOBA KTM 29
14 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM 27
15 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM 27
16 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 26
17 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM 24
18 John MCPHEE Honda 22
19 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 18
20 Riccardo ROSSI KTM 16
21 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 16
22 Carlos TATAY KTM 14
23 Stefano NEPA KTM 14
24 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 10
25 Yuki KUNII Honda 7
26 Daniel HOLGADO KTM 3
27 Maximilian KOFLER KTM 3
28 Elia BARTOLINI KTM 2
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda 1
30 Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0
31 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda 0

MotoE

Rookie Miquel Pons (LCR E-Team) produced a fantastic FIM Enel MotoE World Cup performance at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya to win his first race in the Cup by an impressive 0.531 after fighting at the front from the off. Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP) claims P2 to get within one point of Cup standings leader Alessandro Zaccone (Octo Pramac MotoE), with reigning World Cup winner Jordi Torres (Pons Racing 40) occupying the final step on the rostrum.

There was drama before the six-lap race got underway as polesitter Eric Granado (One Energy Racing) encountered an issue just before lights out. That caused the start to be delayed as he was wheeled off the grid, heartbreakingly forced to start from pitlane.

After the brief stoppage, the lights went out and we were GO in Barcelona. Aegerter grabbed the holeshot as a fierce MotoE scrap started from the off, with Pons lunging up the inside at Turn 10 to slot into second. It was then slipstream city down the long home straight as the lead changed down into Turn 1 aplenty: Zaccone led, then Aegerter returned to the front, before Pons eventually took the lead into the first left-hander on the penultimate lap.

Looking strong, the LCR E-Team rider was able to edge out a 0.3 lead – not a lot, but enough – heading onto the last lap, and importantly held off Aegerter in the slipstream too. The top eight were covered by just 1.8 but Pons remained ahead as attentions turned to the last real overtaking spot: Turn 10.

However, after a crash for Mattia Casadei’s (Ongetta SIC58 Squadracorse) there on the penultimate lap, the yellow flags were waving at Turn 10. That meant no overtaking, which scampered Torres’ chances of a move up the inside of Aegerter on the last lap. And just ahead of that, Pons made no mistake in the final sector and crossed the line to take a maiden MotoE victory, Aegerter and Torres picking up their second podiums of the year in that order.

World Cup points leader Zaccone took the chequered flag in P4 to keep his advantage over Aegerter intact, but it’s just a point splitting them in the overall standings. Yonny Hernandez (Octo Pramac MotoE) ended the six-lap dash in P5, and that’s the Colombian’s best result of the season so far.

16-year-old Fermin Aldeguer (Openbank Aspar Team) took 6th just 1.7 off the win, and the Spaniard was promoted one place after Matteo Ferrari (Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE) exceeded track limits on the last lap. Lukas Tulovic (Tech3 E-Racing), Hikari Okubo (Avant Ajo MotoE) and Corentin Perolari (Tech3 E-Racing) completed the top 10 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.

So what of Granado? After starting from pitlane and having lapped a second a lap quicker than the leaders when fighting his way back through, the Brazilian then crashed out of the points at Turn 4, rider ok. Xavi Cardelus (Avintia Esponsorama Racing) and Jasper Iwema (Pons Racing 40) also crashed out unhurt.

Pons is up to fourth in the overall classification, 18 points behind Zaccone, with Torres 11 off the leader and Aegerter that single point off the top. MotoE returns in a few weeks at the TT Circuit Assen.

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Miquel PONS Energica 11’15.075
2 Dominique AEGERTER Energica 0.531
3 Jordi TORRES Energica 0.577
4 Alessandro ZACCONE Energica 1.121
5 Yonny HERNANDEZ Energica 1.151
6 Fermín ALDEGUER Energica 1.79
7 Matteo FERRARI Energica 1.764
8 Lukas TULOVIC Energica 2.352
9 Hikari OKUBO Energica 3.214
10 Corentin PEROLARI Energica 5.16
11 Maria HERRERA Energica 5.394
12 Kevin ZANNONI Energica 12.15
13 Andre PIRES Energica 24.162
14 Andrea MANTOVANI Energica +1’39.276
Not Classified
DNF Eric GRANADO Energica 1 Lap
DNF Mattia CASADEI Energica 2 Laps
DNF Jasper IWEMA Energica 5 Laps
Not Finished 1st Lap
DNS Xavi CARDELUS Energica 0 Lap

MotoE Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Alessandro ZACCONE Energica 54
2 Dominique AEGERTER Energica 53
3 Jordi TORRES Energica 43
4 Miquel PONS Energica 36
5 Mattia CASADEI Energica 33
6 Eric GRANADO Energica 28
7 Yonny HERNANDEZ Energica 27
8 Matteo FERRARI Energica 27
9 Maria HERRERA Energica 18
10 Lukas TULOVIC Energica 17
11 Hikari OKUBO Energica 16
12 Corentin PEROLARI Energica 13
13 Fermín ALDEGUER Energica 11
14 Kevin ZANNONI Energica 11
15 Andre PIRES Energica 11
16 Andrea MANTOVANI Energica 10
17 Jasper IWEMA Energica 7
18 Xavi CARDELUS Energica 3

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 Jul-11 Finland, KymiRing (subject to homologation)
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 Sam Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Japan, Motegi
Round 16 Oct-10 Thailand, Chang International Circuit
Round 17 Oct-24 Australia, Phillip Island
Round 18 Oct-31 Malaysia, Sepang
Round 19 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo
Round 20 TBA Argentina, Termas de Rio Hondo
Round 21 TBA Americas, COTA

Source: MCNews.com.au

Quartararo penalty doubled for chest protector/leathers infringement

2021 Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya


We received a further bulletin overnight from the FIM MotoGP Stewards titled ‘Notification of Sanction: Quartararo’.

Quartararo had been given a three-second penalty in the closing seconds of the MotoGP race for cutting the track at turn one, after running in too deep at the end of the straight.

What had really been surprising though is that Quartararo had not been black-flagged earlier. The #20 ran most of the latter half of the race with his leathers full unzipped. The Frenchman had discarded his mandatory chest protector also, as it was moving around and causing him problem when his leathers unzipped.

Quartararo

On the cool down lap, whilst not in the heat of battle, Quartararo managed to zip his leathers up, which suggests that the zip was somewhat still functional.

It was somewhat obvious that further discussions would happen post-race to cover this issue, which, in my experience of domestic racing, would have seen a rider black flagged, or alternatively ordered to pit and correct the issue.

Overnight the FIM MotoGP Stewards panel issued a further three-second penalty to be added to the previous three-second penalty.


FIM Sanction

Quartararo had originally crossed the line in third, but was demoted to fourth by that intitial penalty for cutting the track, which promoted Miller into that third position.  The subsequent saction demotes Quartararo further to sixth place, and thus promotes Joan Mir into fourth, and Maverick Vinales into fifth.

Quartararo remains the championship leader but his advantage over second-placed Zarco has now been trimmed to 14-points.

These comments made by Monster Yamaha Team Director and Fabio Quartararo himself were after they knew of the initial three-second penalty, but were as yet unaware of the second saction that demoted Quartararo further to sixth.

Massimo Meregalli – Yamaha Team Director

It’s a bit of a disappointing end to an otherwise good race weekend. We knew the final laps of the race would be decisive but, even though Fabio tried to manage the tyres as good as possible, we lost some performance on the left side. We don’t know what happened yet with Fabio, but regardless of what caused the situation, he showed what a fighter he is by hanging on to third place. The 3-second penalty moved him back to fourth, but that’s still a good result when an issue beyond our control happens (these comments made before another three-second penalty was added for the leathers issue).”

Fabio Quartararo

Unfortunately I can‘t explain what happened yet, we are still looking into it. It‘s a bit disappointing but, anyway, we can still be satisfied with our race, because I feel like I gave it 100%. I‘m happy because our pace was fast all weekend. In the race I didn‘t feel that good. We had a moment in Turn 7. I went wide, then retook the lead, and then had an issue. But getting fourth on a bad day is actually quite good.” (subsequently demoted further to sixth for leathers infringement).

We will update this further with any later statements that reflect on the second penalty.


MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven
Catalunya – Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 40m21.749
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati +0.175
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +1.99
4 Joan MIR Suzuki +5.325
5 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha +6.281
6 Fabio QUARTARARO (+6 sec penalty included) Yamaha +7.815
7 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati +8.175
8 Brad BINDER KTM +8.378
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +15.652
10 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +19.297
11 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +21.65
12 Luca MARINI Ducati +22.533
13 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +27.833
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +29.075
15 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia +40.291
Not Classified
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 8 Laps
DNF Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 9 Laps
DNF Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 14 Laps
DNF Marc MARQUEZ Honda 17 Laps
DNF Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 19 Laps
DNF Pol ESPARGARO Honda 20 Laps

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 115
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 101
3 Jack MILLER Ducati 90
4 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 88
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 78
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 75
7 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 54
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
9 Brad BINDER KTM 43
10 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 40
11 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 31
12 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
13 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 26
14 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 25
15 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 19
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Luca MARINI Ducati 13
22 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
23 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 4
24 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

Source: MCNews.com.au

Quotes, Notes & Times from Catalan GP Qualifying

MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven
Catalunya – Qualifying


Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was most definitely the favourite for pole at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, but the Frenchman was ultimately run close for the honour as Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team), despite a crash in Q2 and a trip through Q1, managed to end the session just 0.037 behind the big smiling Frenchman. Thus, it’s a fifth pole in a row for El Diablo – the first time anyone has managed that since Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) in 2014, and the first time a Yamaha rider has done it since Jorge Lorenzo in 2010. It’s a French front row party once again in Catalunya in third too, with Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing).

2021 Catalunya MotoGP front row
1 Fabio Quartararo – Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP – Yamaha – 1:38.853
2 Jack Miller – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +0.037
3 Johann Zarco – Pramac Racing – Ducati – +0.196

MotoGP Qualifying Quotes

Fabio Quartararo – P1

“Qualifying was great! I did a great first run, but actually my best lap wasn‘t that perfect. I thought that I could improve a little bit more. On my second run, I had prepared the rear tyre really well, but then I was riding under yellow flags in sector 3. Still, the most important thing is that we are on the front row in P1. I‘m so happy to see the fans back at the circuit. I think that‘s giving everyone a boost. Thanks to the team, and thanks to everyone, and let‘s enjoy the race tomorrow.”

Fabio Quartararo
Jack Miller – P2

“This afternoon in qualifying, I felt comfortable on the bike, and maybe I got a bit carried away in the second flying lap, making a mistake in the first sector. Luckily, the bike threw me forward and not up, so I didn’t get hurt. During the day, we managed to find something that allowed us to take a step forward, helping me to move from Q1 to Q2. In FP4, I did 17 consecutive laps on the same tyre and stayed within 1:40, so I think our pace for the race is good. Of course, 24 laps is a lot, but I think we can manage them well, so I’m confident for tomorrow.”

Jack Miller
Johann Zarco – P3

“To start from the first row will be crucial tomorrow; Jack and I will have to try to not let Fabio run away because his race-pace is remarkable. I have a good feeling and I am confident; however, I need to go a slight step further.”

Johann Zarco
Miguel Oliveira – P4

“A positive day. it’s the best qualification of the season so far. We had a strong FP3 but the conditions were a bit more difficult in the afternoon. I still made the lap-time and then I was a bit unfortunate to find those yellow flags in Turn 10 in Q2. We’re opening the second row of the grid tomorrow and I hope for a good start and to finish the race strong this weekend.”

Franco Morbidelli – P5

“It was a good qualifying for us and I felt like we did three really good laps, which resulted in P5. I think maybe my lap that got cancelled because of the yellow flag in the second run could have been a bit better, but our performance has been good and I’m happy about that. Now we have to make the right tyre choice for tomorrow’s race. It’s going to be important to get a good start, stay within the group and look after the tyres. I’m feeling prepared to fight in the race, and to give my maximum. The last races haven’t been as good as we wanted, so it’s going to be important to get the best result possible tomorrow.”

Franco Morbidelli
Maverick Vinales – P6

“I am very happy about the work done today. I think we made a big improvement in FP3. In FP4 we tried many different things. From the Friday to the Saturday, we made a big leap forward and we want to try to make another one tomorrow. I feel good. We are feeling optimistic about getting on the podium. We will see. So far everything is working well, and we are not under pressure. We know that improving our level takes time, and we are working on it.”

Maverick Vinales
Aleix Espargaro – P7

“To be honest, I must say that, after Qatar, this is the track where I am least able to exploit the strong points of the new RS-GP. So, it may seem strange, but I am satisfied, because in spite of this, I was able to be competitive both in terms of pace and on the flying lap in qualifying. If I had been able to finish the last lap, I may have been able to start from even farther forward, but I risked a high side on the same turn where Jack crashed. Tyre choice will clearly be fundamental here. I still need to meet with the engineers, but we’ll analyse the situation extremely carefully.”

Brad Binder – P8

“We didn’t have any rear grip in FP4 so we need to figure out why that happened but in qualifying things were not too bad. I didn’t have the best first run, the second was better and then I lost my best lap because of the yellow flags in the left hander before the back straight so I had to roll-out. I had one more ‘go’ but couldn’t make it perfectly. 8th position will have to do for now but I think we could have been better today.”

Brad Binder
Francesco Bagnaia – P9

“After a positive start to the day, I didn’t like myself much this afternoon. Both in FP4 and qualifying, the wind bothered me a bit. Anyway, this morning our pace was good, so I am confident about the race. The goal for tomorrow will be to get a good start and make up some positions immediately. It is going to be a long race, and we will have to manage the tyres well to be competitive, especially in the final laps”.

Francesco Bagnaia
Joan Mir – P10

“Today was pretty good, I’m slightly disappointed with my qualifying as always – this is an area where we still have to improve. Sometimes we have some problems which prevents me from showing my potential and I get frustrated, but today I felt good with the bike, we found some useful things, and I think tomorrow I can have a good race and I’m happy to be riding in front of the fans again. Tyre management will be very important here, so that will be one of our main focuses.”

Joan Mir
Valentino Rossi – P11

“For me, today was a lot better. We modified the settings of the bike and I think that it is a lot more comfortable now. This morning I was able to stay inside the top-ten and my pace was good in FP4 as well, I was able to finish it in P7. That was a good practice session. Unfortunately I made a mistake in Q2 and I crashed, so this meant that we had to change bikes and tomorrow I will start 11th. I’m not feeling too bad though as my pace is quite positive, so now in the race we will need to make sure everything is good from the beginning. I’ve enjoyed today, I’ve been able to ride in a good way and the result was not so bad.”

Valentino Rossi
Pol Espargaro – P12

“Q1 today was good, we advanced into Q2. In Q2 I was pushing really hard and on the limit, probably over it. The time was good, it looked like a 1’39.1 like I did in Q1 which could have seen us in the first two rows. I had some locking when the asphalt changed at Turn 10 and I crashed, a real pity. Most of the track was done and we did it well, but if you don’t finish it doesn’t matter what you do. It is what it is. I think the race will again be difficult, but we keep on working and seeing what’s possible. The change of time to before the Moto2 race will change the situation a bit.”

Pol Espargaro
Marc Marquez – P13

“Starting 13th is not really any different to starting in 11th or 12th, so I am not too upset about missing Q2. I was joking with Miller yesterday in the Clinca about a tow and today he was the fastest in the session, so it was the time to go for it. We’ll decide the price later! Tomorrow we need to make a good start and see what’s possible from the race, times are very close so we will see. We keep on working in our own way to improve our situation.”

Marc Marquez
Takaaki Nakagami – P14

“It has been a difficult qualifying session. During the FP4 session we tried the hard compound tyres for the first time, and still we are not 100% decided about our race tyre. The hard looks ok, but we are still lacking some side grip and depending on the conditions tomorrow we have to choose between that and the medium tyre. Both options are quite good for us. The lap times in qualifying were really tight, and I thought I could get through to Q2, but in the end Jack Miller led two other riders through to improve on my lap time and I ended up in P14 for tomorrow’s race. It’s really tough but we have a good pace. In tomorrow’s race tyre life is particularly important, which is one of our strong points. We just need to try to be consistent and not give up until the end, I’m hopeful of a good race tomorrow.”

Jorge Martín – P15

“I am satisfied. As I have already stated, this is almost like a test to me. My objective is to be able to finish the race and return to my form as soon as possible. I still need some time to be competitive. Regardless, my race pace is good, and I am happy with how it is going.”

Iker Lecuona – P16

“Overall, I’m happy because I could improve my pace and my fastest lap. I feel really strong with the bike but I had two pretty heavy crashes. I didn’t find out where the limit is with the hard front tyre, so I didn’t have any warning before my crashes. At the same time, I was always pushing. I’m sorry to the team because I know they need to work very hard now to repair both bikes but I also have to say thank you for the great job. I know now it’s possible to fight in the top group.”

Enea Bastianini – P17

“It was a difficult day. We started well this morning, but then I had a crash that made me lose a bit of confidence. In the afternoon I was able to get it back step by step, but my time wasn’t enough to finish in the top two. Anyway, I’m quite satisfied with the work we’ve done and tomorrow we have to try to take another step forward, to continue to get the confidence we’ve lost and it will be important to make a good start.”

Danilo Petrucci – P18

“As quite often this year, we have been struggling with the new tyre and couldn’t make the best use of it for one single fast lap and just couldn’t make the difference. Our pace is pretty good but Qualifying was again very difficult for us. Tomorrow, we will try our best to make up for it in the race.”

Luca Marini – P19

“With the grid position aside, I have to say that I am happy to have done two races in two consecutive weekends. This has helped me to push the bike to the limit, to be able to work well with the tires and to have fun on the track. Today’s times are not the best, but it’s what I can do at the moment. I rode well, I didn’t make any mistakes, but I had no grip on the rear, especially on the right side, something that never happened to me in the previous sessions. Overall, I can say that I am satisfied with the level of riding we are achieving and with the work we are doing with the whole team.”

Álex Márquez – P20

“It’s honestly been a difficult day. After yesterday we expected to have fewer problems and to be up there, but again today we began to have the same issues with the rear grip. This made it tough in terms of race pace but also in terms of the one-lap pace.  I want to say sorry to the team because I made a mistake in turn one and I lost a couple of tenths there, but it didn’t change our story too much. We need to build up more confidence for tomorrow with the rear grip and try to be there, it’s going to be difficult to fight against that. We will try to give our 110% again, make the best race we can and then take as much information as possible for Monday’s test. I promise to give everything I have for the LCR Honda Castrol Team and all our sponsors and supporters.”

Álex Márquez
Lorenzo Savadori – P21

“We tried some different solutions today, but without finding any great improvements. In qualifying, I lost a lot of time on the last sector. I could have done a bit better, but we are still close. For the race tomorrow, choosing the right tyre will be extremely important, and then managing it well with the electronics strategies. That is the factor that can really make the difference here.”


MotoGP Q1

Q1 saw the fireworks begin early as Miller found himself looking to move through, and with Marc Marquez for company rolling down pitlane the Aussie was this time asked for a tow, rather than his more usual taxi service. The response? Get on with the job, but not before rubbing his fingers together at the number 93 in a perfectly-timed “it’ll cost ya” gesture on the way out of the pits.

Marc Marquez tried to get a tow off Miller

In the end it didn’t, with Miller going quickest and Marquez briefly second as he followed the Ducati round, but the next man in the train, Marquez’ teammate Pol Espargaro, then crossed the line… and knocked him out by just 0.011. Marquez was left in Q1, and it was Miller and the number 44 Honda heading through.

MotoGP Q2

Quartararo didn’t take long to find his way to the top of the timesheets in Q2, his 1:39.351 the first benchmark for everyone to try and beat. Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) did on his second flying lap but Quartararo firmly laid down the gauntlet on his next flyer – a 1:38.853, the best of the weekend. The Frenchman’s advantage was 0.421 after the first set of runs, with Morbidelli and Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) on the provisional front row.

This was far from a done deal for El Diablo though. His competitors were finding speed on their second runs as Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), teammate Miguel Oliveira, Zarco and Miller all took turns on the provisional front row, Miller especially a threat going just 0.037s off.

The Australian then slammed in a red sector in the first part of his next lap, but that was all she wrote as he then highsided out at Turn 3, rider ok. That meant yellow flags ended Quartararo’s final push, too, although a few remained on a charge further round the lap.

Zarco, forcing his way past Binder at the updated Turn 10, was one of them and he shot to P3 on his final flying lap, shoving Oliveira off the front row by just 0.050.

The Grid

Quartararo, Miller and Zarco therefore have the clearest view to Turn 1, with Oliveira heading the second row from Morbidelli by another tiny margin of just 0.010. Viñales completes Row 2.

Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) starts seventh at his home race, with Binder for company in P8 and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) in ninth by just 0.016.

Reigning Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar), meanwhile, starts tenth. But the 2020 Catalan GP podium finisher has made quick progress in the past and has more podiums from off the front two rows than on them. So will that stat continue at Catalunya?

Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) starts P11 after a Q2 crash, and Pol Espargaro P12 after the same, riders ok.

MotoGP Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Q Time/Gap
1 Fabio QUARTARARO YAMAHA Q2 1m38.853
2 Jack MILLER DUCATI Q2 +0.037
3 Johann ZARCO DUCATI Q2 +0.196
4 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM Q2 +0.246
5 Franco MORBIDELLI YAMAHA Q2 +0.256
6 Maverick VIÑALES YAMAHA Q2 +0.304
7 Aleix ESPARGARO APRILIA Q2 +0.365
8 Brad BINDER KTM Q2 +0.490
9 Francesco BAGNAIA DUCATI Q2 +0.506
10 Joan MIR SUZUKI Q2 +0.578
11 Valentino ROSSI YAMAHA Q2 +0.752
12 Pol ESPARGARO HONDA Q2 +2.938
13 Marc MARQUEZ HONDA Q1 (*)0.028
14 Takaaki NAKAGAMI HONDA Q1 (*)0.194
15 Jorge MARTIN DUCATI Q1 (*)0.379
16 Iker LECUONA KTM Q1 (*)0.414
17 Enea BASTIANINI DUCATI Q1 (*)0.437
18 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM Q1 (*)0.591
19 Luca MARINI DUCATI Q1 (*)0.789
20 Alex MARQUEZ HONDA Q1 (*)0.856
21 Lorenzo SAVADORI APRILIA Q1 (*)1.005

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 105
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 81
3 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 79
4 Jack MILLER Ducati 74
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 65
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 64
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
8 Brad BINDER KTM 35
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 33
10 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 29
11 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
12 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 28
13 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
14 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 20
16 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 20
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
22 Luca MARINI Ducati 9
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
24 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

Moto2

Another day, another Red Bull KTM Ajo 1-2! World Championship leader Remy Gardner secured his second pole position of the season at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, the Australian’s 1:42.977 enough to fend off teammate Raul Fernandez by 0.158. Bo Bendsneyder (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) bags his second front row of the year in third, the Dutchman impressing once again.

2021 Catalunya Moto2 front row:
1 Remy Gardner – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 1:42.977
2 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – +0.158
3 Bo Bendsneyder – Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team – Kalex – +0.423

Moto2 Q1

Jorge Navarro (MB Conveyors Speed Up) came out on top in Q1, the Spaniard having a tougher weekend of it so far, and that’s also true of the man who followed him through: Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), who suffered a mammoth highside in FP3. But both got the job done, and were joined by Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) and Nicolo Bulega (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), the latter coming back from his shoulder injury sustained in Mugello.

Moto2 Q2

The Red Bull KTM Ajo superiority was on show again as Gardner and Raul Fernandez exchanged P1 a couple of times, but the Australian was able to just take it by the end with a new lap record just under the 1:43 barrier – stretching his advantage from 0.036 to over a tenth. Bendsneyder was 0.265 off Raul Fernandez in second place, but the Dutchman had a tenth in hand over the fourth-placed Fernandez: Augusto (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team). His teammate, Sam Lowes, had a more muted Saturday to take eighth.

The Grid

Gardner vs Raul Fernandez rolls on with Bendsneyder alongside, and Augusto Fernandez heads Row 2 from Di Giannantonio as the Italian bounced back in style to take fifth. Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) takes sixth on home turf to complete Row 2, ahead of rookie Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia). The Japanese rider heads Lowes and Chantra on the third row.

Remy Gardner

Behind them comes a surprising P10 for Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46), the Italian one of those most definitely looking for more on Sunday, and the same can be said for Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) as the American will start P17.

Moto2 Combined Times

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time/Gap
1 Remy GARDNER KALEX Q2 1m42.977
2 Raul FERNANDEZ KALEX Q2 +0.158
3 Bo BENDSNEYDER KALEX Q2 +0.423
4 Augusto FERNANDEZ    SPA KALEX Q2 +0.524
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONI   ITA KALEX Q2 +0.589
6 Xavi VIERGE KALEX Q2 +0.590
7 Ai OGURA KALEX Q2 +0.632
8 Sam LOWES KALEX Q2 +0.716
9 Somkiat CHANTRA KALEX Q2 +0.739
10 Marco BEZZECCHI KALEX Q2 +0.761
11 Aron CANET BOSCOSCURO Q2 +0.797
12 Jorge NAVARRO BOSCOSCURO Q2 +0.927
13 Marcel SCHROTTER KALEX Q2 +1.054
14 Tony ARBOLINO KALEX Q2 +1.086
15 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA KALEX Q2 +1.125
16 Nicolò BULEGA KALEX Q2 +1.181
17 Joe ROBERTS KALEX Q2 +1.369
18 Marcos RAMIREZ KALEX Q2 +1.521
19 Hector GARZO KALEX Q1 (*) 0.242
20 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS Q1 (*) 0.250
21 Albert ARENAS BOSCOSCURO Q1 (*) 0.371
22 Simone CORSI MV AGUSTA Q1 (*) 0.392
23 Thomas LUTHI KALEX Q1 (*) 0.414
24 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI   ITA MV AGUSTA Q1 (*) 0.637
25 Celestino VIETTI KALEX Q1 (*) 0.651
26 Barry BALTUS NTS Q1 (*) 0.725
27 Stefano MANZI KALEX Q1 (*) 0.844
28 Cameron BEAUBIER KALEX Q1 (*) 1.036
29 Alonso LOPEZ BOSCOSCURO Q1 (*) 1.779
30 Keminth KUBO KALEX Q1 (*) 1.851
31 Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI KALEX Q1 (*) 2.230
32 Jake DIXON KALEX Q1 (*) 6.925

Moto2 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 114
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 108
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 88
4 Sam LOWES Kalex 66
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 60
6 Joe ROBERTS Kalex 44
7 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex 41
8 Ai OGURA Kalex 39
9 Aron CANET Boscoscuro 35
10 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex 27
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex 26
12 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 25
13 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex 23
14 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex 20
15 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro 19
16 Stefano MANZI Kalex 17
17 Celestino VIETTI Kalex 13
18 Jake DIXON Kalex 11
19 Hector GARZO Kalex 11
20 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 9
21 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS 8
22 Simone CORSI MV Agusta 7
23 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6
24 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 6
25 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 5
26 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 4
27 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro 4
28 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 3
29 Thomas LUTHI Kalex 1
30 Barry BALTUS NTS 0
31 Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 0
32 Tommaso MARCON MV Agusta 0
33 Miquel PONS MV Agusta 0
34 Fraser ROGERS NTS 0
35 Taiga HADA NTS 0

Moto3

Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) will start the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya from pole, the Argentinean staying on his impressive roll of form to head the grid for the second time in Barcelona – the venue where he took his first Grand Prix podium in 2018. Team work made the dream work as teammate Jeremy Alcoba took second, tucking in and pulling just hundredths clear of Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3) in third. Championship leader Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) had a tougher Saturday at the office, with the rookie sensation back in P25 on the grid.

2021 Catalunya Moto3 top three
1 Gabriel Rodrigo – Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3 – Honda – 1:47.597
2 Jeremy Alcoba – Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3 – Honda – +0.317
3 Niccolo Antonelli – Avintia Esponsorama Moto3 – KTM – +0.361

Moto3 Q1

A host of unexpected names found themselves in Q1, and one certainly sailed safely through: John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing). The Brit was 0.373 ahead of nearest challenger Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing), with second in the standings Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and French GP podium finisher Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride) joining the Brit and the rookie in moving through.

Championship leader Acosta didn’t hook it up and starts P25, Le Mans winner Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) missed out and is 19th, and fellow frontrunner so far this season Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) took P21… so there are a few fast faces looking to move forward.

Moto3 Q2

Rodrigo came out the blocks flying in Q2 and managed to fend off a bunch of riders all eager to tag onto the back of his Honda, the Argentine shooting to P1 with a 1:48.257. McPhee, after coming through Q1, was in the groove too; the Scotsman setting two personal best laps in a row to sit just under a tenth from Rodrigo. Masia, meanwhile, was third heading into the final minute but every rider squeezed over the line for a final flying lap, setting up a showdown.

Rodrigo couldn’t be stopped, however, and pulled clear of the rest to set a new lap record and remain the fastest man in Barcelona by the end of play on Day 2, too. Tucked in behind his teammate, Alcoba managed to make it a Gresini 1-2. Antonelli set his best time on the final flying lap too, as did Free Practice pacesetter Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) in fourth and rookie Izan Guevara (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team) in P5. One man who didn’t was McPhee as he slipped to P6, but it remains a second row start for the Scotsman.

The Grid

Rodrigo, Alcoba, Antonelli head the grid as Nepa, Guevara and McPhee lock out Row 2. Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing), the 2020 Catalan GP winner, slots into a solid seventh, and he’s got company from Mugello polesitter Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Masia completing the third row.

Gabriel Rodrigo

Then come Rossi, Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) and Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3), ahead of Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power), third in the Championship Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3) and rookie Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) as the latter pips Mugello winner Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing).

Behind them sit the likes of Acosta, Garcia and Migno looking to charge forward…

Moto3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Q Time/Gap
1 Gabriel RODRIGO HONDA Q2 1m47.597
2 Jeremy ALCOBA HONDA Q2 +0.317
3 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM Q2 +0.361
4 Stefano NEPA KTM Q2 +0.698
5 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS Q2 +0.721
6 John MCPHEE HONDA Q2 +0.753
7 Darryn BINDER HONDA Q2 +0.892
8 Tatsuki SUZUKI HONDA Q2 +0.901
9 Jaume MASIA KTM Q2 +0.903
10 Riccardo ROSSI KTM Q2 +0.955
11 Romano FENATI HUSQVARNA Q2 +1.065
12 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM Q2 +1.120
13 Kaito TOBA KTM Q2 +1.263
14 Ayumu SASAKI KTM Q2 +1.360
15 Adrian FERNANDEZ HUSQVARNA Q2 +1.387
16 Dennis FOGGIA HONDA Q2 +1.629
17 Filip SALAC HONDA Q2 +1.700
18 Xavier ARTIGAS HONDA Q2 +1.824
19 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS Q1 (*) 0.548
20 Yuki KUNII HONDA Q1 (*) 0.669
21 Andrea MIGNO HONDA Q1 (*) 0.953
22 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM Q1 (*) 0.975
23 Daniel HOLGADO KTM Q1 (*) 1.116
24 Lorenzo FELLON HONDA Q1 (*) 1.130
25 Pedro ACOSTA KTM Q1 (*) 1.214
26 Andi Farid IZDIHAR HONDA Q1 (*) 1.283
27 Takuma MATSUYAMA HONDA Q1 (*) 1.323
28 Elia BARTOLINI KTM Q1 (*) 1.614

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 111
2 Jaume MASIA KTM 59
3 Ayumu SASAKI KTM 57
4 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 56
5 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 56
6 Darryn BINDER Honda 47
7 Andrea MIGNO Honda 47
8 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM 47
9 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 45
10 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 41
11 Filip SALAC Honda 35
12 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM 27
13 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 26
14 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM 26
15 John MCPHEE Honda 22
16 Kaito TOBA KTM 22
17 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 19
18 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 18
19 Riccardo ROSSI KTM 16
20 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 16
21 Carlos TATAY KTM 14
22 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 10
23 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM 8
24 Stefano NEPA KTM 8
25 Yuki KUNII Honda 3
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM 3
27 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda 1
28 Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0
29 Elia BARTOLINI KTM 0
30 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda 0
31 Alberto SURRA 0

MotoE

It’s three E-Poles from three at the beginning of 2021 for Eric Granado (One Energy Racing) after the Brazilian produced a sterling 1:50.446 to beat reigning World Cup winner Jordi Torres (Pons Racing 40) by less than a tenth on Saturday afternoon in Barcelona. Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP) completes the FIM Enel MotoE World Cup front row at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya.

After the first few laps, 2019 World Cup winner Matteo Ferrari (Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE) set a 1:51.187 to set title chase leader Alessandro Zaccone (Octo Pramac MotoE) a time to beat, and that’s exactly what the latter Italian did. Zaccone was the first rider into the 1:50s in E-Pole – a 1:50.813 – as nine riders waited their turn in the one-lap dash for glory in Barcelona.

Mattia Casadei (Ongetta SIC58 Squadracorse) slotted his Energica Ego Corsa into P2, 0.264s off Zaccone’s time, before Aegerter set his best lap of the weekend to go provisional pole position by 0.094s. Miquel Pons (LCR E-Team) was the next rider to set a lap time and the Spaniard missed out on beating Aegerter by a whisker, the rookie going second by just 0.007s.

Torres soon rose to the fore though, setting a 1:50.517 to go P1 by over two tenths. It was then Lukas Tulovic’s (Tech 3 E-Racing) turn to power his way around the lap and in Sector 1, the German was 0.408s under Torres’ time. However, Tulovic failed to hold his advantage to the line and slotted into P4, with just Granado and Fermin Aldeguer (Openbank Aspar Team) left to go…

Granado’s first split was a stunner – 0.337s under Torres, and it was pretty much the same through Sector 2. Granado was two tenths up through the third split and sure enough, the Le Mans winner crossed the line and took provisional pole by 0.071s. Next up: Free Practice pacesetter Aldeguer. Could the rookie do it?

The first half of the lap didn’t quite hook up, and the 16-year-old was 0.404s down on Granado’s time. That became half a second at the third split and ultimately, Aldeguer took the chequered flag in P7, half a second down on Granado. The Brazilian had done it again and taken E-Pole in Barcelona.

Behind the leading trio of Granado, Torres and Aegerter sits Pons at the head of Row 2, with Tulovic and Zaccone ready to pounce from P5 and P6 respectively. Aldeguer leads Row 3 from Casadei and Ferrari, with Cardelus completing a top 10 covered by 0.952. It will surely be another stunner on Sunday…

MotoE EPole

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Eric GRANADO Energica 1m50.446
2 Jordi TORRES Energica +0.071
3 Dominique AEGERTER Energica +0.273
4 Miquel PONS Energica +0.28
5 Lukas TULOVIC Energica +0.326
6 Alessandro ZACCONE Energica +0.367
7 Fermín ALDEGUER Energica +0.545
8 Mattia CASADEI Energica +0.631
9 Matteo FERRARI Energica +0.741
10 Xavi CARDELUS Energica +0.952
11 Hikari OKUBO Energica +1.009
12 Yonny HERNANDEZ Energica +1.082
13 Corentin PEROLARI Energica +1.174
14 Andrea MANTOVANI Energica +1.212
15 Maria HERRERA Energica +1.245
16 Jasper IWEMA Energica +2.113
17 Kevin ZANNONI Energica +2.896
18 Andre PIRES Energica +5.063

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Alessandro ZACCONE 41
2 Mattia CASADEI 33
3 Dominique AEGERTER 33
4 Eric GRANADO 28
5 Jordi TORRES 27
6 Matteo FERRARI 18
7 Yonny HERNANDEZ 16
8 Maria HERRERA 13
9 Miquel PONS 11
10 Hikari OKUBO 9
11 Lukas TULOVIC 9
12 Andrea MANTOVANI 8
13 Andre PIRES 8
14 Corentin PEROLARI 7
15 Kevin ZANNONI 7
16 Jasper IWEMA 7
17 Xavi CARDELUS 3
18 Fermín ALDEGUER 1

2021

Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Riders reflect on opening day of practice at Catalunya

MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven
Catalunya – Friday


By the end of play on Friday at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, it’s Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) leading the way on the combined timesheets with a 1:39.235, but the Frenchman has some close company from Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) as the Italian end the day just 0.021 in arrears. Last year’s winner and Championship leader Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) completes the top three, a tenth and a half down.

Another key headline from the day was the return of fans to the grandstands. The event will be held with a maximum of 24,000 fans per day allowed in – 20 per cent of capacity – and the riders made sure to slow down and greet the crowd on the way back into pitlane.


MotoGP Friday Quotes

Johann Zarco – P1

“Very satisfied with today. I knew that after Mugello I had learned something and I couldn’t wait to try it out. We are working very well with the team, and the results are evidence of this. Now we just need to continue on this route.”

Johann Zarco
Franco Morbidelli – P2

“I’m really happy with today, it has started well and it is important that we did that. We had a good feeling on the bike and I was able to be fast straight away. Now we have got to keep on working and try to improve further. I’m feeling quite good about our race pace, of course there is still work to do, but I’m happy with where we are. I really like the new Turn 10 and it fits with the rest of the circuit, it flows. The old Turn 10 made you feel like you were on another circuit. We tried all the tyres today in preparation for Sunday’s race and I felt good with both compounds, I was able to be fast with both. Now we just need to look at the endurance of them, before we make any decisions.”

Franco Morbidelli
Fabio Quartararo – P3

“It was a great first day in Catalunya. The pace of this morning and this afternoon was good. We clearly worked on that today. We are fast already, and I know where we can improve. The new asphalt is something we need to pay attention to. The change in tarmac is tricky, but the new lay-out is much better than the old one. I look forward to tomorrow’s qualifying session and I will do my best to be on the front row. If I can go for pole, of course I will go for it. One of my favourite things to do at a race weekend is qualifying!”

Fabio Quartararo
Francesco Bagnaia – P5

“Compared to this morning, in the afternoon, we were able to improve a lot and get the fifth fastest time easily. However, the track has very little grip, so we still have work to do. Compared to the usual, today we adopted a different strategy: we ran mainly with the soft tyre, but we have already understood that it is not the right choice for the race. Tomorrow we will also try the other options available. At the moment, I am satisfied with how the weekend is going, and I am positive about tomorrow’s qualifying”.

Francesco Bagnaia leading Marini
Maverick Vinales – P6

“I felt good on the bike. For sure, we changed the bike quite a lot during FP1 and FP2. That‘s not something I usually do, but right now we have to do it to find a better balance and make the bike better suited to my riding style. I felt many positive things during the day. With Silvano, we are working very steadily. We know that our priority right now is to find a setting that makes me feel comfortable so I can ride the bike with my own riding style. We didn‘t check the lap times or my position too much. We are just trying to match my riding style to the bike. My race pace wasn‘t too bad at all. We did have a big drop on the rear tyre, but I think this has more to do with the bike‘s setting. We can fix this. On the first longer run I felt good. I did 1‘40-lows. This is a rhythm that should get you into the top 4, so we need to keep working as we have been doing today.”

Maverick Vinales
Jack Miller – P7

“It was a positive first day, and it was nice to see the fans back in the stands after so long! The asphalt grip is really low on this track, so we did many laps today to figure out what strategy to adopt for the race on Sunday. I think we have a clear idea already. Tomorrow we will do some more tests with the hard rear tyre to try to improve some aspects. But, in general, I feel comfortable on my Desmosedici, and I am confident that I can do well again tomorrow”.

Jack Miller
Enea Bastianini – P8

“I am quite happy with the first day. We started off on the right foot in FP1 and I immediately found a good feeling. This afternoon we were able to work a little bit with the tires, trying to understand the tire compound and the tire life. I felt comfortable with both and it won’t be easy to decide for the race. On my first fast lap I went off the track and on my second one I made some mistakes. Nevertheless, I’m eighth, but with a margin, so I think we can make a step forward tomorrow.”

Enea Bastianini
 Aleix Espgargaro – P9

“As always, the grip here in Barcelona is rather low and that also makes it hard to analyse tyre performance. I hope the track continues to rubberise and improve, as happened already between the two sessions today. In any case, I am pleased overall and I’m confident that we’ll be able to take another step forward tomorrow.”

Aleix Espgargaro
Pol Espargaro – P10

“It’s been a strange day honestly speaking. Normally this isn’t my best track because it’s hot with low grip and I’m a rider who prefers different conditions. The times came quite easily in the morning as well as in the afternoon, we were not pushing a lot and the times were coming. But when we put the soft on the rear of the bike, everyone gains extra time but we can’t quite find it so this is where we are suffering at the moment. Aside from this, our feeling is very good and we have started the weekend well. We also have to say well done for the new Turn 10, it’s very nice.”

Pol Espargaro
Takaaki Nakagami – P11

“Today, the track condition was quite bad because in the morning and afternoon sessions everyone struggled with grip. We were working on the medium compound, which might be the race tyre, but we struggled a lot with side grip. I’m happy with the feeling and my confidence on the bike, but we’re just lacking grip. That’s the only issue, but today, it was a big one for us. Hopefully tomorrow the track will be in better condition, then, for sure, we have good potential. Today I was also outside the top 10, in P11, but it’s very, very tight – from P7 to P14 is only one tenth. So, we’ll keep pushing and work hard to improve the bike.”

Danilo Petrucci – P12

“This track is always very tricky, because the asphalt is pretty hot. But today, we have been working well, improving our setup. Thanks also to the help of more people. We are still not in the position, we want to be, but we are getting closer and closer. Tomorrow morning, it would be very important to do a good lap time in order to reach the top 10, which is the big target for Saturday.”

Luca Marini – P13

“This track is great fun to ride a MotoGP bike, although today’s conditions were really difficult in terms of grip. We struggled a bit, but we were also able to try some new solutions in terms of set-up and overall, I’m happy with the day. We need to make a step forward on the fast laps, we have room for improvement, and we will use FP3 to try something else. There are some places on the track where I can’t do what I want to do.”

Luca Marini
Marc Marquez – P15

“I struggled a bit today like every Friday, in FP2 I felt a bit better and tomorrow the aim is to do another step. We are here trying to understand the way in which to improve, step by step and making laps of the circuit to understand more. There’s a couple of points on track where I need to work to adjust my position, but compared to the last few races my body feels better. The work done to Turn 10 is very good, it’s a more natural corner and closer to what the rest of the circuit is, I think it’s a good opportunity to overtake in the last laps.”

Marc Marquez
Joan Mir – P16

“I felt pretty strong on this first day, despite the track not being very grippy. I was quite competitive in both sessions, but when I switched to the soft-soft combination at the end of the session I had a little problem with the front of the bike and I didn’t feel very comfortable with pushing for a fast lap, so I decided it was better to come into the pit. I knew I couldn’t get close enough to my previous best time and I preferred to be safe instead of over-pushing. I had a nice race pace, with lots of consistent laps, but I need to work on setting some fast laps. My team will try to discover how best to deal with the problem I encountered today and we’ll be ready to go again tomorrow.”

Iker Lecuona – P17

“I’m quite happy. This morning, we did a very good job. I had a decent pace, although I knew I still had to improve it a bit. Anyway, I felt really good with the bike. This afternoon I went alone on the first exit, improved a lot and was very close to the top guys. Overall, I feel strong. Just for the time attack, I did a small mistake on the last lap, but it’s still Friday, so we are happy, the pace is there. We need to continue to work for Qualifying tomorrow, but for the moment, we feel like we are on the way.”

Álex Márquez – P18

“First of all, it was nice to have fans in the grandstand, it’s good to be slowly getting back to normal life, that’s always good news. However, it was a difficult day, we have a lot of problems with the rear grip, it was really difficult to get grip and be fast, especially with a new tyre. So that’s where we need to improve and tomorrow, hopefully, we’ll find something and be fast again. We’ll try hard again and work with the team this afternoon to find some good points and then look to improve a lot tomorrow from the morning.”

Valentino Rossi – P19

“This was not fantastic, but it also wasn’t too bad. This afternoon we tried to modify the setting on the bike to improve the braking and corner entry, but it didn’t quite work and I didn’t feel as comfortable. I was unable to ride like I wanted and I didn’t have a good feeling with it. As the morning was okay, we will try to go back to that tomorrow and we will see what happens. Turn 10 is a very tricky and technical corner, it’s difficult to find the right line, but it’s very beautiful and it’s a little bit faster now. I really like it.”

Valentino Rossi
Lorenzo Savadori – P20

“The first day here at Montmelò did not go badly. There are still some things I need to develop, but we’ll do it with my crew chief and the mechs, analysing the data. Pace is not bad and I noticed that I’m pretty fast even when riding with the others. Unfortunately,I made a mistake on T3 with the new tyre and was unable to improve my time, but I am still satisfied with this first day.”

Jorge Martín – P21

“I’m so happy, I couldn’t wait to get back, it’s a dream to be back here. Now I just need to get my confidence back, but already in FP1 I saw that I was going well. Tomorrow I’ll try to do my best and have a good qualifying.”

Jorge Martín

MotoGP FP1

The morning began with Morbidelli enjoying a similar gap to the top, the Italian opening the weekend only 0.024 in arrears, but it was to Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) in FP1. The Aprilia man hit back late to take over, with Morbidelli having otherwise led the majority of the session.

0.373 was the gap back to Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) in third as he pipped Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), new crew chief alongside him, by just 0.002. Zarco, to begin the weekend, completed the top five – again by mere hundredths. Quartararo, Mugello podium finisher Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), reigning Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar), Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) completed the top ten as action began, with no crashes in the session.

MotoGP FP2

The afternoon saw Morbidelli rise to the top early too, the Italian leading the way for half an hour mid-session before Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) took over. Next Zarco struck, Morbidelli hit back and finally, the French Pramac Racing rider nipped back into P1 by thousandths to end the session – and day – fastest.

Quartararo took third from Binder, and Bagnaia moved up from P10 in FP1 to P5 in the afternoon. Viñales and Miller were next up, with rookie Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) putting in an impressive day at the office to take eighth. Aleix Espargaro was just six thousandths further back, and the gap to Pol Espargaro in P10? Zero. The two brothers from Granollers, which is right next to the track, set identical best laps.

MotoGP Combined timesheets

All but one improved in the afternoon, so it’s Zarco, Morbidelli, Quartararo in the top three. Binder puts KTM in fourth as the Austrian factory continue their recent resurgence, with Bagnaia completing the top five. Viñales, Miller, Bastianini, Aleix and Pol Espargaro complete the top ten.

That leaves Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) as the first looking to move forward in FP3 as the Japanese rider ends Friday in 11th, ahead of Danilo Petrucci (Red Bull KTM Tech3) as the Italian put in a solid performance ahead of Tech3 expecting to receive the new KTM chassis – possibly and/or probably – for the post-race test on Monday.

Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia) had a solid day in P13 despite a run off at Turn 4, able to rejoin with no big drama, with Oliveira shuffled down to P14. The Portuguese rider seems a likely threat for a move up the timesheets in FP3…

Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) was fifteenth, ahead of Mir as the reigning Champion plummeted down the order in the afternoon. Still, there’s plenty of time left to attack for Q2 on Saturday morning after he suffered a problem that denied him a full time attack on Friday.

The only rider who didn’t improve in FP2 was Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) as the Spaniard returns from injury.

MotoGP Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.Zarco DUCATI 1m39.235
2 F.Morbidelli YAMAHA +0.021
3 F.Quartararo YAMAHA +0.166
4 B.Binder KTM +0.427
5 F.Bagnaia DUCATI +0.525
6 M.Viñales YAMAHA +0.586
7 J.Miller DUCATI +0.679
8 E.Bastianini DUCATI +0.742
9 A.Espargaro APRILIA +0.748
10 P.Espargaro HONDA +0.748
11 T.Nakagami HONDA +0.797
12 D.Petrucci KTM +0.825
13 L.Marini DUCATI +0.859
14 M.Oliveira KTM +0.861
15 M.Marquez HONDA +0.885
16 J.Mir SUZUKI +0.915
17 I.Lecuona KTM +1.016
18 A.Marquez HONDA +1.455
19 V.Rossi YAMAHA +1.601
20 L.Savadori APRILIA +1.746
21 J.Martin DUCATI +1.950

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 105
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 81
3 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 79
4 Jack MILLER Ducati 74
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 65
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 64
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
8 Brad BINDER KTM 35
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 33
10 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 29
11 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
12 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 28
13 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
14 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 20
16 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 20
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
22 Luca MARINI Ducati 9
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
24 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

Moto2

The Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya begins with a familiar name on top in Moto2: Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo). The rookie was fastest on Friday ahead of a resurgent Augusto Fernandez, with the number 37’s Elf Marc VDS Racing teammate Sam Lowes completing the top three. Championship leader Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) was fourth as the two teams duelled for Day 1 honours.

Moto2 FP1

The morning belonged to Elf Marc VDS Racing Team as they locked out at the top in the intermediate class. Augusto Fernandez headed team-mate Sam Lowes by a tenth and a half, with man of the moment Gardner just 0.003 further back in third place. His teammate, rookie Raul Fernandez, ended FP1 just 0.048 off the Aussie, with Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) completing the top five.

Keminth Kubo ( VR46 Master Camp Team) was the only faller, rider ok. Barry Baltus (NTS RW Racing GP) didn’t crash, but the Belgian did put in one of the greatest saves of the season so far.

Moto2 FP2

Raul Fernandez struck back in the afternoon, taking to the top late on and deposing teammate Gardner after the Australian led the session for the majority. Lowes and Augusto Fernandez took third and fourth, respectively, with Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) fifth quickest on home turf.

Augusto Fernandez crashed and rejoined, as did Somkiat Chantra (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) and injury replacement Alonso Lopez (MB Conveyors Speed Up). Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team), Jorge Navarro (MB Conveyors Speed Up) and wildcard Piotr Biesiekirski (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Euvic) were also fallers in the afternoon.

Barry Baltus did take a tumble at Turn 4 in the afternoon, and headed for the medical centre for a check up.

Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo)

Moto2 Combined timesheets

Raul Fernandez’ FP2 best puts him top from Augusto Fernandez’ FP1 time, with 0.016 between the two. Lowes is in third ahead of Gardner, with Bezzecchi’s FP1 fastest taking the last place in the top five.

Vierge is sixth ahead of a good showing from Hector Garzo (Flexbox HP 40), with Bo Bendsneyder (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team), rookie Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) and Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team) completing the top ten on the combined times.

As it stands, Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2), Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Jake Dixon (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Marcos Ramirez (American Racing) complete the names who stand to move through to Q2, with FP3 deciding it with a final shuffle on Saturday.

Moto2 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 R.Fernandez KALEX 1m43.687
2 A.Fernandez KALEX +0.016
3 S.Lowes KALEX +0.166
4 R.Gardner KALEX +0.169
5 M.Bezzecchi KALEX +0.390
6 X.Vierge KALEX +0.458
7 H.Garzo KALEX +0.555
8 B.Bendsneyde  Ned KALEX +0.587
9 A.Ogura KALEX +0.617
10 A.Canet BOSCOSCURO +0.635
11 F.Di Giannanto   Ita KALEX +0.669
12 M.Schrotter KALEX +0.673
13 J.Dixon KALEX +0.674
14 M.Ramirez KALEX +0.741
15 J.Navarro BOSCOSCURO +0.750
16 J.Roberts KALEX +0.822
17 N.Bulega KALEX +0.866
18 L.Dalla Porta KALEX +0.887
19 T.Luthi KALEX +0.951
20 S.Corsi MV AGUSTA +0.973
21 L.Baldassarri MV AGUSTA +1.050
22 A.Arenas BOSCOSCURO +1.076
23 S.Manzi KALEX +1.175
24 S.Chantra KALEX +1.188
25 C.Beaubier KALEX +1.220
26 C.Vietti KALEX +1.241
27 T.Arbolino KALEX +1.318
28 B.Baltus NTS +1.437
29 H.Syahrin NTS +1.451
30 A.Lopez BOSCOSCURO +1.611
31 K.Kubo KALEX +2.207
32 P.Biesiekirski KALEX +2.647

Moto2 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 114
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 108
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 88
4 Sam LOWES Kalex 66
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 60
6 Joe ROBERTS Kalex 44
7 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex 41
8 Ai OGURA Kalex 39
9 Aron CANET Boscoscuro 35
10 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex 27
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex 26
12 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 25
13 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex 23
14 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex 20
15 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro 19
16 Stefano MANZI Kalex 17
17 Celestino VIETTI Kalex 13
18 Jake DIXON Kalex 11
19 Hector GARZO Kalex 11
20 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 9
21 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS 8
22 Simone CORSI MV Agusta 7
23 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6
24 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 6
25 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 5
26 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 4
27 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro 4
28 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 3
29 Thomas LUTHI Kalex 1
30 Barry BALTUS NTS 0
31 Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 0
32 Tommaso MARCON MV Agusta 0
33 Miquel PONS MV Agusta 0
34 Fraser ROGERS NTS 0
35 Taiga HADA NTS 0

Moto3

Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) is the man to beat in Barcelona at the end of Day 1 of the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, the Argentinean following up his Mugello podium in style. Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing), last year’s lightweight class winner at the track, was second quickest less than a tenth down, with Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) completing the top three.

Moto3 FP1

Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team started the weekend on top with a 1-2, with Le Mans winner Sergio Garcia topping FP1 by a couple of tenths ahead of rookie teammate Izan Guevara after a late charge from both. Filip Salač (Rivacold Snipers Team) was next up, a tenth and a half further back, ahead of John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing). The timesheets tightened up significantly behind the Brit as the gaps became hundredths or thousandths.

Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) crashed at Turn 16, and Darryn Binder slid out at Turn 5, both riders ok.

Moto3 FP2

FP2 saw the fastest time tumble by half a second as Rodrigo took over on top, with Binder for close company just 0.078 off and the two moving the goalposts by the end of play. A bigger gap of 0.180 then opened up to veteran Italian Romano Fenati in third, with Izan Guevara fourth after another good showing, the rookie a further two tenths in arrears. Then it got tight again, with third in the Championship Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3) 0.034 back and the gaps all much less than a tenth all the way down to ninth-placed Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride).

Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3) suffered a highside out of Turn 2, with Rodrigo taking a tumble not long after. CIP Green Power injury replacement rider Daniel Holgado, the Championship leader in both the FIM Moto3™ Junior World Championship and the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup, also tumbled at Turn 8, riders all ok.

Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3)

Moto3 Combined Timesheets

Rodrigo leads Binder, Fenati, Guevara, Sasaki and Jeremy Alcoba (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) overall, with Garcia’s FP1 best slotting him into seventh. Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) and Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) take eighth and ninth, with Nepa completing the top ten.

As it stands, Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3), Le Mans podium finisher Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride), Championship leader Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Salač, the Czech rider by virtue of his best in FP1, stand to move through to Q2… but everything could change again on Saturday morning.

Moto3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 G.Rodrigo HONDA 1m47.950
2 D.Binder HONDA +0.078
3 R.Fenati HUSQVARNA +0.258
4 I.Guevara GASGAS +0.458
5 A.Sasaki KTM +0.492
6 J.Alcoba HONDA +0.499
7 S.Garcia GASGAS +0.517
8 A.Migno HONDA +0.576
9 T.Suzuki HONDA +0.580
10 S.Nepa KTM +0.681
11 N.Antonelli KTM +0.696
12 R.Rossi KTM +0.814
13 P.Acosta KTM +0.817
14 F.Salac HONDA +0.890
15 J.Mcphee HONDA +1.018
16 D.Foggia HONDA +1.210
17 J.Masia KTM +1.293
18 R.Yamanaka KTM +1.401
19 X.Artigas HONDA +1.472
20 Y.Kunii HONDA +1.506
21 D.Öncü KTM +1.522
22 K.Toba KTM +1.683
23 A.Izdihar HONDA +1.743
24 A.Fernandez HUSQVARNA +1.821
25 T.Matsuyama HONDA +2.069
26 L.Fellon HONDA +2.180
27 E.Bartolini KTM +2.714
28 D.Holgado KTM +3.019

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 111
2 Jaume MASIA KTM 59
3 Ayumu SASAKI KTM 57
4 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 56
5 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 56
6 Darryn BINDER Honda 47
7 Andrea MIGNO Honda 47
8 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM 47
9 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 45
10 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 41
11 Filip SALAC Honda 35
12 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM 27
13 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 26
14 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM 26
15 John MCPHEE Honda 22
16 Kaito TOBA KTM 22
17 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 19
18 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 18
19 Riccardo ROSSI KTM 16
20 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 16
21 Carlos TATAY KTM 14
22 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 10
23 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM 8
24 Stefano NEPA KTM 8
25 Yuki KUNII Honda 3
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM 3
27 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda 1
28 Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0
29 Elia BARTOLINI KTM 0
30 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda 0
31 Alberto SURRA 0

MotoE

Lukas Tulovic (Tech3 E-Racing) duelled home hero Jordi Torres (Pons Racing 40) for top spot on Day 1 of Round 3 of the 2021 FIM Enel MotoE World Cup, and the German came out on top by half a tenth. Behind the two, there was a slightly bigger gap of a few tenths back to MotoE rookie Yonny Hernandez (Octo Pramac MotoE) as the Colombian impressed to complete the top three.

The fastest top speed in MotoE history was also set at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya. The previous best was a 249.1 km/h from Valencia 2019, but that was bettered in FP1 in Barcelona as Dominique Aegerter did 262.1 km/h. And in the afternoon it was broken again, with Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE’s Andrea Mantovani registering 262.7 km/h.

MotoE Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 L.Tulovic ENERGICA 1m50.808
2 J.Torres ENERGICA +0.049
3 Y.Hernandez ENERGICA +0.324
4 E.Granado ENERGICA +0.408
5 F.Aldeguer ENERGICA +0.453
6 D.Aegerter ENERGICA +0.494
7 M.Pons ENERGICA +0.623
8 A.Zaccone ENERGICA +0.767
9 M.Casadei ENERGICA +0.810
10 X.Cardelus ENERGICA +0.988
11 H.Okubo ENERGICA +1.004
12 M.Ferrari ENERGICA +1.044
13 M.Herrera ENERGICA +1.400
14 C.Perolari ENERGICA +1.417
15 A.Mantovani ENERGICA +1.427
16 J.Iwema ENERGICA +2.208
17 K.Zannoni ENERGICA +3.429
18 A.Pires ENERGICA +4.735

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Alessandro ZACCONE 41
2 Mattia CASADEI 33
3 Dominique AEGERTER 33
4 Eric GRANADO 28
5 Jordi TORRES 27
6 Matteo FERRARI 18
7 Yonny HERNANDEZ 16
8 Maria HERRERA 13
9 Miquel PONS 11
10 Hikari OKUBO 9
11 Lukas TULOVIC 9
12 Andrea MANTOVANI 8
13 Andre PIRES 8
14 Corentin PEROLARI 7
15 Kevin ZANNONI 7
16 Jasper IWEMA 7
17 Xavi CARDELUS 3
18 Fermín ALDEGUER 1

2021

Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP hits Catalunya this weekend | Preview | Stats | Schedule

MotoGP 2021 – Round Seven
Catalunya – Preview


Featuring a highly abrasive surface with fast and sweeping corners, a 1,047m straight and elevation changes throughout its 4,627m (2.894 miles) length, the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya was built in 1991, reconfigured and resurfaced in 2018, with some changes made in 2020 to improve safety at Turn 10. It’s a track that is a favourite amongst riders and fans, and often serves up exciting racing along with a fantastic atmosphere, which could be the case this year with limited numbers of spectators being allowed in.


Most succesful riders at Catalunya
  • Valentino Rossi – 10 wins (6 x MotoGP, 1 x 500cc, 2 x 250cc, 1 x 125cc)
  • Jorge Lorenzo – 6 wins (5 x MotoGP, 1 x 250cc)
  • Max Biaggi – 4 wins (4x 250cc)
  • Marc Marquez – 3 wins (2 x MotoGP, 1 x 125cc)
  • Dani Pedrosa – 3 wins (1 x MotoGP, 1 x 250cc, 1 x 125cc)
  • Alex Marquez – 3 wins (2 x Moto2, 1 x Moto3)
Yamaha most successful manufacturer at Catalunya

Yamaha is the most successful manufacturer with 13 wins. 10 in MotoGP: Valentino Rossi (2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2016), Jorge Lorenzo (2010, 2012, 2013, 2015) and Fabio Quartararo (2020); three in 500 cc: Wayne Rainey (1992, 1993) and Luca Cadalora (1994).

Honda’s last MotoGP win in Catalunya: Marc Marquez in 2019. Honda have had 11 premier class wins including five in a row with Alex Criville, Carlos Checa and Mick Doohan from 1995 to 1999, in addition to the wins with Valentino Rossi (2001, 2002), Dani Pedrosa (2008), Casey Stoner (2011) and Marc Marquez (2014, 2019).

Ducati’s last MotoGP win in Catalunya: Jorge Lorenzo in 2018 from pole. Ducati have taken four MotoGP wins at the Catalunya circuit, including their very first in the class with Loris Capirossi in 2003.

The only win for Suzuki was in the 500 cc class in 2000, with Kenny Roberts. In 2020, Joan Mir finished second ahead of teammate Alex Rins for the only podiums at Catalunya for Suzuki in the MotoGP in era.


Yamaha is the most successful manufacturer at Catalunya with 13 wins.

Not since 2016 had Yamaha won at Mugello, but Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) put in a stunner last time out to take back to the top step and make it four Yamaha wins in the first six for the first time since that very same year. Joining him on the podium, for the first time since 2014 at the Italian track, there was no Ducati. The form book took a twist and instead it was Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Miguel Oliveira putting the cherry on top of an impressive weekend for the Austrian factory, and reigning Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) getting back on the rostrum. Now, as the paddock heads for Catalunya – and a new Turn 10 – what can we expect?

Fabio Quartararo now leads the MotoGP World Championship on 108-points to Joan Mir's 100
Fabio Quartararo was victorious at Catalunya in 2020

As ever… Quartararo. The Frenchman won last year at the venue despite a late charge from a Suzuki train headed by Mir, and it’s where he was on pole as a rookie and took his first premier class podium. Now recovered from arm pump surgery and back to his best, Quartararo must surely arrive as favourite.

Fabio Quartararo

I am really looking forward to this next round in Catalunya. It’s a little sad to say it, but in a way I am hoping to forget about last weekend. Even though I rode one of the best races of my life, it was a dark Sunday. Of course, we will keep remembering Jason, but I am ready to start a new race weekend. I like the Catalunya track, I won here last year with Yamaha, so I think we can do a good job. We will do our best!”

Start of the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya in 2020

Team-mate Maverick Viñales, who said they lost their way with the bike somewhat on his side of the garage after his stunner in Qatar, will be aiming to stem the flow of momentum and get back alongside el Diablo at the front, and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) will be looking for a less dramatic start to his race to claw back his impressive earlier form in 2021 too. And can Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT) get further into that top ten?

Maverick Vinales

The Italian GP was a weekend to forget for us, for various reasons. My thoughts are still with Jason‘s friends, family, and team, but we also need to make some serious steps this weekend. We will keep working on understanding what does and doesn‘t work for us and why. It‘s has happened a few times already that I am fast during the practice session, but then suddenly I lose that feeling with the bike later in the weekend. We need to improve on finding a good set-up in just the first two 45-minute FP sessions. For sure, we will be pushing again here this weekend.”

Maverick Vinales
Franco Morbidelli

Barcelona is another historical track and I hope that it will be good for us. Last year we were fast there, I took the pole position and so we have a good indication for our set from the 2020 race weekend. I expect that we can be on the same level as last year. I don’t know if it will be enough to be on top, as it is quite a tricky track, but we will try to do the best job that we can there. I’m really looking forward to facing another race this weekend.”

Franco Morbidelli
Valentino Rossi

The Barcelona track is one of my favourites and I always really enjoy riding there. It’s a great place and I have some very good memories from it. So I’m positive ahead of the upcoming CatalanGP, because we also improved throughout the weekend in Mugello, I was able to do some overtakes and, in the end, I finished inside the top-ten. The result still isn’t what we really wanted but we are improving and it is good to head to this next race with some points. We hope to bring this positivity to Barcelona, to continue improving and see what we can do.

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi – Catalunya 2016

Joan Mir and Team Suzuki Ecstar team-mate Alex Rins had some serious speed at Mugello, and the reigning Champion and his team-mate completed the podium in Barcelona last year. Are we now on to the promised better venues Mir cited earlier in the season? And are we about to see that same metronomic brilliance at slicing through to the front appear week in week out?

2020 Catalunya MotoGP podium
1 Fabio Quartararo – Petronas Yamaha SRT – Yamaha 40:33.176
2 Joan Mir – Team Suzuki Ecstar – Suzuki – +0.928
3 Alex Rins – Team Suzuki Ecstar – Suzuki – +1.898
Joan Mir

I’m looking forward to this race especially because it’s basically my home GP – I’m from Mallorca but Montmeló is the closest I can get to home turf! I really like the track and I enjoy riding here because you always get that special feeling with your home race. Usually I’m pretty quick around this circuit, so I’m ready to get going on Friday and see how the bike is working, I want to have good pace from FP1 onwards. The track is unusual in the sense that it has a bit of everything, it’s a “complete” track. And in that way you need to have everything working perfectly – set up for hard braking, for top speed, it’s another level. Aside from that, you’re always touching your shoulder on the ground! It’s exciting to ride.”

Joan Mir

Rins, meanwhile, is more a man looking for redemption. After speed and progress to the front in the last few, crashes have then ended the Spaniard’s races and he’s left with a mountain to climb. Having shown how fast he is in the latter stages of 2020, if Rins can stay on he’ll be another name to automatically add to the podium fight… and that added to his rostrum at the venue last year.

Alex Rins

After four zero-point scores in a row, the positive thing is that we’re able to get straight back on the bike and try again. First of all I need to fully understand what’s been happening with these front end crashes, then I need to see how my feeling and pace are. In Mugello I actually had good speed and I felt very strong, so I hope that it will be the same here in Montmeló. I want to work hard with the team and I really want to finish the race and put the bad results behind me. The track in general suits us pretty well, although we have a slightly different layout this year. It’s also nice to ride in Spain again, close to where I live, and it’s always a pleasure to ride this track in particular because I’ve been riding it since I was a very young kid so I am really familiar with it.”

Alex Rins had been on course for a top five before crashing out at Mugello

At KTM though, the trajectory is already back on the up after an incredibly impressive charge in Italy. The Austrian factory didn’t come out the blocks swinging with the same armoury as 2020 earlier this year, but it surely would only have been a matter of time… and Mugello says yes. It was not only another podium, but also another top five for the second KTM across the line as Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) equalled his best of the year so far despite never having ridden Mugello in MotoGP before. A new chassis and some serious juice were on show as Binder even equalled the top speed record too… where will they shuffle into the fight in Barcelona? Can that form continue?

Hervé Poncharal – Tech3 KTM Team Manager

After the great improvements seen by all four factory KTMs in Mugello for sure the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing team is going to Catalunya with full confidence after the good team result we achieved in Mugello. This is a track, where I believe our bike should also be quite competitive. The long straight will help us to show how strong the KTM engine is. Last year we were quite competitive there. Our main issue has been the cold temperatures, which didn’t allow us to use the tyre we felt good on, but I don’t think we will face the same this year. So, we are moving to Montmeló with high spirits.”

Ducati, meanwhile, arrive from a slightly more muted weekend. It was supposed to be their turf at Mugello, but with Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) crashing out early on after having been the fastest Borge Panigale machine, it was left to Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) to pick up the baton. And he put on a real show duelling Quartararo early on, before then just slipping from the podium places into fourth. He’s second in the standings, however, and is always a threat. His team-mate Jorge Martin also returns from injury this weekend, so that’ll be something to keep an eye on in the Pramac garage.

Francesco Bagnaia

It’s only been a few days since the Italian GP, and it’s already time to get back on track. On Sunday, we will be racing at Montmeló, where I was able to make a great comeback last year, finishing sixth after starting fourteenth. This year it will be important to start the weekend on the right foot from Friday and then have a good qualifying session on Saturday. Compared to 2020, we will be racing at a different time of year, and the layout of the circuit has slightly changed after the modification made to Turn 10. I’m ready to get back on track to move on after everything that happened at Mugello.”

Franceso Bagnaia got the holeshot last ime out at the Mugello MotoGP but threw it away

So what of Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team)? The Queenslander can’t be counted out either, despite a more solid Italian GP compared to his stunners preceding it. But he was happy with good points and being near the front to the finish, with a record at Mugello that hadn’t been kind. Will Barcelona see Miller bring it back to the fight for the podium?

Jack Miller

After a few days off, we’re back racing at another track that I like a lot: the Montmeló circuit. I know the track very well also because living in Andorra, I often come here to train with my Panigale V4 S. Now it is finally time to go back there with my Desmosedici GP! I feel ready for this Grand Prix: in 2020, I finished the race in fifth place, but this year the goal will definitely be to fight for the podium!”

Jack Miller has two victories under his belt so far this season

At Honda, that fight for the podium remains the goal. After some impressive pace at times, it’s not fully come together yet in 2021, although Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) has been fourth, equalling his best. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) remains under the microscope as the eight-time World Champion continues his return, team-mate Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) is still finding his feet and Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) hasn’t quite had the form shown last year yet. For all three though, it’s familiar and true home turf… and they’ve got some impressive CVs at the venue. Can they reset and impress once again at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya?

Marc Marquez

Although our last race was not good, overall Mugello was a weekend with some positives for us as it was quite consistent. We know where we are, we know where we want to go and we will keep following the correct steps week by week. In Montmelo it seems that there will be some fans in the grandstands again, the fans give a great atmosphere, and it will be very nice to see some people in the stands again at the home GP.”

Marc Marquez was ultimately unrewarded once again after working hard all weekend at Mugello
Pol Espargaro

After a difficult race, sometimes the best thing is a race the very next week. We need to keep moving, this is MotoGP and we return to action again. We approach this new weekend the same way as the previous; with our full focus and the goal to improve. In Mugello we found some things which will help us moving forward. Your home race is always special, even if all the fans can’t join us again this year. Montmelo is really special for me, growing up so close to it and being where I made my World Championship debut in 2006, it’s something you can’t describe racing here. We keep working, we keep improving, we keep moving.”

Pol Espargaro

Aprilia Racing Team Gresini, meanwhile, continue their roll in 2021, with Aleix Espargaro leading the charge. And last time out may have been home turf for the factory, but this time it’s home turf for him as he hails from right next to the track. With a good record there and continued momentum, what can the Noale factory do in Barcelona?

The gap for Quartararo in the points is now more substantial, but it’s not yet a whole race win. So one Grand Prix is all that that could turn it on its head.


2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 105
2 Johann ZARCO Ducati 81
3 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 79
4 Jack MILLER Ducati 74
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 65
6 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 64
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 44
8 Brad BINDER KTM 35
9 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 33
10 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 29
11 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 29
12 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 28
13 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
14 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 23
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 20
16 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 20
17 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17
18 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 16
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 15
20 Iker LECUONA KTM 13
21 Stefan BRADL Honda 11
22 Luca MARINI Ducati 9
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati 3
24 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 3
25 Tito RABAT Ducati 1

Moto2

Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) was already a Grand Prix winner heading into Mugello, but he’d not yet been on the top step in 2021. The Australian has ironed out his form to almost perfection this season, although the cherry missing from the top was that win. Now, after defeating his teammate on the last lap in one of the closest Moto2 finishes of all time, it’s mission accomplished.

For Gardner, the pressure has certainly eased. With a new KTM MotoGP deal already signed and that win ticked off, he can concentrate fully on keeping that consistent record. Will he ease off though? And what about teammate Raul Fernandez? The rookie keeps on impressing and he may have ultimately lost at Mugello, but it was another tour de force. And the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya is more of a known quantity, so Fernandez and Gardner will be tough to beat. For the rest, and each other.

A jubilant Remy Gardner took his first victory of the season to extend his Moto2 championship lead last week at Mugello

Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) remains third thanks to his consistency, and the Italian – who has made a habit of such clean last laps that he’s now gained from a couple of high profile late penalties for riders ahead of him – but he’s still looking for that step to bridge the gap to those ahead. For Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team), on the losing side of that penalty, Mugello was the opposite. He may not have stood on the podium but the American took a leap forward that he’ll want to continue in Catalunya, and get some revenge for the rostrum lost. Can he keep that form?

Both Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) and Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) had been two of those often just up the road in 2021, but now consistency is biting a little harder as both suffered a DNF at Mugello. For Lowes, it was from second when chasing for the lead and Diggia a little further back, but both will have a clear focus: finish. Finish well. And pick up some more big points as Roberts homes in…

The rookie battle, behind Raul Fernandez, is also heating up as Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP) continues his storming of the front, and Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) remains an impressive performer. Can they keep their roll going and make life harder for the riders who, so far, have just had the edge?

Moto2 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 114
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 108
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 88
4 Sam LOWES Kalex 66
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 60
6 Joe ROBERTS Kalex 44
7 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex 41
8 Ai OGURA Kalex 39
9 Aron CANET Boscoscuro 35
10 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex 27
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex 26
12 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 25
13 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex 23
14 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex 20
15 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro 19
16 Stefano MANZI Kalex 17
17 Celestino VIETTI Kalex 13
18 Jake DIXON Kalex 11
19 Hector GARZO Kalex 11
20 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 9
21 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS 8
22 Simone CORSI MV Agusta 7
23 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6
24 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 6
25 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 5
26 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 4
27 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro 4
28 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 3
29 Thomas LUTHI Kalex 1
30 Barry BALTUS NTS 0
31 Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 0
32 Tommaso MARCON MV Agusta 0
33 Miquel PONS MV Agusta 0
34 Fraser ROGERS NTS 0
35 Taiga HADA NTS 0

Moto3

His advantage remains impressive at the top, but Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) has been more of a top ten points scorer in the last two races. The rookie continues to impress and he did just take his first front row though… and now we return to the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, aka much more familiar turf. Even for a rookie. So can he get back on the roll that saw him previously enjoy the biggest leading margin in the Championship… ever?

The pressure does remain less than some of the whirlwind around the number 37 would suggest, however. He can DNF twice and his teammate would have to win both races for his lead to be cut to nearly nothing… and it would still be his lead. Aforementioned teammate Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) will be keen for the deck to shuffle his way though, and after another podium to put some bad luck to bed he’ll likely be a threat again. Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) likewise, who took his very first podium at the venue in 2018 and arrives off the back of his second taken in Mugello. And can Sergio Garcia (Solunion GASGAS Aspar Team get back in the mix?

Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) has had speed before his victory too, and he’ll be aiming for more consistency after taking his second win last weekend. Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) is another looking to get back in the groove at the front as he was earlier in the season, and the South African also took his first Grand Prix win at the venue last year, so it’s good turf for him.

One rider with exceptional consistency, however, is Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3). The Japanese rider put in an incredibly impressive ride on Sunday and is now third overall. Showcasing some metronomic ability to run at the front in 2021, the number 71 is converting flashes of speed into a sustained campaign so far. He already has a pole position and podium, just not this season… and the standings say it may be only a matter of time.

The flotilla of home heroes, the veteran Italians up in the mix and the likes of John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) will be keen to make sure they’re in the freight train fight too though, so who will come out on top in Catalunya? Acosta? Masia? Another previous winner? Or for some, will the aim remain the long game?

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 111
2 Jaume MASIA KTM 59
3 Ayumu SASAKI KTM 57
4 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 56
5 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 56
6 Darryn BINDER Honda 47
7 Andrea MIGNO Honda 47
8 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM 47
9 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 45
10 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 41
11 Filip SALAC Honda 35
12 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM 27
13 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 26
14 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM 26
15 John MCPHEE Honda 22
16 Kaito TOBA KTM 22
17 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 19
18 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 18
19 Riccardo ROSSI KTM 16
20 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 16
21 Carlos TATAY KTM 14
22 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 10
23 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM 8
24 Stefano NEPA KTM 8
25 Yuki KUNII Honda 3
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM 3
27 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda 1
28 Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0
29 Elia BARTOLINI KTM 0
30 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda 0
31 Alberto SURRA 0

MotoE

Last time out we were treated to a true spectacular in the FIM Enel MotoE World Cup, with Eric Granado (ONE Energy Racing) and Alessandro Zaccone (Octo Pramac MotoE) duelling to the line. Granado came out on top to take only his second MotoE win despite his record of speed, and now we’re back in business in Barcelona… but with Zaccone still very much in the points lead.

The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya is a new challenge for the Cup, so there are no MotoE track records to go on. But looking at the season so far, Zaccone, Granado and Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP) have arguably been the biggest players overall: Zaccone has turned a more surprise win into sustained speed and aggression, Granado found redemption in serious style, and Aegerter has pace and consistency nailed down.

If MotoE has taught us anything so far, however, it’s that predicting race day is a hard task in both theory and practice. Mattia Casadei (Ongetta SIC58 Squadra Corse) is proof of that as the Italian now sits second in the standings following his first podium of the season at Le Mans, and that’s after missing the first preseason test and not seeming to have found his previous MotoE form in Jerez at all. Can the roll continue? He’s a veteran with a good CV in the electric class too. That’s also true of reigning Cup winner Jordi Torres (Pons Racing 40), the only other rider who’s been on the podium already this season, although it’s been a pretty smooth start to his 2021 already. Consistency, speed and solid decision-making have been his hallmarks, and it’s Torres’ home turf we arrive onto. Can he get back on the box?

There are those still looking for that first podium of the year, or in the Cup, who could be threats at the front too. 2019 Cup winner Matteo Ferrari (Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE) is the former as he looks to settle in better to the changes for 2021, although he’s been consistent as ever in sixth overall. And some of the latter? Lukas Tulovic (Tech3 E-Racing) is one. The German has been quick and bounced back from bad luck in Jerez to get right in the freight train battle at the front in France, so surely for the German it’s a matter of when, not if. Miquel Pons (LCR E-Team) too, with the rookie taking a top five already.

And then there’s Fermin Aldeguer (Openbank Aspar Team). One of the stories of preseason with his incredible speed from the off, the 16-year-old raised some eyebrows early. From STK600 glory in the FIM CEV Repsol to near the top of testing in MotoE is how it started in 2021, but how it’s going is even more impressive. Undefeated in the Moto2 European Championship with three wins from three, that earned him a ride as injury replacement at MB Conveyors Speed Up in the Moto2 World Championship at Mugello, and the weekend could not have been a realer deal. In his first event on both the bike and track, he scored four points and was 0.050 off the next rider on the same chassis. So can he bring that touch of magic to MotoE™? He has a single point so far as pace has been undermined by mistakes, but if it all comes together…

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Points
1 Alessandro ZACCONE 41
2 Mattia CASADEI 33
3 Dominique AEGERTER 33
4 Eric GRANADO 28
5 Jordi TORRES 27
6 Matteo FERRARI 18
7 Yonny HERNANDEZ 16
8 Maria HERRERA 13
9 Miquel PONS 11
10 Hikari OKUBO 9
11 Lukas TULOVIC 9
12 Andrea MANTOVANI 8
13 Andre PIRES 8
14 Corentin PEROLARI 7
15 Kevin ZANNONI 7
16 Jasper IWEMA 7
17 Xavi CARDELUS 3
18 Fermín ALDEGUER 1

2021

Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP riders reflect on the ups and downs of Catalunya

2020 MotoGP Round Nine – Catalunya

Rider and Team Manager Quotes


Fabio Quartararo – P1

“This is the best moment that I have had in a long time! We have had some tough times since Jerez, so this actually feels better than those wins. I was not expecting to be so fast in the opening laps, but those two guys were so fast at the end of the race. We need to look at why we are struggling at the end of the race. We know that our bike is better in qualifying, so we need to balance this a bit better, but at the end of the day the race result is the most important thing and we won. It feels so good though to be back on the top step of the podium. I am also so happy that I am able to race at my home GP next, because there are not many races in this season. My thanks to the team because this victory is well deserved.”

Fabio Quartararo now leads the MotoGP World Championship on 108-points to Joan Mir’s 100
Joan Mir – P2

“It was quite a tough race, especially starting from the third row. It means you have to push in the early laps and it can be a bit risky. I tried to avoid any trouble and keep my head down whilst also over-taking some riders. When I was behind Miller I knew I needed to stick with him and be ready to take advantage. I got close to the victory today, maybe with a couple more laps it could have been possible, but Fabio was managing everything really well and he did a great race. It’s so nice for Suzuki to have two riders on the podium after a long time and I’m really pleased with today’s work!”

Joan Mir and Alex Rins chased down and passed Morbidelli
Alex Rins – P3

“I’ve been struggling a lot in the last weeks, and to take a podium here today at my home race feels fantastic. Since my shoulder injury in Jerez things haven’t been easy, and I have found it hard to be physically strong enough to compete at the very front. But I’ve worked hard off the bike and the team have worked super hard and have supported me a lot, so I want to thank them. I also want to thank the fans for their support and for standing by me in this tricky season. I’m so happy.”

Alex Rins worked his way to the podium from 13th on the grid
Franco Morbidelli – P4

“I’m a little angry about finishing fourth, but it is a positive thing as it means we are at a good level and want more. I’m angry because I made a mistake in the race: I started a bit too hot and wore the tyre out too much early on. When fighting with Fabio I was too much on the limit and trying to recover in braking, in the end I lost two seconds running wide and the chance for a podium. I still feel like this was the best strategy though. However I cannot complain about this weekend; I got pole position and I was really fast in general, so I’m happy. Now we rest a little bit and try to also be fast at Le Mans.”

Franco Morbidelli
Jack Miller – P5

“Ride fast, but not too fast … open the gas, but don’t spin the rear tyre … there’s races where you can go for it from first lap to last, but Sunday in Barcelona was a day of riding on eggshells as well as you could and seeing if you could get away with it. I did and managed to come home fifth which was something, because it was a day where it could have gone wrong so easily. Shame to miss out on a podium and all that, but it would have been a shame to be on the floor as well after doing so much work. So I’ll definitely take it. I’ve been happier, but I’m not disappointed, let’s say that.

Jack Miller

“Why was it so hard here compared to usual? I know talking about weather and tyres isn’t the most exciting thing in the world but it’ll help me explain. Last year we raced here in June (like we always do) and it’s bloody hot in Barcelona at that time of year. It was about 25 degrees, the track was over 50, so that affects what tyres you choose and how you approach it. This year, because we’re here in late September because of the calendar being shuffled and delayed with COVID and all of that, it was cold all weekend. We’re racing in the middle of the afternoon in autumn and it was only 17 degrees, and the track was only 20 when we started, and there was no sun at all. The track was just so cold. The hard tyres we have were too hard for that temperature and gave you no grip, so nobody used them. The soft had decent grip, but using them for 24 laps around here was about tiptoeing around to make sure you had something left at the end.

Jack Miller

“We all just about managed it, and you can see how close it was at the end because (Takaaki) Nakagami was seventh and less than four seconds behind Fabio (Quartararo), who won it but said his tyres were destroyed afterwards. I was more than two seconds a lap slower at the end of the race than I was at the beginning when we had a full tank of fuel. So it was definitely a race where we tried to hang on instead of being in attack mode.

“I was fourth most of the race but those Suzukis had way better pace than us near the end so I couldn’t fight them, there wasn’t much point. When my teammate Pecco (Bagnaia) came by me on the last lap I fought that one though! I got him back and had just enough to hold him off in the end, and I didn’t lose a spot in the championship so that’s good, I’m still sixth with six races to go so I’m still in it. It felt like a salvage day for the championship, one where you take your points and go home, basically.

Jack Miller

“We got to about 10 laps to go and my plan was to start pushing on and trying to reel in those Yamahas, and then with about seven laps to go the rear tyre fell off a cliff and died in the arse, more or less. I was a bit of a sitting duck from there, and the Suzuki boys, (Joan) Mir and (Alex) Rins, seemed to have more tyre life than the rest of us. As we were coming back in on the cool-down lap I noticed their tyres didn’t even have any lines on them, where mine and all the Yamahas did. The Suzukis could have handled a few more laps, but I reckon the rest of us were pretty happy that it ended when it did.

Jack Miller

“It’s been a crazy busy time for all of us, eight races in about 11 weeks I think it’s been – I’ve kind of lost count to be honest! So, a week off before we head to Le Mans if definitely something to look forward to – it’ll be a quick chance to recharge and then get set for these final six races, they’re going to come thick and fast …”

Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya
Pecco Bagnaia – P6

“It was a difficult weekend because Friday I was not able to adapt to the situation, and I lost one day. Unfortunately starting so far back does not help, but the pace was fast. If we had started from the front maybe we could have fought for the podium, but it was my mistake and you learn from mistakes, we will try again at Le Mans.”

Pecco Bagnaia
Takaaki Nakagami – P7

“It was a bit of a difficult race as the track temperature was very low from the warm up session to the race, so it was really difficult to warm the tyre. We raced a soft compound on the front and the rear and, at the beginning of the race, my pace was not strong enough and I dropped some positions. Then I tried to keep consistency on my laps and started to close the gap on the riders in front of me. I had the opportunity to pass some riders and the second part of the race I was into the top 10 – P9, then P7 – and at the end of the race I had a really strong pace compared to the other guys in my group. So the podium could have been there, but I had no chance to overtake or even try to and I finished P7. It’s another top 10 and a good result and we were only 3.6 seconds behind the race winner, so it was very close and this was positive. We’re now looking forward to Le Mans and we’ll keep pushing.”

Takaaki Nakagami chasing Oliveira, Bagnaia and Binder
Danilo Petrucci – P8

“I’m delighted with my performance today and, in general, with how this weekend went. Today I felt comfortable in the race, and I was able to manage the tyres well. Unfortunately, I was struggling a lot in the straights, where I got passed by most of the riders that overtook me. Maybe, if we had qualified better, we could have aimed for an even better result, but I think it was a good race overall and that after last weekend in Misano, we are gradually returning to our levels”.

Maverick Vinales – P9

“There was no issue at the start, the only weak point is our top speed. I couldn‘t pass anyone, especially in the first fifteen or sixteen laps. So I was just riding around. I‘m really disappointed because if you don‘t start from first or second, you have big problems. I couldn‘t do anything and was just losing positions. We will see in Le Mans. This result after winning last week is difficult to swallow. The championship could go any way. This weekend we made a mistake in the qualifying and we paid the price.”

Maverick Vinales
Cal Crutchlow – P10

“It was a positive day to finish the race and be in the top 10 today, I expected a little more but I was unable to get a good start. I always knew the start was going to be a challenging part of the race as I was probably the only rider on the grid without the start device. But I think we did a good job in the race to be battling with riders who had good results last week and, not having been on the bike for a long time, it was good to get race distance under my belt. I had some pain and problems with my arm, but I felt I didn’t finish the race too bad and with a different setting on the bike we could have been a little bit better. But we did a good job as a team this weekend and we look forward to Le Mans.”

Brad Binder – P11

“Today was a bit different to what I had in mind. Coming into the race my pace seemed really good and I had a good feeling with the bike. In the race it just didn’t quite go to plan. I tried my best at the start but when we hit lap sixteen things became a bit more difficult with the rear tire. It was tough, for sure. Not a great result in the end but we’ll learn from this and use it for the future. We’ll stay focused, look ahead to the next race and try to make things right there.”

Brad Binder
Aleix Espargaro – P12

“The conditions of this track are certainly not the best for us, and we struggled again today. The lack of grip kept me from being incisive. I was able to stay with the other riders, but I wasn’t able to overtake them. Finishing the race was important to be able to provide the engineers with as much data as possible, but these are certainly not the positions I like to battle for.”

Alex Marquez – P13

“A difficult race today. We were expecting warmer conditions and we couldn’t use the soft front; we went with the medium. That was my mistake, I pushed the team hard to use the medium but during the race the temperature dropped a lot. In the first laps I lost a lot of time after my good start, then in the middle of the race I felt better but in the end I slowed again. It’s my mistake, sometimes this happens as a rookie and I have been able to learn from this. We also found a few things this weekend, so we are still improving and learning and now we look to Le Mans and also a quick visit to Portimao to learn the layout.”

Iker Lecuona – P14

“In the end, I’m quite happy that I finished the race, which was my target, as it was a difficult weekend for me. Finally, I could enjoy the race a bit and managed to regain a better feeling. I was fighting with a small group and finished in the points. Thanks to the team for all the support this weekend. I’m sure we will be better in Le Mans.”

Tito Rabat – P15

“Yesterday I did not qualify well, so today we would have to gain positions in the race.  The first laps were good, and I was in a group of four riders, so we continued to take steps.  Today we have done a good analysis of this race, I am not happy, but not satisfied either.  One more point for the championship and now to think about Le Mans.”

Bradley Smith – P16

“We knew this would be a complicated circuit for us because it highlights one of our weak points, namely traction coming out of turns. The positive aspect is that I battled with good riders and good bikes and, at certain times, I was even able to overtake them. We’re lucky to be staying here for a day of tests and we’ll be able to focus on grip, hopefully finding some solutions that can help us on the upcoming tracks.”

Stefan Bradl – P17

“It was cooler than everyone thought it would be, everyone had to manage it. For me it’s tricky to understand the rear tyre and I was struggling a bit. At the end of the race I had to slow down a lot because the rear dropped off a lot. In the middle of the race I was not so bad, and I was near the points, fighting well. Sadly, the rear then dropped and we fell back. But we keep working with the Repsol Honda Team, trying different things and pushing. Now we have a little break before heading to Portimao for a test which will be important for me and Honda.”

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi – DNF

“It‘s a great shame, two mistakes in a row. This was a very different crash from last week‘s. In Misano we did something different on the bike, and technically I was not very strong. I didn‘t feel very good, and also on Saturday and Sunday I was not 100% me. I didn‘t feel very well. This weekend was very different, because I was always competitive. I was good on the bike, I rode well, and I also improved practice by practice. This is very good. Today I was at the limit, because I was behind Fabio and I didn‘t want to lose a lot, I wanted to stay with him. On the left is always dangerous, especially with a low temperature, and I lost the front. It‘s a great shame because I think I could have fought for the victory and for sure for the podium, that was our target. This year my speed is not too bad, but as for the results I have to do better. We still have a lot of races until the end of the season, so our target is to be competitive again starting from Le Mans, work well in the garage with the team, and try to stay at the top.”

Turn Two melee took down Zarco and Dovizioso
Andrea Dovizioso – DNF

“Crashing out at the second corner is always difficult to digest, and I’m sorry for how the race went today. I had focused on making a good start, and at the end of the straight, I managed to recover several positions. Unfortunately, I got involved in an accident on the first lap, which was the result of a normal race dynamic. The Championship is potentially still open but, if we want to challenge for the title, now more than ever, we need to return to the levels of competitiveness to which we are used to”.

Turn Two melee took down Zarco and Dovizioso
Johann Zarco – DNF

“I am sad after today’s race because I thought I could have a good race.  The start was not bad, with a good first braking but in the change of direction Petrucci had a scare, I braked and crashed.  Dovizioso couldn’t help it and crashed next to me.  Now we have to think about Le Mans.“

Dovizioso saw his championship lead disappear from the ignominy of the gravel trap – The Italian now fourth and 24-points behind series leader Quartararo
Miguel Oliveira – DNF

“It’s sad to end the race like this. We had very challenging conditions and expected to be competitive and for that we needed to use the medium front tire. The temperature was quite low today, so it took me just one lap with no slipstream to cool down the tire and when I went to the left side, there was no way I could save the crash. It’s a shame. This is racing. I hope we can get back to the front in Le Mans, the home race for the team. I want to do well there, also for the championship.”

Pol Espargaro – DNF

“For sure I’m disappointed. I paid for some frustration today because with the medium front tyre I could not push so hard in the left corners. I was fighting a lot with Petrucci even though I felt faster than him. I entered the corner a bit too fast and lost the front. My fault entirely. I was trying too hard. I’m keen to get to Le Mans and remove the bad taste in the mouth from here. It was my home Grand Prix and this wasn’t what I expected.”


Team Managers

Razlan Razali – Petronas SRT Team Principal

“It was a strange weekend for us, but we are glad that Fabio’s win helps to inject positivity. It would have been nice to have a double podium, but Franco’s fourth was still a strong finish. It is good for the championship, for both Fabio and Franco, but especially for Fabio who is back leading the championship ahead of his home GP at Le Mans.”

Fabio Quartararo celebrates victory with the Petronas SRT Team
Fabio Quartararo celebrates victory with the Petronas SRT Team
Ken Kawauchi – Suzuki Technical Manager

“It was an incredible race today. Joan has been working very well in these last weeks and I’m very impressed and pleased with his performances. Alex did an unbelievable job from 13th on the grid, and this podium is very important for him. I’m so happy to have both our riders riding so well and bringing us these great results. Thank you to everyone for their work and support.”

Davide Brivio – Suzuki Team Manager

“We’re very happy, it’s been a super day with both our riders on the podium! This is something that hasn’t happened for a long time and it’s a great feeling to achieve it. Joan is keeping a very positive trend going and I’m really pleased for him. I’m also very happy for Alex who did a great performance in the race, especially from 13th on the grid and a difficult couple of weeks. We will celebrate inside the team, and I want to say thank you to everyone who has been working so hard, the personnel here, at home, and in Japan. This is possible because of them.”

Suzuki 2-3 with Alex Rins working his way from 13th on the grid to the podium
Suzuki 2-3 with Alex Rins working his way from 13th on the grid to the podium
Massimo Meregalli – Monster Yamaha Team Director

“It’s a disappointing end to an otherwise really good race weekend. The first corner is what cost Maverick a good result today. He was forced to brake earlier and other riders overtook him left and right, losing him a lot of positions. Once you fall back, it’s very difficult with our bike to overtake, as we know. Maverick also never had the same amazing feeling this weekend that he had in Misano. We will have to analyse the data to see how we can fix this for the next round. The team is heartbroken for Vale. He had great confidence on the bike all weekend. It‘s a shame that he crashed, losing a great opportunity to finish on the podium. We will try our hardest to create another podium possibility again at the next GP weekend in Le Mans. But first the team will have a week off, though we will certainly use this time to prepare for the next triple header.”

Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Race Manager

“We saw already earlier in the weekend that tyre choice would be super-difficult for us. We would always find a solution in the afternoon when the temperatures were higher but race day was pretty cold on track and we knew it would be tough. Pol was doing well until he crashed but, overall, we cannot be happy with our overall results: it is the first time this season that we don’t have a rider in the top ten and we have to analyze why we could not find the performance we wanted. Everybody pushed and gave what they could, but we’ll work now to know more for Le Mans.”

Hervé Poncharal – Red Bull KTM Tech3 Team Manager

“What a tough weekend here in Catalunya. It’s been very difficult. The highlight of the weekend was clearly Saturday, when we had the best track and weather conditions with a great lap in FP3. But apart from that, it was very, very difficult. We never managed to find the right tyre fitting the track grip and temperature. All top three KTM started with a medium front and we knew that was the only possibility for us to go fast. But we also knew we couldn’t afford to let it cool down and more or less this is what happened when Miguel found himself in front. He was doing a good race until then. But he said as soon as nobody was in front of him, the temperature dropped and it was a really cold front tyre. Taking the soft would have probably not end in a crash, but meaning to finish much further down, so it’s a big pity to end up the weekend with a DNF. The positive is, Miguel is still leading KTM in the ranking, but everybody is so close now. Anyway, let’s forget about this weekend and try to move on to the next. Iker had a very, very tough weekend as well and basically, we told him this morning, try to recover your confidence in Warm Up. We gave him the soft-soft front and rear option and told him, his target is to regain confidence and finish that race, which is what he did. Thanks to him, he ended up in 14th position and got two points and for sure has recovered quite a lot of confidence that he lost throughout the weekend. Outside of that, there’s not a lot to say. It was the third weekend in a row, I think it’s time we have a few days off to recover and rest. See you all in Le Mans for the French Grand Prix!”

Piero Taramasso – Michelin Motorsport Two-Wheel Manager

“This has been a very demanding weekend for all concerned. We have to choose the tyres before the season and we were coming to Barcelona in September instead of the usual June, but after looking at historical weather and seeing that both times of the year are similar, we picked a range of tyres with that in mind. Unfortunately, we have had unseasonally cold conditions and this made it very difficult to get the heat in the tyres and for the riders to get the grip from the track. Our Technicians worked tirelessly with every rider all weekend to assist with advice for the optimum compound for the set-ups they were using, in an aim to give the best grip that could be extracted from the asphalt. I feel that we did very well under these exceptional circumstances and stand by the choice of tyres, it is not easy to guess the weather for a track when you have not been to the circuit at that time before, with all this in mind the range provided four raceable tyres for Sunday, of which three were used, so we didn’t go far wrong with our selection. We now head home to Le Mans and another busy weekend where MotoE will join us and we will see that title decided, hopefully it will be a bit warmer than it was this weekend!”

Tyre choice and management was critical at Catalunya

MotoGP Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 40m33.176
2 Joan MIR Suzuki +0.928
3 Alex RINS Suzuki +1.898
4 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +2.846
5 Jack MILLER Ducati +3.391
6 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati +3.518
7 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +3.671
8 Danilo PETRUCCI Ducati +6.117
9 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha +13.607
10 Cal CRUTCHLOW Honda +14.483
11 Brad BINDER KTM +14.927
12 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +15.647
13 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +17.327
14 Iker LECUONA KTM +27.066
15 Tito RABAT Ducati +27.282
16 Bradley SMITH Aprilia +28.736
17 Stefan BRADL Honda +32.643
Not Classified
DNF Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 6 Laps
DNF Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 9 Laps
DNF Pol ESPARGARO KTM 12 Laps
Not Finished 1st Lap
DNF Johann ZARCO Ducati 0 Lap
DNF Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati 0 Lap

MotoGP World Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 108
2 Joan MIR Suzuki 100
3 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 90
4 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati 84
5 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 77
6 Jack MILLER Ducati 75
7 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 72
8 Alex RINS Suzuki 60
9 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 59
10 Brad BINDER KTM 58
11 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 58
12 Pol ESPARGARO KTM 57
13 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 39
14 Danilo PETRUCCI Ducati 39
15 Johann ZARCO Ducati 36
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 27
17 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 22
18 Iker LECUONA KTM 17
19 Cal CRUTCHLOW Honda 13
20 Bradley SMITH Aprilia 11
21 Tito RABAT Ducati 8

2020 MotoGP Calendar

Rnd Date Circuit
1 08 March (Moto2/Moto3) Losail International Circuit
2 19 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
3 26 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
4 09 August Automotodrom Brno
5 16 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
6 23 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
7 13 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
8 20 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
9 27 September Barcelona – Catalunya
10 11 October Le Mans
11 18 October MotorLand Aragón
12 25 October MotorLand Aragón
13 08 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
14 15 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
15 22 November Autodromo Internacional do Algarve

Source: MCNews.com.au

Yamaha dominate Catalunya MotoGP Qualifying

2020 MotoGP Round Nine – Catalunya


MotoGP Qualifying Report

Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) can add a maiden pole position to his tally in 2020 as the Italian proved the only man able to dip into the 1:38s in qualifying at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, only a tenth shy of the lap record. He was two tenths clear of teammate Fabio Quartararo, who starts second, with Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) taking third as the number 46 gets a front row start for his 350th premier class race. Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team), meanwhile, starts P17…

2020 Catalunya MotoGP front row
1 Franco Morbidelli – Petronas Yamaha SRT – Yamaha – 1:38.798
2 Fabio Quartararo – Petronas Yamaha SRT – Yamaha – +0.210
3 Valentino Rossi – Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP – Yamaha – +0.331

In Q1 Dovizioso was one of the main names fighting to make it through, but all did not go to plan for the Italian. Ultimately it was Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) who was quickest, with Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) snatching second right at the end in some late heartbreak for Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar). Rins now lines up in P13, and Dovizioso down in P17.

It was a Yamaha stranglehold at the beginning of Q2 as Morbidelli set the first banker, with Rossi then taking over at the top before his teammate Maverick Viñales hit back. Quartararo, meanwhile, ran wide as he got his YZR-M1 all sorts of crossed up at the tricky Turn 10 – just as his team-mate Morbidelli slammed in the fastest lap of the weekend to go provisional pole again with a 1:39.110.

Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech3) then also got it wrong at Turn 10 but unlike Quartararo, Oliveira was down – thankfully unhurt. Next to get the hammer down were two Ducatis – Miller and Johann Zarco (Esponsorama Racing), and Miller only had one set of fresh soft tyres available after coming through Q1. The Aussie made it count though, slotting into second just 0.115 off Morbidelli.

As the final runs dawned, Quartararo then found himself rumbling out of pitlane with five minutes to go having not set a lap time after his earlier Turn 10 moment. The Frenchman and last year’s poleman was P12, but that was soon going to change as four Yamahas lit up the timing screens. Halfway around the lap, Quartararo was 0.132 under Morbidelli’s time, although the number 21 was going even quicker. Over the line though it was Quartararo who improved this time around to a 1:39.008, with Morbidelli unable to – and nor did Viñales. Rossi, however, did, with the ‘Doctor’ leaping up from P7 to P3 to make it a provisional Yamaha front row lockout.

On the next lap, Morbidelli was flying yet again. The San Marino GP winner was 0.082 under Quartararo’s time at Sector 3, but could he hold it through Sector 4? He could. Ultimately, Morbidelli did more than hold his advantage and the final sector was a stunner as he shot to the top, over two tenths clear. Quartararo went in search of a final lap charge but it didn’t materialise for the MotoGP sophomore, and no one had an answer for Morbidelli.

Franco Morbidelli has qualified on pole position for the first time since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2018. This is the first pole position for an Italian rider in MotoGP since Andrea Dovizioso was on pole position at the 2018 Japanese GP.
Franco Morbidelli has qualified on pole position for the first time since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2018. This is the first pole position for an Italian rider in MotoGP since Andrea Dovizioso was on pole position at the 2018 Japanese GP.

That makes it a first premier class pole position for the recent first time winner, with Quartararo set to launch from P2 and ahead of all his closest challengers in the overall standings. Rossi makes it a Yamaha 1-2-3 for the second time in three races and takes his first front row of the season… as well as sounding pretty confident for Sunday.

After passing through Q1, Jack Miller has qualified fourth as the highest-placed Ducati rider. This is the fifth successive race that Miller is the top Ducati rider on the grid, a sequence that started in Austria (although Johann Zarco was the top Ducati in qualifying in Styria before he started from pitlane).
After passing through Q1, Jack Miller has qualified fourth as the highest-placed Ducati rider. This is the fifth successive race that Miller is the top Ducati rider on the grid, a sequence that started in Austria (although Johann Zarco was the top Ducati in qualifying in Styria before he started from pitlane).

Miller did an impressive job to qualify P4 as the leading Ducati rider, beating Viñales by just over a tenth as the number 12 lost out on making it another Yamaha 1-2-3-4. To the right of Viñales is Zarco, his final lap moving him up to just 0.007 slower than Viñales’ effort to give the Frenchman his best grid slot since his Czech GP pole.

Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) spearheads Row 3 ahead of Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar), with both riders also looking like strong contenders in the race – and Mir having already taken a podium from P11 on the grid last weekend. Ducati Team’s Danilo Petrucci joins the Spaniards on the third row for his second consecutive P9 start.

Heading the third row of the grid is Pol Espargaro in seventh. This is KTM’s best MotoGP qualifying at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.
Heading the third row of the grid is Pol Espargaro in seventh. This is KTM’s best MotoGP qualifying at the Circuit de
Barcelona-Catalunya.

Rookie and Brno winner Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) completes the top 10, ahead of Nakagami and Oliveira after the earlier crash for the Portuguese rider.

Dovizioso leads by one point as it stands and he’s down in 17th, so it seems like Sunday is a prime opportunity for Quartararo, Viñales and Mir to strike back. The Catalan GP promises to be another phenomenal MotoGP race, and a pivotal one at that.

Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso has qualified in 17th, which is his second worst qualifying result since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2008, after Brno this year when he qualified 18th.
Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso has qualified in 17th, which is his second worst qualifying result since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2008, after Brno this year when he qualified 18th.

Tune in and don’t forget, the premier class get underway an hour later than normal this weekend, so it’s 2300 AEST tonight.

2020 MotoGP Misano Qualifying Quotes


Franco Morbidelli – P1

“It was great to be first today; to see that I was the fastest is a really good feeling. It’s always difficult to beat Fabio on a hot lap, so I’m very happy about qualifying today. I was feeling great on the bike and I felt that I could push a lot, on both tyres as well. Now it’s a matter of trying to refine everything for tomorrow and we will try to make a good start. We have a good pace, but there are many riders with a similar pace to us. It will be important to try to improve a little bit more for tomorrow, but I’m sure it is going to be a good race. I also want to congratulate Valentino on one more year in MotoGP and tell him that he is moving to a great team. It will be nice to have him as a team-mate.”

Franco Morbidelli has qualified on pole position for the first time since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2018. This is the first pole position for an Italian rider in MotoGP since Andrea Dovizioso was on pole position at the 2018 Japanese GP.
Franco Morbidelli has qualified on pole position for the first time since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2018. This is the first pole position for an Italian rider in MotoGP since Andrea Dovizioso was on pole position at the 2018 Japanese GP.
Fabio Quartararo – P2

“I’m really happy to be on the front row again in Barcelona. I think it will be really important to make a good start tomorrow. I’m feeling confident on the bike. Let’s see what we can do tomorrow, but our pace looks great and I think the only problem we have is which tyre to choose. It’s a difficult decision, but I’m happy with the job that the team has done. We will see what it is like tomorrow and then make our decision. I’m sure everyone is in the same position, so let’s see what we can do. Regarding the official announcement of the agreement of Valentino and the team, I’m really happy for him, for the team, and also for me because I like having him on track. “

Fabio Quartararo has qualified second for his 20th front row start in MotoGP. On his 19 previous front rows, he went on to finish on the podium nine times, including two wins.
Fabio Quartararo has qualified second for his 20th front row start in MotoGP. On his 19 previous front rows, he went on to finish on the podium nine times, including two wins.
Valentino Rossi – P3

“It‘s a great result to be on the front row. Today is a special day, because I signed the contract for next year, I‘m very happy. We worked well from yesterday, and today in FP4 I had good pace, also with the used tyre. So, I knew I could do a good lap, but it‘s not always easy. At the end, I was able to push at the limit, riding well without making any mistakes. I‘m very happy to be on the front row, because this is very important for the race. But the most important thing is that the bike is competitive. All the Yamaha riders have a good pace, so we need to make a good start, do everything right from the beginning, and then we‘ll see. I am competitive and strong. I can be fast for all the race. But MotoGP is always difficult, and things can change fast from one day to the other. To beat the others you have to arrive at the chequered flag earlier than them – that‘s the target.”

Valentino Rossi, who is the most successful rider at Catalunya in GP racing with 10 wins (seven in the premier class), has qualified third, which is his first front row start since he was second on the grid in Silverstone last year. Rossi is scheduled to start his 350th premier class race on Sunday. The last time Valentino Rossi started from the front row in MotoGP in Catalunya was in 2009, when he was the second fastest qualifier on his way to win the race.
Valentino Rossi, who is the most successful rider at Catalunya in GP racing with 10 wins (seven in the premier class), has qualified third, which is his first front row start since he was second on the grid in Silverstone last year. Rossi is scheduled to start his 350th premier class race on Sunday. The last time Valentino Rossi started from the front row in MotoGP in Catalunya was in 2009, when he was the second fastest qualifier on his way to win the race.
Jack Miller – P4

“I’am quite happy with the set up that we have tried during FP4, I definitively had a better feeling. Today’s weather conditions were acceptable and the wind was not as strong as yesterday, which helped. We have to be very careful due to the lack of grip. I hope to have a good race tomorrow.”

After passing through Q1, Jack Miller has qualified fourth as the highest-placed Ducati rider. This is the fifth successive race that Miller is the top Ducati rider on the grid, a sequence that started in Austria (although Johann Zarco was the top Ducati in qualifying in Styria before he started from pitlane).
After passing through Q1, Jack Miller has qualified fourth as the highest-placed Ducati rider. This is the fifth successive race that Miller is the top Ducati rider on the grid, a sequence that started in Austria (although Johann Zarco was the top Ducati in qualifying in Styria before he started from pitlane).
Maverick Vinales – P5

“The start is always crucial and fifth position is difficult, but it‘s not a really bad result considering we struggled a lot with the tyres this afternoon. Tomorrow we‘ll try to make another step forward. I think maybe we can find something really good for tomorrow. On rhythm we are good, we are very consistent and that is the most important. Tomorrow I‘ll go crazy on the first lap to move up to second or third, and then we‘ll see. What we understand is that we have a good pace in the last ten or twelve laps, which is important because this track is very demanding on the rear tyre. We will see tomorrow, but we are confident for the race.”

On pole in the last two races, Maverick Viñales is fifth, which is the third time this year he’s failed to take a front row start.
On pole in the last two races, Maverick Viñales is fifth, which is the third time this year he’s failed to take a front row start.
Johann Zarco – P6

“Starting from the second row is a very good thing for tomorrow’s race. Since yesterday, we are taking steps forward, we have improved our feeling with the bike and our race pace. Also yesterday we have improved our feelings with the used tire to be able to make a good end of the race and try to fight for the podium.”

Johann Zarco has qualified sixth, which is his best qualifying result since he was third in Styria, although there he started from pitlane due to a penalty. This is his best qualifying result in Catalunya since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2017.
Johann Zarco has qualified sixth, which is his best qualifying result since he was third in Styria, although there he started from pitlane due to a penalty. This is his best qualifying result in Catalunya since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2017.
Pol Espargaro – P7

“A so-so day. I’m happy because the lap-time was not bad but having seen our pace in FP4 with a used tire maybe I was expecting a bit more. My feeling in qualifying was not too bad but we didn’t get that extra grip in other places when we put a fresh tire on the bike. Anyway, P7 is OK and the straight is long here so let’s see if we can get some positions back at the start, make a good rhythm and see what will happen.”

Heading the third row of the grid is Pol Espargaro in seventh. This is KTM’s best MotoGP qualifying at the Circuit de<br /> Barcelona-Catalunya.” width=”1024″ height=”683″ srcset=”https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-11.jpg 1024w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-106.jpg 300w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-107.jpg 160w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-108.jpg 768w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-109.jpg 1536w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-110.jpg 750w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-111.jpg 1140w, https://www.motorcyclenews.net/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/yamaha-dominate-catalunya-motogp-qualifying-112.jpg 1920w” sizes=”(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px”></a><figcaption id=Heading the third row of the grid is Pol Espargaro in seventh. This is KTM’s best MotoGP qualifying at the Circuit de
Barcelona-Catalunya.
Joan Mir – P8

“My target was the second row, and I came close to it. I’m still trying to improve my qualifying performances, but it takes time and I’m working on it. I’m happy with eighth but I struggled to make one quick lap today so that cost me a higher place, but my race pace is there. I will give everything tomorrow to have a strong race, it’s going to be very competitive I think!”

Highest-placed Suzuki rider, Joan Mir has qualified eighth, which is the sixth time this year he has failed to qualify within the top six. He will be aiming to stand on the podium for the third time in row, which would be the first time that Suzuki riders took three (or more) podiums in a row in MotoGP since 2018 (then it was four in a row from Japan to Valencia).
Highest-placed Suzuki rider, Joan Mir has qualified eighth, which is the sixth time this year he has failed to qualify within the top six. He will be aiming to stand on the podium for the third time in row, which would be the first time that Suzuki riders took three (or more) podiums in a row in MotoGP since 2018 (then it was four in a row from Japan to Valencia).
Danilo Petrucci – P9

“This morning, we have finalised our work following the direction identified yesterday afternoon. After getting direct access to Q2, I managed to complete another good lap in qualifying: we are all very close, so I am satisfied with the third row. It won’t be an easy race tomorrow: it will be difficult to make the right tyre choice and manage them for all the duration of the Grand Prix, especially given the track conditions and the low temperatures to which we are not used. However, I remain confident, and I want to thank the team for all the work they have done.”

Danilo Petrucci, who finished third last year in Catalunya, has qualified in ninth place, equalling his second-best qualifying result so far this season from Emilia Romagna. Brno was his best, when he was eighth.
Danilo Petrucci, who finished third last year in Catalunya, has qualified in ninth place, equalling his second-best qualifying result so far this season from Emilia Romagna. Brno was his best, when he was eighth.
Brad Binder – P10

“It was tough. I wanted to push and try to do a good job but I wasn’t comfortable with the front end. When I wanted to push into the left-handers I just kept washing the front tire. It was really difficult: I felt like I was riding around with one hand in my pocket because it was such hard work. We’ll sit down and make a plan for tomorrow.”

Brad Binder
Brad Binder
Takaaki Nakagami – P11

“In FP3, at the end of the session, we tried to improve the lap time, but unluckily I had a crash at turn two which was due to a cold tyre as the temperature wasn’t high enough and I lost the front. I’m sorry to the team as we lost the opportunity to stay in the top 10 and we went into Q1 qualifying. Q1 was good and the lap time was quite good, we were able to make our best lap time of the weekend and go into Q2 which was really positive for the team and myself. But in Q2 we had only one new tyre because we came from Q1 and everyone else had two. So P11, I’m a little bit disappointed, but we had a crash this morning and the situation was not the best, but we finally made it through to Q2. P11 is not too bad, but the biggest thing for tomorrow is tyre management as this track is so difficult and this track is so long. But we had good pace in FP4 which is a good sign, so we’ll try our best and hopefully we can get a good position in the race.”

Miguel Oliveira – P12

“It was a tough Qualifying. This morning we finished with a very good feeling. This afternoon, the conditions changed a bit and I was not so comfortable riding the medium front. I crashed on my fastest lap in Qualifying and lost a bit of feeling, which means I couldn’t do any better than this morning. We hope to do a clever race and arrive as close to the top as we can.”

Miguel Oliveira
Miguel Oliveira
Alex Rins – P13

“I just needed one more flying lap in Q1 and I’m sure I could’ve made it into final qualifying, I was so close! But anyway, I feel good with my race pace so I think I can get a nice result. I will fight tomorrow and try to put passes in on those around me to get the best position I can.”

Alex Rins
Pecco Bagnaia – P14

“I will start from 14th place and I’m not happy about it. During the Q1 I messed up because I wasn’t fast in T4 otherwise I would have been in Q2. It will be a difficult race, I think that the pace will be slower and the most important thing will be the tires retaining, no one expected that the conditions would be like these. I have to do a good start and to recover positions since the first laps. I’m confident for tomorrow because I know to have a good race pace and I can take an advantage thanks to the engine of Ducati.”

Pecco Bagnaia chasing Vinales
Aleix Espargaro – P15

“Definitely a not an easy day. Today, I gave it all once again to get into the top 10. We are competitive, but we are still lacking a few tenths to battle with the best. Grip is still extremely low. If you push too hard, you end up falling like I did. The crash left me in pain. I’ll need to use my head in the race tomorrow. There are a lot of very fast riders who are behind me on the grid. I think the best strategy is to stay calm in the early laps and try to conserve the tyre as much as possible.”

Aleix Espargaro
Cal Crutchlow – P16

“Today I felt quite positive with the bike, I was able to push in a good way. Overall I still have some problems and pain in my arm, so we’re trying to manage that as best as possible. I was disappointed I wasn’t able to go through to Q2 because I think I should have been able to, but I got held up in my lap. Also the same thing happened on my qualifying lap (in FP3) as a rider pulled in front of me in the last sector and wasted my lap and also my next lap as they made a mistake in turn one and pulled back in front of me again! But this is the situation, I qualified 16th today but I’m quite positive about our race pace tomorrow and think we can have a good race and improve our position.”

Cal Crutchlow
Cal Crutchlow
Andrea Dovizioso – P17

“Unfortunately I am still struggling to understand how to brake properly, and obviously this complicates everything, especially in qualifying. As I am not feeling comfortable when braking, I can’t be as fast as I want and try to make the most of the tyres. It’s a shame because our pace for the race is not bad, but the position from which we will start tomorrow will definitely affect our performance.”

Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso has qualified in 17th, which is his second worst qualifying result since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2008, after Brno this year when he qualified 18th.
Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso has qualified in 17th, which is his second worst qualifying result since he stepped up to MotoGP in 2008, after Brno this year when he qualified 18th.
Alex Marquez – P18

“Today was a difficult situation, I wasn’t able to improve my time a lot as yesterday I did a 40.4 and today only a 40.1. We weren’t able to make a big step between days, so we are a little bit further behind. Tomorrow we have Warm Up to try something, especially on the electronics side to try and improve the rear grip. Managing the tyres will be important tomorrow, we saw in FP4 there is some variety with how fast riders are. Still the grip around the circuit isn’t high, so we need to try and find a solution.”

Alex Marquez
Iker Lecuona – P19

“It’s difficult to say a lot about today. In FP4, I tried to improve my feeling with the bike, we didn’t change anything and I was just trying. In Qualifying I managed to improve my lap time. Finally, it was not bad, but not good enough. Tomorrow is a new day and the most important of the week anyway.”

Iker Lecuona
Stefan Bradl – P20

“We had quite an average day today, the crash in FP4 which was a bit unlucky. Our first run in FP4 was quite good and I was happy with the pace. We wanted to try some changes to the setup, but the fall upset our plans again. I was expecting a bit more from today but I’m happy overall because our pace in FP4 is looking good. I’m hoping to make up some positions early and focus on my own race, this circuit is always tricky – especially with these cooler conditions.”

Bradley Smith – P21

“This morning, things started on the right foot. I had a good feeling and a promising pace. We changed the settings for FP4 but it didn’t work. I crashed with the first bike, so I had to use the version with different engine specs in qualifying. We’ll try to get this morning’s sensations back in warmup. In the race, tyre wear will be a determining factor. As for us, our only choice is to push hard straight away and then we’ll just have to deal with the lack of grip.”

Tito Rabat – P22

“In the morning we did a very good practice, but in the afternoon I don’t know very well what happened since I tried to improve my time but I was not able to. It is the first time that I cannot improve my time in the afternoon session. It is true that in qualifying I was very strong and I almost fell at Turn 10. With my eyes set on tomorrow and we hope to continue improving.”

Massimo Meregalli – Monster Yamaha Team Director

“It was another very positive qualifying day for Yamaha, securing its second lock-out of the season. We are very pleased for Valentino to see him back on the front row, which is well deserved. Both he and the team have been working really hard, and third place on the grid is a nice achievement on such an important day for Vale. It‘s a shame that Maverick wasn‘t able to produce the lap times he had in mind, especially after the really good pace he showed in FP4. His goal was to be on the first row, but we know he has the rhythm to join the fight at the front. Before tomorrow’s Warm Up, the team will try to further improve the area of the bike that didn’t give him the right confidence. We will put in 100% effort to make sure we are ready for the fight, especially as this is a Monster Energy sponsored event. We want to see our riders celebrate on the podium at the end of it.”

Davide Brivio – Suzuki Team Manager

“Today was positive in terms of our riders’ race pace, and they are both happy with their GSX-RRs. Everyone struggled a bit today due to the lower temperatures, but we have a competitive pace anyway. Joan qualified on the third row which is an improvement compared to last week, and Alex only missed Q2 by a very small amount. I’m sure both riders can have a good race tomorrow, we’re looking forward to it.”

Team Suzuki Pits

MotoGP Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Bike Q Time/Gap
1 Franco MORBIDELLI YAMAHA Q2 1m38.798
2 Fabio QUARTARARO YAMAHA Q2 +0.210
3 Valentino ROSSI YAMAHA Q2 +0.331
4 Jack MILLER DUCATI Q2 +0.427
5 Maverick VIÑALES YAMAHA Q2 +0.573
6 Johann ZARCO DUCATI Q2 +0.580
7 Pol ESPARGARO KTM Q2 +0.697
8 Joan MIR SUZUKI Q2 +0.830
9 Danilo PETRUCCI DUCATI Q2 +0.843
10 Brad BINDER KTM Q2 +0.861
11 Takaaki NAKAGAMI HONDA Q2 +0.915
12 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM Q2 +1.390
13 Alex RINS SUZUKI Q1 (*) 0.352
14 Francesco BAGNAIA DUCATI Q1 (*) 0.378
15 Aleix ESPARGARO APRILIA Q1 (*) 0.574
16 Cal CRUTCHLOW HONDA Q1 (*) 0.589
17 Andrea DOVIZIOSO DUCATI Q1 (*) 0.710
18 Alex MARQUEZ HONDA Q1 (*) 0.765
19 Iker LECUONA KTM Q1 (*) 1.091
20 Stefan BRADL HONDA Q1 (*) 1.322
21 Bradley SMITH APRILIA Q1 (*) 1.439
22 Tito RABAT DUCATI Q1 (*) 1.614

Moto2 Qualifying Report

Another week, another lap record! Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46) has done it again in the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, putting in a 1:43.355 to set pole position and a new lap record at the track. He’s joined on the front row by Q1 graduate Jorge Navarro (HDR Heidrun Speed Up) and podium finisher last time out Sam Lowes (EG 0,0 Marc VDS). Enea Bastianini (Italtrans Racing Team), who’s only five points off Marini in the standings, starts down in tenth.

In Q1, it was Joe Roberts (Tennor American Racing) who went top, followed by Jake Dixon (Petronas Sprinta Racing), Navarro and Nicolo Bulega (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) as they headed through – leaving one surprise in their wake in the form of Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team Moto2), who missed out and starts P19 after also crashing on Saturday morning, rider ok.

Marini was quickest from the get go in Q2, with teammate Marco Bezzecchi going second in the early stages before Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Lowes leapfrogged him to sit as Marini’s closest challengers. That soon changed, however, as Marini went quicker again and Bezzecchi following suit to take back second. Q1 graduate Dixon then moved up into third as Marini went even quicker, setting the fastest ever Moto2™ lap around the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. His 1:43.355 moved him well clear of the competition, and as it turned out it would secure him pole.

Dixon was then setting red sectors and the British rider pipped Bezzecchi to P2, but the Brit was still 0.349 off Marini’s time. Another Q1 graduate in the form of Navarro then shot up into provisional second, cutting the gap to Marini down to a tenth and a half. Navarro’s team-mate Fabio Di Giannantonio (HDR Heidrun Speed Up) and Lowes then interchanged P3 lap times to push Dixon down to P5, with Di Giannantonio forced to settle for P4.

2020 Catalunya Moto2 front row
1 Luca Marini – Sky Racing Team VR46 – Kalex 1:43.355
2 Jorge Navarro – HDR Heidrun Speed Up – Speed Up +0.181
3 Sam Lowes – EG 0,0 Marc VDS – Kalex +0.282

That was pretty much that at the top. Marini was untouchable, with Navaaro in second and Lowes taking third from ‘Diggia’, leaving Dixon down in fifth. The Brit nevertheless claims his best-ever Moto2™ qualifying result for the second weekend in a row though – going one better than Misano. Bezzecchi will start on the second row alongside ‘Diggia’ and Dixon, the Italian forced to settle for sixth.

Joe Roberts spearheads Row 3 in P7 after coming through Q1, taking his first Saturday top 10 since his Czech GP pole position. After finishing second in FP3, rookie Marcos Ramirez makes it two Tennor American Racing machines on the third row as he took his best qualifying of 2020 to sit in P8. Xavi Vierge completes the third row.

Remy Gardner (Onexox TKKR SAG Team) completed the top 10 in Q2, but after crashing under yellow flags on Friday, the Australian faces a six-place grid penalty. What does that mean? It means Bastianini will move up a position into the top 10 on the grid – and every little helps for the Italian who faces a tough task to mix it with Marini on Sunday afternoon.

Luca Marini

“I felt very good from the beginning of the weekend, it wasn’t easy and I didn’t expect it because it’s a very different situation to Misano, but the bike is still working well. So I don’t have so much rear grip but for everyone it’s the same so that’s great. I tried to manage the rear in practice because I want to understand how it will be in the race. In the quali I focused on being precise, and with a good lap and all sectors together. I think I did my job, and I’m very happy to start from pole because it will be important tomorrow, but I think Speed Up and Sam are strong here so it won’t be an easy race, but for today I’m happy and for the work I’ve done with my crew.”

Luca Marini

Moto2 Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time/Gap
1 Luca MARINI KALEX Q2 1’43.355
2 Jorge NAVARRO SPEED UP Q2 0.181
3 Sam LOWES KALEX Q2 0.282
4 Fabio DI GIANNANTONI   ITA SPEED UP Q2 0.297
5 Jake DIXON KALEX Q2 0.349
6 Marco BEZZECCHI KALEX Q2 0.359
7 Joe ROBERTS KALEX Q2 0.386
8 Marcos RAMIREZ KALEX Q2 0.508
9 Xavi VIERGE KALEX Q2 0.516
10 Remy GARDNER KALEX Q2 0.519
11 Enea BASTIANINI KALEX Q2 0.553
12 Thomas LUTHI KALEX Q2 0.561
13 Augusto FERNANDEZ KALEX Q2 0.601
14 Jorge MARTIN KALEX Q2 0.691
15 Marcel SCHROTTER KALEX Q2 0.888
16 Nicolò BULEGA KALEX Q2 0.994
17 Edgar PONS KALEX Q2 1.055
18 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA KALEX Q2 1.079
19 Aron CANET SPEED UP Q1 (*) 0.518
20 Stefano MANZI MV AGUSTA Q1 (*) 0.612
21 Simone CORSI MV AGUSTA Q1 (*) 0.769
22 Hector GARZO KALEX Q1 (*) 0.831
23 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA   ITA KALEX Q1 (*) 0.860
24 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI   ITA KALEX Q1 (*) 0.899
25 Hafizh SYAHRIN SPEED UP Q1 (*) 1.048
26 Somkiat CHANTRA KALEX Q1 (*) 1.064
27 Kasma DANIEL KALEX Q1 (*) 1.443
28 Bo BENDSNEYDER NTS Q1 (*) 1.519
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR KALEX Q1 (*) 1.728
30 Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI NTS Q1 (*) 2.084

Moto3

Tony Arbolino (Rivacold Snipers Team) has taken his first pole position of 2020 at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, the Italian slamming in a new lap record 1:47.762 to pull an incredible sixth tenths clear of Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Gabriel Rodrigo (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3). And it’s the exact same 0.618 gap to both, with Fernandez and Rodrigo setting identical laps but the former’s second fastest effort ensuring he starts second.

In Q1 there was already plenty to talk about as Ai Ogura (Honda Team Asia) stole the headlines for all the wrong reasons. Incredibly, Championship leader Albert Arenas (Gaviota Aspar Team Moto3), closest challenger Ogura and third overall John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) all found themselves in the session, and it was mission accomplished for Arenas and McPhee as they moved through behind Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Q1’s fastest man Alonso Lopez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team). But Ogura? The Japanese rider suffered his worst qualifying of the season by a whopping nine places, so he’ll be facing a serious mountain on Sunday from P24 on the grid.

Once Q2 was underway, Fernandez set the first benchmark of the session with a 1:48.611 to lead Darryn Binder (CIP – Green Power) and Kaito Toba (Red Bull KTM Ajo) in the early stages, but Arenas was next on the attack and into provisional P2 on his first flying lap. Arbolino then went top by just 0.045, moving the goalposts ahead of a frantic final couple of laps for the field.

On his second run, Fernandez reclaimed provisional pole by 0.186, but the standings were soon to get a shake up. Seven riders were lighting up the timing screens as the 18-rider field chased pole, but the fastest of them all was Arbolino. Over three tenths under Fernandez’ lap time halfway around the lap, the Italian was nearly four tenths under by the third split. Making no mistakes through the final sector and keeping it together across the line, Arbolino’s time was astonishing. Pole secured, lap record obliterated and over six tenths clear.

There was last minute drama for Fernandez too as the Spaniard tumbled out at the final corner, but rider ok and ready to line up second. Rodrigo takes the outside of the front row after setting his best time late on, and although it’s identical to Fernandez’ best, the Argentine’s second fastest time was slower so he takes P3.

2020 Catalunya Moto3 front row
1 Tony Arbolino – Rivacold Snipers Team – Honda 1:47.762
2 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – KTM – +0.618
3 Gabriel Rodrigo – Kömmerling Gresini Moto3 – Honda +0.618

Arenas will be stoked to be heading Row 2 in fourth, the highest-placed of the current title-challenging trio. Jaume Masia (Leopard Racing) played the risky strategy of not setting a lap time until the final minute, but it paid off as the Spaniard claimed P5 in Q2. Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse) completes the second row in sixth, the Italian 0.8 shy of Arbolino’s pace but only just over two tenths away from P2.

Filip Salač (Rivacold Snipers Team) spearheads the third row in seventh as the Czech rider took his best Saturday afternoon result of the season, joined by Toba and Binder on Row 3. The Japanese rider improved on his final flying lap to get the better of the South African, who was unable to beat his second lap set early on.

Sergio Garcia (Estrella Galicia 0,0) rounds out the top 10 in Moto3 Q2, joined on Row 4 by Andrea Migno (Sky Racing Team VR46) and McPhee. That’s now three races in a row that McPhee has failed to qualify inside the top 10, although he did still win one of them… and Sunday is very much another day.

Tony Arbolino

“It was an incredible lap, I think from the first run I saw I was first and went in the box and saw the data. It wasn’t a perfect lap, I said ‘ok, we can do better’ but I didn’t expect to do that lap. We put the bike the same as last year and we’re faster in QP and a bit more difficult in the race, but it was an incredible lap with 0.6 to second and we did an incredible job. We didn’t stop working every day so I think we deserve it! But tomorrow we need to get a lot of points because we’re not so close to first in the Championship so we have a lot of work to do tomorrow!”

Tony Arbolino

Moto3 Qualifying Results

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time/Gap
1 Tony ARBOLINO HONDA Q2 1m47.762
2 Raul FERNANDEZ KTM Q2 +0.618
3 Gabriel RODRIGO HONDA Q2 +0.618
4 Albert ARENAS KTM Q2 +0.628
5 Jaume MASIA HONDA Q2 +0.728
6 Niccolò ANTONELLI HONDA Q2 +0.832
7 Filip SALAC HONDA Q2 +0.942
8 Kaito TOBA KTM Q2 +0.967
9 Darryn BINDER KTM Q2 +1.026
10 Sergio GARCIA HONDA Q2 +1.062
11 Andrea MIGNO KTM Q2 +1.111
12 John MCPHEE HONDA Q2 +1.113
13 Dennis FOGGIA HONDA Q2 +1.176
14 Jeremy ALCOBA HONDA Q2 +1.207
15 Romano FENATI HUSQVARNA Q2 +1.323
16 Alonso LOPEZ HUSQVARNA Q2 +1.464
17 Celestino VIETTI KTM Q2 +1.494
18 Ayumu SASAKI KTM Q2 +1.616
19 Jose Julian GARCIA HONDA Q1 (*) 0.436
20 Riccardo ROSSI KTM Q1 (*) 0.452
21 Carlos TATAY KTM Q1 (*) 0.526
22 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM Q1 (*) 0.728
23 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM Q1 (*) 0.829
24 Ai OGURA HONDA Q1 (*) 0.888
25 Stefano NEPA KTM Q1 (*) 0.925
26 Ryusei YAMANAKA HONDA Q1 (*) 1.066
27 Khairul Idham PAWI HONDA Q1 (*) 1.318
28 Davide PIZZOLI KTM Q1 (*) 1.394
29 Yuki KUNII HONDA Q1 (*) 1.543
30 Maximilian KOFLER KTM Q1 (*) 2.104
31 Barry BALTUS KTM FP3 0.819

2020 MotoGP Calendar

Rnd Date Circuit
1 08 March (Moto2/Moto3) Losail International Circuit
2 19 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
3 26 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
4 09 August Automotodrom Brno
5 16 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
6 23 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
7 13 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
8 20 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
9 27 September Barcelona – Catalunya
10 11 October Le Mans
11 18 October MotorLand Aragón
12 25 October MotorLand Aragón
13 08 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
14 15 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
15 22 November Autodromo Internacional do Algarve

Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini Schedule

Time Class Session
1740 Moto3 WUP
1810 Moto2 WUP
1840 MotoGP WUP
2000 Moto3 Race
2120 Moto2 Race
2300 MotoGP Race

Source: MCNews.com.au

Five brands in top seven on slippery and windy Friday at Catalunya

Franco Morbidelli leads Friday Practice at Catalunya

Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) was struggling with illness the week after his incredible maiden MotoGP win in the San Marino GP, but now he’s back – and back on top. The Italian shot to P1 in the afternoon on Friday to rule the roost, a tenth ahead of Johann Zarco (Esponsorama Racing), with rookie Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) searing up to third by the end of the day’s action.

Franco Morbidelli

FP1

The morning, however, belonged to Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) as the Frenchman went faster and faster to end the session over four tenths clear of nearest rival Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team). Dovizioso, in turn, was a couple of tenths clear of Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) down in third, and the two spent a while together on track, whether by accident or design.

It was an uncharacteristic start to the event for Mir just before that, however, as the Spaniard crashed at Turn 5 unhurt, although upon getting back on the Mayorcan went quicker.

Fourth place went the way of Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) as last week’s winner was just 0.045 off Mir, that making the top four in the title fight also the top four in FP1. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) was less than a tenth off Viñales, in an impressive fifth.

Morbidelli, Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar), Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda Castrol) and Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) completed the top ten, Crutchlow impressing on his return from injury. As well as Mir’s crash, there was a tumble for Iker Lecuona (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) at Turn 2.

FP2

In the much windier afternoon, Morbidelli made sure Petronas Yamaha SRT were top in both sessions of the day. Morbidelli, Binder and Rins all rose into the top four to slot in behind FP1 pacesetter Quartararo initially, with Viñales and Rossi also improving their times. After the first few bouts, Dovizioso, Quartararo, Mir and Aleix Espargaro were the only riders inside the top 10 who hadn’t gone faster in the first 15 minutes of FP2.

Morbidelli was then down at Turn 10 – unhurt – with 24 minutes to go. Before that, Zarco also crashed at Turn 5 – rider ok – and Repsol Honda Team’s Stefan Bradl also went down, the latter at Turn 2. Lecuona later suffered a second crash of the day. Wind or grip? The session was certainly a tougher one in terms of tumbles.

Heading into the final 10 minutes of FP2, there were 12 riders within a second and with automatic entry to Q2 already on everyone’s minds, that meant one thing – cue the time attacks!

Brad Binder P3

The first benchmark came from Binder as he leapt up from outside the top 20 in FP1 to lead the way, four tenths clear. Morbidelli and Zarco were on a charge but lost those laps after Yellow Flags for Lecuona’s crash, but next time around the duo became the first and only riders into the 1:39s, demoting Binder to third overall.

Viñales also struck late to slot into fourth, ahead of Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu). Every rider bar three improved their time in the afternoon by the time the flag came out: Dovizioso, teammate Danilo Petrucci and Quartararo were the outliers.

Overall then, it’s the FP2 fastest five of Morbidelli, Zarco, Binder, Viñales and Nakagami who are also fastest overall, with Quartararo’s FP1 time slotting him into sixth on the combined time-sheets. That shuffles Mir down to P7 overall, ahead of Pol Espargaro, Alex Marquez and Rossi. The latter duo are the most successful on the grid at the track across all classes, with three and five wins, respectively.

Jack Miller P12

Next up is another group who all improved, but remain outside the top ten: Rins is 11th and the first man looking to move forward in FP3, ahead of Jack Miller (Pramac Racing), Crutchlow and Aleix Espargaro.  Miller held back by struggles for grip and also coping with the wind.

Dovizioso, who didn’t go faster in the afternoon, ended the day in P15 overall. For him more than many, FP3 is a chance to shoot back towards the top.


Friday Rider Reflections

Franco Morbidelli – P1

“I felt immediately very good with the bike today and I was able to be quite fast this morning. I think we did the right modifications this afternoon to improve the pace and I was able to be fast. I’m happy with today. I went in too hot to Turn 10 with cold tyres on my first flying lap, it was too early to push that hard and I ended up on the ground. I wanted to get the bike back to the pitbox to keep working with the used tyres, but unfortunately I was not able to. I changed my focus to the flying lap with soft tyres and was able to put in a quick lap. It was a really positive Friday for us. This weekend will be interesting because the conditions could play a big part, there is a lot of wind and the grip level of the track is slightly strange. We need to see how it develops over the weekend and try to make a strategy, but at the moment it is really difficult to predict.”

Franco Morbidelli
Johann Zarco – P2

“It has been a good day today in a track that I like a lot. In the morning with a new tire it was not easy to set a good time.  The afternoon training was weird, I had a small crash possibly caused by the low temperature on the left side of the tire.  Despite this I managed to go fast, at the end of the session on soft tires I managed to go fast and finish the day in second position.”

Johann Zarco
Maverick Vinales – P4

“I’m very happy with last week’s victory, it gives us some extra confidence, and now we’re in Montmeló, which is a track that I love and where I can ride very fast. The first day has been good. In the morning I felt fast straight away, but in the afternoon the conditions were more difficult because of the wind, but I think we rode well. Our lap times were quite good, and the most important thing is that the feeling is there. I was feeling comfortable on the bike. Honestly, I didn’t do a very good hot lap, because I was on the medium front and I didn’t want to take the risk to push, but I’m quite happy. We are trying to improve and understand the bike. We just try to remain calm and go with the flow in the corners. Tomorrow we will focus on the soft-soft tyre combination to see if it works for us over the race distance. We’ll also try to make another step, especially concerning the race set-up, but I feel strong. If I can push for the pole position, I will, but our main objective is to be on the front row, and then we’ll see where we stand.”

Maverick Vinales
Takaaki Nakagami – P5

“Today was a bit of a strange day. The track condition was not the best and, normally, from FP1 to FP2 you can feel there is more rubber on the track and more grip. But today I didn’t feel any improvement on the track because it was so windy, this afternoon was maybe worse than this morning, and conditions were so difficult. I really struggled to keep hold of the bike. At the end of FP2 we put a new soft rear tyre on and were able to improve the lap time and finish P5 overall, so we’re into the top 10 and this is a good start for us. But we definitely need to improve for the race distance, because with the medium compound we are not strong enough. So we’ll work hard to prepare a good bike for tomorrow.”

Fabio Quartararo – P6

“I was not feeling well yesterday and, although I am better today, I am still not at 100%. However, the feeling on the bike was great, this morning we managed to make quite a good lap time. The track condition was a bit strange, but we finished in a good position. This afternoon we continued with the used tyre, did a lot of laps and the feeling was great. I was surprised that we could make the quick laps we did on these tyres. Unfortunately when I went to do the time attack, I had a problem with the brakes and so couldn’t put the lap together. We still have FP3 tomorrow to really push and see our true potential. I’m feeling good on the bike and let’s see tomorrow if we can improve something for the race.”

Fabio Quartararo
Joan Mir – P7

“Today has been a bit tough for everyone because the track is slippery and it’s really difficult to find the best tyre option, it’s also quite windy. This first day hasn’t really shown who’s on the pace and who’s not. I worked a lot with a used medium rear tyre which gave me some info for the race. I didn’t really try to set fast laps today, but my lap times weren’t bad anyway. Qualifying will be interesting tomorrow.”

Joan Mir
Alex Marquez – P9

“It was not a bad day for us, it is really positive to be ninth. Maybe not every rider was pushing to their maximum today, but it’s a positive sign. I am feeling good on the bike, even if we are suffering a bit with rear grip – I think all riders are finding the rear grip tough. It’s a lovely track but there’s no grip and we have to try and manage it, hopefully with more riding it improves. I am happy with how this first day has gone, I am using everything we have been learning in the previous races and the test and we are making progress.”

Alex Marquez
Valentino Rossi – P10

“The conditions are difficult, because the grip level is very low. So, you have to ride the bike in a different way compared to Misano and manage the sliding and spinning rear as much as possible – which is difficult. But, apart from that, I don’t feel so bad. Today was positive because my pace is quite good, I feel good with the bike. It works well, and I feel comfortable. For sure, we will have to work a lot, because everybody will improve for tomorrow, but the first day wasn’t so bad. I’m in P10, but I think my potential is higher. The windy conditions were difficult this afternoon, especially on the front straight, because when you exit from the last corner you don’t have any protection from the wind. The straight is also very fast, and at the end of it the wind is quite inconsistent and it moves the bike a lot. That’s quite scary. But it looks like it will be less windy tomorrow, so I think FP3 will be very crucial, as always, for staying in the top 10. I think everybody will be pushing at the maximum. After that I will try to do a good qualifying and try to start from the first two rows. Right now it’s still open between the soft and the medium tyres, especially on the rear. We need to make some more laps before we make a decision. Usually at this track the grip level improves on the second day, so we will see tomorrow.”

Valentino Rossi
Alex Rins – P11

“Today I got back the good feeling that I didn’t have in Misano. This morning I suffered a bit with the low grip on the track, but in the afternoon I started to really enjoy riding here and I managed a lot of consistent lap times. My aim is to take another step forward tomorrow in terms of one lap pace and then I’ll be hoping to qualify well.”

Alex Rins
Jack Miller – P12

“Unfortunately a combination of things weren’t helpful, I did not have grip and the wind was very strong. Also, I struggled a lot with the front wheel because of the wind. Let’s hope it will be better tomorrow as the weather forecast should improve.”

Jack Miller
Cal Crutchlow – P13

“It was positive to be back out on the track today with the LCR Honda team. We worked in a good way, I tried the setting we had for the race here last year when I was really competitive in the middle and the end of the race. But today that didn’t work with the 2020 Honda and we have to go back to the drawing board a little bit to improve my feeling with the bike. We had some instability with the bike, but a lot of this was due to the wind today as it was really, really high. But we worked in a good way and it was nice to be back in the garage with the boys. I felt like I was competitive, I wasn’t fast enough, but I was competitive. I still have some pain with my arm, the ankle felt ok, but my tendon in the arm is causing me some bother and the arm is very swollen again, so we’ll have to do the best treatment we can so we can ride well tomorrow.”

Cal Crutchlow
Aleix Espargaro – P14

“A difficult day, but I felt good. I like this layout and I had fun riding today. The grip is extremely low, especially if we compare it to Misano. Because of this, I did not take too many risks, as it would have been incredibly easy to make a mistake. Unfortunately, I do not have good sensations with the medium tyre but, because of tyre allocation, I was only able to use the soft in the last 10 minutes of FP2. I felt much better with that one, but I was unable to do a good lap, partly because of a yellow flag. Tomorrow morning I’ll try again to qualify for Q2.”

Aleix Espargaro
Andrea Dovizioso – P15

“As expected, there is much less grip on this track than Misano, and for this reason, in this morning’s session, we first had to adapt to these new conditions. Compared to the rest of the riders on track, today we worked very differently and therefore we cannot make a real comparison to understand our potential. Unfortunately, with today’s strong wind we have not been able to get any univocal feedback from the tests we made, so we hope tomorrow to find different conditions, which will allow us to confirm the work done. The goal will be to be able to finish FP3 in the top ten tomorrow morning”.

Andrea Dovizioso
Iker Lecuona – P16

“I have to admit, that I was struggling a lot with the front today. I had two crashes and didn’t really understand why, as there was no single warning. I felt good, but suddenly I lost the front. I need to work with the team now in order to try to find a good solution for tomorrow and hopefully we can improve.”

Miguel Oliveira – P17

“Today has been a difficult day for us. We couldn’t manage to find a good balance with the bike to gain some grip here on this track. Coming here, we knew that the grip level was not so high, but we didn’t expect to find so many issues. So, we will do our best together with the team to work on this in order to do a decent FP3 tomorrow morning.”

Miguel Oliveira
Bradley Smith – P18

“I think it was a demanding day for everyone, especially in terms of rear grip. It seems rather difficult to get the tyre up to temp here, partly because it is a bit cooler than the usual situation here. It will take a few laps to find the right feeling and I’m curious to see what happens tomorrow since I don’t think it will be possible to aim for a flying lap in FP3 and qualifying, but to increase pace gradually instead. Historically, we stress the tyre less with the RS-GP and this is a disadvantage for us at the moment. We need to analyse the data and try to make improvements where that is concerned.”

Stefan Bradl – P19

“My arm is fine, this morning I felt much better than last week and I didn’t have any problems with it. This morning we started well, I am happy with the general setup of the bike and it seems like Honda has made a step since Misano. I think we have a good base for the rest of the weekend. The crash we had today was a little strange, I am perfectly okay, but it upset our plans for FP2 a little bit and I couldn’t do a proper time attack after. Otherwise, we are in quite a good way.”

Stefan Bradl
Pecco Bagnaia – P20

“It was a tough day, I did not have a good feeling as I did not have grip and the wind was very strong, especially in some areas of the track. From the data we have analysed it was found that I could not warm up the tires despite the changes that we have applied. There should be more grip tomorrow as the weather should improve and I am sure it will be better.”

Pecco Bagnaia
Tito Rabat – P21

“It has been a difficult day, things have not turned out as we expected but we are still looking on the positive side.  We have tried things and for tomorrow we have everything much clearer.  I hope to continue taking steps forward as before during this weekend.”

Danilo Petrucci – P22

“It was a rather difficult day, conditioned mainly by the strong wind, which prevented us from immediately understanding which direction to take on this track. After the first session, we made choices that were not correct, and that’s why we had to take a step back. Fortunately, we were able to find the right way towards the end of the day and understand what we need. Of course, today we did not try a time attack, but after this afternoon, I am confident that I can improve tomorrow”.

Danilo Petrucci

Friday MotoGP Combined Practice Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 F.Morbidelli YAMAHA 1m39.789
2 J.Zarco DUCATI +0.109
3 B.Binder KTM +0.219
4 M.Viñales YAMAHA +0.419
5 T.Nakagami HONDA +0.623
6 F.Quartararo YAMAHA +0.642
7 J.Mir SUZUKI +0.652
8 P.Espargaro KTM +0.685
9 A.Marquez HONDA +0.689
10 V.Rossi YAMAHA +0.713
11 A.Rins SUZUKI +0.749
12 J.Miller DUCATI +0.837
13 C.Crutchlow HONDA +0.965
14 A.Espargaro APRILIA +1.002
15 A.Dovizioso DUCATI +1.072
16 I.Lecuona KTM +1.082
17 M.Oliveira KTM +1.239
18 B.Smith APRILIA +1.306
19 S.Bradl HONDA +1.471
20 F.Bagnaia DUCATI +1.548
21 T.Rabat DUCATI +1.884
22 D.Petrucci DUCATI +2.270

Moto2

Sam Lowes (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) was back on top on Friday at the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya, the Brit ahead of closest challenger Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46) by two tenths by the end of play. Completing the top three was Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP) as the German once again showed some solid speed, fastest in the afternoon.

FP1

Lowes kicked off the weekend fastest with a 1:44.122 to lead Championship leader Marini from the off, the two split by exactly two tenths in FP1. Tetsuta Nagashima (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took third as he found some solid form, but the Japanese rider was over half a second off Lowes’ lap. Speed Up machinery made a resurgence in fourth and fifth, meanwhile, with impressive rookie Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team Moto2) getting the better of Fabio Di Giannantonio (HDR Heidrun Speed Up) as the two completed the top five.

The top 14 were within a second in FP1 and with Lowes half a second faster than Nagashima, that meant it was just half a second covering P3 to P14!

There were three crashes but two crashers in the session, with Andi Izdihar (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) taking a tumble at Turn 10, before Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) followed suit not long after. Corsi also later crashed at Turn 5, rider ok.

FP2

The afternoon saw Schrötter take to the top, with the German 0.066 ahead of Di Giannantonio in the session. Home hero Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) slotted into third, ahead of Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) and second in the Championship, Enea Bastianini (Italtrans Racing Team), as the latter made a leap up the timesheets in the session at least, from P13 in FP1.

Jake Dixon (Petronas Sprinta Racing) crashed at Turn 2, before Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) did the same shortly after, riders ok. Gardner has been given a six-place grid penalty for the incident after crashing whilst not respecting a Yellow Flag.

Overall then, it’s Lowes and Marini who lead the way thanks to their fastest times in FP1, ahead of Schrötter by virtue of his fastest lap in the afternoon. Di Giannantonio was consistently quick in both sessions but his FP2 best puts him in fourth, with Nagashima completing the fastest five on Friday by virtue of his FP1 lap.

Rookie Canet ends the day in sixth ahead of Marco Bezzecchi, both also courtesy of their FP1 laps, ahead of Xavi Vierge in eighth.

Next up was the returning Jorge Martin (Red Bull KTM Ajo) as the Spaniard’s FP1 best put him P7 in that session and P9 overall, a solid day’s work as he gets back on track after missing two races.

Augusto Fernandez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) completed the top ten on Day 1, but by an infinitesimal 0.002 – with Bo Bendsneyder (NTS RW Racing GP) missing out by the equally tiny margin of 0.005!

Friday Moto2 Combined Practice Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 S.Lowes KALEX 1m44.122
2 L.Marini KALEX +0.200
3 M.Schrotter KALEX +0.409
4 F.Di Giannanto SPEED UP +0.475
5 T.Nagashima KALEX +0.508
6 A.Canet SPEED UP +0.515
7 M.Bezzecchi KALEX +0.643
8 X.Vierge KALEX +0.678
9 J.Martin KALEX +0.734
10 A.Fernandez KALEX +0.736
11 B.Bendsneyde NTS +0.741
12 E.Bastianini KALEX +0.764
13 N.Bulega KALEX +0.814
14 J.Dixon KALEX +0.841
15 H.Syahrin SPEED UP +0.922
16 J.Navarro SPEED UP +1.000
17 E.Pons KALEX +1.002
18 H.Garzo KALEX +1.032
19 T.Luthi KALEX +1.111
20 R.Gardner KALEX +1.164
21 M.Ramirez KALEX +1.291
22 S.Manzi MV AGUSTA +1.297
23 J.Roberts KALEX +1.321
24 S.Corsi MV AGUSTA +1.407
25 S.Chantra KALEX +1.532
26 L.Dalla Porta KALEX +1.612
27 A.Izdihar KALEX +1.759
28 L.Baldassarri KALEX +1.770
29 K.Daniel KALEX +1.820
30 P.Biesiekirski NTS +2.694

Moto3

Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) is making something of a habit of going fastest on Friday, and the Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya was no different as the Spaniard ended the day with a fairly comfortable margin ahead of compatriot Jaume Masia (Leopard Racing). Last week’s winner, Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), completed the top three on the combined timesheets.

FP1

FP1 saw a familiar name at the top once again: Fernandez. The Spaniard made it three FP1s in a row at the top, and was the only man to dip beneath the 1:49 barrier as he pulled four tenths clear with a late 1:48.853. Husqvarna history maker Fenati was the man in second in the session, ahead of his compatriot Tony Arbolino (Rivacold Snipers Team) a further tenth back in third.

Masia ended FP1 0.575 seconds adrift in fourth, but he had some close company courtesy of Petronas Sprinta Racing’s John McPhee. Championship leader Albert Arenas (Gaviota Aspar Team Moto3) was next up in sixth, with his closest rival as it stands, Ai Ogura (Honda Team Asia), down in an uncharacteristic P25.

FP2

In the afternoon, the wind was higher to complicate life for the lightweight class, and early on Fernandez stole a few more headlines but this time with a spectacular save. Ultimately it was Masia who came out on top in FP2 though, 0.284 ahead of Darryn Binder (CIP – Green Power). Carlos Tatay (Reale Avintia Moto3) was the only other man within half a second of the top after he put in an impressive session, with the three men at the top of the Championship all a little further back: McPhee took P10, Ogura P13 and Arenas P14. For Ogura, however, that was a move forward after his P25 in FP1.

The main headlines from FP2, however, were the crashes. First to go down was Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) as he tumbled at Turn 3, before McPhee went down at Turn 10. Gabriel Rodrigo (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3) and Stefano Nepa (Gaviota Aspar Team Moto3) were then both caught out at Turn 1 a few minutes apart, before another crash at Turn 10, this time for Arbolino. He headed to the Medical Centre but was given the all-clear. Masia then crashed at Turn 7, before Davide Pizzoli (BOE Skull Rider Facile Energy) was the final crasher of the session, at Turn 10.

Ryusei Yamanaka (Estrella Galicia 0,0) avoided a crash with a miracle save, adding to Fernandez’ earlier efforts in the sweepstakes for biggest spectacle of the day.

After a day of two halves in Barcelona then, it’s Fernandez’ FP1 time that puts him on top once again, ahead of Masia’s FP2 fastest by 0.281. Fenati and Arbolino’s best times put them into P3 and P4 overall, respectively, with Darryn Binder ending Friday in fifth thanks to his quickest lap in the afternoon.

Despite his crash, McPhee is the fastest of the Championship-leading trio in P6, but Arenas is less than a tenth off. Both set their quickest efforts in the morning. Niccolo Antonelli (SIC58 Squadra Corse) had a good first day as he slots into eighth, 0.029 off Arenas, with Tatay just another 0.033 off Antonelli, in ninth. Kaito Toba (Red Bull KTM Ajo) completed the top ten.

Ogura ultimately ended the day down in P23, and he’ll be one of the first pushing to improve in FP3 as the fight to head through to Q2 really gets down to business. Tune in for that at 9:00 (GMT +2), before Moto3™ qualifying starts from 12:35.

Friday Moto3 Combined Practice Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 R.Fernandez KTM 1m48.853
2 J.Masia HONDA +0.281
3 R.Fenati HUSQVARNA +0.390
4 T.Arbolino HONDA +0.409
5 D.Binder KTM +0.565
6 J.Mcphee HONDA +0.607
7 A.Arenas KTM +0.696
8 N.Antonelli HONDA +0.725
9 C.Tatay KTM +0.758
10 K.Toba KTM +0.773
11 G.Rodrigo HONDA +0.787
12 F.Salac HONDA +0.835
13 A.Migno KTM +0.954
14 A.Lopez HUSQVARNA +0.994
15 S.Nepa KTM +1.178
16 J.Alcoba HONDA +1.212
17 S.Garcia HONDA +1.296
18 R.Rossi KTM +1.341
19 B.Baltus KTM +1.357
20 D.Pizzoli KTM +1.393
21 D.Foggia HONDA +1.467
22 A.Sasaki KTM +1.485
23 A.Ogura HONDA +1.562
24 R.Yamanaka HONDA +1.654
25 J.Dupasquier KTM +1.729
26 C.Vietti KTM +1.752
27 J.Garcia HONDA +1.965
28 Y.Kunii HONDA +2.147
29 K.Pawi HONDA +2.226
30 M.Kofler KTM +2.251
31 D.Öncü KTM +2.347


2020 MotoGP Calendar

Rnd Date Circuit
1 08 March (Moto2/Moto3) Losail International Circuit
2 19 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
3 26 July Circuito de Jerez-Ángel Nieto
4 09 August Automotodrom Brno
5 16 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
6 23 August Red Bull Ring-Spielberg
7 13 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
8 20 September Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
9 27 September Barcelona – Catalunya
10 11 October Le Mans
11 18 October MotorLand Aragón
12 25 October MotorLand Aragón
13 08 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
14 15 November Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo
15 22 November Autodromo Internacional do Algarve

MotoGP World Championship Points


Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya Schedule (AEST)

Source: MCNews.com.au

Yamaha dominate opening day at Catalunya in mixed conditions

Toprak tops Friday at Catalunya

Day one of the Acerbis Catalunya Round for the Motul FIM Superbike World Championship was a day of two halves as the mostly dry weather in the morning made way for mixed conditions in the afternoon; the track conditions at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya slowly improving after a shower soaked the track. Toprak Razgatlioglu (PATA YAMAHA WorldSBK Official Team) ended the day fastest after posting the best lap time in the dry Free Practice 1 session.

The combined classifications meant Razgatlioglu topped Friday’s running after a flurry of quick laps at the end of Lap 1 changed the order rapidly. The Turkish rider led a Yamaha 1-2-3 as teammate Michael van der Mark and American Garrett Gerloff (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team) finishing the day in third place.

All three riders were running as the session came to a close and kept improving their lap times with Gerloff putting in a stunning lap for third place right at the end of the session; allowing him to finish the day nearly a second clear of team-mate Federico Caricasulo (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Junior Team); the Italian in 14th place.

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu – P1

Today we had a good start in FP1, but I still feel like we still have some work to do to improve more – this is normal after only one session. I’m happy with FP2 as we rode in wet conditions and normally this is my big weakness, but I had a good feeling on the Yamaha R1 today and I could understand the grip levels. Maybe 10th position is not “good”, but I feel like I am riding better in these conditions! We are happy with today, everything is working really well in the team and I am enjoying my R1 very much here in Barcelona – maybe too much after FP1, as I made a big “stoppie” for fun but Race Control were not so impressed, so I had to say sorry to them!

Toprak Razgatlıoğlu
Michael van der Mark – P2

Really happy with the first day here in Barcelona, the conditions were different to the test but I felt very good with the bike immediately and the changes we made during FP1 were all positive. The bike’s also quite a lot different to what we had here at the test, so it was really interesting to see how the R1 was performing. I was really happy with how fast we were this morning, and also with the used tyre we had really good pace. In my fast lap I had a small moment, but even with this FP1 was great. FP2 was wet so I waited a little bit to see how track conditions were before I went out with the bike and to be honest I felt really comfortable. I was making progress every lap and in the end we tried a different bike set-up for these conditions but also the track was drying a lot. Happy with my bike, happy with FP1 and I think it was valuable to ride in FP2.”

Michael van der Mark
Paul Denning – Team Principal

A positive Friday and a good first day here in Barcelona both for us as Pata Yamaha and for WorldSBK. It’s a great facility, the circuit layout is fantastic and, as we hoped, it looks like a more “friendly” track for the R1 by comparison to Aragón. Both Mikey and Toprak had a great feeling straight away in FP1, running competitive and consistent lap times, while also managing to both make impressive laps on fresh rubber at the end of the session to go one and two. Equally important, the wet performance was good, with Mikey right at the sharp end as usual and Toprak improving significantly on what has previously been a weak point for him. Race distance will be a challenge on this circuit in terms of rear tyre durability, but we’ve made a strong start to the weekend and let’s hope it can continue.”

Alvaro Bautista (Team HRC) had led the majority of the running in the opening practice session of the day but was one of a handful of riders who did not take to the track in the last few minutes of the session; the Spanish rider finishing the day in fourth place ahead of reigning Champion Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK).

Alvaro Bautista – P4

We’ve had a positive day. In FP1 I focused on using just one tyre, as the track is critical in terms of tyre consumption and we don’t have real references here of course. I was really happy with my feeling today and held first place for most of the morning’s session, only losing it when others put in fresh tyres at the end. The bike is giving me more feedback and I’m feeling increasingly in control. This afternoon I used the rain tyres for only the second time. At first the feedback on the wet track wasn’t great, but we made some changes to improve my feeling and pace during that session and to be honest, by the end, I was feeling quite confident also in the wet. So we have some ideas ahead of tomorrow as well as good information regarding tyre life, which I think will be key in the races.

Alvaro Bautista

Bautista’s Team HRC team-mate, Leon Haslam, finished the day in 18th place but was running towards the front of the field in the wet Free Practice 2.

Leon Haslam – P18

It was a little tough today. We spent the morning working on the bike and so I only made a couple of flying laps. We weren’t doing too badly in the heavy rain this afternoon but as the track began to dry my feeling wasn’t as good, so we have a few things to reassess. I’m enjoying the track though and those first laps in the rain have helped build my confidence. Tomorrow we’ll use FP3 to make a few changes to try and find better feeling ahead of the Superpole and race one.”

Leon Haslam

Rea had appeared to be unhappy during the early stages of Free Practice 1 but found lap time as the session progressed and ended the day in fifth place, with Alex Lowes (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) in eighth place as KRT finished with both bikes inside the top ten as they celebrated their home race. Rea ended the Free Practice 2 as the fastest rider in the wet session.

Jonathan Rea – P5

“In the end I felt quite good with the bike and found a good rhythm. This morning I had some issues in braking, when the lever was coming back too far, so the first half of the session was dealing with that. In the afternoon it was wet so we were just step-by-step finding the conditions. We have never ridden here in the wet so we were just looking out for those slippery areas. I almost got caught out in the afternoon when Maximilian Scheib fell just in front of me – and first of all I want to say that I hope he is OK. I was catching him and he lost the rear on the exit of turn five. I was right there and I got in between the bike and him, so I was so lucky. After day one I feel like we are quite prepared and I have experience in wet and dry conditions now. We know what we are dealing with.”

Jonathan Rea
Alex Lowes – P7

“I felt quite good this morning in the dry session. We used the same tyres for all of FP1 and we went well on them. We had a good test here so even though we did not get any dry track time in the afternoon today we feel quite good with the set-up of the bike. In the rain I tried some different settings on the bike but the track conditions were also drying up and changing so it was a strange session. I have not done many wet laps on the bike before so it was nice to get out in the rain. Now let’s see what the weather is like on Saturday. I feel great and three or four days after the Motorland race I was feeling completely relaxed. It is so nice to be here feeling good, feeling fresh, knowing I can attack the races rather than physically struggle for 20 laps.”

Alex Lowes

Tom Sykes (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) finished the day in eighth place as BMW, who were strong in a test at the circuit in July, continue to show good pace at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya.

Tom Sykes – P8

I am feeling quite good at the end of the day, I also think P8 is not a true reflection of how we performed. We made a few changes to the BMW S 1000 RR this morning, found some good improvements here and there so this is great that we keep moving forward. I was happy with our consistency throughout the session and the gap to the top, before the soft tyres came out at the end. This afternoon we had a wet session and I wanted to see what grip we had available, so I certainly took it easy in the opening stages. Once I had the feeling on the bike the lap times began to come to us, for sure the changes we made in the morning session helped in the wet conditions so to be P3 / P4 and respectable gap to the top boys was pleasing. Obviously towards the end the track began to dry, we did plan to schedule a change but, in those conditions, there was not much need to risk it and as a result dropped down the timing sheets. I feel that today has been very successful and I am looking forward to seeing what tomorrow brings.

Team-mate Eugene Laverty finished the day in 12th place, just two-tenths outside the top ten.

Eugene Laverty – P12

Today was a good day, and right from start of the session we were up in the second and third positions for a while. We decided to stay on the used tyre as we were testing a different rear setting on the bike for the race, this meant we got bumped down the order towards the end but reality is we were likely in the top 6, which is the first time this year. The second session we ended up in P9, this was good for us as the last time I rode the bike in the wet was in Phillip Island, which we didn’t have a good feeling on. My aim as normal for tomorrow is to get up into that top 6 in qualifying, this will give us a real good chance for the opening race.”

Scott Redding (ARUBA.IT Racing – Ducati) was classified in ninth place for the day’s running, around seventh tenths away from Razgatlioglu’s pace, with Redding looking to start clawing back some of Rea’s 36-point Championship lead. Teammate Chaz Davies was in 11th place but with little to separate the two Ducati riders on the timesheets.

Scott Redding – P9

It was a very particular day that allowed us to go out on the track in different conditions. For this reason, I think it was a positive first day at the end of which we collected interesting data. In FP1 the feeling with the bike was good. We worked for a lot with the used tire and at the end of the session, I preferred not to try the time attack. The feelings are positive“.

Scott Redding
Chaz Davies – P11

I am quite satisfied with what we did today, especially in FP1 in dry conditions. We completed many laps with the same tire and the race pace was incisive. We tried to improve the grip with positive results. The plan of the afternoon was to try other tires solutions but the rain did not allow us to do it. Anyway, I am very confident“.

Chaz Davies

Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing Yamaha) was inside the top ten after Friday’s two practice sessions but was another who showed strong pace in the mixed conditions in the afternoon, finishing sixth in the second practice session although the Frenchman crashed in the latter stages of the session at Turn 7. Xavi Fores (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) finished the day in 13th place after edging close to the top ten, finishing half a second away from Baz in tenth.

Jonas Folger (Bonovo Action by MGM Racing) was 15th after his first day of WorldSBK action after showing promising pace early in the opening session but falling down the order as others improved their lap time. Sylvain Barrier (Brixx Performance) was 19th for the day with Samuele Cavalieri (Barni Racing Team) in 20th on his WorldSBK debut, and rookie Valentin Debise (OUTDO Kawasaki TPR) completing the order.

Leandro Mercado (Motocorsa Racing) was declared unfit for the weekend following a crash in Free Practice 1 after he came off his bike, with the Argentinean taking to a local hospital where he was diagnosed with a right wrist fracture (radius and scaphoid). Takumi Takahashi (MIE Racing HONDA Team) crashed during the wet running at Turn 4; finishing the day in 17th place. Maximilian Scheib (ORELAC Racing VerdNatura) suffered a crash in the wet running in Free Practice 2 at the Turn 4 right-hander causing the session to be Red Flagged; Scheib taking to the medical centre for a check-up following the crash and later declared unfit with a right acromioclavicular joint injury and taken to a local hospital for further assessment.

WorldSBK Friday Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 T. Razgatlioglu Yamaha 1m42.140
2 M. Van Der Mark Yamaha +0.169
3 G. Gerloff Yamaha +0.338
4 A. Bautista Honda +0.373
5 J. Rea Kawasaki +0.474
6 M. Rinaldi Ducati +0.495
7 A. Lowes Kawasaki +0.548
8 T. Sykes BMW +0.659
9 S. Redding Ducati +0.692
10 L. Baz Yamaha +0.699
11 C. Davies Ducati +0.733
12 E. Laverty BMW +0.887
13 X. Fores Kawasaki +1.117
14 F. Caricasulo Yamaha +1.457
15 J. Folger Yamaha +1.524
16 M. Scheib Kawasaki +1.806
17 T. Takahashi Honda +2.082
18 L. Haslam Honda +2.175
19 S. Barrier Ducati +2.698
20 S. Cavalieri Ducati +2.832
21 L. Mercado Ducati +3.411
22 V. Debise Kawasaki +3.521

World Supersport

The FIM Supersport World Championship teams and riders were greeted with dry running in the morning and a damp track in the afternoon as the Championship made its debut at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for the inaugural Acerbis Catalunya Round. Lucas Mahias (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) topped the combined timesheets after setting the pace in the morning Free Practice 1 session.

Lucas Mahias

Mahias posted a time of 1’45.682s to top the timesheets on the opening day of running in Montmelo as he looks to keep his Championship hopes alive across the Catalunya Round weekend. The French rider was less than a tenth clear of Isaac Viñales (Kallio Racing) at the top of the standings, although Viñales did top the second practice session ahead of Mahias. Philipp Oettl (Kawasaki Puccetti Racing) was third in the standings after the two practice sessions.

Isaac Viñales

Andrea Locatelli (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team), who can clinch the WorldSSP World Championship title at the Catalunya Round, finished in fourth place overall for the day, with the Italian three tenths away from Mahias’ pace. South African rider Steven Odendaal (EAB Ten Kate Racing) finished in fifth place, matching Locatelli’s time, while Corentin Perolari (GMT94) completed the top six.

Andrea Locatelli

Raffaele de Rosa (MV Agusta Reparto Corse) was seventh with Kyle Smith (GMT94 Yamaha), replacing the injured Jules Cluzel, in eighth place; Smith making his return to WorldSSP as a substitute rider. 2019 WorldSSP300 World Champion Manuel Gonzalez (Kawasaki ParkinGO Team) was ninth in the classification with Danny Webb (WRP Wepol Racing) completing the top ten in the James Toseland-run team; Webb surviving a trip through the gravel in the first session to post the tenth best time.

Can Öncü (Turkish Racing Team) was 11th fastest after the two sessions but briefly found himself leading the timesheets in Free Practice 2. He finished ahead of Kevin Manfredi (Altogoo Racing Team) with the Italian finishing the day as the highest placed WorldSSP Challenge rider. Estonian rider Hannes Soomer (Kallio Racing) was 13th with Andy Verdoïa (bLU cRU WorldSSP by MS Racing) in 14th and Axel Bassani (Soradis Yamaha Motoxracing) rounding out the top 15.

Miquel Pons (Dynavolt Honda) was the lead Honda rider in 16th place as he edged out teammate Patrick Hobelsberger in 17th place. Peter Sebestyen (OXXO Yamaha Team Toth) was in 18th place after showing impressive form in recent rounds; the Hungarian will look to return to the top ten throughout the weekend.

WorldSSP Friday Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 L. Mahias Kawasaki 1m45.682
2 I.  Vinales Yamaha +0.059
3 P. Oettl Kawasaki +0.231
4 A. Locatelli Yamaha +0.258
5 S. Odendaal Yamaha +0.289
6 C. Perolari Yamaha +0.461
7 R. De Rosa MV Agusta +0.730
8 K. Smith Yamaha +0.958
9 M. Gonzalez Kawasaki +1.065
10 D. Webb Yamaha +1.107
11 C. Oncu Kawasaki +1.136
12 K. Manfredi Yamaha +1.163
13 H. Soomer Yamaha +1.180
14 A. Verdoia Yamaha +1.583
15 A. Bassani Yamaha +1.689
16 M. Pons Honda +1.943
17 P. Hobelsberger Honda +1.983
18 P. Sebestyen Yamaha +2.213
19 F. Fuligni MV Agusta +2.588
20 L. Cresson Yamaha +2.667
21 A. Ruiz Carranza Yamaha +2.714
22 G. Hendra Pratama Yamaha +2.985
23 G. Van Straalen Yamaha +3.601
24 O. Gutierrez Iglesiasesp  Gmt94 Y Kawasaki +3.752
25 L. Montella Kawasaki +3.771
26 G. Erill Kawasaki +4.271

WorldSSP300

FIM Supersport 300 World Championship’s visit to the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya for the Acerbis Catalunya Round was disrupted by rain in the afternoon meaning Bruno Ieraci (Kawasaki GP Project) topped the times after going fastest in the morning Free Practice 1 session with dry conditions with the Italian going two tenths quicker than his nearest rival.

Bruno Ieraci

Group B riders were the first to venture on track this morning but riders from Group A riders made up the first three positions in the combined standings with Ieraci posting a 1’56.453s to lead Koen Meuffels (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) and Championship leader Jeffrey Buis (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT); Buis continuing his Championship charge by being in the top three in practice.

Koen Meuffels

Inigo Iglesias Bravo (Scuderia Maranga Racing) was in fourth place overall for the day, almost matching both Meuffels and Buis on pace during the session and finished as the lead Group B rider for the day. Yuta Okaya (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT) made it three MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT riders in the top five with fifth place, finishing just ahead of Alan Kroh (Yamaha MS Racing).

Samuel di Sora (Leader Team Flembbo) finished the day in seventh place with Meikon Kawakami (Team Brasil AD 78) in eighth place and Marc Garcia (2R Racing) in ninth; the 2017 WorldSSP300 Champion making his return to the Championship at 2R Racing following Victor Rodriguez Nuñez’s switch to EAB Ten Kate Racing. Angel Heredia (DEZA-ISMABON Racing Team) completed the top ten as he competes at the Catalunya Round as a wildcard.

Tom Booth-Amos (RT Motorsports by SKM – Kawasaki) finished the day in 11th place as the three-time podium finisher missed out on the spot in the top ten by just a tenth of a second, while Ton Kawakami (Yamaha MS Racing) was in 12th, less than a tenth behind Booth-Amos. The top 12 were separated by just six tenths of a second in dry running.

Scott Deroue (MTM Kawasaki MOTOPORT), currently second in the Championship and 12 points behind teammate Buis, was 15th in the Group B classification as the Dutch rider looks to close the gap on his teammate at the top of the Championship.

In the afternoon session, in the rain in Montmelo, Eunan McGlinchey (Team# 109 Kawasaki) topped the times as teams and riders looked to gather information for any more potential wet running across the weekend. Bahattin Sofuoglu (Biblion Motoxracing Yamaha WorldSSP300) was a faller in the afternoon’s Free Practice 2 session as the Turkish race winner came off his bike at Turn 10 with Sofuoglu able to complete four laps in the session.

WorldSSP300 A Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Class Time/Gap
1 B. Ieraci Kawasaki A 1m56.543
2 K. Meuffels Kawasaki A +0.158
3 J. Buis Kawasaki A +0.224
4 A. Kroh Yamaha A +0.331
5 S. Di Sora Kawasaki A +0.342
6 M. Garcia Kawasaki A +0.413
7 M. Perez Kawasaki A +0.562
8 N. Kalinin Kawasaki A +0.667
9 D. Mogeda Kawasaki A +0.711
10 A. Carrion Kawasaki A +0.737
11 P. Grassia Kawasaki A +0.903
12 K. Aloisi Yamaha A +1.100
13 F. Rovelli Kawasaki A +1.109
14 J. Gimbert Kawasaki A +1.237
15 U. Orradre Yamaha A +1.370
16 I.  Garcia Kawasaki A +1.374
17 F. Macan Yamaha A +1.537
18 E. Mcglinchey Kawasaki A +1.632
19 T. Bramich Kawasaki A +1.650
20 D. Blin Yamaha A +2.020
21 A. Diaz Yamaha A +2.041
22 M. Gennai Yamaha A +2.195
23 B. Neila Yamaha A +2.650
24 V. Rodriguez Nunez Yamaha A +2.855
25 M. Gaggi Yamaha A +3.353
26 I.  Offer Kawasaki A +4.912
27 L. Gruau Kawasaki A +6.045
28 P. Fragoso Yamaha A +6.178

WorldSSP300 B Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Class Gap
1 I.  Iglesias Bravo Kawasaki B 1m56.786
2 Y. Okaya Kawasaki B +0.052
3 M. Kawakami Yamaha B +0.112
4 A. Heredia Kawasaki B +0.237
5 T. Booth-Amos Kawasaki B +0.362
6 T. Kawakami Yamaha B +0.423
7 O. Konig Kawasaki B +0.607
8 J. Perez Gonzalez Yamaha B +0.923
9 T. Brianti Kawasaki B +0.962
10 A. Huertas Yamaha B +0.992
11 K. Sabatucci Kawasaki B +1.002
12 A. Coppola Kawasaki B +1.027
13 F. Perez Casas Yamaha B +1.385
14 S. Markarian Yamaha B +1.477
15 S. Deroue Kawasaki B +1.511
16 B. Sofuoglu Yamaha B +1.534
17 T. Edwards Kawasaki B +1.637
18 H. De Cancellis Yamaha B +1.665
19 T. Bercot Yamaha B +1.673
20 G. Mastroluca Kawasaki B +1.861
21 E. De La Vega Yamaha B +1.877
22 N. Bernabè Kawasaki B +1.943
23 D. Kuban Kawasaki B +2.335
24 J. Ioverno Kawasaki B +2.346
25 J. Corral Yamaha B +2.506
26 M. Cervenka Kawasaki B +3.157
27 A. Quinet Kawasaki B +3.391
28 A. Zanca Kawasaki B +3.969

Source: MCNews.com.au