The Italian makes a huge statement at Jerez, locking horns with Marquez as Martin crashes out and sees his lead slashed to just 17 points.
Any questions? Reigning Champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) made a serious statement on Sunday at the Gran Premio Estrella Galicia 0,0 de España, following up two tougher race weekends with an all-time great at Jerez. But it takes two to create a true clash of the titans, and home hero Marc Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) more than obliged, resulting in one of the greatest showdowns Jerez has ever staged. Won by Bagnaia in front of a partisan, sold-out crowd and one of the best atmospheres in the sport, it also brings him to within 17 points of the Championship lead as Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) crashed out. Just behind the duel for the win, Marco Bezzecchi (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) made a return to the podium in third after getting his fair share of elbows out early on.
As the lights went out, Marquez took the holeshot – just – as Martin got incredibly close to the rear of the #93. But the Championship leader was forced to settle for second as Bezzecchi and Bagnaia slotted into third and fourth in the aftermath. Fourth wasn’t enough for the #1 though, even in the early stages, as Bagnaia went for an incredible 2-for-1 move at the end of the back straight… round the outside.
By the final corner on the same lap, Marquez was just wide enough on the exit to open the door. Bagnaia sliced through to lead, but by Turn 1 the #93 was heading back up the inside, both were slightly wide, and Martin was trying to pick their pocket. Bagnaia shot back into the lead though, now with the #89 on his tail and Marquez relegated to third.
By the final corner next time round it was all change again, with Bagnaia the rider in hot – letting both Martin and Marquez through but the latter temporarily as the #1 hit back at Turn 1. The next key move came from Bezzecchi at the final corner as he got through on Marquez, and then came the big title drama.
With Bagnaia right on his tail but a potential huge points lead up for grabs, Martin then suddenly slid out from the front as the Championship took an instant twist. Rider ok, but leaving key rival Bagnaia to lead Bezzecchi and Marquez in the chase for 25 more points, and letting that home GP win go begging.
Up ahead, the race pounded on. Bagnaia led the way as the tension rose on his tail, with the #93 inching closer to Bezzecchi ahead. When the VR46 machine went very slightly deep at the final corner, the Gresini was glued to him. Later that lap he struck, kept it, and then set off after Bagnaia. The duel was taking shape.
The gap hovered around a second, but by just under ten to go, Marquez was three tenths quicker. Bagnaia responded, and then Marquez responded, with the two not yet sharing the same bit of track. But the distance back to Bezzecchi growing and growing.
By five to go, the first mission was complete for the #93. The Gresini was tagged onto the rear tyre of the Ducati Lenovo machine, and he didn’t stalk his prey for long. Marquez went for it at Turn 9, but Bagnaia responded immediately into 10, slicing straight back alongside the #93 as the two bashed into each other and jostled over the racing line. The #93 was ahead but as Bagnaia sliced through into the next apex, Marquez had no choice but to concede. Something not many have ever made him do. It was as you were, the tension left to build again.
A lap later, the stadium section got another show. This time Marquez divebombed it instead, and the door for the cutback was left a little more open. Bagnaia needed no second invitation, back in the lead, slicing straight through. As you were. Three to go. The #93 was forced to regroup, but over the line to start the next lap, Bagnaia had found even more – setting a new best race lap as the #1 put the pedal to the medal, and then through the floor.
Both on the absolute limit, the crowd on their feet. Two laps, four tenths, two riders, one win. The #1 pounded on. The #93 cut back into the gap, centimetre by centimetre. But the tarmac left to race at the Circuito de Jerez-Angel Nieto was disappearing in metres and kilometers, not centimetres, and Bagnaia was holding strong. The final chance for Marquez to create his fairytale was the final corner… but he just wasn’t close enough. So Bagnaia completed his.
0.372 is a small margin to be part of such a big statement, but it was a mammoth race win for the reigning Champion after a touger run – and it brings him to just 17 points off Martin in the Championship. Second overall after his second GP win of the season. Marquez takes his first dry weather podium since 2022, but that win will likely be on his mind as the paddock arrives at Mugello. The opposite home turf. But more on that later, we’re sure.
Bezzecchi, meanwhile, was back on the rostrum for the first time since his incredible Indian GP win in 2023, making his own statement after a performance to remember. Behind, Alex Marquez (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) took fourth to just deny Enea Bastianini (Ducati Lenovo Team) by the flag, the two with some tenths in hand over Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing). Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) took P7 and held off top Aprilia Miguel Oliveira (Trackhouse Racing), with COTA winner Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing) just tenths off in P9. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) crashed earlier in the race with Johann Zarco (CASTROL Honda LCR), both riders ok.
Superstar rookie Pedro Acosta (Red Bull GASGAS Tech3) had a mammoth crash in Warm Up, rider ok but race day seeing him come home in P10 at the flag. Raul Fernandez (Trackhouse Racing) held off Joan Mir (Repsol Honda Team) in a near photo finish just behind, with Alex Rins (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™), Takaaki Nakagami (IDEMITSU Honda LCR) and Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) completing the points.
There was drama as Franco Morbidelli (Prima Pramac Racing) collided with Jack Miller (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and both crashed out earlier in the race, and MotoGP™ Legend Daniel Pedrosa’s Red Bull Factory Racing wildcard came to an early end with a crash too.
After the drama for some, glory for others, and scores to be settled noted down for many on the grid, the record-breaking Spanish GP comes to an end. But that duel, that defeat, and that win will not be forgotten. Next up it’s Le Mans, with another huge crowd assured. And another chance for the world’s most exciting sport to prove that’s far more than a tagline.
A la prochaine…
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