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Australia

Japan MotoGP: Miller dominates, Bagnaia crashes out on last lap

Jack Miller dominated the MotoGP Japanese Grand Prix to salvage a dark day for Ducati’s 2022 title hopes, as teammate Francesco Bagnaia crashed on the last lap.

Podium: race winner Jack Miller, Ducati Team

Podium: race winner Jack Miller, Ducati Team

Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Going without a win since last year’s wet French GP, Miller grabbed the lead on lap three and streaked away to his first victory of the season.

It was a nightmare race for the three main championship contenders, as Fabio Quartararo and Bagnaia struggled for form while Aleix Espargaro was forced to change to his second Aprilia on the warm-up lap due to a mechanical issue.

A crash trying to pass Quartararo on the last lap led to a fifth DNF of the season for Bagnaia, gifting Quartararo an 18-point lead in the standings heading to next week’s Thailand GP.

Such was the limited amount of dry time the grid had this weekend at Motegi that numerous tyre changes took place ahead of lights out.

Poleman Marc Marquez went to the grid on a hard rear tyre, but switched to a soft for the start.

But he couldn’t use the early grip advantage that would have offered him to any effect. Though Marquez did convert his first pole in three years to the holeshot, he was muscled out by KTM’s Brad Binder at Turn 1.

Pramac Ducati rider Jorge Martin jumped up to second, before overtaking Binder for the lead into Turn 7 as Marquez was shuffled back to fifth.

Behind, the title challengers were all experiencing their struggles.

Drama struck at the end of the warm-up lap when Aprilia’s Espargaro pulled into pitlane for his second bike, dropping his broken first RS-GP as he made the switch.

Espargaro emerged from pitlane at the back of the pack behind the safety car, while Quartararo and Bagnaia failed to make up ground on the opening lap from their starting spots of ninth and 12th.

Miller’s charge from seventh on the grid saw him into the podium places began on the opening lap, with the factory Ducati rider passing Binder on the brakes into Turn 11 on the second tour.

The Australian, running the hard rear tyre, tried the same manoeuvre on Martin next time around.

Miller ran wide on the exit of Turn 11, allowing Martin to draw back alongside into the next left-hander at Turn 12 – though Miller held firm to end the third lap in the lead.

The factory Ducati rider repeatedly reeled off race-best laps as he quickly opened his lead out to over a second come lap nine of 24.

Martin would make an error a lap later which would give Miller a lead of over three seconds, which he would continue to extend out to over five seconds in the latter stages.

As drama struck behind him on the last lap for his Ducati teammate, Miller eased off to take the chequered flag 3.4s clear of the field.

Second went to Binder after the KTM rider overtook Martin on the final lap, marking his first podium since the opening night of the season in Qatar back at the start of March.

Poleman Marquez completed his first race since May’s Italian GP in fourth after snatching the position from the second KTM of Miguel Oliveira with a hard move on the inside of Turn 8 three laps from the end.

VR46 Ducati rider Luca Marini continued his 100% finishing record in his MotoGP career with a strong ride to sixth ahead of the Aprilia of Maverick Vinales.

Vinales came under pressure late on from former Yamaha teammate Quartararo, but the Frenchman’s attentions were taken by a charge from nearest title rival Bagnaia in the closing stages.

Bagnaia engaged in an early duel with Gresini Ducati’s Enea Bastianini as the Aragon winner recovered from 15th on the grid, but would retake ninth from his future teammate with a brave pass into the final two corners on lap 20.

The factory Ducati rider hunted down Quartararo, but when he went for a pass up the inside of the Yamaha into Turn 3 Bagnaia tucked the front of his GP22 and crashed out – narrowly avoiding taking the championship leader with him.

Tallying up his fifth DNF of 2022, Bagnaia allowed Quartararo to get to the chequered flag in a damage-limiting eighth to slip from 10 points behind in the standings after Aragon to 18 with just four rounds remaining.

Bastianini was ninth, his title hopes remaining remote as he sits 49 points behind Quartararo.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team crash

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team crash

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Aleix Espargaro couldn’t salvage any points in the end, the Spaniard 16th to go to Thailand 25 points behind Quartararo in the standings.

VR46’s Marco Bezzecchi rounded out the top 10, with Pramac’s Johann Zarco fading from second on the grid to 11th at the chequered flag ahead of Honda’s Pol Espargaro, LCR’s Alex Marquez, Yamaha’s Franco Morbidelli and RNF Racing’s Cal Crutchlow.

Aleix Espargaro passed Fabio Di Giannantonio (Gresini) late on, relegating the Italian to 17th ahead of Tech 3 KTM duo Raul Fernandez and Remy Gardner, and the injured Takaaki Nakagami.

Technical problems blighted Suzuki’s final home race, with Alex Rins forced to retire on lap 16 with problems.

His stand-in teammate Takuya Tsuda – who is replacing the injured Joan Mir – exited the Motegi race in spectacular fashion after his GSX-RR burst into flames on lap 12.

Tsuda left the bike ablaze against the barrier on the outside of Turn 5, escaping unscathed as the marshals quickly dealt with the fire.

RNF’s Darryn Binder and Honda wildcard Tetsuta Nagashima also failed to finish after separate crashes.

Japanese GP - Race results:

Cla Rider Bike Time
1 Australia Jack Miller
Ducati 42'29.174
2 South Africa Brad Binder
KTM 42'32.583
3 Spain Jorge Martin
Ducati 42'33.310
4 Spain Marc Marquez
Honda 42'36.958
5 Portugal Miguel Oliveira
KTM 42'37.359
6 Italy Luca Marini
Ducati 42'37.522
7 Spain Maverick Viñales
Aprilia 42'39.053
8 France Fabio Quartararo
Yamaha 42'39.367
9 Italy Enea Bastianini
Ducati 42'39.492
10 Italy Marco Bezzecchi
Ducati 42'45.593
11 France Johann Zarco
Ducati 42'45.760
12 Spain Pol Espargaro
Honda 42'46.630
13 Spain Alex Marquez
Honda 42'47.393
14 Italy Franco Morbidelli
Yamaha 42'48.186
15 United Kingdom Cal Crutchlow
Yamaha 42'48.375
16 Spain Aleix Espargaro
Aprilia 42'54.647
17 Italy Fabio Di Giannantonio
Ducati 42'56.180
18 Spain Raúl Fernández
KTM 42'58.548
19 Australia Remy Gardner
KTM 42'58.643
20 Japan Takaaki Nakagami
Honda 43'12.468
Italy Francesco Bagnaia
Ducati 40'52.986
Spain Alex Rins
Suzuki 25'09.144
South Africa Darryn Binder
Yamaha 25'54.596
Japan Takuya Tsuda
Suzuki 20'03.446
Japan Tetsuta Nagashima
Honda 16'14.469
Cla # Rider Bike Time
1 43 Australia Jack Miller
Ducati 42'29.174
2 33 South Africa Brad Binder
KTM 42'32.583
3 89 Spain Jorge Martin
Ducati 42'33.310
4 93 Spain Marc Marquez
Honda 42'36.958
5 88 Portugal Miguel Oliveira
KTM 42'37.359
6 10 Italy Luca Marini
Ducati 42'37.522
7 12 Spain Maverick Viñales
Aprilia 42'39.053
8 20 France Fabio Quartararo
Yamaha 42'39.367
9 23 Italy Enea Bastianini
Ducati 42'39.492
10 72 Italy Marco Bezzecchi
Ducati 42'45.593
11 5 France Johann Zarco
Ducati 42'45.760
12 44 Spain Pol Espargaro
Honda 42'46.630
13 73 Spain Alex Marquez
Honda 42'47.393
14 21 Italy Franco Morbidelli
Yamaha 42'48.186
15 35 United Kingdom Cal Crutchlow
Yamaha 42'48.375
16 41 Spain Aleix Espargaro
Aprilia 42'54.647
17 49 Italy Fabio Di Giannantonio
Ducati 42'56.180
18 25 Spain Raúl Fernández
KTM 42'58.548
19 87 Australia Remy Gardner
KTM 42'58.643
20 30 Japan Takaaki Nakagami
Honda 43'12.468
63 Italy Francesco Bagnaia
Ducati 40'52.986
42 Spain Alex Rins
Suzuki 25'09.144
40 South Africa Darryn Binder
Yamaha 25'54.596
85 Japan Takuya Tsuda
Suzuki 20'03.446
45 Japan Tetsuta Nagashima
Honda 16'14.469

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Edition

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