Tag Archives: MotoGP

After two weeks off Marquez eager to get back on the bike

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España


After an emotional return to MotoGP in Portimao, Marc Marquez’s rehabilitation continues as MotoGP heads to the iconic Jerez de la Frontera for the Gran Premio Red Bull de España, where the MotoGP World Championship is primed for another exciting weekend.

The Repsol Honda Team will again be operating at full capacity as Marc Marquez and Pol Espargaro line up together aboard the RC213V. This weekend there will be a fifth Honda on the grid as Stefan Bradl returns to the World Championship as a wildcard.

Zarco led the field into turn one last time out but Marc Marquez was straight up to third by the exit of turn one

Marc Marquez put in a hero’s effort to race to seventh in Portugal on his return to racing after missing the majority of the 2020 season.

Marc Marc chasing Aleix Espargaro at Portimao

In Portimao Marquez showed he has lost none of his aggressive style, sliding his Honda, making his characteristic saves and even fighting for the lead of the race in the early laps.

The eight-time World Champion is prepared for another demanding round as his physical condition continues to improve. While the previously broken right humerus had no problems in the previous outing, Marquez is continuing to work in the gym to improve his overall race fitness.

Marc Marquez tried to ride at Jerez last year but had to withdraw

Marquez has scored a podium on each occasion he has finished the Spanish GP in the premier class including three wins.

MotoGP rd valencia marquez
Marc Marquez – Jerez 2019 – Image AJRN

Marc Marquez

Now we are back into the rhythm of racing, after a productive week we are coming back to the track. I have continued to work through my recovery programme to make sure my physical condition is improving and following the advice of the doctors I have not ridden a motorcycle since Portugal. So, of course I am excited to get back on the bike! We approach Jerez the same way as Portimao; we are here to keep improving step by step and do the best job that we can. My recovery is continuing, and the important thing is that we keep improving our consistency. Let’s put on a great weekend for the fans who can’t attend.

It was an emotional return to the pits for an emotionally charged but also spent Marc Marquez – He does appear to be somewhat human after all…

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Rossi hopeful of good fortune returning at Jerez

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España


This weekend MotoGP visits Jerez and Valentino Rossi will be hoping to make amends after a disappointing end to the PortugueseGP last time out.

Rossi, who has achieved some of his best results in Jerez, has been on its podium 13 times in the MotoGP/500cc era, with seven of those being victories.

Rossi became the seventh oldest rider to finish on the podium in the premier class of Grand Prix racing when he was on the podium at Jerez last year, 2020

The Italian most recently had a top-three finish at the Spanish venue after claiming third at the 2020 AndaluciaGP.

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi at Jerez in 2016

With the circuit being one he knows well, and with progress made at the PortugueseGP, Rossi will be aiming to be back in the fight for a good points haul this weekend as he currently only has four-points on his 2021 tally.

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi – Jerez 2016

Valentino Rossi

I think Jerez is one of the circuits on the MotoGP calendar that I most look forward to racing every year, because I have some great memories from there. In fact, last year I was on the podium in the second race of the season – the AndaluciaGP. My pace during the race in Portugal last time out was quite good, we made some improvements, so we go into this fourth round of the year with more optimism than before. For sure, a lot of riders will be strong in Jerez, because we all know it very, very well, but we will try our best and see what we can do to return to the top positions where we have to be.”

Valentino Rossi – 2021

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Dell’Orto to remain Data Acquisition partner of MotoE™

Dorna Sports is proud to announce a contract extension with Dell’Orto that will see the Italian company remain as the Official Data Acquisition partner of the FIM Enel MotoE™ World Cup for at least another season. Dell’Orto became the Official Data Acquisition partner of MotoE™ in 2019 and supplies a state-of-the-art system including data logger, inertial measurement unit, tyre monitoring system, and suspension and brake sensors. 

Headquartered in Lombardy and a long term partner of Dorna Sports, Dell’Orto has also been the sole ECU supplier for the lightweight class of Grand Prix racing since 2012; an agreement recently extended until 2025. The news that the company will also remain on board as the Official Data Acquisition partner of MotoE™ serves to strengthen the partnership between Dell’Orto and Dorna Sports further, maintaining the breadth of Dell’Orto’s vital presence within the MotoGP™ paddock. 

Andrea Dell’Orto, DELL’ORTO S.p.A. Executive Vice President: “After two seasons, we are more than happy about MotoE: we had the chance to interact with the main players in the electric world and with excellent engineers. We have noticed great interest by press and a positive feedback by the most important motorcycle manufacturers and suppliers. MotoE project was very important for DELLORTO as brought us into a new era: electrification!

“From our point of view, in the near future, sustainable mobility will ask for different solutions in which electric propulsion and combustion engine will co-exist. Dell’Orto wants to take part in this challenge.”

Pau Serracanta, Managing Director at Dorna Sports: “I’m delighted to announce this agreement and see Dell’Orto remain the Official Data Acquisition partner of MotoE. A trusted partner of the Cup since 2019 and of Moto3 since 2012, Dell’Orto is a vital part of the success of our sport and especially MotoE. In extending our partnership I’m glad to confirm that they will remain so into the future.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Petrucci and Tech 3 looking to kickstart season in Jerez

“I’m very happy to ride my bike again at a different track. Jerez is a quite difficult, but very interesting circuit,” he said. “Normally, we always test there a lot and due to the nature of the track with many slow and many fast corners and also hard braking areas, it’s the ideal place to work on the bike.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

The kids are alright

So, what about the other end of the scale and the highest average age of the Grand Prix winners at one event. Sixty-eight years ago, in the 1953 Spanish Grand Prix at Montjuic Park in Barcelona, the average age of the three winners was 40 years 224 days which is more the double the average age in Portugal last week.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

MotoGP rolls on to Jerez this weekend | Preview | Schedule

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España


Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) is a man on a mission. After not even starting the season with a podium, the Frenchman regrouped and refocused for round two, taking a resounding victory in the Doha GP before in Portimão we saw more of the same. And the same was not simply the fastest man on Sunday, but also a tactical masterclass in when and where to attack, and whom, before deciding where to pull that final pin. His two wins rocket El Diablo to the top of the standings and very much make him the man to beat. The next track on the calendar is one at which he dominated twice last year too, and although it was in the heat of July, that makes good reading for him. So who’s going to stop Quartararo’s roll?

Fabio Quartararo takes a 15-point lead into Jerez

The closest to doing so in Portugal was Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team), and the Italian did it from the fourth row of the grid. Had he not fallen foul of Yellow Flags in qualifying, where an electrifying new lap record got scrubbed off, could he have challenged? It’s a tall order but Pecco has taken a big step forward so far this season. Jerez, however, hasn’t been the kindest to Ducati of late… although that means another podium or challenge at the front would be an even bigger statement. His fellow Borgo Panigale machines of teammate Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) and Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) will also want a lot from Andalucia, as both look to bounce back quickly from crashes, for Zarco one that saw him lose the Championship lead.

Jack Miller will be seeking redemption in Spain

Bouncing back is also the mission for Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP). After a masterclass in the season opener, Viñales just lost out in Doha and then a difficult qualifying – with two laps scrubbed for the most infinitesimal track limit infractions – in Portugal put him on the back foot. Despite a bad start and getting swallowed by the pack, however, he stays third overall with 11th place doing enough to keep Zarco at bay. Back on home turf, reset and reloaded, can Viñales unleash the pace he showed in round one and take the fight back to his teammate? And what about Petronas Yamaha SRT?

Valentino Rossi had another weekend to forget in Portugal and has only four-points on his tally so far this season

It’s fair to say the first two rounds of the season weren’t what the grid’s newest Independent Team had been expecting, with both Franco Morbidelli and Valentino Rossi seeming out of position for team and rider. Morbidelli put that to rights in Portugal as he was top Independent Team rider and only just off the podium in fourth, so can he keep that rolling in Jerez? And can the ‘Doctor’, back on familiar turf and with more track time, bounce back from a tough few first races of the season?

Johann Zarco leading the Suzuki pairing of Rins and Mir at Portimao before the Frenchman made an error while down-shifting that saw him score no points

Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar), meanwhile, was back on the podium last time out. And last year, that sparked his run for the crown. However, the reigning Champion said the venues so far and a few more aren’t their ideal circuits for starting to go on a similar run just yet, so will it be ‘just’ a podium challenge again? Or more? Teammate Alex Rins will be eager to right wrongs from last time out too after a stunner in Portimão was cut short by a crash out of second, so could he stay in with Quartararo this time around?

Jerez is also good news for a few others on the grid, and one must be Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing). Last year as a rookie the results didn’t come, but some of the South African’s FP4 pace was an eyebrow raiser… and that was first time out. Now, his sophomore season started at a tough track for KTM and a venue he’d never raced – the MotoGP class didn’t compete in Qatar last year – and then Portimão, where he took an impressive and hard-fought fifth that raised the eyebrows of the podium finishers. Jerez is somewhere he has more experience and a few good memories to boot, having won in Moto3 from the very back of the grid. Teammate Miguel Oliveira, after a tougher home race this time round, will also be focused on taking the Austrian factory back to the front as the pendulum he’d had since round one starts to swing back towards the other side of the garage.

KTM are yet to fire in season 2021

There is, of course, an elephant in the room in the shape of eight-time World Champion Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team). His return in Portugal was a successful one as he took seventh, and he was understandably emotional after completing his first race since Valencia 2019. More time has passed since lights out on the Algarve for Marquez to continue his recovery, and now it’s Jerez he’s facing down. Scene of his crash, but also scene of previous glory as well as much more familiar turf. What can he do? And can Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) take a step forward as he fends off Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) and Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) in the Honda battle? There’s also test rider Stefan Bradl back on track doing a wildcard for HRC in Jerez, so he’ll be an interesting benchmark as ever.

Marc Marquez was overcome with emotion after finishing the race in Portimao – Podium this weekend….?

Speaking of benchmarks, Portugal saw Aprilia continue to home in on a good few. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) put in another impressive ride to equal the Noale factory’s best result in MotoGP in sixth, and he’ll want to continue his roll to underline the steps forward made by the nearly all-new package. After a certain Andrea Dovizioso took the RS-GP for a spin recently at the very same Jerez too, was there any feedback from Dovi to Noale, or was it a taster for rider more than a data-gathering exercise?

How good would it be to see Aprilia and Aleix Espargaro break through for a podium at Jerez…?

In the battle of the Moto2 graduate rookies, meanwhile, Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama Racing) is now back ahead of Doha podium man Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) as the latter crashed on Saturday in Portugal and is now sidelined until at least Mugello. He’ll be replaced by Tito Rabat, and Bastianini will be looking to gain a little more ground on Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia) too. The Beast has been consistent, but Marini did seriously impress in Free Practice in Portugal so it’s starting to come together.

Jorge Martín had been the standout rookie but made a costly mistake in Portugal that sees him out until at least Mugello

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 61
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 46
3 Maverick VIÑALES Yamaha 41
4 Johann ZARCO Ducati 40
5 Joan MIR Suzuki 38
6 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 25
7 Alex RINS Suzuki 23
8 Brad BINDER KTM 21
9 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati 18
10 Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17
11 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha 17
12 Jack MILLER Ducati 14
13 Pol ESPARGARO Honda 11
14 Marc MARQUEZ Honda 9
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda 8
16 Stefan BRADL Honda 7
17 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 6
18 Luca MARINI Ducati 4
19 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha 4
20 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 4
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 3
22 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia 2
23 Iker LECUONA KTM 1

Moto2

After the first two races of 2021, Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) looked almost invincible. But that’s never the case in racing and a shocking highside at Turn 1 in Portugal served as a reminder that the business of winning isn’t as easy as the number 22 made it look in Qatar, with everyone vulnerable to mistakes. Now the Brit will be on a mission to fight back – but Portimão winner (Raul Fernandez) and veteran teammate Remy Gardner will be the first looking to stop that happening.

Remy Gardner leads the Moto2 World Championship heading to Jerez

Raul Fernandez has been on a rookie roll since his switch to the intermediate class and a first win looked certain this season, but it’s happened rather early as the Spaniard made a late race charge to the top in Portugal. That will give him extra confidence as he arrives on home turf for round four, and he’ll be expected near the front once again. Will Jerez see him able to fight for the win once more? Or is his prowess at Portimão complemented by the track, where he dominated last year in Moto3, and now he’ll be aiming for the podium? Time will tell…

His teammate Remy Gardner, meanwhile, is also making consistency look easy. A late lunge on Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) on the Algarve secured him his third podium from three, and although none have yet been a win, that makes him the Championship leader. Can he make that extra step and stamp some authority on Jerez as Lowes comes out the blocks maybe a little more cautiously? Or is the Aussie’s game plan, far from the win or bin of old, just about raking in those points? There’s a final corner at Jerez made for the kind of move Gardner pulled off on Roberts just last race.

Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team) was back on song in Portimão too and after taking his first Moto2 podium, he’ll want to get back in the battle at the front to prove he belongs there. So too will the aforementioned Roberts, who was a real threat on the Algarve until just losing out to Gardner in the final stages. Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) wants to bother the podium more as well after a more muted rounds two and three, and what about Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46)? The Italian has been there but not yet dealt out the searing speed he had at times in 2020, so he’ll be looking to do just that. He’s also the only one of the frontrunners so far who was on the podium in Jerez last year.

There’s also the likes of Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing), his teammate Jake Dixon, rookie Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia), Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) and Hector Garzo (Flexbox HP 40) in the mix, with a deep field in Moto2 and running at the front never guaranteed. Who will tame Jerez?

Moto2 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 56
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 52
3 Sam LOWES Kalex 50
4 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex 36
5 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex 27
6 Aron CANET Boscoscuro 23
7 Joe ROBERTS Kalex 23
8 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex 23
9 Xavi VIERGE Kalex 16
10 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex 14
11 Celestino VIETTI Kalex 13
12 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex 12
13 Ai OGURA Kalex 11
14 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex 11
15 Jake DIXON Kalex 9
16 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro 9
17 Hector GARZO Kalex 8
18 Stefano MANZI Kalex 8
19 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6
20 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex 5
21 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 4
22 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 2
23 Thomas LUTHI Kalex 1
24 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex 1
25 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex 0
26 Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 0
27 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS 0
28 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 0
29 Miquel PONS MV Agusta 0
30 Fraser ROGERS NTS 0

Moto3

It’s been some time since a rider made a splash in the Grand Prix paddock as big as that of Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo), but the Portuguese GP did the exact opposite of calming down the hype. As the Spaniard hunted down and passed Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) with clinical but very much on-the-edge brilliance at Portimão, all it did was add to the legend before Moto3 saddle up at the Circuito de Jerez-Angel Nieto; turf that’s even more familiar to the rookie superstar. So can anyone stop him? They’ll have to soon, as his lead is already well over a race win in the standings…

Pedro Acosta was the 2020 Red Bull Rookies Cup champion and is now taking Moto3 by storm

One bit of good news for the grid is that Acosta hasn’t actually been the fastest so far. His speed is undoubtedly impressive and even more so for a rookie, but it’s race day where the Spaniard has done his shining. He’s won from pitlane but on Saturday, he’s not made it onto the front two rows of the grid yet. So tactics, racecraft and, sometimes, the pure luck of the draw are what the rest of the grid will likely need to defeat him, and there are a good few contenders waiting in the wings to do just that.

The first rider looking to hit back is Acosta’s teammate Jaume Masia, not least of all because he’s second overall in the standings, as well as the veteran in the box. He’ll want to put a dent in the attention being grabbed by the other side of the garage. Masia won the season opener and was quick in Portugal before a crash that he somehow recovered from to still take ninth, so he has speed. Can it all come together in Jerez?

Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) will be another key threat as he looks to hit back after a pitlane start in Portugal. The South African is looking consistent, aggressive and fast this season, and last year in the second race at Jerez he was only just off the podium. He’ll likely be one who won’t arrive at the final corner and play it safe, but so far this season he also seems like he’d pull it off. Wanting to make a charge at the crown means the gap is already such that it’s the kind of gamble worth making, too.

Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3) is another who should be well in the fight at the front. Until Doha, the Italian hadn’t been on the podium, suffering with a shoulder problem too, since his emotional win at Jerez in 2019. So he has form, he has experience and so far in 2021 he has consistency. Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) too, and he was only just of the Spanish GP podium last year. Can he keep it rolling?

There’s also Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), another Italian veteran who’s already won at Jerez, and Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse), who took to the top step last year in Andalucia. Foggia is another threat, as are Gabriel Rodrigo (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3), teammate Jeremy Alcoba and Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech 3). And what about GASGAS Solunion Aspar Team’s Sergio Garcia and fast rookie Izan Guevara? Some bad luck has hit both so far in 2021, and Jerez is a chance to fight back.

Last but not least, the biggest chance to fight back likely comes for John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing). The start of the season has been an uphill struggle of bad luck, boiling over and then a pitlane start with an added 10 second delay, so we’ve not seen the Scotsman in the thick of it on the final lap. And the last time we did at Jerez, he missed out on the win by just 0.064… so there’s some serious speed waiting to get back in the fight at the front.

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Bike Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 70
2 Jaume MASIA KTM 39
3 Darryn BINDER Honda 36
4 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM 36
5 Andrea MIGNO Honda 29
6 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda 25
7 Ayumu SASAKI KTM 22
8 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 21
9 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 20
10 Romano FENATI Husqvarna 20
11 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS 19
12 Kaito TOBA KTM 18
13 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM 16
14 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM 15
15 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 12
16 Filip SALAC Honda 6
17 Stefano NEPA KTM 5
18 Carlos TATAY KTM 4
19 Maximilian KOFLER KTM 3
20 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda 2
21 Yuki KUNII Honda 1
22 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM 1
23 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna 0
24 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda 0
25 Riccardo ROSSI KTM 0
26 Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0
27 John MCPHEE Honda 0
28 Xavier ARTIGAS 0

2021 Gran Premio Red Bull de España Schedule

Source: MCNews.com.au

Hurricane Acosta arrives in Jerez

One bit of good news for the grid is that Acosta hasn’t actually been the fastest so far. His speed is undoubtedly impressive and even more so for a rookie, but it’s race day where the Spaniard has done his shining. He’s won from pitlane but on Saturday, he’s not made it onto the front two rows of the grid yet. So tactics, racecraft and, sometimes, the pure luck of the draw are what the rest of the grid will likely need to defeat him, and there are a good few contenders waiting in the wings to do just that.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Advantage Gardner and Fernandez as Lowes looks to fight back

His teammate Remy Gardner, meanwhile, is also making consistency look easy. A late lunge on Joe Roberts (Italtrans Racing Team) on the Algarve secured him his third podium from three, and although none have yet been a win, that makes him the Championship leader. Can he make that extra step and stamp some authority on Jerez as Lowes comes out the blocks maybe a little more cautiously? Or is the Aussie’s game plan, far from the win or bin of old, just about raking in those points? There’s a final corner at Jerez made for the kind of move Gardner pulled off on Roberts just last race.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Stopping Quartararo: the contenders get ready for Jerez

Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) is a man on a mission. After not even starting the season with a podium, the Frenchman regrouped and refocused for round two, taking a resounding victory in the Doha GP before in Portimão we saw more of the same. And the same was not simply the fastest man on Sunday, but also a tactical masterclass in when and where to attack, and whom, before deciding where to pull that final pin. His two wins rocket El Diablo to the top of the standings and very much make him the man to beat. The next track on the calendar is one at which he dominated twice last year too, and although it was in the heat of July, that makes good reading for him. So who’s going to stop Quartararo’s roll?

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Back in action! MotoE™ returns to Jerez for Round 1

Eric Granado (One Energy Racing) arrives as the fastest rider in testing, the Brazilian leaving it late to pip Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP) to the top on the final day and set a new – although unofficial – lap record. It was just 0.041 between the two, however, and Aegerter dominated the race simulation… but Granado was one who dropped back and didn’t push. Last year, it was similarly split: Granado won the first race of the season at Jerez, and Aegerter the second as the Cup started the year with two rounds in Andalucia. This time, there’s one top step at the Spanish GP… so who’s going to be on it?

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here