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

Jerez MotoGP: Marquez wins, Pedrosa and Ducati duo in big crash

Honda rider Marc Marquez dominated the MotoGP race at Jerez, as teammate Dani Pedrosa and Ducati works riders Andrea Dovizioso and Jorge Lorenzo came together in a huge crash.

Johann Zarco, Monster Yamaha Tech 3, Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team, Andrea Iannone, Team Suzuki MotoGP

Johann Zarco, Monster Yamaha Tech 3, Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team, Andrea Iannone, Team Suzuki MotoGP

Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team
Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team
Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team
Jorge Lorenzo, Ducati Team
Andrea Dovizioso, Ducati Team, Jorge Lorenzo, Ducati Team
Andrea Dovizioso, Ducati Team
Hafizh Syahrin, Monster Yamaha Tech 3
Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team
Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team

With Marquez breaking away out front, Dovizioso and Lorenzo were battling for second place towards the closing stages of the race, with the incident triggered by the Italian diving down the inside of Lorenzo at the Turn 6 right-hander.

He looked to have completed the pass but ran wide, with Lorenzo cutting back to the inside to retake position.

Yet as Lorenzo moved to the right, he clashed with the Honda of Pedrosa, who had tried to pass the battling Ducatis in one fell swoop.

The contact threw Pedrosa high into the air off his bike and sent Lorenzo's GP18 right into the path of Dovizioso, with all three retiring on the spot but managing to walk away seemingly unhurt.

Lorenzo had been the only frontrunner to pick the soft front tyre, and used it to great effect initially, making a lightning getaway from fourth to lead into Turn 1.

He kept Pedrosa at bay in the early going, and then fought off Marquez for several laps after the reigning champion had slid down the inside of his teammate at the fast Turn 11 right-hander.

By lap eight, however, Lorenzo's defensive resolve weakened, and he finally ceded the lead to Marquez – while, right behind them, Dovizioso worked his way past Pedrosa.

The top four, having already broken away from the rest of the pack, remained close for a couple of more laps, but Marquez soon began to stretch his legs, undeterred by a massive slide through the gravel at Turn 12, left there by Tom Luthi's crash.

As the leader began to disappear into the distance, Dovizioso was growing impatient behind Lorenzo and had to back out of a move at the final corner that briefly dropped him behind Pedrosa.

When all three were collected by the crash later on, Tech 3 Yamaha's Johann Zarco was promoted into a comfortable second, despite having seemingly struggled in the early going.

He finished five seconds behind Marquez, who showboated through much of the final lap.

The incident also meant that the four-bike group of Pramac Ducati's Danilo Petrucci, Suzuki's Andrea Iannone, Pramac Ducati's Jack Miller and Yamaha's Valentino Rossi were suddenly battling for third – with Iannone finally coming out on top.

The Suzuki rider, whose teammate Alex Rins crashed out of fifth at Turn 11 early on, finished a few tenths ahead of Petrucci and Rossi to clinch his second consecutive third-place finish.

Behind Miller, Vinales worked his way past Nieto Ducati's Alvaro Bautista to claim a seventh-place finish, having dropped well outside of the top 10 in the initial running.

Marc VDS Honda rookie Franco Morbidelli posted his best MotoGP finish yet in ninth, while wildcard Mika Kallio, running a KTM 2019 prototype, was 10th ahead of the marque's regular rider Pol Espargaro.

Poleman Cal Crutchlow dropped back to fourth with a slow getaway, and the LCR Honda rider held that position until he fell at the Turn 1 right-hander, retiring from a second consecutive grand prix.

Nieto Ducati's Karel Abraham crashed at the same corner later on, while Aprilia's Aleix Espargaro had pulled up shortly after the start with what looked like a mechanical problem.

Race results:

Pos.#RiderBikeTime/Gap
1 93 spain Marc Marquez  Honda 41'39.678
2 5 france Johann Zarco  Yamaha 5.241
3 29 italy Andrea Iannone  Suzuki 8.214
4 9 italy Danilo Petrucci  Ducati 8.617
5 46 italy Valentino Rossi  Yamaha 8.743
6 43 australia Jack Miller  Ducati 9.768
7 25 spain Maverick Viñales  Yamaha 13.543
8 19 spain Alvaro Bautista  Ducati 14.076
9 21 italy Franco Morbidelli  Honda 16.822
10 36 finland Mika Kallio  KTM 19.405
11 44 spain Pol Espargaro  KTM 21.149
12 30 japan Takaaki Nakagami  Honda 21.174
13 38 united_kingdom Bradley Smith  KTM 21.765
14 53 spain Tito Rabat  Ducati 22.103
15 45 united_kingdom Scott Redding  Aprilia 36.755
16 55 malaysia Hafizh Syahrin  Yamaha 41.861
17 10 belgium Xavier Simeon  Ducati 49.241
18 17 czech_republic Karel Abraham  Ducati 1 lap
Ret 99 spain Jorge Lorenzo  Ducati 8 laps
Ret  4 italy Andrea Dovizioso  Ducati 8 laps
Ret  26 spain Dani Pedrosa  Honda 8 laps
Ret  35 united_kingdom Cal Crutchlow  Honda 9 laps
Ret  12 switzerland Thomas Luthi  Honda 14 laps
Ret  42 spain Alex Rins  Suzuki 20 laps
Ret  41 spain Aleix Espargaro  Aprilia -

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Bradl to make MotoGP return as Honda wildcard
Next article Marquez and Honda "missing something" despite dominant wins

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