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Qualifying report
MotoGP San Marino GP

Misano MotoGP: Miller beats Bagnaia to pole, Quartararo eighth

Ducati’s Jack Miller snatched pole in a hectic qualifying for the MotoGP San Marino Grand Prix as championship leader Fabio Quartararo was only eighth in iffy conditions.

Having gone without a pole since the 2018 Argentine GP when he took top honours on his Pramac Ducati in similarly changeable conditions, the Australian beat teammate Francesco Bagnaia – who is carrying a three-place penalty - by 0.015 seconds at Misano.

Spots of rain began to fall around the back of the Misano circuit in the preceding FP4 session, but conditions on track were still good enough for slicks when Q1 got underway.

But across the Q1 session, more rain began to fall, forcing the riders to abort their hopes for a place in Q2 in the closing moments.

Such was the change in conditions that wet tyres were called for when the 15-minute pole shootout session got underway by all except KTM’s Miguel Oliveira and Gresini’s Enea Bastianini.

Oliveira’s first lap of 1m38.743s put him to the top of the order 2.9 seconds clear of Francesco Bagnaia on wet tyres.

Though rain kept falling, the track wasn’t wet enough to stop the slicks from being the viable option, and therefore pitlane became a hive of bike swaps.

Oliveira extended his advantage with a 1m37.332s lap, but pole would change hands between seven riders across the 15 minutes.

It would be a 1m31.899s from Miller on his penultimate lap that would seal him his first pole for the factory Ducati squad.

Teammate Bagnaia shadowed him but will drop to fifth for irresponsible riding in FP1.

However, the damage this will deal his hopes of slashing his 44-point disadvantage in the standings will be minimal as standings leader Quartararo failed to capitalise.

Quartararo was one of the first out on track in Q2 and elected for wets, but on his switch to slicks he couldn’t trouble the top spots in conditions the Yamaha has typically struggled in.

The Frenchman could only muster a 1m32.246s to qualify eighth.

Bastianini – who took his first MotoGP podium at Misano last year – qualified his year-old Ducati third, but will be promoted to second by Bagnaia’s penalty as VR46 Ducati rookie Marco Bezzecchi in fourth will now complete the front row.

Maverick Vinales was the top Aprilia rider in fifth on the timesheets, but will start fourth ahead of Bagnaia and Pramac’s Johann Zarco.

Luca Marini followed his VR46 teammate Bezzecchi through Q1 after timing his final flying lap perfectly to coincide with the worseining conditions.

He will start seventh ahead of Quartararo, with title contender Aleix Espargaro – who is Quartararo’s nearest title rival at 32 points adrift – ninth on the second of the Aprilias.

Oliveira faded to 10th in the end ahead of Yamaha’s Franco Morbidelli and the Suzuki of Alex Rins.

Jorge Martin was the biggest loser in the iffy conditions after he was knocked out of Q1 by 0.011s by Marini’s well-timed lap.

The Pramac rider will line up 13th from KTM’s Brad Binder and Alex Marquez after the LCR rider crashed early on in Q1.

Andrea Dovizioso will begin his final MotoGP outing from 18th on his RNF Yamaha ahead of the leading works team Honda of Pol Espargaro, while Joan Mir’s Suzuki stand-in Kazuki Watanabe will start his maiden MotoGP race from 23rd after beating both Tech 3 KTM riders.

The 2022 MotoGP San Marino GP will get underway at 2pm CEST.

Q2 results:

Cla Rider Bike Time Gap
1 Australia Jack Miller
Ducati 1'31.899
2 Italy Francesco Bagnaia
Ducati 1'31.914 0.015
3 Italy Enea Bastianini
Ducati 1'32.014 0.115
4 Italy Marco Bezzecchi
Ducati 1'32.048 0.149
5 Spain Maverick Viñales
Aprilia 1'32.118 0.219
6 France Johann Zarco
Ducati 1'32.169 0.270
7 Italy Luca Marini
Ducati 1'32.226 0.327
8 France Fabio Quartararo
Yamaha 1'32.246 0.347
9 Spain Aleix Espargaro
Aprilia 1'32.577 0.678
10 Portugal Miguel Oliveira
KTM 1'32.775 0.876
11 Italy Franco Morbidelli
Yamaha 1'33.351 1.452
12 Spain Alex Rins
Suzuki 1'33.438 1.539

Q1 results:

Cla Rider Bike Time Gap
1 Italy Marco Bezzecchi
Ducati 1'31.961
2 Italy Luca Marini
Ducati 1'32.004 0.043
3 Spain Jorge Martin
Ducati 1'32.015 0.054
4 Italy Fabio Di Giannantonio
Ducati 1'32.276 0.315
5 South Africa Brad Binder
KTM 1'32.600 0.639
6 Spain Alex Marquez
Honda 1'32.631 0.670
7 Italy Michele Pirro
Ducati 1'32.658 0.697
8 Italy Andrea Dovizioso
Yamaha 1'32.663 0.702
9 Spain Pol Espargaro
Honda 1'32.826 0.865
10 Germany Stefan Bradl
Honda 1'32.838 0.877
11 South Africa Darryn Binder
Yamaha 1'33.331 1.370
12 Japan Takaaki Nakagami
Honda 1'33.484 1.523
13 Japan Kazuki Watanabe
Suzuki 1'36.289 4.328
14 Australia Remy Gardner
KTM 1'44.690 12.729
15 Spain Raúl Fernández
KTM 1'46.732 14.771
Cla Rider Bike Time Gap
1 Italy Marco Bezzecchi
Ducati 1'31.961
2 Italy Luca Marini
Ducati 1'32.004 0.043
3 Spain Jorge Martin
Ducati 1'32.015 0.054
4 Italy Fabio Di Giannantonio
Ducati 1'32.276 0.315
5 South Africa Brad Binder
KTM 1'32.600 0.639
6 Spain Alex Marquez
Honda 1'32.631 0.670
7 Italy Michele Pirro
Ducati 1'32.658 0.697
8 Italy Andrea Dovizioso
Yamaha 1'32.663 0.702
9 Spain Pol Espargaro
Honda 1'32.826 0.865
10 Germany Stefan Bradl
Honda 1'32.838 0.877
11 South Africa Darryn Binder
Yamaha 1'33.331 1.370
12 Japan Takaaki Nakagami
Honda 1'33.484 1.523
13 Japan Kazuki Watanabe
Suzuki 1'36.289 4.328
14 Australia Remy Gardner
KTM 1'44.690 12.729
15 Spain Raúl Fernández
KTM 1'46.732 14.771

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