Bagnaia "can be stronger" in Thailand and Malaysia after losing ground to Martin
World champion expects to be “very fast” at next two circuits as he looks to counter Phillip Island setback
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
2024 Australian GP- Sunday
Factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia is optimistic of regaining the points lost to Jorge Martin in Australia as MotoGP heads to two of his favourite tracks for its next rounds.
Bagnaia’s deficit to Pramac Ducati’s Martin doubled from 10 to 20 points over the weekend at Phillip Island, where he finished fourth in the sprint and third in the grand prix, while Martin took a win and a second place.
Bagnaia was candid about Martin’s advantage at Phillip Island, but remained philosophical with three rounds left in a points battle that has continually ebbed and flowed.
The points gap is almost the same as it was two race weekends ago following the Indonesian Grand Prix, when the Italian faced a 21-point deficit.
“It’s like it was in Indonesia [again] - we recover, we lose, then we recover again,” said Bagnaia.
“We’ll move onto the next ones with confidence knowing that these are tracks where I am very fast.
“[Thailand GP venue] Buriram and Malaysia suit my riding style better and I think I can be stronger - these are two tracks where I am faster compared to here.
Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team
Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images
“We knew coming to this track that there was a high possibility of losing points. We tried our best to avoid it, but it wasn’t enough.
“It’s true that I’ve always had good results here, but I’ve never been fast like I was at Motegi and at other tracks.
“At Buriram we have a good possibility of fighting again. Last year Jorge won, but let’s see this year!”
In 2023, Bagnaia finished second to Martin in the Thailand Grand Prix but did beat him to fourth place in Malaysia and also won the 2022 Sepang race.
While Bagnaia is correct that the gap is similar to where it was a couple of rounds ago, it’s a more comfortable buffer for Martin with fewer points now available. It also means a fall or any kind of zero score for Bagnaia could be terminal to his challenge.
The 20-point gap at this juncture puts the costly incident with Alex Marquez at Aragon at the front of Bagnaia’s mind, a clash he says “carries more weight right now”.
We want your opinion!
What would you like to see on Motorsport.com?
Take our 5 minute survey.- The Motorsport.com Team
Share Or Save This Story
Kevin Schwantz: “I see myself reflected in Marc Marquez”
Aleix Espargaro quits pro cycling after injuries hinders 2025 Honda role
Luca Marini guides Honda to its MotoGP concessions target in Valencia GP
Ducati: Resurgent Francesco Bagnaia back to his ‘2024 mentality’ in MotoGP
Francesco Bagnaia signals factory-team priority as MotoGP future questions linger
Alex Marquez edges Francesco Bagnaia and Marc Marquez in Sepang race simulations
Honda’s Joan Mir believes Ducati has given rivals a "reality check" in Sepang
Breakthrough or false dawn? Francesco Bagnaia finds early confidence on 2026 Ducati
Ducati debuts new aerodynamic package at Sepang MotoGP shakedown
Latest news
James Hinchcliffe to make NASCAR Truck debut at St. Pete
F1 2026 Bahrain pre-season test: Charles Leclerc tops day two, Lando Norris completes most laps
Lance Stroll: Aston Martin is "four seconds off" after tough start to F1 2026 pre-season
IndyCar announces historic multi-year deal with Chevrolet and Honda
Subscribe and access Motorsport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
You have 2 options:
- Become a subscriber.
- Disable your adblocker.
Top Comments