Subscribe

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia

Valencia MotoGP: Bagnaia wins as Rossi brings career to a close

Francesco Bagnaia led a historic first Ducati 1-2-3 in a tense Valencia Grand Prix as Valentino Rossi brought his illustrious MotoGP career to a close with a ride to 10th.

Watch: MotoGP: Bagnaia wins as Rossi brings career to a close

After 432 grand prix starts spanning 26 seasons, nine-time world champion Rossi has brought the curtain down on his career in an emotional final ride to 10th having qualified there.

The Petronas SRT rider made up one spot to ninth on the opening lap, though was demoted to 11th when Enea Bastianini blasted past early in the race on his Avintia Ducati.

But a crash for Takaaki Nakagami promoted Rossi back into the top 10, with the Italian legend holding off the factory Yamaha of Franco Morbidelli to end his final race with the fourth top 10 of a difficult 2021 season.

Poleman Jorge Martin nailed his launch off the line to grab the lead into the first corner at the start of the 27-lap finale, with Jack Miller and Joan Mir shadowing him.

Miller took the lead on the run into Turn 1 at the start of the second lap, though Martin retaliated at Turn 2, while Mir would force his Suzuki up the inside of the Australian at Turn 4.

Bagnaia and Alex Rins would also quickly surmount Miller as he appeared to struggle to stop his factory Ducati in the early stages, while Bagnaia and Rins would get ahead of Mir on lap four to give chase on Martin.

The top four of Martin, Bagnaia, Rins and Mir briefly opened up a gap of around a second to the rest by the sixth tour, though Mir would soon just drop off the leading trio.

Rins and Bagnaia traded second spot on the same lap, but the former’s victory hopes were dashed when he crashed at Turn 6 on lap 11.

Martin and Bagnaia’s pace kept them out of reach of the chasing Mir following Rins’ crash, with the factory Ducati rider having a look at Pramac’s Martin into Turn 6 on lap 15.

That proved unsuccessful, but Bagnaia got a great run out of Turn 12 and followed Martin line astern through the Turn 13 left-hander to execute a clinical pass for the lead into the final corner.

Bagnaia proceeded to put in the best lap of the race and open up a gap of over four tenths, though Martin for a few more tours did keep his factory Ducati counterpart within reach.

But by lap 22 Bagnaia had begun to stretch his legs again, his lead up to over six tenths and continuing to climb to over a second – though he did ease off on the final lap - as he took the chequered flag for his fourth win of 2021.

Valentino Rossi, Petronas Yamaha SRT

Valentino Rossi, Petronas Yamaha SRT

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Behind, Mir’s podium charge faded as the race wore on to its conclusion, with Miller regrouping in the second half after his earlier issued to hunt down Martin come the last tour.

But Martin would hold onto second ahead of Miller to complete the first Ducati 1-2-3 in MotoGP history, while the factory Ducati squad wrapped up the teams’ title to add to its constructors’ crown in 2021.

Mir faded to fourth by the end, beating world champion Fabio Quartararo on the works Yamaha by just over two tenths, while Pramac’s Johann Zarco completed the top six.

Brad Binder held onto seventh on the KTM ahead of Bastianini, Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro and Rossi.

Franco Morbidelli was 11th on the second factory Yamaha, with SRT’s Andrea Dovizioso, LCR’s Alex Marquez, Miguel Oliveira (KTM) and Tech 3’s Iker Lecuona on his final MotoGP outing rounding out the points.

Maverick Vinales on the Aprilia, Avintia’s Luca Marini and the outgoing Danilo Petrucci on the Tech 3 KTM were the final finishers.

Honda withdrew Pol Espargaro ahead of Sunday’s race following his violent crash in FP3 on Saturday, marking the first time since Assen 1992 that no factory team Honda rider started a premier class grand prix with Marc Marquez already ruled out with vision problems. 

Race results:

Cla # Rider Bike Gap
1 63 Italy Francesco Bagnaia Ducati  
2 89 Spain Jorge Martin Ducati 0.489
3 43 Australia Jack Miller Ducati 0.823
4 36 Spain Joan Mir Suzuki 5.214
5 20 France Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 5.439
6 5 France Johann Zarco Ducati 6.993
7 33 South Africa Brad Binder KTM 8.437
8 23 Italy Enea Bastianini Ducati 10.933
9 41 Spain Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 12.651
10 46 Italy Valentino Rossi Yamaha 13.468
11 21 Italy Franco Morbidelli Yamaha 14.085
12 4 Italy Andrea Dovizioso Yamaha 16.534
13 73 Spain Alex Marquez Honda 17.059
14 88 Portugal Miguel Oliveira KTM 18.221
15 27 Spain Iker Lecuona KTM 19.233
16 12 Spain Maverick Viñales Aprilia 19.815
17 10 Italy Luca Marini Ducati 28.860
18 9 Italy Danilo Petrucci KTM 32.169
  42 Spain Alex Rins Suzuki  
  30 Japan Takaaki Nakagami Honda  

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Honda withdraws Espargaro from Valencia MotoGP finale
Next article Bagnaia: Valencia MotoGP win “best way possible” to celebrate Rossi

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Australia